Public Act 095-0607
Public Act 0607 95TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
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Public Act 095-0607 |
SB0684 Enrolled |
LRB095 10881 HLH 31161 b |
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| AN ACT concerning local government.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The North Shore Sanitary District Act is amended | by changing Sections 3, 4, 5, 8.1, and 11 as follows:
| (70 ILCS 2305/3) (from Ch. 42, par. 279)
| Sec. 3. The corporate authority of the North Shore Sanitary | District
shall consist of 5 trustees.
| Within 20 days after the adoption of the Act, as provided | in Section
1, the county governing body shall proceed to divide | the sanitary
district into 5 wards for the purpose of electing | trustees. One trustee shall
be elected for each ward on the | date of the next regular county election. In
each sanitary | district organized pursuant to the provisions of this Act prior
| to the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1975, one | trustee shall be
elected for each ward on the date of the | regular county election in the year
1976. However, the | population in no one ward shall be less than 1/6 of the
| population of the whole district and the territory in each of | the wards
shall be composed of contiguous territory in as | compact form as
practicable. A portion of each ward shall abut | the west shore of Lake
Michigan and the boundaries of the | respective wards shall coincide with
precinct boundaries and |
| the boundaries of existing municipalities as
nearly as | practicable. In the year 1981, and every 10 years thereafter,
| the sanitary district board of trustees shall reapportion the | district, so that
the respective wards shall conform as nearly | as practicable with the above
requirements as to population, | shape and territory.
| The trustees shall hold office respectively for 4 years | from the
first Monday of May after their election and until | their successors are
appointed and qualified, except that the | term of office of 2 of the
trustees first elected shall be for | 2 years. Which of the trustees
first elected shall serve a term | of 2 years shall be determined by lot
at their first meeting. | Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions, all trustees
elected | in 1994 or thereafter shall assume office on the first Monday | in
December following the general election instead of the first | Monday in May of
the following year.
| In the year 1982, and every 10 years thereafter, following | each
decennial Federal census, all 5 trustees shall be elected. | Immediately
following each decennial redistricting, the | sanitary district board of
trustees shall divide the wards into | 2 groups, one of which shall consist of 3
wards and the other | shall consist of 2 wards. Trustees from one group shall
serve | terms of 4 years, 4 years and 2 years; and trustees from the | other group
shall serve terms of 2 years, 4 years and 4 years.
| Each of the trustees , upon entering the duties of their | respective offices, shall execute a bond with security, in the |
| amount and form to be approved by the corporate authorities, | payable to the district, in the penal sum of not less than | $10,000.00, as directed by resolution or ordinance, | conditioned upon the faithful performance of the duties of the | office. Each bond shall be filed with and preserved by the | board secretary.
shall enter into bond, in a sum determined by | the
circuit court, with security to be approved by the circuit | court.
| When a vacancy exists in the office of trustees of any | sanitary
district organized under the provisions of this Act, | the vacancy shall
be filled by appointment by the president of | the sanitary district board
of trustees, with the advice and | consent of the sanitary district board of
trustees, until the | next regular election at which trustees of the sanitary
| district are elected, and shall be made a matter of record in | the office of the
county clerk in the county in which the | district is located.
| A majority of the board of trustees shall constitute a | quorum, but a
smaller number may adjourn from day to day. No | trustee or employee of
the district shall be directly or | indirectly interested in any
contract, work or business of the | district, or the sale of any article,
the expense, price or | consideration of which is paid by the district;
nor in the | purchase of any real estate or other property belonging to
the | district, or which shall be sold for taxes or assessments, or | by
virtue of legal process at the suit of the district. The |
| trustees have
the power to provide and adopt a corporate seal | for the district.
| (Source: P.A. 87-937.)
| (70 ILCS 2305/4) (from Ch. 42, par. 280)
| Sec. 4. Board of trustees; powers; compensation. The | trustees shall
constitute a board of trustees for the district.
| The board of trustees is the corporate authority of the | district, and
shall exercise all the powers and manage and | control all the affairs and
property of the district. The board | shall elect a president and
vice-president from among their own | number. In case of the death,
resignation, absence from the | state, or other disability of the
president, the powers, duties | and emoluments of the office of the
president shall devolve | upon the vice-president, until the disability
is removed or | until a successor to the president is appointed and chosen
in | the manner provided in this Act. The board may select a | secretary,
treasurer, chief engineer, superintendent and | attorney, and may provide
by ordinance for the employment of | such clerks and other employees as
the board may deem necessary | for the municipality. The board may appoint
such other officers | and hire such employees to manage and control the
operations of | the district as it deems necessary; provided, however, that the
| board shall not employ an individual as a wastewater operator | whose Certificate
of Technical Competency is suspended or | revoked under rules adopted by the
Pollution Control Board |
| under item (4) of subsection (a) of Section 13 of the
| Environmental Protection Act. All employees
selected by the | board shall hold their respective offices during the
pleasure | of the board, and give such bond as may be required by the
| board. The board may prescribe the duties and fix the | compensation of
all the officers and employees of the sanitary | district. However, the
president of the board of trustees shall | not receive more than $10,000 per
year and the other members of | the board shall not receive more than $7,000
per year. However, | beginning with the commencement of the new term of each
board | member in 1993, the president shall not receive more than | $11,000 per
year and each other member of the board shall not | receive more than $8,000
per year. Beginning with the | commencement of the first new term after the effective date of | this amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly, the president | of the board shall not receive more than $14,000 per year, and | each other member of the board shall not receive more than | $11,000 per year. The board of trustees has full power to pass | all necessary
ordinances, rules and regulations for the proper | management and conduct of
the business of the board and of the | corporation, and for carrying into
effect the objects for which | the sanitary district was formed. The
ordinances may provide | for a fine for each offense of not less than $100 or
more than | $1,000. Each day's continuance of a violation shall be a
| separate offense. Fines under this Section are recoverable by | the sanitary
district in a civil action. The sanitary district |
| is authorized to apply
to the circuit court for injunctive | relief or mandamus when, in the opinion
of the chief | administrative officer, the relief is necessary
to protect the | sewerage system of the sanitary district.
| The board of trustees shall have the authority to change | the name of the District, by ordinance, to the North Shore | Water Reclamation District. If an ordinance is passed pursuant | to this paragraph, all provisions of this Act shall apply to | the newly renamed district.
| (Source: P.A. 89-143, eff. 7-14-95.)
| (70 ILCS 2305/5) (from Ch. 42, par. 281)
| Sec. 5. Ordinance enactment and rulemaking procedures.
| (a) No ordinance or rule imposing a penalty, or assessing a | charge under
Section 7.1, shall take effect until the board of | trustees has complied with
the requirements of this Section. As | used in this Section, "rule" means a rule,
regulation, order, | or resolution.
| (1) Not less than 30 days before the effective date of | a proposed
ordinance or rule imposing a penalty or | assessing a charge under Section 7.1 , the board of trustees | shall publish a general notice of the
proposed ordinance or | rule imposing a penalty or assessing a charge under Section | 7.1 in a newspaper of general circulation in the
district | or, if no such newspaper exists, shall post copies of the | notice in 3
public places in the district, unless persons |
| subject to the proposed ordinance
or rule are named and | either personally served or otherwise have actual notice
in | accordance with the law. The notice shall include the | following:
| (A) A statement of the time, place, and nature of | public proceedings to
consider or adopt the proposed | ordinance or rule.
| (B) Reference to the legal authority under which | the ordinance or rule
is proposed.
| (C) Either the terms or substance of the proposed | ordinance or rule or a
description of the subjects and | issues involved.
| (2) After publication or service of the notice of the | proposed ordinance
or rule imposing a penalty or assessing | a charge under Section 7.1
required by this Section , the | board of trustees shall give interested
persons a | meaningful opportunity to participate in the process | through
submission of written data, views, or arguments | with or without the opportunity
for oral presentation. | After consideration of the relevant matter presented,
the | board of trustees shall incorporate in the adopted | ordinance or rule a
concise general statement of its basis | and purpose and in an accompanying
explanatory notice shall | specifically address each comment received by the
board.
| (3) The board of trustees shall make the required | publication or service
of notice of a final ordinance or |
| rule imposing a penalty or assessing a charge under Section | 7.1; not less than 30 days before its
effective date.
| (b) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, no other | ordinance or rule shall take effect until 10 days after it is | published. However, notwithstanding the provisions of this | Section, any ordinance or rule which contains a statement of | its urgency in the preamble or body thereof, may take effect | immediately upon its passage provided that the corporate | authorities, by a vote of two-thirds of all the members then | holding office, so direct. The decision of the corporate | authorities as to the urgency of any ordinance shall not be | subject to judicial review except for an abuse of discretion.
| Within 30 days after the adoption by the board of trustees of | all other
ordinances and rules, the board of trustees
shall | publish at least once in a newspaper of general circulation in | the
district or, if no such newspaper exists, shall post copies | of the notice in
3 public places in the district, and no | ordinance or rule
shall take effect until 10 days after it is | published.
| (c) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, all | ordinances, rules, or resolutions shall be (1) printed or | published in book or pamphlet form, published by authority of | the corporate authorities, or (2) published at least once, | within 30 days after passage, in one or more newspapers | published in the district, or, if no newspaper is published | therein, then in one or more newspapers with a general |
| circulation within the district. Publication shall be | satisfied by either subsection (1) or (2) notwithstanding any | other provision in this Act. If there is an error in printing, | the publishing requirement of this Act shall be satisfied if | those portions of the ordinance or rule that were erroneously | printed are republished, correctly, within 30 days after the | original publication that contained the error. The fact that an | error occurred in publication shall not affect the effective | date of the ordinance or rule so published. If the error in | printing is not corrected within 30 days after the date of the | original publication that contained the error, as provided in | the preceding sentence, the corporate authorities may, by | ordinance, declare the ordinance or rule that was erroneously | published to be nevertheless valid and in effect no sooner than | 10 days after the date of the original publication, | notwithstanding the error in publication, and shall order the | original ordinance or rule to be published once more within 30 | days after the passage of the validating ordinance.
| (d)
(c) The board of trustees shall give an interested | person the right to
petition for the issuance, amendment, or | repeal of an ordinance or a rule.
| (Source: P.A. 88-649, eff. 9-16-94.)
| (70 ILCS 2305/8.1) (from Ch. 42, par. 284.1)
| Sec. 8.1. Every such sanitary district shall also have the | power to lease
to others for any period of time, not exceeding |
| 20
ten years, upon such terms
as its board of trustees may | determine, any real estate, right-of-way, or
privilege, or any | interest therein, or any part thereof, acquired by it
which is | in the opinion of the board of trustees of such sanitary | district,
no longer required for its corporate purposes or | which may not be
immediately needed for such purposes, and such | leases may contain such
conditions and retain such interests | therein as may be deemed for the best
interest of such sanitary | district by such board of trustees; also any such
sanitary | district shall have the right to grant easements and permits | for
the use of any such real property, right-of-way, or | privilege, which will
not in the opinion of the board of | trustees of such sanitary district,
interfere with the use | thereof by such sanitary district for its corporate
purposes, | and such easements and permits may contain such conditions and
| retain such interests therein as may be deemed for the best | interests of
such sanitary district by such board of trustees.
| (Source: Laws 1961, p. 551.)
| (70 ILCS 2305/11) (from Ch. 42, par. 287)
| Sec. 11. Except as otherwise provided in this Section, all | contracts
for purchases or sales by the municipality, the | expense of which will exceed
the mandatory competitive bid | threshold, shall be let to the
lowest responsible bidder | therefor upon not less
than 14 days' public notice of the terms | and conditions upon which the contract
is to be let, having |
| been given by publication in a newspaper of general
circulation | published in the district, and the board may reject any and all
| bids and readvertise. In determining the lowest responsible | bidder, the board
shall take into consideration the qualities | and serviceability of the articles
supplied, their conformity | with specifications, their suitability to the
requirements of | the district, the availability of support services, the
| uniqueness of the service, materials, equipment, or supplies as | it applies to
network integrated computer systems, the | compatibility of the service,
materials, equipment or supplies | with existing equipment, and the delivery
terms. Contracts for | services in excess of the mandatory competitive bid
threshold | may, subject to the
provisions of this Section, be let by | competitive bidding at the discretion of
the district board of | trustees. All contracts for purchases or sales that
will not | exceed the mandatory competitive bid threshold may be made in | the open market without publication in a
newspaper as above | provided, but whenever practical shall be based on at least
3 | competitive bids. For purposes of this Section, the "mandatory | competitive
bid threshold"
is a dollar amount equal to 0.1% of | the total general fixed
assets of the district as reported in | the most recent required audit report.
In
no event, however, | shall the mandatory competitive bid threshold dollar amount
be | less than $10,000, nor more than $40,000.
| Cash, a cashier's check, a
certified check, or a bid
bond | with adequate surety approved by the board of trustees as a |
| deposit of
good faith, in a reasonable amount, but not in | excess of 10% of the contract
amount, may be required of each | bidder by the district on all bids involving
amounts in excess | of the mandatory competitive bid threshold and, if so
required, | the advertisement for bids shall so specify.
| Contracts which by their nature are not adapted to award by | competitive
bidding, including, without limitation, contracts | for the services of
individuals, groups or firms possessing a | high degree of professional skill
where the ability or fitness | of the individual or organization plays an
important part, | contracts for financial management services undertaken
| pursuant to "An Act relating to certain investments of public | funds by
public agencies", approved July 23, 1943, as now or | hereafter amended,
contracts for the purchase or sale of | utilities, contracts for materials
economically procurable | only from a single source of supply, contracts for
the use, | purchase, delivery, movement, or installation of
data | processing equipment, software, or services and | telecommunications and
interconnect equipment, software, or | services, contracts for duplicating
machines and supplies, | contracts for goods or services procured from another
| governmental agency, purchases of equipment previously owned | by an entity
other than the district itself, and leases of real | property where the sanitary
district is the lessee shall not be | subject to the competitive bidding
requirements of this | Section.
|
| In the case of an emergency affecting the public health or | safety so declared
by the Board of Trustees of the municipality | at a meeting thereof
duly convened, which declaration shall | require the affirmative vote of four
of the five Trustees | elected, and shall set forth the nature of the
danger to the | public health or safety, contracts totaling not more than the
| emergency contract cap
may be let to the extent necessary to
| resolve such emergency
without public advertisement or | competitive bidding.
For purposes of this Section, the | "emergency contract cap" is a dollar
amount equal to 0.4% of | the total general fixed assets of
the
district as reported in | the most recent required audit report.
In no event,
however, | shall the emergency contract cap dollar amount be less than | $40,000,
nor more than $250,000
$100,000 .
The Resolution
or | Ordinance in which such declaration is embodied shall fix the | date upon
which such emergency shall terminate which date may | be extended or abridged
by the Board of Trustees as in their | judgment the circumstances require. A
full written account of | any such emergency, together with a requisition for the
| materials, supplies, labor or equipment required therefor | shall be submitted
immediately upon completion and shall be | open to public inspection for a
period of at least one year | subsequent to the date of such emergency purchase.
Within 30 | days after the passage of the resolution or ordinance declaring | an
emergency
affecting the public health or safety, the | municipality shall submit to the
Illinois
Environmental |
| Protection Agency the full written account of any such | emergency
along
with a copy of the resolution or ordinance | declaring the emergency, in
accordance with
requirements as may | be provided by rule.
| To address operating emergencies not affecting the public | health or safety,
the
Board of Trustees shall authorize, in | writing, officials or employees of the
sanitary
district to | purchase in the open market and without advertisement any | supplies,
materials,
equipment, or services for immediate | delivery to meet the bona fide operating
emergency, without | filing a requisition or estimate therefor, in an amount not
in | excess of
$100,000
$40,000 ; provided that the Board of Trustees | must be notified of the operating
emergency. A full, written | account of each operating emergency and a
requisition for the
| materials, supplies, equipment, and services required to meet | the operating
emergency
must be immediately submitted by the | officials or employees authorized to make
purchases to the
| Board of
Trustees. The account must be available for public | inspection for a period of
at least one
year after the date of | the operating emergency purchase. The exercise of
authority | with
respect to purchases for a bona fide operating emergency | is not dependent on a
declaration of an operating emergency by | the Board of Trustees.
| No Trustee shall be interested, directly or indirectly, in | any contract,
work or business of the municipality, or in the | sale of any article, whenever
the expense, price or |
| consideration of the contract work, business or sale is
paid | either from the treasury or by any assessment levied by any | Statute or
Ordinance. No Trustee shall be interested, directly | or indirectly, in the
purchase of any property which (1) | belongs to the municipality, or (2) is sold
for taxes or | assessments of the municipality, or (3) is sold by virtue of | legal
process in the suit of the municipality.
| A contract for any work or other public improvement, to be | paid for in
whole or in part by special assessment or special | taxation, shall be entered
into and the
performance thereof | controlled by the provisions of Division 2 of
Article 9 of the | "Illinois Municipal Code", approved May 29, 1961, as
heretofore | or hereafter amended, as near as may be. However, contracts
may | be let for making proper and suitable connections between the | mains
and outlets of the respective sanitary sewers in the | district with any
conduit, conduits, main pipe or pipes that | may be constructed by such
sanitary district.
| (Source: P.A. 91-921, eff. 1-1-01; 92-195, eff. 1-1-02.)
| Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | becoming law.
|
Effective Date: 9/11/2007
|