Summary as Introduced
Amends the Environmental Protection Act. Provides that an owner or operator of a community water supply may, by an additional method approved by the State, give written notice of the existence of lead service lines that are connected to buildings. Provides that an owner or operator of a community water supply that performs at least 4,000 lead service line replacements per year or exceeds a statutorily prescribed lead service line replacement rate is exempt from a provision that prohibits partial lead service line replacements. Provides that, in a municipality with a population of more than 1,000,000 inhabitants, the owner of a private property upon which there is located a renter-occupied building, a building that is used as a day care, or a multi-dwelling building must allow the community water supply access to replace the lead service line on the private side of the property.
Staff Analysis
The bill streamlines public notification procedures while drastically expanding municipal authority to replace hazardous lead and galvanized water service lines on private property across the state.
Under the updated statute, owners and operators of community water supplies are granted greater flexibility in public health communications. Water utilities may now utilize additional, state-approved methods to deliver written notifications to building owners regarding the presence of lead service lines connected to their properties.
The most sweeping changes, introduced through successive Senate floor amendments, establish a statewide mandate for physical property access to facilitate infrastructure upgrades. Property owners across all Illinois municipalities—not just those in high-population areas—are now legally required to grant community water supplies or their designated contractors access to the private side of their property. This mandatory access is strictly contingent upon the water utility offering the service line replacement entirely at no cost to the property owner. Furthermore, the scope of the mandate has been broadened to include both lead service lines and galvanized service lines that require replacement.
To prevent landlord-tenant disputes or absent owners from delaying critical infrastructure work, the law introduces a novel consent framework. If a property owner is unavailable or unwilling to provide consent for the replacement, any legal occupant of the private property is authorized to grant access to the water utility or its contractor. To encourage cooperation and protect residents, the legislation explicitly states that legal occupants will be held legally harmless for providing access, completing required paperwork, or allowing the replacements to be finished.
Notably, lawmakers removed previously considered exemptions that would have allowed certain high-volume water supplies to perform prohibited partial lead service line replacements. By striking these provisions, the final bill enforces a strict, comprehensive replacement standard statewide. The Act takes effect immediately.