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Full Text of HB3596
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HB3596 - 104th General Assembly
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104TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2025 and 2026
HB3596
Introduced 2/18/2025, by Rep. Anna Moeller
SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
See Index
Creates the Wetlands Protection Act. Provides that no person may
discharge dredged or fill material into a State jurisdictional wetland
except with a permit issued by the Department of Natural Resources.
Exempts certain activities from the requirements of the Act. Sets forth
procedures for individual permit applications and other related procedural
requirements. Provides that the Department shall not issue an individual
permit unless the Environmental Protection Agency certifies to the
Department that there will not be a violation of State water quality
standards. Provides that the Department may issue an after-the-fact permit
in certain emergency circumstances. Sets forth financial assurance
requirements. Authorizes the Department to adopt general permits under the
Act. Provides that any person who intends to conduct a regulated activity
may do so in accordance with a general permit issued by the Department,
which pre-authorizes a category of activities with minimal adverse
effects. Provides procedures and requirements regarding preconstruction
notifications. Provides that certain entities may establish and operate a
mitigation bank or in lieu fee program. Describes procedures and
requirements for mitigation banks. Grants the Department rulemaking
powers. Provides that the Department shall prepare certain reports and
studies. Provides for the review of final decisions of the Department.
Provides for investigations by the Department and enforcement by a State's
Attorney or the Attorney General. Provides for a civil penalty not to
exceed $10,000 per day of violation, with interest after judgment, and
with certain costs, fees, and expenses, payable to the Wetlands Protection
Fund. Provides that any person may file a complaint with the Illinois
Pollution Control Board concerning a violation of the Act, a rule adopted
under the Act, a condition of a permit issued under the Act, or an order of
the Pollution Control Board issued under the Act. Provides for county and
special district stormwater program authorities to control or regulate
activities in any wetlands within their jurisdiction. Establishes the
Wetlands Protection Fund. Provides that a permit review fee for all permit
applications is to be set by the Department by rule. Makes corresponding
changes to the State Finance Act. Makes findings. Defines terms. Effective
immediately.
LRB104 09762 BDA 19828 b
A BILL FOR
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AN ACT concerning safety.
2
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3
represented in the General Assembly:
4
Section 1.
Short title.
This Act may be cited as the
5
Wetlands Protection Act.
6
Section 5.
Findings and intent.
The General Assembly
7
finds:
8
(1) In 1818, Illinois contained an estimated 8.2 million
9
acres of wetlands. Based on the Illinois portion of the
10
National Wetlands Inventory, less than 9% of those original
11
acres of wetlands remain.
12
(2) As a result of the significant loss in wetland
13
acreage, there has been a corresponding loss in the functional
14
values and benefits that wetlands provide.
15
(3) Illinois is bordered by 880 miles of rivers, which are
16
critical to navigation, commerce, recreation, and ecosystem
17
health at home and downstream to the Gulf of Mexico, and the
18
health of Illinois rivers is heavily influenced by the health
19
of the tributaries and streams that flow into them.
20
(4) In Illinois, 9,894 total miles of streams provide
21
water for surface water intakes, supplying public drinking
22
water systems that rely at least in part on intermittent,
23
ephemeral, or headwater streams.
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(5) Continued loss of Illinois' wetlands and streams may
2
deprive the People of the State of some or all of the benefits
3
that they provide, including:
4
(A) reducing flood damages and protecting vulnerable
5
communities by absorbing, storing, and conveying peak
6
flows from storms;
7
(B) improving water quality by serving as
8
sedimentation and filtering basins and as natural
9
biological treatment areas;
10
(C) providing breeding, nesting, foraging, and
11
protective habitat for approximately 40% of the State's
12
threatened and endangered plants and animals, in addition
13
to other forms of fish, wildlife, game, waterfowl, and
14
shorebirds;
15
(D) protecting underground water resources and helping
16
to recharge rivers, streams, and local or regional
17
underground water supplies;
18
(E) serving as recreational areas for hunting,
19
fishing, boating, hiking, bird watching, photography, and
20
other uses;
21
(F) providing open space and aesthetic values,
22
particularly in rapidly developing areas;
23
(G) providing unique educational and research
24
opportunities because of their high diversity of plants
25
and animals, their support for a high incidence of
26
threatened and endangered species, and their function as a
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natural buffer for rivers, lakes, and streams;
2
(H) supplying nutrients in freshwater food cycles and
3
serving as nursery areas and sanctuaries for young fish;
4
and
5
(I) helping to protect shorelines from the forces of
6
water erosion.
7
(6) Our changing climate and its more extreme and less
8
predictable weather patterns heighten the need for some or all
9
of the benefits that Illinois' wetlands provide, including
10
flood control, coastal resilience, water quality, aquifer
11
recharge, habitat, and maintenance of baseflow to recharge
12
rivers, streams, and local or regional underground water
13
supplies.
14
(7) Illinois historically relied on the federal Clean
15
Water Act's permit program administered by the U.S. Army Corps
16
of Engineers and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to
17
prevent harm to aquatic resources from unauthorized discharges
18
of dredge or fill material.
19
(8) After rejection of the 1989 Wetland Delineation Manual
20
and in light of uncertainty about federal protections for some
21
"isolated" wetlands, the General Assembly passed the
22
Interagency Wetland Policy Act of 1989 to protect these
23
wetlands from State agency actions and achieve no net loss of
24
wetlands.
25
(9) The Supreme Court's May 25, 2023 decision in Sackett
26
v. EPA rolled back the scope of waters of the United States,
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thereby removing federal Clean Water Act protections for many
2
waters of the United States, including wetlands that provide
3
significant flood control protections, such as bottomland
4
hardwood forested wetlands that are separated from the
5
Illinois River by levees.
6
(10) It is important for Illinois to adopt protections
7
under State law to reinstate protections lost by rolling back
8
the scope of the federal Clean Water Act.
9
Section 10.
Definitions.
As used in this Act:
10
"Adjacent" means bordering, contiguous, or neighboring.
11
"Adjacent wetlands" includes wetlands separated from
12
waters of the United States by man-made dikes or barriers,
13
natural river berms, beach dunes, and other man-made or
14
natural structures.
15
"Affected property" means any property upon which a
16
regulated activity is conducted.
17
"Agency" means the Illinois Environmental Protection
18
Agency.
19
"Approved county or district" means a county or special
20
district with a stormwater program that has been approved
21
under Section 55 to issue permits under this Act instead of the
22
Department of Natural Resources.
23
"Approved wetland specialist" means a person who has met
24
the educational, training, and field experience requirements
25
that have been adopted, by rule, under this Act or set forth in
HB3596
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an approved county or district code and that assure
2
knowledgeable wetland delineations using the Corps of
3
Engineers Wetland Delineation Manual in a manner that is
4
consistent with subsection (f) of Section 25 of this Act.
5
"Avoidance" means any action that is taken in a manner
6
that will cause a regulated activity not to occur and that is
7
consistent with the federal Clean Water Act 404(b)(1)
8
Guidelines developed by the U.S. Environmental Protection
9
Agency and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
10
"Bog" means a peat-accumulating wetland that has no
11
significant inflows or outflows and that supports acidophilic
12
mosses, particularly sphagnum, resulting in highly acidic
13
conditions.
14
"Bottomland hardwood" means forested riverine floodplain
15
forest, including flatwoods in northeastern Illinois, that are
16
located in the 100-year flood plain of Illinois rivers and
17
streams and that are at least seasonally flooded.
18
"Class I wetland" means a top tier wetland as indicated by
19
type (such as bog, bottomland hardwood forest, or panne),
20
designation (such as Ramsar wetland of international
21
importance), or function (such as threatened or endangered
22
species habitat or important flood protection) consistent with
23
Section 25 of this Act. Class I wetlands do not include waters
24
of the United States.
25
"Class II wetland" means a wetland, including its
26
contiguous area, that is larger than 0.5 acres and is not a
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Class I wetland. Class II wetlands do not include waters of the
2
United States.
3
"Class III wetland" means a wetland, including its
4
contiguous area, that is between 0.1 acres and 0.5 acres and is
5
not a Class I wetland. Class III wetlands do not include waters
6
of the United States.
7
"Commercial battery energy storage system" means a type of
8
energy storage system that uses batteries to store and
9
distribute energy in the form of electricity for the primary
10
purpose of wholesale or retail sale and is not intended
11
primarily for use on the property on which the device or
12
devices reside.
13
"Commercial solar energy facility" means a "commercial
14
solar energy system" as defined in Section 10-720 of the
15
Illinois Property Tax Code.
16
"Contiguous area" means the portion of a wetland that
17
extends beyond the property boundary of the affected property.
18
"Corps of Engineers" means the U.S. Army Corps of
19
Engineers.
20
"Corps of Engineers Wetlands Delineation Manual" means the
21
1987 U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Wetlands Delineation
22
Manual, Research Program Technical Report Y-87-1, and any
23
applicable Regional Supplements thereto in effect May 24,
24
2023.
25
"Cypress swamp" means forested, permanent, or
26
semi-permanent bodies of water, with species assemblages
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characteristic of the Gulf of Mexico and Southeastern Coastal
2
Plains and including bald cypress, which are typically found
3
in far southern Illinois.
4
"Department" means the Department of Natural Resources.
5
"Director" means the Director of Natural Resources.
6
"Discharge" means any addition of dredged or fill material
7
into, including redeposit of dredged material other than
8
incidental fallback within, State jurisdictional wetlands.
9
"Dredged material" means material that is excavated or
10
dredged from waters of the U.S. and waters of the State.
11
"Fen" means a wetland fed by an alkaline water source,
12
such as a calcareous spring or seep.
13
"Fill material" means material placed in a State
14
jurisdictional wetland where the material has the effect of
15
replacing any portion of a State jurisdictional wetland with
16
dry land or changing the bottom elevation of any portion of a
17
State jurisdictional wetland.
18
"General permit" means a permit issued by an approved
19
county or district, or the Department, in a manner that is
20
authorized under Section 40 of this Act. "General permit"
21
includes a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers nationwide permit.
22
"High-Quality Aquatic Resources" or "HQAR" means
23
high-quality aquatic resources consistent with the guidelines
24
of the Chicago District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers or
25
approved county or district codes.
26
"Individual permit" means a permit issued by the
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Department under Section 25 of this Act after case-specific
2
sequenced review (avoidance, minimization, mitigation) of the
3
proposed project and certification of compliance with State
4
water quality standards.
5
"In lieu fee mitigation" means a payment to an approved in
6
lieu fee program made by a permittee to satisfy a mitigation
7
requirement in accordance with this Act and implementing
8
rules.
9
"Maintenance" means work to repair and keep in good
10
working order existing structures in wetlands, including
11
emergency reconstruction of recently damaged parts of
12
currently serviceable structures, including dikes, dams,
13
levees, groins, riprap, breakwaters, causeways, and bridge
14
abutments or approaches, and transportation structures.
15
"Maintenance" does not include any modification that changes
16
the character, scope, or size of the original fill design but
17
such a modification may be eligible to use Nationwide Permit
18
3, Maintenance.
19
"Metropolitan Water Reclamation District" or "district"
20
means a special district organized under the Metropolitan
21
Water Reclamation District Act.
22
"Minimization" means reducing, as much as practicable, the
23
adverse environmental impact of an unavoidable regulated
24
activity in a manner that is consistent with this Act and the
25
federal Clean Water Act 404(b)(1) Guidelines developed by the
26
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Army Corps
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of Engineers.
2
"Mitigation" means the restoration, establishment,
3
enhancement, or protection and maintenance of wetlands and
4
other aquatic resources for the purpose of compensating for
5
unavoidable adverse impacts that remain after all appropriate
6
and practicable avoidance and minimization have been achieved.
7
Mitigation must be consistent with the requirements of this
8
Act. Mitigation may include wetlands creation if authorized by
9
the Department in situations in which other mitigation is
10
impractical and the likelihood of success is high. Wetland
11
creation is restricted to areas that are currently
12
non-wetlands.
13
"Mitigation bank" means a site, or suite of sites, where
14
aquatic resources, such as wetlands, streams, wetland buffers,
15
and riparian areas, are restored, established, enhanced, or
16
preserved for the purpose of providing compensatory mitigation
17
for impacts authorized by permits under this Act.
18
"Nationwide permit" means a nationwide permit issued by
19
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers as of the effective date of
20
this Act.
21
"Navigable water" means traditionally navigable waters
22
that were historically navigable, are presently navigable, or
23
are susceptible to future navigable use. Navigable water also
24
includes interstate waters (including interstate wetlands),
25
impoundments of traditionally navigable waters and interstate
26
waters (including interstate wetlands), and tributaries.
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"Ordinary high water mark" means that line on the shore
2
established by the fluctuations of water and indicated by
3
physical characteristics, such as a clear, natural line
4
impressed on the bank, shelving, changes in the character of
5
soil, destruction of terrestrial vegetation, the presence of
6
litter and debris, or other appropriate means that consider
7
the characteristics of the surrounding areas.
8
"Panne" means wet interdunal flats located near Lake
9
Michigan. "Panne" includes dune and swale wetlands.
10
"Permit" means a written authorization issued by the
11
Department of Natural Resources under this Act and
12
implementing rules. "Permit" includes general permits and
13
individual permits.
14
"Person" means an individual, partnership, co-partnership,
15
firm, company, limited liability company, corporation,
16
association, joint-stock company, trust, estate, political
17
subdivision, state or federal agency or other legal entity, or
18
its legal representative, employee, agent or assigns.
19
"Preconstruction notification" means notice that a
20
permittee must provide the Department before undertaking an
21
activity authorized by a general permit.
22
"Prior converted cropland" means a wetland that was
23
converted to agricultural use before December 23, 1985, that
24
had an agricultural commodity produced on it at least once
25
before December 23, 1985, that remains available for
26
agricultural commodity production, and that, as of December
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1
23, 1985, did not support woody vegetation and met the
2
following hydrologic criteria for a farmed wetland: (i)
3
inundation was less than 15 consecutive days during the
4
growing season or 10% of the growing season, whichever is
5
less, in most years (50% chance or more); and (ii) if a
6
pothole, ponding was less than 7 consecutive days during the
7
growing season in most years (50% chance or more) and
8
saturation was less than 14 consecutive days during the
9
growing season most years (50% chance or more). However, if
10
the prior converted cropland is changed out of agricultural
11
use (including conservation) and the area reverts to a
12
wetland, the area may become subject to this Act under Section
13
15.
14
"Regulated activity" means the discharge of dredged or
15
fill material into a State jurisdictional wetland subject to
16
this Act.
17
"Renewable energy facility" means (i) a commercial solar
18
energy facility or commercial battery energy storage system;
19
or (ii) supporting facilities. Supporting facilities mean
20
transmission lines, substations, access roads, meteorological
21
towers, storage containers, and equipment associated with the
22
generation and storage of electricity by a commercial solar
23
energy facility.
24
"Significant nexus" means connectivity or nexus to
25
maintaining the chemical, physical, or biological integrity of
26
navigable waters.
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"State jurisdictional wetland" means a wetland that is
2
protected by the requirements of this Act and is identified
3
consistent with Department rules adopted under Section 40 of
4
this Act. State jurisdictional wetlands are adjacent to or
5
otherwise have a significant nexus to maintaining the
6
chemical, physical, or biological integrity of navigable
7
waters. A State jurisdictional wetland does not include waters
8
of the United States.
9
"Threatened or endangered species" means those species
10
that have been designated as threatened or endangered under
11
the Illinois Endangered Species Protection Act and those
12
species that have been listed as threatened or endangered
13
under the federal Endangered Species Act.
14
"Upland" means non-wetland, dry land.
15
"Voluntary aquatic habitat restoration project" means
16
activities that are voluntarily undertaken (not as required
17
mitigation) to restore, reestablish, rehabilitate, or enhance
18
altered, degraded, or former aquatic habitats that result in a
19
net increase in aquatic habitat functions and services
20
consistent with historic, pre-disturbance functions and
21
services of the aquatic habitat.
22
"Wetlands" means those areas that are inundated or
23
saturated by surface or groundwater at a frequency and
24
duration sufficient to support, and that under normal
25
circumstances do support, a prevalence of vegetation typically
26
adapted for life in saturated soil conditions. "Wetlands"
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includes areas that are delineated in accordance with the
2
Corps of Engineers Wetland Delineation Manual.
3
Section 15.
Exemptions.
4
(a) Consistent with Section 404(f) of the federal Clean
5
Water Act, as long as they do not have as their purpose
6
bringing a wetland into a use to which it was not previously
7
subject where the flow or circulation of navigable waters may
8
be impaired or the reach of such waters be reduced and do not
9
entail discharge of toxic pollutants consistent with Section
10
307 of the Clean Water Act, the following activities are not
11
prohibited by or otherwise subject to regulation under this
12
Act:
13
(1) Normal farming, silviculture, and ranching
14
activities, including plowing, seeding, cultivating, minor
15
drainage, and harvesting for the production of food,
16
fiber, and forest products, or upland soil and water
17
conservation practices.
18
(2) Maintenance, including emergency reconstruction of
19
recently damaged parts, of currently serviceable
20
structures, such as dikes, dams, levees, groins, riprap,
21
breakwaters, causeways, bridge abutments or approaches,
22
and transportation structures. Maintenance does not
23
include any modification that changes the character,
24
scope, or size of the original fill design. Emergency
25
reconstruction must occur within a reasonable period of
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1
time after damage occurs in order to qualify for this
2
exemption.
3
(3) Construction or maintenance of farm or stock ponds
4
or irrigation ditches, or the maintenance (but not
5
construction) of drainage ditches. Discharge associated
6
with siphons, pumps, headgates, wingwalls, weirs,
7
diversion structures, and such other facilities as are
8
appurtenant and functionally related to irrigation and
9
ditches are included in this definition.
10
(4) Construction of temporary sedimentation basins on
11
a construction site which does not include any regulated
12
activities within a wetland. As used in this paragraph,
13
the term "construction site" means any site involving the
14
erection of buildings, roads, and other discrete
15
structures and the installation of support facilities
16
necessary for construction and utilization of such
17
structures. "Construction site" also includes any other
18
land areas which involve land-disturbing excavation
19
activities, including quarrying or other mining
20
activities, where an increase in the runoff of sediment is
21
controlled through the use of temporary sedimentation
22
basins.
23
(5) Construction or maintenance of farm roads or
24
forest roads or temporary roads for moving mining
25
equipment, where such roads are constructed and
26
maintained, in accordance with best management practices,
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1
to assure that flow and circulation patterns and chemical
2
and biological characteristics of the wetland are not
3
impaired, that the reach of the wetland is not reduced,
4
and that any adverse effect on the aquatic environment
5
will be otherwise minimized.
6
(6) Activities for the placement of pilings for linear
7
projects, including bridges, elevated walkways, and power
8
line structures in accordance with best management
9
practices, to assure that the flow and circulation
10
patterns and chemical and biological characteristics of
11
the wetland are not impaired, that the reach of the
12
wetland is not reduced, and that any adverse effect on the
13
aquatic environment will be otherwise minimized.
14
(b) Any exemption that is authorized by and pertaining to
15
wetlands that are subject to regulation under the federal
16
Clean Water Act, or regulations promulgated thereunder, at the
17
time of enactment of this Act, shall also be an exemption for
18
the purpose of this Act.
19
(c) The following are exempt from regulation as State
20
jurisdictional wetlands under this Act:
21
(1) Waste treatment systems, including treatment ponds
22
or lagoons designed to meet the requirements of the
23
federal Clean Water Act and comply with State water
24
quality standards.
25
(2) Prior converted cropland unless there has been a
26
change in use out of agricultural or conservation use and
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1
the area reverts to a wetland.
2
(3) Ditches (including roadside ditches) excavated
3
wholly in and draining only dry land and that do not carry
4
a relatively permanent flow of water.
5
(4) An artificially irrigated area that would revert
6
to upland if the irrigation ceased. This shall also
7
include the pumping of water for purposes of waterfowl
8
hunting or creating waterfowl habitat.
9
(5) An artificial lake or pond created by excavating
10
or diking upland to collect and retain water and which are
11
used exclusively for such purposes as stock watering,
12
irrigation, settling basins, or rice growing.
13
(6) Artificial reflecting or swimming pools or other
14
small ornamental bodies of water created by excavating or
15
diking dry land to retain water for primarily aesthetic
16
reasons.
17
(7) A water-filled depression created in dry land
18
incidental to construction activity and pits excavated in
19
dry land for the purpose of obtaining fill, sand, or
20
gravel unless and until the construction or excavation
21
operation is abandoned and the resulting water body meets
22
the definition of "waters of the State" consistent with
23
the Environmental Protection Act, including Section 3.550
24
of the Environmental Protection Act.
25
(8) Swales and erosional features, including gullies,
26
rills, and small washes, characterized by low volume,
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infrequent, or short duration flow.
2
(9) Wetlands created by the construction of stormwater
3
facilities in upland areas, provided that the facility was
4
not created for the purpose of wetland mitigation.
5
(d) Any activity with respect to which a county or special
6
district has an approved program under Section 55 of this Act.
7
Section 20.
Applicability.
8
(a) The requirements of this Act apply to all State
9
jurisdictional wetlands as that term is defined in this Act.
10
If a wetland ceases to meet that definition because it becomes
11
subject to regulation under the federal Clean Water Act, it
12
shall no longer be subject to the provisions of this Act. The
13
Department may enter into an agreement with the Corps of
14
Engineers to coordinate the permit program under this Act with
15
the Corps of Engineers permit program under Section 404 of the
16
federal Clean Water Act.
17
(b) The following are presumed to be adjacent or have a
18
significant nexus to maintaining the chemical, physical, or
19
biological integrity of a navigable water and as such are
20
State jurisdictional wetlands for purposes of this Act:
21
(1) wetlands that are wholly or partially located
22
within 100 feet of the ordinary high water mark of a
23
navigable water, interstate water, or tributary;
24
(2) wetlands that are wholly or partially located in
25
the 100-year floodplain and are within 1,500 feet of the
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ordinary high water mark of a navigable water, interstate
2
water, or tributary;
3
(3) wetlands that are wholly or partially within 1,500
4
feet of the ordinary high water mark of Lake Michigan; or
5
(4) wetlands that have a visible surface water or a
6
regular shallow subsurface water connection to a navigable
7
water.
8
(c) An affected property owner or developer may introduce
9
information that is relevant to demonstrate that a particular
10
wetland is not a State jurisdictional wetland, thereby
11
rebutting the presumption in subsection (b). The Department
12
shall consider information presented to rebut the presumption
13
and determine whether the presumption has been rebutted. If
14
the Department determines that the presumption is rebutted and
15
the wetland is not a jurisdictional wetland for the purpose of
16
this Act, the wetland shall not be subject to this Act.
17
Section 25.
Regulated activities; individual permits;
18
wetland classification; mitigation; delineation.
19
(a) No person may discharge dredged or fill material into
20
a State jurisdictional wetland protected by this Act except in
21
accordance with the terms of an individual or general permit
22
issued by the Department under this Section or Section 30 of
23
this Act. This subsection (a) becomes effective on the date
24
the Department adopts rules under Section 40 of this Act.
25
(b) No permit shall be required under this Act, and the
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requirements of the Act shall not apply to, renewable energy
2
facility construction, maintenance, repair, improvement, or
3
reconstruction that commenced construction before the
4
effective date of rules adopted under Section 40 of this Act.
5
For purposes of this subsection, "commenced construction"
6
means:
7
(1) to have begun a continuous program of on-site
8
physical construction, such as the placement, assembly, or
9
installation of facilities or equipment or the conducting
10
of site preparation work, including clearing, excavation,
11
or removal of existing structures;
12
(2) to have submitted a binding application or bid to
13
the Illinois Power Agency to execute a Renewable Energy
14
Credit Contract under Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power
15
Agency Act;
16
(3) to have entered into a binding contractual
17
agreement for the purchase and sale of electricity; or
18
(4) to have obtained municipal or county siting
19
approval, a special use permit, or building approval.
20
(c) Wetlands shall be classified as follows:
21
(1) The Department shall classify a wetland as Class I
22
if the wetland:
23
(A) is or encompasses a bog, bottomland hardwood
24
forest, fen, panne, or cypress swamp;
25
(B) has been designated a Ramsar wetland of
26
international importance under the Convention on
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Wetlands;
2
(C) is designated for important flood protection
3
services under paragraph (3);
4
(D) is occupied or suitable habitat for a
5
threatened or endangered species listed under State or
6
federal law;
7
(E) has a Floristic Quality Index that is equal to
8
or greater than 20 or a mean coefficient of
9
conservatism (Mean C) equal to or greater than 3.5,
10
determined in accordance with rules adopted by the
11
Department; or
12
(F) is a High-Quality Aquatic Resource.
13
(2) The Department shall classify a non-Class I
14
wetland as a Class II wetland if the wetland, including
15
its contiguous area, is larger than 0.5 acres. However, if
16
a non-Class I wetland is smaller than 0.5 acres it shall be
17
designated a Class III wetland. If a Class III wetland is
18
1/10th of an acre or smaller, there is no permit required.
19
(3) The Department may, in consultation with the
20
Illinois Emergency Management Agency and Office of
21
Homeland Security, the Federal Emergency Management Agency
22
or local authorities, designate a wetland as a Class I
23
wetland due to important flood protection services
24
protecting human life and property if the wetland is no
25
longer protected under the federal Clean Water Act.
26
(c) Mitigation shall be required in accordance with this
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Act for permitted activities and shall be conducted according
2
to the following preferred order:
3
(1) Discharges impacting Class I wetlands shall be
4
mitigated through either on-site mitigation or off-site
5
mitigation at an approved wetland mitigation bank within
6
the same watershed as the location of the proposed fill.
7
Mitigation shall be in kind, restoring to the maximum
8
degree practicable, as determined by the Department, both
9
the type and functions of the wetland that will be
10
affected by the regulated activity. The mitigation ratio
11
shall be 5:1 unless the Director, for good cause shown and
12
on a case-by-case basis, authorizes a higher mitigation
13
ratio not to exceed 6:1 or a lower mitigation ratio not
14
less than 4:1. In lieu fee mitigation may be used for
15
mitigation when there are no available mitigation credits
16
within the watershed.
17
(2) Discharges impacting Class II wetlands shall be
18
mitigated through either on-site mitigation or off-site
19
mitigation at an approved wetland mitigation bank within
20
the same watershed as the location of the proposed fill.
21
Mitigation shall be in kind, restoring to the maximum
22
degree practicable as determined by the Department, both
23
the type and functions of the wetland that will be
24
affected by the regulated activity. The mitigation ratio
25
shall be 3:1 unless the Director, for good cause shown and
26
on a case-by-case basis, authorizes a higher mitigation
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ratio not to exceed 3.5:1 or a lower mitigation ratio not
2
less than 2.5:1. In lieu fee mitigation may be used for
3
mitigation when there are no available mitigation credits
4
within the watershed.
5
(3) Discharges impacting Class III wetlands shall be
6
mitigated through either participation in an approved
7
wetland mitigation bank or an approved in-lieu fee
8
program, unless the Department for good cause requires in
9
kind on-site mitigation or off-site mitigation at an
10
approved mitigation bank. The mitigation ratio shall be
11
1.5:1 for compensation through an approved wetland
12
mitigation bank and 2:1 for compensation through an
13
approved in-lieu fee program. The Director, for good cause
14
shown and on a case-by-case basis, may authorize a higher
15
or lower mitigation ratio.
16
(d) Persons seeking a permit are responsible for wetland
17
delineation and classification made by or under the
18
supervision of an approved wetland specialist. Wetland
19
delineations shall be made in accordance with the Corps of
20
Engineers Wetland Delineation Manual. Classifications shall be
21
in accordance with this Section or an approved program under
22
Section 55. Delineations by the Corps of Engineers, by
23
approved counties, or by Corps of Engineers approved agencies
24
shall be honored.
25
(e) Persons seeking an individual permit shall provide the
26
Department with a complete application, including, at a
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minimum, the following items: (i) a map of the area that will
2
be affected by the activity, including wetland and water
3
boundaries for the areas affected and the existing uses and
4
structures; (ii) a wetland delineation made in accordance with
5
the Corps of Engineers Wetland Delineation Manual by or under
6
the supervision of an approved wetland specialist and this
7
Section; (iii) a description of the proposed activity,
8
including its purpose, the location and dimensions of any
9
structures, grading or fills, drainage, roads, sewers and
10
water supply, parking lots, stormwater facilities, discharge
11
of pollutants and on-site waste disposal; (iv) a description
12
of any public benefit to be derived from the proposed project;
13
(v) a description of avoidance, minimization, and mitigation,
14
including a mitigation plan; and (vi) the names and addresses
15
of adjacent landowners as determined by the current tax
16
assessment rolls. The Department shall notify the applicant
17
within 20 business days if the permit application is
18
incomplete and provide a reasonable time for the applicant to
19
correct deficiencies in the permit application. Within 90
20
business days of receipt of a complete permit application, the
21
Department shall either issue the permit, deny the permit, or
22
issue the permit with conditions. All individual permit
23
decisions are subject to public comment. If a public hearing
24
is held, the deadline to make a permit determination is
25
extended by 45 business days.
26
(f) The Department shall evaluate individual permit
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requests through the following sequence: (i) avoidance of
2
impacts to aquatic resources if a less environmentally
3
damaging practicable alternative exists; (ii) minimization of
4
unavoidable impacts by taking appropriate and practicable
5
steps such as reduction of the footprint of the fill; (iii)
6
compensatory mitigation for any remaining impacts to aquatic
7
resources in accordance with this Act. The Department shall
8
not issue an individual permit pursuant to this Section unless
9
the Agency has certified to the Department that the proposed
10
activity will not cause or contribute to a violation of a State
11
water quality standard. The Agency shall, within 80 business
12
days of receipt of a complete application, approve, deny, or
13
approve with conditions the water quality certification. The
14
applicant for a permit may mutually agree to extend the 80-day
15
deadline up to an additional 80 business days in which the
16
Agency must take final action on the water quality
17
certification under this paragraph. If the Agency does not
18
approve, deny, or approve with conditions the water quality
19
certification within the extended time period, the
20
certification requirements shall be waived and the Department
21
may issue their permit decision consistent with the sections
22
of this Act.
23
(g) Upon request by an applicant, the Department may issue
24
an after-the-fact permit if the Department determines that the
25
activities covered by the after-the-fact permit were
26
undertaken and conducted in response to emergency
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circumstances that constituted an imminent threat to persons,
2
public infrastructure, personal property, or uninterrupted
3
utility service. The request for an after-the-fact permit must
4
be made as soon as reasonably possible after the event. The
5
Department shall require compensatory mitigation. If the
6
Department for good cause shown denies an after-the-fact
7
permit, the applicant shall be in violation of this Act.
8
However, the applicant and Department may, through mutual
9
agreement, provide for compensatory mitigation, restoration,
10
or other measures to resolve the violation. In such an
11
instance, the applicant may appeal the denial of an
12
after-the-fact permit consistent with the appeals procedures
13
in this Act.
14
(h) The permit applicant and the Department may waive or
15
extend the permit deadlines in this Section through mutual
16
agreement. If the Department is unable to comply with the
17
permit deadlines and they are not waived or extended through
18
mutual agreement, the permit application will be denied
19
without prejudice.
20
Section 30.
General permits.
21
(a) Notwithstanding Section 25, any person who intends to
22
conduct a regulated activity within the State may do so in
23
accordance with a general permit issued by the Department
24
under this Section. A general permit pre-authorizes a category
25
of activities that are similar in nature and impact on water
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quality, will have only minimal adverse effects when performed
2
separately, will have minimal cumulative impacts on water
3
quality provided the permittee complies with all of the
4
conditions of the general permit, and will not cause or
5
contribute to a violation of State water quality standards.
6
(b) Permits for all categories of activities, subject to
7
the same permit limitations and conditions, that are the
8
subject of a nationwide permit issued by the Corps of
9
Engineers, in effect on the date of the enactment of this Act,
10
are adopted as general permits covering regulated activities
11
subject to this Act. Notwithstanding the foregoing, all such
12
permits will include a preconstruction notification
13
requirement and compensatory mitigation, unless the permit
14
states compensatory mitigation is not required because the
15
work is designed to improve water quality or, with respect to
16
voluntary aquatic habitat restoration, to provide net increase
17
in wetland function. In any case, compensatory mitigation is
18
not required for impacts below 1/10 of an acre.
19
(c) The Department may, through rulemaking in accordance
20
with the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, adopt general
21
permits covering activities not covered by general permits
22
under subsection (b) of this Section if the Department
23
determines that the activities in the category would be
24
subject to the same permit limitations and conditions and will
25
cause only minimal adverse environmental effects when
26
performed separately, will have only minimal cumulative
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adverse effect on the environment, will not cause or
2
contribute to a violation of State water quality standards
3
when performed separately, and will have only a minimal
4
cumulative adverse effect on water quality. The Department
5
shall prescribe best management practices for any general
6
permit issued under this Section. The Department shall include
7
compensatory mitigation requirements in general permits for
8
impacts that exceed 1/10 of an acre.
9
(d) The Department shall adopt a general permit for:
10
(1) construction or maintenance of access roads for
11
utility lines, substations, or related equipment or
12
facilities with adequate culverts, bridges, or other
13
structures to provide freshwater connectivity and passage
14
for fish or other aquatic life;
15
(2) activities for the purpose of preserving and
16
enhancing aviation safety or to prevent an airport hazard;
17
and
18
(3) conservation activities, such as voluntary aquatic
19
habitat restoration and fish passage.
20
The Department shall develop the general permit under
21
paragraph (3) in consultation with local, state, and federal
22
resource agencies, such as the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
23
and qualified non-profit organizations engaged in aquatic
24
habitat restoration as a central part of their mission.
25
(e) No general permit adopted under subsection (b), (c),
26
or (d) of this Section shall be for a period of more than 5
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years after the date of its adoption, and the Department shall
2
revoke or modify such a general permit, after opportunity for
3
public hearing, if the Department determines that the
4
activities authorized by the general permit have an adverse
5
impact on the environment, cause or contribute to a violation
6
of State water quality standards, or are more appropriately
7
authorized by individual permits.
8
(f) Compliance with the terms of a general permit shall be
9
deemed compliance with the provisions of this Act if the
10
applicant:
11
(1) files a preconstruction notification in accordance
12
with regulations adopted under this Act, including the
13
specific requirements of the general permit;
14
(2) files all reports required by the general permit;
15
(3) complies with all limitations required by the
16
general permit; and
17
(4) complies with applicable compensatory mitigation
18
requirements.
19
(g) The Department may respond to a preconstruction
20
notification issued under this Section within 30 days after
21
the Department receives the notice. In any response, the
22
Department may require the applicant to:
23
(1) provide more information to determine whether the
24
applicant's proposed regulated activity is covered by the
25
general permit;
26
(2) file a preconstruction notification for a
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different general permit if the Department determines the
2
applicant's proposed activity is not covered by the
3
general permit for which the notification was filed; or
4
(3) apply for an individual permit if the Department
5
determines that the proposed activity does not fall within
6
the scope of any valid general permit.
7
(h) If a person files a preconstruction discharge
8
notification and receives no response under subsection (g) of
9
this Section for a general permit that is valid at the time of
10
the notification but that general permit is later modified,
11
revoked, or expires, that person may proceed as if that
12
general permit were still valid for the purposes of the
13
project for which the preconstruction discharge notification
14
was filed.
15
(i) The Department may require bonds or letters of credit
16
in favor of the State, including conditions sufficient to
17
secure compliance with conditions and limitations of a permit
18
under this Act.
19
Section 35.
In lieu fee program; permittee responsible for
20
on-site mitigation and mitigation banking.
21
(a) The following entities may establish and operate a
22
mitigation bank or in lieu fee program consistent with this
23
Act and rules implementing this Act:
24
(1) State agencies;
25
(2) qualified for-profit and non-profit entities; and
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(3) units of local government, including, but not
2
limited to, counties, the Metropolitan Water Reclamation
3
District of Greater Chicago (MWRD), soil and water
4
conservation districts, and county forest districts.
5
(b) Mitigation banks may be established on public or
6
private lands and must be located on sites that possess the
7
physical, chemical, and biological characteristics to support
8
establishment of the desired aquatic resources and functions,
9
such as wetland hydrology.
10
A mitigation bank may be approved to provide mitigation
11
for impacts to wetlands that have been approved by the Corps of
12
Engineers under Section 404 of the federal Clean Water Act,
13
for impacts to wetlands under the Illinois Interagency
14
Wetlands Policy Act of 1989, or for both. A mitigation bank
15
must be approved by the Department in accordance with this Act
16
and implementing rules, by an approved county, or by the Corps
17
of Engineers in accordance with the process established in 33
18
CFR 332.8 and 40 CFR 230.98.
19
(c) The requirements for mitigation banks shall include a
20
mitigation bank instrument, long-term management and
21
protection, monitoring requirements, remedial action
22
procedures, reporting requirements, and financial assurances,
23
such as performance bonds.
24
(d) In lieu fee programs must include (i) an agreement
25
between an operating entity listed in subsection (a) and the
26
Department that is similar to a mitigation bank instrument,
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(ii) a time-table, such as a requirement to use funds to design
2
and implement restoration projects within 3 years, (iii)
3
accounting requirements, including, but not limited to,
4
watershed-based accounting, (iv) monitoring requirements, (v)
5
reporting requirements, and (vi) financial assurances. Any
6
agency in lieu fee program must have provisions that protect
7
the integrity of the fund and prevent this funding from being
8
reassigned to other uses.
9
(e) The permittee is responsible for on-site mitigation as
10
approved by the Department on a case-by-case basis in
11
accordance with this Act and implementing rules if (i) on-site
12
mitigation has a strong likelihood of success, (ii) the
13
permittee has a Department approved monitoring plan, and (iii)
14
sufficient financial assurances, such as bonds or letters of
15
credit in favor of the State, have been provided as required by
16
the Department to assure long-term success.
17
Section 40.
Rulemaking and reporting.
18
(a) The Department shall adopt rules pursuant to the
19
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act:
20
(1) to implement Sections 25 and 30 of this Act within
21
one year after the effective date of this Act, including:
22
(A) rules for the review, issuance, denial, or
23
issuance with conditions of individual permits; and
24
(B) rules to promulgate, revise, or revoke general
25
permits;
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(2) to administer and prioritize use of funding from
2
the Wetlands Protection Fund under Section 60 of this Act;
3
(3) to approve mitigation banks and in lieu fee
4
programs under Section 35 of this Act, including:
5
(A) criteria that an applicant to operate a
6
mitigation or in lieu fee program under Section 35 of
7
this Act shall meet and that are at least as stringent
8
as the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers requirements set
9
out in 33 CFR Part 332;
10
(B) requirements for in lieu fee agreements
11
consistent with subsection (d) of Section 35 of this
12
Act;
13
(C) priority for mitigation banks and in lieu fee
14
programs that restore previously existing wetlands and
15
small streams; and
16
(D) surety provisions for permittee-responsible
17
on-site mitigation, mitigation banks, and in lieu fee
18
programs;
19
(4) to establish, within one year after the effective
20
date of this Act, the procedures under which a
21
governmental body with a stormwater management program
22
under Section 5-1062 of the Counties Code or under Section
23
7h of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District Act
24
shall be recognized to have met the conditions of
25
subsection (b) of Section 55 of this Act;
26
(5) to govern State jurisdictional wetlands
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determinations; State jurisdictional wetlands are adjacent
2
to or otherwise have a significant nexus to maintaining
3
the chemical, physical or biological integrity of
4
navigable waters;
5
(6) to establish procedures and standards for
6
rebutting a significant nexus presumption under Section 20
7
of this Act;
8
(7) to provide for approval of wetland delineators
9
consistent with subsection (f) of Section 25 of this Act,
10
including recognition of existing county, special
11
district, or U.S. Army Corps of Engineers wetland
12
delineator training programs, approval programs, or both;
13
and
14
(8) to otherwise implement and administer this Act.
15
(b) The Department may provide by rule for any
16
requirements regarding bonds or letters of credit in favor of
17
the State, including conditions sufficient to secure
18
compliance with conditions and limitations of a permit.
19
(c) The Department may consult with the Illinois Water
20
Plan Task Force.
21
(d) The Department shall seek to create a joint permit
22
process with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
23
(e) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall do all
24
of the following:
25
(1) provide a report to the Governor and the Illinois
26
General Assembly regarding implementation of this Act and
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recommendations, including legislative proposals, to
2
enhance the effectiveness of this Act;
3
(2) provide recommendations to harmonize these
4
wetlands protections with the Illinois Interagency
5
Wetlands Policy Act of 1989; and
6
(3) study the impact of federal rollback of protection
7
for waters beyond wetlands, such as ephemeral streams, in
8
Illinois and provide recommendations, including possible
9
legislative proposals, to protect the citizens of Illinois
10
and waters of the State.
11
Section 45.
Appeal of final Department decisions; judicial
12
review.
13
(a) Any permit applicant who has been denied a permit in
14
whole or in part, and any person who participated in the permit
15
proceeding and who is aggrieved by a decision of the
16
Department to grant a permit in whole or in part, may appeal
17
the decision to the Director within 60 calendar days of the
18
date the permit is granted or denied. In all such appeals, the
19
burden of persuasion shall be on the party appealing the
20
Department's decision. Appeals shall be in accordance with
21
administrative rules set out by the Department, including
22
allowed basis for appeals.
23
(b) A person who is aggrieved by a final decision made
24
under this Act and who has participated in an appeal to the
25
Director under subsection (a) of this Section, including
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parties that have participated in the permit process if a
2
permit was granted, may seek judicial review of the Director's
3
decision under the Administrative Review Law.
4
Section 50.
Investigation; enforcement.
5
(a) In accordance with constitutional limitations, the
6
Department shall have authority to enter at all reasonable
7
times upon any private or public lands for the purpose of
8
inspecting and investigating to ascertain compliance and
9
possible violations of this Act, implementing rules, or permit
10
terms or conditions.
11
(b) The civil penalties provided for in this Section may
12
be recovered in a civil action that may be instituted in a
13
court with jurisdiction over the place where the violation
14
occurred. The State's Attorney of the county in which the
15
alleged violation occurred, or the Attorney General may, at
16
the request of the Department or on the State's Attorney's or
17
Attorney General's own motion, institute a civil action in a
18
court of competent jurisdiction to recover civil penalties and
19
to obtain an injunction to restrain violations of this Act and
20
to compel compliance with this Act.
21
(c) Any person who violates any provision of this Act, any
22
rule adopted under this Act, any permit issued under this Act,
23
or any term or condition of a permit issued under this Act
24
shall be liable for a civil penalty not to exceed $10,000 per
25
day of violation. Any such penalty shall be made payable to the
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Wetlands Protection Fund and shall be deposited into that Fund
2
as provided in Section 60. In assessing a penalty, courts
3
shall consider any matters of record including:
4
(1) the duration and gravity of the violation;
5
(2) the presence or absence of due diligence on the
6
part of the violator in attempting to comply with the Act;
7
(3) any economic benefits accrued by the violator
8
through the violation;
9
(4) the likely deterrence effect of the penalty;
10
(5) any history on the part of the violator of past
11
violations of this Act; and
12
(6) a recommendation by the Department to limit or
13
waive penalties.
14
(d) All final orders imposing civil penalties under this
15
Section shall prescribe the deadline for payment. If such a
16
penalty is not paid within the time prescribed, interest on
17
the penalty shall be charged at the rate set forth in
18
subsection (a) of Section 1003 of the Illinois Income Tax Act
19
unless the deadline for payment is stayed by a court pending
20
appeal.
21
(e) The Department may terminate a permit if the permittee
22
violated the terms or conditions of the permit, obtained the
23
permit by misrepresentation, or failed to disclose relevant
24
facts.
25
(f) The Attorney General or State's Attorney of the county
26
where the affected wetland is located, may, upon his or her own
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motion or upon request of the Department, institute a civil
2
action in circuit court for an injunction or other appropriate
3
legal action to restrain a violation of this Act. In the
4
proceeding, the court shall determine whether a violation of
5
this Act has been committed, and shall enter any order it
6
considers necessary to remove the effects of the violation and
7
to prevent the violation from occurring, continuing or being
8
renewed in the future. An order may include a requirement that
9
the violator restore the affected wetland area, including a
10
provision that, if the violator does not comply by restoring
11
the wetland within a reasonable time, the Department may
12
restore the wetland to its condition prior to the violation
13
and the violator shall be liable to the Department for the cost
14
of the restoration. However, the Department retains the right
15
to act to remedy emergency situations, such as threats to
16
public safety, and the violator shall be liable to the
17
Department for the cost of the restoration.
18
(g) Any person, other than the Attorney General or the
19
State's Attorney, may file a complaint with the Illinois
20
Pollution Control Board against any person allegedly violating
21
this Act, any rule adopted under this Act, any permit issued
22
under this Act, or any term or condition of a permit issued
23
under this Act, or any relevant Board order. The Board shall
24
have authority to conduct proceedings upon complaints charging
25
such violations of this Act unless the Board determines that
26
such complaint is duplicative or frivolous. The Board may
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impose civil penalties for a violation of this Act as
2
described in subsection (c).
3
(h) Any penalty assessed under this Act, including costs
4
of wetland restoration and any restoration requirement, shall
5
be recorded by the clerk of the court as a lien against the
6
property and shall not be removed until the penalty is paid or
7
the restoration is completed.
8
(i) All costs, fees, and expenses in connection with an
9
enforcement or restoration action shall be assessed as damages
10
against the violator.
11
(j) Enforcement actions under this Section may be
12
concurrent or separate.
13
Section 55.
County and special district authority.
14
(a) Nothing in this Act preempts or denies the right of any
15
governmental body with a stormwater management program under
16
Section 5-1062 of the Counties Code or a special district with
17
a stormwater program under Section 7h of the Metropolitan
18
Water Reclamation District Act from controlling or regulating
19
activities in any wetlands within the jurisdiction of the
20
governmental body.
21
(b) Upon the request of a governmental body with a
22
stormwater management program under Section 5-1062 of the
23
Counties Code or under Section 7h of the Metropolitan Water
24
Reclamation District Act, the Director shall, within 30
25
calendar days of receiving the written request or, in the case
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1
of subsection (d), within 30 calendar days after the effective
2
date of this Act, provide a letter of recognition delegating
3
permitting authority under this Act to the county or special
4
district stormwater program. Subject to subsection (c), the
5
letter of recognition shall be provided if the governmental
6
body's stormwater management program:
7
(1) provides wetlands protections that are consistent
8
with the scope and intent of this Act and that are at least
9
as stringent as those in this Act;
10
(2) has an administration and qualified staff to
11
implement the governmental body's stormwater management
12
program; and
13
(3) is implementing and enforcing its stormwater
14
management program.
15
(c) Activities within or affecting wetlands that occur in
16
the jurisdiction of a governmental body with a stormwater
17
management program under Section 5-1062 of the Counties Code
18
or under Section 7h of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation
19
District Act and that meet the requirements of paragraphs (1),
20
(2), and (3) of subsection (b) of this Section are deemed to be
21
in compliance with the requirements of this Act, but must meet
22
those county or special district stormwater management
23
requirements, at a minimum. This also applies during the
24
period that the Department is considering a county's request
25
under subsection (b), but the requirements of this Act do
26
apply until the county has requested recognition under
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subsection (b).
2
(d) Lake, Cook, Kane, McHenry, and DuPage Counties and the
3
Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago are
4
deemed to have requested recognition as of the effective date
5
of this Act, and their programs are deemed to meet the
6
requirements of paragraph (b) of this Section.
7
(e) The Director may rescind recognition status, or place
8
conditions on recognition status, for any county or special
9
district program as set out in administrative rule, if the
10
defect with regard to subsection (b) is not resolved. However,
11
notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, a county
12
or special district delegation will not be revoked or modified
13
if the local program remains at least as stringent as it was on
14
the effective date of this Act.
15
(f) A governmental body with a stormwater management
16
program under Section 5-1062 of the Counties Code or under
17
Section 7h of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District Act
18
that has obtained recognition by the Director under this
19
Section shall submit an annual report to the Director.
20
(g) Nothing in this Act shall be construed as a limitation
21
or preemption of any home rule power.
22
(h) The Department may provide technical assistance and
23
grant funding under Section 60 to governmental bodies with
24
approved programs under this Section.
25
Section 60.
Wetlands Protection Fund.
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(a) The Wetlands Protection Fund shall be established as a
2
special fund in the State treasury, to be managed by the
3
Department, separate and distinct from the General Revenue
4
Fund. Any interest earned by the Wetlands Protection Fund
5
shall be credited to the Fund. The purpose of the Wetlands
6
Protection Fund is to further wetlands and small streams
7
protection and management. Its purpose is to supplement, not
8
supplant, existing Department resources. The Wetlands
9
Protection Fund may not be used to pay for compensatory
10
mitigation obligations under this Act.
11
(b) Pursuant to Section 50, all penalties collected by the
12
Department under this Act shall be deposited into the Wetlands
13
Protection Fund.
14
(c) The Illinois General Assembly may appropriate
15
additional moneys to the Wetlands Protection Fund to implement
16
this Act.
17
(d) The Department shall use the moneys in the Wetlands
18
Protection Fund to further wetlands and small streams
19
protection and management. Eligible uses of moneys in the Fund
20
include:
21
(1) providing technical assistance and grant funding
22
to counties or special districts with approved programs
23
under Section 55 to restore, preserve, enhance, protect,
24
or maintain wetlands, streams, and upland buffers,
25
particularly Class I areas or wetlands, waters, and
26
buffers that provide floodwater storage and flood risk
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1
reduction;
2
(2) supplementing other State, local, or private
3
funding for non-compensatory wetlands and small streams
4
restoration, enhancement, preservation and maintenance;
5
(3) providing matching funds for wetland and stream
6
inventories, mapping, watershed planning and wetland
7
program development grants; and
8
(4) covering staffing, administrative, and enforcement
9
costs for the Department to implement this Act.
10
Section 65.
Review fee.
All inquiries to determine whether
11
or not the proposed activity requires permit authorization by
12
the Department under this Act will be reviewed by the
13
Department free of charge. A permit review fee that is to be
14
set by the Department by rule is required for all permit
15
applications under this Act. The Department shall establish a
16
graduated review fee payment schedule depending on the
17
intensity of required review and the size of the individual
18
project. Accordingly, the highest review fees will be charged
19
for individual permits to authorize major projects. The
20
Department may, by rule, impose a reasonable fee for wetlands
21
delineation and classification.
22
Section 90.
The State Finance Act is amended by adding
23
Section 5.1030 as follows:
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1
(30 ILCS 105/5.1030 new)
2
Sec. 5.1030.
The Wetlands Protection Fund.
3
Section 97.
Severability.
The provisions of this Act are
4
severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.".
5
Section 99.
Effective date.
This Act takes effect upon
6
becoming law.
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1
INDEX
2
Statutes amended in order of appearance
3
New Act
4
30 ILCS 105/5.1030 new
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