Illinois Environmental Protection Agency: Regulations, Permits, and Conservation

The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (Illinois EPA) is the principal state agency responsible for administering environmental protection programs, issuing permits, enforcing pollution control standards, and implementing conservation requirements across Illinois. The agency operates under authority granted by the Illinois Environmental Protection Act (415 ILCS 5) and coordinates with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on federal program delegation. This page addresses the agency's regulatory structure, permitting processes, enforcement mechanisms, and the boundaries of its jurisdiction.

Definition and scope

The Illinois EPA was established in 1970 as the administrative arm of the state's environmental regulatory system. Its counterpart, the Illinois Pollution Control Board (IPCB), functions as the independent quasi-judicial body that sets environmental standards and adjudicates violations — a structural distinction that separates rulemaking from enforcement. The Illinois EPA implements the standards the IPCB adopts; it does not set them unilaterally.

The agency's jurisdiction covers air quality, water quality, land pollution, public water supplies, underground storage tanks, and site remediation. It administers delegated federal programs under the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. §7401 et seq.), the Clean Water Act (33 U.S.C. §1251 et seq.), and the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), among others.

The Illinois Department of Natural Resources holds separate authority over wildlife, state parks, and natural heritage conservation — functions distinct from the Illinois EPA's pollution control mandate. The Illinois Department of Agriculture administers pesticide regulation and agricultural land management, which intersects with but does not duplicate Illinois EPA programs.

Scope limitations: Illinois EPA authority applies within state boundaries. Federal installations, tribal lands (where applicable), and activities exclusively regulated under federal law are outside the agency's direct enforcement reach. Interstate environmental disputes — such as air pollution crossing state lines — are addressed through U.S. EPA and interstate compacts, not through the Illinois EPA acting unilaterally. The broader structure of Illinois state government, including how agencies like the Illinois EPA relate to executive authority, is documented at illinoisgovernmentauthority.com.

How it works

Illinois EPA operations divide across four primary program areas: air, water, land, and site remediation.

Permitting process — structured breakdown:

  1. Application submission — Applicants submit permit applications through the Illinois EPA's online Bureau of Water or Bureau of Air portals, depending on the media involved. Construction and operation permits for major sources require technical review against National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) and Illinois-specific standards in 35 Ill. Adm. Code Part 201–250.
  2. Public notice and comment — Permits for major facilities trigger a 45-day public comment period under 35 Ill. Adm. Code 309, during which affected parties may request a public hearing.
  3. Technical review — Agency staff evaluate applications against applicable standards; deficiencies trigger a Request for Additional Information (RAI).
  4. Permit issuance or denial — Final permit decisions are issued by the Bureau Director. Denied applicants may petition the Illinois Pollution Control Board for review.
  5. Compliance monitoring — Permitted facilities submit periodic monitoring reports; the agency conducts inspections and can refer violations to the Illinois Attorney General's office for enforcement.

Air permits contrast with water permits in one operationally significant way: Title V operating permits under the Clean Air Act apply to major stationary sources emitting 100 tons per year or more of regulated pollutants, while National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permits under the Clean Water Act apply to any point source discharge, including facilities with minimal daily effluent volumes.

Common scenarios

The Illinois EPA's permit and enforcement activity concentrates in four recurring operational contexts:

Decision boundaries

Illinois EPA involvement is triggered by specific statutory thresholds, not by discretionary judgment alone. Key decision points:

References