Public Act 100-0613 Public Act 0613 100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 100-0613 | HB1439 Enrolled | LRB100 03186 MJP 13191 b |
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| AN ACT concerning safety.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, | represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Electronic Products Recycling and Reuse Act | is amended by changing Section 50 as follows: | (415 ILCS 150/50) | (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2020)
| Sec. 50. Recycler and refurbisher registration. | (a) Prior to January 1 of each program year, through | program year 2018, each recycler and refurbisher must register | with the Agency and submit a registration fee pursuant to | subsection (b) for that program year. Registration must be on | forms and in a format prescribed by the Agency and shall | include, but not be limited to, the address of each location | where the recycler or refurbisher manages CEDs or EEDs and | identification of each location at which the recycler or | refurbisher accepts CEDs or EEDs from a residence. | (b) The registration fee for program year 2010 is $2,000. | For program year 2011, if a recycler's or refurbisher's annual | combined total weight of CEDs and EEDs is less than 1,000 tons | per year, the registration fee shall be $500. For program year | 2012 and for all subsequent program years, through program year | 2018, both registration fees shall be increased each year by an |
| inflation factor determined by the annual Implicit Price | Deflator for Gross National Product as published by the U.S. | Department of Commerce in its Survey of Current Business. The | inflation factor must be calculated each year by dividing the | latest published annual Implicit Price Deflator for Gross | National Product by the annual Implicit Price Deflator for | Gross National Product for the previous year. The inflation | factor must be rounded to the nearest 1/100th, and the | resulting registration fee must be rounded to the nearest whole | dollar. No later than October 1 of each program year, through | October 1, 2017, the Agency shall post on its website the | registration fee for the next program year. | (c) Through program year 2018, no person may act as a | recycler or a refurbisher of CEDs for a manufacturer obligated | to meet goals under this Act unless the recycler or refurbisher | is registered with the Agency and has paid the registration fee | as required under this Section. Beginning in program year 2016, | and through program year 2018, all recycling or refurbishing | facilities used by collectors of CEDs and EEDs shall be | accredited by the Responsible Recycling (R2) Practices or | e-Stewards certification programs or any other equivalent | certification programs recognized by the United States | Environmental Protection Agency. Accreditation is not required | for facilities that place cathode ray tube (CRT) glass in | storage cells for future retrieval in accordance with | subsection (d) of Section 15 of this Act. Manufacturers of CEDs |
| and EEDs shall ensure that recycling or refurbishing facilities | used as part of their recovery programs meet this requirement. | Any organization that accredits facilities pursuant to this | Section is prohibited from penalizing or taking other negative | actions against any recycler, refurbisher, or collector of CEDs | and EEDs based on the recycler's, refurbisher's, or collector's | use of a facility that places CRT glass in storage cells for | future retrieval in accordance with subsection (d) of Section | 15 of this Act. | (c-5) Through program year 2018, a registered recycler or | refurbisher of CEDs and EEDs for a manufacturer obligated to | meet goals under this Act may not charge individual consumers | or units of local government acting as collectors a fee to | recycle or refurbish CEDs and EEDs, unless the recycler or | refurbisher provides (i) a financial incentive, such as a | coupon, that is of greater or equal value to the fee being | charged or (ii) premium service, such as curbside collection, | home pick-up, or similar methods of collection. Local units of | government serving as collectors of CEDs and EEDs shall not | charge a manufacturer for collection costs and shall offer the | manufacturer or its representative all CEDs and EEDs collected | by the local government at no cost. Nothing in this Act | requires a local unit of government to serve as a collector. | (c-10) Nothing in this Act prohibits any waste hauler from | entering into a contractual agreement with a unit of local | government to establish a collection program for the recycling |
| or reuse of CEDs or EEDs, including services such as curbside | collection, home pick-up, drop-off locations, or similar | methods of collection. | (d) Through program year 2018, recyclers and refurbishers | must, at a minimum, comply with all of the following: | (1) Recyclers and refurbishers must comply with | federal, State, and local laws and regulations, including | federal and State minimum wage laws, specifically relevant | to the handling, processing, refurbishing and recycling of | residential CEDs and must have proper authorization by all | appropriate governing authorities to perform the handling, | processing, refurbishment, and recycling. | (2) Recyclers and refurbishers must implement the | appropriate measures to safeguard occupational and | environmental health and safety, through the following: | (A) environmental health and safety training of | personnel, including training with regard to material | and equipment handling, worker exposure, controlling | releases, and safety and emergency procedures; | (B) an up-to-date, written plan for the | identification and management of hazardous materials; | and | (C) an up-to-date, written plan for reporting and | responding to exceptional pollutant releases, | including emergencies such as accidents, spills, | fires, and explosions. |
| (3) Recyclers and refurbishers must maintain (i) | commercial general liability insurance or the equivalent | corporate guarantee for accidents and other emergencies | with limits of not less than $1,000,000 per occurrence and | $1,000,000 aggregate and (ii) pollution legal liability | insurance with limits not less than $1,000,000 per | occurrence for companies engaged solely in the dismantling | activities and $5,000,000 per occurrence for companies | engaged in recycling. | (4) Recyclers and refurbishers must maintain on file | documentation that demonstrates the completion of an | environmental health and safety audit completed and | certified by a competent internal and external auditor | annually. A competent auditor is an individual who, through | professional training or work experience, is appropriately | qualified to evaluate the environmental health and safety | conditions, practices, and procedures of the facility. | Documentation of auditors' qualifications must be | available for inspection by Agency officials and | third-party auditors. | (5) Recyclers and refurbishers must maintain on file | proof of workers' compensation and employers' liability | insurance. | (6) Recyclers and refurbishers must provide adequate | assurance (such as bonds or corporate guarantee) to cover | environmental and other costs of the closure of the |
| recycler or refurbisher's facility, including cleanup of | stockpiled equipment and materials. | (7) Recyclers and refurbishers must apply due | diligence principles to the selection of facilities to | which components and materials (such as plastics, metals, | and circuit boards) from CEDs and EEDs are sent for reuse | and recycling. | (8) Recyclers and refurbishers must establish a | documented environmental management system that is | appropriate in level of detail and documentation to the | scale and function of the facility, including documented | regular self-audits or inspections of the recycler or | refurbisher's environmental compliance at the facility. | (9) Recyclers and refurbishers must use the | appropriate equipment for the proper processing of | incoming materials as well as controlling environmental | releases to the environment. The dismantling operations | and storage of CED and EED components that contain | hazardous substances must be conducted indoors and over | impervious floors. Storage areas must be adequate to hold | all processed and unprocessed inventory. When heat is used | to soften solder and when CED and EED components are | shredded, operations must be designed to control indoor and | outdoor hazardous air emissions. | (10) Recyclers and refurbishers must establish a | system for identifying and properly managing components |
| (such as circuit boards, batteries, CRTs, and mercury | phosphor lamps) that are removed from CEDs and EEDs during | disassembly. Recyclers and refurbishers must properly | manage all hazardous and other components requiring | special handling from CEDs and EEDs consistent with | federal, State, and local laws and regulations. Recyclers | and refurbishers must provide visible tracking (such as | hazardous waste manifests or bills of lading) of hazardous | components and materials from the facility to the | destination facilities and documentation (such as | contracts) stating how the destination facility processes | the materials received. No recycler or refurbisher may | send, either directly or through intermediaries, hazardous | wastes to solid waste (non-hazardous waste) landfills or to | non-hazardous waste incinerators for disposal or energy | recovery. For the purpose of these guidelines, smelting of | hazardous wastes to recover metals for reuse in conformance | with all applicable laws and regulations is not considered | disposal or energy recovery. | (11) Recyclers and refurbishers must use a regularly | implemented and documented monitoring and record-keeping | program that tracks inbound CED and EED material weights | (total) and subsequent outbound weights (total to each | destination), injury and illness rates, and compliance | with applicable permit parameters including monitoring of | effluents and emissions. Recyclers and refurbishers must |
| maintain contracts or other documents, such as sales | receipts, suitable to demonstrate: (i) the reasonable | expectation that there is a downstream market or uses for | designated electronics (which may include recycling or | reclamation processes such as smelting to recover metals | for reuse); and (ii) that any residuals from recycling or | reclamation processes, or both, are properly handled and | managed to maximize reuse and recycling of materials to the | extent practical. | (12) Recyclers and refurbishers must comply with | federal and international law and agreements regarding the | export of used products or materials. In the case of | exports of CEDs and EEDs, recyclers and refurbishers must | comply with applicable requirements of the U.S. and of the | import and transit countries and must maintain proper | business records documenting its compliance. No recycler | or refurbisher may establish or use intermediaries for the | purpose of circumventing these U.S. import and transit | country requirements. | (13) Recyclers and refurbishers that conduct | transactions involving the transboundary shipment of used | CEDs and EEDs shall use contracts (or the equivalent | commercial arrangements) made in advance that detail the | quantity and nature of the materials to be shipped. For the | export of materials to a foreign country (directly or | indirectly through downstream market contractors): (i) the |
| shipment of intact televisions and computer monitors | destined for reuse must include only whole products that | are tested and certified as being in working order or | requiring only minor repair (e.g. not requiring the | replacement of circuit boards or CRTs), must be destined | for reuse with respect to the original purpose, and the | recipient must have verified a market for the sale or | donation of such product for reuse; (ii) the shipments of | CEDs and EEDs for material recovery must be prepared in a | manner for recycling, including, without limitation, | smelting where metals will be recovered, plastics recovery | and glass-to-glass recycling; or (iii) the shipment of CEDs | and EEDs are being exported to companies or facilities that | are owned or controlled by the original equipment | manufacturer. | (14) Recyclers and refurbishers must maintain the | following export records for each shipment on file for a | minimum of 3 years: (i) the facility name and the address | to which shipment is exported; (ii) the shipment contents | and volumes; (iii) the intended use of contents by the | destination facility; (iv) any specification required by | the destination facility in relation to shipment contents; | (v) an assurance that all shipments for export, as | applicable to the CED manufacturer, are legal and satisfy | all applicable laws of the destination country. | (15) Recyclers and refurbishers must employ |
| industry-accepted procedures for the destruction or | sanitization of data on hard drives and other data storage | devices. Acceptable guidelines for the destruction or | sanitization of data are contained in the National | Institute of Standards and Technology's Guidelines for | Media Sanitation or those guidelines certified by the | National Association for Information Destruction; | (16) No recycler or refurbisher may employ prison labor | in any operation related to the collection, | transportation, recycling, and refurbishment of CEDs and | EEDs. No recycler or refurbisher may employ any third party | that uses or subcontracts for the use of prison labor.
| (Source: P.A. 99-13, eff. 7-10-15; 100-433, eff. 8-25-17.)
| Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | becoming law.
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Effective Date: 7/20/2018
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