(410 ILCS 635/3) (from Ch. 56 1/2, par. 2203)
Sec. 3. Definitions.
(a) As used in this Act "Grade A" means that milk and milk
products are produced and processed in accordance with the current Grade "A" Pasteurized Milk Ordinance as adopted by the National Conference on Interstate Milk Shipments and the United
States Public Health Service - Food and Drug Administration and all other applicable federal regulations. The term Grade A is applicable to "dairy
farm", "milk hauler-sampler", "milk plant", "milk product",
"receiving station", "transfer station", "milk tank truck",
and "certified pasteurizer sealer" whenever used in this Act.
(b) Unless the context clearly indicates otherwise, terms have the meaning
ascribed as follows:
(1) (Blank).
(2) "Milk" means the milk of cows, goats, sheep, |
| water buffalo, or other hooved mammals, provided that it must be labeled in accordance with the current Grade "A" Pasteurized Milk Ordinance as adopted by the United States Public Health Service - Food and Drug Administration, and includes skim milk and cream. The Grade "A" Pasteurized Milk Ordinance labeling requirement does not apply to unpasteurized milk produced and distributed in accordance with Section 8 of this Act and Department rules.
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(3) (Blank).
(4) (Blank).
(5) "Receiving station" means any place, premise, or
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| establishment where raw milk is received, collected, handled, stored or cooled and prepared for further transporting.
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(6) "Transfer station" means any place, premise, or
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| establishment where milk or milk products are transferred directly from one milk tank truck to another.
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(7) "Department" means the Illinois Department of
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(8) "Director" means the Director of the Illinois
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| Department of Public Health.
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(9) "Embargo or hold for investigation" means a
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| detention or seizure designed to deny the use of milk or milk products which may be unwholesome or to prohibit the use of equipment which may result in contaminated or unwholesome milk or dairy products.
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(10) "Imminent hazard to the public health" means any
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| hazard to the public health when the evidence is sufficient to show that a product or practice, posing or contributing to a significant threat of danger to health, creates or may create a public health situation (1) that should be corrected immediately to prevent injury and (2) that should not be permitted to continue while a hearing or other formal proceeding is being held.
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(11) "Person" means any individual, group of
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| individuals, association, trust, partnership, corporation, person doing business under an assumed name, the State of Illinois, or any political subdivision or department thereof, or any other entity.
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(12) "Enforcing agency" means the Illinois Department
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| of Public Health or a unit of local government electing to administer and enforce this Act as provided for in this Act.
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(13) "Permit" means a document awarded to a person
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| for compliance with the provisions of and under conditions set forth in this Act.
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(14) (Blank).
(15) (Blank).
(16) (Blank).
(17) "Certified pasteurizer sealer" means a person
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| who has satisfactorily completed a course of instruction and has demonstrated the ability to satisfactorily conduct all pasteurization control tests, as required by rules adopted by the Department.
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(18) "Unpasteurized milk" means milk that has not
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| been pasteurized or homogenized in accordance with the Grade "A" Pasteurized Milk Ordinance as adopted by the United States Public Health Service - Food and Drug Administration and is not subject to the labeling requirements of the Ordinance.
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(Source: P.A. 98-958, eff. 1-1-15; 99-304, eff. 1-1-16 .)
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(410 ILCS 635/4) (from Ch. 56 1/2, par. 2204)
Sec. 4.
The Illinois Department of Public Health shall administer and
enforce this Act. However, any local unit of government with a population of
1,000,000 or more and having or contracting with a health department with
a qualified administrative and inspectional staff meeting the personnel
standards promulgated by the Illinois Department of Public Health, may administer
and enforce this Act by adopting an ordinance containing provisions for
enforcement and penalties, and adopting by reference the rules and regulations
promulgated and amended from time to time by the Department under the authority
of this Act. A local unit of government that is so qualified and elects to administer
and enforce this Act shall furnish the Department a copy of its ordinance
and the names and qualifications of the employees required by this Act.
When it is determined by the Department that the local unit of government
is not administering or enforcing the approved local ordinance in an approved
manner, such local unit of government shall be notified
in writing and given a reasonable
time to improve its administration and enforcement of the approved
ordinance. During this time period, the Department may
make inspections or take enforcement action as necessary to insure compliance
with the provisions of this Act. If after such notice and time allowed
the local unit of government is unable to administer and enforce the
approved ordinance in an approved manner, the approval to administer
and enforce this Act shall be revoked and the
administration and enforcement of this Act shall revert
to the Department.
Dairy farms, milk plants, receiving stations, cleaning and
sanitizing facilities, transfer stations, and
milk hauler-samplers in jurisdictions under a local ordinance
at the time of the
effective date of this Act will be subject to the local ordinance in lieu
of this Act until July 1, 1986, or until the date prior to July 1, 1986,
when the local ordinance is brought into compliance with this Act.
(Source: P.A. 89-526, eff. 7-19-96.)
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(410 ILCS 635/5) (from Ch. 56 1/2, par. 2205)
Sec. 5.
After the effective date of this Act, it shall be unlawful for
any person to establish, maintain, conduct, or operate a dairy farm,
milk plant, receiving station, or transfer station processing milk or milk
products, to establish and operate a cleaning and sanitizing facility or milk
tank truck, to haul or sample milk, or to act as a certified
pasteurizer
sealer within this State, or to bring into and
distribute from
out-of-state milk and milk products without first obtaining a permit
therefor from the Department.
The Department may prescribe and conduct examinations, a portion of which
may be written, to test the knowledge of milk hauler-samplers and certified
pasteurizer sealers as a condition for
awarding permits.
Permits issued by the Department for certified pasteurizer sealers,
cleaning and sanitizing facilities, milk plants, and receiving or
transfer stations shall expire on December 31 of each year.
Permits issued to milk hauler-samplers shall expire on
March 31 of each year. Permits issued for milk tank trucks
shall
remain valid indefinitely unless revoked by the Department for noncompliance
with the rules promulgated under this Act or the milk tank truck is
transferred or removed from service.
Permits issued for dairy farms shall have no expiration date and shall
remain valid indefinitely unless revoked by the Department for
noncompliance with the rules promulgated under this Act
or discontinuation of the dairy farm operation for which a
permit was issued.
Applications for original permits or renewals shall be made on forms
furnished
by the Department. Each application shall contain: (1) the name and address
of the applicant or names and addresses of the partners if the applicant
is a partnership, or the names and addresses of the officers if the applicant
is a corporation, or the names and addresses of all persons having a financial
interest
therein if the applicant is a group of individuals, association or trust;
and (2) the location of the plant, station, cleaning and sanitizing
facility, certified pasteurizer sealer, milk tank truck, or milk
hauler-sampler. A permit
shall be valid only in the hands of the person to whom it is issued and
shall not be the subject of sale, assignment or other transfer, voluntary
or involuntary, nor shall the permit be valid for any premises, milk tank
truck, certified pasteurizer sealer, or milk
hauler-sampler
other than the one for which originally issued.
(Source: P.A. 92-216, eff. 1-1-02.)
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(410 ILCS 635/6) (from Ch. 56 1/2, par. 2206)
Sec. 6.
If the Department finds that a dairy farm, milk hauler-sampler, milk
plant, cleaning and sanitizing facility, receiving station, transfer
station, milk tank truck, or
pasteurizer sealer for which a permit is sought
is not in compliance with the provisions of this Act or the rules and
regulations
relating thereto, but that such dairy farm, milk plant, cleaning and
sanitizing facility, transfer or receiving
station, milk tank truck, milk
hauler-sampler, or pasteurizer sealer may operate
without undue prejudice to the public
health, the Department may issue a conditional permit setting forth the
conditions on which the permit is issued, the manner in which the dairy
farm, milk plant, cleaning and sanitizing facility, transfer or
receiving station, milk tank truck,
milk hauler-sampler, or pasteurizer sealer fails to
comply with the Act and such rules and regulations and shall set forth the
time, not to exceed 90 days, within which the applicant must make any changes
or corrections necessary in order for such dairy farm, milk plant,
cleaning and sanitizing facility, transfer
or receiving station, milk tank truck, milk
hauler-sampler, or
pasteurizer sealer to
fully comply with this Act and the
rules and regulations relating thereto.
(Source: P.A. 92-216, eff. 1-1-02.)
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(410 ILCS 635/10) (from Ch. 56 1/2, par. 2210)
Sec. 10.
After proper identification, authorized representatives of
the enforcing agency are authorized and shall have the power to enter, at
reasonable times, all dairy farms, milk plants, cleaning and sanitizing
facilities, receiving stations, transfer stations, or vehicles used to
transport milk and milk products under its jurisdiction, for the purpose of
inspecting, sampling, and investigating conditions relating to the
enforcement of this Act and the rules and regulations promulgated hereunder.
The enforcing agency has the responsibility to prevent the distribution of adulterated milk and milk products and to inform the public of adulterated milk and milk products already in commerce. In response to a confirmed foodborne outbreak or when a high risk of infection exists, the enforcing agency shall require pathogen testing to be performed on the implicated milk and milk products. At least 4 times during every 6-month period, representatives of the
enforcing agency shall collect samples of milk from each milk plant for
testing in accordance with the rules adopted under this Act and the Grade A Pasteurized Milk Ordinance. Examination standards and enforcement thereof shall be in accordance with the rules adopted under this Act and the Grade A Pasteurized Milk Ordinance.
Written notice of all violations shall be given
to the dairy farm, milk plant, cleaning and sanitizing facility, receiving
or transfer station, milk hauler-sampler, milk tank truck,
or certified pasteurizer sealer. The enforcing agency shall provide a dairy farm with a paper copy of the dairy farm's inspection report created in accordance with this Act at the time of inspection.
(Source: P.A. 100-618, eff. 1-1-19 .)
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(410 ILCS 635/12) (from Ch. 56 1/2, par. 2212)
Sec. 12.
Whenever the enforcing agency finds that an imminent hazard
to the public health exists which requires immediate action to protect the
public health, it may, without any administrative procedure to bond, bring
an action for immediate injunctive relief to require that such
action be taken as the court may deem necessary to meet the emergency,
including the closing of the dairy farm, milk plant, receiving or transfer
station, cleaning and sanitizing facility, milk hauler-sampler,
milk tank truck, or certified pasteurizer sealer or the suspension or
revocation of the permit. Notwithstanding any
other
provision of this Act, such order shall be effective immediately. The
court may issue an ex parte order and shall schedule a hearing on the
matter no later than 3 working days from the date of the injunction. Where
this Act is being enforced by the State of Illinois, the State's Attorney
of the county in which the violation occurred or the Attorney General shall
bring such actions in the name of the People of the State of Illinois.
When, in the opinion of the enforcing agency, such conditions are abated,
it may authorize reopening the plant, cleaning and sanitizing facility
or station, and the injunctive order shall be dissolved.
(Source: P.A. 92-216, eff. 1-1-02.)
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