Public Act 100-0461 Public Act 0461 100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 100-0461 | SB1774 Enrolled | LRB100 05367 MJP 15378 b |
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| AN ACT concerning health.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Comprehensive Lead Education, Reduction, | and Window Replacement Program Act is amended by changing | Sections 5, 10, 20, 25, and 30 and by adding Section 16 as | follows: | (410 ILCS 43/5)
| Sec. 5. Findings; intent; establishment of program. | (a) The General Assembly finds all of the following: | (1) Lead-based paint poisoning is a potentially | devastating, but preventable disease. It is one of the top | environmental threats to children's health in the United | States. | (2) The number of lead-poisoned children in Illinois is | among the highest in the nation, especially in older, more | affordable properties.
| (3) Lead poisoning causes irreversible damage to the | development of a child's nervous system. Even at low and | moderate levels, lead poisoning causes learning | disabilities, problems with speech, shortened attention | span, hyperactivity, and behavioral problems. Recent | research links low levels of lead exposure to lower IQ |
| scores and to juvenile delinquency. | (4) Older housing is the number one risk factor for | childhood lead poisoning. Properties built before 1950 are | statistically much more likely to contain lead-based paint | hazards than buildings constructed more recently.
| (5) While the use of lead-based paint in residential | properties was banned in 1978, the State of Illinois ranks | seventh nationally in the number of housing units built | before 1978 and has the highest risk for lead hazards. | (5) The State of Illinois ranks 10th out of the 50 | states in the age of its housing stock. More than 50% of | the housing units in Chicago and in Rock Island, Peoria, | Macon, Madison, and Kankakee counties were built before | 1960. More than 43% of the housing units in St. Clair, | Winnebago, Sangamon, Kane, and Cook counties were built | before 1950.
| (6) There are nearly 1.4 million households with | lead-based paint hazards in Illinois. | (7) Most children are lead poisoned in their own homes | through exposure to lead dust from deteriorated lead paint | surfaces, like windows, and when lead paint deteriorates or | is disturbed through home renovation and repainting.
| (8) Children at the highest risk for lead poisoning | live in low-income communities and in older housing | throughout the State of Illinois. | (8) Less than 25% of children in Illinois age 6 and |
| under have been tested for lead poisoning . While children | are lead poisoned throughout Illinois, counties above the | statewide average include: Alexander, Cass, Cook, Fulton, | Greene, Kane, Kankakee, Knox, LaSalle, Macon, Mercer, | Peoria, Perry, Rock Island, Sangamon, St. Clair, | Stephenson, Vermilion, Will, and Winnebago. | (9) The control of lead hazards significantly reduces | lead-poisoning rates. Other communities, including New | York City and Milwaukee, have successfully reduced | lead-poisoning rates by removing lead-based paint hazards | on windows. | (10) Windows are considered a higher lead exposure risk | more often than other components in a housing unit. Windows | are a major contributor of lead dust in the home, due to | both weathering conditions and friction effects on paint.
| (11) The Comprehensive Lead Elimination, Reduction, | and
Window Replacement (CLEAR-WIN) Program was established
| under Public Act 95-492 as a pilot program to reduce | potential lead hazards by replacing
windows in low-income, | pre-1978 homes. It also provided for on-the-job
training | for community members in 2 pilot communities in Chicago and
| Peoria County. | (12) The CLEAR-WIN Program provided for installation | of 8,000
windows in 466 housing units between 2010 and | 2014. Evaluations of the pilot
program determined window | replacement was effective in lowering lead
hazards and |
| produced energy, environmental, health, and market | benefits.
Return on investment was almost $2 for every | dollar spent. | (13) (11) There is an insufficient pool of licensed | lead abatement workers and contractors to address the | problem in some areas of the State. | (14) (12) Through grants from the U.S. Department of | Housing and Urban Development and State dollars , some | communities in Illinois have begun to reduce lead poisoning | of children. While this is an ongoing effort, it only | addresses a small number of the low-income children | statewide in communities with high levels of lead paint in | the housing stock. | (b) It is the intent of the General Assembly to: | (1) address the problem of lead poisoning of children | by eliminating lead hazards in homes; | (2) provide training within communities to encourage | the use of lead paint safe work practices; | (3) create job opportunities for community members in | the lead abatement industry; | (4) support the efforts of small business and property | owners committed to maintaining lead-safe housing; and | (5) assist in the maintenance of affordable lead-safe | housing stock. | (c) The General Assembly hereby establishes the | Comprehensive Lead Education, Reduction, and Window |
| Replacement Program to assist residential property owners | through a Lead Direct Assistance Program loan and grant | programs to reduce lead paint hazards in
residential properties | through window replacement in pilot area communities. Where | there is a lack of workers trained to remove lead-based paint | hazards, job-training programs must be initiated. The General | Assembly also recognizes that training, insurance, and | licensing costs are prohibitively high and hereby establishes | incentives for contractors to do lead abatement work .
| (d) The Department of Public Health is authorized to: | (1) adopt rules necessary to implement this Act; | (2) adopt by reference the Illinois Administrative | Procedure Act for administration of this Act; | (3) assess administrative fines and penalties, as | established by the Department by rule, for persons | violating
rules adopted by the Department under this Act; | (4) make referrals for prosecution to the Attorney | General or
the State's Attorney for the county in which a | violation occurs, for a violation of this Act or the rules | adopted under this Act; and | (5) establish agreements under the Intergovernmental | Cooperation Act with the Department of
Commerce and | Economic Opportunity, the Illinois Housing Development
| Authority, or any other public agency as required, to | implement this Act. | (Source: P.A. 95-492, eff. 1-1-08.) |
| (410 ILCS 43/10)
| Sec. 10. Definitions. In this Act: | "Advisory Council" refers to the Lead Safe Housing Advisory | Council established under Public Act 93-0789. | "Child care facility" means any structure used by a child | care
provider licensed by the Department of Children and Family | Services or
a public or private school structure frequented by | children 6 years of age
or younger. | "Child-occupied property" means a property where a child | under 6 years of
age is on the property an average of at least 6 | hours per week. | "CLEAR-WIN Program" refers to the Comprehensive Lead | Education, Reduction, and Window Replacement Program created | pursuant to this Act to assist property owners of single-family | single family homes and multi-unit residential properties in | the State pilot area communities, through the Direct Assistance | Program, which reduces loan and grant programs that reduce lead | paint and leaded plumbing hazards primarily through window | replacement and, where necessary, through other lead | lead-based paint hazard control techniques.
| "Department" means the Department of Public Health. | "Director" means the Director of Public Health. | "Lead hazard" means a lead-bearing substance that poses an
| immediate health hazard to humans. | "Lead Safe Housing Maintenance Standards" refers to the |
| standards developed by the Lead Safe Housing Department in | conjunction with the Advisory Council. | "Leaded plumbing" means that portion of a building's | potable water
plumbing that is suspected or known to contain | lead or lead-containing
material as indicated by lead in | potable water samples. | "Low-income" means a household at or below 80% of the | median income level for a given county as determined annually | by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. | "Person" means an individual, corporation, partnership, | firm,
organization, or association, acting individually or as a | group. | "Plumbing" has the meaning ascribed to that term in the | Illinois Plumbing Licensing Law. | "Recipient" means a person receiving direct assistance | under this Act. | "Residential property" means a single-family residence or
| renter-occupied property with up to 8 units. | "Pilot area communities" means the counties or cities | selected by the Department, with the advice of the Advisory | Council, where properties whose owners are eligible for the | assistance provided by this Act are located.
| "Window" means the inside, outside, and sides of sashes and | mullions and the frames to the outside edge of the frame, | including sides, sash guides, and window wells and sills.
| (Source: P.A. 95-492, eff. 1-1-08.) |
| (410 ILCS 43/16 new) | Sec. 16. Lead Direct Assistance
Program. | (a) Subject to appropriation, the Department, in | consultation with the Advisory Council, shall establish and | operate the Lead
Direct Assistance Program throughout the | State. The purpose of the Lead
Direct Assistance Program is to | employ primary prevention strategies to
prevent childhood lead | poisoning. | (b) The Department shall administer the Lead Direct
| Assistance Program to remediate lead-based paint hazards and | leaded
plumbing hazards in residential properties. Conditions | for receiving direct assistance shall be developed by the | Department of Public Health, in consultation with the | Department of Commerce
and Economic Opportunity and the | Illinois Housing Development
Authority. Criteria for receiving | direct assistance shall include: | (1) for owner-occupied properties: (i) the property | contains lead
hazards; (ii) the property is a | child-occupied property or the residence of a
pregnant | woman; and (iii) the owner is low-income; and | (2) for rental properties: (i) the property contains | lead hazards and
(ii) 50% or more of the renters in the | residential property are
low-income. | Recipients of direct assistance under this program shall be | provided a
copy of the Department's Lead Safe Housing |
| Maintenance Standards. Before receiving the direct assistance, | the recipient must certify that he or she has received the | standards and intends to comply with them. If the property is a | rental property, the recipient must also
certify that he or she | will continue to rent to the same tenant or other low-income | tenant for a period of not less than 5 years following | completion of the work. Failure to comply with the conditions | of the Lead
Direct Assistance Program is a violation of this | Act. | (c) To
identify properties with lead hazards, the | Department may prioritize
properties where at least one child | has been found to have an elevated
blood lead level under the | Lead Poisoning Prevention Act and the paint or potable water
| has been tested and found to contain lead exceeding levels | established
by rule. | (d) All lead-based paint hazard control work performed | under the Lead Direct
Assistance Program shall comply with the | Lead Poisoning Prevention Act
and the Illinois Lead Poisoning | Prevention Code. All plumbing work performed under the Lead
| Direct Assistance Program shall comply with the Illinois | Plumbing
Licensing Act and the Illinois Plumbing Code. Before | persons are paid for work conducted under this Act, each | subject property must be inspected by a lead risk assessor or | lead inspector licensed in Illinois. Prior to payment, an | appropriate number of dust samples must be collected from in | and around the work areas for lead analysis, with results in |
| compliance with levels set by the Lead Poisoning Prevention Act | and the Illinois Lead Poisoning Prevention Code or in the case | of
leaded plumbing work, be inspected by an Illinois-certified | plumbing
inspector. All costs associated with these | inspections, including
laboratory fees, shall be compensable | to the person contracted to
provide direct assistance, as | prescribed by rule. Additional repairs and clean-up costs | associated with a failed clearance test, including follow-up | tests, shall be the responsibility of the person
performing the | work under the Lead Direct Assistance Program. | (e) The Department shall issue Lead Safe Housing | Maintenance Standards in accordance with this Act. Except for | properties where all lead-based paint, leaded plumbing, or | other
identified lead hazards have been removed, the standards | shall describe the responsibilities of property owners and | tenants in maintaining lead-safe housing, including, but not | limited to, prescribing special cleaning, repair, flushing, | filtering, and maintenance necessary to minimize the risk that | subject properties will cause lead poisoning in children. | Recipients of direct assistance shall be required to continue | to maintain their properties in compliance with these Lead Safe | Housing Maintenance Standards. Failure to maintain properties | in accordance with these standards is a violation and may | subject the
recipient to fines and penalties prescribed by | rule.
| (f) From funds appropriated, the Department may pay its own |
| reasonable administrative costs and, by agreement, the
| reasonable administrative costs of other public agencies. | (g) Failure by a person performing work under the Lead
| Direct Assistance Program to comply with rules or any | contractual
agreement made thereunder may subject the person to | administrative
action by the Department or other public | agencies, in accordance with rules
adopted under this Act, | including, but not limited to, civil penalties,
retainage of | payment, and loss of eligibility to participate. Civil
actions, | including for reimbursement, damages, and money penalties, and
| criminal actions may be brought by the Attorney General or the | State's
Attorney for the county in which the violation occurs. | (410 ILCS 43/20)
| Sec. 20. Lead abatement training. The Advisory Council | shall advise the Department determine whether a sufficient | number of lead abatement training programs exist to serve the | State. If the Department determines pilot sites. If it is | determined additional programs are needed, then the Department | may
use funds appropriated under this Act to address the | deficiencies the Advisory Council shall work with the | Department to establish the additional training programs for | purposes of the CLEAR-WIN Program .
| (Source: P.A. 95-492, eff. 1-1-08.) | (410 ILCS 43/25)
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| Sec. 25. Insurance assistance. The Department , through | agreements with other public agencies, may
allow for | reimbursement of certain insurance costs associated with
| persons performing work under the Lead Direct Assistance | Program. shall make available, for the portion of a policy | related to lead activities,
100% insurance subsidies to | licensed lead abatement contractors who primarily target
their | work to the pilot area communities and employ a significant | number of licensed lead abatement workers from the pilot area | communities. Receipt of the subsidies shall be reviewed | annually by the Department. The Department shall adopt rules | for implementation of these insurance subsidies within 6 months | after the effective date of this Act.
| (Source: P.A. 95-492, eff. 1-1-08.) | (410 ILCS 43/30)
| Sec. 30. Advisory Council. The Advisory Council shall | assist the Department in developing submit an annual written | report to the Governor and General Assembly on the operation | and effectiveness of the CLEAR-WIN Program. The report must | evaluate the program's effectiveness on reducing the | prevalence of lead poisoning in children in the pilot area | communities and in training and employing persons in the pilot | area communities . The report also must : (i) contain information | about training and
employment associated with persons | providing direct assistance work,
(ii) describe the numbers of |
| units in which lead hazards were remediated or leaded plumbing | replaced, (iii) lead -based paint was abated; specify the type | of work completed and the types of dwellings and demographics | of persons assisted , (iv) ; summarize the cost of lead | lead-based paint hazard control and CLEAR-WIN Program | administration , (v) report on ; rent increases or decreases in | the residential property affected by direct assistance work and | pilot area communities; rental property ownership changes , | (vi) describe ; and any other CLEAR-WIN actions taken by the | Department , other public agencies, or the Advisory Council , and | (vii) recommend any necessary legislation or rule-making to | improve the effectiveness of this the CLEAR-WIN Program.
| (Source: P.A. 95-492, eff. 1-1-08.)
| (410 ILCS 43/15 rep.) | Section 10. The Comprehensive Lead Education, Reduction, | and Window Replacement Program Act is amended by repealing | Section 15. | Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | becoming law. |
Effective Date: 8/25/2017
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