SB1089enr 102ND GENERAL ASSEMBLY



 


 
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1    AN ACT concerning regulation.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 5. The Environmental Protection Act is amended by
5changing Sections 3.160, 3.330, 21, 22.15, 22.38, 22.44, 31.1,
6and 42 as follows:
 
7    (415 ILCS 5/3.160)  (was 415 ILCS 5/3.78 and 3.78a)
8    Sec. 3.160. Construction or demolition debris.
9    (a) "General construction or demolition debris" means
10non-hazardous, uncontaminated materials resulting from the
11construction, remodeling, repair, and demolition of utilities,
12structures, and roads, limited to the following: bricks,
13concrete, and other masonry materials; soil; rock; wood,
14including non-hazardous painted, treated, and coated wood and
15wood products; wall coverings; plaster; drywall; plumbing
16fixtures; non-asbestos insulation; roofing shingles and other
17roof coverings; reclaimed or other asphalt pavement; glass;
18plastics that are not sealed in a manner that conceals waste;
19electrical wiring and components containing no hazardous
20substances; and corrugated cardboard, piping or metals
21incidental to any of those materials.
22    General construction or demolition debris does not include
23uncontaminated soil generated during construction, remodeling,

 

 

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1repair, and demolition of utilities, structures, and roads
2provided the uncontaminated soil is not commingled with any
3general construction or demolition debris or other waste.
4    To the extent allowed by federal law, uncontaminated
5concrete with protruding rebar shall be considered clean
6construction or demolition debris and shall not be considered
7"waste" if it is separated or processed and returned to the
8economic mainstream in the form of raw materials or products
9within 4 years of its generation, if it is not speculatively
10accumulated and, if used as a fill material, it is used in
11accordance with item (i) in subsection (b) of this Section.
12    (a-1) "General construction or demolition debris recovery
13facility" means a site or facility used to store or treat
14exclusively general construction or demolition debris,
15including, but not limited to, sorting, separating, or
16transferring, for recycling, reclamation, or reuse. For
17purposes of this definition, treatment includes altering the
18physical nature of the general construction or demolition
19debris, such as by size reduction, crushing, grinding, or
20homogenization, but does not include treatment designed to
21change the chemical nature of the general construction or
22demolition debris.
23    (b) "Clean construction or demolition debris" means
24uncontaminated broken concrete without protruding metal bars,
25bricks, rock, stone, reclaimed or other asphalt pavement, or
26soil generated from construction or demolition activities.

 

 

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1    Clean construction or demolition debris does not include
2uncontaminated soil generated during construction, remodeling,
3repair, and demolition of utilities, structures, and roads
4provided the uncontaminated soil is not commingled with any
5clean construction or demolition debris or other waste.
6    To the extent allowed by federal law, clean construction
7or demolition debris shall not be considered "waste" if it is
8(i) used as fill material outside of a setback zone if the fill
9is placed no higher than the highest point of elevation
10existing prior to the filling immediately adjacent to the fill
11area, and if covered by sufficient uncontaminated soil to
12support vegetation within 30 days of the completion of filling
13or if covered by a road or structure, and, if used as fill
14material in a current or former quarry, mine, or other
15excavation, is used in accordance with the requirements of
16Section 22.51 of this Act and the rules adopted thereunder or
17(ii) separated or processed and returned to the economic
18mainstream in the form of raw materials or products, if it is
19not speculatively accumulated and, if used as a fill material,
20it is used in accordance with item (i), or (iii) solely broken
21concrete without protruding metal bars used for erosion
22control, or (iv) generated from the construction or demolition
23of a building, road, or other structure and used to construct,
24on the site where the construction or demolition has taken
25place, a manmade functional structure not to exceed 20 feet
26above the highest point of elevation of the property

 

 

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1immediately adjacent to the new manmade functional structure
2as that elevation existed prior to the creation of that new
3structure, provided that the structure shall be covered with
4sufficient soil materials to sustain vegetation or by a road
5or structure, and further provided that no such structure
6shall be constructed within a home rule municipality with a
7population over 500,000 without the consent of the
8municipality.
9    For purposes of this subsection (b), reclaimed or other
10asphalt pavement shall not be considered speculatively
11accumulated if: (i) it is not commingled with any other clean
12construction or demolition debris or any waste; (ii) it is
13returned to the economic mainstream in the form of raw
14materials or products within 4 years after its generation;
15(iii) at least 25% of the total amount present at a site during
16a calendar year is transported off of the site during the next
17calendar year; and (iv) if used as a fill material, it is used
18in accordance with item (i) of the second paragraph of this
19subsection (b).
20    (c) For purposes of this Section, the term "uncontaminated
21soil" means soil that does not contain contaminants in
22concentrations that pose a threat to human health and safety
23and the environment.
24        (1) No later than one year after the effective date of
25    this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, the
26    Agency shall propose, and, no later than one year after

 

 

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1    receipt of the Agency's proposal, the Board shall adopt,
2    rules specifying the maximum concentrations of
3    contaminants that may be present in uncontaminated soil
4    for purposes of this Section. For carcinogens, the maximum
5    concentrations shall not allow exposure to exceed an
6    excess upper-bound lifetime risk of 1 in 1,000,000;
7    provided that if the most stringent remediation objective
8    or applicable background concentration for a contaminant
9    set forth in 35 Ill. Adm. Code 742 is greater than the
10    concentration that would allow exposure at an excess
11    upper-bound lifetime risk of 1 in 1,000,000, the Board may
12    consider allowing that contaminant in concentrations up to
13    its most stringent remediation objective or applicable
14    background concentration set forth in 35 Ill. Adm. Code
15    742 in soil used as fill material in a current or former
16    quarry, mine, or other excavation in accordance with
17    Section 22.51 or 22.51a of this Act and rules adopted
18    under those Sections. Any background concentration set
19    forth in 35 Ill. Adm. Code 742 that is adopted as a maximum
20    concentration must be based upon the location of the
21    quarry, mine, or other excavation where the soil is used
22    as fill material.
23        (2) To the extent allowed under federal law and
24    regulations, uncontaminated soil shall not be considered a
25    waste.
26(Source: P.A. 96-235, eff. 8-11-09; 96-1416, eff. 7-30-10;

 

 

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197-137, eff. 7-14-11.)
 
2    (415 ILCS 5/3.330)  (was 415 ILCS 5/3.32)
3    Sec. 3.330. Pollution control facility.
4    (a) "Pollution control facility" is any waste storage
5site, sanitary landfill, waste disposal site, waste transfer
6station, waste treatment facility, or waste incinerator. This
7includes sewers, sewage treatment plants, and any other
8facilities owned or operated by sanitary districts organized
9under the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District Act.
10    The following are not pollution control facilities:
11        (1) (blank);
12        (2) waste storage sites regulated under 40 CFR, Part
13    761.42;
14        (3) sites or facilities used by any person conducting
15    a waste storage, waste treatment, waste disposal, waste
16    transfer or waste incineration operation, or a combination
17    thereof, for wastes generated by such person's own
18    activities, when such wastes are stored, treated, disposed
19    of, transferred or incinerated within the site or facility
20    owned, controlled or operated by such person, or when such
21    wastes are transported within or between sites or
22    facilities owned, controlled or operated by such person;
23        (4) sites or facilities at which the State is
24    performing removal or remedial action pursuant to Section
25    22.2 or 55.3;

 

 

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1        (5) abandoned quarries used solely for the disposal of
2    concrete, earth materials, gravel, or aggregate debris
3    resulting from road construction activities conducted by a
4    unit of government or construction activities due to the
5    construction and installation of underground pipes, lines,
6    conduit or wires off of the premises of a public utility
7    company which are conducted by a public utility;
8        (6) sites or facilities used by any person to
9    specifically conduct a landscape composting operation;
10        (7) regional facilities as defined in the Central
11    Midwest Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact;
12        (8) the portion of a site or facility where coal
13    combustion wastes are stored or disposed of in accordance
14    with subdivision (r)(2) or (r)(3) of Section 21;
15        (9) the portion of a site or facility used for the
16    collection, storage or processing of waste tires as
17    defined in Title XIV;
18        (10) the portion of a site or facility used for
19    treatment of petroleum contaminated materials by
20    application onto or incorporation into the soil surface
21    and any portion of that site or facility used for storage
22    of petroleum contaminated materials before treatment. Only
23    those categories of petroleum listed in Section 57.9(a)(3)
24    are exempt under this subdivision (10);
25        (11) the portion of a site or facility where used oil
26    is collected or stored prior to shipment to a recycling or

 

 

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1    energy recovery facility, provided that the used oil is
2    generated by households or commercial establishments, and
3    the site or facility is a recycling center or a business
4    where oil or gasoline is sold at retail;
5        (11.5) processing sites or facilities that receive
6    only on-specification used oil, as defined in 35 Ill.
7    Admin. Code 739, originating from used oil collectors for
8    processing that is managed under 35 Ill. Admin. Code 739
9    to produce products for sale to off-site petroleum
10    facilities, if these processing sites or facilities are:
11    (i) located within a home rule unit of local government
12    with a population of at least 30,000 according to the 2000
13    federal census, that home rule unit of local government
14    has been designated as an Urban Round II Empowerment Zone
15    by the United States Department of Housing and Urban
16    Development, and that home rule unit of local government
17    has enacted an ordinance approving the location of the
18    site or facility and provided funding for the site or
19    facility; and (ii) in compliance with all applicable
20    zoning requirements;
21        (12) the portion of a site or facility utilizing coal
22    combustion waste for stabilization and treatment of only
23    waste generated on that site or facility when used in
24    connection with response actions pursuant to the federal
25    Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and
26    Liability Act of 1980, the federal Resource Conservation

 

 

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1    and Recovery Act of 1976, or the Illinois Environmental
2    Protection Act or as authorized by the Agency;
3        (13) the portion of a site or facility regulated under
4    that accepts exclusively general construction or
5    demolition debris and is operated and located in
6    accordance with Section 22.38 of this Act;
7        (14) the portion of a site or facility, located within
8    a unit of local government that has enacted local zoning
9    requirements, used to accept, separate, and process
10    uncontaminated broken concrete, with or without protruding
11    metal bars, provided that the uncontaminated broken
12    concrete and metal bars are not speculatively accumulated,
13    are at the site or facility no longer than one year after
14    their acceptance, and are returned to the economic
15    mainstream in the form of raw materials or products;
16        (15) the portion of a site or facility located in a
17    county with a population over 3,000,000 that has obtained
18    local siting approval under Section 39.2 of this Act for a
19    municipal waste incinerator on or before July 1, 2005 and
20    that is used for a non-hazardous waste transfer station;
21        (16) a site or facility that temporarily holds in
22    transit for 10 days or less, non-putrescible solid waste
23    in original containers, no larger in capacity than 500
24    gallons, provided that such waste is further transferred
25    to a recycling, disposal, treatment, or storage facility
26    on a non-contiguous site and provided such site or

 

 

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1    facility complies with the applicable 10-day transfer
2    requirements of the federal Resource Conservation and
3    Recovery Act of 1976 and United States Department of
4    Transportation hazardous material requirements. For
5    purposes of this Section only, "non-putrescible solid
6    waste" means waste other than municipal garbage that does
7    not rot or become putrid, including, but not limited to,
8    paints, solvent, filters, and absorbents;
9        (17) the portion of a site or facility located in a
10    county with a population greater than 3,000,000 that has
11    obtained local siting approval, under Section 39.2 of this
12    Act, for a municipal waste incinerator on or before July
13    1, 2005 and that is used for wood combustion facilities
14    for energy recovery that accept and burn only wood
15    material, as included in a fuel specification approved by
16    the Agency;
17        (18) a transfer station used exclusively for landscape
18    waste, including a transfer station where landscape waste
19    is ground to reduce its volume, where the landscape waste
20    is held no longer than 24 hours from the time it was
21    received;
22        (19) the portion of a site or facility that (i) is used
23    for the composting of food scrap, livestock waste, crop
24    residue, uncontaminated wood waste, or paper waste,
25    including, but not limited to, corrugated paper or
26    cardboard, and (ii) meets all of the following

 

 

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1    requirements:
2            (A) There must not be more than a total of 30,000
3        cubic yards of livestock waste in raw form or in the
4        process of being composted at the site or facility at
5        any one time.
6            (B) All food scrap, livestock waste, crop residue,
7        uncontaminated wood waste, and paper waste must, by
8        the end of each operating day, be processed and placed
9        into an enclosed vessel in which air flow and
10        temperature are controlled, or all of the following
11        additional requirements must be met:
12                (i) The portion of the site or facility used
13            for the composting operation must include a
14            setback of at least 200 feet from the nearest
15            potable water supply well.
16                (ii) The portion of the site or facility used
17            for the composting operation must be located
18            outside the boundary of the 10-year floodplain or
19            floodproofed.
20                (iii) Except in municipalities with more than
21            1,000,000 inhabitants, the portion of the site or
22            facility used for the composting operation must be
23            located at least one-eighth of a mile from the
24            nearest residence, other than a residence located
25            on the same property as the site or facility.
26                (iv) The portion of the site or facility used

 

 

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1            for the composting operation must be located at
2            least one-eighth of a mile from the property line
3            of all of the following areas:
4                    (I) Facilities that primarily serve to
5                house or treat people that are
6                immunocompromised or immunosuppressed, such as
7                cancer or AIDS patients; people with asthma,
8                cystic fibrosis, or bioaerosol allergies; or
9                children under the age of one year.
10                    (II) Primary and secondary schools and
11                adjacent areas that the schools use for
12                recreation.
13                    (III) Any facility for child care licensed
14                under Section 3 of the Child Care Act of 1969;
15                preschools; and adjacent areas that the
16                facilities or preschools use for recreation.
17                (v) By the end of each operating day, all food
18            scrap, livestock waste, crop residue,
19            uncontaminated wood waste, and paper waste must be
20            (i) processed into windrows or other piles and
21            (ii) covered in a manner that prevents scavenging
22            by birds and animals and that prevents other
23            nuisances.
24            (C) Food scrap, livestock waste, crop residue,
25        uncontaminated wood waste, paper waste, and compost
26        must not be placed within 5 feet of the water table.

 

 

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1            (D) The site or facility must meet all of the
2        requirements of the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act (16
3        U.S.C. 1271 et seq.).
4            (E) The site or facility must not (i) restrict the
5        flow of a 100-year flood, (ii) result in washout of
6        food scrap, livestock waste, crop residue,
7        uncontaminated wood waste, or paper waste from a
8        100-year flood, or (iii) reduce the temporary water
9        storage capacity of the 100-year floodplain, unless
10        measures are undertaken to provide alternative storage
11        capacity, such as by providing lagoons, holding tanks,
12        or drainage around structures at the facility.
13            (F) The site or facility must not be located in any
14        area where it may pose a threat of harm or destruction
15        to the features for which:
16                (i) an irreplaceable historic or
17            archaeological site has been listed under the
18            National Historic Preservation Act (16 U.S.C. 470
19            et seq.) or the Illinois Historic Preservation
20            Act;
21                (ii) a natural landmark has been designated by
22            the National Park Service or the Illinois State
23            Historic Preservation Office; or
24                (iii) a natural area has been designated as a
25            Dedicated Illinois Nature Preserve under the
26            Illinois Natural Areas Preservation Act.

 

 

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1            (G) The site or facility must not be located in an
2        area where it may jeopardize the continued existence
3        of any designated endangered species, result in the
4        destruction or adverse modification of the critical
5        habitat for such species, or cause or contribute to
6        the taking of any endangered or threatened species of
7        plant, fish, or wildlife listed under the Endangered
8        Species Act (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) or the Illinois
9        Endangered Species Protection Act;
10        (20) the portion of a site or facility that is located
11    entirely within a home rule unit having a population of no
12    less than 120,000 and no more than 135,000, according to
13    the 2000 federal census, and that meets all of the
14    following requirements:
15            (i) the portion of the site or facility is used
16        exclusively to perform testing of a thermochemical
17        conversion technology using only woody biomass,
18        collected as landscape waste within the boundaries of
19        the home rule unit, as the hydrocarbon feedstock for
20        the production of synthetic gas in accordance with
21        Section 39.9 of this Act;
22            (ii) the portion of the site or facility is in
23        compliance with all applicable zoning requirements;
24        and
25            (iii) a complete application for a demonstration
26        permit at the portion of the site or facility has been

 

 

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1        submitted to the Agency in accordance with Section
2        39.9 of this Act within one year after July 27, 2010
3        (the effective date of Public Act 96-1314);
4        (21) the portion of a site or facility used to perform
5    limited testing of a gasification conversion technology in
6    accordance with Section 39.8 of this Act and for which a
7    complete permit application has been submitted to the
8    Agency prior to one year from April 9, 2010 (the effective
9    date of Public Act 96-887);
10        (22) the portion of a site or facility that is used to
11    incinerate only pharmaceuticals from residential sources
12    that are collected and transported by law enforcement
13    agencies under Section 17.9A of this Act;
14        (23) the portion of a site or facility:
15            (A) that is used exclusively for the transfer of
16        commingled landscape waste and food scrap held at the
17        site or facility for no longer than 24 hours after
18        their receipt;
19            (B) that is located entirely within a home rule
20        unit having a population of (i) not less than 100,000
21        and not more than 115,000 according to the 2010
22        federal census, (ii) not less than 5,000 and not more
23        than 10,000 according to the 2010 federal census, or
24        (iii) not less than 25,000 and not more than 30,000
25        according to the 2010 federal census or that is
26        located in the unincorporated area of a county having

 

 

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1        a population of not less than 700,000 and not more than
2        705,000 according to the 2010 federal census;
3            (C) that is permitted, by the Agency, prior to
4        January 1, 2002, for the transfer of landscape waste
5        if located in a home rule unit or that is permitted
6        prior to January 1, 2008 if located in an
7        unincorporated area of a county; and
8            (D) for which a permit application is submitted to
9        the Agency to modify an existing permit for the
10        transfer of landscape waste to also include, on a
11        demonstration basis not to exceed 24 months each time
12        a permit is issued, the transfer of commingled
13        landscape waste and food scrap or for which a permit
14        application is submitted to the Agency within 6 months
15        of the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
16        100th General Assembly; and
17        (24) the portion of a municipal solid waste landfill
18    unit:
19            (A) that is located in a county having a
20        population of not less than 55,000 and not more than
21        60,000 according to the 2010 federal census;
22            (B) that is owned by that county;
23            (C) that is permitted, by the Agency, prior to
24        July 10, 2015 (the effective date of Public Act
25        99-12); and
26            (D) for which a permit application is submitted to

 

 

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1        the Agency within 6 months after July 10, 2015 (the
2        effective date of Public Act 99-12) for the disposal
3        of non-hazardous special waste.
4    (b) A new pollution control facility is:
5        (1) a pollution control facility initially permitted
6    for development or construction after July 1, 1981; or
7        (2) the area of expansion beyond the boundary of a
8    currently permitted pollution control facility; or
9        (3) a permitted pollution control facility requesting
10    approval to store, dispose of, transfer or incinerate, for
11    the first time, any special or hazardous waste.
12(Source: P.A. 99-12, eff. 7-10-15; 99-440, eff. 8-21-15;
1399-642, eff. 7-28-16; 100-94, eff. 8-11-17.)
 
14    (415 ILCS 5/21)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1021)
15    Sec. 21. Prohibited acts. No person shall:
16    (a) Cause or allow the open dumping of any waste.
17    (b) Abandon, dump, or deposit any waste upon the public
18highways or other public property, except in a sanitary
19landfill approved by the Agency pursuant to regulations
20adopted by the Board.
21    (c) Abandon any vehicle in violation of the "Abandoned
22Vehicles Amendment to the Illinois Vehicle Code", as enacted
23by the 76th General Assembly.
24    (d) Conduct any waste-storage, waste-treatment, or
25waste-disposal operation:

 

 

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1        (1) without a permit granted by the Agency or in
2    violation of any conditions imposed by such permit,
3    including periodic reports and full access to adequate
4    records and the inspection of facilities, as may be
5    necessary to assure compliance with this Act and with
6    regulations and standards adopted thereunder; provided,
7    however, that, except for municipal solid waste landfill
8    units that receive waste on or after October 9, 1993, and
9    CCR surface impoundments, no permit shall be required for
10    (i) any person conducting a waste-storage,
11    waste-treatment, or waste-disposal operation for wastes
12    generated by such person's own activities which are
13    stored, treated, or disposed within the site where such
14    wastes are generated, or (ii) until one year after the
15    effective date of rules adopted by the Board under
16    subsection (n) of Section 22.38, a facility located in a
17    county with a population over 700,000 as of January 1,
18    2000, operated and located in accordance with Section
19    22.38 of this Act, and used exclusively for the transfer,
20    storage, or treatment of general construction or
21    demolition debris, provided that the facility was
22    receiving construction or demolition debris on August 24,
23    2009 (the effective date of Public Act 96-611) this
24    amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly;
25        (2) in violation of any regulations or standards
26    adopted by the Board under this Act; or

 

 

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1        (3) which receives waste after August 31, 1988, does
2    not have a permit issued by the Agency, and is (i) a
3    landfill used exclusively for the disposal of waste
4    generated at the site, (ii) a surface impoundment
5    receiving special waste not listed in an NPDES permit,
6    (iii) a waste pile in which the total volume of waste is
7    greater than 100 cubic yards or the waste is stored for
8    over one year, or (iv) a land treatment facility receiving
9    special waste generated at the site; without giving notice
10    of the operation to the Agency by January 1, 1989, or 30
11    days after the date on which the operation commences,
12    whichever is later, and every 3 years thereafter. The form
13    for such notification shall be specified by the Agency,
14    and shall be limited to information regarding: the name
15    and address of the location of the operation; the type of
16    operation; the types and amounts of waste stored, treated
17    or disposed of on an annual basis; the remaining capacity
18    of the operation; and the remaining expected life of the
19    operation.
20    Item (3) of this subsection (d) shall not apply to any
21person engaged in agricultural activity who is disposing of a
22substance that constitutes solid waste, if the substance was
23acquired for use by that person on his own property, and the
24substance is disposed of on his own property in accordance
25with regulations or standards adopted by the Board.
26    This subsection (d) shall not apply to hazardous waste.

 

 

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1    (e) Dispose, treat, store or abandon any waste, or
2transport any waste into this State for disposal, treatment,
3storage or abandonment, except at a site or facility which
4meets the requirements of this Act and of regulations and
5standards thereunder.
6    (f) Conduct any hazardous waste-storage, hazardous
7waste-treatment or hazardous waste-disposal operation:
8        (1) without a RCRA permit for the site issued by the
9    Agency under subsection (d) of Section 39 of this Act, or
10    in violation of any condition imposed by such permit,
11    including periodic reports and full access to adequate
12    records and the inspection of facilities, as may be
13    necessary to assure compliance with this Act and with
14    regulations and standards adopted thereunder; or
15        (2) in violation of any regulations or standards
16    adopted by the Board under this Act; or
17        (3) in violation of any RCRA permit filing requirement
18    established under standards adopted by the Board under
19    this Act; or
20        (4) in violation of any order adopted by the Board
21    under this Act.
22    Notwithstanding the above, no RCRA permit shall be
23required under this subsection or subsection (d) of Section 39
24of this Act for any person engaged in agricultural activity
25who is disposing of a substance which has been identified as a
26hazardous waste, and which has been designated by Board

 

 

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1regulations as being subject to this exception, if the
2substance was acquired for use by that person on his own
3property and the substance is disposed of on his own property
4in accordance with regulations or standards adopted by the
5Board.
6    (g) Conduct any hazardous waste-transportation operation:
7        (1) without registering with and obtaining a special
8    waste hauling permit from the Agency in accordance with
9    the regulations adopted by the Board under this Act; or
10        (2) in violation of any regulations or standards
11    adopted by the Board under this Act.
12    (h) Conduct any hazardous waste-recycling or hazardous
13waste-reclamation or hazardous waste-reuse operation in
14violation of any regulations, standards or permit requirements
15adopted by the Board under this Act.
16    (i) Conduct any process or engage in any act which
17produces hazardous waste in violation of any regulations or
18standards adopted by the Board under subsections (a) and (c)
19of Section 22.4 of this Act.
20    (j) Conduct any special waste-transportation waste
21transportation operation in violation of any regulations,
22standards or permit requirements adopted by the Board under
23this Act. However, sludge from a water or sewage treatment
24plant owned and operated by a unit of local government which
25(1) is subject to a sludge management plan approved by the
26Agency or a permit granted by the Agency, and (2) has been

 

 

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1tested and determined not to be a hazardous waste as required
2by applicable State and federal laws and regulations, may be
3transported in this State without a special waste hauling
4permit, and the preparation and carrying of a manifest shall
5not be required for such sludge under the rules of the
6Pollution Control Board. The unit of local government which
7operates the treatment plant producing such sludge shall file
8an annual report with the Agency identifying the volume of
9such sludge transported during the reporting period, the
10hauler of the sludge, and the disposal sites to which it was
11transported. This subsection (j) shall not apply to hazardous
12waste.
13    (k) Fail or refuse to pay any fee imposed under this Act.
14    (l) Locate a hazardous waste disposal site above an active
15or inactive shaft or tunneled mine or within 2 miles of an
16active fault in the earth's crust. In counties of population
17less than 225,000 no hazardous waste disposal site shall be
18located (1) within 1 1/2 miles of the corporate limits as
19defined on June 30, 1978, of any municipality without the
20approval of the governing body of the municipality in an
21official action; or (2) within 1000 feet of an existing
22private well or the existing source of a public water supply
23measured from the boundary of the actual active permitted site
24and excluding existing private wells on the property of the
25permit applicant. The provisions of this subsection do not
26apply to publicly owned publicly-owned sewage works or the

 

 

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1disposal or utilization of sludge from publicly owned
2publicly-owned sewage works.
3    (m) Transfer interest in any land which has been used as a
4hazardous waste disposal site without written notification to
5the Agency of the transfer and to the transferee of the
6conditions imposed by the Agency upon its use under subsection
7(g) of Section 39.
8    (n) Use any land which has been used as a hazardous waste
9disposal site except in compliance with conditions imposed by
10the Agency under subsection (g) of Section 39.
11    (o) Conduct a sanitary landfill operation which is
12required to have a permit under subsection (d) of this
13Section, in a manner which results in any of the following
14conditions:
15        (1) refuse in standing or flowing waters;
16        (2) leachate flows entering waters of the State;
17        (3) leachate flows exiting the landfill confines (as
18    determined by the boundaries established for the landfill
19    by a permit issued by the Agency);
20        (4) open burning of refuse in violation of Section 9
21    of this Act;
22        (5) uncovered refuse remaining from any previous
23    operating day or at the conclusion of any operating day,
24    unless authorized by permit;
25        (6) failure to provide final cover within time limits
26    established by Board regulations;

 

 

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1        (7) acceptance of wastes without necessary permits;
2        (8) scavenging as defined by Board regulations;
3        (9) deposition of refuse in any unpermitted portion of
4    the landfill;
5        (10) acceptance of a special waste without a required
6    manifest;
7        (11) failure to submit reports required by permits or
8    Board regulations;
9        (12) failure to collect and contain litter from the
10    site by the end of each operating day;
11        (13) failure to submit any cost estimate for the site
12    or any performance bond or other security for the site as
13    required by this Act or Board rules.
14    The prohibitions specified in this subsection (o) shall be
15enforceable by the Agency either by administrative citation
16under Section 31.1 of this Act or as otherwise provided by this
17Act. The specific prohibitions in this subsection do not limit
18the power of the Board to establish regulations or standards
19applicable to sanitary landfills.
20    (p) In violation of subdivision (a) of this Section, cause
21or allow the open dumping of any waste in a manner which
22results in any of the following occurrences at the dump site:
23        (1) litter;
24        (2) scavenging;
25        (3) open burning;
26        (4) deposition of waste in standing or flowing waters;

 

 

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1        (5) proliferation of disease vectors;
2        (6) standing or flowing liquid discharge from the dump
3    site;
4        (7) deposition of:
5            (i) general construction or demolition debris as
6        defined in Section 3.160(a) of this Act; or
7            (ii) clean construction or demolition debris as
8        defined in Section 3.160(b) of this Act.
9    The prohibitions specified in this subsection (p) shall be
10enforceable by the Agency either by administrative citation
11under Section 31.1 of this Act or as otherwise provided by this
12Act. The specific prohibitions in this subsection do not limit
13the power of the Board to establish regulations or standards
14applicable to open dumping.
15    (q) Conduct a landscape waste composting operation without
16an Agency permit, provided, however, that no permit shall be
17required for any person:
18        (1) conducting a landscape waste composting operation
19    for landscape wastes generated by such person's own
20    activities which are stored, treated, or disposed of
21    within the site where such wastes are generated; or
22        (1.5) conducting a landscape waste composting
23    operation that (i) has no more than 25 cubic yards of
24    landscape waste, composting additives, composting
25    material, or end-product compost on-site at any one time
26    and (ii) is not engaging in commercial activity; or

 

 

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1        (2) applying landscape waste or composted landscape
2    waste at agronomic rates; or
3        (2.5) operating a landscape waste composting facility
4    at a site having 10 or more occupied non-farm residences
5    within 1/2 mile of its boundaries, if the facility meets
6    all of the following criteria:
7            (A) the composting facility is operated by the
8        farmer on property on which the composting material is
9        utilized, and the composting facility constitutes no
10        more than 2% of the site's total acreage;
11            (A-5) any composting additives that the composting
12        facility accepts and uses at the facility are
13        necessary to provide proper conditions for composting
14        and do not exceed 10% of the total composting material
15        at the facility at any one time;
16            (B) the property on which the composting facility
17        is located, and any associated property on which the
18        compost is used, is principally and diligently devoted
19        to the production of agricultural crops and is not
20        owned, leased, or otherwise controlled by any waste
21        hauler or generator of nonagricultural compost
22        materials, and the operator of the composting facility
23        is not an employee, partner, shareholder, or in any
24        way connected with or controlled by any such waste
25        hauler or generator;
26            (C) all compost generated by the composting

 

 

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1        facility is applied at agronomic rates and used as
2        mulch, fertilizer, or soil conditioner on land
3        actually farmed by the person operating the composting
4        facility, and the finished compost is not stored at
5        the composting site for a period longer than 18 months
6        prior to its application as mulch, fertilizer, or soil
7        conditioner;
8            (D) no fee is charged for the acceptance of
9        materials to be composted at the facility; and
10            (E) the owner or operator, by January 1, 2014 (or
11        the January 1 following commencement of operation,
12        whichever is later) and January 1 of each year
13        thereafter, registers the site with the Agency, (ii)
14        reports to the Agency on the volume of composting
15        material received and used at the site; (iii)
16        certifies to the Agency that the site complies with
17        the requirements set forth in subparagraphs (A),
18        (A-5), (B), (C), and (D) of this paragraph (2.5); and
19        (iv) certifies to the Agency that all composting
20        material was placed more than 200 feet from the
21        nearest potable water supply well, was placed outside
22        the boundary of the 10-year floodplain or on a part of
23        the site that is floodproofed, was placed at least 1/4
24        mile from the nearest residence (other than a
25        residence located on the same property as the
26        facility) or a lesser distance from the nearest

 

 

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1        residence (other than a residence located on the same
2        property as the facility) if the municipality in which
3        the facility is located has by ordinance approved a
4        lesser distance than 1/4 mile, and was placed more
5        than 5 feet above the water table; any ordinance
6        approving a residential setback of less than 1/4 mile
7        that is used to meet the requirements of this
8        subparagraph (E) of paragraph (2.5) of this subsection
9        must specifically reference this paragraph; or
10        (3) operating a landscape waste composting facility on
11    a farm, if the facility meets all of the following
12    criteria:
13            (A) the composting facility is operated by the
14        farmer on property on which the composting material is
15        utilized, and the composting facility constitutes no
16        more than 2% of the property's total acreage, except
17        that the Board may allow a higher percentage for
18        individual sites where the owner or operator has
19        demonstrated to the Board that the site's soil
20        characteristics or crop needs require a higher rate;
21            (A-1) the composting facility accepts from other
22        agricultural operations for composting with landscape
23        waste no materials other than uncontaminated and
24        source-separated (i) crop residue and other
25        agricultural plant residue generated from the
26        production and harvesting of crops and other customary

 

 

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1        farm practices, including, but not limited to, stalks,
2        leaves, seed pods, husks, bagasse, and roots and (ii)
3        plant-derived animal bedding, such as straw or
4        sawdust, that is free of manure and was not made from
5        painted or treated wood;
6            (A-2) any composting additives that the composting
7        facility accepts and uses at the facility are
8        necessary to provide proper conditions for composting
9        and do not exceed 10% of the total composting material
10        at the facility at any one time;
11            (B) the property on which the composting facility
12        is located, and any associated property on which the
13        compost is used, is principally and diligently devoted
14        to the production of agricultural crops and is not
15        owned, leased or otherwise controlled by any waste
16        hauler or generator of nonagricultural compost
17        materials, and the operator of the composting facility
18        is not an employee, partner, shareholder, or in any
19        way connected with or controlled by any such waste
20        hauler or generator;
21            (C) all compost generated by the composting
22        facility is applied at agronomic rates and used as
23        mulch, fertilizer or soil conditioner on land actually
24        farmed by the person operating the composting
25        facility, and the finished compost is not stored at
26        the composting site for a period longer than 18 months

 

 

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1        prior to its application as mulch, fertilizer, or soil
2        conditioner;
3            (D) the owner or operator, by January 1 of each
4        year, (i) registers the site with the Agency, (ii)
5        reports to the Agency on the volume of composting
6        material received and used at the site, (iii)
7        certifies to the Agency that the site complies with
8        the requirements set forth in subparagraphs (A),
9        (A-1), (A-2), (B), and (C) of this paragraph (q)(3),
10        and (iv) certifies to the Agency that all composting
11        material:
12                (I) was placed more than 200 feet from the
13            nearest potable water supply well;
14                (II) was placed outside the boundary of the
15            10-year floodplain or on a part of the site that is
16            floodproofed;
17                (III) was placed either (aa) at least 1/4 mile
18            from the nearest residence (other than a residence
19            located on the same property as the facility) and
20            there are not more than 10 occupied non-farm
21            residences within 1/2 mile of the boundaries of
22            the site on the date of application or (bb) a
23            lesser distance from the nearest residence (other
24            than a residence located on the same property as
25            the facility) provided that the municipality or
26            county in which the facility is located has by

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 31 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1            ordinance approved a lesser distance than 1/4 mile
2            and there are not more than 10 occupied non-farm
3            residences within 1/2 mile of the boundaries of
4            the site on the date of application; and
5                (IV) was placed more than 5 feet above the
6            water table.
7            Any ordinance approving a residential setback of
8        less than 1/4 mile that is used to meet the
9        requirements of this subparagraph (D) must
10        specifically reference this subparagraph.
11    For the purposes of this subsection (q), "agronomic rates"
12means the application of not more than 20 tons per acre per
13year, except that the Board may allow a higher rate for
14individual sites where the owner or operator has demonstrated
15to the Board that the site's soil characteristics or crop
16needs require a higher rate.
17    (r) Cause or allow the storage or disposal of coal
18combustion waste unless:
19        (1) such waste is stored or disposed of at a site or
20    facility for which a permit has been obtained or is not
21    otherwise required under subsection (d) of this Section;
22    or
23        (2) such waste is stored or disposed of as a part of
24    the design and reclamation of a site or facility which is
25    an abandoned mine site in accordance with the Abandoned
26    Mined Lands and Water Reclamation Act; or

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 32 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1        (3) such waste is stored or disposed of at a site or
2    facility which is operating under NPDES and Subtitle D
3    permits issued by the Agency pursuant to regulations
4    adopted by the Board for mine-related water pollution and
5    permits issued pursuant to the federal Federal Surface
6    Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977 (P.L. 95-87) or
7    the rules and regulations thereunder or any law or rule or
8    regulation adopted by the State of Illinois pursuant
9    thereto, and the owner or operator of the facility agrees
10    to accept the waste; and either:
11            (i) such waste is stored or disposed of in
12        accordance with requirements applicable to refuse
13        disposal under regulations adopted by the Board for
14        mine-related water pollution and pursuant to NPDES and
15        Subtitle D permits issued by the Agency under such
16        regulations; or
17            (ii) the owner or operator of the facility
18        demonstrates all of the following to the Agency, and
19        the facility is operated in accordance with the
20        demonstration as approved by the Agency: (1) the
21        disposal area will be covered in a manner that will
22        support continuous vegetation, (2) the facility will
23        be adequately protected from wind and water erosion,
24        (3) the pH will be maintained so as to prevent
25        excessive leaching of metal ions, and (4) adequate
26        containment or other measures will be provided to

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 33 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1        protect surface water and groundwater from
2        contamination at levels prohibited by this Act, the
3        Illinois Groundwater Protection Act, or regulations
4        adopted pursuant thereto.
5    Notwithstanding any other provision of this Title, the
6disposal of coal combustion waste pursuant to item (2) or (3)
7of this subdivision (r) shall be exempt from the other
8provisions of this Title V, and notwithstanding the provisions
9of Title X of this Act, the Agency is authorized to grant
10experimental permits which include provision for the disposal
11of wastes from the combustion of coal and other materials
12pursuant to items (2) and (3) of this subdivision (r).
13    (s) After April 1, 1989, offer for transportation,
14transport, deliver, receive or accept special waste for which
15a manifest is required, unless the manifest indicates that the
16fee required under Section 22.8 of this Act has been paid.
17    (t) Cause or allow a lateral expansion of a municipal
18solid waste landfill unit on or after October 9, 1993, without
19a permit modification, granted by the Agency, that authorizes
20the lateral expansion.
21    (u) Conduct any vegetable by-product treatment, storage,
22disposal or transportation operation in violation of any
23regulation, standards or permit requirements adopted by the
24Board under this Act. However, no permit shall be required
25under this Title V for the land application of vegetable
26by-products conducted pursuant to Agency permit issued under

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 34 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1Title III of this Act to the generator of the vegetable
2by-products. In addition, vegetable by-products may be
3transported in this State without a special waste hauling
4permit, and without the preparation and carrying of a
5manifest.
6    (v) (Blank).
7    (w) Conduct any generation, transportation, or recycling
8of construction or demolition debris, clean or general, or
9uncontaminated soil generated during construction, remodeling,
10repair, and demolition of utilities, structures, and roads
11that is not commingled with any waste, without the maintenance
12of documentation identifying the hauler, generator, place of
13origin of the debris or soil, the weight or volume of the
14debris or soil, and the location, owner, and operator of the
15facility where the debris or soil was transferred, disposed,
16recycled, or treated. This documentation must be maintained by
17the generator, transporter, or recycler for 3 years. This
18subsection (w) shall not apply to (1) a permitted pollution
19control facility that transfers or accepts construction or
20demolition debris, clean or general, or uncontaminated soil
21for final disposal, recycling, or treatment, (2) a public
22utility (as that term is defined in the Public Utilities Act)
23or a municipal utility, (3) the Illinois Department of
24Transportation, or (4) a municipality or a county highway
25department, with the exception of any municipality or county
26highway department located within a county having a population

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 35 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1of over 3,000,000 inhabitants or located in a county that is
2contiguous to a county having a population of over 3,000,000
3inhabitants; but it shall apply to an entity that contracts
4with a public utility, a municipal utility, the Illinois
5Department of Transportation, or a municipality or a county
6highway department. The terms "generation" and "recycling", as
7used in this subsection, do not apply to clean construction or
8demolition debris when (i) used as fill material below grade
9outside of a setback zone if covered by sufficient
10uncontaminated soil to support vegetation within 30 days of
11the completion of filling or if covered by a road or structure,
12(ii) solely broken concrete without protruding metal bars is
13used for erosion control, or (iii) milled asphalt or crushed
14concrete is used as aggregate in construction of the shoulder
15of a roadway. The terms "generation" and "recycling", as used
16in this subsection, do not apply to uncontaminated soil that
17is not commingled with any waste when (i) used as fill material
18below grade or contoured to grade, or (ii) used at the site of
19generation.
20(Source: P.A. 100-103, eff. 8-11-17; 101-171, eff. 7-30-19;
21revised 9-12-19.)
 
22    (415 ILCS 5/22.15)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.15)
23    Sec. 22.15. Solid Waste Management Fund; fees.
24    (a) There is hereby created within the State Treasury a
25special fund to be known as the Solid Waste Management Fund, to

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 36 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1be constituted from the fees collected by the State pursuant
2to this Section, from repayments of loans made from the Fund
3for solid waste projects, from registration fees collected
4pursuant to the Consumer Electronics Recycling Act, and from
5amounts transferred into the Fund pursuant to Public Act
6100-433. Moneys received by the Department of Commerce and
7Economic Opportunity in repayment of loans made pursuant to
8the Illinois Solid Waste Management Act shall be deposited
9into the General Revenue Fund.
10    (b) The Agency shall assess and collect a fee in the amount
11set forth herein from the owner or operator of each sanitary
12landfill permitted or required to be permitted by the Agency
13to dispose of solid waste if the sanitary landfill is located
14off the site where such waste was produced and if such sanitary
15landfill is owned, controlled, and operated by a person other
16than the generator of such waste. The Agency shall deposit all
17fees collected into the Solid Waste Management Fund. If a site
18is contiguous to one or more landfills owned or operated by the
19same person, the volumes permanently disposed of by each
20landfill shall be combined for purposes of determining the fee
21under this subsection. Beginning on July 1, 2018, and on the
22first day of each month thereafter during fiscal years 2019
23through 2021, the State Comptroller shall direct and State
24Treasurer shall transfer an amount equal to 1/12 of $5,000,000
25per fiscal year from the Solid Waste Management Fund to the
26General Revenue Fund.

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 37 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1        (1) If more than 150,000 cubic yards of non-hazardous
2    solid waste is permanently disposed of at a site in a
3    calendar year, the owner or operator shall either pay a
4    fee of 95 cents per cubic yard or, alternatively, the
5    owner or operator may weigh the quantity of the solid
6    waste permanently disposed of with a device for which
7    certification has been obtained under the Weights and
8    Measures Act and pay a fee of $2.00 per ton of solid waste
9    permanently disposed of. In no case shall the fee
10    collected or paid by the owner or operator under this
11    paragraph exceed $1.55 per cubic yard or $3.27 per ton.
12        (2) If more than 100,000 cubic yards but not more than
13    150,000 cubic yards of non-hazardous waste is permanently
14    disposed of at a site in a calendar year, the owner or
15    operator shall pay a fee of $52,630.
16        (3) If more than 50,000 cubic yards but not more than
17    100,000 cubic yards of non-hazardous solid waste is
18    permanently disposed of at a site in a calendar year, the
19    owner or operator shall pay a fee of $23,790.
20        (4) If more than 10,000 cubic yards but not more than
21    50,000 cubic yards of non-hazardous solid waste is
22    permanently disposed of at a site in a calendar year, the
23    owner or operator shall pay a fee of $7,260.
24        (5) If not more than 10,000 cubic yards of
25    non-hazardous solid waste is permanently disposed of at a
26    site in a calendar year, the owner or operator shall pay a

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 38 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1    fee of $1050.
2    (c) (Blank).
3    (d) The Agency shall establish rules relating to the
4collection of the fees authorized by this Section. Such rules
5shall include, but not be limited to:
6        (1) necessary records identifying the quantities of
7    solid waste received or disposed;
8        (2) the form and submission of reports to accompany
9    the payment of fees to the Agency;
10        (3) the time and manner of payment of fees to the
11    Agency, which payments shall not be more often than
12    quarterly; and
13        (4) procedures setting forth criteria establishing
14    when an owner or operator may measure by weight or volume
15    during any given quarter or other fee payment period.
16    (e) Pursuant to appropriation, all monies in the Solid
17Waste Management Fund shall be used by the Agency and the
18Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity for the
19purposes set forth in this Section and in the Illinois Solid
20Waste Management Act, including for the costs of fee
21collection and administration, and for the administration of
22(1) the Consumer Electronics Recycling Act and (2) until
23January 1, 2020, the Electronic Products Recycling and Reuse
24Act.
25    (f) The Agency is authorized to enter into such agreements
26and to promulgate such rules as are necessary to carry out its

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 39 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1duties under this Section and the Illinois Solid Waste
2Management Act.
3    (g) On the first day of January, April, July, and October
4of each year, beginning on July 1, 1996, the State Comptroller
5and Treasurer shall transfer $500,000 from the Solid Waste
6Management Fund to the Hazardous Waste Fund. Moneys
7transferred under this subsection (g) shall be used only for
8the purposes set forth in item (1) of subsection (d) of Section
922.2.
10    (h) The Agency is authorized to provide financial
11assistance to units of local government for the performance of
12inspecting, investigating and enforcement activities pursuant
13to Section 4(r) at nonhazardous solid waste disposal sites.
14    (i) The Agency is authorized to conduct household waste
15collection and disposal programs.
16    (j) A unit of local government, as defined in the Local
17Solid Waste Disposal Act, in which a solid waste disposal
18facility is located may establish a fee, tax, or surcharge
19with regard to the permanent disposal of solid waste. All
20fees, taxes, and surcharges collected under this subsection
21shall be utilized for solid waste management purposes,
22including long-term monitoring and maintenance of landfills,
23planning, implementation, inspection, enforcement and other
24activities consistent with the Solid Waste Management Act and
25the Local Solid Waste Disposal Act, or for any other
26environment-related purpose, including but not limited to an

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 40 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1environment-related public works project, but not for the
2construction of a new pollution control facility other than a
3household hazardous waste facility. However, the total fee,
4tax or surcharge imposed by all units of local government
5under this subsection (j) upon the solid waste disposal
6facility shall not exceed:
7        (1) 60¢ per cubic yard if more than 150,000 cubic
8    yards of non-hazardous solid waste is permanently disposed
9    of at the site in a calendar year, unless the owner or
10    operator weighs the quantity of the solid waste received
11    with a device for which certification has been obtained
12    under the Weights and Measures Act, in which case the fee
13    shall not exceed $1.27 per ton of solid waste permanently
14    disposed of.
15        (2) $33,350 if more than 100,000 cubic yards, but not
16    more than 150,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous waste is
17    permanently disposed of at the site in a calendar year.
18        (3) $15,500 if more than 50,000 cubic yards, but not
19    more than 100,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous solid
20    waste is permanently disposed of at the site in a calendar
21    year.
22        (4) $4,650 if more than 10,000 cubic yards, but not
23    more than 50,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous solid waste
24    is permanently disposed of at the site in a calendar year.
25        (5) $650 if not more than 10,000 cubic yards of
26    non-hazardous solid waste is permanently disposed of at

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 41 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1    the site in a calendar year.
2    The corporate authorities of the unit of local government
3may use proceeds from the fee, tax, or surcharge to reimburse a
4highway commissioner whose road district lies wholly or
5partially within the corporate limits of the unit of local
6government for expenses incurred in the removal of
7nonhazardous, nonfluid municipal waste that has been dumped on
8public property in violation of a State law or local
9ordinance.
10    For the disposal of solid waste from general construction
11or demolition debris recovery facilities as defined in
12subsection (a-1) of Section 3.160, the total fee, tax, or
13surcharge imposed by all units of local government under this
14subsection (j) upon the solid waste disposal facility shall
15not exceed 50% of the applicable amount set forth above. A unit
16of local government, as defined in the Local Solid Waste
17Disposal Act, in which a general construction or demolition
18debris recovery facility is located may establish a fee, tax,
19or surcharge on the general construction or demolition debris
20recovery facility with regard to the permanent disposal of
21solid waste by the general construction or demolition debris
22recovery facility at a solid waste disposal facility, provided
23that such fee, tax, or surcharge shall not exceed 50% of the
24applicable amount set forth above, based on the total amount
25of solid waste transported from the general construction or
26demolition debris recovery facility for disposal at solid

 

 

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1waste disposal facilities, and the unit of local government
2and fee shall be subject to all other requirements of this
3subsection (j).
4    A county or Municipal Joint Action Agency that imposes a
5fee, tax, or surcharge under this subsection may use the
6proceeds thereof to reimburse a municipality that lies wholly
7or partially within its boundaries for expenses incurred in
8the removal of nonhazardous, nonfluid municipal waste that has
9been dumped on public property in violation of a State law or
10local ordinance.
11    If the fees are to be used to conduct a local sanitary
12landfill inspection or enforcement program, the unit of local
13government must enter into a written delegation agreement with
14the Agency pursuant to subsection (r) of Section 4. The unit of
15local government and the Agency shall enter into such a
16written delegation agreement within 60 days after the
17establishment of such fees. At least annually, the Agency
18shall conduct an audit of the expenditures made by units of
19local government from the funds granted by the Agency to the
20units of local government for purposes of local sanitary
21landfill inspection and enforcement programs, to ensure that
22the funds have been expended for the prescribed purposes under
23the grant.
24    The fees, taxes or surcharges collected under this
25subsection (j) shall be placed by the unit of local government
26in a separate fund, and the interest received on the moneys in

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 43 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1the fund shall be credited to the fund. The monies in the fund
2may be accumulated over a period of years to be expended in
3accordance with this subsection.
4    A unit of local government, as defined in the Local Solid
5Waste Disposal Act, shall prepare and post on its website
6distribute to the Agency, in April of each year, a report that
7details spending plans for monies collected in accordance with
8this subsection. The report will at a minimum include the
9following:
10        (1) The total monies collected pursuant to this
11    subsection.
12        (2) The most current balance of monies collected
13    pursuant to this subsection.
14        (3) An itemized accounting of all monies expended for
15    the previous year pursuant to this subsection.
16        (4) An estimation of monies to be collected for the
17    following 3 years pursuant to this subsection.
18        (5) A narrative detailing the general direction and
19    scope of future expenditures for one, 2 and 3 years.
20    The exemptions granted under Sections 22.16 and 22.16a,
21and under subsection (k) of this Section, shall be applicable
22to any fee, tax or surcharge imposed under this subsection
23(j); except that the fee, tax or surcharge authorized to be
24imposed under this subsection (j) may be made applicable by a
25unit of local government to the permanent disposal of solid
26waste after December 31, 1986, under any contract lawfully

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 44 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1executed before June 1, 1986 under which more than 150,000
2cubic yards (or 50,000 tons) of solid waste is to be
3permanently disposed of, even though the waste is exempt from
4the fee imposed by the State under subsection (b) of this
5Section pursuant to an exemption granted under Section 22.16.
6    (k) In accordance with the findings and purposes of the
7Illinois Solid Waste Management Act, beginning January 1, 1989
8the fee under subsection (b) and the fee, tax or surcharge
9under subsection (j) shall not apply to:
10        (1) waste which is hazardous waste;
11        (2) waste which is pollution control waste;
12        (3) waste from recycling, reclamation or reuse
13    processes which have been approved by the Agency as being
14    designed to remove any contaminant from wastes so as to
15    render such wastes reusable, provided that the process
16    renders at least 50% of the waste reusable; the exemption
17    set forth in this paragraph (3) of this subsection (k)
18    shall not apply to general construction or demolition
19    debris recovery facilities as defined in subsection (a-1)
20    of Section 3.160;
21        (4) non-hazardous solid waste that is received at a
22    sanitary landfill and composted or recycled through a
23    process permitted by the Agency; or
24        (5) any landfill which is permitted by the Agency to
25    receive only demolition or construction debris or
26    landscape waste.

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 45 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1(Source: P.A. 100-103, eff. 8-11-17; 100-433, eff. 8-25-17;
2100-587, eff. 6-4-18; 100-621, eff. 7-20-18; 100-863, eff.
38-14-18; 101-10, eff. 6-5-19; 101-636, eff. 6-10-20.)
 
4    (415 ILCS 5/22.38)
5    Sec. 22.38. General construction or demolition debris
6recovery facilities Facilities accepting exclusively general
7construction or demolition debris for transfer, storage, or
8treatment.
9    (a) General construction or demolition debris recovery
10facilities Facilities accepting exclusively general
11construction or demolition debris for transfer, storage, or
12treatment shall be subject to local zoning, ordinance, and
13land use requirements. General construction or demolition
14debris recovery Those facilities shall be located in
15accordance with local zoning requirements or, in the absence
16of local zoning requirements, shall be located so that no part
17of the facility boundary is closer than 1,320 feet from the
18nearest property zoned for primarily residential use.
19    (b) An owner or operator of a general construction or
20demolition debris recovery facility accepting exclusively
21general construction or demolition debris for transfer,
22storage, or treatment shall:
23        (0.5) Ensure that no less than 40% of the total
24    general construction or demolition debris received at the
25    facility on a rolling 12-month average basis is recyclable

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 46 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1    general construction or demolition debris as defined in
2    subsection (c). The percentage in this paragraph (0.5) of
3    subsection (b) shall be calculated by weight.
4        (1) Within 48 hours after receipt of the general
5    construction or demolition debris at the facility, sort
6    the general construction or demolition debris to separate
7    the (i) recyclable general construction or demolition
8    debris and (ii) wood being , recovered wood that is
9    processed for use as fuel from all other general
10    construction or demolition debris , and general
11    construction or demolition debris that is processed for
12    use at a landfill from the non-recyclable general
13    construction or demolition debris that is to be disposed
14    of or discarded.
15        (2) Transport off site for disposal, in accordance
16    with all applicable federal, State, and local
17    requirements, within 72 hours after its receipt at the
18    facility, all non-usable or non-recyclable general
19    construction or demolition debris that is not (i)
20    recyclable general construction or demolition debris or
21    (ii) wood being , recovered wood that is processed for use
22    as fuel, or general construction or demolition debris that
23    is processed for use at a landfill.
24        (3) Use best management practices to identify and
25    remove all drywall and other wallboard containing gypsum
26    from the (i) recyclable general construction or demolition

 

 

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1    debris and (ii) wood being recovered for use as fuel,
2    prior to any mechanical sorting, separating, grinding, or
3    other processing. Limit the percentage of incoming
4    non-recyclable general construction or demolition debris
5    to 25% or less of the total incoming general construction
6    or demolition debris, so that 75% or more of the general
7    construction or demolition debris accepted, as calculated
8    monthly on a rolling 12-month average, consists of
9    recyclable general construction or demolition debris,
10    recovered wood that is processed for use as fuel, or
11    general construction or demolition debris that is
12    processed for use at a landfill except that general
13    construction or demolition debris processed for use at a
14    landfill shall not exceed 35% of the general construction
15    or demolition debris accepted on a rolling 12-month
16    average basis. The percentages in this paragraph (3) of
17    subsection (b) shall be calculated by weight, using scales
18    located at the facility that are certified under the
19    Weights and Measures Act.
20        (4) Within 45 calendar days after receipt, transport
21    off-site all putrescible recyclable general construction
22    or demolition debris and all wood recovered for use as
23    fuel. Within 6 months after its receipt at the facility,
24    transport:
25            (A) all non-putrescible recyclable general
26        construction or demolition debris for recycling or

 

 

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1        disposal; and
2            (B) all non-putrescible general construction or
3        demolition debris that is processed for use at a
4        landfill to a MSWLF unit for use or disposal.
5        (5) Within 6 months after receipt, transport off-site
6    all non-putrescible recyclable general construction or
7    demolition debris. 45 days after its receipt at the
8    facility, transport:
9            (A) all putrescible or combustible recyclable
10        general construction or demolition debris (excluding
11        recovered wood that is processed for use as fuel) for
12        recycling or disposal;
13            (B) all recovered wood that is processed for use
14        as fuel to an intermediate processing facility for
15        sizing, to a combustion facility for use as fuel, or to
16        a disposal facility; and
17            (C) all putrescible general construction or
18        demolition debris that is processed for use at a
19        landfill to a MSWLF unit for use or disposal.
20        (6) Employ tagging and recordkeeping procedures to, at
21    a minimum, (i) demonstrate compliance with this Section,
22    and (ii) identify the type, amount, source, and
23    transporter of material accepted by the facility, and
24    (iii) identify the type, amount, destination, and
25    transporter of material transported from the facility.
26    Records shall be maintained in a form and format

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 49 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1    prescribed by the Agency, and beginning October 1, 2021,
2    no later than every October 1, January 1, April 1, and July
3    1 thereafter the records shall be summarized in quarterly
4    reports submitted to the Agency in a form and format
5    prescribed by the Agency.
6        (7) Control odor, noise, combustion of materials,
7    disease vectors, dust, and litter.
8        (8) Control, manage, and dispose of any storm water
9    runoff and leachate generated at the facility in
10    accordance with applicable federal, State, and local
11    requirements.
12        (9) Control access to the facility.
13        (10) Comply with all applicable federal, State, or
14    local requirements for the handling, storage,
15    transportation, or disposal of asbestos-containing
16    material or other material accepted at the facility that
17    is not general construction or demolition debris.
18        (11) For an owner or operator that first received
19    general construction or demolition debris prior to August
20    24, 2009, submit to the Agency, no later than 6 months
21    after the effective date of rules adopted by the Board
22    under subsection (n), a permit application for a general
23    construction or demolition debris recovery facility. Prior
24    to August 24, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act
25    96-611), submit to the Agency at least 30 days prior to the
26    initial acceptance of general construction or demolition

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 50 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1    debris at the facility, on forms provided by the Agency,
2    the following information:
3            (A) the name, address, and telephone number of
4        both the facility owner and operator;
5            (B) the street address and location of the
6        facility;
7            (C) a description of facility operations;
8            (D) a description of the tagging and recordkeeping
9        procedures the facility will employ to (i) demonstrate
10        compliance with this Section and (ii) identify the
11        source and transporter of any material accepted by the
12        facility;
13            (E) the name and location of the disposal sites to
14        be used for the disposal of any general construction
15        or demolition debris received at the facility that
16        must be disposed of;
17            (F) the name and location of an individual,
18        facility, or business to which recyclable materials
19        will be transported;
20            (G) the name and location of intermediate
21        processing facilities or combustion facilities to
22        which recovered wood that is processed for use as fuel
23        will be transported; and
24            (H) other information as specified on the form
25        provided by the Agency.
26        (12) On or after August 24, 2009 (the effective date

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 51 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1    of Public Act 96-611), obtain a permit for the operation
2    of a general construction or demolition debris recovery
3    facility issued by the Agency prior to the initial
4    acceptance of general construction or demolition debris at
5    the facility.
6        When any of the information contained or processes
7    described in the initial notification form submitted to
8    the Agency under paragraph (11) of subsection (b) of this
9    Section changes, the owner and operator shall submit an
10    updated form within 14 days of the change.
11    (c) For purposes of this Section, the term "recyclable
12general construction or demolition debris" means general
13construction or demolition debris that is being reclaimed from
14the general construction or demolition debris waste stream and
15(i) is has been rendered reusable and is reused or (ii) that
16would otherwise be disposed of or discarded but is collected,
17separated, or processed and returned to the economic
18mainstream in the form of raw materials or products.
19"Recyclable general construction or demolition debris" does
20not include (i) general construction or demolition debris that
21is (i) recovered processed for use as fuel or that is
22otherwise , incinerated or , burned, (ii) buried, or otherwise
23used as fill material, including, but not limited to, the use
24of any clean construction or demolition debris fraction of
25general construction or demolition debris as fill material
26under subsection (b) of Section 3.160 or at a clean

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 52 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1construction or demolition debris fill operation under Section
222.51, or (iii) disposed of at a landfill (ii) general
3construction or demolition debris that is processed for use at
4a landfill.
5    (d) (Blank). For purposes of this Section, "treatment"
6means processing designed to alter the physical nature of the
7general construction or demolition debris, including but not
8limited to size reduction, crushing, grinding, or
9homogenization, but does not include processing designed to
10change the chemical nature of the general construction or
11demolition debris.
12    (e) For purposes of this Section, wood recovered for use
13as fuel is "recovered wood that is processed for use as fuel"
14means wood that is recovered has been salvaged from the
15general construction or demolition debris waste stream and
16processed for use as fuel, as authorized by the applicable
17state or federal environmental regulatory authority, and
18supplied only to intermediate processing facilities for
19sizing, or to combustion facilities for use as fuel, that have
20obtained all necessary waste management and air permits for
21handling and combustion of the fuel.
22    (f) (Blank). For purposes of this Section, "non-recyclable
23general construction or demolition debris" does not include
24"recovered wood that is processed for use as fuel" or general
25construction or demolition debris that is processed for use at
26a landfill.

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 53 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1    (g) (Blank). Recyclable general construction or demolition
2debris, recovered wood that is processed for use as fuel, and
3general construction or demolition debris that is processed
4for use at a landfill shall not be considered as meeting the
575% diversion requirement for purposes of subdivision (b)(3)
6of this Section if sent for disposal at the end of the
7applicable retention period.
8    (h) (Blank). For the purposes of this Section, "general
9construction or demolition debris that is processed for use at
10a landfill" means general construction or demolition debris
11that is processed for use at a MSWLF unit as alternative daily
12cover, road building material, or drainage structure building
13material in accordance with the MSWLF unit's waste disposal
14permit issued by the Agency under this Act.
15    (i) (Blank). For purposes of the 75% diversion requirement
16under subdivision (b)(3) of this Section, owners and operators
17of facilities accepting exclusively general construction or
18demolition debris for transfer, storage, or treatment may
19multiply by 2 the amount of accepted asphalt roofing shingles
20that are transferred to a facility for recycling in accordance
21with a beneficial use determination issued under Section 22.54
22of this Act. The owner or operator of the facility accepting
23exclusively general construction or demolition debris for
24transfer, storage, or treatment must maintain receipts from
25the shingle recycling facility that document the amounts of
26asphalt roofing shingles transferred for recycling in

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 54 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1accordance with the beneficial use determination. All receipts
2must be maintained for a minimum of 3 years and must be made
3available to the Agency for inspection and copying during
4normal business hours.
5    (j) No person shall cause or allow the acceptance of any
6waste at a general construction or demolition debris recovery
7facility, other than general construction or demolition
8debris.
9    (k) No person shall cause or allow the deposit or other
10placement of any general construction or demolition debris
11that is received at a general construction or demolition
12debris recovery facility, including any clean construction or
13demolition debris fraction, into or on any land or water.
14However, any clean construction or demolition debris fraction
15may be used as fill or road construction material at a clean
16construction or demolition debris fill operation under Section
1722.51 and any rules or regulations adopted thereunder if the
18clean construction or demolition debris is separated and
19managed separately from other general construction or
20demolition debris and otherwise meets the requirements
21applicable to clean construction or demolition debris at a
22clean construction or demolition debris fill operation.
23    (l) Beginning one year after the effective date of rules
24adopted by the Board under subsection (n), no person shall own
25or operate a general construction or demolition debris
26recovery facility without a permit issued by the Agency.

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 55 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1    (m) In addition to any other requirements of this Act, no
2person shall, at a general construction or demolition debris
3recovery facility, cause or allow the storage or treatment of
4general construction or demolition debris in violation of this
5Act, any regulations or standards adopted under this Act, or
6any condition of a permit issued under this Act.
7    (n) No later than one year after the effective date of this
8amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, the Agency shall
9propose to the Board, and no later than one year after receipt
10of the Agency's proposal, the Board shall adopt, rules for the
11permitting of general construction or demolition debris
12recovery facilities. Such rules shall include, but not be
13limited to: requirements for material receipt, handling,
14storage, and transfer; improvements to best management
15practices for identifying, testing for, and removing drywall
16containing gypsum; recordkeeping; reporting; limiting or
17prohibiting sulfur in wallboard used or disposed of at
18landfills; and requirements for the separation and separate
19management of any clean construction or demolition debris that
20will be transported to a clean construction or demolition
21debris fill operation.
22(Source: P.A. 96-235, eff. 8-11-09; 96-611, eff. 8-24-09;
2396-1000, eff. 7-2-10; 97-230, eff. 7-28-11; 97-314, eff.
241-1-12; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12.)
 
25    (415 ILCS 5/22.44)

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 56 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1    Sec. 22.44. Subtitle D management fees.
2    (a) There is created within the State treasury a special
3fund to be known as the "Subtitle D Management Fund"
4constituted from the fees collected by the State under this
5Section.
6    (b) The Agency shall assess and collect a fee in the amount
7set forth in this subsection from the owner or operator of each
8sanitary landfill permitted or required to be permitted by the
9Agency to dispose of solid waste if the sanitary landfill is
10located off the site where the waste was produced and if the
11sanitary landfill is owned, controlled, and operated by a
12person other than the generator of the waste. The Agency shall
13deposit all fees collected under this subsection into the
14Subtitle D Management Fund. If a site is contiguous to one or
15more landfills owned or operated by the same person, the
16volumes permanently disposed of by each landfill shall be
17combined for purposes of determining the fee under this
18subsection.
19        (1) If more than 150,000 cubic yards of non-hazardous
20    solid waste is permanently disposed of at a site in a
21    calendar year, the owner or operator shall either pay a
22    fee of 10.1 cents per cubic yard or, alternatively, the
23    owner or operator may weigh the quantity of the solid
24    waste permanently disposed of with a device for which
25    certification has been obtained under the Weights and
26    Measures Act and pay a fee of 22 cents per ton of waste

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 57 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1    permanently disposed of.
2        (2) If more than 100,000 cubic yards, but not more
3    than 150,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous waste is
4    permanently disposed of at a site in a calendar year, the
5    owner or operator shall pay a fee of $7,020.
6        (3) If more than 50,000 cubic yards, but not more than
7    100,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous solid waste is
8    permanently disposed of at a site in a calendar year, the
9    owner or operator shall pay a fee of $3,120.
10        (4) If more than 10,000 cubic yards, but not more than
11    50,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous solid waste is
12    permanently disposed of at a site in a calendar year, the
13    owner or operator shall pay a fee of $975.
14        (5) If not more than 10,000 cubic yards of
15    non-hazardous solid waste is permanently disposed of at a
16    site in a calendar year, the owner or operator shall pay a
17    fee of $210.
18    (c) The fee under subsection (b) shall not apply to any of
19the following:
20        (1) Hazardous waste.
21        (2) Pollution control waste.
22        (3) Waste from recycling, reclamation, or reuse
23    processes that have been approved by the Agency as being
24    designed to remove any contaminant from wastes so as to
25    render the wastes reusable, provided that the process
26    renders at least 50% of the waste reusable. However, the

 

 

SB1089 Enrolled- 58 -LRB102 04912 CPF 14931 b

1    exemption set forth in this paragraph (3) of this
2    subsection (c) shall not apply to general construction or
3    demolition debris recovery facilities as defined in
4    subsection (a-1) of Section 3.160.
5        (4) Non-hazardous solid waste that is received at a
6    sanitary landfill and composted or recycled through a
7    process permitted by the Agency.
8        (5) Any landfill that is permitted by the Agency to
9    receive only demolition or construction debris or
10    landscape waste.
11    (d) The Agency shall establish rules relating to the
12collection of the fees authorized by this Section. These rules
13shall include, but not be limited to the following:
14        (1) Necessary records identifying the quantities of
15    solid waste received or disposed.
16        (2) The form and submission of reports to accompany
17    the payment of fees to the Agency.
18        (3) The time and manner of payment of fees to the
19    Agency, which payments shall not be more often than
20    quarterly.
21        (4) Procedures setting forth criteria establishing
22    when an owner or operator may measure by weight or volume
23    during any given quarter or other fee payment period.
24    (e) Fees collected under this Section shall be in addition
25to any other fees collected under any other Section.
26    (f) The Agency shall not refund any fee paid to it under

 

 

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1this Section.
2    (g) Pursuant to appropriation, all moneys in the Subtitle
3D Management Fund shall be used by the Agency to administer the
4United States Environmental Protection Agency's Subtitle D
5Program provided in Sections 4004 and 4010 of the Resource
6Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (P.L. 94-580) as it
7relates to a municipal solid waste landfill program in
8Illinois and to fund a delegation of inspecting,
9investigating, and enforcement functions, within the
10municipality only, pursuant to subsection (r) of Section 4 of
11this Act to a municipality having a population of more than
121,000,000 inhabitants. The Agency shall execute a delegation
13agreement pursuant to subsection (r) of Section 4 of this Act
14with a municipality having a population of more than 1,000,000
15inhabitants within 90 days of September 13, 1993 and shall on
16an annual basis distribute from the Subtitle D Management Fund
17to that municipality no less than $150,000. Pursuant to
18appropriation, moneys in the Subtitle D Management Fund may
19also be used by the Agency for activities conducted under
20Section 22.15a of this Act.
21(Source: P.A. 93-32, eff. 7-1-03; 94-272, eff. 7-19-05.)
 
22    (415 ILCS 5/31.1)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1031.1)
23    Sec. 31.1. Administrative citation.
24    (a) The prohibitions specified in subsections (o) and (p)
25of Section 21 and subsection (k) of Section 55 of this Act

 

 

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1shall be enforceable either by administrative citation under
2this Section or as otherwise provided by this Act. Violations
3of Sections 22.38, Section 22.51, and 22.51a of this Act shall
4be enforceable either by administrative citation under this
5Section or as otherwise provided by this Act.
6    (b) Whenever Agency personnel or personnel of a unit of
7local government to which the Agency has delegated its
8functions pursuant to subsection (r) of Section 4 of this Act,
9on the basis of direct observation, determine that any person
10has violated any provision of subsection (o) or (p) of Section
1121, Section 22.38, Section 22.51, Section 22.51a, or
12subsection (k) of Section 55 of this Act, the Agency or such
13unit of local government may issue and serve an administrative
14citation upon such person within not more than 60 days after
15the date of the observed violation. Each such citation issued
16shall be served upon the person named therein or such person's
17authorized agent for service of process, and shall include the
18following information:
19        (1) a statement specifying the provisions of
20    subsection (o) or (p) of Section 21, Section 22.38,
21    Section 22.51, Section 22.51a, or subsection (k) of
22    Section 55 of which the person was observed to be in
23    violation;
24        (2) a copy of the inspection report in which the
25    Agency or local government recorded the violation, which
26    report shall include the date and time of inspection, and

 

 

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1    weather conditions prevailing during the inspection;
2        (3) the penalty imposed by subdivision (b)(4) or
3    (b)(4-5) of Section 42 for such violation;
4        (4) instructions for contesting the administrative
5    citation findings pursuant to this Section, including
6    notification that the person has 35 days within which to
7    file a petition for review before the Board to contest the
8    administrative citation; and
9        (5) an affidavit by the personnel observing the
10    violation, attesting to their material actions and
11    observations.
12    (c) The Agency or unit of local government shall file a
13copy of each administrative citation served under subsection
14(b) of this Section with the Board no later than 10 days after
15the date of service.
16    (d) (1) If the person named in the administrative citation
17fails to petition the Board for review within 35 days from the
18date of service, the Board shall adopt a final order, which
19shall include the administrative citation and findings of
20violation as alleged in the citation, and shall impose the
21penalty specified in subdivision (b)(4) or (b)(4-5) of Section
2242.
23    (2) If a petition for review is filed before the Board to
24contest an administrative citation issued under subsection (b)
25of this Section, the Agency or unit of local government shall
26appear as a complainant at a hearing before the Board to be

 

 

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1conducted pursuant to Section 32 of this Act at a time not less
2than 21 days after notice of such hearing has been sent by the
3Board to the Agency or unit of local government and the person
4named in the citation. In such hearings, the burden of proof
5shall be on the Agency or unit of local government. If, based
6on the record, the Board finds that the alleged violation
7occurred, it shall adopt a final order which shall include the
8administrative citation and findings of violation as alleged
9in the citation, and shall impose the penalty specified in
10subdivision (b)(4) or (b)(4-5) of Section 42. However, if the
11Board finds that the person appealing the citation has shown
12that the violation resulted from uncontrollable circumstances,
13the Board shall adopt a final order which makes no finding of
14violation and which imposes no penalty.
15    (e) Sections 10-25 through 10-60 of the Illinois
16Administrative Procedure Act shall not apply to any
17administrative citation issued under subsection (b) of this
18Section.
19    (f) The other provisions of this Section shall not apply
20to a sanitary landfill operated by a unit of local government
21solely for the purpose of disposing of water and sewage
22treatment plant sludges, including necessary stabilizing
23materials.
24    (g) All final orders issued and entered by the Board
25pursuant to this Section shall be enforceable by injunction,
26mandamus or other appropriate remedy, in accordance with

 

 

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1Section 42 of this Act.
2(Source: P.A. 96-737, eff. 8-25-09; 96-1416, eff. 7-30-10.)
 
3    (415 ILCS 5/42)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1042)
4    Sec. 42. Civil penalties.
5    (a) Except as provided in this Section, any person that
6violates any provision of this Act or any regulation adopted
7by the Board, or any permit or term or condition thereof, or
8that violates any order of the Board pursuant to this Act,
9shall be liable for a civil penalty of not to exceed $50,000
10for the violation and an additional civil penalty of not to
11exceed $10,000 for each day during which the violation
12continues; such penalties may, upon order of the Board or a
13court of competent jurisdiction, be made payable to the
14Environmental Protection Trust Fund, to be used in accordance
15with the provisions of the Environmental Protection Trust Fund
16Act.
17    (b) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of
18this Section:
19        (1) Any person that violates Section 12(f) of this Act
20    or any NPDES permit or term or condition thereof, or any
21    filing requirement, regulation or order relating to the
22    NPDES permit program, shall be liable to a civil penalty
23    of not to exceed $10,000 per day of violation.
24        (2) Any person that violates Section 12(g) of this Act
25    or any UIC permit or term or condition thereof, or any

 

 

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1    filing requirement, regulation or order relating to the
2    State UIC program for all wells, except Class II wells as
3    defined by the Board under this Act, shall be liable to a
4    civil penalty not to exceed $2,500 per day of violation;
5    provided, however, that any person who commits such
6    violations relating to the State UIC program for Class II
7    wells, as defined by the Board under this Act, shall be
8    liable to a civil penalty of not to exceed $10,000 for the
9    violation and an additional civil penalty of not to exceed
10    $1,000 for each day during which the violation continues.
11        (3) Any person that violates Sections 21(f), 21(g),
12    21(h) or 21(i) of this Act, or any RCRA permit or term or
13    condition thereof, or any filing requirement, regulation
14    or order relating to the State RCRA program, shall be
15    liable to a civil penalty of not to exceed $25,000 per day
16    of violation.
17        (4) In an administrative citation action under Section
18    31.1 of this Act, any person found to have violated any
19    provision of subsection (o) of Section 21 of this Act
20    shall pay a civil penalty of $500 for each violation of
21    each such provision, plus any hearing costs incurred by
22    the Board and the Agency. Such penalties shall be made
23    payable to the Environmental Protection Trust Fund, to be
24    used in accordance with the provisions of the
25    Environmental Protection Trust Fund Act; except that if a
26    unit of local government issued the administrative

 

 

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1    citation, 50% of the civil penalty shall be payable to the
2    unit of local government.
3        (4-5) In an administrative citation action under
4    Section 31.1 of this Act, any person found to have
5    violated any provision of subsection (p) of Section 21,
6    Section 22.38, Section 22.51, Section 22.51a, or
7    subsection (k) of Section 55 of this Act shall pay a civil
8    penalty of $1,500 for each violation of each such
9    provision, plus any hearing costs incurred by the Board
10    and the Agency, except that the civil penalty amount shall
11    be $3,000 for each violation of any provision of
12    subsection (p) of Section 21, Section 22.38, Section
13    22.51, Section 22.51a, or subsection (k) of Section 55
14    that is the person's second or subsequent adjudication
15    violation of that provision. The penalties shall be
16    deposited into the Environmental Protection Trust Fund, to
17    be used in accordance with the provisions of the
18    Environmental Protection Trust Fund Act; except that if a
19    unit of local government issued the administrative
20    citation, 50% of the civil penalty shall be payable to the
21    unit of local government.
22        (5) Any person who violates subsection 6 of Section
23    39.5 of this Act or any CAAPP permit, or term or condition
24    thereof, or any fee or filing requirement, or any duty to
25    allow or carry out inspection, entry or monitoring
26    activities, or any regulation or order relating to the

 

 

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1    CAAPP shall be liable for a civil penalty not to exceed
2    $10,000 per day of violation.
3        (6) Any owner or operator of a community water system
4    that violates subsection (b) of Section 18.1 or subsection
5    (a) of Section 25d-3 of this Act shall, for each day of
6    violation, be liable for a civil penalty not to exceed $5
7    for each of the premises connected to the affected
8    community water system.
9        (7) Any person who violates Section 52.5 of this Act
10    shall be liable for a civil penalty of up to $1,000 for the
11    first violation of that Section and a civil penalty of up
12    to $2,500 for a second or subsequent violation of that
13    Section.
14    (b.5) In lieu of the penalties set forth in subsections
15(a) and (b) of this Section, any person who fails to file, in a
16timely manner, toxic chemical release forms with the Agency
17pursuant to Section 25b-2 of this Act shall be liable for a
18civil penalty of $100 per day for each day the forms are late,
19not to exceed a maximum total penalty of $6,000. This daily
20penalty shall begin accruing on the thirty-first day after the
21date that the person receives the warning notice issued by the
22Agency pursuant to Section 25b-6 of this Act; and the penalty
23shall be paid to the Agency. The daily accrual of penalties
24shall cease as of January 1 of the following year. All
25penalties collected by the Agency pursuant to this subsection
26shall be deposited into the Environmental Protection Permit

 

 

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1and Inspection Fund.
2    (c) Any person that violates this Act, any rule or
3regulation adopted under this Act, any permit or term or
4condition of a permit, or any Board order and causes the death
5of fish or aquatic life shall, in addition to the other
6penalties provided by this Act, be liable to pay to the State
7an additional sum for the reasonable value of the fish or
8aquatic life destroyed. Any money so recovered shall be placed
9in the Wildlife and Fish Fund in the State Treasury.
10    (d) The penalties provided for in this Section may be
11recovered in a civil action.
12    (e) The State's Attorney of the county in which the
13violation occurred, or the Attorney General, may, at the
14request of the Agency or on his own motion, institute a civil
15action for an injunction, prohibitory or mandatory, to
16restrain violations of this Act, any rule or regulation
17adopted under this Act, any permit or term or condition of a
18permit, or any Board order, or to require such other actions as
19may be necessary to address violations of this Act, any rule or
20regulation adopted under this Act, any permit or term or
21condition of a permit, or any Board order.
22    (f) The State's Attorney of the county in which the
23violation occurred, or the Attorney General, shall bring such
24actions in the name of the people of the State of Illinois.
25Without limiting any other authority which may exist for the
26awarding of attorney's fees and costs, the Board or a court of

 

 

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1competent jurisdiction may award costs and reasonable
2attorney's fees, including the reasonable costs of expert
3witnesses and consultants, to the State's Attorney or the
4Attorney General in a case where he has prevailed against a
5person who has committed a willful, knowing, or repeated
6violation of this Act, any rule or regulation adopted under
7this Act, any permit or term or condition of a permit, or any
8Board order.
9    Any funds collected under this subsection (f) in which the
10Attorney General has prevailed shall be deposited in the
11Hazardous Waste Fund created in Section 22.2 of this Act. Any
12funds collected under this subsection (f) in which a State's
13Attorney has prevailed shall be retained by the county in
14which he serves.
15    (g) All final orders imposing civil penalties pursuant to
16this Section shall prescribe the time for payment of such
17penalties. If any such penalty is not paid within the time
18prescribed, interest on such penalty at the rate set forth in
19subsection (a) of Section 1003 of the Illinois Income Tax Act,
20shall be paid for the period from the date payment is due until
21the date payment is received. However, if the time for payment
22is stayed during the pendency of an appeal, interest shall not
23accrue during such stay.
24    (h) In determining the appropriate civil penalty to be
25imposed under subdivisions (a), (b)(1), (b)(2), (b)(3),
26(b)(5), (b)(6), or (b)(7) of this Section, the Board is

 

 

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1authorized to consider any matters of record in mitigation or
2aggravation of penalty, including, but not limited to, the
3following factors:
4        (1) the duration and gravity of the violation;
5        (2) the presence or absence of due diligence on the
6    part of the respondent in attempting to comply with
7    requirements of this Act and regulations thereunder or to
8    secure relief therefrom as provided by this Act;
9        (3) any economic benefits accrued by the respondent
10    because of delay in compliance with requirements, in which
11    case the economic benefits shall be determined by the
12    lowest cost alternative for achieving compliance;
13        (4) the amount of monetary penalty which will serve to
14    deter further violations by the respondent and to
15    otherwise aid in enhancing voluntary compliance with this
16    Act by the respondent and other persons similarly subject
17    to the Act;
18        (5) the number, proximity in time, and gravity of
19    previously adjudicated violations of this Act by the
20    respondent;
21        (6) whether the respondent voluntarily self-disclosed,
22    in accordance with subsection (i) of this Section, the
23    non-compliance to the Agency;
24        (7) whether the respondent has agreed to undertake a
25    "supplemental environmental project", which means an
26    environmentally beneficial project that a respondent

 

 

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1    agrees to undertake in settlement of an enforcement action
2    brought under this Act, but which the respondent is not
3    otherwise legally required to perform; and
4        (8) whether the respondent has successfully completed
5    a Compliance Commitment Agreement under subsection (a) of
6    Section 31 of this Act to remedy the violations that are
7    the subject of the complaint.
8    In determining the appropriate civil penalty to be imposed
9under subsection (a) or paragraph (1), (2), (3), (5), (6), or
10(7) of subsection (b) of this Section, the Board shall ensure,
11in all cases, that the penalty is at least as great as the
12economic benefits, if any, accrued by the respondent as a
13result of the violation, unless the Board finds that
14imposition of such penalty would result in an arbitrary or
15unreasonable financial hardship. However, such civil penalty
16may be off-set in whole or in part pursuant to a supplemental
17environmental project agreed to by the complainant and the
18respondent.
19    (i) A person who voluntarily self-discloses non-compliance
20to the Agency, of which the Agency had been unaware, is
21entitled to a 100% reduction in the portion of the penalty that
22is not based on the economic benefit of non-compliance if the
23person can establish the following:
24        (1) that either the regulated entity is a small entity
25    or the non-compliance was discovered through an
26    environmental audit or a compliance management system

 

 

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1    documented by the regulated entity as reflecting the
2    regulated entity's due diligence in preventing, detecting,
3    and correcting violations;
4        (2) that the non-compliance was disclosed in writing
5    within 30 days of the date on which the person discovered
6    it;
7        (3) that the non-compliance was discovered and
8    disclosed prior to:
9            (i) the commencement of an Agency inspection,
10        investigation, or request for information;
11            (ii) notice of a citizen suit;
12            (iii) the filing of a complaint by a citizen, the
13        Illinois Attorney General, or the State's Attorney of
14        the county in which the violation occurred;
15            (iv) the reporting of the non-compliance by an
16        employee of the person without that person's
17        knowledge; or
18            (v) imminent discovery of the non-compliance by
19        the Agency;
20        (4) that the non-compliance is being corrected and any
21    environmental harm is being remediated in a timely
22    fashion;
23        (5) that the person agrees to prevent a recurrence of
24    the non-compliance;
25        (6) that no related non-compliance events have
26    occurred in the past 3 years at the same facility or in the

 

 

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1    past 5 years as part of a pattern at multiple facilities
2    owned or operated by the person;
3        (7) that the non-compliance did not result in serious
4    actual harm or present an imminent and substantial
5    endangerment to human health or the environment or violate
6    the specific terms of any judicial or administrative order
7    or consent agreement;
8        (8) that the person cooperates as reasonably requested
9    by the Agency after the disclosure; and
10        (9) that the non-compliance was identified voluntarily
11    and not through a monitoring, sampling, or auditing
12    procedure that is required by statute, rule, permit,
13    judicial or administrative order, or consent agreement.
14    If a person can establish all of the elements under this
15subsection except the element set forth in paragraph (1) of
16this subsection, the person is entitled to a 75% reduction in
17the portion of the penalty that is not based upon the economic
18benefit of non-compliance.
19    For the purposes of this subsection (i), "small entity"
20has the same meaning as in Section 221 of the federal Small
21Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (5 U.S.C.
22601).
23    (j) In addition to any other remedy or penalty that may
24apply, whether civil or criminal, any person who violates
25Section 22.52 of this Act shall be liable for an additional
26civil penalty of up to 3 times the gross amount of any

 

 

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1pecuniary gain resulting from the violation.
2    (k) In addition to any other remedy or penalty that may
3apply, whether civil or criminal, any person who violates
4subdivision (a)(7.6) of Section 31 of this Act shall be liable
5for an additional civil penalty of $2,000.
6(Source: P.A. 99-934, eff. 1-27-17; 100-436, eff. 8-25-17;
7100-863, eff. 8-14-18.)
 
8    (415 ILCS 5/22.38a rep.)
9    Section 10. The Environmental Protection Act is amended by
10repealing Section 22.38a.
 
11    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
12becoming law.