103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2023 and 2024
HB4205

 

Introduced 11/1/2023, by Rep. Hoan Huynh

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
New Act
30 ILCS 105/5.990 new

    Creates the Bottle Deposit Act. Provides that, to encourage container reuse and recycling, every beverage container sold or offered for sale to a consumer in the State must have a deposit and refund value. Includes provisions regarding: a dealer as a distributor; requirements for labels, stamps, and brand names on beverage containers; application of the Act; the commingling of beverage containers and entering into commingling agreements; unclaimed deposits for beverage containers not subject to commingling agreements; redemption centers, including licensing requirements; prohibitions on certain types of beverage containers and holders; penalties, ranging from $100 to $1,000; exceptions for beverage containers used on international flights; licensing requirements, including fees for applications; the creation of the Beverage Container Enforcement Fund; administration by the Environmental Protection Agency; the denial of redemption center licenses; the unlawful possession of beverage containers; the prohibition of glass-breaking games; and annual reporting requirements. Makes a conforming change in the State Finance Act.


LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB4205LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 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 Bottle
5Deposit Act.
 
6    Section 5. Definitions. As used in this Act:
7    "Agency" means the Illinois Environmental Protection
8Agency.
9    "Beverage" means:
10        (1) wine, alcoholic liquor, or beer, as defined in the
11    Liquor Control Act of 1934; or
12        (2) mineral water, tea, coffee, soda water or similar
13    carbonated soft drinks, bottled water, juice, or other
14    drinks in liquid form intended for human consumption.
15    "Beverage container" means a bottle, can, jar, carton, or
16other container made of glass, metal, or plastic that has been
17sealed by a manufacturer.
18    "Brand" means a name, symbol, word, or mark that
19identifies a beverage container, rather than its components,
20and attributes the beverage container to the owner of the
21brand.
22    "Commingling agreement" means an agreement between 2 or
23more initiators of deposit allowing the beverage containers

 

 

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1for which they have initiated deposits to be commingled by
2dealers and redemption centers, as described in Section 30.
3    "Consumer" means an individual who purchases a beverage in
4a beverage container for use or consumption.
5    "Dealer" means a person who sells, offers to sell, or
6engages in the sale of beverages in beverage containers to a
7consumer, including, but not limited to, an operator of a
8vending machine containing beverages in beverage containers.
9    "Director" means the Director of the Environmental
10Protection Agency.
11    "Distributor" means a person who engages in the sale of
12beverages in beverage containers to a dealer in this State.
13"Distributor" includes a manufacturer who engages in such
14sales.
15    "Initiator of deposit" or "initiator" means a
16manufacturer, distributor, or other person who initiates a
17deposit on a beverage container under Section 10.
18    "Manufacturer" means a person that:
19        (1) sells or offers for sale a beverage in this State
20    under the manufacturer's brand or label;
21        (2) licenses another person to sell or offer for sale
22    a beverage in this State under the manufacturer's brand or
23    label;
24        (3) imports into the United States for sale or
25    offering for sale in this State a beverage that is
26    manufactured outside of the United States by another

 

 

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1    person without a presence in the United States; or
2        (4) is an out-of-state wholesaler of liquor that holds
3    a license issued under the Liquor Control Act of 1934.
4    "Nonrefillable" means a beverage container that, after
5being used by a consumer, is not intended to be reused as a
6beverage container by the manufacturer.
7    "Operator of a vending machine" means an owner of a
8vending machine, the person who refills a vending machine, or
9the owner or lessee of the property upon which a vending
10machine is located.
11    "Person" means an individual, partnership, corporation, or
12other legal entity.
13    "Pick-up agent" means an initiator of deposit, distributor
14or contracted agent of an initiator of deposit, or distributor
15that receives redeemed beverage containers from a redemption
16center and transports those containers for recycling.
17    "Premises" means the property of the dealer or the
18dealer's lessor on which a sale is made.
19    "Product stewardship" means a manufacturer's taking
20responsibility for managing and reducing the life-cycle
21impacts of the manufacturer's beverage containers, from
22product design to end-of-life management.
23    "Product stewardship program" means a program financed and
24either managed or provided by manufacturers individually or
25collectively that includes, but is not limited to, the
26collection, transportation, reuse, and recycling or disposal,

 

 

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1or both, of unwanted beverage containers. "Product stewardship
2program" includes a program financed through an assessment
3paid by the manufacturers to a stewardship organization.
4    "Proprietary information" means information that is a
5trade secret or production, commercial, or financial
6information the disclosure of which would impair the
7competitive position of the submittor and would make available
8information not otherwise publicly available.
9    "Recycling" or "recycle" means a series of activities by
10which material that has reached the end of its current use is
11processed into material for use in the production of new
12beverage containers.
13    "Reuse" means a change in ownership of a beverage
14container or component in a beverage container for use in the
15same manner and purpose for which it was originally produced.
16    "Redemption center" means a place of business that deals
17in acceptance of empty, returnable beverage containers from
18consumers or dealers, or both, and that is licensed under
19Section 60.
20    "Refillable" means a beverage container that, after being
21used by a consumer, is to be reused as a beverage container at
22least 5 times by a manufacturer.
23    "Reverse vending machine" means an automated device that
24uses a laser scanner and microprocessor to accurately
25recognize the universal product code on beverage containers
26and to accumulate information regarding containers redeemed,

 

 

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1enabling the reverse vending machine to accept containers from
2redeemers and to issue script for the containers' refund
3value. "Reverse vending machine" does not include a hand
4scanner or other similar device.
5    "Spirits" has the meaning given to that term in Section
61-3.02 of the Liquor Control Act of 1934.
7    "Stewardship organization" means a corporation, nonprofit
8organization, or other legal entity created by a manufacturer
9or group of manufacturers to implement a product stewardship
10program.
11    "Unwanted beverage container" means a beverage container
12that is no longer wanted by its owner or that has been
13abandoned or discarded or is intended to be discarded by its
14owner.
15    "Use or consumption" means the exercise of any right or
16power over a beverage incident to the ownership thereof, other
17than the sale, storage, or retention for the purpose of sale of
18a beverage.
19    "Wine" has the meaning given to that term in Section
201-3.03 of the Liquor Control Act of 1934. "Wine" does not
21include wine coolers.
22    "Wine cooler" means a beverage of less than 8% alcohol
23content by volume consisting of wine and:
24        (1) plain, sparkling, or carbonated water; and
25        (2) any one or more of the following:
26            (A) fruit juices;

 

 

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1            (B) fruit adjuncts;
2            (C) artificial or natural flavors or flavorings;
3            (D) preservatives;
4            (E) coloring; or
5            (F) any other natural or artificial blending
6        material.
 
7    Section 10. Refund value. To encourage container reuse and
8recycling, every beverage container sold or offered for sale
9to a consumer in this State must have a deposit and refund
10value. The deposit and refund value are determined according
11to this Section.
12        (1) For refillable beverage containers, except wine
13    and spirits containers, the manufacturer shall determine
14    the deposit and refund value according to the type, kind,
15    and size of the beverage container. The deposit and refund
16    value may not be less than 5 cents.
17        (2) For nonrefillable beverage containers, except wine
18    and spirits containers, sold through geographically
19    exclusive distributorships, the distributor shall
20    determine and initiate the deposit and refund value
21    according to the type, kind, and size of the beverage
22    container. The deposit and refund value may not be less
23    than 5 cents.
24        (3) For nonrefillable beverage containers, except wine
25    and spirits containers, not sold through geographically

 

 

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1    exclusive distributorships, the deposit and refund value
2    may not be less than 5 cents.
3        (4) For wine and spirits containers having a volume of
4    50 milliliters or less, the refund value may not be more
5    than 5 cents. For wine and spirits containers having a
6    volume greater than 50 milliliters, the refund value may
7    not be less than 15 cents.
 
8    Section 15. Dealer as distributor. Whenever a dealer or
9group of dealers receives a shipment or consignment of, or in
10any other manner acquires, beverage containers outside the
11State for sale to consumers in the State, the dealer or dealers
12shall comply with this Act as if they were distributors as well
13as dealers.
 
14    Section 20. Labels; stamps; brand names.
15    (a) Except as provided in subsections (b) and (d), the
16refund value and the word "Illinois" or the abbreviation "IL"
17must be clearly indicated on every refundable beverage
18container sold or offered for sale by a dealer in this State by
19embossing, stamping, labeling, or other method of secure
20attachment to the beverage container. The refund value may not
21be indicated on the bottom of the container.
22    (b) With respect to nonrefillable beverage containers the
23deposits for which are initiated under paragraph (3) of
24Section 10, the refund value and the word "Illinois" or the

 

 

HB4205- 8 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1abbreviation "IL" must be clearly indicated on every
2refundable beverage container sold or offered for sale by a
3dealer in this State by permanently embossing or permanently
4stamping the beverage containers, except in instances when the
5initiator of deposit has specific permission from the Agency
6to use stickers or similar devices. The refund value may not be
7indicated on the bottom of the container.
8    (c) Notwithstanding subsection (a) and with respect to
9nonrefillable beverage containers, for the deposits that are
10initiated under paragraph (2) of Section 10, the refund value
11and the word "Illinois" or the abbreviation "IL" may be
12clearly indicated on refundable beverage containers sold or
13offered for sale by a dealer in this State by use of stickers
14or similar devices if those containers are not otherwise
15marked in accordance with subsection (a). A redemption center
16shall accept containers identified by stickers in accordance
17with this subsection or by embossing or stamping in according
18with subsection (a).
19    (d) Refillable glass beverage containers of carbonated
20beverages, for which the deposit is initiated under paragraph
21(1) of Section 10, that have a refund value of not less than 5
22cents and a brand name permanently marked on the container are
23not required to comply with subsection (a). The exception
24provided by this subsection does not apply to glass beverage
25containers that contain spirits, wine, or malt liquor.
26    (e) An initiator of deposit shall register the container

 

 

HB4205- 9 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1label of any beverage offered for sale in the State on which it
2initiates a deposit. Registration must be on forms or in an
3electronic format provided by the Agency and must include the
4universal product code for each combination of beverage and
5container manufactured. The initiator of deposit shall renew a
6label registration annually and whenever that label is revised
7by altering the universal product code or whenever the
8container on which it appears is changed in size, composition,
9or glass color. The initiator of deposit shall also include,
10as part of the registration, the method of collection for that
11type of container, identification of a collection agent,
12identification of all the parties to a commingling agreement
13that applies to the container, and proof of the collection
14agreement. The Agency may charge a fee for registration and
15registration renewals under this subsection.
16    (f) A beverage container that is sold or distributed in
17the State that is not in compliance with the initiator of
18deposit or the labeling registration requirements established
19in this Section may be removed from sale by the Agency.
 
20    Section 25. Application.
21    (a) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, a dealer
22operating a retail space of 5,000 square feet or more may not
23refuse to accept from any consumer or other person who is not a
24dealer any empty, unbroken, and reasonably clean beverage
25container or refuse to pay, in cash, the refund value of the

 

 

HB4205- 10 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1returned beverage container as established by Section 10
2unless the dealer has a written agreement with a redemption
3center to provide redemption services on behalf of the dealer
4and that redemption center:
5        (1) is located within 10 miles from the dealer, as
6    measured along public roadways; or
7        (2) if there is no redemption center located within 10
8    miles from the dealer under paragraph (1), is the
9    redemption center in closest proximity to the dealer, as
10    measured along public roadways.
11    This subsection does not require an operator of a vending
12machine to maintain a person to accept returned beverage
13containers on the premises where the vending machine is
14located.
15    (b) A dealer may limit the total number of beverage
16containers that the dealer will accept from any one consumer
17or other person in any one business day to 240 containers, or
18any other number greater than 240.
19    (c) A dealer may refuse to accept beverage containers
20during no more than 3 hours in any one business day. If a
21dealer refuses to accept containers under this subsection the
22hours during which the dealer will not accept containers must
23be conspicuously posted.
24    (d) A distributor may not refuse to accept from any dealer
25or redemption center any empty, unbroken, and reasonably clean
26beverage container or any beverage container that has been

 

 

HB4205- 11 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1processed through an approved reverse vending machine that
2meets the requirements of rules adopted by the Agency under
3this Act of the kind, size, and brand sold by the distributor
4or refuse to pay to the dealer or redemption center the refund
5value of a beverage container as established by Section 10.
6    (e) Notwithstanding subsection (g), a distributor or its
7agent may refuse to accept or pay the refund value and handling
8costs to a dealer, redemption center, or other person for a
9beverage container that has been processed by a reverse
10vending machine in a way that has reduced the recycling value
11of the container below market value. This subsection may not
12be interpreted to prohibit a written processing agreement
13between a distributor and a dealer or redemption center and
14does not relieve a distributor of its obligation under
15subsection (g) to accept empty, unbroken, and reasonably clean
16beverage containers. The Agency shall adopt rules to establish
17the recycling value of beverage containers under this
18subsection and the rules may authorize the use of a third party
19vendor to determine if a beverage container has been processed
20by a reverse vending machine in a manner that has reduced the
21recycling value below current market value. The rules must
22outline the method of allocating among the parties involved
23the payment for third party vendor costs.
24    (f) Reimbursement of handling costs is governed by this
25subsection.
26        (1) In addition to the payment of the refund value,

 

 

HB4205- 12 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1    the initiator of deposit under paragraphs (1), (2), and
2    (4) of Section 10 shall reimburse the dealer or redemption
3    center for the cost of handling beverage containers
4    subject to Section 10, in an amount that equals at least
5    4.5 cents per returned container for containers picked up
6    by the initiator after January 1, 2025. The initiator of
7    deposit may reimburse the dealer or redemption center
8    directly or indirectly through a party with which it has
9    entered into a commingling agreement.
10        (2) In addition to the payment of the refund value,
11    the initiator of deposit under paragraph (3) of Section 10
12    shall reimburse the dealer or redemption center for the
13    cost of handling beverage containers subject to Section 10
14    in an amount that equals at least 4.5 cents for containers
15    picked up on or after January 1, 2025. The initiator of
16    deposit may reimburse the dealer or redemption center
17    directly or indirectly through a contacted agent or
18    through a party with which it has entered into a
19    commingling agreement.
20    (g) The obligation to pick up and recycle beverage
21containers subject to this Act is determined by this
22subsection.
23        (1) A distributor that initiates the deposit under
24    paragraph (2) or (4) of Section 10 has the obligation to
25    pick up and recycle any empty, unbroken, and reasonably
26    clean beverage containers of the particular kind, size,

 

 

HB4205- 13 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1    and brand sold by the distributor from dealers to whom
2    that distributor has sold those beverages and from
3    licensed redemption centers. A distributor that, within
4    this State, sells beverages under a particular label
5    exclusively to one dealer, which dealer offers those
6    labeled beverages for sale at retail exclusively at the
7    dealer's establishment, shall pick up any empty, unbroken,
8    and reasonably clean beverage containers of the kind,
9    size, and brand sold by the distributor to the dealer only
10    from those licensed redemption centers that are located
11    within 25 miles from the dealer, as measured along public
12    roadways. A dealer that manufactures its own beverages for
13    exclusive sale by that dealer at retail has the obligation
14    of a distributor under this Section. The Agency may
15    establish by rule, in accordance with the Illinois
16    Administrative Procedure Act, criteria prescribing the
17    manner in which distributors shall fulfill the obligations
18    imposed by this paragraph. The rules may establish a
19    minimum number or value of containers below which a
20    distributor is not required to respond to a request to
21    pick up empty containers. Any rules adopted under this
22    paragraph must allocate the burdens associated with the
23    handling, storage, transportation, and recycling of empty
24    containers to prevent unreasonable financial or other
25    hardship.
26        (2) The initiator of deposit under paragraph (3) of

 

 

HB4205- 14 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1    Section 10 has the obligation to pick up and recycle any
2    empty, unbroken, and reasonably clean beverage containers
3    of the particular kind, size, and brand sold by the
4    initiator from dealers to whom a distributor has sold
5    those beverages and from licensed redemption centers. The
6    obligation may be fulfilled by the initiator directly or
7    indirectly through a contracted agent.
8        (3) An initiator of deposit under paragraph (2), (3),
9    or (4) of Section 10 has the obligation to pick up and
10    recycle any empty, unbroken, and reasonably clean beverage
11    containers that are commingled under a commingling
12    agreement along with any beverage containers that the
13    initiator is otherwise obligated to pick up and recycle
14    under paragraphs (1) and (2).
15        (4) The initiator of deposit or initiators of deposit
16    who are members of a commingling agreement have the
17    obligation under this subsection to pick up and recycle
18    empty, unbroken, and reasonably clean beverage containers
19    of the particular kind, size, and brand sold by the
20    initiator from dealers to whom a distributor has sold
21    those beverages and from licensed redemption centers every
22    15 days. The initiator of deposit or initiators of deposit
23    who are members of a commingling agreement have the
24    obligation to make additional pick ups when a redemption
25    center has collected 10,000 beverage containers from that
26    initiator of deposit or initiators of deposit who are

 

 

HB4205- 15 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1    members of the commingling agreement.
2    The obligations of the initiator of deposit under this
3subsection may be fulfilled by the initiator directly or
4indirectly through a party with which it has entered into a
5commingling agreement. A contracted agent hired to pick up
6beverage containers for one or more initiators of deposit is
7deemed to have made a pick up at a redemption center for those
8initiators of deposit when it picks up beverage containers
9belonging to those initiators of deposit.
10    (h) A dealer or redemption center has an obligation to
11pick up plastic bags that are used by that dealer or redemption
12center to contain beverage containers. Plastic bags used by a
13dealer or redemption center and the cost allocation of these
14bags must conform to rules adopted by the Agency concerning
15size and gauge.
16    (i) The obligations to accept or take empty beverage
17containers and to pay the refund value and handling fees for
18such containers as described in subsections (a), (d), (f), and
19(g) apply only to containers originally sold in this State as
20filled beverage containers. A person who tenders to a dealer,
21distributor, redemption center, or bottler more than 48 empty
22beverage containers that the person knows or has reason to
23know were not originally sold in this State as filled beverage
24containers is subject to the enforcement action and civil
25penalties set forth in this subsection. At each location where
26consumers tender containers for redemption, dealers and

 

 

HB4205- 16 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1redemption centers must conspicuously display a sign in
2letters that are at least one inch in height with the following
3information: "WARNING: Persons tendering containers for
4redemption that were not originally purchased in this State
5may be subject to a fine of greater than $100 per container or
6$25,000 for each tender." A person who violates the provisions
7of this subsection is subject to a civil penalty of the greater
8of $100 for each container or $25,000 for each tender of
9containers.
10    (j) The Agency may revoke the license of a dealer or
11redemption center that has been adjudged to have committed a
12violation of this Section.
13    (k) In order to prevent fraud from the redemption of
14beverage containers not originally sold in this State, this
15subsection governs the redemption of more than 2,500 beverage
16containers.
17        (1) A person tendering for redemption more than 2,500
18    beverage containers at one time to a dealer or redemption
19    center must provide to the dealer or redemption center
20    that person's name and address and the license plate
21    number of the vehicle used to transport the beverage
22    containers. The dealer or redemption center redeeming
23    these beverage containers shall forward that information
24    to the Agency within 10 days, and the information must be
25    kept on file for a minimum of 12 months.
26        (2) After complying at least once with the

 

 

HB4205- 17 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1    requirements of paragraph (1), a person need not comply
2    with paragraph (1) each subsequent time that person
3    tenders to a dealer or redemption center for redemption
4    more than 2,500 beverage containers if:
5            (A) all of the containers were collected at one
6        location in this State;
7            (B) all proceeds of the refund value benefit a
8        nonprofit organization that has been determined by the
9        United States Internal Revenue Service to be exempt
10        from taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the United
11        States Internal Revenue Code of 1986; and
12            (C) the person tendering the containers for
13        redemption signs a declaration indicating the person's
14        name, the address of the collection point, and the
15        name of the organization or organizations that will
16        receive the refund value.
17    (l) An initiator of deposit may maintain a civil action in
18a circuit court against a person, other than a redemption
19center licensed in accordance with Section 10, that tenders to
20a redemption center or retailer more than 48 empty beverage
21containers that the person knows or has reason to know were not
22originally sold in this State as filled beverage containers.
23If the initiator of deposit prevails in any action, the
24initiator of deposit is entitled to an award of reasonable
25attorney's fees and court costs, including expert witness
26fees.
 

 

 

HB4205- 18 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1    Section 30. Commingling of beverage containers.
2    (a) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act to
3the contrary, 2 or more initiators of deposit may enter into a
4commingling agreement through which some or all of the
5beverage containers for which the initiators have initiated
6deposits may be commingled by dealers and operators of
7redemption centers as provided in this Section.
8    An initiator of deposit that enters into a commingling
9agreement under this Section shall permit any other initiator
10of deposit to become a party to that agreement on the same
11terms and conditions as the original agreement. Once the
12initiator of deposit has established a qualified commingling
13agreement under the requirements of subsection (c), the Agency
14shall allow additional brands of beverage containers from a
15different product group to be included in the commingling
16agreement if those additional brands are of like material to
17those containers already managed under the commingling
18agreement.
19    For the purposes of this Act and notwithstanding any
20provision of this Act to the contrary, the State, through the
21Department of Financial and Professional Regulation and the
22Liquor Control Board, is deemed to be managing returned
23containers for which the State has initiated deposits in a
24commingling program under a qualified commingling agreement as
25long as the State allows a dealer or redemption center to

 

 

HB4205- 19 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1commingle returned containers of like material.
2    (b) If initiators of deposit enter into a commingling
3agreement under this Section, commingling of beverage
4containers must be by all containers of like product group,
5material, and size. An initiator of deposit required under
6subsection (g) of Section 25 to pick up beverage containers
7subject to a commingling agreement also shall pick up all
8other beverage containers subject to the same commingling
9agreement. The initiator of deposit may not require beverage
10containers that are subject to a commingling agreement to be
11sorted separately by a dealer or redemption center.
12    (c) The Agency shall determine that a commingling
13agreement is qualified for the purposes of this Act if:
14        (1) 50% or more of beverage containers of like product
15    group, material, and size for which the deposits are being
16    initiated in the State are included in the commingling
17    agreement;
18        (2) the initiators of deposit included in the
19    commingling agreement are initiators of deposit for
20    beverage containers containing wine and each initiator of
21    deposit sells no more than 100,000 gallons of wine or
22    500,000 beverage containers containing wine in a calendar
23    year; or
24        (3) the commingling agreement has been approved by the
25    Agency under subsection (f).
26    (d) For purposes of this Section, containers are

 

 

HB4205- 20 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1considered to be of like materials if made up of one of the
2following:
3        (1) plastic;
4        (2) aluminum;
5        (3) metal other than aluminum; and
6        (4) glass.
7    (e) For purposes of this Section, like products are those
8that are made up of one or more of the following:
9        (1) beer, ale, or other beverage produced by
10    fermenting malt, wine, and wine coolers;
11        (2) spirits;
12        (3) soda;
13        (4) noncarbonated water; and
14        (5) all other beverages.
15    (f) Subject to the requirements of this subsection, an
16initiator of deposit may enter into a commingling agreement
17for its beverage containers to be managed in a commingling
18program operated by a third party or by a stewardship
19organization. The third party or stewardship organization
20shall submit a plan for the operation of the commingling
21program to the Agency for review and approval as a qualified
22commingling agreement. A commingling program under this
23subsection must:
24        (1) require redemption centers to commingle all
25    beverage containers of initiators of deposit included by
26    like material;

 

 

HB4205- 21 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1        (2) establish standards to provide for fair
2    apportionment of costs among initiators of deposit
3    included in the program either on the basis of the count of
4    containers redeemed or on the total weight of containers
5    marketed in the State. These standards may provide for the
6    determination of the amount to be paid to a redemption
7    center as based on the unit counts generated by a reverse
8    vending machine, as long as the reverse vending machine is
9    subject to periodic audits by the third party or
10    stewardship organization on a schedule approved by the
11    Agency; and
12        (3) require that, no later than the 20th day of the
13    month following the end of March, June, September, and
14    December, each initiator of deposit included in the
15    commingling program report to the third party or
16    stewardship organization operating the commingling program
17    regarding its sales of beverages into the State for the
18    previous 3-month period by brand and by number of
19    nonrefillable beverage containers sold by product size and
20    material type as well as the average beverage container
21    weight by material type and size. The third party or
22    stewardship organization shall assign financial
23    responsibility for the costs of operating the commingling
24    program to the initiators of deposit included in the
25    commingling program based on each initiator of deposit's
26    proportion of the total weight of beverage containers

 

 

HB4205- 22 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1    marketed in the State by material type or by actual count
2    of containers redeemed.
3    The third party or stewardship organization operating the
4commingling program may require an initiator of deposit
5included in the commingling program to provide financial
6assurance in the form of a deposit no greater than the
7initiator of deposit's anticipated costs for beverage
8container deposits, redemption center handling costs, and any
9contractual fees for up to 4 months of anticipated sales in the
10State. The third party or stewardship organization shall
11retain any financial assurance required under this subsection
12in a separate account. If an initiator of deposit that has
13provided financial assurance in accordance with this
14subsection fails to reimburse the third party or stewardship
15organization for its incurred costs within 90 days of receipt
16of an invoice of such costs, the third party or stewardship
17organization may cover those invoiced costs using the
18financial assurance provided by the initiator of deposit in
19accordance with this subsection.
20    The Agency may approve no more than 2 commingling
21agreements as qualified commingling agreements under this
22subsection and may not approve a qualified commingling
23agreement under this subsection for a period exceeding 10
24years.
25    (g) Not later than 48 hours following the execution or
26amendment of a commingling agreement, including an amendment

 

 

HB4205- 23 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1that adds an additional party to an existing agreement, the
2parties shall file a copy of the commingling agreement or
3amendment with the Agency.
4    (h) The initiators of deposit participating in a qualified
5commingling agreement under this Section must submit to the
6Agency an application for reapproval of that commingling
7agreement in a form prescribed by the Agency at least 6 months
8prior to the date of expiration of the Agency's prior approval
9or reapproval.
10    After review of an application submitted under this
11subsection, the Agency may reapprove the commingling agreement
12for an additional period not to exceed 10 years.
 
13    Section 35. Unclaimed deposits.
14    (a) This Section applies only to those beverage containers
15that are not subject to a commingling agreement under Section
1630.
17    (b) An initiator of deposit shall maintain a separate
18account to be known as the initiator's deposit transaction
19fund. The initiator shall keep that fund separate from all
20other revenues and accounts. The initiator shall place in that
21fund the refund value for all nonrefillable beverage
22containers it sells subject to this Act. Except as specified
23in subsections (d) and (e), amounts in the initiator's deposit
24transaction fund may only be expended to pay refund values for
25returned nonrefillable beverage containers. Amounts in the

 

 

HB4205- 24 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1fund may not be used to pay the handling fees required by this
2Act. The fund must be maintained by the initiator on behalf of
3consumers who have purchased products in refundable
4nonrefillable beverage containers and on behalf of the State.
5Except as specified in subsections (d) and (e), amounts in the
6fund may not regarded as income of the initiator.
7    (c) An initiator of deposit shall report to the Department
8of Revenue by the 20th day of each month concerning
9transactions affecting its deposit transaction fund in the
10preceding month. The report must be in a form prescribed by the
11Department of Revenue and must include:
12        (1) the number of nonrefillable beverage containers
13    sold and the number of nonrefillable beverage containers
14    returned in the applicable month;
15        (2) the amount of deposits received in and payments
16    made from the fund in the applicable month and the most
17    recent 3-month period;
18        (3) any income earned on amounts in the fund during
19    the applicable month;
20        (4) the balance in the fund at the close of the
21    applicable month; and
22        (5) such other information as the Department of
23    Revenue may require.
24    The report required by this subsection must be treated by
25the Department of Revenue as a return.
26    For the purposes of this subsection, "return" means any

 

 

HB4205- 25 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1document, digital file, or electronic data transmission
2containing information required by this subsection to be
3reported to the Department of Revenue.
4    (d) The initiator's abandoned deposit amount, at the end
5of each month, is the amount equal to the amount of deposits
6that are or should be in the fund, less the sum of:
7        (1) income earned on amounts in the fund during that
8    month; and
9        (2) the total amount of refund values received by the
10    initiator for nonrefillable beverage containers during
11    that month and the 2 preceding months.
12    Income on the fund may be transferred from the fund for use
13as funds of the initiator.
14    (e) By the 20th day of each month, an initiator shall turn
15over to the Department of Revenue the initiator's abandoned
16deposit amounts determined under subsection (d). Those amounts
17may be paid from the deposit fund. Amounts collected by the
18Department of Revenue under this subsection must be treated by
19the Department of Revenue as a tax and must be deposited in the
20General Revenue Fund.
21    For the purposes of this subsection, "tax" means the total
22amount required to be paid, withheld, and paid over or
23collected and paid over with respect to estimated or actual
24tax liability in this State, any credit or reimbursement
25allowed or paid in this State that is recoverable by the
26Department of Revenue, and any amount assessed by the

 

 

HB4205- 26 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1Department of Revenue in this State, including any interest or
2penalties provided by law. "Tax" also means any fee, fine,
3penalty, or other debt owed to the State provided for by law if
4that fee, fine, penalty, or other debt is subject to
5collection by the Department of Revenue under statute or
6transferred to the Department of Revenue for collection.
7    (f) If any month the authorized payments from the deposit
8transaction fund by an initiator under this Section exceed the
9funds that are or should be in the initiator's deposit
10transaction fund, the Department of Revenue shall reimburse
11the initiator, from amounts received under subsection (e), for
12those refunds paid by the initiator for nonrefillable beverage
13containers for which the funds that are or should be in the
14initiator's deposit transaction fund are insufficient.
15However, reimbursements paid by the Department of Revenue to
16an initiator may not exceed amounts paid by the initiator
17under subsection (e) in the preceding 24-months less amounts
18paid to the initiator under this subsection during that same
1924-month period.
20    (g) Any uniform tax administration provisions apply to the
21Department of Revenue's administration of the reports and
22payments required by this Section.
23    (h) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, a
24manufacturer who produces no more than 50,000 gallons of its
25product in a calendar year is exempt from the requirements of
26this Section for that year. A brewer who produces no more than

 

 

HB4205- 27 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

150,000 gallons of its product or bottler of water who sells no
2more than 250,000 containers each containing no more than one
3gallon of its product in a calendar year is exempt from the
4requirements of this Section for that year.
5    (i) The Agency may remove from sale a beverage that is sold
6or distributed in the State by an initiator of deposit who is
7not in compliance with the reporting and payment requirements
8established in this Section if the Agency is notified by the
9Department of Revenue of that noncompliance. The Agency shall
10allow the sale of the beverage to resume upon notification by
11the Department of Revenue that all delinquent reports have
12been submitted and all payments are current.
 
13    Section 40. Redemption centers.
14    (a) Redemption centers may be established and operated by
15any person or municipality, agency, or municipal joint action
16agency, subject to the approval of the Director, to serve
17local dealers and consumers, at which consumers may return
18empty beverage containers as provided under Section 25.
19    (b) Application for approval of a redemption center must
20be filed with the Agency. The application must state the name
21and address of the person responsible for the establishment
22and operation of the center and the names and addresses of each
23dealer with whom the redemption center has entered into a
24written agreement to provide redemption services in accordance
25with subsection (a) of Section 25 and their distances from the

 

 

HB4205- 28 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1redemption center, as measured along public roadways, and must
2include a statement that the redemption center will accept and
3manage all beverage containers the labels for which are
4registered in accordance with Section 20.
5    (c) The Director may, by order, approve the licensing of a
6redemption center if the redemption center complies with the
7requirements established under Section 60 and the applicable
8rules adopted under this Act.
9    (d) A licensed redemption center may not refuse to accept
10from any consumer or dealer any empty, unbroken, and
11reasonably clean beverage container of the kind, size, and
12brand sold in the State as long as the label for the container
13is registered under subsection (e) of Section 20 or refuse to
14pay in cash the refund value of the returned beverage
15container as established under Section 10. A redemption center
16or reverse vending machine is not obligated to count
17containers or to pay a cash refund at the time the beverage
18container is returned as long as the amount of the refund value
19due is placed into an account to be held for the benefit of the
20consumer and funded in a manner that allows the consumer to
21obtain deposits due within 2 business days of the time of the
22return.
23    (e) A redemption center shall tender to pick-up agents
24only beverage containers sold in the State that are placed in
25shells, shipping cartons, bags, or other receptacles in a
26manner that facilities accurate eligible beverage container

 

 

HB4205- 29 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1unit counts.
2    (f) A redemption center shall prepare beverage containers
3for pick up by pick-up agents, which are subject to audit under
4rules adopted by the Agency in accordance with this
5subsection.
6        (1) A redemption center shall label each shell,
7    shipping carton, bag, or other receptacle with the
8    business name, initials, redemption center license number,
9    or other unique identifying mark and with the number of
10    beverage containers contained in each shell, shipping
11    carton, bag, or other receptacle.
12        (2) The Agency may audit shells, shipping cartons,
13    bags, or other receptacles that have been prepared for
14    pick up by a redemption center.
15            (A) An audit may be conducted by the Agency
16        on-site at the redemption center or off-site at a
17        different location. Off-site audits may involve the
18        use of bulk redemption technology.
19            (B) An audit must be conducted on a minimum of
20        1,000 beverage containers.
21            (C) If the results of an audit vary from the
22        beverage container count labeled in accordance with
23        paragraph (1), the Agency shall, in the case of an
24        on-site audit, require the redemption center to add or
25        remove containers to address the variation in the
26        results of the audit or, in the case of an off-site

 

 

HB4205- 30 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1        audit, require the redemption center to accept payment
2        from the initiator of deposit or pick-up agent
3        adjusted in accordance with the variation in the
4        results of the audit.
5            (D) The Agency may deny an application for
6        approval of a redemption center under subsection (b)
7        if the redemption center, pursuant to audits conducted
8        by the Agency in accordance with this subsection, has
9        repeatedly prepared for pick up shells, shipping
10        cartons, bags, or other receptacles containing less
11        than 97% of the beverage containers that such shells,
12        shipping cartons, bags, or other receptacles are
13        labeled as containing.
14    (g) The Agency may, in a manner consistent with the
15Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, revoke the license of a
16redemption center if the redemption center has not complied
17with the Director's approval order issued under subsection (c)
18or if the redemption center no longer provides a convenient
19service to the public.
 
20    Section 45. Prohibition on certain types of containers and
21holders. A beverage may not be sold or offered for sale to
22consumers in this State:
23        (1) in a metal container designed or constructed so
24    that part of the container is detachable for the purpose
25    of opening the container without the aid of a separate can

 

 

HB4205- 31 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1    opener, except that nothing in this paragraph prohibits
2    the sale of a container the only detachable part of which
3    is a piece of adhesive-backed tape; and
4        (2) in a container composed of one or more plastics if
5    the basic structure of the container, exclusive of the
6    closure device, also includes aluminum or steel.
 
7    Section 50. Penalties.
8    (a) A violation of this Act by any person is a civil
9violation for which a fine of not more than $100 may be
10adjudged.
11    (b) Each day a violation under subsection (a) continues or
12exists constitutes a separate offense.
13    (c) Notwithstanding subsection (a), a person who knowingly
14violates subsection (g) of Section 25 commits a civil
15violation for which a fine of $1,000 may be adjudged.
 
16    Section 55. Exception for beverage containers used on
17international flights. This Act does not apply to any beverage
18container sold to an airline and containing a beverage
19intended for consumption on an aircraft flight in interstate
20or foreign commerce.
 
21    Section 60. Licensing requirements.
22    (a) A license issued annually by the Agency is required
23before any person may initiate deposits under Section 10,

 

 

HB4205- 32 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1operate a redemption center under Section 40, or act as a
2contracted agent for the collection of beverage containers
3under paragraph (2) of subsection (g) of Section 25.
4    (b) The Agency shall adopt rules establishing the
5requirements and procedures for issuance of licenses and
6annual renewals under this Section, including a fee structure.
7    (c) An applicant under this Section shall include the
8following fees with a license application and an annual
9license renewal application.
10        (1) An applicant for approval of a redemption center
11    shall submit a $100 license fee with an initial
12    application and subsequent annual applications.
13        (2) An applicant for approval as an initiator of
14    deposit:
15            (A) of a small brewery or a small winery that
16        produces more than 50,000 gallons of its product or a
17        bottler of water that annually sells no more than
18        250,000 containers, each containing no more than one
19        gallon of its product, shall submit an annual license
20        fee of $50.
21            For the purposes of this subparagraph:
22            "Small brewery" means a person that engages in
23        either or both of the following activities:
24                (i) producing the person's own malt liquor by
25            fermentation of malt, wholly or partially, or
26            substitute for malt; or

 

 

HB4205- 33 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1                (ii) producing or bottling low-alcohol spirits
2            products consisting of malt liquor to which
3            spirits have been added.
4            "Small brewery" does not include a person that
5        engages in the activities described in item (i) or
6        (ii) above that produces in total more than 30,000
7        barrels per year of malt liquor and low-alcohol
8        spirits products consisting of malt liquor to which
9        spirits have been added.
10            "Small winery" means a person that ferments and
11        ages:
12                (i) up to 50,000 gallons per year of the
13            person's own wine that is not hard cider; and
14                (ii) up to 3,000 barrels per year of the
15            person's own wine that is hard cider;
16            (B) of a small beverage manufacturer whose total
17        production of all beverages from all combined
18        manufacturing locations in less than 50,000 gallons
19        annually, shall submit an annual license fee of $50;
20        and
21            (C) other than under subparagraph (A) or (B),
22        shall submit a $500 annual license fee with each
23        application.
24        (3) An applicant for approval as a contracted agent
25    for the collection of beverage containers shall submit a
26    $500 annual license fee with each application.

 

 

HB4205- 34 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1    (d) In licensing redemption centers, the Agency shall
2consider at least the following:
3        (1) the health and safety of the public, including
4    sanitation protection when food is also sold on the
5    premises;
6        (2) the convenience for the public, including the
7    distribution of centers by population or by distance, or
8    both;
9        (3) the proximity of the proposed redemption center to
10    existing redemption centers and the potential impact that
11    the location of the proposed redemption center may have on
12    an existing redemption center;
13        (4) the proposed owner's record of compliance with
14    this Act and rules adopted by the Agency under this Act;
15    and
16        (5) the hours of operation of the proposed redemption
17    center and existing redemption centers in the proximity of
18    the proposed redemption center.
19    (e) The Agency may grant a license to a redemption center
20if the following requirements are met:
21        (1) the Agency may license up to 5 redemption centers
22    in a municipality with a population over 30,000;
23        (2) the Agency may license up to 3 redemption centers
24    in a municipality with a population over 20,000 but no
25    more than 30,000; and
26        (3) the Agency may license up to 2 redemption centers

 

 

HB4205- 35 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1    in a municipality with a population over 5,000 but no more
2    than 20,000.
3    For a municipality with a population of no more than
45,000, the Agency may license redemption canters in accordance
5with rules adopted by the Agency.
6    (f) Notwithstanding subsection (e):
7        (1) an entity that is a distributor licensed by or
8    registered with the Agency need not comply with subsection
9    (e);
10        (2) a reverse vending machine is not considered a
11    redemption center for purposes of subsection (e) when it
12    is located in a licensed redemption center; and
13        (3) the Agency may grant a license that is
14    inconsistent with the requirements set out in subsection
15    (e) only if the applicant has demonstrated a compelling
16    public need for an additional redemption center in the
17    municipality.
 
18    Section 65. Beverage Container Enforcement Fund.
19    (a) The Beverage Container Enforcement Fund is created as
20a special fund in the State treasury. Any interest earned on
21moneys in the Fund shall be deposited into the Fund.
22    (b) The Fund consists of:
23        (1) fees for issuance of licenses and license renewals
24    under Section 60;
25        (2) fees for registration of beverage container labels

 

 

HB4205- 36 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1    and registration renewals under subsection (e) of Section
2    20; and
3        (3) all other money appropriated or allocated for
4    inclusion in the Fund.
5    (c) The Agency may combine administration and inspection
6responsibilities of other programs it administers with
7administration and enforcement responsibilities under this Act
8for efficiency purposes. However, money in the Fund may be
9used to Fund only the portion of staff time devoted to
10administration and enforcement activities under this Act.
11    (d) The Fund is a nonlapsing, revolving fund. All money in
12the Fund must be continuously applied by the Agency to carry
13out the administrative and enforcement responsibilities of the
14Agency under this Act.
 
15    Section 70. Agency administration. The Agency shall
16administer this Act and has the authority, following public
17hearing, to adopt necessary rules to carry it into effect. The
18Agency may adopt rules governing redemption centers that
19receive beverage containers from dealers supplied by
20distributors other than the distributors servicing the area in
21which the redemption center is located in order to prevent the
22distributors servicing the area in which the redemption center
23is located in order to prevent the distributors servicing the
24area within which the redemption center is located from being
25unfairly penalized. In addition to other actions required by

 

 

HB4205- 37 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1this Act, the Agency responsibilities include:
2        (1) The Agency shall establish and maintain a registry
3    of beverage container labels. The registry must contain
4    the information of each beverage type and beverage
5    contained filed under subsection (e) of Section 20
6    arranged and displayed in an organized and comprehensible
7    manner. The Agency shall update the registry regularly and
8    make information from the registry available upon request.
9        (2) The Agency shall provide information about the
10    operation of this Act to any affected person whose
11    premises it inspects or visits as part of its licensing
12    and inspection responsibilities.
 
13    Section 75. Denial of redemption center license.
14    (a) The Agency shall notify an applicant denied a license
15for a redemption center of the reasons for the denial. Written
16notification must be sent to the mailing address given by the
17applicant in the application for a redemption center license.
18    (b) An applicant aggrieved by a decision made by the
19Agency may appeal the decision to the Pollution Control Board
20in accordance with Section 40 of the Environmental Protection
21Act or by filing an appeal with the Appellate Court and serving
22a copy of the appeal in accordance with the Code of Civil
23Procedure. The appeal to the Pollution Control Board or to the
24Appellate Court must be filed and served within 30 days of the
25mailing of the Agency's decision.
 

 

 

HB4205- 38 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1    Section 80. Unlawful possession of beverage containers.
2    (a) A person is guilty of a violation of this Section if
3that person possesses more than 48 beverage containers that
4are not labeled as required under Section 20. This Section
5does not apply to any landfill or waste disposal sites
6permitted by the Agency under the Environmental Protection
7Act.
8    (b) A violation of this Section is a civil violation for
9which a fine of $100 per container in excess of 48 beverage
10containers may be adjudged.
11    (c) The Illinois State Police shall enforce this Section
12and prosecute any persons found in violation.
13    (d) An initiator of deposit may maintain a civil action in
14a circuit court against a person, other than a redemption
15center licensed in accordance with Section 60, in possession
16of more than 48 beverage containers that the person knows or
17has reason to know were not originally sold in this State as
18filled beverage containers. If the initiator of deposit
19prevails in any action, the initiator of deposit is entitled
20to an award of reasonable attorney's fees and court costs,
21including expert witness fees.
22    (e) The Agency may, by rule, adopt procedures for
23designating certain transportation activities and storage or
24production facilities or portions of facilities as exempt from
25this Section. Any exemption granted under this subsection must

 

 

HB4205- 39 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1be based on a showing by the person owning or operating the
2facility or undertaking the activity that:
3        (1) the beverage containers stored or transported are
4    intended solely for retail sale outside of the State;
5        (2) the beverage containers are being transported to
6    and stored in a facility licensed by the Department of
7    Revenue. No person shall receive, hold, store, or deliver
8    any alcoholic liquors without a certificate of
9    registration from the Department of Revenue in accordance
10    with Article VIIA of the Liquor Control Act of 1934 prior
11    to labeling and subsequent retail sale within the State;
12    or
13        (3) the person is licensed by the Department of
14    Revenue. No person shall receive, hold, store, or deliver
15    any alcoholic liquors without a certificate of
16    registration from the Department of Revenue in accordance
17    with Article VIIA of the Liquor Control Act of 1934 to
18    import malt liquor and wine into the State, the beverage
19    containers contain malt liquor or wine and these
20    containers are being transported or stored prior to
21    labeling and subsequent retail sale within the State.
22    The Agency may require reporting of the numbers of
23beverage containers imported into and exported from the State
24under the terms of this subsection.
 
25    Section 85. Glass-breaking games. A person, firm,

 

 

HB4205- 40 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1corporation, association, or organization may not hold,
2conduct, or operate any game, contest scheme, or device in
3which a person stakes or risks something of value for the
4opportunity to win something of value if that game, contest,
5scheme, or device involves the breaking of glass. A violation
6of this Section is a Class C misdemeanor.
 
7    Section 90. Reporting requirements.
8    (a) This Section establishes annual reporting requirements
9for initiators of deposit and pick-up agents that are not
10initiators of deposit.
11    (b) Each initiator of deposit shall report annually by
12March 1 to the Agency concerning its deposit transactions in
13the preceding calendar year. The report must be in a form
14prescribed by the Agency and must include the number of
15nonrefillable beverage containers sold by the initiator of
16deposit in the State by container size, beverage type, and
17redemption value, delineated at a minimum into wine, spirits,
18and all other beverage types, and must include the number of
19nonrefillable beverage containers returned to the initiator of
20deposit by beverage type and redemption value.
21    (c) Each pick-up agent that is not an initiator of deposit
22shall report annually by March 1 to the Agency concerning the
23redemptions for each initiator of deposit it served in the
24preceding calendar year. The report must be in a form
25prescribed by the Agency and must include the number of

 

 

HB4205- 41 -LRB103 34179 LNS 64002 b

1nonrefillable containers returned by the pick-up agent to each
2initiator of deposit it served by redemption value, except
3that the pick-up agent may report by average weight and total
4weight of beverage containers returned by material type for
5containers managed by a qualified commingling agreement under
6Section 30.
7    (d) Proprietary information submitted to the Agency in a
8report required under this Section that is identified by the
9submittor as proprietary information is confidential and must
10be handled by the Agency in the same manner as other
11confidential information.
 
12    Section 95. The State Finance Act is amended by adding
13Section 5.990 as follows:
 
14    (30 ILCS 105/5.990 new)
15    Sec. 5.990. The Beverage Container Enforcement Fund.