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            Changes to public health regulations to provide better health and 
			safety protection for swimming facilities  Send a link to a friend
 
			
            
            [January 03, 2013] 
            SPRINGFIELD -- To help protect 
			your health and safety in public swimming pools and at water parks, 
			Illinois enacted new
			
			legislation effective Jan. 1 that calls for swimming facility 
			engineers, architects and contractors to be prequalified by the 
			Illinois Department of Public Health. There will also be a new fee 
			structure for swimming facilities to ensure inspectors can respond 
			to complaints and inspect public swimming facilities more frequently 
			and in a timely manner. Swimming facility fees in Illinois have not 
			increased in almost 40 years. | 
		
            |  "The goal of the Illinois Department of Public Health is to protect 
			the health and safety of the public from disease and injury," said 
			Illinois Department of Public Health Director LaMar Hasbrouck. "A 
			new swimming facility fee structure will allow the department to 
			conduct more inspections and respond faster when there is a 
			complaint, an injury or outbreak of illness. Inspections help 
			protect the public’s swimming safety, but will also allow swimming 
			facilities to open quicker if they have to shut down due to 
			equipment malfunctions, chemical imbalances or disease-causing 
			organisms found in the water. This benefits not only the public, but 
			businesses as well." 
			 Schools and municipal pools will only pay a 
			fee for building aquatic features -- water slides, spray pools, play 
			structures and other similar features. Certain tax-exempt 
			organizations like the YMCA or United Way will pay lower fees than 
			other commercial swimming facilities. 
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			 By requiring engineers, architects and contractors to be 
			prequalified and trained, the department anticipates seeing 
			better-quality plans to build or alter a swimming facility 
			submitted, which will allow the department to approve permits more 
			quickly. Better-quality plans reduce the possibility of having to 
			resubmit plans due to errors or noncompliance with the Swimming 
			Facilities Code. Prequalified engineers, architects and contractors 
			will also help people make better and more cost-effective choices 
			when planning to build a pool. IDPH licenses and inspects more than 4,000 swimming facilities 
			annually. For more information, visit
			
			http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/swimmingpools.htm.
 
            [Text from 
			Illinois 
			Department of Public Health file received from 
			the
			Illinois Office of 
			Communication and Information] |