There is a newer version of the Illinois Compiled Statutes
2005 Illinois 65 ILCS 5/ Illinois Municipal Code. Art 11 prec Div 123 - Harbors and Terminals
(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑1)
Sec. 11‑123‑1.
The term "utility," as used in this Division 123 means and
includes: (1) harbors, canals, slips, wharves, docks, levees, piers, quay
walls, breakwaters, and all appropriate harbor structures, facilities,
connections, and improvements; and (2) such elevators, vaults, warehouses,
including cold storage warehouses which may be acquired, owned, maintained,
or operated in connection therewith, as necessary adjuncts or incidental to
transportation or railroad terminals; and (3) all other necessary or
appropriate terminal facilities.
The term "artificially made or reclaimed land," as used in this Division
123, includes all land which formerly was submerged under the public waters
of the state, the title to which is in the state, and which has been
artificially made or reclaimed in whole or in part contrary to law.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑2)
Sec. 11‑123‑2.
Every city and village may acquire, own, construct,
maintain, and operate utilities anywhere within the jurisdiction or
corporate limits of the city or village, or in, over, and upon public
waters bordering thereon.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑3)
Sec. 11‑123‑3.
Every city or village with only a river water frontage may
acquire, own, construct, maintain, and operate railroad terminal
facilities, tracks, and connections, necessary or appropriate to connect a
utility with any railroad or interurban railroad entering the municipality.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑4)
Sec. 11‑123‑4.
Every city and village for the purpose of carrying out the
powers granted in this Division 123, may acquire by purchase, gift, or
condemnation, any property necessary or appropriate for any of the purposes
enumerated in this Division 123. In all cases where property is acquired or
sought to be acquired by condemnation, the procedure shall be, as nearly as
may be, like that provided for the exercise of
the right of eminent domain under Article VII of the Code of Civil
Procedure, as heretofore and
hereafter amended. Nothing in this section limits the power of a
municipality to acquire by grant from the state submerged land or
artificially made or reclaimed land as provided in Section 11‑123‑9.
(Source: P.A. 82‑783.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑5) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑5)
Sec. 11‑123‑5.
Every city and village may use, occupy, and reclaim such
submerged land under the public waters of the state within the corporate
limits or jurisdiction of, or bordering on the municipality, as may be
necessary or appropriate for any of the purposes enumerated in this
Division 123. The power granted in this section is superior to and takes
precedence over any similar power heretofore granted to any person, other
than a city or village, in so far as that similar power has not been
exercised at the time when a city or village by ordinance, as to land
therein particularly described, determines to exercise the power granted in
this section.
Except as otherwise provided in this Code or in any other law of this
state, no person or corporation, private, public, or municipal, other than
a city or village, shall hereafter construct a utility over and upon such
submerged lands within the limits or jurisdiction of any such city or
village, or over or upon any public waters bordering thereon, without first
securing the consent of the corporate authorities of such city or village.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑6) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑6)
Sec. 11‑123‑6.
Every city and village may take possession of, use, and
occupy any artificially made or reclaimed land (1) which before the
artificial making or reclamation thereof constituted a portion of the
submerged land under the public waters of the State of Illinois, and (2)
which lies within the corporate limits or jurisdiction of or borders on the
municipality, and (3) the title to which is in the State of Illinois, when
the land is declared by an ordinance of the municipality particularly
describing it to be necessary or appropriate for any of the purposes
enumerated in this Division 123.
Every city and village has the power to bring and maintain all necessary
suits, actions, or proceedings, in its corporate name, against any person
for the recovery of the possession of such artificially made or reclaimed
land. This land, when so acquired, shall be held, used, and occupied by the
city or village subject to the conditions stated in this Division 123.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑7) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑7)
Sec. 11‑123‑7.
Every city and village may take possession of, use, and
occupy any artificially made or reclaimed land specified in Section
11‑123‑6, when the land is declared by an ordinance of the municipality
particularly describing it to be necessary or appropriate for approaches to
or connections with a utility.
Every city and village may establish, widen, extend, grade, pave, and
otherwise improve such approaches or connections over and upon such
artificially made or reclaimed land and to vacate all or any part of the
approaches or connections.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑8) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑8)
Sec. 11‑123‑8.
Every city and village may acquire the land, whether of
natural or artificial formation, property, and property rights, including
riparian rights, of any owner or claimant, other than a city or village, on
the shores of public waters in, upon, or near which it is proposed to
construct any utility.
Every city and village may also acquire the title of such an owner or
claimant to the land lying beneath, adjacent to or adjoining the specified
public waters, without other compensation, by agreeing with the owner or
claimant upon a boundary line dividing the land, whether of natural or
artificial formation, to be acquired by the municipality, and the adjacent,
adjoining, submerged, or other land, whether of natural or artificial
formation, to be taken and acquired by the owner or claimant. The rights
and property to be taken and acquired, respectively, by the city or village
and by the owner or claimant, shall be specifically described and set forth
in the judgment to be entered by the court as provided in Section 11‑123‑9.
(Source: P.A. 79‑1361.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑9) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑9)
Sec. 11‑123‑9.
When any city or village and the owner or claimant
have agreed upon a boundary line as provided in Section 11‑123‑8, the
city or village shall commence a civil action in the circuit court of
the county in which the land is situated, praying that the boundary line
be established and confirmed by judgment of the court. All persons
interested in the land as owners or otherwise, who appear of record, if
known, or if not known, upon stating the fact, shall be made parties
defendant. Interested persons whose names are unknown may be made
parties defendant by the description of unknown owners, but in all cases
an affidavit shall be filed by or on behalf of the municipality, setting
forth that the names of these persons are unknown.
The municipality shall publish notice of the commencement of the
action once a week for 3 consecutive weeks, in one or more newspapers
published in the municipality, or, if no newspaper is published therein,
then in one or more newspapers with a general circulation within the
municipality. In municipalities with less than 500 population in which
no newspaper is published, publication may instead be made by posting a
notice in 3 prominent places within the municipality. The notices shall
contain the title of the action and the return day at which the
defendants are to appear, and the last of the notices shall be published
not less than 10 nor more than 20 days before the return day. The
defendants who do not enter their appearances shall be served with
process and the proceedings in the action shall be conducted in the same
manner as provided by the Civil Practice Law, as heretofore and
hereafter amended and the Supreme Court Rules, now or hereafter
adopted, in relation to that Law, except as otherwise provided in this
Division 123.
If upon a hearing the court finds that the rights and interests of
the public have been duly conserved by the agreement, the court shall
confirm the agreement and establish the boundary line. Otherwise the
court, in its discretion, shall dismiss the suit. If the boundary line
agreed upon is so established and confirmed by a court judgment, it
shall be the permanent boundary line thereafter and shall not be
affected either by accretion or erosion.
The establishment of such a boundary line operates as a conveyance
and release to the municipality of all the right, title, and interest of
owners to all land, property, and property rights, including riparian
rights, lying upon the outer or water side of the boundary line. The
municipality is hereby granted by the State of Illinois the title to all
land, property, and property rights, including riparian rights, lying
upon the outer or water side of the boundary line when so established.
The owners of the shore land are hereby granted by the State of Illinois
the title to the adjacent, adjoining, submerged, or other land, whether
of natural or artificial formation, as specifically and particularly
described in the court judgment, lying upon the inner or land side of
the boundary line when so established. These owners may fill in,
improve, protect, and use, sell, and convey this land lying upon the
inner or land side of the boundary line free from any adverse claim in
any way arising out of any question as to where the shore line was at
any time in the past, or as to the title to any existing accretions.
(Source: P.A. 82‑783.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑10) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑10)
Sec. 11‑123‑10.
Every city or village may occupy, hold, and use any land
acquired by the municipality under this Division 123 or under any act providing
for harbor construction. A specified municipality may occupy, hold, and
use any submerged land of the State of Illinois filled in or reclaimed by
the municipality in connection with or in construction of a utility for
the uses and purposes provided for in this Division 123. A specified municipality
may lease any of this land for a period not longer than 50 years to any
person upon such terms and conditions as are prescribed by ordinance, but
the ordinance shall provide that the rental value of the land shall be revalued
near the end of each 10 years of the rental period and that the rental for
the ensuing 10 years shall be adjusted and fixed in accordance with that evaluation.
Before such a lease becomes effective, it shall be approved in writing
by the Secretary of Transportation of the state, and, in case of approval, it
shall be authenticated by the seal of that department.
All money received by a specified municipality from the lease of land forming
a part of any harbor development shall be credited to a fund entitled the
harbor fund of that particular harbor development. All money expended by
the municipality for any purpose in relation to that land or in relation
to the construction and maintenance of any utility, may be charged to the
harbor fund, and that fund shall be used for no other purpose.
(Source: P.A. 81‑840.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑11) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑11)
Sec. 11‑123‑11.
Every city or village may levy and collect in each of 4 consecutive
years a tax of .0125% of the value, as equalized or assessed by the
Department of Revenue, of all taxable property therein,
for the current year. This tax shall be in addition to all taxes
authorized by law to be levied and collected in that municipality. The
proceeds of this additional tax shall be used for harbor construction
purposes only and shall be credited to the harbor fund for that
particular harbor development.
The foregoing limitation upon tax rate in cities and villages of less
than 1,000,000 population may be increased or decreased according to the
referendum provisions of the General Revenue Law of Illinois.
(Source: P.A. 81‑1509.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑12) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑12)
Sec. 11‑123‑12.
Any city or village may lease any part or all of any
utility owned by it in the manner and subject to the limitations provided
in Sections 11‑76‑1 and 11‑76‑2.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑13) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑13)
Sec. 11‑123‑13.
Every city and village may locate and establish dock lines
and harbor lines in the public waters or rivers within the limits or
jurisdiction of, or bordering on the city or village.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑15) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑15)
Sec. 11‑123‑15.
Every city and village has the power to use any portion of
a utility for public recreation purposes if, in the judgment of the
corporate authorities of the municipality, the utility can be used for
public recreation purposes without interfering with the use of the utility
for transportation purposes.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑16) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑16)
Sec. 11‑123‑16.
In connection with the use of any portion of a utility for
recreation purposes, as specified in Section 11‑123‑15, every city and
village has the power to provide, by lease or contract, for the sale in or
on the utility of food, non‑alcoholic drinks, and merchandise, and for the
giving in or on the utility of dances, concerts, exhibitions, and other
entertainments, and for check‑room privileges incidental thereto. Upon
reasonable notice, however, such a lease or contract is terminable by the
municipality, either with or without compensation therefor as may be
therein stipulated, whenever in the judgment of the corporate authorities
of the municipality the transportation necessities make such termination
desirable. No such lease or contract shall be entered into for a period
exceeding 5 years except in conformity with the provisions of Section
11‑123‑12.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑17) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑17)
Sec. 11‑123‑17.
No portion of a utility, except a breakwater, shall be
constructed within one‑half mile of any intake of water for public
consumption, and in constructing such a utility no ashes, cinders, or waste
shall be dumped into any public waters within 4 miles of any intake of
water for public consumption unless placed behind retaining bulkheads. This
section does not apply to any city or village whose water frontage is
exclusively on a river.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑18) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑18)
Sec. 11‑123‑18.
Every city and village by ordinance may authorize any
public or municipal corporation, other than a city or village, which is
authorized by law to construct or operate a utility, to construct and
operate a utility within the corporate limits or jurisdiction of, or
bordering on, the city or village, on such terms and conditions as may be
determined in the ordinance, and on such terms and conditions as may be
provided by law.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑19) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑19)
Sec. 11‑123‑19.
Whenever any public or municipal corporation constructs a
utility under authority of Section 11‑123‑18, or any other law of the
state, within the corporate limits or jurisdiction of any city or village,
or in, over, or upon public waters bordering thereon, the city or village
has the power to purchase the utility on such terms and conditions as may
be provided by law, and in case no terms and conditions are provided by
law, then on such terms and conditions as may be agreed upon by the city or
village and the public or municipal corporation.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑20) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑20)
Sec. 11‑123‑20.
Every city and village may cross by roadways or other
appropriate means, the ways, drives, boulevards, beaches, wharves, docks,
levees, piers, breakwaters, retaining walls, land, or submerged land of any
public or municipal corporation, other than a city or village, whenever the
crossing is declared by ordinance of the municipality to be necessary or
advantageous to the development and use of a utility.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑21) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑21)
Sec. 11‑123‑21.
Accretions or artificially made or reclaimed land, which
may be formed or added to any utility constructed under this Division 123
by a public or municipal corporation, other than a city or village, shall
not become the property of that public or municipal corporation, but shall
revert to and become the property of the city or village for the purposes
of this Division 123, subject to such disposition as the corporate
authorities of the city or village shall direct.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑22) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑22)
Sec. 11‑123‑22.
The powers granted by this Division 123 are subject to the
provisions of section 18 of "An Act in relation to the regulations of the
rivers, lakes and streams of the State of Illinois," approved June 10,
1911, as heretofore and hereafter amended.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑23) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑23)
Sec. 11‑123‑23.
Sections 11‑123‑1 through 11‑123‑22 shall not be considered
as impairing the provisions of "An Act to enable Park Commissioners having
control of a park or parks bordering upon public waters in this State, to
enlarge and connect the same from time to time by extensions over lands and
the bed of such waters, and defining the use which may be made of such
extensions, and granting lands for the purpose of such enlargements,"
approved May 14, 1903, as heretofore and hereafter amended.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑123‑24) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑123‑24)
Sec. 11‑123‑24.
For the purpose of widening, deepening, or otherwise
improving a river or harbor, a city or village may institute proceedings in
any court of record to condemn any land or right‑of‑way needed for that
purpose and to pay for the land or right‑of‑way by special assessment upon
the property specially benefited by the widening, deepening, or other
improvement of the river or harbor, or upon the public, or both, as the
case may be. The proceedings shall be instituted in the manner provided by
and in all respects under the provisions of Article 9.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑124‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑124‑1)
Sec. 11‑124‑1.
Contracts for supply of water.
(a) The corporate authorities of each municipality may contract
with any person, corporation, municipal corporation, political subdivision,
public water district or any other agency for a supply of water. Any such
contract entered into by a municipality shall provide that payments to be
made thereunder shall be solely from the revenues to be derived from the
operation of the waterworks system of the municipality, and the contract
shall be a continuing valid and binding obligation of the municipality
payable from the revenues derived from the operation of the waterworks
system of the municipality for the period of years, not to exceed 40, as may
be provided in such contract. Any such contract shall not be a debt within the
meaning of any constitutional or statutory limitation. No prior appropriation
shall be required before entering into such a contract and no appropriation
shall be required to authorize payments to be made under the terms of any
such contract notwithstanding any provision in this Code to the contrary.
(a) Payments to be made under any such contract | ||
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(b) Payments to be made under any such contract with | ||
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The changes in this Section made by these amendatory Acts of 1984 are
intended to be declarative of existing law.
(b) A municipality with a water supply contract with a county water
commission organized pursuant to the Water Commission Act of 1985
shall provide water to unincorporated areas of that home county in accordance
with the terms of this subsection. The provision of water by the municipality
shall be in accordance with a mandate of the home county as provided
in Section
0.01 of the Water Commission Act of 1985.
A home rule unit may not provide water
in a manner that is inconsistent with the provisions of this
amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly. This subsection is a limitation
under subsection (i) of Section 6 of Article VII of the Illinois Constitution
on the concurrent exercise by home rule units of powers and functions exercised
by the State.
(Source: P.A. 93‑226, eff. 7‑22‑03.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑125‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑125‑1)
Sec. 11‑125‑1.
The corporate authorities in each city and village may (1)
provide for a supply of water by the boring of artesian wells, or by the
digging, construction, or regulation of wells, pumps, cisterns, reservoirs,
or waterworks, (2) borrow money therefor, (3) authorize any person to bore,
dig, construct, and maintain the same for a period not exceeding 30 years,
(4) prevent the unnecessary waste of water, (5) prevent the pollution of
water, and (6) prevent injuries to the wells, pumps, cisterns, reservoirs,
or waterworks.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑125‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑125‑2)
Sec. 11‑125‑2.
For the purpose of establishing or supplying waterworks and
to purchase, extend, improve and operate waterworks, each city or village
may go beyond its corporate limits and acquire and hold property by
purchase or otherwise, and also may take and condemn all necessary property
therefor, in the manner provided for the taking or damaging of private
property for public uses, including any land now used for highway purposes
in or near any basin proposed to be flooded by the construction, extension
or improvement of any lake by any city or village of this state, for water
supply purposes, provided the highway is capable of being rerouted, raised
or otherwise revised and maintained in use and that the city or village
requiring such reconstruction shall either perform the necessary
reconstruction work or pay the full cost thereof to provide a highway of
equal value and usefulness to that existing before such work is required,
or provided the highway has been vacated by order of the highway
authorities having a jurisdiction over said highway. The jurisdiction of
the city or village to prevent or punish any pollution or injury to the
stream or source of water, or to waterworks, extends 20 miles beyond its
corporate limits, or so far as the waterworks may extend.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑125‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑125‑3)
Sec. 11‑125‑3.
The corporate authorities may make all needful rules and
regulations concerning the use of water supplied by the waterworks of the
city or village, and may do all acts and make such rules and regulations
for the construction, completion, management, or control of the waterworks,
and for the fixing and collecting of such water rates or rents as the
corporate authorities may deem necessary or expedient. The corporate
authorities may levy a general tax for the construction and maintenance of
the waterworks, and appropriate money therefor.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑125‑4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑125‑4)
Sec. 11‑125‑4.
The corporate authorities of each municipality
served by a community water supply well may perform a groundwater
protection needs assessment, and may by ordinance adopt a minimum or maximum
setback zone around a wellhead
pursuant to Sections 14.2, 14.3, 14.4 and 17.1 of the Environmental
Protection Act.
(Source: P.A. 85‑863.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑126‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑126‑1)
Sec. 11‑126‑1.
Each municipality may provide for a supply of water for fire
protection and for the use of the inhabitants of the municipality (1) by
constructing and maintaining a system of waterworks, or (2) by uniting with
any adjacent municipality in constructing and maintaining a system of
waterworks for the joint use of those municipalities, or (3) by procuring
such a supply of water from any adjacent municipality already having
waterworks.
All contracts for the construction of such a system of waterworks or any
part thereof shall be let to the lowest responsible bidder therefor, upon
not less than 3 weeks' public notice of the terms and conditions upon which
the contract is to be let having been given by publication in a newspaper
published in the municipality, or if no newspaper is published therein,
then in some newspaper published in the county. No member of the corporate
authorities shall be directly or indirectly interested in such a contract.
In all cases the corporate authorities have the right to reject any and all
bids that may not be satisfactory to them.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑126‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑126‑2)
Sec. 11‑126‑2.
Each municipality may borrow money and levy and collect a
general tax, in the same manner as other municipal taxes may be levied and
collected, for the construction and maintenance of such a system of
waterworks, and may appropriate money for that construction and
maintenance.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑126‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑126‑3)
Sec. 11‑126‑3.
For the purpose of locating, constructing, maintaining, or
supplying such a system of waterworks, each municipality may go beyond its
corporate limits, and acquire and hold property purchased or otherwise, and
also may take, condemn, and hold all necessary property in the manner
provided for the taking or damaging of private property for public use.
Also each municipality may acquire and hold property and rights necessary
for the location, construction and maintenance of such a system of
waterworks, by purchase or otherwise. The jurisdiction of the municipality
to prevent or punish any pollution or injury to the stream or source of
water for the supply of the waterworks extends 10 miles beyond its
corporate limits.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑126‑4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑126‑4)
Sec. 11‑126‑4.
The corporate authorities of each municipality make make and
enforce all needful rules and regulations in the construction and
management of such a system of waterworks, and for the use of the water
supplied thereby.
The corporate authorities of each municipality also may make and enforce
all needful rules, regulations, and enact ordinances for the improvement,
care, and protection from pollution or other injury of any impounding
reservoir or artificial lake constructed or maintained by the municipality
for water supply purposes and any adjacent zone of land which the
municipality may acquire or control. If the leasing of portions of such
adjacent zone of land will, in the discretion of the corporate authorities,
aid in the protection from pollution or other injury of the impounding
reservoir or artificial lake by promoting forestation, development or care
of other suitable vegetation, and the improvement, care and maintenance of
the premises, the corporate authorities may lease those portions of that
land jointly or severally to custodians of good reputation and character
for periods not to exceed 60 years, and permit those custodians to
construct, maintain, use, and occupy dwelling houses and other structures
thereon for such rental and on such other terms and conditions and subject
to such rules and regulations and with such powers and duties as may be
determined by the corporate authorities.
The corporate authorities of each municipality have the power to fix and
collect from the inhabitants thereof the rent or rates for the use and
benefit of water used or supplied to them by such a system of waterworks,
as the corporate authorities shall deem just and expedient. These rents or
rates shall be paid and collected in such manner as the corporate
authorities by ordinance shall provide. Such charges, rents, or rates are
liens upon the real estate upon or for which water service is supplied
whenever the charges, rents, or rates become delinquent as provided by the
ordinance of the municipality fixing a delinquency date. However, the
municipality has no preference over the rights of any purchaser, mortgagee,
judgment creditor, or other lien holder arising prior to the filing of the
notice of such a lien in the office of the recorder of the county
in which such real estate is located, or in the office of the registrar of
titles of such county if the property affected is registered under "An
Act concerning land titles", approved May 1, 1897, as amended. This notice
shall consist of a sworn statement setting out
(1) a description of such real estate sufficient for the identification
thereof, (2) the amount of money due for such water service, and (3) the
date when such amount became delinquent. The municipality may foreclose
this lien in the same manner and with the same effect as in the foreclosure
of mortgages on real estate.
(Source: P.A. 83‑358.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑126‑5) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑126‑5)
Sec. 11‑126‑5.
The expense of locating, and constructing reservoirs and
hydrants for the purpose of fire protection, and the expense of
constructing and laying water main pipes, or such part thereof as may be
just and lawful, whenever it is for a local improvement, may be assessed
upon and collected from the property specially benefited thereby, if any,
in such manner as may be provided for the making of special assessments for
other local improvements in the municipality, as provided in Article 9.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑126‑6) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑126‑6)
Sec. 11‑126‑6.
All the income received by a municipality from such a system
of waterworks, from the payment and collection of water rents or rates,
shall be kept in a separate fund and shall be applied first in the payment
and discharge of the principal of and the interest on bonds or money
borrowed and used in the construction of the waterworks and of the
operating expenses thereof. Any surplus may be applied in such manner as
the corporate authorities may direct.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑126‑7) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑126‑7)
Sec. 11‑126‑7.
For the purpose of constructing a system of waterworks,
storm or sanitary sewer system, each municipality has the power to levy
special assessments for said local improvements on property beyond its
corporate limits, but within one mile therefrom, that is specially
benefited by the improvement.
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 2637.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑127‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑127‑1)
Sec. 11‑127‑1.
In all municipalities where waterworks have been
constructed, the corporate authorities of the municipality may purchase
or lease the waterworks from the owner thereof. However, such a lease or
purchase is not binding upon the municipality until the corporate
authorities pass an ordinance which includes the terms of the lease or
purchase therein. This ordinance shall be published at least once,
within 10 days after passage, in one or more newspapers published in the
municipality, or, if no newspaper is published therein, then in one or
more newspapers with a general circulation within the municipality. In
municipalities with less than 500 population in which no newspaper is
published, publication may instead be made by posting a notice in 3
prominent places within the municipality.
The publication or posting of the ordinance shall be accompanied by a
notice of (1) the specific number of voters required to sign a petition
requesting the question of authorizing the purchase or lease of waterworks
to be submitted to the electors; (2) the time in which such petition must
be filed; and (3) the date of the prospective referendum. The city clerk
shall provide a petition form to any individual requesting one.
If no petition is submitted to the corporate authorities, as provided
in this section, within 30 days after the ordinance is so published and
posted, the corporate authorities may consummate the lease or purchase
provided for in the ordinance. But if within this period of 30 days
there is presented to the corporate authorities a petition signed by
electors of the municipality numbering 10% or more of the number of
registered voters in the municipality asking that the question, whether the
lease or purchase should be made, be submitted to a vote, the corporate
authorities by ordinance shall designate the election at which the electors
of the municipality may vote upon that question and the city clerk shall
promptly certify the proposition for submission. If a
majority of the electors voting upon that question vote
in favor of making the lease or purchase, then the corporate authorities
shall proceed to complete the lease or purchase. But if a majority of
the votes cast on the question are against the lease or purchase, the
corporate authorities shall proceed no further with the lease or
purchase for the period of 6 months next ensuing.
(Source: P.A. 87‑767.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑127‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑127‑2)
Sec. 11‑127‑2.
Municipalities may borrow money, appropriate money, and levy
and collect a general tax in the same manner as other municipal taxes may
be levied and collected for the purchase and maintenance or the lease and
maintenance of such waterworks.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑128‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑128‑1)
Sec. 11‑128‑1.
Subject to the provisions of Section 11‑128‑3, each
city and village may levy, in addition to the taxes now authorized by
law and in addition to the amount authorized to be levied for general
purposes as provided by Section 8‑3‑1, a direct annual tax of not more
than .1666% of the value, as equalized or assessed by the Department of
Revenue, upon all the property within the corporate
limits of the city or village. This tax is payable yearly for a period
of not more than 30 years. The proceeds of this tax shall be used solely
for the purchase, construction, and enlargement of waterworks.
The foregoing limitation upon tax rates in municipalities of less
than 1,000,000 population may be increased or decreased according to the
referendum provisions of the General Revenue Law of Illinois.
(Source: P.A. 81‑1509.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑128‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑128‑2)
Sec. 11‑128‑2.
Whenever any specified municipality desires to avail itself
of the provisions of this Division 128, the corporate authorities by
ordinance or resolution may contract for the purchase, construction, or
enlargement of waterworks for a provisionally certain fixed sum. The
contract for purchase, construction, or enlargement, together with a report
from the municipal engineer recommending the same, shall be published at
least once a week for 3 consecutive weeks in a newspaper with a general
circulation in the municipality. The corporate authorities shall also
provide in the specified ordinance or resolution for the levying of a
direct annual tax as authorized in Section 11‑128‑1. The total of this tax
for the term levied, together with the annual revenue which is estimated to
be derived from the waterworks, shall be sufficient to pay the contract
price for the waterworks, together with interest thereon. However, the
contract for the purchase, construction, or enlargement, and this tax,
shall not be valid or binding until confirmed by a vote as provided by
Section 11‑128‑3.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑128‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑128‑3)
Sec. 11‑128‑3.
Before they shall be valid and binding, the specified
contract and tax, after action by the corporate authorities, shall be
certified by the clerk and submitted for ratification to the electors of
the municipality. The notice shall specify the character of the waterworks
proposed to be purchased, constructed, or enlarged and the amount of the
tax to be levied. For 3 weeks preceding the election there shall be on file
in some public place, convenient of access, a full description of the
waterworks and a copy of the contract and of the report of the engineer,
for the inspection of the electors. Notice of where the documents are on
file shall be included in the notice of the election.
If 3/4 of all the electors voting on the proposition vote
in favor thereof, the contract and tax shall be binding and the tax
shall be duly levied. The proposition
shall be in substantially the following form:
Shall the city (or village) of .... construct, purchase, or enlarge YES (as the case may be) waterworks
and levy a tax of .... annually NO for .... years?
Whenever the electors of a city or village have ratified a contract
to purchase, construct, or enlarge waterworks and to levy a tax therefor
as provided in "An Act to enable cities and villages to provide,
construct, or enlarge waterworks and to provide for the management
thereof, and giving them authority to levy an annual tax and to pledge
the same in payment therefor," approved April 19, 1899, as amended, the
city or village may proceed or continue to exercise the power specified
in this Division 128 without again submitting the proposition to the
electors for approval.
(Source: P.A. 81‑1489 .)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑128‑4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑128‑4)
Sec. 11‑128‑4.
The corporate authorities have the power to carry into
execution the contract for the purchase, construction, or enlargement of
waterworks when ratified by the electors, as directed in Section 11‑128‑3,
and to employ a superintendent and such other employees as may be necessary
and proper for the operation of the waterworks, for the collection of water
rentals, and for the conduct of the business necessary to the operation
thereof.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑128‑5) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑128‑5)
Sec. 11‑128‑5.
The corporate authorities may issue bonds against the taxes
levied, but the bonds shall be payable only out of the special tax when
collected and out of the net revenue derived from the operation of the
waterworks.
These bonds shall be made to mature in as nearly as possible equal
installments of $100, or multiples thereof. The first installment shall be
payable one or 2 years from the date of issue, and the last installment
within one year after the date of the last tax levy provided by the vote
authorizing a levy. The bonds shall bear interest at a rate not to exceed
the maximum rate authorized by the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the
time of the making of the contract, payable annually or semi‑annually.
They shall be sold for not less than
par, or they may be paid out at not less than par for the construction,
purchase, and/or enlargement of the waterworks.
With respect to instruments for the payment of money issued under this
Section either before, on, or after the effective date of this amendatory
Act of 1989, it is and always has been the intention of the General
Assembly (i) that the Omnibus Bond Acts are and always have been
supplementary grants of power to issue instruments in accordance with the
Omnibus Bond Acts, regardless of any provision of this Act that may appear
to be or to have been more restrictive than those Acts, (ii) that the
provisions of this Section are not a limitation on the supplementary
authority granted by the Omnibus Bond Acts, and (iii) that instruments
issued under this Section within the supplementary authority granted
by the Omnibus Bond Acts are not invalid because of any provision of
this Act that may appear to be or to have been more restrictive than
those Acts.
(Source: P.A. 86‑4.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑128‑6) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑128‑6)
Sec. 11‑128‑6.
The specified bonds shall be substantially in the following
form:
The city (or village) of ...., county of ...., State of Illinois, for
value received hereby promises to pay the bearer .... hundred dollars,
lawful money of the United States of America, on the .... day of .... A.D.
...., together with interest thereon at the rate of ....% annually, payable
annually (or semi‑annually) on the .... day of ...., ..... Both principal
and interest are payable at the .....
This bond is one of a series of bonds amounting to .... dollars, issued
under an ordinance of the city (or village) of .... and is payable solely
out of funds derived from a special tax levy and the net revenue of the
waterworks of the city (or village) of .... and out of no other funds. The
construction, purchase, or enlargement of the waterworks and levy of the
tax were authorized at an election legally called and held on the .... day
of ...., ..... And it is asserted that all acts, conditions, and things
precedent to and in the issuance of this bond have occurred and have been
performed in regular and due form as required by law.
In testimony whereof the corporate authorities have caused this bond to
be signed by the mayor (or president) and countersigned by the clerk, and
have caused the seal of the city (or village) to be affixed this .... day
of ...., ....
.... Mayor
.... Clerk
Coupons representing the interest shall be attached to the bond, and
they may be signed or bear the lithographed signature of the clerk of the
city or village.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑128‑7) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑128‑7)
Sec. 11‑128‑7.
The corporate authorities from time to time shall fix the
water rentals or rates to be charged for the furnishing of water. These
rentals or rates shall be made sufficient, together with the proceeds of
the special tax provided in this Division 128, to pay at maturity the
interest and principal of bonds issued under the provisions of this
article, and also for the proper maintenance and operation of the
waterworks, and for all repairs thereon.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑128‑8) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑128‑8)
Sec. 11‑128‑8.
Any 2 or more cities or villages adjacent to each other by
an ordinance adopted by each of them may create a water district. This
water district shall be governed by a board of trustees jointly composed of
the corporate authorities of each of the cities and villages, which created
the district. This board of trustees shall have the powers given to the
corporate authorities in this article, and the water district shall be a
body corporate to carry out the provisions of this Division 128. But notice
of any election held by such a water district under this Division 128 shall
be given in each city and village combining into the district, and if the
proposition does not carry by three‑fourths of all electors voting on the
proposition in each city or village constituting the district, then the
proposed contract and tax have failed of ratification and are void.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑129‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑129‑1)
Sec. 11‑129‑1.
Any municipality with a population of less than 500,000 is
authorized, as provided in this Division 129, to build, or purchase, and to
operate a waterworks system or water supply system either within or without
the corporate limits thereof, and also to improve or extend that system.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑129‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑129‑2)
Sec. 11‑129‑2.
A specified municipality is authorized to pay the cost of
a purchase, construction, improvement, or extension of a waterworks or
water supply system by the issuance and sale of revenue bonds of the
municipality, payable solely from the revenue derived from the operation of
the waterworks or water supply system. These revenue bonds shall bear
interest at a rate not to exceed the maximum rate authorized by the Bond
Authorization Act, as amended at the time of the making of the contract,
payable semi‑annually, and shall mature within the period of usefulness of
the project, to be determined by the corporate authorities, but in no event
more than 40 years from the date of the completion of the project. The
bonds shall be sold in such manner as the corporate authorities shall
determine except that, if issued to bear interest at the maximum rate
authorized by the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the time of the
making of the contract, the bonds shall be sold for not less than par and
accrued interest, and except that the selling price of bonds bearing less than
the maximum rate authorized by the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the
time of the making of the contract, shall be such that the interest cost to the
municipality of the money received from the bond sale shall not exceed
the maximum rate authorized by the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the
time of the making of the contract, computed to maturity according to
standard tables of bond values.
In case any officer, whose signature appears on these revenue bonds or
the coupons attached thereto, ceases to hold that office before the
delivery of the bonds to the purchaser, his signature nevertheless shall be
valid and sufficient for all purposes, to the same effect as if he had
remained in office until the delivery of the bonds. The bonds shall have
all the qualities of negotiable instruments under the law merchant and the
"Uniform Commercial Code", approved May 28, 1965, as amended.
However, upon the effective date of the Acts of 1971, 1972 and 1973, the
maximum interest rate and interest cost on bonds issued under this Section
is
the maximum rate authorized by the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the
time of the making of the contract.
With respect to instruments for the payment of money issued under this
Section either before, on, or after the effective date of this amendatory
Act of 1989, it is and always has been the intention of the General
Assembly (i) that the Omnibus Bond Acts are and always have been
supplementary grants of power to issue instruments in accordance with the
Omnibus Bond Acts, regardless of any provision of this Act that may appear
to be or to have been more restrictive than those Acts, (ii) that the
provisions of this Section are not a limitation on the supplementary
authority granted by the Omnibus Bond Acts, and (iii) that instruments
issued under this Section within the supplementary authority granted
by the Omnibus Bond Acts are not invalid because of any provision of
this Act that may appear to be or to have been more restrictive than
those Acts.
The amendatory Acts of 1971, 1972 and 1973 are not a limit upon any
municipality which is a home rule unit.
(Source: P.A. 86‑4.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑129‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑129‑3)
Sec. 11‑129‑3.
The corporate authorities of any municipality availing
itself of the provisions of this Division 129 shall adopt an ordinance
describing in a general way the contemplated project. If it is intended to
purchase an existing waterworks or water supply system, the ordinance shall
describe in a general way the system to be purchased. If it is intended to
build a waterworks or water supply system or to improve or extend a
waterworks or water supply system owned and operated by the municipality,
the ordinance shall describe in a general way the waterworks or water
supply system to be constructed or the improvements or extensions to be
made. It shall not be necessary that the ordinance refer to plans and
specifications nor that there be on file for public inspection prior to the
adoption of such ordinance detailed plans and specifications of the
project. The ordinance shall set out the estimated cost of the project,
determine its period of usefulness, and fix the amount and maturities of
water revenue bonds proposed to be issued, the interest rate, and all
details in respect thereof. The ordinance may contain such covenants and
restrictions upon the issuance of additional revenue bonds thereafter as
may be deemed necessary or advisable for the assurance of payment of the
bonds thereby authorized and as may be thereafter issued.
Revenue bonds issued under this Division 129 shall be payable solely
from the revenue derived from the operation of the waterworks or water
supply system on account of which the bonds are issued; provided, that
bonds issued under this Division 129 may also be payable from funds pledged
by the municipality issuing such bonds pursuant to the
Illinois Finance Authority Act. Notwithstanding any
such
pledge or any other matter, these bonds shall
not in any event constitute an indebtedness of the municipality within the
meaning of any constitutional or statutory limitation and it shall be so
stated on the face of each bond.
(Source: P.A. 93‑205, eff. 1‑1‑04.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑129‑4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑129‑4)
Sec. 11‑129‑4.
Within 10 days after an ordinance for any project
under this Division 129 has been passed, it shall be published at least
once in one or more newspapers published in the municipality, or, if no
newspaper is published therein, then in one or more newspapers with a
general circulation within the municipality. In municipalities with less
than 500 population in which no newspaper is published, publication may
instead be made by posting a notice in 3 prominent places within the
municipality.
If the ordinance authorizes the issuance of revenue bonds for the
purpose of purchasing an existing waterworks system and if the revenue
thereof (after proper adjustments and elimination of nonrecurring
charges under public ownership based upon the average annual receipts
and expenditures for the 3 calendar years next preceding the date of the
adoption of the ordinance as shown by the annual reports for those years
made by the owners to the Illinois Commerce Commission) is sufficient
(1) to pay all operating and maintenance expenses, (2) to pay into a
depreciation fund a reasonable amount as a depreciation reserve, and (3)
to provide for the payment when due of the principal of and interest
upon the bonds proposed to be issued to purchase the waterworks system,
the ordinance authorizing the issuance of those revenue bonds shall be
in effect immediately upon its adoption and publication, or posting, as
provided in this section, notwithstanding any provision in this Code or
any other law to the contrary.
If the ordinance authorizes the issuance of revenue bonds for the
purpose of extending or improving an existing waterworks system, after
its acquisition, or a presently municipally owned and operated
waterworks system, and if the ordinance specifies that those extensions
or improvements are to be paid for, either in whole or in part, by a
loan or grant, or both, from any federal agency, the ordinance
authorizing the issuance of those revenue bonds shall be in effect
immediately upon its adoption and publication, or posting, as provided
in this section, notwithstanding any provision in this Code or any other
law to the contrary.
The fact as to the sufficiency of the revenue in case of the purchase
of an existing waterworks system, or of the intention of the corporate
authorities to pay the cost of the proposed extensions or improvements
to an existing system proposed to be purchased, or to a presently
municipally owned system, by a loan or grant, or both, from a federal
agency shall be determined by the ordinance authorizing the revenue
bonds and that determination when so expressed in that ordinance shall
be conclusive.
In all other cases, if no petition is filed with the municipal clerk,
as provided in this section, within 30 days after the publication, or
posting, of the ordinance, then, after the expiration of those 30 days,
the ordinance shall be in effect. The publication or posting of an ordinance
which does not take effect immediately shall be accompanied by a notice
of (1) the specific number of voters required to sign a petition requesting
the question of authorizing the issuance of revenue bonds for the purpose
of building, purchasing, improving or extending the waterworks or water
supply system to be submitted to the electors; (2) the time in which such
petition must be filed; and (3) the date of the prospective referendum.
The municipal clerk shall provide a petition form to any individual requesting
one. But if within this period of 30 days a petition is filed with the
municipal clerk signed by electors of the municipality numbering 10% or
more of the number of registered voters in the municipality, asking that
the question of building, purchasing, improving, or extending the
waterworks or water supply system and the issuance of revenue bonds
therefor, as provided in the ordinance, be submitted to the electors of
the municipality, the clerk shall certify the proposition for submission at
an election in accordance with the general election law.
If a majority of the votes cast on the question are in
favor thereof, the ordinance shall be in effect. But if a majority of
the votes cast on the question are unfavorable, the municipality shall
proceed no further and the ordinance shall not take effect.
(Source: P.A. 87‑767.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑129‑5) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑129‑5)
Sec. 11‑129‑5.
Whenever revenue bonds are issued under this Division 129,
sufficient revenue received from the operation of such a waterworks or
water‑supply system shall be deposited in a separate fund designated as the
water fund of the municipality. It shall be used only (1) to pay the cost
of operation and maintenance of the system, (2) to provide an adequate
depreciation fund, and (3) to pay the principal of and interest upon the
revenue bonds of the municipality issued under this Division 129.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑129‑6) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑129‑6)
Sec. 11‑129‑6.
Rates charged for water by such a municipality shall be
sufficient at all times to pay the cost of operation and maintenance, to
provide an adequate depreciation fund, and to pay the principal of and
interest upon all revenue bonds issued under this Division 129. The holder
of such a bond, or of any of its coupons, in any civil action mandamus,
injunction or
other proceeding, may enforce and compel performance of all duties required
by this Division 129 including the making and collecting of sufficient
water rates for the specified purposes and the proper application of the
income therefrom.
(Source: P.A. 83‑345.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑129‑7) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑129‑7)
Sec. 11‑129‑7.
This Division 129 authorizes the issuance of revenue bonds
provided for in this Division 129 without submitting the proposition for
the approval of the ordinance authorizing the bonds to the electors as
provided in Sections 8‑4‑1 and 8‑4‑2.
(Source: 91‑357, eff. 7‑29‑99.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑129‑8) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑129‑8)
Sec. 11‑129‑8.
Any municipality with a population of less than 500,000
hereafter authorizing the issuance of bonds to pay the cost of acquiring a
water works, which bonds are payable solely from the revenue of such water
works, may pursuant to ordinance adopted by the governing body of such
municipality and as an incident thereto and for the purpose of assuring the
holder or holders of such bonds of a continuous, efficient management and
operation of such water works, provide for the establishment of a municipal
water board consisting of not less than 3 nor more than 7 members to
administer the action and function of such municipality in managing,
maintaining and operating such water works. The members of the board shall
be selected by the city council, board of trustees, or other governing body
of such municipality, and shall serve for such terms, receive such
compensation and successors shall be selected, as shall be specified by the
ordinance providing for the establishment of such board. The board shall
approve all contracts for materials and services and shall employ all such
persons as the proper and successful operation of such water works system
may require, including a superintendent, an engineer and an attorney. No
disbursement shall be made of any revenues of such water works system for
operation and maintenance expenses or to pay the cost of any additions or
improvements thereto, except such as are approved by such board. The holder
of any bond issued for the purpose of acquiring any such water works
system, or extending or improving the same may compel the board to perform
any act in respect to the management, maintenance or operation of the water
works system as may be required by the laws of this state or as may have
been undertaken in the ordinance or ordinances pursuant to which such board
was established or the bonds issued. If the adoption of such ordinance was
made a condition to the sale of water revenue bonds issued for the purpose
of acquiring such water works system, any such ordinance shall not be
repealed or amended prior to the retirement of the bonds without the
consent of the holders of two‑thirds of the bonds then outstanding.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑129‑9) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑129‑9)
Sec. 11‑129‑9.
In addition to other projects authorized by this
Division 129, any municipality with a population under 500,000 may
construct or acquire a water‑supply system to serve a particular
locality within or without its corporate limits or to extend or improve
an existing water‑supply system for the purpose of serving a particular
locality within or without the municipality not theretofore served by
its existing system, and may pay the cost thereof by the issuance and
sale of revenue bonds of the municipality, payable solely from the
revenue derived from the operation of the water‑supply system
constructed or acquired for that particular locality, or from the
revenue derived from the operation of the improvements and extensions of
an existing system.
Except insofar as inconsistent with Sections 11‑129‑9 through
11‑129‑11, the provisions of Section 11‑129‑1 through 11‑129‑8 shall
govern all matters connected with projects under this Section. In
addition to the requirements of Section 11‑129‑3, an ordinance for a
project under this Section shall contain a description of the particular
locality to be served by the system, improvement or extension.
(Source: P.A. 80‑1382.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑129‑10) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑129‑10)
Sec. 11‑129‑10.
After adoption of an ordinance for a project under
Section 11‑129‑9, the corporate authorities may make and enforce all
needful rules and regulations in connection with the construction,
acquisition, improvement, or extension, and with the management and
maintenance of the project to be constructed or acquired. The corporate
authorities shall establish rates or charges to each user of the
water‑supply system, improvement or extension at a rate which will be
sufficient at all times to pay the principal and interest of any bonds
issued to pay the cost thereof, maintenance, and operation of the
system, improvement, or extension and an adequate depreciation fund
therefor. Charges or rates shall be established, revised, and
maintained by ordinance and become payable as the corporate authorities
may determine by ordinance.
(Source: P.A. 80‑1382.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑129‑11) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑129‑11)
Sec. 11‑129‑11.
All revenue derived from the operation of a
water‑supply system, improvement or extension constructed or acquired
under Section 11‑129‑9 shall be set aside as collected and deposited in
a special fund designated as a municipal water fund for the particular
locality. The fund shall be used only for the purpose of paying the
cost of operating and maintaining the water‑supply system, improvement
or extension, providing an adequate depreciation fund, and paying the
principal and interest on the bonds issued by the municipality under
Section 11‑129‑9 for the purpose of constructing or acquiring the
system, improvement or extension.
(Source: P.A. 80‑1382.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑130‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑130‑1)
Sec. 11‑130‑1.
Any municipality may purchase or construct waterworks or
construct improvements to its waterworks as provided in this Division 130.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑130‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑130‑2)
Sec. 11‑130‑2.
The term "waterworks", as used in this Division 130, means
and includes a waterworks system in its entirety or any integral part
thereof, including mains, hydrants, meters, valves, standpipes, storage
tanks, pumping tanks, intakes, wells, impounding reservoirs, or
purification plants.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑130‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑130‑3)
Sec. 11‑130‑3.
Whenever the corporate authorities of any municipality
determine to purchase or construct waterworks under the provisions of this
Division 130, they shall have an estimate made of the cost thereof and, by
ordinance, shall provide for the issuance of revenue bonds under the
provisions of this Division 130. The ordinance shall set forth a brief
description of the contemplated purchase or construction, the estimated
cost thereof, the amount, rate of interest, time and place of payment, and
other details in connection with the issuance of the bonds. The bonds shall
bear interest at not more than the maximum rate authorized by the Bond
Authorization Act, as amended at the time of the making of the contract,
payable semi‑annually, and shall be payable at such times and places not
exceeding 20 years from their date as shall be prescribed in the ordinance
providing for their issuance. This ordinance shall also declare that a
statutory mortgage lien exists upon the property
so to be purchased or constructed, fix minimum rates for water to be
collected prior to the payment of all of the revenue bonds so issued, and
shall pledge the revenue derived from the operation of the waterworks for
the purpose of paying those bonds and the interest thereon. This pledge
shall definitely fix and determine the amount of revenue which must be set
apart and applied to the payment of the principal of and interest on the
bonds and the proportion of the balance of the revenue which is to be set
aside as a proper and adequate depreciation account. The remainder of the
revenue shall be set aside for the reasonable and proper operation and
maintenance of the waterworks. The rates to be charged for the services
from the waterworks shall be sufficient to provide for the payment of
interest upon all bonds and to create a sinking fund to pay the principal
thereof as and when the bonds become due, to provide for the operation and
maintenance of the system and to provide an adequate depreciation fund.
With respect to instruments for the payment of money issued under this
Section either before, on, or after the effective date of this amendatory
Act of 1989, it is and always has been the intention of the General
Assembly (i) that the Omnibus Bond Acts are and always have been
supplementary grants of power to issue instruments in accordance with the
Omnibus Bond Acts, regardless of any provision of this Act that may appear
to be or to have been more restrictive than those Acts, (ii) that the
provisions of this Section are not a limitation on the supplementary
authority granted by the Omnibus Bond Acts, and (iii) that instruments
issued under this Section within the supplementary authority granted
by the Omnibus Bond Acts are not invalid because of any provision of
this Act that may appear to be or to have been more restrictive than
those Acts.
The amendatory Acts of 1971, 1972 and 1973 are not a limit upon any
municipality which is a home rule unit.
(Source: P.A. 86‑4.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑130‑4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑130‑4)
Sec. 11‑130‑4.
Within 10 days after such an ordinance has been passed it
shall be published at least once, with a notice to all persons concerned
stating that the ordinance has been adopted in one or more newspapers
published in the municipality, or, if no newspaper is published therein,
then in one or more newspapers with a general circulation within the
municipality. In municipalities with less than 500 population in which no
newspaper is published, publication may instead be made by posting a notice
in 3 prominent places within the municipality. Such notice shall state that
the municipality contemplates the issuance of the bonds described in the
ordinance, and that any person interested may appear before the corporate
authorities upon a certain date, which shall not be less than 10 days
subsequent to the publication or posting of the ordinance and notice, and
present protests. At this hearing all objections and suggestions shall be
heard, and the corporate authorities shall take such action as they shall
deem proper in the premises.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑130‑5) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑130‑5)
Sec. 11‑130‑5.
Bonds provided for in this Division 130 shall be issued in
such amounts as may be necessary to provide sufficient funds to pay all
costs of the purchase or construction, including engineering, legal, and
other expenses, together with interest to a date 6 months subsequent to the
estimated date of completion. Bonds issued under this Division 130 are
negotiable instruments. They shall be executed by the mayor, or president
and by the municipal clerk and shall be sealed with the corporate seal of
the municipality. In case any of the officers whose signatures appear on
the bonds, or coupons attached thereto, ceases to hold his office before
delivery of the bonds, his signature nevertheless shall be valid and
sufficient for all purposes the same as if it had remained in office until
the delivery of the bonds. The bonds may be sold at not less than 90 cents
on the dollar, and the proceeds derived therefrom shall be used exclusively
for the purposes for which the bonds were issued. The bonds may be sold at
one time or in parcels as funds are needed, but no bond shall be delivered
until bids for the construction, or the offer to sell, in the case of a
purchase, has been received, or judgment has been entered in the event of a
condemnation, and it is apparent that the authorized bonds will pay for the
contemplated waterworks.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑130‑6) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑130‑6)
Sec. 11‑130‑6.
Revenue bonds issued under this Division 130 shall be
payable solely from the revenue derived from the operation of the
waterworks on account of which the bonds were issued. These bonds shall not
in any event constitute an indebtedness of the municipality within the
meaning of any constitutional or statutory limitation. It shall be plainly
stated on the face of each bond that the bond has been issued under this
Division 130 and that it does not constitute an indebtedness of the
municipality within the meaning of any constitutional or statutory
limitation.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑130‑7) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑130‑7)
Sec. 11‑130‑7.
There is hereby created a statutory mortgage lien upon the
waterworks so purchased or constructed from the proceeds of the bonds
authorized to be issued under this Division 130. This lien exists in favor
of the holder of each of the bonds, and in favor of the holder of each of
the coupons attached to the bonds. The waterworks shall remain subject to
this statutory mortgage lien until the principal and interest of the bonds
are paid in full. Any holder of bonds issued under this Division 130, or of
any coupons representing interest accrued thereon, may, in a civil action,
enforce the statutory mortgage lien hereby created, and may compel the performance
of the duties of the officials of
the issuing municipality set forth in this Division 130.
If there is a default in the payment of the principal of and/or interest
upon any of these bonds, the circuit court
in any proper action
may appoint a receiver to administer the waterworks on behalf of the
municipality with power to charge and collect rates sufficient to provide
for the payment of the bonds and interest thereon, and for the payment of
the operating expenses and with power to apply the revenue in conformity
with this Division 130 and the ordinance providing for the issuance of the
bonds.
(Source: P.A. 79‑1361.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑130‑8) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑130‑8)
Sec. 11‑130‑8.
Rates for water fixed precedent to the issuance of bonds
shall not be reduced until all of the bonds have been fully paid, and,
whenever necessary, may be increased in amounts sufficient to provide for
the payment of the bonds, both principal and interest, and to provide
proper funds for the depreciation account and operation and maintenance
charges.
If any surplus accumulates in the operating and maintenance fund in
excess of the cost of maintaining and operating the waterworks during the
remainder of the then current fiscal year, and during the next ensuing
fiscal year, that excess may be transferred by the corporate authorities
either to the depreciation account or to the bond and interest redemption
account as the corporate authorities may designate. If any surplus
accumulates in the depreciation account over and above that which the
corporate authorities find may be necessary for the probable replacements
which may be needed during the remainder of the then present fiscal year
and the next ensuing fiscal year, that excess may be transferred to the
bond and interest redemption account. If any surplus exists in the bond and
interest redemption account that surplus shall be applied insofar as
possible in the purchase or retirement of outstanding revenue bonds payable
from that account, and for that purpose the corporate authorities are
hereby authorized to purchase bonds not due in the open market at not more
than the fair market value thereof.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑130‑9) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑130‑9)
Sec. 11‑130‑9.
For the purpose of purchasing any waterworks under this
Division 130, or for the purpose of purchasing any property necessary
therefor, the municipality has the right of eminent domain as provided by
Article VII of the Code of Civil Procedure, as heretofore and hereafter amended.
(Source: P.A. 82‑783.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑130‑10) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑130‑10)
Sec. 11‑130‑10.
Whenever a municipality owns and operates a waterworks
system, whether purchased or constructed under this Division 130 or not,
and desires to construct improvements thereto, it may issue revenue bonds
under this Division 130 to pay for that construction. The procedure for
that issuance, including the fixing of rates and the computation of the
amount thereof, shall be the same as is provided in this Division 130 for
the issuance of bonds for the purchase or construction of waterworks by a
municipality, except that in the ordinance declaring the intention to issue
the bonds and providing details in connection therewith, the corporate
authorities shall find and declare, in addition to the other requirements
set out in this Division 130, the value of the then existing waterworks and
the value of the property proposed to be constructed. The revenue derived
from the waterworks when the contemplated improvements are completed shall
be divided according to those 2 values. So much of the revenue as is in
proportion to the value of the improvements as distinguished from the value
of the previously existing waterworks, as so determined, shall be set aside
and used solely for the purpose of paying the revenue bonds issued for the
improvements, together with the cost of the operation and the depreciation
thereof, and that revenue shall be deemed to be income derived exclusively
from the improvements.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑130‑11) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑130‑11)
Sec. 11‑130‑11.
Any municipality issuing revenue bonds under this Division
130 shall install and maintain a proper system of accounts, showing the
amount of revenue received and its application. At least once a year the
municipality shall have the accounts properly audited by a competent
auditor. The report of that audit shall be open for inspection at all
proper times to any taxpayer, water‑user, or any holder of bonds issued
under this Division 130, or to anyone acting for and on behalf of the
taxpayer, water‑user, or bondholder.
The treasurer of the municipality shall be custodian of the funds
derived from income received from waterworks purchased or constructed
either in whole or in part under the provisions of this Division 130. He
shall give proper bond for the faithful discharge of his duties as such
custodian, and this bond shall be fixed and approved by the corporate
authorities of the municipality.
All of the funds received as income from waterworks purchased or
constructed in whole or in part under the provisions of this Division 130,
and all of the funds received from the sale of revenue bonds issued to
construct such a waterworks system, shall be kept separate and apart from
the other funds of the municipality. The treasurer shall maintain separate
accounts in which shall be placed (1) the interest and sinking fund, (2)
the depreciation fund and (3) the operating and maintenance fund. He shall
also provide for refunding outstanding certificates payable out of water
revenue.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑130‑12) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑130‑12)
Sec. 11‑130‑12.
Whenever all of the holders of unpaid water revenue
certificates of a particular issue, which were issued prior to July 8,
1927, to pay the cost of constructing waterworks and are payable from the
revenue thereof, offer in writing to exchange the certificates for
refunding revenue bonds to be issued under this Division 130, the corporate
authorities shall receive the certificates, and if found to be properly
executed, may adopt an ordinance incorporating therein the offer of the
certificate holders. This ordinance shall set forth the determined value of
the waterworks as it then exists, the value of as much of the waterworks as
was paid for by the issue of certificates, the unpaid portion of which are
proposed to be refunded, and the details in connection with the issuance of
the refunding revenue bonds in the same manner as is provided for in this
Division 130. The ordinance also shall fix the minimum rates to be charged
for water and pledge that revenue, if and when the refunding revenue bonds
are issued, to pay these refunding revenue bonds. The revenue shall be
applied as provided in this Division 130 and particularly in Sections
11‑130‑8 and 11‑130‑9.
The amount of the refunding revenue bonds shall not exceed and may be
less than the par amount of the certificates to be surrendered and shall
not exceed and may be less than the determined value of so much of the
waterworks as was paid for by that issue of certificates, less the amount
of certificates paid. The ordinance shall be published, or posted, together
with a notice of a hearing thereon, and a hearing shall be had thereon, in
the same manner as is provided in this Division 130. After such a hearing
the refunding revenue bonds specified in the offer may be issued, or a less
amount thereof may be issued with the consent of the certificate holders,
or the ordinance may be repealed, as the corporate authorities shall
determine. If the refunding revenue bonds are issued, the certificates
shall be surrendered and cancelled simultaneously therewith. Refunding
revenue bonds issued under this Division 130 shall be payable only out of
revenue derived from the waterworks as provided in the ordinance and
according to the terms of this Division 130. Holders of refunding revenue
bonds issued under this Division 130 have rights similar to those of
holders of revenue bonds issued under this Division 130, including the
power to apply for a receiver to operate the waterworks. The municipality
is under the same obligations to the refunding bondholders as it is to
holders of revenue bonds issued under this Division 130.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑131‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑131‑1)
Sec. 11‑131‑1.
The corporate authorities of any municipality, whether incorporated
under a special charter or the general law, which now has, or hereafter
may have, established or leased a waterworks system for the supply of
water to its inhabitants, has the power annually to levy and collect a
tax not to exceed .0166% of the value, as equalized or assessed by the
Department of Revenue, of the taxable property in the
municipality, for the extension of watermains or pipes in the municipality and for the
maintenance of its waterworks system, or for the creation of a sinking
fund to be applied to the establishment of a waterworks system. However,
the board of public works of the municipality, if any, or the head of the municipality's
water department, shall first certify to the corporate authorities the amount
that will be necessary for the specified purposes, and shall further
certify that the revenue from the waterworks system will be insufficient
therefor. This tax shall be known as the water fund tax and shall be
levied and collected in the same manner as are the other general taxes
of the municipality. A two‑thirds majority of all the corporate authorities
may levy and collect annually, a
tax not to exceed .05% of the value, as equalized or assessed by the
Department of Revenue, of the taxable property in the
municipality, for the specified purposes.
The corporate authorities of each municipality, with the concurrence of
two‑thirds of all of the members elected thereto, may
levy and collect annually, in addition to all other taxes now authorized
by law, a further tax of not to exceed .033% of the value, as equalized
or assessed by the Department of Revenue, of the
taxable property in the municipality, to be used exclusively for the purpose of
supplying water to the municipality.
Nothing in this Section increases the aggregate amount of tax, as
limited in Section 8‑3‑1, that may be levied in any one year.
(Source: P.A. 81‑1550.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑132‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑132‑1)
Sec. 11‑132‑1.
All cities owning or operating waterworks under any charter
granted by an act of any General Assembly of this state, or under the
general incorporation laws of this state, whether by boards of water
commissioners or by officers appointed for that purpose, have the powers
and privileges granted by Section 11‑132‑2, for the purpose of increasing
or bettering the source of supply from which their water is obtained.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑132‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑132‑2)
Sec. 11‑132‑2.
Whenever, in the judgment of a majority of any board of
water commissioners, or if there is no such board, whenever in the judgment
of a majority of the city council of any city specified in Section
11‑132‑1, it is necessary for the public health, or for any other cause, to
increase the source of water supply, or to substitute for it such better
source as in their judgment the interests of the city may demand, the board
of water commissioners or the city council may dig wells, either by boring
or excavation, and protect and equip them, or they may lease water
privileges from persons owning wells already or hereafter to be dug.
Subject to the provisions of Section 11‑132‑3, the board of water
commissioners or the city council may pay for the boring, excavation, or
lease, and for the expenses incurred in maintaining and operating the
wells, only out of the surplus earnings of the city's waterworks.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑132‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑132‑3)
Sec. 11‑132‑3.
No money, except the specified surplus earnings, shall
be expended under the provisions of Section 11‑132‑2, for the purposes
therein specified, until the question of the expenditure of the money
has been certified by the clerk submitted to a vote of the electors of the
city, and has received a favorable majority of the votes cast on the question.
(Source: P.A. 81‑1489.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑133‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑133‑1)
Sec. 11‑133‑1.
Any municipality with a population of 500,000 or more,
owning and operating its waterworks system, may pay for improving and
extending that system by the issuance and sale of certificates of
indebtedness of the municipality. These certificates shall bear interest at
a rate of not to exceed the maximum rate authorized by the Bond
Authorization Act, as amended at the time of the making of the contract,
payable semi‑annually, and shall mature within 25 years from the date
thereof; provided that any certificate issued and sold subsequent to
December 31, 1965, shall mature within 40 years from the date of issuance.
With respect to instruments for the payment of money issued under this
Section either before, on, or after the effective date of this amendatory
Act of 1989, it is and always has been the intention of the General
Assembly (i) that the Omnibus Bond Acts are and always have been
supplementary grants of power to issue instruments in accordance with the
Omnibus Bond Acts, regardless of any provision of this Act that may appear
to be or to have been more restrictive than those Acts, (ii) that the
provisions of this Section are not a limitation on the supplementary
authority granted by the Omnibus Bond Acts, and (iii) that instruments
issued under this Section within the supplementary authority granted
by the Omnibus Bond Acts are not invalid because of any provision of
this Act that may appear to be or to have been more restrictive than
those Acts.
This amendatory Act of 1973 is not a limit upon any municipality which
is a home rule unit.
(Source: P.A. 86‑4.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑133‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑133‑2)
Sec. 11‑133‑2.
The corporate authorities of any municipality availing itself of the
provisions of this Division 133, shall adopt an ordinance describing in a
general way the improvements and extensions to be made and refer to the
plans and specifications therefor prepared for that purpose. These plans
and specifications shall be open to the inspection of the public. This
ordinance shall set out the estimated cost of the improvements and
extensions and shall fix the amount of certificates proposed to be issued,
the maturity, interest rate, and all details in respect thereof. After this
ordinance has been adopted and approved, it shall be published once in a
newspaper published and having a general circulation in the municipality.
This ordinance shall be in effect after the expiration of 10 days from the
date of this publication.
Certificates of indebtedness issued under this Division 133, shall be
payable solely from the revenue derived from the waterworks system, and
these certificates shall not in any event constitute an indebtedness of the
municipality within the meaning of the constitutional limitation. It shall
be plainly stated on the face of each certificate that it has been issued
under the provisions of this Division 133, and that it does not constitute
an indebtedness of the municipality within any constitutional or statutory
limitation. The total amount of these certificates that may be issued
during the 8 years' period of 1958 to 1965 both inclusive, shall not exceed
$150,000,000, which certificates may be issued from time to time within the
8 years' period. The total amount of these certificates that may be issued
during the six year period of 1966 to 1971 both inclusive, shall not exceed
$60,000,000 which certificates may be issued from time to time within the
six year period. The total amount of these certificates that may be issued
in the year 1972 shall not exceed $5,000,000 and in the year of 1973 and
each year thereafter shall not exceed $10,000,000.
This amendatory Act of 1973 is not a limit upon any municipality which
is a home rule unit.
(Source: P. A. 78‑211.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑133‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑133‑3)
Sec. 11‑133‑3.
Whenever certificates of indebtedness are issued pursuant to
this Division 133, the entire revenue received from the operation of the
waterworks system shall be deposited in a separate fund, designated as the
water fund of the municipality of ..... This fund shall be used only in
paying (1) the cost of maintenance and operation of the waterworks system,
(2) obligations of the municipality theretofore issued that are payable by
their terms from this revenue, whether in the form of certificates, bonds,
or otherwise, and (3) certificates issued pursuant to this Division 133.
Rates charged for water shall be sufficient to pay the cost of
maintenance and operation and to pay the principal of and interest upon all
of the specified certificates and bonds. These rates shall not be reduced
while any of these certificates or bonds are unpaid.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑133‑4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑133‑4)
Sec. 11‑133‑4.
In case any officer whose signature appears on the specified
certificates or the coupons attached thereto ceases to hold his office
before the delivery of the certificates to the purchaser, his signature
nevertheless shall be valid and sufficient for all purposes, to the same
effect as if he had remained in office until the delivery of the
certificates. The specified certificates shall have all the qualities of
negotiable paper under the law merchant and the negotiable instruments law.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑134‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑134‑1)
Sec. 11‑134‑1.
Any city with a population of 25,000 or more but less than
500,000 which owns or operates its waterworks system, may contract with any
person for the filtration and treatment of its water supply.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑134‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑134‑2)
Sec. 11‑134‑2.
The city council of any city availing itself of the
provisions of this Division 134, shall adopt an ordinance, incorporating
therein the contract to be entered into and authorizing the execution
thereof on behalf of the city. The contract, among other things, (1) shall
describe in a general way the plans and equipment to be constructed for the
purpose of such filtration and treatment, (2) shall refer to and make a
part thereof the plans and specifications for the plants and equipment, (3)
shall provide for the manner, terms, and conditions upon which the water is
to be filtered and treated, (4) shall provide for and fix the rate at which
the water will be filtered and treated, and (5) may prescribe a method of
redetermining that rate in the event such redetermination is provided for
by the terms of the contract. The rate so fixed and the method so
prescribed for redetermining the rate shall not be modified during the term
of the contract without the consent of both the city and the other
contracting party.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑134‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑134‑3)
Sec. 11‑134‑3.
Such a contract may provide that the city has the right, at
its option, to acquire the filtration and treatment plants and equipment to
be constructed, upon the terms and conditions therein set forth. Filtration
and treatment plants and equipment so acquired by any city shall become a
part of its waterworks system, and the revenue derived therefrom shall be
deposited at all times in the water fund of the city provided for in
Section 11‑134‑5, for the uses and purposes therein specified.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑134‑4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑134‑4)
Sec. 11‑134‑4.
At all times during the term of such a contract the city
shall establish, maintain, and collect rates for water supplied or
delivered to its water consumers sufficient to enable the city to pay for
all water filtered and treated under the terms of the contract at the rates
therein provided for. But this provision does not relieve the city from any
obligation to maintain such other rates as may be imposed upon it under the
terms of any other statutory provision or contract.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑134‑5) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑134‑5)
Sec. 11‑134‑5.
During the term of such a contract, the entire revenue
received by the city from the operation of its waterworks system shall be
deposited in a separate fund designated as the water fund of the city of
..... This fund shall be used only in paying, first, the cost of
maintenance and operation of the waterworks system, and then the
obligations, in whatever form, of the city that are payable by their terms
from that revenue. All charges or payments required to be paid by the city
under such a contract for the filtration and treatment of its water supply
shall be deemed to be part of the cost of maintenance and operation of its
waterworks system.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑134‑6) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑134‑6)
Sec. 11‑134‑6.
The performance of the terms and the observance of the
provisions of such a contract for the filtration and treatment of the water
supply of such a city may be enforced in any civil action, mandamus, injunction or
other proceeding.
(Source: P.A. 83‑345.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑134‑7) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑134‑7)
Sec. 11‑134‑7.
All charges or payments to be made by any city under such a
contract for the filtration and treatment of its water supply shall be made
solely out of revenue derived by the city from the operation of its
waterworks system. The obligation of the city to make payments under such a
contract is limited solely to that revenue and does not constitute an
indebtedness to the city within the meaning of any constitutional or
statutory limitation.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑134‑8) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑134‑8)
Sec. 11‑134‑8.
Sections 11‑134‑1 through 11‑134‑7, without reference to any
other statutory provisions, authorize any city with a population of 25,000
or more but less than 500,000 to enter into a contract for the purpose
declared in those sections without submitting a proposition for the
approval of the contract to the electors of the city.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑135‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑135‑1)
Sec. 11‑135‑1.
Any 2 or more municipalities, except cities of 500,000 or
more inhabitants, may acquire either by purchase or construction a
waterworks system or a common source of supply of water, or both, and may
operate jointly a waterworks system or a common source of supply of water,
or both, and improve and extend the same, as provided in this Division 135.
The corporate authorities of the specified municipalities desiring to avail
themselves of the provisions of this Division 135 shall adopt a resolution
or ordinance determining and electing to acquire and operate jointly a
waterworks system or a common source of supply of water or both, as the
case may be. Such resolution or ordinance may be rescinded at any time
prior to the issuance and sale of revenue bonds and after the rescinding
municipality has no outstanding obligation to pay a proportionate share
of the costs of development, construction or operation.
Any municipality adopting a resolution or ordinance to acquire and
operate jointly a waterworks system or a common source of supply of water,
or both, as the case may be, under the provisions of this Division 135, is
authorized from time to time to pay, to advance or to obligate itself to
the Commission, to bear a proportionate share of the development costs of
any project proposed by the Commission including plans, feasibility reports
and engineering even though the project is never constructed or water is
never supplied by the Commission to such municipality.
Whenever any municipality determines to pay, to advance or to obligate
itself for its proportionate share of development costs as above provided,
it shall adopt an ordinance declaring its intention to do so, fix the maximum
amount of its share of the cost it proposes to pay, to advance or to obligate
itself for, and the period over which it proposes to pay its obligation
(not exceeding 5 years) and the maximum amount to be paid annually, if such
obligation is to be paid in installments. The time of payment of any such
installment obligation may be extended for a period of not exceeding five years
from the final maturity date of the original obligation.
From and after such ordinance becomes effective, it shall be the duty of
the municipality to include an amount sufficient to pay the annual installments
of its obligation each year in the next succeeding appropriation ordinances. No
prior appropriation shall be required for a municipality to authorize the
payments, advances or obligations herein provided for.
Whenever any municipality has obligated itself for development costs as
herein provided and after the effective date of the ordinance under which
it obligated itself for a specific amount for development costs of a
project and after approval of such obligation by the Commission, the
Commission is authorized to borrow funds temporarily for payment of such
development costs in advance of permanent financing. The Commission may
from time to time and pursuant to an appropriate resolution borrow money
and issue its interim notes to evidence borrowings for such purpose,
including all necessary and incidental expenses in connection therewith.
Any resolution authorizing the issuance of such notes shall describe the
project and the development costs to be undertaken, specify the principal
amount, rate of interest as authorized under Section 2 of "An Act to authorize
public corporations to issue bonds, other evidences of indebtedness and
tax anticipation warrants subject to interest rate limitations set forth
therein", approved May 26, 1970, as now or hereafter amended, and the maturity
date which shall coincide with the due date of the obligations or the
installments thereof incurred by the respective municipalities pursuant to this
Section not, however, to exceed 5 years from date.
Contemporaneously with the issuance as provided by this Division of revenue
bonds, all outstanding interim notes issued for development costs of a project
though they have not then matured shall be paid, both principal and interest
to date of payment, from funds derived from the sale of revenue bonds for
the permanent financing of any such project for which interim notes may
have been issued and such interim notes shall be surrendered and cancelled.
Any municipality adopting a resolution or ordinance to acquire and operate
jointly a waterworks system or a common source of supply of water, or both,
as the case may be, under the provisions of this Division 135 is further
authorized from time to time, to pay, to advance or to obligate itself to
the Commission to bear, a proportionate share of the construction and operating
costs of any project proposed by the Commission.
Whenever a municipality determines to pay, to advance or to obligate itself
for its proportionate share of construction or operating costs as above
provided, it shall adopt an ordinance declaring its intention to do so,
fix the maximum amount of its share of the cost it proposes to pay, to advance
or to obligate itself for, and the period over which it proposes to pay its
obligation and the maximum amount to be paid annually, if such obligation is to
be paid in installments. From and after such ordinance becomes effective, it
shall be the duty of the municipality to include an amount sufficient to pay
the annual installments of its obligation each year in the next succeeding
appropriation ordinances. No prior appropriation shall be required for a
municipality to authorize the payments, advances or obligations herein provided
for.
Whenever any municipality has paid, advanced or obligated itself for
development, construction or operating costs as herein provided, the Commission
is authorized to contract with such municipality, on such terms as may be
agreed, for the repayment to such municipality by the Commission of any payment
or advance made by such municipality to the Commission to charge, in addition
to all other charges and rates authorized under the provisions of this
Division, such rates and charges for water sold by the Commission as shall be
necessary to provide for such repayment. In addition, any payment or advance
of such costs made by a municipality pursuant to this Section may be repaid by
the Commission to the municipality from the proceeds of revenue bonds
authorized to be issued by the Commission pursuant to this Division 135.
(Source: P.A. 82‑783 .)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑135‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑135‑2)
Sec. 11‑135‑2.
Upon the adoption of such an ordinance or resolution
by the corporate authorities of any such municipality, the mayor or
president, with the approval of the corporate authorities, shall appoint
a commissioner.
If under Section 11‑135‑3 a water commission meets the participatory
requirements, that water commission shall appoint a commissioner.
The commissioners so appointed by each of such
municipalities and participatory water commissions together with a like
commissioner appointed by the
presiding officer of the county board with the advice and consent of the
county board of the county in which the major part of the works of the
water commission are, or are to be, located, shall constitute a
commission and public corporation with the powers and duties specified
in this Division 135. The corporate name of the commission shall be
"(here insert an appropriate name indicative of the area) Water Commission"
and as such the
Commission may contract and be contracted with, and sue and be sued.
The commissioners so appointed shall serve for a term of 6 years, or until
their successors have been appointed and have qualified in the same manner
as the original appointments, except that the commissioners first appointed
shall determine by lot at their first meeting the respective commissioners
whose terms shall be for 2, 4 and 6 years from the date of that meeting.
Each commissioner appointed by a mayor or president shall be an elector
or the chief administrator of the municipality for which he acts as
commissioner,
and the commissioner appointed by the presiding officer of the county board
shall be an elector of the county in which the major works of the water
commission are, or are to be, located. Any commissioner so appointed may
be a member of the governing board or officer or employee of the municipality
or county from which the appointment is made. A commissioner is eligible
for reappointment upon the expiration of his term. A vacancy shall be filled
for the balance of the unexpired term of the person who has ceased to hold
office by the mayor, president or county board presiding officer who initially
made such appointment in the same manner as the original appointment. Each
commissioner shall receive the same compensation, as determined by the
appointing authority, which shall not be more
than $2,000 per year, except that no commissioner who is a
member of the governing
board or officer of the municipality or county from which the
appointment
is made may receive any compensation for serving as commissioner. Each
commissioner shall furnish a bond for the faithful performance of his
official duties. This bond shall not be less than $5,000 and its costs
shall be paid by the commission.
Each commissioner may be removed for any cause for which any other
municipal officer may be removed. No commissioner, or employee of the
commission, and no mayor, or president, or other member of the corporate
authorities, or any employee of any of the municipalities, shall be
interested directly or indirectly in any contract or job of work or
materials, or the profits thereof, or services to be performed for or by
the commission.
A violation of any of the foregoing provisions of this section is a
Class C misdemeanor. A conviction is cause for the removal of a person
from his office or employment.
(Source: P.A. 90‑517, eff. 8‑22‑97; 91‑659, eff. 12‑22‑99.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑135‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑135‑3)
Sec. 11‑135‑3.
Such a commission shall organize by appointing a
chairman from its own members and a clerk and treasurer, who need not be
commissioners. It shall adopt its own rules of procedure and provide
for its meetings. The commission has full and complete supervision,
management, and control of the waterworks system, or the common source
of supply of water, or both, as provided in the ordinances or
resolutions for acquiring and operating the same, and in their
maintenance, operation, and extension. The commission is authorized to
contract with the municipalities which established the commission for a
supply of water to those municipalities, for a period not exceeding 50
years, and the corporate authorities of those municipalities are
authorized to enter into contracts with the commission.
The commission is authorized to develop, promote and provide for
recreational facilities on property acquired in and for the operation of
its common source of supply of water and to include reasonable charges
for such recreational facilities as part of the cost of operation and
maintenance of the waterworks system.
Any 2 or more water commissions organized under this Division 135
may, by resolution adopted by each commission and ratified by the
corporate authorities of each of the municipalities comprising each of
the water commissions agree to the joint purchase, construction,
operation, improvement or extension, or any combination thereof, of
either or both a waterworks system and a common source of supply of
water for those commissions. When such an agreement has been executed,
the water commissions entering into that agreement may jointly issue
revenue bonds for the projects subject to the agreement in the same
manner and subject to the same conditions as are provided in this
Division 135 in the case of an individual water commission.
Any additional municipality or water commission may join and become a
part of the system
provided for in this Division 135 in the same manner as if participating
at the time of formation if approved by majority vote of the water
commissioners and such approval is ratified by resolution of the corporate
authorities of a majority of the municipalities or water commissions
constituting
the commission; except that if a system is composed of two municipalities,
only the approval of a majority of the water commissioners is required to
accept an additional municipality or water commission to the system. If a
municipality or water commission has
been a continuous customer of the same water commission for a minimum of
20 years, receives at least 90% of its water from the water commission,
and the population of the municipality or water commission
exceeds
20% of the population of
the then current member municipalities in the water commission, that
municipality or water commission
shall become a part of the system.
In such event the name of the water commission may be
changed either to include the joining municipality's or water
commission's name or to provide
another name that is indicative of the area. The
membership of the
water commission shall be enlarged to include a member from such joining
municipality or water commission.
(Source: P.A. 91‑659, eff. 12‑22‑99.)
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(2) The power to enter into intergovernmental | ||
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(Source: P.A. 94‑123, eff. 1‑1‑06.) |
(65 ILCS 5/11‑135‑4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑135‑4)
Sec. 11‑135‑4.
A commission may from time to time issue its revenue
bonds in such principal amounts as the commission shall deem necessary to
provide sufficient funds to carry out any of its corporate purposes and
powers, including, without limitation, developing, acquiring, constructing,
extending or improving a waterworks system or common source of supply of
water, or any combination thereof, the funding or refunding of the principal
of, redemption premium, if any, and interest on, any bonds issued by it
whether or not such bonds or interest to be funded or refunded have or have
not become due, the payment of engineering, legal and other expenses, together
with interest to a date one year subsequent to the estimated date of completion
of the project, the establishment or increase of reserves to secure or to
pay such bonds and interest thereon, the providing of working capital and
the payment of all other costs or expenses of the commission incident to
and necessary or convenient to carry out its corporate purposes and powers.
These bonds shall have all the qualities of negotiable instruments under
the laws of this State and shall not constitute indebtedness of any of the
municipalities constituting the commission.
Every issue of bonds of such commission shall be payable out of the revenues
to be derived pursuant to contracts with the specified municipalities and
participating water commissions or
by virtue of the operation of any properties acquired or to be acquired
or constructed. A commission may issue such types of bonds as it may
determine,
including bonds as to which the principal and interest are payable exclusively
from the revenues from one or more projects, or from an interest therein
or a right to the products and services thereof, or from one or more revenue
producing contracts made by the commission, or its revenues generally.
Any such bonds may be additionally secured by a pledge of any grant, subsidy,
or contribution from the United States, the State of Illinois, or any unit
of local government, or any combination thereof.
Before the treasurer of the commission is entitled to receive the proceeds
of the sale of such a bond issue, he shall supply a corporate surety bond
in an amount equivalent to the amount of funds to be derived from the sale
of the bonds, and, in addition thereto, he shall supply a separate corporate
surety bond for the faithful accounting of any funds that may come into
his possession in an amount equal to the amount of funds likely to come
into his hands in any one year from the revenue to be derived from the operation
of any of the properties of the commission. The cost of these surety bonds
shall be paid by the commission.
The revenue bonds shall be issued pursuant to an ordinance or resolution
and may be issued in one or more series, and shall bear such date or dates,
mature at such time or times within the estimated period of usefulness of
the project involved and in any event not more than 50 years from the date
thereof, bear interest at such rate or rates as authorized under Section
2 of "An Act to authorize public corporations to issue bonds, other evidences
of indebtedness and tax anticipation warrants subject to interest rate limitations
set forth therein", approved May 26, 1970, as now or hereafter amended,
which rates may be fixed or variable, be in such denominations, be in such
form, either coupon or registered, carry such conversion, registration,
and exchange privileges, have such rank or priority, be executed in such
manner, be payable in such medium of payment at such place or places within
or without the State of Illinois, be subject to such terms of redemption
with or without premium, and contain or be subject to such other terms as
the ordinance or resolution may provide, and shall not be restricted by
the provisions of any other law limiting the amounts, maturities, interest
rates, or other terms of obligations of public agencies or private persons.
The bonds shall be sold in such manner as the commission shall determine,
at private or public sale. It shall not be
necessary that the ordinance or resolution refer to plans and specifications
nor that there be on file for public inspection prior to the adoption of
such ordinance detailed plans and specifications of the
project. This ordinance or resolution may contain such covenants and
restrictions in relation to the operation of the properties under the
control of the commission and the issuance of additional revenue bonds
thereafter as may be deemed necessary or advisable for the assurance of
payment of the bonds thereby authorized and as may be thereafter issued.
It shall be plainly stated on the face of each bond that it does not
constitute an indebtedness of any municipality represented by the
commission within the meaning of any statutory or constitutional
limitation. Upon the issuance of revenue bonds, the revenue of the
commission derived pursuant to contracts entered into for the sale of
water to the specified municipalities and from the operation of its
properties, shall be accounted for as provided in the ordinance or
resolution authorizing the issuance of the bonds. Any commission created
under the provisions of this Division 135 may also issue new bonds for
the purpose of providing funds for the payment of unpaid bonds in
accordance with the procedure prescribed by this Division 135.
The amendatory Acts of 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975 and 1981
are not a limit upon any
municipality which is a home rule unit.
(Source: P.A. 91‑659, eff. 12‑22‑99.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑135‑5) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑135‑5)
Sec. 11‑135‑5.
Whenever bonds are issued under this Division 135 the
revenue received from the operation of the properties under the control
of the commission shall be set aside as collected and deposited in a
separate fund to be used only (1) in paying the cost of the operation
and maintenance of those properties, (2) in providing an adequate
depreciation fund, (3) in paying the principal of and interest upon the
revenue bonds issued by the commission, as provided by this Division
135, (4) to comply with the covenants of the ordinance or resolution authorizing
the issuance of such bonds, and (5) to carry out the corporate purposes
and powers of the commission.
In case the commission has charge of the operation of a complete
waterworks system, including the distribution mains, the commission
shall establish rates and charges for water which shall be sufficient at
all times to pay the cost of operation and maintenance, to provide an adequate
depreciation fund, to pay the principal of and interest upon all
revenue bonds issued as provided by this Division 135, to comply with
the covenants of the ordinance or resolution authorizing the issuance of
such bonds, and to carry out the corporate purposes and powers of the commission.
Charges and rates shall be established, revised, and maintained by ordinance
and become payable as the commission may determine by ordinance.
In case the commission has charge of the operation of a common source of
supply of water, the municipalities represented by the commission shall
contract with the commission for water. These municipalities shall establish
such charges and rates for water supplied by them to consumers as will be
sufficient at all times (1) to pay the cost of operation and maintenance
of the respective waterworks systems (or waterworks and sewerage systems,
where combined) of the municipalities, (2) to provide an adequate depreciation
fund therefor, (3) to pay the principal of and interest on all
revenue bonds of the municipalities payable from the revenues of the waterworks
system (or combined waterworks and sewerage system), and (4) to pay the
charges and rates established by the commission for the sale of water by
the commission to those municipalities. The commission shall
establish such charges and rates for water supplied to those municipalities
as will be sufficient at all times (1) to pay the cost of operation and
maintenance of the common source of supply of water, (2) to provide an adequate
depreciation fund therefor, (3) to
pay the principal of and interest on the revenue bonds issued by the
commission, (4) to comply with the covenants of the ordinance or resolution
authorizing the issuance of such bonds, and (5) to carry out the corporate
purposes and powers of the commission, under the provisions of this Division
135. Contracts
entered into between the commission and the specified municipalities shall
include covenants for the establishment of rates and charges as
provided in this section.
Municipality contributions to the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund,
by commissions created under this Division 135 which have been included
under that Fund, shall be considered a cost of operation and maintenance
for the purposes of this Section.
Any holder of a bond or of any of its coupons, issued under this
Division 135, in any civil action, mandamus, or other proceeding, may
enforce and compel performance of all duties required by this Division
135 to be performed by such a commission or by any of the
municipalities, including the making of rates and charges, the
collecting of sufficient revenue, and the application thereof, as
provided in this Division 135.
All contracts for the construction of a waterworks system or of a
common source of supply of water, or both, to be let by such a
commission, shall be entered into only after advertising for bids,
pursuant to a resolution to be adopted for that purpose by the
commission. A notice inviting bids shall be published in a newspaper
published and having a general circulation in the county or counties in
which the municipalities represented by the commission are located, not
more than 30 nor less than 15 days in advance of the receipt of the
bids. The notice shall be published at least twice. In the resolution
directing the advertising for bids the commission also shall establish
all requirements necessary for the bidding, for the awarding of
contracts, and for the approval of contractors' faithful performance
bonds.
(Source: P.A. 82‑641.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑135‑6) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑135‑6)
Sec. 11‑135‑6.
Whenever such commission shall pass an ordinance for the
construction or acquisition of any waterworks properties, or improvements
or extension or mains, pumping stations, reservoirs or other appurtenances
thereto, which such commission is authorized to make, the making of which
will require that private property be taken or damaged, such commission may
cause compensation therefor to be ascertained and may condemn and acquire
possession thereof in the same manner as nearly as may be, as provided for
the exercise of the right of eminent domain under Article VII of the Code
of Civil Procedure, as heretofore and hereafter amended. However,
proceedings to ascertain the compensation to be paid for taking or damaging
private property shall in all cases be instituted in the circuit court
of the county where the property sought to be taken or damaged is situated.
In addition, when a Water Commission created under the Water Commission
Act of 1985, as amended, requires that public property be taken or damaged
for the purposes specified above, such commission may condemn and acquire
possession of public property and cause compensation for such public
property to be ascertained in the same manner provided for the exercise of
the right of eminent domain under Article VII of the Code of Civil
Procedure, as amended, during such time as the Commission has the power to
initiate action in the manner provided by Sections 7‑103 through Sections
7‑112 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended.
In the event a Commission created under the Water Commission Act of
1985 shall determine that negotiations for the acquisition of property or
easements for making any
improvement which such Commission is authorized to make have proven
unsuccessful and the Commission shall have by resolution adopted a schedule
or plan of operation for the execution of the project and therein made a
finding that it is necessary to take such property or easements immediately
or at some specified later date in order to comply with the schedule, the
Commission may commence proceedings to acquire such property or easements
in the same manner provided in Sections 7‑103 through 7‑112 of the Code of
Civil Procedure, as amended; except that if the property or easement is
located in a municipality having more than 2,000,000 inhabitants, the
Commission may not commence such proceedings until the acquisition has been
approved by ordinance of the corporate authorities of the municipality.
Any commission has the power to acquire, hold, sell, lease as lessor or
lessee, transfer or dispose of real or personal property, or interest
therein, as it deems appropriate in the exercise of its powers for its
lawful purposes. When, in the opinion of a commission, real estate owned by
it, however acquired, is no longer necessary, appropriate, required for
the use of, profitable to, or for best interest of the commission, such
commission may, by resolution, lease such surplus real estate for a period
not to exceed 99 years, or sell such surplus real estate, in accordance
with procedures adopted by resolution by such commission.
(Source: P.A. 84‑1473.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑135‑7) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑135‑7)
Sec. 11‑135‑7.
Such commission may construct, maintain, alter and extend
its water mains as a proper use of highways along, upon, under and across
any highway, street, alley or public ground in the state, including
highways within a municipality, but so as not to inconvenience the public
use thereof, and such commission may construct, maintain and operate any
conduit or conduits, water pipe or pipes, wholly or partially buried or
otherwise in, upon and along any of the lands owned by the State of
Illinois and under any of the public waters therein. However, the right,
permission and authority hereby created shall be subject to all public
rights of commerce and navigation and the authority of the United States in
behalf of such public rights and also the laws of the State of Illinois to
regulate and control the same. Notice shall be given to the highway
authorities of any municipality, county, township, road district or
township district in which such highway, street or public way may be
situated at least 60 days before any construction or installation work in
such highway or street shall commence. All laws and ordinances pertaining
to such work for the protection of the public and of public property shall
be complied with except that no fee may be charged such commission for the
construction or installation of such facilities in such public places.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑135‑8) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑135‑8)
Sec. 11‑135‑8.
Such commission shall have the right to supply water
to any municipality, political subdivision, private person or
corporation, in addition to the municipalities which have formed the
commission, and to construct water transmission and distribution lines within
a radius of 25 miles outside the
corporate limits of member municipalities for the purpose of furnishing
water to any additional entities which contract with the commission for
a supply of water, upon such payment, terms and conditions as may be
mutually agreed upon. In addition to the foregoing powers, if there is
any municipality within a radius of 25 miles of the corporate limits of
the commission which desires not to own or operate a waterworks system,
and such municipality adopts an ordinance requesting the Commission to supply
water for public and domestic use within such municipality, then any such
commission may, when determined by the Commissioners to be in the public
interest and necessary for the protection of the public health or in the
best interest of the Commission or its environs, enter into and perform
contracts, whether long term or short term, with any such municipality,
to acquire, construct and operate and maintain its waterworks properties
within the corporate limits of such municipality for the purpose of supplying
water for public and domestic use to the inhabitants thereof.
Such commission shall have the power to contract with any person,
corporation or political subdivision or any municipal corporation or
other agency for a supply of water, or to supply water to such person,
corporation, municipal corporation or political subdivision. Any such
contract made by a commission for a supply of water may contain
provisions whereby the
commission is obligated to pay for such supply of water without setoff or
counterclaim and irrespective of whether such supply of water is ever
furnished, made available or delivered to the commission or whether any
project for the supply of water contemplated by any such contract is
completed, operable or operating and notwithstanding any suspension,
interruption, interference, reduction or curtailment of the supply of
water from such project. Any such contract may provide that if one or more
of the other purchasers defaults in the payment of its obligations under
such contract or similar contract made with the supplier of the water, one
or more of the remaining purchasers party to such contract or such similar
contract shall be required to pay for all or a portion of the obligations
of the defaulting purchasers. Any such
contract entered into to supply water to a municipal corporation or
political subdivision shall provide that the payments to be made
thereunder shall be solely from the revenues to be derived by such
municipality or political subdivision from the operation of the
waterworks system of such municipality or political subdivision, and
said contract shall be a continuing, valid and binding obligation of the
municipality or political subdivision, payable from such revenues for
such period of years, not to exceed 40, as may be provided in such
contract. Any such contract shall not be a debt within the meaning of
any statutory or constitutional limitations.
No prior appropriation shall be required before entering into such
contract, and no appropriation shall be required to authorize payments
to be made under the terms of any such contract, notwithstanding any
provision of this Code to the contrary.
The changes in this Section made by this amendatory Act of 1984 are
intended to be declarative of existing law.
(Source: P.A. 83‑1123.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑135‑9) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑135‑9)
Sec. 11‑135‑9.
Whenever a water commission has been constituted pursuant to
this Division 135, was functioning as such on July 21, 1959, and thereafter
continued to exercise the powers conferred on it at the time it was so
constituted, such commission is a valid public corporation, and all acts
performed by or on behalf of such commission, or its officers or employees
are valid.
In all cases where a municipality which has adopted a resolution or ordinance
to acquire and operate jointly a waterworks system or a common source of
supply of water, or both, as the case may be, under the provisions of this
Division 135, thereby becoming a member of a water commission, has heretofore
adopted an ordinance repealing the aforesaid resolution or ordinance and
declaring the termination of membership and withdrawal of such municipality
from said water commission; and the said water commission has not at the
time of such ordinance acquired a waterworks system or common source of supply
of water, as the case may be; and the said water commission duly adopts
a resolution finding that the withdrawal of such municipality will not burden
or adversely affect the remaining members of said water commission in their
efforts to acquire and operate jointly a waterworks system or a common source
of supply of water or both, as the case may be, and consenting to the withdrawal
of such municipality, each such resolution is hereby made a legal and valid
consent to the withdrawal of such municipality from the said water commission
and such withdrawal is hereby declared legal and valid and effective, and
such municipality is hereby declared legally and validly withdrawn from
the said water commission and no longer a member or a part of the system
and all such water commissions are hereby declared legally and validly
organized and established water commissions, and valid and existing water
commissions and public corporations under the provisions of Division 135,
notwithstanding any such withdrawal.
All actions taken prior to the effective date of this Act by any water
commission which has heretofore consented to the withdrawal of one or more
of its members in accordance with the procedures described herein, which
actions were otherwise valid but for the invalidating effect of the membership
or withdrawal from membership of the withdrawing community or communities
upon any quorum, voting or other requirement based upon the number of commissioners
or commission members, are hereby declared effective, legal and valid, notwithstanding
any lack of compliance with any such quorum, voting or other requirement
imposed by law or by the rules of the said commission.
(Source: P.A. 82‑641.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑135‑10) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑135‑10)
Sec. 11‑135‑10.
The provisions of this Division 135 are subject to the
terms and provisions of the Water Commission Act of 1985, as now or
hereafter amended.
(Source: P.A. 84‑1308.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑136‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑136‑1)
Sec. 11‑136‑1.
Any 2 or more municipalities, except cities of 500,000 or
more inhabitants, may acquire either by purchase or construction a
waterworks system or sources of supply of water or sewer systems, or any
combination thereof, and may operate jointly a waterworks system or sources
of supply of water or sewer systems, or any combination thereof, and
improve and extend the same, as provided in this Division 136. The
corporate authorities of such municipalities desiring to avail themselves
of the provisions of this Division 136 shall adopt a resolution or
ordinance determining and electing to acquire and operate jointly a
waterworks system or sources of supply of water or sewer systems, or any
combination thereof, as the case may be. This Division 136 shall not be
construed as limiting, amending or repealing any other laws with respect to
joint acquisition and operation of a waterworks system or sources of supply
of water or sewer systems, or any combination thereof, but shall be
considered as an additional grant of power for the purposes herein set out.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑136‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑136‑2)
Sec. 11‑136‑2.
Upon the adoption of such an ordinance or resolution by the
corporate authorities of any such municipality, the mayor or president,
with the approval of the corporate authorities, shall appoint one
commissioner for each 5,000 population, or part thereof. The commissioners
so appointed by each of such municipalities, together with a like
commissioner appointed by the chairman of the county board of the
county in which the municipality having the
greatest population is
situated, shall constitute a commission and public corporation with the
powers and duties specified in this Division 136. The corporate name of the
commission shall be "(here insert appropriate name indicative of the area)
Water Commission" or "Water and Sewer Commission" and as such the
commission may contract and be contracted with, and sue and be sued.
The commissioners so appointed shall serve for a term of 6 years, or
until their successors have been appointed and have qualified. Each
commissioner shall be an elector of the municipality for which he acts as
commissioner. However, no person shall be eligible for appointment, if he
has held an elective office in the state, county or municipality, until one
year after the expiration of the term for which he was elected. A
commissioner is eligible for reappointment upon the expiration of his term.
A vacancy shall be filled for the balance of the unexpired term in the same
manner as that prescribed for the appointment of the person who has ceased
to hold office. Each commissioner shall receive the same compensation which
shall not be more than $1,000 per year. Each commissioner shall furnish a
bond for the faithful performance of his official duties. This bond shall
not be less than $5,000 and its costs shall be paid by the commission.
Each commissioner may be removed for any cause for which any other
municipal officer may be removed. No commissioner, or employee of the
commission, and no mayor, or president, or other member of the corporate
authorities, or any employee of any of the municipalities, shall be
interested directly or indirectly in any contractor‑job of work or
materials, or the profits thereof, or services to be performed for or by
the commission.
A violation of any of the foregoing provisions of this section is a
Class C misdemeanor. A conviction is cause for the removal of a person from
his office or employment. Any member of the commission or any employee
thereof who in any manner contributes money, labor, or other valuable thing
to any person for election purposes in any election for office in any of
the municipalities which are furnished water by the commission is guilty of
a Class C misdemeanor.
(Source: P.A. 84‑1308.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑136‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑136‑3)
Sec. 11‑136‑3.
Such a commission shall organize by appointing a chairman
from its own members and a clerk and treasurer, who need not be
commissioners. It shall adopt its own rules of procedure and provide for
its meetings. The commission has full and complete supervision, management,
and control of the waterworks system, or sources of supply of water, or
sewer systems, or combination thereof, as provided in the ordinances or
resolutions for acquiring and operating the same, and in their maintenance,
operation, and extension. The commission is authorized to contract with the
municipalities which established the commission or with any other person,
firm or corporation for a supply of water, a sewage treatment plant or any
other facilities useful in conducting a water supply and sewage disposal
system for a period not exceeding 50 years, and the corporate authorities
of those municipalities are authorized to enter into contracts with the
commission. The commission is authorized to purchase from any person, firm
or corporation or municipal corporation including those making up the
commission, any sewer or water properties or sources of supplies and
municipalities are hereby authorized to sell such facilities to the
commission.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑136‑4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑136‑4)
Sec. 11‑136‑4.
For the purpose of acquiring such a waterworks system or
sources of supply of water or sewer systems, or any combination thereof or
for making improvements and extensions to such a waterworks system or
sources of supply of water or sewer systems, or any combination thereof,
such a commission is authorized to issue revenue bonds payable solely from
the revenue to be derived pursuant to any contracts with the specified
municipalities or with any person, firm or corporation or by virtue of the
operation of any properties acquired or to be acquired. These bonds shall
not constitute an indebtedness of any of the municipalities represented by
the commission. The bonds shall bear interest at a rate not exceeding
the maximum rate authorized by the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the
time of the making of the contract, payable semiannually, and
shall mature within the period of usefulness of the property to be
acquired or constructed from the proceeds thereof. This period shall be
conclusively determined by the commission at or before the time of the
issuance of the bonds, and in no event shall any of the bonds be issued
with a maturity more than 50 years from the date thereof. The bonds
shall be sold in such manner as the commission shall determine, except
that if issued to bear interest at
the maximum rate authorized by the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the
time of the making of the contract, the bonds
shall be sold for not less than par and accrued interest, and except
that the selling price of any bond bearing interest at less than
the maximum rate authorized by the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the
time of the making of the contract, shall be such that the interest cost
of the money received from that bond shall not exceed
the maximum rate authorized by the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the
time of the making of the contract, computed to maturity, according
to standard tables of bond values.
Before the treasurer of the commission is entitled to receive the
proceeds of the sale of such a bond issue, he shall supply a corporate
surety bond in an amount equivalent to the amount of funds to be derived
from the sale of the bonds, and, in addition thereto, he shall supply a
separate corporate surety bond for the faithful accounting of any funds
that may come into his possession in an amount equal to the amount of
funds likely to come into his hands in any one year from the revenue to
be derived from the operation of any of the properties of the
commission. The cost of these surety bonds shall be paid by the
commission.
The revenue bonds shall be issued pursuant to an ordinance or
resolution and shall be in such form and be executed in such manner as
may be prescribed by the ordinance or resolution. It shall not be
necessary that the ordinance or resolution refer to plans and
specifications nor that there be on file for public inspection prior to
the adoption of such ordinance detailed plans and specifications of the
project. This ordinance or resolution may contain such covenants and
restrictions in relation to the operation of the properties under the
control of the commission and the issuance of additional revenue bonds
thereafter as may be deemed necessary or advisable for the assurance of
payment of the bonds thereby authorized and as may be thereafter issued.
It shall be plainly stated on the face of each bond that it does not
constitute an indebtedness of any municipality represented by the
commission within the meaning of any statutory or constitutional
limitation. Upon the issuance of revenue bonds, the revenue of the
commission derived pursuant to contracts entered into for the sale of
water to the specified municipalities and from the operation of its
properties, shall be accounted for as provided in the ordinance or
resolution authorizing the issuance of the bonds. Any commission created
under the provisions of this Division 136 may also issue new bonds for
the purpose of providing funds for the payment of unpaid bonds in
accordance with the procedure prescribed by this Division 136.
With respect to instruments for the payment of money issued under this
Section either before, on, or after the effective date of this amendatory
Act of 1989, it is and always has been the intention of the General
Assembly (i) that the Omnibus Bond Acts are and always have been
supplementary grants of power to issue instruments in accordance with the
Omnibus Bond Acts, regardless of any provision of this Act that may appear
to be or to have been more restrictive than those Acts, (ii) that the
provisions of this Section are not a limitation on the supplementary
authority granted by the Omnibus Bond Acts, and (iii) that instruments
issued under this Section within the supplementary authority granted
by the Omnibus Bond Acts are not invalid because of any provision of
this Act that may appear to be or to have been more restrictive than
those Acts.
The amendatory Acts of 1971, 1972 and 1973 are not a limit upon any
municipality which is a home rule unit.
(Source: P.A. 86‑4.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑136‑5) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑136‑5)
Sec. 11‑136‑5.
Whenever bonds are issued under this Division 136 the
revenue received from the operation of the properties under the control
of the commission shall be set aside as collected and deposited in a
separate fund to be used only (1) in paying the cost of the operation
and maintenance of those properties, (2) in providing an adequate
depreciation fund, and (3) in paying the principal of and interest upon
the revenue bonds issued by the commission, as provided by this Division
136.
In case the commission has charge of the operation of a complete
waterworks system or sewer system including the distribution mains, the
commission shall establish rates and charges for water or sewer service
or both which shall be sufficient at all times to pay the cost of
operation and maintenance, to provide an adequate depreciation fund, and
to pay the principal of and interest upon all revenue bonds issued as
provided by this Division 136. The rates for water and sewer service
need not be the same nor do rates for the same type of service have to
be identical in the several municipalities constituting the commission
but shall be equitably based upon the net plant account and the expenses
of operation in each municipality. Charges and rates shall be
established, revised, and maintained by ordinance and become payable as
the commission may determine by ordinance.
In case the commission has charge of the operation of sources of
supply of water, the municipalities specified in Section 11‑136‑1
represented by the commission shall contract with the commission for
water. These municipalities shall establish such charges and rates for
water supplied by them to consumers as will be sufficient at all times
(1) to pay the cost of operation and maintenance of the respective
waterworks systems of the municipalities, (2) to provide an adequate
depreciation fund therefor, and (3) to pay the charges and rates
established by the commission for the sale of water by the commission to
those municipalities, and the commission shall establish such charges
and rates for water supplied to those municipalities as will be
sufficient at all times (1) to pay the cost of operation and maintenance
of the common source of supply of water, (2) to provide an adequate
depreciation fund therefor, and (3) to pay the principal of and interest
on the revenue bonds issued by the commission, under the provisions of
this Division 136. Contracts entered into between the commission and
the specified municipalities shall include covenants for the
establishment of rates and charges as provided in this section.
Municipality contributions to the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund,
by commissions created under this Division 136 which have been included
under that Fund, shall be considered a cost of operation and maintenance
for the purposes of this Section.
Any holder of a bond or of any of its coupons, issued under this
Division 136, in any civil action, mandamus, or other proceedings, may
enforce and compel performance of all duties required by this Division
136 to be performed by such a commission or by any of the
municipalities, including the making of rates and charges, the
collecting of sufficient revenue, and the application thereof, as
provided in this Division 136.
All contracts for the construction of a waterworks system or sources
of supply of water, or sewer systems, or any combination thereof, to be
let by such a commission, shall be entered into only after advertising
for bids, pursuant to a resolution to be adopted for that purpose by the
commission. A notice inviting bids shall be published in a newspaper
published and having a general circulation in the county or counties in
which the municipalities represented by the commission are located, not
more than 30 nor less than 15 days in advance of the receipt of the
bids. The notice shall be published at least twice. In the resolution
directing the advertising for bids the commission also shall establish
all requirements necessary for the bidding, for the awarding of
contracts, and for the approval of contractors' faithful performance
bonds.
(Source: P.A. 80‑425.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑136‑6) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑136‑6)
Sec. 11‑136‑6.
Whenever such commission shall pass an ordinance for the
construction or acquisition of any waterworks properties or sewer
properties or improvements or extensions or mains, pumping stations,
reservoirs or other appurtenances thereto, which such commission is
authorized to make, the making of which will require that private property
be taken or damaged, such commission may cause compensation therefor to be
ascertained and may condemn and acquire possession thereof in the same
manner as nearly as may be, as provided for the
exercise of the right of eminent domain under Article VII of the Code
of Civil Procedure, as
heretofore and hereafter amended. However, proceedings to ascertain the
compensation to be paid for taking or damaging private property shall in
all cases be instituted in the county where the property sought to be taken
or damaged is situated.
(Source: P.A. 82‑783.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑136‑7) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑136‑7)
Sec. 11‑136‑7.
Such commission may construct, maintain, alter and extend
its water mains or sewer facilities as a proper use of highways along,
upon, under and across any highway, street, alley or public ground in the
State, including highways within a municipality, but so as not to
inconvenience the public use thereof. Such commission may construct,
maintain and operate any conduit or conduits, water pipe or pipes, wholly
or partially buried or otherwise in, upon and along any of the lands owned
by the State of Illinois and under any of the public waters therein.
However, the right, permission and authority hereby created shall be
subject to all public rights of commerce and navigation and the authority
of the United States in behalf of such public rights and also the laws of
the State of Illinois to regulate and control the same. Notice shall be
given to the highway authorities of any municipality, county, township,
road district or township district in which such highway, street or public
way may be situated at least 60 days before any construction or
installation work in such highway or street shall commence. All laws and
ordinances pertaining to such work for the protection of the public and of
public property shall be complied with except that no fee may be charged
such commission for the construction or installation of such facilities in
such public places.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑136‑8) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑136‑8)
Sec. 11‑136‑8.
Such commission shall have the right to supply water or
sewer facilities to any municipality, political subdivision, private person
or corporation, in addition to the municipalities which have formed the
commission, upon such payment, terms and conditions as may be mutually
agreed upon, provided the water is delivered to such party or parties at
the corporate limits of the municipalities which have created such
commission or from such water works properties of the commission located
outside such municipalities that have been constructed or acquired as
necessary and incidental to the furnishing of water to the municipalities
which formed the commission.
Such commission shall have the power to contract with any person,
corporation or political subdivision or any municipal corporation or other
agency for a sewer system or for a supply of water, or to supply water to
such person, corporation, municipal corporation or political subdivision.
Any such contract entered into to supply water or sewer service to a
municipal corporation or political subdivision shall provide that the
payments to be made thereunder shall be solely from the revenues to be
derived by such municipality or political subdivision from the operation of
the waterworks system or sewer system of such municipality or political
subdivision, and said contract shall be a continuing, valid and binding
obligation of the municipality or political subdivision, payable from such
revenues for such period of years, not to exceed 40, as may be provided in
such contract. Any such contract shall not be a debt within the meaning of
any statutory or constitutional limitations.
No prior appropriation shall be required before entering into such
contract, and no appropriation shall be required to authorize payments to
be made under the terms of any such contract, notwithstanding any provision
of this Code to the contrary.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑136‑9) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑136‑9)
Sec. 11‑136‑9.
All powers and duties of the commission heretofore set forth
in this Division 136 may be exercised within the municipalities
constituting the commission and in contiguous territory not more than 3
miles beyond the corporate limits of such municipalities and in the
territory necessary to interconnect any of the municipalities constituting
the commission. The commission shall keep proper accounting records which
records shall be kept so as to show the book value, reserve for
depreciation, revenue and expenses broken down as to type of utility and by
all municipalities making up the commission.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑137‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑137‑1)
Sec. 11‑137‑1.
To enable municipalities to promote and procure the
construction and installation of waterworks and sewerage systems when it
becomes necessary for public health and welfare or for better sanitary
conditions of a municipality, each municipality may contract with any
person for a supply of water for public use, and for sewerage for drainage
and sanitary purposes of the municipality, for a period not exceeding 30
years. Any contract that is entered into by a municipality and pledged to
secure the bonds issued to construct any waterworks or sewerage system
shall enure at all times and under all conditions to the benefit of the
holders of any of the bonds so issued and for the payment of those bonds.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑137‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑137‑2)
Sec. 11‑137‑2.
In all municipalities where any person has constructed
a waterworks or sewerage system, or both, the municipality may purchase
or lease that waterworks or sewerage system, or both, from the owners
thereof, subject to the provisions of this Division 137.
Before such a lease or purchase is binding upon the municipality, the
corporate authorities shall pass an ordinance authorizing the
municipality to lease or purchase that waterworks or sewerage system, or
both, and shall include in the ordinance the terms, as near as
practicable, upon which the lease or purchase shall be made. The
ordinance shall be published at least once, within 10 days after
passage, in one or more newspapers published in the municipality, or, if
no newspaper is published therein, then in one or more newspapers with a
general circulation within the municipality. In municipalities with less
than 500 population in which no newspaper is published, publication may
instead be made by posting a notice in 3 prominent places within the
municipality.
The publication or posting of the ordinance shall be accompanied by a
notice of (1) the specific number of voters required to sign a petition
requesting the question of authorizing the lease or purchase of a waterworks
or sewerage system to be submitted to the electors; (2) the time in which
such petition must be filed; and (3) the date of the prospective referendum.
The municipal clerk shall provide a petition form to any individual requesting one.
If no petition is presented to the corporate authorities as
hereinafter provided, within 30 days after the ordinance is so published
and posted, the corporate authorities may consummate the lease or
purchase of that waterworks or sewerage system, or both, as provided in
the ordinance. If within 30 days after the first publication of the
ordinance a petition is filed with the municipal clerk signed by electors
of the municipality numbering 10% or more of the number of registered
voters in the municipality, asking that the question of leasing or
purchasing that waterworks or sewerage system, or both, as provided in the
ordinance, be submitted to a vote, the clerk shall certify the proposition
and the corporate authorities shall designate an election at which the
question shall be submitted. If a majority of the votes cast on the
question are in favor thereof, the corporate authorities may complete the
lease or purchase, but if a majority of the votes cast on the question are
unfavorable, no further action shall be taken by the municipality for a
period of not less than 6 months. Thereafter, the same or another question
may be submitted as before.
(Source: P.A. 87‑767.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑137‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑137‑3)
Sec. 11‑137‑3.
If any municipality is authorized to purchase a waterworks
or sewerage system, or both, as provided in Section 11‑137‑2, and if the
system is pledged to secure the payment of bonds, or other written
evidences of indebtedness, by a mortgage or trust deed, the corporate
authorities of the municipality may direct the municipal clerk or
treasurer, by a motion or resolution, to enter the bonds, or the other
written evidences of indebtedness on the records of the municipality as an
indebtedness against the waterworks or sewerage system only. The corporate
authorities shall have all the revenue derived from the operation of the
system, and all rents due and payable to the former owners for use of the
water and sewerage facilities, and pledged for the payment of the
indebtedness, set apart in a separate fund for the payment of the
indebtedness as it becomes due and payable, provided the system can be
operated and maintained from the current funds of the municipality
appropriated therefor.
Nothing contained in this Division 137 affects any lien or renders void
any bond, mortgage, or trust deed securing any indebtedness upon the
system, or any franchise under which the system is operated, or any
contract executed by any person as owner for the construction and
installation of the waterworks or sewerage system, or both, prior to the
transfer of the system to the municipality as provided in this Division
137. If the municipality neglects or fails to pay the indebtedness as it
falls due and if any mortgage or trust deed is foreclosed at the instance
of bona fide holders of unpaid bonds or other written evidences of
indebtedness, the mortgagee or trustee for those bona fide holders shall be
re‑invested with all former rights which existed in their behalf by virtue
of the franchise and contract which were granted by the municipality, and
which were pledged.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑137‑4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑137‑4)
Sec. 11‑137‑4.
Such municipalities may borrow money and levy and collect a
general tax, in the same manner as other municipal taxes may be levied and
collected, to procure funds to lease or purchase and maintain such a
waterworks or sewerage system, or both, and to pay any existing
indebtedness thereon. They may issue their bonds to procure funds to
purchase such a system or systems and to pay off the existing bonds or
indebtedness thereon, at the time of the purchase or at any time thereafter
that the financial condition of the municipality will permit.
Any bonds issued under this Section as limited bonds as defined in Section 3
of
the Local Government Debt Reform Act shall comply with the requirements of the
Bond Issue Notification Act.
If an appropriation has been made therefor, such a municipality may
constitute and make any bond which falls due during the current year, and
which is secured by a mortgage or trust deed on such a system or systems,
and which was issued by any person to procure funds to construct the system
or systems, a bond of the municipality for that year and levy and collect a
tax to pay the appropriation. However, this action shall not increase the
bonded indebtedness of the municipality in excess of the constitutional
limitation for the year for which this tax is to be levied and collected.
(Source: P.A. 89‑655, eff. 1‑1‑97.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑137‑5) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑137‑5)
Sec. 11‑137‑5.
A municipality may contract with any person for a supply of
water for public use for a period not exceeding 30 years.
A municipality so contracting may pay for the water so supplied by
general taxation, or out of the rents paid by consumers for the water
supplied to them, or out of any fund otherwise available for that purpose,
or by any combination of any of these means.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑138‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑138‑1)
Sec. 11‑138‑1.
Any water company organized under the laws of this state for
the purpose of supplying any municipality or the inhabitants thereof with
water, may locate its source of supply at, or change its source of supply
to, a point not more than 20 miles beyond the corporate limits of the
municipality. Such company may enter upon any land and take and damage
private property beyond those corporate limits, (1) for the construction,
maintenance, and operation of a line or lines of water‑pipe to the source
of supply, (2) for the necessary pumping stations, reservoirs, and other
appurtenances, and (3) for the protection of all reservoirs, submerged
land, and source of supply from contamination, pollution, or damage from
any cause whatsoever.
Such a company may construct, maintain, and operate beyond those
corporate limits such a line or lines of water‑pipe across or under any
railroad right‑of‑way, and in and under any public or private road,
highway, street, alley, or public ground, or across or under any of the
waters within this state, subject, however, to these conditions: (1) such a
line or lines of water‑pipe shall not interfere with any railroad, or with
any sewer, gas pipes, water‑pipes, or other conduit, already laid in or
under any public or private road, highway, street, alley, or public ground
by public authority; (2) such a company, in the construction and repair of
such a line or lines of water‑pipe, shall restore any public or private
road, highway, street, alley, or public ground that is damaged to the same
condition as before, and shall not unnecessarily interfere with the public
use of the navigation of any of the specified waters; and (3) the laying of
the water‑pipes and construction of the other works shall be done under
such reasonable regulations as the corporate authorities of any township or
municipality wherein that work is done may prescribe.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑138‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑138‑2)
Sec. 11‑138‑2.
Whenever it is necessary for the construction, maintenance,
and operation of such a line or lines of water‑pipe, pumping stations,
reservoirs, other appurtenances, or for the protection of reservoirs,
submerged land, and the source of supply from contamination, pollution, or
damage from any cause, to take or damage private property adjacent to these
improvements, that property may be taken or damaged, and the compensation
therefor may be ascertained and paid in the manner which may be then
provided by law for the exercise of the right of eminent domain.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑138‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑138‑3)
Sec. 11‑138‑3.
Any person who unlawfully and intentionally molests or
destroys any part of such a line of water‑pipe, pumping station, reservoir,
or other appurtenance, or the material or property belonging to a specified
water company, or who in any manner interferes with the construction,
maintenance, or operation of the property specified in this section is
guilty of a petty offense. But a prosecution under the provisions of this
section shall not in any manner prevent a recovery by the company entitled
thereto, of the amount of damages done to its property.
(Source: P. A. 77‑2830.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑139‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑139‑1)
Sec. 11‑139‑1.
When used in this Division 139, "waterworks" means and
includes a waterworks system in its entirety or any integral part thereof,
including mains, hydrants, meters, values, standpipes, storage tanks, pump
tanks, intakes, wells, impounding reservoirs, pumps, machinery,
purification plants, softening apparatus, and all other elements, useful in
connection with a water supply or water distribution system.
"Sewerage system" means and includes any or all of the following: a
sewerage treatment plant or plants, collecting, intercepting and outlet
sewers, lateral sewers, and drains, including combined and separate storm
water and sanitary drains, force mains, conduits, pumping stations, ejector
stations and all other appurtenances, extensions and improvements
necessary, useful, or convenient for the collection, treatment, and
disposal in a sanitary manner of sewage and industrial wastes.
"Combined waterworks and sewerage system" means and includes a
waterworks and sewerage system, which the municipality determines by
ordinance to operate in combination.
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 2433.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑139‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑139‑2)
Sec. 11‑139‑2.
Any municipality may acquire, or construct, and maintain and
operate a combined waterworks and sewerage system either within or without
the corporate limits thereof. A municipality owning and operating a
waterworks or sewerage system may provide for the inclusion of that
waterworks or sewerage system or the combination of the 2 in a combined
waterworks and sewerage system under this Division 139, and in connection
therewith may provide for paying or refunding any unpaid obligations which
are payable solely from the revenue of or which are secured by a mortgage
of that waterworks or sewerage system, or any part thereof included in the
combined waterworks and sewerage system. Any municipality owning and
operating a combined waterworks and sewerage system may also provide for
paying or refunding any unpaid obligations which are payable solely from
the revenue of the combined waterworks and sewerage system. A municipality
owning, acquiring, or constructing and providing for the operation of a
combined waterworks and sewerage system may improve and extend that system,
and may impose and collect charges or rates for the use of that system as
provided in this Division 139. A municipality may also, when determined by
its corporate authorities to be in the public interest and necessary for
the protection of the public health or in the best interests of the
municipality and its environs, enter into and perform contracts, whether
long‑term or short‑term, with any other municipality within a radius of 25
miles of its corporate limits and construct water mains to such
municipality and supply water to such municipalities on the request of any
such municipality; provided, that such water mains be constructed and that
such municipality purchase water on a long term basis at rates sufficient
to amortize the cost of the construction of such water mains and pay the
cost of maintenance and operation thereof, as hereinafter provided in this
Division 139, and also with any industrial establishment for the provision
and operation by the municipality of sewerage facilities, either within or
without the corporate limits of such municipality, to abate or reduce the
pollution of waters caused by discharges of industrial wastes by the
industrial establishment and the payment periodically by such municipality
or municipalities or the industrial establishment to the municipality of
amounts at least sufficient, in the determination of such corporate
authorities, to compensate the municipality for the cost of providing
(including payment of principal and interest charges, if any) and of
operating and maintaining any such facilities. This amendatory Act is not a
prohibition upon the contractual and associational powers granted by
Article VII, Section 10 of the Constitution.
(Source: P. A. 77‑2837.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑139‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑139‑3)
Sec. 11‑139‑3.
For the purpose of defraying the cost of acquiring, constructing,
extending, or improving a combined waterworks and sewerage system or any
part thereof, any municipality (1) may apply money received therefor from
the federal government or available therefor from any source, and (2) may
issue and sell revenue bonds of the municipality payable solely from
revenue derived from the operation of the combined waterworks and sewerage
system. These bonds may be issued in such amounts as may be necessary to
provide sufficient funds to pay all the costs of the acquisition,
construction, extension, or improvement of the combined waterworks and
sewerage system as authorized by Section 11‑139‑2, including engineering,
legal, and other expenses, together with interest to the estimated date of
completion of the combined waterworks and sewerage system or of the project
to be constructed. The bonds shall bear interest at a rate not to exceed
the maximum rate authorized by the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the
time of the making of the contract, payable semi‑annually and shall mature
within the period of usefulness of the project involved, to be determined
by the corporate authorities and in any event not more than 40 years. The
bonds shall be sold in such manner as the corporate authorities shall
determine and if issued to bear interest at the maximum rate authorized by
the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the time of the making of the
contract, shall be sold for not less than par and accrued interest. If any
of these bonds are issued to bear interest at a rate of less than the
maximum rate authorized by the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the
time of the making of the contract, the minimum price at which they may be
sold shall be such that the interest cost to the municipality of the
proceeds of the bonds shall not exceed the maximum rate authorized by the
Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the time of the making of the contract,
computed to maturity. In case any officer whose signature appears on the
bonds or coupons attached thereto ceases to hold that office before the
delivery of the bonds to the purchaser, the signature nevertheless shall be
valid and sufficient for all purposes, with the same effect as if he had
remained in office until the delivery of the bonds. The bonds shall have
all the qualities of negotiable instruments under the law of this state.
With respect to instruments for the payment of money issued under this
Section either before, on, or after the effective date of this amendatory
Act of 1989, it is and always has been the intention of the General
Assembly (i) that the Omnibus Bond Acts are and always have been
supplementary grants of power to issue instruments in accordance with the
Omnibus Bond Acts, regardless of any provision of this Act that may appear
to be or to have been more restrictive than those Acts, (ii) that the
provisions of this Section are not a limitation on the supplementary
authority granted by the Omnibus Bond Acts, and (iii) that instruments
issued under this Section within the supplementary authority granted
by the Omnibus Bond Acts are not invalid because of any provision of
this Act that may appear to be or to have been more restrictive than
those Acts.
This amendatory Act of 1971 is not a limit upon any municipality which
is a home rule unit.
This amendatory Act of 1972 is not a limit upon any municipality which
is a home rule unit.
(Source: P.A. 86‑4.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑139‑4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑139‑4)
Sec. 11‑139‑4.
Whenever an existing waterworks or sewerage system is
included in a combined waterworks and sewerage system under this Division
139 and there are unpaid obligations previously issued, which are payable
solely from the revenue or secured by a mortgage of the waterworks or
sewerage system, or any part thereof, or whenever there are unpaid
obligations previously issued which are payable solely from the revenue of
the combined waterworks and sewerage system, the unpaid obligations may be
refunded by the issue and exchange therefor of revenue bonds, to be issued
under this Division 139, with the consent of the respective holders of the
unpaid obligations. The holders of revenue bonds issued under this Division
139, whether (1) for refunding or (2) for acquisition, construction,
extension, or improvement, or both, have the same rights and privileges
with respect to payment and there is no distinction between revenue bonds
issued for the 2 purposes unless it is specifically provided in the
ordinance authorizing the issuance of bonds that the bonds, or such ones
thereof as may be specified, issued for such acquisition, construction,
extension or improvement, shall, to the extent and in the manner
prescribed, be subordinated and be junior in standing, with respect to the
payment of principal and interest and the security thereof, to such other
bonds payable from the revenue of the combined waterworks and sewerage
system as are specified in such ordinance. Whenever any unpaid obligations
previously issued which are payable solely from the revenue or secured by a
mortgage of any waterworks or sewerage system included in a combined
waterworks and sewerage system or any combined waterworks and sewerage
system under this Division 139 are refunded, the unpaid obligations shall
be surrendered and exchanged for revenue bonds of the combined waterworks
and sewerage system of a total principal amount which shall not be more but
may be less than the principal amount of the obligations exchanged and the
interest thereon to the date of exchange.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑139‑5) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑139‑5)
Sec. 11‑139‑5.
The corporate authorities of any municipality availing
itself of the provisions of this Division 139 shall adopt an ordinance
describing in a general way the contemplated project. If it is intended to
include in the combined waterworks and sewerage system any existing
waterworks or any existing sewerage system, the ordinance shall provide for
its inclusion in the combined system and shall describe in a general way
the existing waterworks or sewerage system to be included in the combined
waterworks and sewerage system. If it is intended to acquire or construct a
combined waterworks and sewerage system, or to extend and improve such a
system, the ordinance shall describe in a general way the system to be
acquired or constructed or the extension or improvement to be made or any
project authorized by Section 11‑139‑2. It shall not be necessary that the
ordinance refer to plans and specifications nor that there be on file for
public inspection prior to the adoption of such ordinance detailed plans
and specifications of the project. The ordinance shall set out the
estimated cost of the contemplated project, and if any existing waterworks
or sewerage system is included in the project, the ordinance shall state
the means provided for defraying or refunding any unpaid obligation,
payable solely from the revenue or secured by a mortgage of the waterworks
or sewerage system, and if any unpaid obligations payable from the revenue
of the combined waterworks and sewerage system are outstanding and unpaid
the ordinance shall state the means providing for defraying or refunding
any unpaid obligation so payable from the revenue of the combined
waterworks and sewerage system. The ordinance shall determine the period of
usefulness of the contemplated project. The ordinance shall also prescribe
the method of defraying the cost of the contemplated project and fix the
amount of revenue bonds proposed to be issued, the interest rate, and all
other details in connection with the bonds deemed advisable. The ordinance
may contain such covenants and restrictions upon the issuance thereafter of
additional revenue bonds as may be deemed necessary or advisable for the
assurance of the payment of bonds thereby authorized and as may be
thereafter issued.
(Source: P. A. 77‑2837.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑139‑6) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑139‑6)
Sec. 11‑139‑6.
Within 10 days after the ordinance for any project
under this Division 139 has been passed, it shall be published at least
once in one or more newspapers published in the municipality, or, if no
newspaper is published therein, then in one or more newspapers with a
general circulation within the municipality. In municipalities with less
than 500 population in which no newspaper is published, publication may
instead be made by posting a notice in 3 prominent places within the
municipality. The publication or posting of the ordinance shall be accompanied
by a notice of (1) the specific number of voters required to sign a petition
requesting the question of the adoption of the ordinance be submitted to
the electors of the municipality; (2) the time in which such petition must
be filed; and (3) the date of the prospective referendum. The municipal
clerk shall provide a petition form to any individual requesting one. If
no petition is filed with the municipal clerk, as
provided in this section, within 30 days after the publication or
posting of the ordinance, it shall be in effect. But if within this 30
day period a petition is filed with the municipal clerk signed by
electors of the municipality numbering 10% or more of the number of
registered voters in the municipality, asking that the question of acquiring,
constructing, extending, or improving the combined waterworks and
sewerage system, as provided in the ordinance, and the issuance of
revenue bonds therefor be submitted to the electors of the municipality,
the municipal clerk shall certify such question for submission at an election
in accordance with the general election law. If a majority of the votes
cast on the question are in favor thereof, the ordinance shall be in effect.
But if a majority of the votes cast on the question are unfavorable, the
municipality shall proceed no further and the ordinance shall not take effect.
(Source: P.A. 87‑767.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑139‑7) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑139‑7)
Sec. 11‑139‑7.
Revenue bonds issued under this Division 139 shall be
payable solely from the revenue derived from the operation of the combined
waterworks and sewerage system on account of which the bonds are
issued; provided, that bonds issued under this Division 139 may also be
payable from funds pledged by the municipality issuing such bonds pursuant
to the Illinois Finance Authority
Act.
Notwithstanding any such pledge or any other matter,
these bonds shall not in any event constitute an indebtedness of the
municipality within the meaning of any constitutional or statutory
limitation and it shall be so stated on the face of each bond.
(Source: P.A. 93‑205, eff. 1‑1‑04.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑139‑8) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑139‑8)
Sec. 11‑139‑8.
The corporate authorities of any municipality availing
itself of this Division 139 may (1) make, enact, and enforce all needful
rules and regulations for the acquisition, construction, extension,
improvement, management, and maintenance of the combined waterworks and
sewerage system of the municipality and for the use thereof, (2) make,
enact, and enforce all needful rules, regulations, and ordinances for the
care and protection of such a system, which may be conducive to the
preservation of the public health, comfort, and convenience and to
rendering the water supply of the municipality pure and the sewerage
harmless insofar as it is reasonably possible to do so, and (3) charge the
inhabitants thereof a reasonable compensation for the use and service of
the combined waterworks and sewerage system and to establish rates for that
purpose. Separate rates may be fixed for the water and sewer services
respectively or single rates may be fixed for the combined water and sewer
services. Separate rates may be fixed for any water services to any other
municipality and separate sewer rates to any industrial establishment for
the purposes set forth in Section 11‑139‑2. These rates, whether separate
or combined, shall be sufficient at all times to (1) pay the cost of
operation and maintenance of the combined waterworks and sewerage system,
(2) provide an adequate depreciation fund, and (3) pay the principal of and
interest upon all revenue bonds issued under this Division. Rates shall be
established, revised, and maintained by ordinance and become payable as the
corporate authorities may determine by ordinance.
Whenever a municipality shall issue revenue bonds as provided by this
Division to pay the cost of the extension or improvement of its combined
waterworks and sewerage system or any part thereof to serve a particular
area of the municipality, the municipality may vary its rates to be charged
for the water and sewer services of the system or for either of them
effective upon the issuance of bonds as provided by this division to pay
the cost of the extension or improvement of its combined waterworks or
sewerage system or any part thereof to serve a particular area of a
municipality so that the rates to be charged for services in the particular
area to be served by such extension or improvement shall be calculated to
produce, in addition to the revenues generally to be produced by such
rates, sufficient funds to pay the principal of and interest upon the
revenue bonds issued to pay the cost of such extension or improvement for
that particular area.
Such charges or rates are liens upon the real estate upon or for which
service is supplied whenever the charges or rates become delinquent as
provided by the ordinance of the municipality fixing a delinquency date;
except the charges or rates established by contract for the supply of water
to another municipality. A lien is created under the preceding sentence only if
the municipality sends to the owner or owners of record of the real estate, as
referenced by the taxpayer's identification number, (i) a copy of each
delinquency notice sent to the person who is delinquent in paying the charges
or rates or other notice sufficient to inform the owner or owners of record, as
referenced by the taxpayer's identification number, that the charges or rates
have become delinquent and (ii) a notice that unpaid charges or rates may
create a lien on the real estate under this Section. However, the municipality
has no preference over the rights of any purchaser, mortgagee, judgment
creditor, or other lien holder arising prior to the filing of the notice of
such a lien in the office of the recorder of the county in which such real
estate is located, or in the office of the registrar of titles of such county
if the property affected is registered under "An Act concerning land titles",
approved May 1, 1897, as amended. This notice shall consist of a sworn
statement setting out (1) a description of such real
estate sufficient for the identification thereof, (2) the amount of money
due for such service, and (3) the date when such amount became delinquent.
The municipality shall send a copy of the notice of the lien to the owner or owners of
record of the real estate, as referenced by the taxpayer's identification
number. The municipality has the power to foreclose this lien in the same
manner and with the same effect as in the foreclosure of mortgages on real
estate.
The municipality also has the power, from time to time, to sue the
occupant or user of the real estate in a civil action to recover the money
due for services rendered, plus a reasonable attorney's fee, to be fixed by
the court. Whenever a judgment is entered in such a civil action the
foregoing provisions in this section with respect to filing sworn
statements of such delinquencies in the office of the recorder and
creating a lien against the real estate shall not be effective thereafter
as to charges sued upon and no lien shall exist thereafter against the real
estate for the delinquency. Judgment in such a civil action operates as a
release and waiver of the lien for the amount of the judgment.
(Source: P.A. 87‑1197.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑139‑9) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑139‑9)
Sec. 11‑139‑9.
Whenever revenue bonds are issued under this Division 139,
sufficient revenue derived from the operation of such a combined waterworks
and sewerage system shall be deposited in a separate fund, designated as
the waterworks and sewerage fund of the municipality. It shall be used only
(1) to pay the cost of maintenance and operation of the combined system,
(2) to provide an adequate depreciation fund, and (3) to pay the principal
of and interest upon the revenue bonds of the municipality issued under
this Division 139.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑139‑10) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑139‑10)
Sec. 11‑139‑10.
Any municipality operating a combined waterworks and
sewerage system under this Division 139, shall set up and maintain a proper
system of accounts showing the amount of revenue received from the combined
waterworks and sewerage system and the application of this revenue. At
least once each year the municipality shall have these accounts properly
audited, and a report of this audit shall be open to the public for
inspection at all reasonable times.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑139‑11) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑139‑11)
Sec. 11‑139‑11.
The holder of any bond or of any coupon of any bond issued under this
Division 139 may proceed by civil action to compel performance of all
duties required by this Division 139, including the making and collection
of sufficient rates for the purposes specified in this Division 139 and the
application of the revenue therefrom to those purposes.
(Source: P. A. 77‑942.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑139‑12) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑139‑12)
Sec. 11‑139‑12.
For the purpose of acquiring, constructing, extending, or
improving any combined waterworks and sewerage system under this Division
139, or any property necessary or appropriate therefor, any municipality
has the right of eminent domain, as provided by Article VII of the Code
of Civil Procedure, as heretofore and hereafter amended.
The fair cash market value of an existing waterworks and sewerage system,
or portion thereof, acquired under this Division 139, which existing system
is a special use property as defined in Article VII of the "Code of Civil
Procedure", approved August 19, 1981, as heretofore or hereafter amended,
may be determined in accordance with the following valuation principles.
The fair cash market value of existing facilities, whether real or
personal, may be determined by utilizing the net earnings which are attributable
to the facilities in question for the preceding fiscal year on the date the
condemnation petition is filed,
over the remaining useful life of the facilities. Said earnings may be
capitalized under an annuity capitalization method and discounted to present
value. The fair cash market value of any extensions, additions or improvements
of the existing system made subsequent to the date that the condemnation
petition is filed may be determined by utilizing the probable net earnings
attributable to the facilities in question over the
remaining life of the facilities. The probable earnings may be capitalized
under an annuity capitalization method and discounted to present value.
The value of the land and easements upon which the facilities are situated
may be determined in accordance with the foregoing principles, giving
due account to the special use of the property for water and sewerage purposes.
For the purposes of this Section no prior approval of the Illinois Commerce
Commission, or any other body having jurisdiction over the existing system,
shall be required.
(Source: P.A. 83‑1466.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑140‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑140‑1)
Sec. 11‑140‑1.
In every municipality with a population of 100,000 or less
which has a sewage system but has no adequate outlet therefor, or any
proper disposition of the sewage thereof, without constructing an outlet
sewer the terminus of which will be outside the corporate limits of the
municipality, the corporate authorities thereof may (1) construct an outlet
sewer, wholly without, or partially within and partially without the
corporate limits of the municipality into which the sewers throughout the
municipality are to empty, and through which the sewers are to discharge
their sewage for proper disposition and sanitary benefits, (2) construct
reservoirs, erect pumping works, machinery, and plants for the treatment of
the sewage within or without the corporate limits of the municipality, (3)
acquire the necessary land and machinery for these purposes, and (4)
otherwise provide for discharge of the municipality's sewage into channels
that will promote the health and improve the sanitary condition of and
accomplish the purpose of an outlet sewer for the municipality. The cost of
exercising the powers conferred by this section shall be borne by special
assessment or by special taxation upon the property in those portions of
the municipality the sewers in which are ultimately to find their outlet
through the outlet sewer so constructed.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑140‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑140‑2)
Sec. 11‑140‑2.
The corporate authorities of such municipality may maintain
and keep in repair the outlet sewers, purification plants, reservoirs,
pumping works, and machinery provided for in Section 11‑140‑1. The cost of
the maintenance and repair shall be borne by special assessment or by
special taxation upon the property specified in Section 11‑140‑1. No lot,
block, or parcel of land shall be assessed more than once in any one year
for such maintenance and repair.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑140‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑140‑3)
Sec. 11‑140‑3.
The corporate authorities of such a municipality may acquire
by purchase, gift, condemnation, or otherwise, all the real and personal
property, rights‑of‑way, and easements within or without the corporate
limits of the municipality necessary for the construction and maintenance
of the outlet sewers and works authorized by Section 11‑140‑1. The
corporate authorities have the same control and jurisdiction of this
property which is without as of that which is within the municipality.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑140‑4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑140‑4)
Sec. 11‑140‑4.
When the corporate authorities of a municipality determine
to construct improvements provided for in Section 11‑140‑1, they shall do
so by an ordinance which shall prescribe whether the improvements shall be
made by special assessment or by special taxation. The ordinance shall also
prescribe the nature, character, locality, and description of the
improvements, either by setting forth the same in the ordinance itself, or
by reference to maps, plats, plans, profiles, or specifications thereof on
file in the office of the municipal clerk, or by both methods.
The ordinance shall also describe by reasonably well understood
boundaries, those portions of the municipality the sewerage of which is to
be conducted by sewers already laid, or by those contemplated to be laid,
into and through the outlet sewer provided for by Section 11‑140‑1. This
property within those boundaries shall be assessable for the cost of this
outlet sewer improvement. If property is to be taken or damaged for this
improvement, the ordinance shall describe the property with reasonable
certainty.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑140‑5) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑140‑5)
Sec. 11‑140‑5.
All proceedings preliminary to the passage of the ordinance,
the enactment of the ordinance and the provisions thereof, and all
subsequent proceedings, including the filing of the petition, steps
necessary to the making of the assessment roll, the return thereof to the
court, notices to parties assessed, newspaper publications, confirmation of
assessment by court, delivery of roll to the collector, collection of
assessments, return of delinquent lists, application for judgments against
delinquents, tax sales on delinquents, and tax deeds necessary to be taken
to make, levy, confirm, and collect an assessment, and to pay the cost by
special assessment or by special taxation of the outlet sewer provided for
by Section 11‑140‑1, as well as proceedings for the condemnation of
property, the manner of awarding contracts, doing and superintending the
work, and paying the contractor therefor, shall be in accordance with the
provisions of Article 9, except in so far as the provisions of this
Division 140 are inconsistent therewith.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑140‑6) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑140‑6)
Sec. 11‑140‑6.
For the purpose of anticipating the collection of the second
and succeeding installments provided for by this Division 140, every
municipality specified in Section 11‑140‑1 may issue and retire bonds in
accordance with the provisions and regulations of Article 9.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑141‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑141‑1)
Sec. 11‑141‑1.
When used in this Division 141, "sewerage system" means and
includes any or all of the following: a sewage treatment plant or plants,
collecting, intercepting and outlet sewers, force mains, conduits, lateral
sewers and extensions, pumping stations, ejector stations, and all other
appurtenances, extensions or improvements necessary or useful and
convenient for the collection, treatment, and disposal, in a sanitary
manner, of sewage and industrial wastes. The term also includes the
disconnection of storm water drains and constructing outlets therefor,
where, in any case, such work is necessary to relieve existing sanitary
sewers of storm water loads, in order to permit the efficient operation of
such sanitary sewers for collection, treatment, and disposal of sewage and
industrial wastes.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑141‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑141‑2)
Sec. 11‑141‑2.
Every municipality may construct or acquire, and may improve, extend,
and operate a sewerage system either within or without the corporate limits
thereof. Every municipality also may, when determined by its corporate
authorities to be in the public interest and necessary for the protection
of the public health, enter into and perform contracts, whether long‑term
or short‑term, with any industrial establishment for the provision and
operation by the municipality of sewerage facilities to abate or reduce the
pollution of waters caused by discharges of industrial wastes by the
industrial establishment and the payment periodically by the industrial
establishment to the municipality of amounts at least sufficient, in the
determination of such corporate authorities, to compensate the municipality
for the cost of providing (including payment of principal and interest
charges, if any), and of operating and maintaining the sewerage facilities
serving such industrial establishment.
Every municipality may borrow money from the United States Government or
any agency thereof, or from any other source, for the purpose of improving
or extending or for the purpose of constructing or acquiring and improving
and extending a sewerage system and, as evidence thereof, may issue its
revenue bonds, payable solely from the revenue derived from the operation
of the sewerage system by that municipality. These bonds may be issued with
maturities not exceeding 40 years from the date of the bonds, and in such
amounts as may be necessary to provide sufficient funds to pay all the
costs of the improvement or extension or construction or acquisition and
improvement and extension of the sewerage system, including engineering,
legal, and other expenses, together with interest, to a date 6 months
subsequent to the estimated date of completion. These bonds shall bear
interest at a rate of not more than
the maximum rate authorized by the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the
time of the making of the contract, payable semi‑annually, may
be made registerable as to principal, and may be made callable on any
interest payment date at a price of par and accrued interest under such
terms and conditions as may be fixed by the ordinance authorizing the
issuance of the bonds. Bonds issued under this Division 141 are negotiable
instruments. They shall be executed by the mayor or president of the
municipality and by the municipal clerk and shall be sealed with the
corporate seal of the municipality. In case any officer whose signature
appears on the bonds or coupons ceases to hold that office before the bonds
are delivered, his signature, nevertheless, shall be valid and sufficient
for all purposes, the same as though he had remained in office until the
bonds were delivered. The bonds shall be sold in such manner and upon such
terms as the corporate authorities shall determine, except that the selling
price shall be such that the interest cost to the municipality of the
proceeds of the bonds shall not exceed
the maximum rate authorized by the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the
time of the making of the contract, payable semi‑annually,
computed to maturity according to the standard table of bond values.
With respect to instruments for the payment of money issued under this
Section either before, on, or after the effective date of this amendatory
Act of 1989, it is and always has been the intention of the General
Assembly (i) that the Omnibus Bond Acts are and always have been
supplementary grants of power to issue instruments in accordance with the
Omnibus Bond Acts, regardless of any provision of this Act that may appear
to be or to have been more restrictive than those Acts, (ii) that the
provisions of this Section are not a limitation on the supplementary
authority granted by the Omnibus Bond Acts, and (iii) that instruments
issued under this Section within the supplementary authority granted
by the Omnibus Bond Acts are not invalid because of any provision of
this Act that may appear to be or to have been more restrictive than
those Acts.
The amendatory Acts of 1971, 1972 and 1973 are not a limit upon any
municipality which is a home rule unit.
(Source: P.A. 86‑4.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑141‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑141‑3)
Sec. 11‑141‑3.
Whenever the corporate authorities of a municipality determine to
improve or extend or to construct or acquire and improve and extend a
sewerage system and to issue bonds, under this Division 141, for the
payment of the cost thereof, the corporate authorities shall adopt an
ordinance describing, in a general way, the contemplated project. It is
not necessary that the ordinance refer to plans and specifications nor
that there be on file for public inspection prior to the adoption of
such ordinance detailed plans and specifications of the project.
Whenever a municipality has been directed by an order issued under
"An Act to establish a Sanitary Water Board and to control, prevent and
abate pollution of the streams, lakes, ponds and other surface and
underground waters in the State, and to repeal an Act named therein",
approved July 12, 1951, as now or hereafter amended, or the
"Environmental Protection Act", enacted by the 76th
General Assembly, to abate its discharge of untreated or inadequately
treated sewage, this fact shall be set out in the ordinance, unless the
order to abate the discharge has been reversed on appeal.
The ordinance shall set out the estimated cost of the project,
determine the period of usefulness thereof, and fix the amount of
revenue bonds proposed to be issued, the maturity or maturities, the
interest rate, which shall not exceed
the maximum rate authorized by the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the
time of the making of the contract, and all the details
in connection with the bonds. The ordinance may contain such covenants
and restrictions upon the issuance of additional revenue bonds
thereafter, which will share equally the revenue of the sewerage system,
as may be deemed necessary or advisable for the assurance of the payment
of the bonds first issued. Any municipality may also provide in the
ordinance authorizing the issuance of bonds under this Division 141 that
the bonds, or such ones thereof as may be specified, shall, to the
extent and in the manner prescribed, be subordinated and be junior in
standing, with respect to the payment of principal and interest and the
security thereof, to such other bonds as are designated in the
ordinance.
The ordinance shall pledge the revenue derived from the operation of
the sewerage system for the purpose of paying the cost of operation and
maintenance of the system, providing an adequate depreciation fund, and
paying the principal and interest on the bonds of the municipality
issued under this Division 141.
This amendatory Act (Public Act 76‑1983) applies to bonds which are
authorized but not sold on its effective date.
With respect to instruments for the payment of money issued under this
Section either before, on, or after the effective date of this amendatory
Act of 1989, it is and always has been the intention of the General
Assembly (i) that the Omnibus Bond Acts are and always have been
supplementary grants of power to issue instruments in accordance with the
Omnibus Bond Acts, regardless of any provision of this Act that may appear
to be or to have been more restrictive than those Acts, (ii) that the
provisions of this Section are not a limitation on the supplementary
authority granted by the Omnibus Bond Acts, and (iii) that instruments
issued under this Section within the supplementary authority granted
by the Omnibus Bond Acts are not invalid because of any provision of
this Act that may appear to be or to have been more restrictive than
those Acts.
The amendatory Acts of 1971, 1972 and 1973 are not a limit upon any
municipality which is a home rule unit.
(Source: P.A. 86‑4.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑141‑4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑141‑4)
Sec. 11‑141‑4.
Within 10 days after this ordinance has been passed,
it shall be published at least once in one or more newspapers published
in the municipality, or, if no newspaper is published therein, then in
one or more newspapers with a general circulation within the
municipality. In municipalities with less than 500 population in which
no newspaper is published, publication may instead be made by posting a
notice in 3 prominent places within the municipality.
If the ordinance specifies that the municipality has been directed by
an order issued under the provisions of "An Act to establish a Sanitary
Water Board and to control, prevent and abate pollution of the streams,
lakes, ponds and other surface and underground waters in the State, and
to repeal an Act named therein", approved July 12, 1951, as heretofore
and hereafter amended, and the Environmental Protection Act, to abate its
discharge of untreated or inadequately treated sewage, the ordinance
authorizing the issuance of those revenue bonds shall be in effect
immediately upon its adoption and publication, or posting, as provided in
this section, notwithstanding any provision in this Code or any other law
to the contrary.
In all other cases, if no petition is filed with the municipal clerk
as hereinafter provided in this section, within 30 days after the
publication or posting of the ordinance, the ordinance shall be in
effect after the expiration of that 30 day period. In such cases
the publication or posting of the ordinance shall be accompanied by a
notice of (1) the specific number of voters required to sign a petition
requesting the question of improving or extending or of construction or
acquiring and improving and extending a sewerage system and of issuing
revenue bonds to be submitted to the electors; (2) the time in which such
petition must be filed; and (3) the date of the prospective referendum.
The municipal clerk shall provide a petition form to any individual
requesting one. But if within that 30 day period a petition is filed with
the municipal clerk signed by electors of the municipality numbering 10% or
more of the number of registered voters in the municipality, asking that
the question of improving or extending or of construction or acquiring
and improving and extending a sewerage system and of issuing revenue
bonds to pay the cost thereof be submitted to the electors of the
municipality, the municipal clerk of the municipality shall certify the
question for submission at an election.
If a majority of the electors voting upon the question
voted in favor thereof, the ordinance shall be in effect, but if a
majority of the electors voting upon the questions are not in favor
thereof, the ordinance shall not take effect.
(Source: P.A. 87‑767.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑141‑5) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑141‑5)
Sec. 11‑141‑5.
All bonds issued under this Division 141 are payable solely
from the revenue derived from the operation of the sewerage system;
provided, that bonds issued under this Division 141 may also be
payable from funds pledged by the municipality issuing such bonds pursuant
to the Illinois Finance Authority
Act.
Notwithstanding any such pledge or any other matter, these
bonds shall not, in any event, constitute an indebtedness of the
municipality within the meaning of any constitutional or statutory
limitation. It shall be plainly stated on the face of each bond that the
bond has been issued under this Division 141 and that it does not
constitute an indebtedness of the municipality within any constitutional or
statutory limitation.
(Source: P.A. 93‑205, eff. 1‑1‑04.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑141‑6) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑141‑6)
Sec. 11‑141‑6.
So long as any revenue bonds of the municipality under the
provisions of this Division 141 are outstanding, all revenue derived from
the operation of such a sewerage system shall be set aside as collected,
and deposited in a special fund of the municipality, and this revenue shall
be used only for the purpose of paying the cost of operating and
maintaining the sewerage system, providing an adequate depreciation fund,
and paying the principal of and interest on the bonds issued by the
municipality under the provisions of this Division 141. When no such
revenue bonds are outstanding, such revenue shall be used for the purpose
of paying the principal of and interest on any other bonds or indebtedness
issued or incurred by the municipality for the construction, acquisition,
improvement, extension, operation or improvement of the sewerage system, or
for paying for the construction, acquisition, improvement, extension,
operation or improvement of the sewerage system.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑141‑8) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑141‑8)
Sec. 11‑141‑8.
Every municipality which issues bonds under this Division
141 shall install and maintain a proper system of accounts showing the
amount of revenue received from the sewerage system and the application of
that revenue. At least once each year the municipality shall have the
accounts properly audited. A report of that audit shall be open for
inspection at all proper times to any taxpayer, sewerage system user, or
the holder of any bond issued under this Division 141, or their respective
representatives.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑141‑9) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑141‑9)
Sec. 11‑141‑9.
The holder of any bond issued under this Division 141, or of
any coupon representing interest accrued thereon, by any
civil action, mandamus, injunction or other proceeding, may compel the
officials of the municipality
issuing the bonds to perform all duties imposed upon them by the provisions
of this Division 141, including the making and collection of sufficient
charges or rates for that purpose and the application of the revenue from
the sewerage system.
(Source: P.A. 83‑345.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑141‑10) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑141‑10)
Sec. 11‑141‑10.
For the purpose of improving or extending, or constructing
or acquiring and improving and extending a sewerage system under this
Division 141, a municipality may acquire any property necessary or
appropriate therefor by eminent domain as provided by Article VII of the
Code of Civil Procedure,
as heretofore and hereafter amended.
(Source: P.A. 82‑783.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑141‑10.5)
Sec. 11‑141‑10.5.
Sewerage systems; adjacent municipality's access to
other jurisdictions. The corporate authorities of any municipality shall not
restrain or interfere with an adjacent municipality's construction,
maintenance, alteration, or extension of a sewerage system that accesses
intercepting and outlet sewers of a third consenting wastewater treatment
authority outside of the adjacent municipality's corporate boundaries provided
that
the construction, maintenance, alteration, or extension is an appropriate or
practical route, according to any Environmental Protection Agency engineer, and
is necessary to maintain or establish compliance with the Environmental
Protection Act or rules or regulations
promulgated by the Pollution Control Board.
Any municipality granting access to intercepting and outlet sewers of a third
consenting wastewater treatment authority may recover only its actual costs,
including but not limited to inspection, regulation, administration, and repair
costs, associated with any construction, maintenance, extension, or alteration
of the existing system.
(Source: P.A. 90‑190, eff. 7‑24‑97.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑141‑11) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑141‑11)
Sec. 11‑141‑11.
Every municipality may construct or acquire a sewerage
system to serve a particular locality within its corporate limits or to
extend or improve an existing sewerage system for the purpose of serving a
particular locality within the municipality not theretofore served by its
existing sewerage system, and may pay the cost thereof by the issuance and
sale of revenue bonds of the municipality, payable solely from the revenue
derived from the operation of the entire sewerage system or systems of the
municipality. Except insofar as inconsistent with this section, the
provisions of Sections 11‑141‑1 through 11‑141‑10 govern all matters
connected with a project under this section.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑141‑12) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑141‑12)
Sec. 11‑141‑12.
Every municipality also may construct or acquire a sewerage
system to serve a particular locality within its corporate limits or to
extend or improve an existing sewerage system for the purpose of serving a
particular locality within the municipality not theretofore served by its
existing sewerage system, and may pay the cost thereof by the issuance and
sale of revenue bonds of the municipality, payable solely from the revenue
derived from the operation of the sewerage system constructed or acquired
for that particular locality, or from the revenue to be derived from the
operation of the improvements and extensions of an existing system. Except
insofar as inconsistent with this section, the provisions of Section
11‑141‑2 govern all matters connected with the bonds issued under this
section.
Bonds issued under this section are payable solely from revenue derived
from the operation of that sewerage system or improvement or extension.
These bonds shall not, in any event, constitute an indebtedness of the
municipality within the meaning of any constitutional or statutory
limitation, and it shall be so stated on the face of each bond. The face of
each bond shall also contain a description of the locality for which that
system or improvement or extension is constructed or acquired.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑141‑13) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑141‑13)
Sec. 11‑141‑13.
The corporate authorities of any municipality intending to
avail itself of the provisions of Sections 11‑141‑12 through 11‑141‑18
shall adopt a resolution declaring its intention to construct or acquire a
sewerage system for a particular locality within the municipality, or its
intention to make an extension or improvement to an existing sewerage
system for a particular locality, and describing the project to be
constructed and the boundaries of the locality to be served thereby. The
corporate authorities shall also determine the estimated cost of the
project, approve a report of the engineer for the municipality of the
possible rates to be charged to users of the sewerage system or improvement
or extension, and set a date for a public hearing on the question of
whether or not the project should be constructed.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑141‑14) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑141‑14)
Sec. 11‑141‑14.
Notice of the public hearing shall be sent by mail to the
persons who paid the general taxes for the last preceding year on each lot,
block, tract, or parcel of land within the boundaries of the locality to be
served by the proposed project and also to each occupant of premises within
the locality. Notice shall also be published at least once, the first
publication being not more than 30 nor less than 15 days before the date
set for the hearing, in one or more newspapers published in the
municipality, or, if no newspaper is published therein, then in one or more
newspapers with a general circulation within the municipality. In
municipalities with less than 500 population in which no newspaper is
published, publication may instead be made by posting a notice in 3
prominent places within the municipality. The notice shall state (1) the
time and place of the hearing, (2) the intention of the corporate
authorities to construct or acquire the system or to extend or improve the
existing system, (3) a description of the project to be constructed or
acquired and the boundaries of the locality to be served thereby, (4) the
estimated cost of the project, and (5) the probable rates to be charged the
users of the system or improvement or extension.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑141‑15) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑141‑15)
Sec. 11‑141‑15.
At the time and place fixed in the notice for the public
hearing, the corporate authorities shall meet and hear the representations
of any person desiring to be heard on the subject of the construction or
acquisition of the proposed project, the nature thereof, the cost as
estimated, and the probable rates to be charged. After the hearing has been
had and all persons desiring to appear have been heard, the corporate
authorities shall adopt a new resolution adopting, altering, amending,
changing, or modifying the former resolution or abandoning the project.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑141‑17) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑141‑17)
Sec. 11‑141‑17.
If the corporate authorities adopt a resolution to proceed
with the construction or acquisition of the project as provided in Section
11‑141‑16, they shall adopt an ordinance providing for the issuance of the
bonds. The ordinance shall contain the necessary detail and data provided
for by Section 11‑141‑3. It shall not be necessary that the ordinance refer
to plans and specifications nor that there be on file for public inspection
prior to the adoption of such ordinance detailed plans and specifications
of the project. Within 10 days after the ordinance has been passed, it
shall be published at least once in one or more newspapers published in the
municipality, or, if no newspaper is published therein, then in one or more
newspapers with a general circulation within the municipality. In
municipalities with less than 500 population in which no newspaper is
published, publication may instead be made by posting a notice in 3
prominent places within the municipality. The ordinance shall become
effective 10 days after the publication.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑141‑18) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑141‑18)
Sec. 11‑141‑18.
All revenue derived from the operation of such a sewerage
system, improvement, or extension shall be set aside as collected, and
deposited in a special fund of the municipality. It shall be used only for
the purpose of paying the cost of operating and maintaining the sewerage
system, improvement, or extension, providing an adequate depreciation fund,
and paying the principal and interest on the bonds issued by the
municipality under Sections 11‑141‑12 through 11‑141‑18 for the purpose of
constructing or acquiring the system, improvement, or extension.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑142‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑142‑1)
Sec. 11‑142‑1.
Subject to the provisions of Section 11‑142‑2,
whenever a municipality which is not in a sanitary district has
constructed a sewage treatment or disposal plant or plants, the
municipality may levy an annual tax of not to exceed .075% of the value,
as equalized or assessed by the Department of Revenue,
of all taxable property therein for the operation and maintenance of the
plant or plants. The tax shall be in addition to all other taxes
authorized by law to be levied and collected in the municipality and
shall be in addition to taxes levied for general purposes as authorized
by Section 8‑3‑1.
The foregoing limitation upon tax rates may be increased or decreased
according to the referendum provisions of the General Revenue Law of
Illinois.
(Source: P.A. 81‑1509.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑142‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑142‑2)
Sec. 11‑142‑2.
Section 11‑142‑1 shall be in force in any municipality
in which "An Act to provide for a tax for the operation and maintenance
of sewage treatment and disposal plants in municipalities which are not
in any sanitary district," approved May 2, 1932, has been heretofore
adopted and was in force immediately prior to January 1, 1942. Section
11‑142‑1 shall not be in force in any other municipality until the
question of its adoption is certified by the clerk and submitted to the electors of the
municipality at an election in accordance with the general election law,
and approved by a majority of those voting thereon.
The question shall be in substantially the
following form:
Shall Section 11‑142‑1 of the Illinois Municipal Code, providing YES for a tax for the operation and maintenance of sewage treatment
and disposal plants in municipalities which are not in any sanitary NO district, be adopted?
If a majority of the electors of the municipality voting on the
question vote in favor of adopting Section 11‑142‑1, it shall become
operative in that municipality.
(Source: P.A. 81‑1489 .)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑142‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑142‑3)
Sec. 11‑142‑3.
In addition to all other taxes now or hereafter
authorized, the corporate authorities of each municipality may levy and
collect, without referendum, a tax for the purpose of paying the
expenses of the chlorination of sewage, or other means of disinfection
or additional treatment as may be required by water quality standards
approved or adopted by the Pollution Control Board or by the court,
which tax may be extended at a rate not to exceed .02% of the value of
all taxable property within the municipality as equalized or assessed by
the Department of Revenue.
(Source: P.A. 81‑1509.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑143‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑143‑1)
Sec. 11‑143‑1.
The corporate authorities of any municipality which now has, or
hereafter may have, established a system of sewerage for the municipality,
annually may levy and collect a tax not to exceed .01666% of the value,
as equalized or assessed by the Department of Revenue,
of the taxable real and personal property in the municipality, for the extension
and laying of sewers in the municipality and for the maintenance of those
sewers. However, the board of public works of the municipality, if any, or the
head of the municipality's sewer department, shall first certify to the
corporate authorities the amount that will be necessary for those purposes. The tax
shall be known as the sewerage fund tax and shall be levied and
collected in the same manner as are the other general taxes of the municipality.
A two‑thirds majority of all the corporate authorities may levy and collect
annually, a tax not to exceed .10% of
the value, as equalized or assessed by the Department of Revenue, of the
taxable real and personal property in the
municipality, for the specified purposes. Nothing in this Section increases the
aggregate amount of tax, as limited in Section 8‑3‑1, that may be levied
in any one year.
(Source: P.A. 81‑1550.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑143‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑143‑2)
Sec. 11‑143‑2.
Upon approval by referendum as hereinafter provided,
the city council of any city having a population of less than 100,000
inhabitants which operates a sewage disposal plant may levy and collect
an annual tax of not to exceed .075% of the assessed valuation of the
taxable property in the city for the purpose of operating and
maintaining such sewage disposal plant. However, the board of public
works of the city, if any, or the head of the city's sewer department,
shall first certify to the city council the amount that will be
necessary for such purpose. This tax shall be levied and collected in
like manner as the general taxes for city purposes and shall not be
included within any limitation of rate prescribed by Section 8‑3‑1 but
shall be excluded therefrom and shall be in addition thereto and in
excess thereof.
This Section shall not be in force in any municipality until the
question of its adoption is certified by the clerk and submitted to
the electors of the
municipality at an election in accordance with the general election law
and approved by a majority of those voting thereon.
The question shall be in substantially the
following form:
Shall Section 11‑143‑1 of the Illinois Municipal Code, YES providing for an additional tax for the operation and
maintenance of a sewage NO disposal plant, be adopted?
If a majority of the electors of the municipality voting on the
question vote in favor of adopting this section, it shall become
operative in that municipality.
(Source: P.A. 81‑1489 .)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑144‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑144‑1)
Sec. 11‑144‑1.
For the purpose of Sections 11‑144‑2 and 11‑144‑3, "sewerage
system" means a sewage treatment plant or plants, collecting, intercepting
and outlet sewers, force mains, conduits, lateral sewers and extensions,
pumping stations, ejector stations and all other appurtenances, extensions,
or improvements necessary or useful and convenient for the collection,
treatment, and disposal, in a sanitary manner, of sewage and industrial
wastes.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑144‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑144‑2)
Sec. 11‑144‑2.
Subject to the provisions of Section 11‑144‑3, when a
municipality with a population of less than 3,000 has issued revenue bonds
prior to July 22, 1939, for the purpose of constructing or acquiring
sewerage systems, and payment of the principal and interest on these bonds
has been defaulted, the corporate authorities thereof annually may levy and
collect a tax upon the taxable real and personal property in the
municipality not to exceed .5% on the dollar. The proceeds of this tax
shall be used for the payment of the defaulted principal and interest on
the specified bonds. The tax shall be levied and collected in the same
manner as are other general taxes of the municipality.
(Source: P. A. 76‑1593.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑144‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑144‑3)
Sec. 11‑144‑3.
The corporate authorities of a municipality specified
in Section 11‑144‑2, by ordinance, may cause the question of the levy of
the tax to be submitted to the electors at an election in accordance with
the general election law. The question shall be certified by the clerk of
the municipality to the proper election authority.
The question shall be in substantially the following form:
Shall a tax not exceeding .5% be levied each year on all taxable YES property in the .... of .... for the purpose of redeeming defaulted
revenue bonds, and accrued interest thereon, issued for the purpose of NO constructing or acquiring sewerage systems?
The levy is authorized if the majority of votes cast on the
proposition are in favor thereof. The corporate authorities shall then
levy a tax annually, not exceeding the rate authorized by that election,
until the amount necessary to redeem the principal and interest on the
specified bonds is collected.
Any municipality whose electors have approved the levy of an annual
tax under "An Act to authorize cities, villages and incorporated towns
to levy a tax for the redemption of defaulted revenue bonds, and accrued
interest thereon, issued for the purpose of constructing or acquiring
sewerage systems," approved July 22, 1939, shall continue to levy the
tax annually, not exceeding one‑half of the rate authorized at the
election, until the amount necessary to redeem the principal of and
interest on the specified bonds is collected.
(Source: P.A. 81‑1489 .)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑145‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑145‑1)
Sec. 11‑145‑1.
Any municipality which issues revenue bonds for the
construction, acquisition, improvement, extension or operation of a
sewerage system under the provisions of this Code and establishes rates,
charges or rents for the use of such sewerage system based upon the
volume of water delivered through a waterworks system not owned by such
municipality, may enter into a contract with the owner or operator of
such waterworks system to act as collector of such rates, rents or
charges for the use of such sewerage system and to pay over such
revenues to such municipality as provided by this section. Such contract
may authorize and require such owner or operator of the waterworks
system, as agent for the municipality, to do all things relating to the
collection of such rates, rents or charges as the municipality could do
if it were making such collections directly and may allow such
compensation to such collector for acting as such, not to exceed 6% of
the total amount collected, as may be agreed upon by the contracting
parties, such compensation to be deducted from such collections and the
balance to be paid over to such municipality.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑146‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑146‑1)
Sec. 11‑146‑1.
The corporate authorities of each municipality may contract
with the State of Illinois, any municipality, or any person for the
collection and disposal of sewage originating outside of municipalities.
The corporate authorities of a municipality may provide by ordinance for
the extension and maintenance of municipal sewers in specified areas
outside the corporate limits.
(Source: P. A. 76‑1516.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑147‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑147‑1)
Sec. 11‑147‑1.
Whenever a municipality, drainage district, sanitary
district, or other municipal corporation is adjacent to any other
municipality, drainage district, sanitary district, or other municipal
corporation the adjacent municipal corporations have the power to contract
with each other, upon such terms as may be agreed upon between them, for
the perpetual or temporary use and benefit by one of them of any sewer or
drain, or of any system of sewerage or drainage or part thereof, or of any
sewage disposal or sewage treatment plants and works, heretofore or
hereafter constructed by the other. Any such sewer or drain, or system of
sewerage or drainage or part thereof, or sewage disposal or sewage
treatment plants and work, heretofore or hereafter constructed by one such
municipal corporation may be extended or furnished to the inhabitants of
the other. Such municipal corporations may by contract with each other
provide for the joint construction of any sewer or drain or sewage disposal
or sewage treatment plants and works by the municipal corporations so
contracting, and for the common use thereof by the inhabitants of the
contracting municipal corporations.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑147‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑147‑2)
Sec. 11‑147‑2.
Any contract specified in Section 11‑147‑1 may be made by
the authority of an ordinance or resolution passed by the proper
legislative authority of the municipality, sanitary district, drainage
district, or other municipal corporation proposing the contract, and shall
be assented to by an ordinance or resolution passed by the proper
legislative authority of the municipality, sanitary district, drainage
district, or other municipal corporation assenting to the contract. When
made and assented to by the proper legislative authorities of the municipal
corporations who are parties thereto, the contract shall be in all respects
valid and binding.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑147‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑147‑3)
Sec. 11‑147‑3.
Every municipality lying within or partly within the
corporate limits of, or adjacent to, any sanitary district which was
organized under "An Act to create sanitary districts in certain localities,
to drain and protect the same from overflow for sanitary purposes and to
provide for sewage disposal," approved May 17, 1907, as heretofore and
hereafter amended, and which is authorized to collect, carry‑off, dispose
of, and treat sewage and industrial wastes, may enter into a contract with
this sanitary district upon such reasonable terms as may be agreed upon,
for the use of the drains, conduits, treatment plants, pumping plants, and
works maintained by the sanitary district for the carrying‑off, disposal,
and treatment of sewage and industrial wastes.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑147‑4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑147‑4)
Sec. 11‑147‑4.
Any municipality lying wholly or partly within the
boundaries of any county which accepts the provisions of "An Act in
relation to water supply, drainage, sewage, pollution and flood control in
certain counties," approved July 22, 1959, as heretofore or hereafter
amended, may contract with such county for water supply or sewerage
service to or for the benefit of the inhabitants of the municipality. Any
such contract may provide for the periodic payment to the county of a share
of the amounts necessary to pay or provide for the expenses of operation
and maintenance of the waterworks or sewerage system of the combined
waterworks and sewerage system (including insurance) of the county, to pay
the principal of and interest on any revenue bonds issued by the county
hereunder, and to provide an adequate depreciation fund and to maintain
other reserves and sinking funds for the payment of the bonds or the
extension or improvement of the waterworks properties or sewage facilities
of the county or a combination thereof, as the case may be.
Any such contract may be entered into without making a previous
appropriation for the expense thereby incurred. Any such contract may be
for a term not in excess of 20 years, if the contract is a general
obligation of the municipality, or for a term not in excess of 40 years, if
the obligation under the contract is payable solely from the revenues
derived by the municipality from its water supply or sewerage system.
If the contract is payable solely from the revenues derived by the
municipality from its water supply or sewerage system, the amounts due
under the contract shall be deemed an expense of operating and maintaining
the water supply or sewerage system of the municipality.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 2429.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑148‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑148‑1)
Sec. 11‑148‑1.
Whenever the territory of any municipality of this state is
adjacent to the territory of another state, the municipality may jointly
construct a sewage disposal plant, together with all necessary and proper
pipes, conduits, and appurtenances within its own corporate limits, and may
own, operate, and maintain the plant jointly with any municipality in the
adjacent state, for their joint use, on terms and conditions to be agreed
upon by the municipalities.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑148‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑148‑2)
Sec. 11‑148‑2.
Whenever a municipality in an adjacent state desires to
construct a sewage disposal plant in an Illinois municipality adjacent to
the boundary of the State of Illinois, the municipality in the adjacent
state may construct a sewage disposal plant, together with all necessary
and proper pipes, conduits, and appurtenances, within the corporate limits
of the Illinois municipality, and may hold, own, maintain, and operate the
plant as its sole and separate property, subject to the approval of the
corporate authorities of the Illinois municipality.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑148‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑148‑3)
Sec. 11‑148‑3.
Whenever a municipality in an adjacent state desires to
construct a sewage disposal plant within or near the corporate limits of an
adjoining municipality, located in the State of Illinois, the municipality
in the adjacent state may construct the sewage disposal plant within or
near the corporate limits of the Illinois municipality, together with all
necessary pipes, conduits, and appurtenances thereto, and may own, operate,
and maintain the plant and also may permit use thereof by the Illinois
municipality upon terms and conditions to be agreed upon by contract
between the municipalities.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑148‑4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑148‑4)
Sec. 11‑148‑4.
Whenever a municipality located in the State of Illinois
owns and operates a sewage disposal plant within or near its corporate
limits, and is adjacent to a municipality in another state, the Illinois
municipality has the power to permit use of its sewage disposal plant and
appurtenances by the adjacent municipality located in the other state, on
terms to be agreed upon by a contract between the municipalities.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑148‑5) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑148‑5)
Sec. 11‑148‑5.
The interest, ownership, or equity which any municipality of
another state has in any sewage disposal plant and necessary connecting and
outlet sewers and appurtenances in the State of Illinois, constructed by
virtue of Section 11‑148‑1 through 11‑148‑4 is not subject to taxation in
the State of Illinois.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑148‑6) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑148‑6)
Sec. 11‑148‑6.
Whenever a municipality of another state constructs or
leases a sewage disposal plant in the State of Illinois, pursuant to the
provisions of Sections 11‑148‑1 through 11‑148‑4, the municipality may
condemn and take property within the State of Illinois necessary for that
disposal plant and for connecting and outlet sewers and appurtenances, in
the same manner as might any municipality within this state.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑148‑7) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑148‑7)
Sec. 11‑148‑7.
The purpose of Sections 11‑148‑1 through 11‑148‑6 is the
elimination or lessening of pollution of streams within the State of
Illinois, and is particularly for the benefit of adjacent municipalities
whose territory is located partially in the State of Illinois and partially
in an adjacent state, and whose sewage disposal can be most efficiently and
economically handled by a joint plant for the 2 municipalities. The
sections specified shall be liberally construed to give effect to these
purposes.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑149‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑149‑2)
Sec. 11‑149‑2.
The extension of such service may be financed by the
issuance of bonds payable solely from the revenue obtained from the
furnishing of such service. The bonds shall be issued and shall be subject
to the provisions, as near as may be, of Division 139 of this article. The
corporate authorities may make rules and regulations and may establish
charges for such service in areas outside the corporate limits in the
manner provided in Section 11‑139‑8, as near as may be.
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 2727.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑150‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑150‑1)
Sec. 11‑150‑1.
The corporate authorities of any municipality operating a
waterworks, sewerage or combined waterworks and sewerage system have the
power by ordinance to collect a fair and reasonable charge for connection
to any such system in addition to those charges covered by normal taxes,
for the construction, expansion and extension of the works of the system,
the charge to be assessed against new or additional users of the system and
to be known as a connection charge, except that no connection or water
usage charge shall exceed the actual cost required for the installation or
usage of an automatic sprinkler system. The funds thus collected shall be used
by the municipality for its general corporate purposes with primary
application thereof being made by the necessary expansion of the works of
the system to meet the requirements of the new users thereof.
(Source: P.A. 85‑784.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑151‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑151‑1)
Sec. 11‑151‑1.
As used in this Article, "public water district" or "district" means a
public water district organized under "An Act in relation to public water
districts", approved July 25, 1945, as amended.
(Source: P. A. 76‑1356.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑151‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑151‑3)
Sec. 11‑151‑3.
Except as otherwise provided in this Article, no municipality may
furnish water or sanitary sewer service to any territory situated within a
public water district and more than one mile from the corporate limits of
the municipality without the district's consent. Nothing in this Section
affects the performance by the municipality of any other function in which
the district is not engaged.
A municipality that operates a public water supply and furnishes water
service has the exclusive right, as against a public water district, to
serve residents in the territory within one mile or less of the corporate
limits of the municipality but may consent to the district's providing
service to such residents.
(Source: P. A. 76‑1356.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑151‑4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑151‑4)
Sec. 11‑151‑4.
If a municipality annexes all of the territory of a public water
district, the municipality shall take over all the properties and assets of
the district, assume all debts, liabilities and obligations of the district
and perform all functions and services of the district. The district shall
be abolished and the rights and duties imposed on the municipality of this
Section shall commence 90 days after the effective date of the annexation
or at such earlier date as the corporate authorities of the municipality,
by ordinance, provide.
(Source: P. A. 76‑1356.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑151‑5) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑151‑5)
Sec. 11‑151‑5.
If a municipality annexes part, but not all of the territory
of a public
water district, sanitary sewer district, or both, the corporate authorities
of the municipality and of the
district may enter contracts providing for the division and allocation of
duplicate and overlapping powers, functions and duties between the 2
entities and for the use, management, control, purchase, conveyance,
assumption and disposition of the properties, assets, debts, liabilities
and obligations of the district. The corporate authorities of a district
and such a municipality may also enter agreements providing for the
operation by the municipality of the district's utility systems and other
properties or for the transfer, conveyance or sale of those systems and
properties to the municipality. "Systems and properties" includes those of
every kind and character and whether situated within or outside the
municipality. An operating contract made under this Section may not extend
for a period longer than 30 years and must be subject to amendment, renewal
or termination by mutual consent of the contracting parties. No contract
under this Section may contain any provision impairing the obligation of
any existing contract of such a municipality or district.
(Source: P.A. 90‑190, eff. 7‑24‑97.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑152‑1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑152‑1)
Sec. 11‑152‑1.
(a) The corporate authorities of any municipality over
1,000,000 in population
may establish a
municipal insurance availability program to make available to the residents
of such municipality, who are
otherwise unable to obtain such insurance at affordable rates,
insurance against damage or loss, including the costs of diagnosis
or repair, where the proximate cause of such damage or loss is attributable
to the breakage or stoppage of a water or sewage drainage system or pipes, apparatus
and conduits utilized in connection therewith.
(b) The corporate authorities shall establish uniform eligibility
requirements for participation in the program.
(c) The corporate authorities shall appoint a program administrator to
operate the program.
(Source: P.A. 84‑1431.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑152‑2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑152‑2)
Sec. 11‑152‑2.
(a) The municipal insurance availability program shall
offer to each eligible resident
coverage in the amount and type determined to be sufficient by the program administrator.
(b) Premiums charged for coverage issued under the program shall be
reasonable in relation to the coverage
provided.
(c) The program administrator shall establish a premium billing
procedure for collection of premiums from insureds on a periodic basis.
(d) The program administrator shall perform all necessary functions to
assure timely payment of claims under the program.
(Source: P.A. 84‑1431.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑152‑3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑152‑3)
Sec. 11‑152‑3.
Revenues received under the municipal insurance
availability program shall be used to
pay the costs of the program and to maintain and service the municipality's
water and sewage drainage system.
(Source: P.A. 84‑1431.)
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(65 ILCS 5/11‑152‑4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11‑152‑4)
Sec. 11‑152‑4.
Municipal insurance availability programs organized
under this Division 152 of Article 11 of the Illinois Municipal Code shall
be subject to all applicable provisions of the Illinois Insurance Code.
(Source: P.A. 84‑1431.)
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