Issuance of new DMV titles under certain requirment
Illinois will ban state agencies from buying tropical hardwoods and require verification that forest-risk commodities in state contracts are deforestation-free.
Illinois will ban state agencies from buying tropical hardwoods and require verification that forest-risk commodities in state contracts are deforestation-free.
Status and timeline
- Bill: HB 3197 (Introduced Feb 21, 2025). Primary sponsor: Rep. Daniel Didech; cosponsors: Margaret Croke, Will Guzzardi, Abdelnasser Rashid, Nabeela Syed.
- Major procedural steps: First reading Feb 18, 2025; assigned to State Government Administration Committee; House Committee Amendment 001 filed Mar 18, 2025 (revises bill by adding Article 54 to the Illinois Procurement Code); Do Pass from committee Mar 20; placed on second reading Mar 21–26; Rule 19(a) / Re‑referred to Rules Committee Apr 11, 2025.
- Companion bills: SB 1570 and HB 125.
- Effective date: the bill states “effective immediately.”
Purpose and intent
- To prevent Illinois state procurement and state-contracted public works from contributing to global deforestation and forest degradation by prohibiting purchase and use of certain tropical hardwoods and by requiring procurement safeguards for “forest‑risk commodities.”
Key provisions
1. Placement in Illinois Procurement Code
- The amendment inserts Article 54, titled the “Deforestation‑Free Illinois Law,” into the Illinois Procurement Code.
Prohibition on tropical hardwoods
Contractual requirements for forest‑risk commodities
Definitions (selected)
Other definitions and thresholds
Implementation and enforcement
- The bill requires contract language and contractor confirmation but does not in the text of the amendment specify civil penalties or enforcement mechanisms beyond procurement disallowance and rulemaking authority vested in the Director of Central Management Services to define terms and verification procedures.
- Agencies and contractors will be affected at procurement and contracting stages; suppliers in affected supply chains (domestic and international) may face new documentation/verifications to participate in state contracts.
Who is affected
- State agencies, departments, and quasi‑governmental entities conducting procurement or contracting.
- Contractors, vendors, and suppliers bidding on public works, maintenance, goods, or services for the State.
- Producers and supply chains of listed forest‑risk commodities (domestic and international exporters).
Potential impacts (practical)
- Limits use of tropical hardwoods in public construction and maintenance.
- Introduces sourcing verification requirements for many commodities used in state contracts, potentially increasing due‑diligence and documentation burdens on contractors and suppliers.
- Aims to reduce Illinois government contribution to commodity-driven deforestation and to encourage deforestation‑free supply chains.
For full legislative text, see the introduced bill and House Amendment 001 (Article 54 of the Illinois Procurement Code).
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
Sign in to ask a question.