Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of HB2363
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Full Text of HB2363  103rd General Assembly

HB2363 103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY

  
  

 


 
103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2023 and 2024
HB2363

 

Introduced 2/14/2023, by Rep. Nicholas K. Smith

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
New Act

    Creates the Clean Lighting Act. Prohibits offering for final sale, selling at final sale, or distributing as a new manufactured product (i) a screw or bayonet base compact fluorescent lamp on and after January 1, 2024 and (ii) a pin-base compact fluorescent lamp or a linear fluorescent lamp on and after January 1, 2025. Exempts specified lamps from the Act. Contains enforcement provisions. Allows the Environmental Protection Agency to adopt rules to implement and enforce the Act. Contains a severability provision. Contains other provisions.


LRB103 04761 CPF 53860 b

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB2363LRB103 04761 CPF 53860 b

1    AN ACT concerning safety.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Clean
5Lighting Act.
 
6    Section 5. Findings. The General Assembly finds that:
7        (1) Mercury is a persistent and toxic pollutant that
8    bioaccumulates in the environment and poses a serious
9    threat to humans, particularly young children, and
10    wildlife.
11        (2) Human exposure to mercury can result in nervous
12    system, kidney, and liver damage and impaired childhood
13    development.
14        (3) Removal of mercury and mercury-containing products
15    from the waste stream prior to combustion or disposal is
16    an effective way to reduce mercury pollution.
17        (4) All fluorescent lamps contain mercury and can
18    create an immediate public health and environmental hazard
19    when they accidentally break during installation, use,
20    transportation, storage, recycling, or disposal.
21        (5) Light-emitting diode (LED) replacements for
22    fluorescent lamps do not contain any mercury.
 

 

 

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1    Section 10. Definitions. In this Act:
2    "Agency" means the Illinois Environmental Protection
3Agency.
4    "Compact fluorescent lamp" means a compact low-pressure,
5mercury-containing, electric-discharge light source in which a
6fluorescent coating transforms some of the ultraviolet energy
7generated by the mercury discharge into visible light, and
8includes all of the following characteristics:
9        (1) One base (end cap) of any type, including, but not
10    limited to, screw, bayonet, 2 pins, and 4 pins.
11        (2) Integrally ballasted or non-integrally ballasted.
12        (3) Light emission between a correlated color
13    temperature of 1700K and 24000K and a Duv of +0.024 and -
14    0.024 in the International Commission on Illumination
15    (CIE) Uniform Color Space (CAM02-UCS).
16        (4) All tube diameters and all tube lengths.
17        (5) All lamp sizes and shapes for directional and
18    nondirectional installations, including, but not limited
19    to, PL, spiral, twin tube, triple twin, 2D, U-bend, and
20    circular.
21    "Linear fluorescent lamp" means a low-pressure,
22mercury-containing, electric-discharge light source in which a
23fluorescent coating transforms some of the ultraviolet energy
24generated by the mercury discharge into visible light, and
25includes all of the following characteristics:
26        (1) Two bases (end caps) of any type, including, but

 

 

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1    not limited to, single-pin, two-pin, and recessed double
2    contact.
3        (2) Light emission between a correlated color
4    temperature of 1700K and 24000K and a Duv of +0.024 and -
5    0.024 in the CIE CAM02-UCS.
6        (3) All tube diameters, including, but not limited to,
7    T5, T8, T10, and T12.
8        (4) All tube lengths from 0.5 to 8.0 feet, inclusive.
9        (5) All lamp shapes, including, but not limited to,
10    linear, U-bend, and circular.
11    "Sunlamp product" has the same meaning as defined in
12paragraph (9) of subsection (b) of Section 1040.20 of
13Subchapter J of Title 21 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
 
14    Section 15. Clean lighting standard.
15    (a) On and after January 1, 2024, it shall be a violation
16of this Act to offer for final sale, sell at final sale, or
17distribute in this State as a new manufactured product a screw
18or bayonet base type compact fluorescent lamp.
19    (b) On and after January 1, 2025, it shall be a violation
20of this Act to offer for final sale, sell at final sale, or
21distribute in this State as a new manufactured product a
22pin-base type compact fluorescent lamp or a linear fluorescent
23lamp.
 
24    Section 20. Exemptions. This Act does not apply to the

 

 

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1following:
2    (a) A lamp designed and marketed exclusively for image
3capture and projection, including:
4        (1) photocopying;
5        (2) printing, directly or in preprocessing;
6        (3) lithography;
7        (4) film or video projection; and
8        (5) holography.
9    (b) A lamp that has a high proportion of ultraviolet light
10emission and is one of the following:
11        (1) A lamp with high ultraviolet content that has
12    ultraviolet power greater than 2 milliwatts per kilolumen
13    (mW/klm).
14        (2) A lamp for germicidal use, such as the destruction
15    of DNA, that emits a peak radiation of approximately 253.7
16    nanometers.
17        (3) A lamp designed and marketed exclusively for
18    disinfection or fly trapping from which either the
19    radiation power emitted between 250 and 315 nanometers
20    represents at least 5% of, or the radiation power emitted
21    between 315 and 400 nanometers represents at least 20% of,
22    the total radiation power emitted between 250 and 800
23    nanometers.
24        (4) A lamp designed and marketed exclusively for the
25    generation of ozone where the primary purpose is to emit
26    radiation at approximately 185.1 nanometers.

 

 

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1        (5) A lamp designed and marketed exclusively for coral
2    zooxanthellae symbiosis from which the radiation power
3    emitted between 400 and 480 nanometers represents at least
4    40% of the total radiation power emitted between 250 and
5    800 nanometers.
6        (6) Any lamp designed and marketed exclusively for use
7    in a sunlamp product, as defined in paragraph (9) of
8    subsection (b) of Section 1040.20 of Subchapter J of Title
9    21 of the Code of Federal Regulations on the effective
10    date of this Act.
11    (c) A lamp designed and marketed exclusively for use in
12medical or veterinary diagnosis or treatment or in a medical
13device.
14    (d) A lamp designed and marketed exclusively for use in
15the manufacturing or quality control of pharmaceutical
16products.
17    (e) A lamp designed and marketed exclusively for
18spectroscopy and photometric applications, such as UV-visible
19spectroscopy, molecular spectroscopy, atomic absorption
20spectroscopy, nondispersive infrared (NDIR), Fourier transform
21infrared (FTIR), medical analysis, ellipsometry, layer
22thickness measurement, process monitoring, or environmental
23monitoring.
24    (f) A lamp used by academic and research institutions for
25conducting research projects and experiments.
 

 

 

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1    Section 25. Implementation; enforcement.
2    (a) The Agency may cause periodic inspections to be made
3of distributors or retailers in order to determine compliance
4with this Act. The Agency shall investigate complaints
5received concerning violations of this Act.
6    (b) If the Agency finds that any person has committed a
7violation of any provision of this Act, the Agency shall issue
8a warning to the person. Any person who commits a second
9violation after the issuance of the warning shall be subject
10to a civil penalty, issued by the Agency, of up to $100 for
11each offense. Any further violations committed by the person
12after the second violation shall be subject to a civil penalty
13of not more than $500 for each offense. Each lamp offered,
14sold, or distributed in violation of Section 15 shall
15constitute a separate violation, each violation shall
16constitute a separate offense, and each day that a violation
17occurs shall constitute a separate offense.
18    (c) If the Agency finds that repeated violations have
19occurred, it shall report the results of the violations to the
20Attorney General. The Attorney General may institute
21proceedings to seek an injunction in circuit court to enforce
22this Act.
23    (d) The Agency may adopt rules as necessary to ensure the
24proper implementation and enforcement of this Act.
 
25    Section 97. Severability. The provisions of this Act are

 

 

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1severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.