| ||||
| Public Act 099-0078 | ||||
  | ||||
 | ||||
 AN ACT to revise the law by combining multiple enactments  | ||||
and making technical corrections.
 | ||||
 Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
 | ||||
represented in the General Assembly:
 | ||||
 Section 1. Nature of this Act.  | ||||
 (a) This Act may be cited as the First 2015 General  | ||||
Revisory Act. | ||||
 (b) This Act is not intended to make any substantive change  | ||||
in the law. It reconciles conflicts that have arisen from  | ||||
multiple amendments and enactments and makes technical  | ||||
corrections and revisions in the law. | ||||
 This Act revises and, where appropriate, renumbers certain  | ||||
Sections that have been added or amended by more than one  | ||||
Public Act. In certain cases in which a repealed Act or Section  | ||||
has been replaced with a successor law, this Act may  | ||||
incorporate amendments to the repealed Act or Section into the  | ||||
successor law. This Act also corrects errors, revises  | ||||
cross-references, and deletes obsolete text. | ||||
 (c) In this Act, the reference at the end of each amended  | ||||
Section indicates the sources in the Session Laws of Illinois  | ||||
that were used in the preparation of the text of that Section.  | ||||
The text of the Section included in this Act is intended to  | ||||
include the different versions of the Section found in the  | ||||
Public Acts included in the list of sources, but may not  | ||||
include other versions of the Section to be found in Public  | ||
Acts not included in the list of sources. The list of sources  | ||
is not a part of the text of the Section. | ||
 (d) Public Acts 98-590 through 98-1173 were considered in  | ||
the preparation of the combining revisories included in this  | ||
Act. Many of those combining revisories contain no striking or  | ||
underscoring because no additional changes are being made in  | ||
the material that is being combined.
 | ||
 Section 5. The Effective Date of Laws Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 6 as follows:
 | ||
 (5 ILCS 75/6) (from Ch. 1, par. 1206)
 | ||
 Sec. 6. 
As used in this Act, "Constitution" means the  | ||
Constitution of the
State of Illinois of 1970.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 78-85; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 10. The Regulatory Sunset Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 4.27 as follows:
 | ||
 (5 ILCS 80/4.27) | ||
 Sec. 4.27. Acts repealed on January 1, 2017. The following
 | ||
are repealed on January 1, 2017:
 | ||
 The Illinois Optometric Practice Act of 1987. | ||
 The Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act. | ||
 The Boiler and Pressure Vessel Repairer Regulation Act. | ||
 Articles II, III, IV, V, V 1/2, VI, VIIA, VIIB, VIIC, XVII,
 | ||
XXXI, XXXI 1/4, and XXXI 3/4 of the Illinois Insurance Code. | ||
(Source: P.A. 94-787, eff. 5-19-06; 94-870, eff. 6-16-06;  | ||
94-956, eff. 6-27-06; 94-1076, eff. 12-29-06; 95-331, eff.  | ||
8-21-07; 95-876, eff. 8-21-08; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 15. The Illinois Administrative Procedure Act is  | ||
amended by changing Section 10-40 as follows:
 | ||
 (5 ILCS 100/10-40) (from Ch. 127, par. 1010-40)
 | ||
 Sec. 10-40. Rules of evidence; official notice. In  | ||
contested cases:
 | ||
 (a) Irrelevant, immaterial, or unduly repetitious evidence  | ||
shall be
excluded. The rules of evidence and privilege as  | ||
applied in civil cases
in the circuit courts of this State  | ||
shall be followed. Evidence not
admissible under those rules of  | ||
evidence may be admitted, however, (except
where precluded by  | ||
statute) if it is of a type commonly relied upon by
reasonably  | ||
prudent men in the conduct of their affairs. Objections to
 | ||
evidentiary offers may be made and shall be noted in the  | ||
record. Subject
to these requirements, when a hearing will be  | ||
expedited and the interests
of the parties will not be  | ||
prejudiced, any part of the evidence may be
received in written  | ||
form.
 | ||
 (b) Subject to the evidentiary requirements of subsection  | ||
(a) of this
Section, a party may conduct cross-examination  | ||
required for a full and fair
disclosure of the facts.
 | ||
 (c) Notice may be taken of matters of which the circuit  | ||
courts of this
State may take judicial notice. In addition,  | ||
notice may be taken of
generally recognized technical or  | ||
scientific facts within the agency's
specialized knowledge.  | ||
Parties shall be notified either before or during
the hearing,  | ||
or by reference in preliminary reports or otherwise, of the
 | ||
material noticed, including any staff memoranda or data, and  | ||
they shall be
afforded an opportunity to contest the material  | ||
so noticed. The agency's
experience, technical competence, and  | ||
specialized knowledge may be utilized
in the evaluation of the  | ||
evidence.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 87-823; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 20. The Open Meetings Act is amended by changing  | ||
Section 2 as follows:
 | ||
 (5 ILCS 120/2) (from Ch. 102, par. 42)
 | ||
 Sec. 2. Open meetings. 
 | ||
 (a) Openness required. All meetings of public
bodies shall  | ||
be open to the public unless excepted in subsection (c)
and  | ||
closed in accordance with Section 2a.
 | ||
 (b) Construction of exceptions. The exceptions contained  | ||
in subsection
(c) are in derogation of the requirement that  | ||
public bodies
meet in the open, and therefore, the exceptions  | ||
are to be strictly
construed, extending only to subjects  | ||
clearly within their scope.
The exceptions authorize but do not  | ||
require the holding of
a closed meeting to discuss a subject  | ||
included within an enumerated exception.
 | ||
 (c) Exceptions. A public body may hold closed meetings to  | ||
consider the
following subjects:
 | ||
  (1) The appointment, employment, compensation,  | ||
 discipline, performance,
or dismissal of specific  | ||
 employees of the public body or legal counsel for
the  | ||
 public body, including hearing
testimony on a complaint  | ||
 lodged against an employee of the public body or
against  | ||
 legal counsel for the public body to determine its  | ||
 validity.
 | ||
  (2) Collective negotiating matters between the public  | ||
 body and its
employees or their representatives, or  | ||
 deliberations concerning salary
schedules for one or more  | ||
 classes of employees.
 | ||
  (3) The selection of a person to fill a public office,
 | ||
 as defined in this Act, including a vacancy in a public  | ||
 office, when the public
body is given power to appoint  | ||
 under law or ordinance, or the discipline,
performance or  | ||
 removal of the occupant of a public office, when the public  | ||
 body
is given power to remove the occupant under law or  | ||
 ordinance. 
 | ||
  (4) Evidence or testimony presented in open hearing, or  | ||
 in closed
hearing where specifically authorized by law, to
 | ||
 a quasi-adjudicative body, as defined in this Act, provided  | ||
 that the body
prepares and makes available for public  | ||
 inspection a written decision
setting forth its  | ||
 determinative reasoning.
 | ||
  (5) The purchase or lease of real property for the use  | ||
 of
the public body, including meetings held for the purpose  | ||
 of discussing
whether a particular parcel should be  | ||
 acquired.
 | ||
  (6) The setting of a price for sale or lease of  | ||
 property owned
by the public body.
 | ||
  (7) The sale or purchase of securities, investments, or  | ||
 investment
contracts. This exception shall not apply to the  | ||
 investment of assets or income of funds deposited into the  | ||
 Illinois Prepaid Tuition Trust Fund. 
 | ||
  (8) Security procedures and the use of personnel and
 | ||
 equipment to respond to an actual, a threatened, or a  | ||
 reasonably
potential danger to the safety of employees,  | ||
 students, staff, the public, or
public
property.
 | ||
  (9) Student disciplinary cases.
 | ||
  (10) The placement of individual students in special  | ||
 education
programs and other matters relating to  | ||
 individual students.
 | ||
  (11) Litigation, when an action against, affecting or  | ||
 on behalf of the
particular public body has been filed and  | ||
 is pending before a court or
administrative tribunal, or  | ||
 when the public body finds that an action is
probable or  | ||
 imminent, in which case the basis for the finding shall be
 | ||
 recorded and entered into the minutes of the closed  | ||
 meeting.
 | ||
  (12) The establishment of reserves or settlement of  | ||
 claims as provided
in the Local Governmental and  | ||
 Governmental Employees Tort Immunity Act, if
otherwise the  | ||
 disposition of a claim or potential claim might be
 | ||
 prejudiced, or the review or discussion of claims, loss or  | ||
 risk management
information, records, data, advice or  | ||
 communications from or with respect
to any insurer of the  | ||
 public body or any intergovernmental risk management
 | ||
 association or self insurance pool of which the public body  | ||
 is a member.
 | ||
  (13) Conciliation of complaints of discrimination in  | ||
 the sale or rental
of housing, when closed meetings are  | ||
 authorized by the law or ordinance
prescribing fair housing  | ||
 practices and creating a commission or
administrative  | ||
 agency for their enforcement.
 | ||
  (14) Informant sources, the hiring or assignment of  | ||
 undercover personnel
or equipment, or ongoing, prior or  | ||
 future criminal investigations, when
discussed by a public  | ||
 body with criminal investigatory responsibilities.
 | ||
  (15) Professional ethics or performance when  | ||
 considered by an advisory
body appointed to advise a  | ||
 licensing or regulatory agency on matters
germane to the  | ||
 advisory body's field of competence.
 | ||
  (16) Self evaluation, practices and procedures or  | ||
 professional ethics,
when meeting with a representative of  | ||
 a statewide association of which the
public body is a  | ||
 member.
 | ||
  (17) The recruitment, credentialing, discipline or  | ||
 formal peer review
of physicians or other
health care  | ||
 professionals for a hospital, or
other institution  | ||
 providing medical care, that is operated by the public  | ||
 body.
 | ||
  (18) Deliberations for decisions of the Prisoner  | ||
 Review Board.
 | ||
  (19) Review or discussion of applications received  | ||
 under the
Experimental Organ Transplantation Procedures  | ||
 Act.
 | ||
  (20) The classification and discussion of matters  | ||
 classified as
confidential or continued confidential by  | ||
 the State Government Suggestion Award
Board.
 | ||
  (21) Discussion of minutes of meetings lawfully closed  | ||
 under this Act,
whether for purposes of approval by the  | ||
 body of the minutes or semi-annual
review of the minutes as  | ||
 mandated by Section 2.06.
 | ||
  (22) Deliberations for decisions of the State
 | ||
 Emergency Medical Services Disciplinary
Review Board.
 | ||
  (23) The operation by a municipality of a municipal  | ||
 utility or the
operation of a
municipal power agency or  | ||
 municipal natural gas agency when the
discussion involves  | ||
 (i) contracts relating to the
purchase, sale, or delivery  | ||
 of electricity or natural gas or (ii) the results
or  | ||
 conclusions of load forecast studies.
 | ||
  (24) Meetings of a residential health care facility  | ||
 resident sexual
assault and death review
team or
the  | ||
 Executive
Council under the Abuse Prevention Review
Team  | ||
 Act.
 | ||
  (25) Meetings of an independent team of experts under  | ||
 Brian's Law.  | ||
  (26) Meetings of a mortality review team appointed  | ||
 under the Department of Juvenile Justice Mortality Review  | ||
 Team Act.  | ||
  (27) (Blank).  | ||
  (28) Correspondence and records (i) that may not be  | ||
 disclosed under Section 11-9 of the Public Aid Code or (ii)  | ||
 that pertain to appeals under Section 11-8 of the Public  | ||
 Aid Code.  | ||
  (29) Meetings between internal or external auditors  | ||
 and governmental audit committees, finance committees, and  | ||
 their equivalents, when the discussion involves internal  | ||
 control weaknesses, identification of potential fraud risk  | ||
 areas, known or suspected frauds, and fraud interviews  | ||
 conducted in accordance with generally accepted auditing  | ||
 standards of the United States of America. | ||
  (30) Those meetings or portions of meetings of a  | ||
 fatality review team or the Illinois Fatality Review Team  | ||
 Advisory Council during which a review of the death of an  | ||
 eligible adult in which abuse or neglect is suspected,  | ||
 alleged, or substantiated is conducted pursuant to Section  | ||
 15 of the Adult Protective Services Act.  | ||
  (31) Meetings and deliberations for decisions of the  | ||
 Concealed Carry Licensing Review Board under the Firearm  | ||
 Concealed Carry Act.  | ||
  (32) Meetings between the Regional Transportation  | ||
 Authority Board and its Service Boards when the discussion  | ||
 involves review by the Regional Transportation Authority  | ||
 Board of employment contracts under Section 28d of the  | ||
 Metropolitan Transit Authority Act and Sections 3A.18 and  | ||
 3B.26 of the Regional Transportation Authority Act. | ||
 (d) Definitions. For purposes of this Section:
 | ||
 "Employee" means a person employed by a public body whose  | ||
relationship
with the public body constitutes an  | ||
employer-employee relationship under
the usual common law  | ||
rules, and who is not an independent contractor.
 | ||
 "Public office" means a position created by or under the
 | ||
Constitution or laws of this State, the occupant of which is  | ||
charged with
the exercise of some portion of the sovereign  | ||
power of this State. The term
"public office" shall include  | ||
members of the public body, but it shall not
include  | ||
organizational positions filled by members thereof, whether
 | ||
established by law or by a public body itself, that exist to  | ||
assist the
body in the conduct of its business.
 | ||
 "Quasi-adjudicative body" means an administrative body  | ||
charged by law or
ordinance with the responsibility to conduct  | ||
hearings, receive evidence or
testimony and make  | ||
determinations based
thereon, but does not include
local  | ||
electoral boards when such bodies are considering petition  | ||
challenges.
 | ||
 (e) Final action. No final action may be taken at a closed  | ||
meeting.
Final action shall be preceded by a public recital of  | ||
the nature of the
matter being considered and other information  | ||
that will inform the
public of the business being conducted. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-318, eff. 1-1-12; 97-333, eff. 8-12-11;  | ||
97-452, eff. 8-19-11; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 97-876, eff.  | ||
8-1-12; 98-49, eff. 7-1-13; 98-63, eff. 7-9-13; 98-756, eff.  | ||
7-16-14; 98-1027, eff. 1-1-15; 98-1039, eff. 8-25-14; revised  | ||
10-1-14.)
 | ||
 Section 25. The Freedom of Information Act is amended by  | ||
changing Sections 2 and 7.5 as follows:
 | ||
 (5 ILCS 140/2) (from Ch. 116, par. 202)
 | ||
 Sec. 2. Definitions. As used in this Act:
 | ||
 (a) "Public body" means all legislative,
executive,  | ||
administrative, or advisory bodies of the State, state  | ||
universities
and colleges, counties, townships, cities,  | ||
villages, incorporated towns,
school districts and all other  | ||
municipal corporations,
boards, bureaus, committees, or  | ||
commissions of this State, any
subsidiary
bodies of any of the  | ||
foregoing including but not limited to committees and
 | ||
subcommittees thereof, and a School Finance Authority created  | ||
under
Article 1E of the School Code.
"Public body" does not  | ||
include a child death review team
or the Illinois Child Death  | ||
Review Teams
Executive Council
established under
the Child  | ||
Death Review Team Act, or a regional youth advisory board or  | ||
the Statewide Youth Advisory Board established under the  | ||
Department of Children and Family Services Statewide Youth  | ||
Advisory Board Act.
 | ||
 (b) "Person" means any individual, corporation,  | ||
partnership, firm,
organization
or association, acting  | ||
individually or as a group.
 | ||
 (c) "Public records" means all records, reports, forms,  | ||
writings, letters,
memoranda, books, papers, maps,  | ||
photographs, microfilms, cards, tapes,
recordings,
electronic  | ||
data processing records, electronic communications, recorded  | ||
information and all other
documentary
materials pertaining to  | ||
the transaction of public business, regardless of physical form  | ||
or characteristics, having been
prepared by or for, or having  | ||
been or being used by, received by, in the possession of, or  | ||
under the
control
of
any public body. | ||
 (c-5) "Private information" means unique identifiers,  | ||
including a person's social security number, driver's license  | ||
number, employee identification number, biometric identifiers,  | ||
personal financial information, passwords or other access  | ||
codes, medical records, home or personal telephone numbers, and  | ||
personal email addresses. Private information also includes  | ||
home address and personal license plates, except as otherwise  | ||
provided by law or when compiled without possibility of  | ||
attribution to any person.  | ||
 (c-10) "Commercial purpose" means the use of any part of a  | ||
public record or records, or information derived from public  | ||
records, in any form for sale, resale, or solicitation or  | ||
advertisement for sales or services. For purposes of this  | ||
definition, requests made by news media and non-profit,  | ||
scientific, or academic organizations shall not be considered  | ||
to be made for a "commercial purpose" when the principal  | ||
purpose of the request is (i) to access and disseminate  | ||
information concerning news and current or passing events, (ii)  | ||
for articles of opinion or features of interest to the public,  | ||
or (iii) for the purpose of academic, scientific, or public  | ||
research or education.
 | ||
 (d) "Copying" means the reproduction of any public record  | ||
by means of any
photographic, electronic, mechanical or other  | ||
process, device or means now known or hereafter developed and  | ||
available to the public body.
 | ||
 (e) "Head of the public body" means the president, mayor,  | ||
chairman,
presiding
officer, director, superintendent,  | ||
manager, supervisor or individual otherwise
holding primary  | ||
executive and administrative authority for the public
body, or  | ||
such person's duly authorized designee.
 | ||
 (f) "News media" means a newspaper or other periodical  | ||
issued at regular
intervals whether in print or electronic  | ||
format, a news service whether
in print or electronic format, a  | ||
radio
station, a television station, a television network, a  | ||
community
antenna television service, or a person or  | ||
corporation engaged in making news
reels or other motion  | ||
picture news for public showing.
 | ||
 (g) "Recurrent requester", as used in Section 3.2 of this  | ||
Act, means a person that, in the 12 months immediately  | ||
preceding the request, has submitted to the same public body  | ||
(i) a minimum of 50 requests for records, (ii) a minimum of 15  | ||
requests for records within a 30-day period, or (iii) a minimum  | ||
of 7 requests for records within a 7-day period. For purposes  | ||
of this definition, requests made by news media and non-profit,  | ||
scientific, or academic organizations shall not be considered  | ||
in calculating the number of requests made in the time periods  | ||
in this definition when the principal purpose of the requests  | ||
is (i) to access and disseminate information concerning news  | ||
and current or passing events, (ii) for articles of opinion or  | ||
features of interest to the public, or (iii) for the purpose of  | ||
academic, scientific, or public research or education.  | ||
 For the purposes of this subsection (g), "request" means a  | ||
written document (or oral request, if the public body chooses  | ||
to honor oral requests) that is submitted to a public body via  | ||
personal delivery, mail, telefax, electronic mail, or other  | ||
means available to the public body and that identifies the  | ||
particular public record the requester seeks. One request may  | ||
identify multiple records to be inspected or copied.  | ||
 (h) "Voluminous request" means a request that: (i) includes  | ||
more than 5 individual requests for more than 5 different  | ||
categories of records or a combination of individual requests  | ||
that total requests for more than 5 different categories of  | ||
records in a period of 20 business days; or (ii) requires the  | ||
compilation of more than 500 letter or legal-sized pages of  | ||
public records unless a single requested record exceeds 500  | ||
pages. "Single requested record" may include, but is not  | ||
limited to, one report, form, e-mail, letter, memorandum, book,  | ||
map, microfilm, tape, or recording. | ||
 "Voluminous request" does not include a request made by  | ||
news media and non-profit, scientific, or academic  | ||
organizations if the principal purpose of the request is: (1)  | ||
to access and disseminate information concerning news and  | ||
current or passing events; (2) for articles of opinion or  | ||
features of interest to the public; or (3) for the purpose of  | ||
academic, scientific, or public research or education. | ||
 For the purposes of this subsection (h), "request" means a  | ||
written document, or oral request, if the public body chooses  | ||
to honor oral requests, that is submitted to a public body via  | ||
personal delivery, mail, telefax, electronic mail, or other  | ||
means available to the public body and that identifies the  | ||
particular public record or records the requester seeks. One  | ||
request may identify multiple individual records to be  | ||
inspected or copied.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-579, eff. 8-26-11; 98-806, eff. 1-1-15;  | ||
98-1129, eff. 12-3-14; revised 12-19-14.)
 | ||
 (5 ILCS 140/7.5) | ||
 Sec. 7.5. Statutory exemptions Exemptions. To the extent  | ||
provided for by the statutes referenced below, the following  | ||
shall be exempt from inspection and copying: | ||
  (a) All information determined to be confidential  | ||
 under Section 4002 of the Technology Advancement and  | ||
 Development Act. | ||
  (b) Library circulation and order records identifying  | ||
 library users with specific materials under the Library  | ||
 Records Confidentiality Act. | ||
  (c) Applications, related documents, and medical  | ||
 records received by the Experimental Organ Transplantation  | ||
 Procedures Board and any and all documents or other records  | ||
 prepared by the Experimental Organ Transplantation  | ||
 Procedures Board or its staff relating to applications it  | ||
 has received. | ||
  (d) Information and records held by the Department of  | ||
 Public Health and its authorized representatives relating  | ||
 to known or suspected cases of sexually transmissible  | ||
 disease or any information the disclosure of which is  | ||
 restricted under the Illinois Sexually Transmissible  | ||
 Disease Control Act. | ||
  (e) Information the disclosure of which is exempted  | ||
 under Section 30 of the Radon Industry Licensing Act. | ||
  (f) Firm performance evaluations under Section 55 of  | ||
 the Architectural, Engineering, and Land Surveying  | ||
 Qualifications Based Selection Act. | ||
  (g) Information the disclosure of which is restricted  | ||
 and exempted under Section 50 of the Illinois Prepaid  | ||
 Tuition Act. | ||
  (h) Information the disclosure of which is exempted  | ||
 under the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act, and  | ||
 records of any lawfully created State or local inspector  | ||
 general's office that would be exempt if created or  | ||
 obtained by an Executive Inspector General's office under  | ||
 that Act. | ||
  (i) Information contained in a local emergency energy  | ||
 plan submitted to a municipality in accordance with a local  | ||
 emergency energy plan ordinance that is adopted under  | ||
 Section 11-21.5-5 of the Illinois Municipal Code. | ||
  (j) Information and data concerning the distribution  | ||
 of surcharge moneys collected and remitted by wireless  | ||
 carriers under the Wireless Emergency Telephone Safety  | ||
 Act. | ||
  (k) Law enforcement officer identification information  | ||
 or driver identification information compiled by a law  | ||
 enforcement agency or the Department of Transportation  | ||
 under Section 11-212 of the Illinois Vehicle Code. | ||
  (l) Records and information provided to a residential  | ||
 health care facility resident sexual assault and death  | ||
 review team or the Executive Council under the Abuse  | ||
 Prevention Review Team Act. | ||
  (m) Information provided to the predatory lending  | ||
 database created pursuant to Article 3 of the Residential  | ||
 Real Property Disclosure Act, except to the extent  | ||
 authorized under that Article. | ||
  (n) Defense budgets and petitions for certification of  | ||
 compensation and expenses for court appointed trial  | ||
 counsel as provided under Sections 10 and 15 of the Capital  | ||
 Crimes Litigation Act. This subsection (n) shall apply  | ||
 until the conclusion of the trial of the case, even if the  | ||
 prosecution chooses not to pursue the death penalty prior  | ||
 to trial or sentencing. | ||
  (o) Information that is prohibited from being  | ||
 disclosed under Section 4 of the Illinois Health and  | ||
 Hazardous Substances Registry Act. | ||
  (p) Security portions of system safety program plans,  | ||
 investigation reports, surveys, schedules, lists, data, or  | ||
 information compiled, collected, or prepared by or for the  | ||
 Regional Transportation Authority under Section 2.11 of  | ||
 the Regional Transportation Authority Act or the St. Clair  | ||
 County Transit District under the Bi-State Transit Safety  | ||
 Act.  | ||
  (q) Information prohibited from being disclosed by the  | ||
 Personnel Records Review Act.  | ||
  (r) Information prohibited from being disclosed by the  | ||
 Illinois School Student Records Act.  | ||
  (s) Information the disclosure of which is restricted  | ||
 under Section 5-108 of the Public Utilities Act. 
 | ||
  (t) All identified or deidentified health information  | ||
 in the form of health data or medical records contained in,  | ||
 stored in, submitted to, transferred by, or released from  | ||
 the Illinois Health Information Exchange, and identified  | ||
 or deidentified health information in the form of health  | ||
 data and medical records of the Illinois Health Information  | ||
 Exchange in the possession of the Illinois Health  | ||
 Information Exchange Authority due to its administration  | ||
 of the Illinois Health Information Exchange. The terms  | ||
 "identified" and "deidentified" shall be given the same  | ||
 meaning as in the Health Insurance Accountability and  | ||
 Portability Act of 1996, Public Law 104-191, or any  | ||
 subsequent amendments thereto, and any regulations  | ||
 promulgated thereunder.  | ||
  (u) Records and information provided to an independent  | ||
 team of experts under Brian's Law.  | ||
  (v) Names and information of people who have applied  | ||
 for or received Firearm Owner's Identification Cards under  | ||
 the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act or applied for  | ||
 or received a concealed carry license under the Firearm  | ||
 Concealed Carry Act, unless otherwise authorized by the  | ||
 Firearm Concealed Carry Act; and databases under the  | ||
 Firearm Concealed Carry Act, records of the Concealed Carry  | ||
 Licensing Review Board under the Firearm Concealed Carry  | ||
 Act, and law enforcement agency objections under the  | ||
 Firearm Concealed Carry Act.  | ||
  (w) Personally identifiable information which is  | ||
 exempted from disclosure under subsection (g) of Section  | ||
 19.1 of the Toll Highway Act. | ||
  (x) Information which is exempted from disclosure  | ||
 under Section 5-1014.3 of the Counties Code or Section  | ||
 8-11-21 of the Illinois Municipal Code.  | ||
  (y) Confidential information under the Adult  | ||
 Protective Services Act and its predecessor enabling  | ||
 statute, the Elder Abuse and Neglect Act, including  | ||
 information about the identity and administrative finding  | ||
 against any caregiver of a verified and substantiated  | ||
 decision of abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation of an  | ||
 eligible adult maintained in the Registry established  | ||
 under Section 7.5 of the Adult Protective Services Act.  | ||
  (z) Records and information provided to a fatality  | ||
 review team or the Illinois Fatality Review Team Advisory  | ||
 Council under Section 15 of the Adult Protective Services  | ||
 Act.  | ||
  (aa) Information which is exempted from disclosure  | ||
 under Section 2.37 of the Wildlife Code.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-80, eff. 7-5-11; 97-333, eff. 8-12-11; 97-342,  | ||
eff. 8-12-11; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 97-976, eff. 1-1-13; 98-49,  | ||
eff. 7-1-13; 98-63, eff. 7-9-13; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14; 98-1039,  | ||
eff. 8-25-14; 98-1045, eff. 8-25-14; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 Section 30. The State Records Act is amended by changing  | ||
Section 15b as follows:
 | ||
 (5 ILCS 160/15b) (from Ch. 116, par. 43.18b)
 | ||
 Sec. 15b. The head of each agency shall:
 | ||
  (1) Determine what records are "essential" for  | ||
 emergency government
operation through consultation with  | ||
 all branches of government, State
agencies, and with the  | ||
 State Civil Defense Agency.
 | ||
  (2) Determine what records are "essential" for  | ||
 post-emergency government
operations and provide for their  | ||
 protection and preservation.
 | ||
  (3) Establish the manner in which essential records for  | ||
 emergency and
post-emergency government operations shall  | ||
 be preserved to ensure insure emergency
usability.
 | ||
  (4) Establish and maintain an essential
records  | ||
 preservation program.
 | ||
 The Secretary may provide for security storage or
 | ||
relocation of essential State
records in the event of an  | ||
emergency arising from enemy attack or natural
disaster.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 85-414; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 35. The Electronic Commerce Security Act is amended  | ||
by changing Section 10-115 as follows:
 | ||
 (5 ILCS 175/10-115)
 | ||
 Sec. 10-115. Commercially reasonable; reliance. 
 | ||
 (a) The commercial reasonableness of a security
procedure  | ||
is a question of law to be determined in light of the purposes  | ||
of the
procedure and the commercial
circumstances at the time  | ||
the
procedure was used, including the nature of the  | ||
transaction, sophistication of
the parties, volume of
similar  | ||
transactions engaged in by either or both of the parties,  | ||
availability
of alternatives offered to but
rejected by either  | ||
of the parties, cost of alternative procedures, and
procedures  | ||
in general use for similar
types of transactions.
 | ||
 (b) Whether reliance on a security procedure was reasonable  | ||
and in good
faith is to be
determined in light of all the  | ||
circumstances known to the relying party at the
time of the  | ||
reliance, having
due regard to the:
 | ||
  (1) the information that the relying party knew or  | ||
 should have known of at the
time of
reliance that would  | ||
 suggest that reliance was or was not reasonable;
 | ||
  (2) the value or importance of the electronic record,  | ||
 if known;
 | ||
  (3) any course of dealing between the relying party and  | ||
 the purported
sender and
the available indicia of  | ||
 reliability or unreliability apart from the security
 | ||
 procedure;
 | ||
  (4) any usage of trade, particularly trade conducted by  | ||
 trustworthy
systems or other
computer-based means; and
 | ||
  (5) whether the verification was performed with the  | ||
 assistance of an
independent
third party.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 90-759, eff. 7-1-99; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 40. The Employee Rights Violation Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 2 as follows:
 | ||
 (5 ILCS 285/2) (from Ch. 127, par. 63b100-2)
 | ||
 Sec. 2. 
For the purposes of this Act, the terms used herein  | ||
shall
have the meanings ascribed to them in this Section:
 | ||
 (a) "Policy making officer" means: (i) an employee of a  | ||
State agency who
is engaged predominantly in executive and  | ||
management functions and is
charged with the responsibility of  | ||
directing the effectuation of such
management policies and  | ||
practices; or (ii) an employee of a State agency
whose  | ||
principal work is substantially different from that of his
 | ||
subordinates and who has authority in the interest of the State  | ||
agency to
hire, transfer, suspend, lay off, recall, promote,  | ||
discharge, direct,
reward, or discipline employees, or to  | ||
adjust their grievances, or to
effectively recommend such  | ||
action, if the exercise of such authority is not
of a merely  | ||
routine or clerical nature, but requires the consistent use of
 | ||
independent judgment; or (iii) a Director, Assistant Director  | ||
or Deputy
Director of a State agency. ;
 | ||
 (b) "State agency" means the Departments of the Executive  | ||
Branch of
State government listed in Section 5-15 of the  | ||
Departments of State
Government Law (20 ILCS 5/5-15). ;
 | ||
 (c) "Director" includes the Secretary of Transportation.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 45. The Election Code is amended by changing  | ||
Sections 10-10 and 16-6.1 as follows:
 | ||
 (10 ILCS 5/10-10) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-10)
 | ||
 Sec. 10-10. Within 24 hours after the receipt of the  | ||
certificate of
nomination or nomination papers or proposed  | ||
question of public
policy, as the case may be, and the  | ||
objector's petition, the chairman
of the electoral board other  | ||
than the State Board of Elections shall
send a call by  | ||
registered or certified mail to each of the members of the
 | ||
electoral board, and to the objector who filed the objector's  | ||
petition, and
either to the candidate whose certificate of  | ||
nomination or nomination
papers are objected to or to the  | ||
principal proponent or attorney for
proponents of a question of  | ||
public policy, as the case may be, whose
petitions are objected  | ||
to, and shall also cause the sheriff of the county
or counties  | ||
in which such officers and persons reside to serve a copy of
 | ||
such call upon each of such officers and persons, which call  | ||
shall set out
the fact that the electoral board is required to  | ||
meet to hear and pass upon
the objections to nominations made  | ||
for the office, designating it, and
shall state the day, hour  | ||
and place at which the electoral board shall meet
for the  | ||
purpose, which place shall be in the
county court house in the  | ||
county in the case of the County Officers
Electoral Board, the  | ||
Municipal Officers Electoral Board, the Township
Officers  | ||
Electoral Board or the Education Officers Electoral Board,  | ||
except that the Municipal Officers Electoral Board, the  | ||
Township Officers Electoral Board, and the Education Officers  | ||
Electoral Board may meet at the location where the governing  | ||
body of the municipality, township, or community college  | ||
district, respectively, holds its regularly scheduled  | ||
meetings, if that location is available; provided that voter  | ||
records may be removed from the offices of an election  | ||
authority only at the discretion and under the supervision of  | ||
the election authority.
In
those cases where the State Board of  | ||
Elections is the electoral board
designated under Section 10-9,  | ||
the chairman of the State Board of Elections
shall, within 24  | ||
hours after the receipt of the certificate of nomination
or  | ||
nomination papers or petitions for a proposed amendment to  | ||
Article IV of
the Constitution or proposed statewide question  | ||
of public policy, send a
call by registered or certified mail  | ||
to the objector who files the
objector's petition, and either  | ||
to the candidate whose certificate of
nomination or nomination  | ||
papers are objected to or to the principal
proponent or  | ||
attorney for proponents of the proposed Constitutional
 | ||
amendment or statewide question of public policy and shall  | ||
state the day,
hour and place at which the electoral board  | ||
shall meet for the purpose,
which place may be in the Capitol  | ||
Building or in the principal or permanent
branch office of the  | ||
State Board. The day of the meeting shall not be less
than 3  | ||
nor more than 5 days after the receipt of the certificate of
 | ||
nomination or nomination papers and the objector's petition by  | ||
the chairman
of the electoral board.
 | ||
 The electoral board shall have the power to administer  | ||
oaths and to
subpoena and examine witnesses and, at the request  | ||
of either party and only upon a vote by a majority of its  | ||
members, may authorize the
chairman to issue subpoenas  | ||
requiring the attendance of witnesses and
subpoenas duces tecum  | ||
requiring the production of such books, papers,
records and  | ||
documents as may be evidence of any matter under inquiry
before  | ||
the electoral board, in the same manner as witnesses are
 | ||
subpoenaed in the Circuit Court.
 | ||
 Service of such subpoenas shall be made by any sheriff or  | ||
other
person in the same manner as in cases in such court and  | ||
the fees of such
sheriff shall be the same as is provided by  | ||
law, and shall be paid by
the objector or candidate who causes  | ||
the issuance of the subpoena. In
case any person so served  | ||
shall knowingly neglect or refuse to obey any
such subpoena, or  | ||
to testify, the electoral board shall at once file a
petition  | ||
in the circuit court of the county in which such hearing is to
 | ||
be heard, or has been attempted to be heard, setting forth the  | ||
facts, of
such knowing refusal or neglect, and accompanying the  | ||
petition with a
copy of the citation and the answer, if one has  | ||
been filed, together
with a copy of the subpoena and the return  | ||
of service thereon, and shall
apply for an order of court  | ||
requiring such person to attend and testify,
and forthwith  | ||
produce books and papers, before the electoral board. Any
 | ||
circuit court of the state, excluding the judge who is sitting  | ||
on the electoral
board, upon such showing shall order such  | ||
person to appear and testify,
and to forthwith produce such  | ||
books and papers, before the electoral board
at a place to be  | ||
fixed by the court. If such person shall knowingly fail
or  | ||
refuse to obey such order of the court without lawful excuse,  | ||
the court
shall punish him or her by fine and imprisonment, as  | ||
the nature of the case
may require and may be lawful in cases  | ||
of contempt of court.
 | ||
 The electoral board on the first day of its meeting shall  | ||
adopt rules
of procedure for the introduction of evidence and  | ||
the presentation of
arguments and may, in its discretion,  | ||
provide for the filing of briefs
by the parties to the  | ||
objection or by other interested persons.
 | ||
 In the event of a State Electoral Board hearing on  | ||
objections to a
petition for an amendment to Article IV of the  | ||
Constitution
pursuant to Section 3 of Article XIV of the  | ||
Constitution, or to a
petition for a question of public policy  | ||
to be submitted to the
voters of the entire State, the  | ||
certificates of the county clerks and boards
of election  | ||
commissioners showing the results of the random sample of
 | ||
signatures on the petition shall be prima facie valid and  | ||
accurate, and
shall be presumed to establish the number of  | ||
valid and invalid
signatures on the petition sheets reviewed in  | ||
the random sample, as prescribed
in Section 28-11 and 28-12 of  | ||
this Code. Either party, however, may introduce
evidence at  | ||
such hearing to dispute the findings as to particular  | ||
signatures.
In addition to the foregoing, in the absence of  | ||
competent evidence presented
at such hearing by a party  | ||
substantially challenging the results of a random
sample, or  | ||
showing a different result obtained by an additional sample,
 | ||
this certificate of a county clerk or board of election  | ||
commissioners shall
be presumed to establish the ratio of valid  | ||
to invalid signatures within
the particular election  | ||
jurisdiction.
 | ||
 The electoral board shall take up the question as to  | ||
whether or not
the certificate of nomination or nomination  | ||
papers or petitions are in
proper form, and whether or not they  | ||
were filed within the time and
under the conditions required by  | ||
law, and whether or not they are the
genuine certificate of  | ||
nomination or nomination papers or petitions
which they purport  | ||
to be, and whether or not in the case of the
certificate of  | ||
nomination in question it represents accurately the
decision of  | ||
the caucus or convention issuing it, and in general shall
 | ||
decide whether or not the certificate of nomination or  | ||
nominating papers
or petitions on file are valid or whether the  | ||
objections thereto should
be sustained and the decision of a  | ||
majority of the electoral board shall
be final subject to  | ||
judicial review as provided in Section 10-10.1. The
electoral  | ||
board must state its findings in writing and must state in
 | ||
writing which objections, if any, it has sustained. A copy of  | ||
the decision shall be served upon the parties to the  | ||
proceedings in open proceedings before the electoral board. If  | ||
a party does not appear for receipt of the decision, the  | ||
decision shall be deemed to have been served on the absent  | ||
party on the date when a copy of the decision is personally  | ||
delivered or on the date when a copy of the decision is  | ||
deposited in the Unites States mail, in a sealed envelope or  | ||
package, with postage prepaid, addressed to each party affected  | ||
by the decision or to such party's attorney of record, if any,  | ||
at the address on record for such person in the files of the  | ||
electoral board. 
 | ||
 Upon the expiration of the period within which a proceeding  | ||
for
judicial review must be commenced under Section 10-10.1,  | ||
the electoral
board shall, unless a proceeding for judicial  | ||
review has been commenced
within such period, transmit, by  | ||
registered or certified mail, a
certified copy of its ruling,  | ||
together with the original certificate of
nomination or  | ||
nomination papers or petitions and the original objector's
 | ||
petition, to the officer or board with whom the certificate of
 | ||
nomination or nomination papers or petitions, as objected to,  | ||
were on
file, and such officer or board shall abide by and  | ||
comply with the
ruling so made to all intents and purposes.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-115, eff. 7-29-13; 98-691, eff. 7-1-14;  | ||
revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 (10 ILCS 5/16-6.1) (from Ch. 46, par. 16-6.1)
 | ||
 Sec. 16-6.1. 
In elections held pursuant to the provisions  | ||
of Section 12 of
Article VI of the Constitution relating to  | ||
retention of judges in office,
the form of the proposition to  | ||
be submitted for each candidate shall be
as provided in  | ||
paragraph (1) or (2), as the election authority may choose.
 | ||
  (1) The names of all persons seeking retention in the  | ||
 same office shall be
listed, in the order provided in this  | ||
 Section, with one proposition that reads
substantially as  | ||
 follows: "Shall each of the persons listed be retained
in  | ||
 office as (insert name of office and court)?".
To the right  | ||
 of each candidate's name must be places for the voter to  | ||
 mark
"Yes" or "No". If the list of candidates for retention  | ||
 in the same office
exceeds one page of the ballot, the  | ||
 proposition must appear on each page
upon which the list of  | ||
 candidates continues.
 | ||
  (2) The form of the proposition for each candidate  | ||
 shall be
substantially as follows:
 | ||
  -----------------------------------------------------
 | ||
 Shall ....... (insert name YES
 | ||
 of candidate) be retained in --------------
 | ||
 office as ..... (insert name NO
 | ||
 of office and Court)?
 | ||
  -----------------------------------------------------
 | ||
 The names of all candidates thus submitting their names for  | ||
retention in
office in any particular judicial district or  | ||
circuit shall appear on the
same ballot which shall be separate  | ||
from all other ballots voted on at the
general election.
 | ||
 Propositions on Supreme Court judges, if any are seeking  | ||
retention,
shall appear on the ballot in the first group, for  | ||
judges of the Appellate
Court in the second group immediately  | ||
under the first, and for circuit
judges in the last group. The  | ||
grouping of candidates for the same office
shall be preceded by  | ||
a heading describing the office and the court. If
there are two  | ||
or more candidates for each office, the names of such
 | ||
candidates in each group shall be listed in the order  | ||
determined as
follows: The name of the person with the greatest  | ||
length of time served in
the specified office of the specified  | ||
court shall be listed first in each
group. The rest of the  | ||
names shall be listed in the appropriate order based
on the  | ||
same seniority standard. If two or more candidates for each  | ||
office
have served identical periods of time in the specified  | ||
office, such
candidates shall be listed alphabetically at the  | ||
appropriate place in the
order of names based on seniority in  | ||
the office as described. Circuit
judges shall be credited for  | ||
the purposes of this section with service as
associate judges  | ||
prior to July 1, 1971 and with service on any court the
judges  | ||
of which were made associate judges on January 1, 1964 by  | ||
virtue of
Paragraph 4, subparagraphs (c) and (d) of the  | ||
Schedule to Article VI of the
former Illinois Constitution.
 | ||
 At the top of the ballot on the same side as the  | ||
propositions on the
candidates are listed shall be printed an  | ||
explanation to read substantially
as follows: "Vote on the  | ||
proposition with respect to all or any of the
judges listed on  | ||
this ballot. No judge listed is running against any other
 | ||
judge. The sole question is whether each judge shall be  | ||
retained in his or her
present office".
 | ||
 Such separate ballot shall be printed on paper of  | ||
sufficient size so
that when folded once it shall be large  | ||
enough to contain the following
words, which shall be printed  | ||
on the back, "Ballot for judicial candidates
seeking retention  | ||
in office". Such ballot shall be handed to the elector at
the  | ||
same time as the ballot containing the names of other  | ||
candidates for
the general election and shall be returned  | ||
therewith by the elector to the
proper officer in the manner  | ||
designated by this Act. All provisions of this
Act relating to  | ||
ballots shall apply to such separate ballot, except as
 | ||
otherwise specifically provided in this section. Such separate  | ||
ballot shall
be printed upon paper of a green color. No other  | ||
ballot at the same
election shall be green in color.
 | ||
 In precincts in which voting machines are used, the special  | ||
ballot
containing the propositions on the retention of judges  | ||
may be placed on the
voting machines if such voting machines  | ||
permit the casting of votes on such
propositions.
 | ||
 An electronic voting system authorized by Article 24A may  | ||
be used in
voting and tabulating the judicial retention  | ||
ballots. When an electronic
voting system is used which  | ||
utilizes a ballot label booklet and ballot
card, there shall be  | ||
used in the label booklet a separate ballot label page
or pages  | ||
as required for such proposition, which page or pages for such
 | ||
proposition shall be of a green color separate and distinct  | ||
from the ballot
label page or pages used for any other  | ||
proposition or candidates.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 92-178, eff. 1-1-02; 92-465, eff. 1-1-02; revised  | ||
11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 50. The State Comptroller Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 26 as follows:
 | ||
 (15 ILCS 405/26) | ||
 Sec. 26. Illinois Gives Initiative.  | ||
 (a) The Illinois Gives Initiative is hereby created to  | ||
provide a mechanism whereby an employee or annuitant may  | ||
authorize the withholding of a portion of his or her salary,  | ||
wages, or annuity for payment to Illinois chapters of the  | ||
American Red Cross whose territories include areas affected by  | ||
a declaration of disaster issued in accordance with Section 7  | ||
of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act. | ||
 (b) The initiative shall be administered by the State  | ||
Comptroller, who is authorized to: | ||
  (1) develop an electronic mechanism whereby an  | ||
 employee or annuitant may register with the Office of the  | ||
 Comptroller for the withholding to be deducted from the  | ||
 next available scheduled pay period; | ||
  (2) develop policies and procedures necessary for the  | ||
 efficient transmission of the notification of the  | ||
 withholding under this Section to the employee's Payroll  | ||
 Officer or the annuitant's Retirement Agency; and | ||
  (3) develop policies and procedures necessary for the  | ||
 efficient distribution of the withholdings under this  | ||
 Section to designated Illinois chapters of the American Red  | ||
 Cross.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-700, eff. 7-7-14; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 55. The Illinois Act on the Aging is amended by  | ||
changing Section 8.09 as follows:
 | ||
 (20 ILCS 105/8.09) | ||
 Sec. 8.09. Unlicensed or uncertified facilities. No public  | ||
official, agent, or employee may place any person in or with,  | ||
or recommend that any person be placed in or with, or directly  | ||
or indirectly cause any person to be placed in or with any  | ||
unlicensed or uncertified: (i) board and care home as defined  | ||
in the Board and Care Home Act and licensed under the Assisted  | ||
Living and Shared Housing Act; (ii) assisted living or shared  | ||
housing establishment as defined in the Assisted Living and  | ||
Shared Housing Act; (iii) facility licensed under the Nursing  | ||
Home Care Act; (iv) supportive living facility as described in  | ||
Section 5-5.01a of the Illinois Public Aid Code; (v)  | ||
free-standing hospice residence licensed under the Hospice  | ||
Program Licensing Act; or (vi) home services agency licensed  | ||
under the Home Health, Home Services, and Home Nursing Agency  | ||
Licensing Act if licensure or certification is required. No  | ||
public official, agent, or employee may place the name of such  | ||
a facility on a list of facilities to be circulated to the  | ||
public, unless the facility is licensed or certified. Use of  | ||
the Department of Public Health's annual list of licensed  | ||
facilities shall satisfy compliance with this Section for all  | ||
facilities licensed or certified by the Illinois Department of  | ||
Public Health.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 96-1318, eff. 7-27-10; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 60. The Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse and  | ||
Dependency Act is amended by changing Section 40-5 as follows:
 | ||
 (20 ILCS 301/40-5) | ||
 Sec. 40-5. Election of treatment. An addict or alcoholic  | ||
who is charged
with or convicted of a crime or any other person  | ||
charged with or convicted of a misdemeanor violation of the Use  | ||
of Intoxicating Compounds Act and who has not been previously  | ||
convicted of a violation of that Act may elect treatment under  | ||
the supervision of a
licensed program designated by the  | ||
Department, referred to in this Article
as "designated  | ||
program", unless: | ||
  (1) the crime is a crime of violence; | ||
  (2) the crime is a violation of Section 401(a), 401(b),  | ||
 401(c) where the
person electing treatment has been  | ||
 previously convicted of a non-probationable
felony or the  | ||
 violation is non-probationable, 401(d) where the violation  | ||
 is
non-probationable, 401.1, 402(a), 405 or 407 of the  | ||
 Illinois Controlled
Substances
Act, or Section 12-7.3 of  | ||
 the Criminal Code of 2012, or Section 4(d), 4(e), 4(f),  | ||
 4(g), 5(d), 5(e), 5(f), 5(g), 5.1, 7
or 9 of the Cannabis  | ||
 Control Act or Section 15, 20, 55, 60(b)(3), 60(b)(4),  | ||
 60(b)(5), 60(b)(6), or 65 of the Methamphetamine Control  | ||
 and Community Protection Act or is otherwise ineligible for  | ||
 probation under Section 70 of the Methamphetamine Control  | ||
 and Community Protection Act; | ||
  (3) the person has a record of 2 or more convictions of  | ||
 a crime of
violence; | ||
  (4) other criminal proceedings alleging commission of  | ||
 a felony are pending
against the person; | ||
  (5) the person is on probation or parole and the  | ||
 appropriate parole or
probation authority does not consent  | ||
 to that election; | ||
  (6) the person elected and was admitted to a designated  | ||
 program on 2 prior
occasions within any consecutive 2-year  | ||
 period; | ||
  (7) the person has been convicted of residential  | ||
 burglary and has a record
of one or more felony  | ||
 convictions; | ||
  (8) the crime is a violation of Section 11-501 of the  | ||
 Illinois Vehicle
Code or a similar provision of a local  | ||
 ordinance; or | ||
  (9) the crime is a reckless homicide or a reckless  | ||
 homicide of an unborn
child, as defined in Section 9-3 or  | ||
 9-3.2 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of  | ||
 2012, in
which the cause of death consists of the driving  | ||
 of a motor vehicle by a person
under the influence of  | ||
 alcohol or any other drug or drugs at the time of the
 | ||
 violation. | ||
 Nothing in this Section shall preclude an individual who is  | ||
charged with or convicted of a crime that is a violation of  | ||
Section 60(b)(1) or 60(b)(2) of the Methamphetamine Control and  | ||
Community Protection Act, and who is otherwise eligible to make  | ||
the election provided for under this Section, from being  | ||
eligible to make an election for treatment as a condition of  | ||
probation as provided for under this Article. | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-889, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13;  | ||
98-896, eff. 1-1-15; 98-1124, eff. 8-26-14; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 Section 65. The Children and Family Services Act is amended  | ||
by changing Section 8 as follows:
 | ||
 (20 ILCS 505/8) (from Ch. 23, par. 5008)
 | ||
 Sec. 8. Scholarships and fee waivers. Each year the  | ||
Department shall select a minimum of 53 students (at least 4 of  | ||
whom shall be children of veterans) to receive scholarships and  | ||
fee waivers which will enable them to attend and complete their  | ||
post-secondary education at a community college, university,  | ||
or college. Youth shall be selected from among the youth for  | ||
whom the Department has court-ordered legal responsibility,  | ||
youth who aged out of care at age 18 or older, or youth  | ||
formerly under care
who have been adopted or who have been  | ||
placed in private guardianship. Recipients must have earned a  | ||
high school diploma from an accredited institution or , a high  | ||
school equivalency General Education Development certificate  | ||
or diploma, or have met the State criteria for high school  | ||
graduation before the start of the school year for which they  | ||
are applying for the scholarship and waiver. high school  | ||
equivalency Scholarships and fee waivers shall be available to  | ||
students for at least 5 years, provided they are continuing to  | ||
work toward graduation. Unused scholarship dollars and fee  | ||
waivers shall be reallocated to new recipients. No later than  | ||
January 1, 2015, the Department shall promulgate rules  | ||
identifying the criteria for "continuing to work toward  | ||
graduation", and for reallocating unused scholarships and fee  | ||
waivers. Selection shall be made on the
basis of several  | ||
factors, including, but not limited to, scholastic record,  | ||
aptitude, and general interest in higher
education. The  | ||
selection committee shall include at least 2 individuals  | ||
formerly under the care of the Department who have completed  | ||
their post-secondary education. In accordance with this Act,  | ||
tuition scholarships and fee waivers
shall be available to such  | ||
students at any university or college maintained by
the State  | ||
of Illinois. The Department shall provide maintenance and  | ||
school
expenses, except tuition and fees, during the academic  | ||
years to supplement
the students' earnings or other resources  | ||
so long as they consistently
maintain scholastic records which  | ||
are acceptable to their schools and to
the Department. Students  | ||
may attend other colleges and universities, if
scholarships are  | ||
awarded them, and receive the same benefits for maintenance
and  | ||
other expenses as those students attending any Illinois State  | ||
community
college, university, or college under this Section.  | ||
Beginning with recipients receiving scholarships and waivers  | ||
in August 2014, the Department shall collect data and report  | ||
annually to the General Assembly on measures of success,  | ||
including (i) the number of youth applying for and receiving  | ||
scholarships, (ii) the percentage of scholarship recipients  | ||
who complete their college or university degree within 5 years,  | ||
(iii) the average length of time it takes for scholarship  | ||
recipients to complete their college or university degree, (iv)  | ||
the reasons that scholarship recipients are discharged or fail  | ||
to complete their college or university degree, (v) when  | ||
available, youths' outcomes 5 years and 10 years after being  | ||
awarded the scholarships, and (vi) budget allocations for  | ||
maintenance and school expenses incurred by the Department. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-799, eff. 7-13-12; 98-718, eff. 1-1-15;  | ||
98-805, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 Section 70. The High Speed Internet Services and  | ||
Information Technology Act is amended by changing Section 30 as  | ||
follows:
 | ||
 (20 ILCS 661/30)
 | ||
 Sec. 30. High Speed Internet Services and Information  | ||
Technology Fund.  | ||
 (a) There is created in the State treasury a special fund  | ||
to be known as the High Speed Internet Services and Information  | ||
Technology Fund, to be used, subject to appropriation, by the  | ||
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity Development  | ||
for purposes of providing grants to the nonprofit organization  | ||
enlisted under this Act. | ||
 (b) On the effective date of this Act, $4,000,000 in the  | ||
Digital Divide Elimination Infrastructure Fund shall be  | ||
transferred to the High Speed Internet Services and Information  | ||
Technology Fund. Nothing contained in this subsection (b) shall  | ||
affect the validity of grants issued with moneys from the  | ||
Digital Divide Elimination Infrastructure Fund before June 30,  | ||
2007.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 95-684, eff. 10-19-07; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 75. The Department of Human Services Act is amended  | ||
by changing Section 10-66 as follows:
 | ||
 (20 ILCS 1305/10-66) | ||
 Sec. 10-66. Rate reductions. Rates for medical services  | ||
purchased by the Divisions of Alcoholism Alcohol and Substance  | ||
Abuse, Community Health and Prevention, Developmental  | ||
Disabilities, Mental Health, or Rehabilitation Services within  | ||
the Department of Human Services shall not be reduced below the  | ||
rates calculated on April 1, 2011 unless the Department of  | ||
Human Services promulgates rules and rules are implemented  | ||
authorizing rate reductions.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-74, eff. 6-30-11; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 80. The Mental Health and Developmental  | ||
Disabilities Administrative Act is amended by changing  | ||
Sections 15.4 and 18.6 as follows:
 | ||
 (20 ILCS 1705/15.4)
 | ||
 Sec. 15.4. Authorization for nursing delegation to permit  | ||
direct care
staff to
administer medications. | ||
 (a) This Section applies to (i) all programs for persons
 | ||
with a
developmental disability in settings of 16 persons or  | ||
fewer that are funded or
licensed by the Department of Human
 | ||
Services and that distribute or administer medications and (ii)  | ||
all
intermediate care
facilities for the developmentally  | ||
disabled with 16 beds or fewer that are
licensed by the
 | ||
Department of Public Health. The Department of Human Services  | ||
shall develop a
training program for authorized direct care  | ||
staff to administer
medications under the
supervision and  | ||
monitoring of a registered professional nurse.
This training  | ||
program shall be developed in consultation with professional
 | ||
associations representing (i) physicians licensed to practice  | ||
medicine in all
its branches, (ii) registered professional  | ||
nurses, and (iii) pharmacists.
 | ||
 (b) For the purposes of this Section:
 | ||
 "Authorized direct care staff" means non-licensed persons  | ||
who have
successfully completed a medication administration  | ||
training program
approved by the Department of Human Services  | ||
and conducted by a nurse-trainer.
This authorization is  | ||
specific to an individual receiving service in
a
specific  | ||
agency and does not transfer to another agency.
 | ||
 "Medications" means oral and topical medications, insulin  | ||
in an injectable form, oxygen, epinephrine auto-injectors, and  | ||
vaginal and rectal creams and suppositories. "Oral" includes  | ||
inhalants and medications administered through enteral tubes,  | ||
utilizing aseptic technique. "Topical" includes eye, ear, and  | ||
nasal medications. Any controlled substances must be packaged  | ||
specifically for an identified individual. | ||
 "Insulin in an injectable form" means a subcutaneous  | ||
injection via an insulin pen pre-filled by the manufacturer.  | ||
Authorized direct care staff may administer insulin, as ordered  | ||
by a physician, advanced practice nurse, or physician  | ||
assistant, if: (i) the staff has successfully completed a  | ||
Department-approved advanced training program specific to  | ||
insulin administration developed in consultation with  | ||
professional associations listed in subsection (a) of this  | ||
Section, and (ii) the staff consults with the registered nurse,  | ||
prior to administration, of any insulin dose that is determined  | ||
based on a blood glucose test result. The authorized direct  | ||
care staff shall not: (i) calculate the insulin dosage needed  | ||
when the dose is dependent upon a blood glucose test result, or  | ||
(ii) administer insulin to individuals who require blood  | ||
glucose monitoring greater than 3 times daily, unless directed  | ||
to do so by the registered nurse.  | ||
 "Nurse-trainer training program" means a standardized,  | ||
competency-based
medication administration train-the-trainer  | ||
program provided by the
Department of Human Services and  | ||
conducted by a Department of Human
Services master  | ||
nurse-trainer for the purpose of training nurse-trainers to
 | ||
train persons employed or under contract to provide direct care  | ||
or
treatment to individuals receiving services to administer
 | ||
medications and provide self-administration of medication  | ||
training to
individuals under the supervision and monitoring of  | ||
the nurse-trainer. The
program incorporates adult learning  | ||
styles, teaching strategies, classroom
management, and a  | ||
curriculum overview, including the ethical and legal
aspects of  | ||
supervising those administering medications.
 | ||
 "Self-administration of medications" means an individual  | ||
administers
his or her own medications. To be considered  | ||
capable to self-administer
their own medication, individuals  | ||
must, at a minimum, be able to identify
their medication by  | ||
size, shape, or color, know when they should take
the  | ||
medication, and know the amount of medication to be taken each  | ||
time.
 | ||
 "Training program" means a standardized medication  | ||
administration
training program approved by the Department of  | ||
Human Services and
conducted by a registered professional nurse  | ||
for the purpose of training
persons employed or under contract  | ||
to provide direct care or treatment to
individuals receiving  | ||
services to administer medications
and provide  | ||
self-administration of medication training to individuals  | ||
under
the delegation and supervision of a nurse-trainer. The  | ||
program incorporates
adult learning styles, teaching  | ||
strategies, classroom management,
curriculum overview,  | ||
including ethical-legal aspects, and standardized
 | ||
competency-based evaluations on administration of medications  | ||
and
self-administration of medication training programs.
 | ||
 (c) Training and authorization of non-licensed direct care  | ||
staff by
nurse-trainers must meet the requirements of this  | ||
subsection.
 | ||
  (1) Prior to training non-licensed direct care staff to  | ||
 administer
medication, the nurse-trainer shall perform the  | ||
 following for each
individual to whom medication will be  | ||
 administered by non-licensed
direct care staff:
 | ||
   (A) An assessment of the individual's health  | ||
 history and
physical and mental status.
 | ||
   (B) An evaluation of the medications prescribed.
 | ||
  (2) Non-licensed authorized direct care staff shall  | ||
 meet the
following criteria:
 | ||
   (A) Be 18 years of age or older.
 | ||
   (B) Have completed high school or have a high  | ||
 school equivalency certificate.
 | ||
   (C) Have demonstrated functional literacy.
 | ||
   (D) Have satisfactorily completed the Health and  | ||
 Safety
component of a Department of Human Services  | ||
 authorized
direct care staff training program.
 | ||
   (E) Have successfully completed the training  | ||
 program,
pass the written portion of the comprehensive  | ||
 exam, and score
100% on the competency-based  | ||
 assessment specific to the
individual and his or her  | ||
 medications.
 | ||
   (F) Have received additional competency-based  | ||
 assessment
by the nurse-trainer as deemed necessary by  | ||
 the nurse-trainer
whenever a change of medication  | ||
 occurs or a new individual
that requires medication  | ||
 administration enters the program.
 | ||
  (3) Authorized direct care staff shall be re-evaluated  | ||
 by a
nurse-trainer at least annually or more frequently at  | ||
 the discretion of
the registered professional nurse. Any  | ||
 necessary retraining shall be
to the extent that is  | ||
 necessary to ensure competency of the authorized
direct  | ||
 care staff to administer medication.
 | ||
  (4) Authorization of direct care staff to administer  | ||
 medication
shall be revoked if, in the opinion of the  | ||
 registered professional nurse,
the authorized direct care  | ||
 staff is no longer competent to administer
medication.
 | ||
  (5) The registered professional nurse shall assess an
 | ||
 individual's health status at least annually or more  | ||
 frequently at the
discretion of the registered  | ||
 professional nurse.
 | ||
 (d) Medication self-administration shall meet the  | ||
following
requirements:
 | ||
  (1) As part of the normalization process, in order for  | ||
 each
individual to attain the highest possible level of  | ||
 independent
functioning, all individuals shall be  | ||
 permitted to participate in their
total health care  | ||
 program. This program shall include, but not be
limited to,  | ||
 individual training in preventive health and  | ||
 self-medication
procedures.
 | ||
   (A) Every program shall adopt written policies and
 | ||
 procedures for assisting individuals in obtaining  | ||
 preventative
health and self-medication skills in  | ||
 consultation with a
registered professional nurse,  | ||
 advanced practice nurse,
physician assistant, or  | ||
 physician licensed to practice medicine
in all its  | ||
 branches.
 | ||
   (B) Individuals shall be evaluated to determine  | ||
 their
ability to self-medicate by the nurse-trainer  | ||
 through the use of
the Department's required,  | ||
 standardized screening and assessment
instruments.
 | ||
   (C) When the results of the screening and  | ||
 assessment
indicate an individual not to be capable to  | ||
 self-administer his or her
own medications, programs  | ||
 shall be developed in consultation
with the Community  | ||
 Support Team or Interdisciplinary
Team to provide  | ||
 individuals with self-medication
administration.
 | ||
  (2) Each individual shall be presumed to be competent  | ||
 to self-administer
medications if:
 | ||
   (A) authorized by an order of a physician licensed  | ||
 to
practice medicine in all its branches; and
 | ||
   (B) approved to self-administer medication by the
 | ||
 individual's Community Support Team or
 | ||
 Interdisciplinary Team, which includes a registered
 | ||
 professional nurse or an advanced practice nurse.
 | ||
 (e) Quality Assurance.
 | ||
  (1) A registered professional nurse, advanced practice  | ||
 nurse,
licensed practical nurse, physician licensed to  | ||
 practice medicine in all
its branches, physician  | ||
 assistant, or pharmacist shall review the
following for all  | ||
 individuals:
 | ||
   (A) Medication orders.
 | ||
   (B) Medication labels, including medications  | ||
 listed on
the medication administration record for  | ||
 persons who are not
self-medicating to ensure the  | ||
 labels match the orders issued by
the physician  | ||
 licensed to practice medicine in all its branches,
 | ||
 advanced practice nurse, or physician assistant.
 | ||
   (C) Medication administration records for persons  | ||
 who
are not self-medicating to ensure that the records  | ||
 are completed
appropriately for:
 | ||
    (i) medication administered as prescribed;
 | ||
    (ii) refusal by the individual; and
 | ||
    (iii) full signatures provided for all  | ||
 initials used.
 | ||
  (2) Reviews shall occur at least quarterly, but may be  | ||
 done
more frequently at the discretion of the registered  | ||
 professional nurse
or advanced practice nurse.
 | ||
  (3) A quality assurance review of medication errors and  | ||
 data
collection for the purpose of monitoring and  | ||
 recommending
corrective action shall be conducted within 7  | ||
 days and included in the
required annual review.
 | ||
 (f) Programs using authorized direct care
staff to  | ||
administer medications are responsible for documenting and  | ||
maintaining
records
on the training that is completed.
 | ||
 (g) The absence of this training program constitutes a  | ||
threat to the
public interest,
safety, and welfare and  | ||
necessitates emergency rulemaking by
the Departments of Human  | ||
Services and
Public Health
under Section 5-45
of
the
Illinois  | ||
Administrative Procedure Act.
 | ||
 (h) Direct care staff who fail to qualify for delegated  | ||
authority to
administer medications pursuant to the provisions  | ||
of this Section shall be
given
additional education and testing  | ||
to meet criteria for
delegation authority to administer  | ||
medications.
Any direct care staff person who fails to qualify  | ||
as an authorized direct care
staff
after initial training and  | ||
testing must within 3 months be given another
opportunity for  | ||
retraining and retesting. A direct care staff person who fails
 | ||
to
meet criteria for delegated authority to administer  | ||
medication, including, but
not limited to, failure of the  | ||
written test on 2 occasions shall be given
consideration for  | ||
shift transfer or reassignment, if possible. No employee
shall  | ||
be terminated for failure to qualify during the 3-month time  | ||
period
following initial testing. Refusal to complete training  | ||
and testing required
by this Section may be grounds for  | ||
immediate dismissal.
 | ||
 (i) No authorized direct care staff person delegated to  | ||
administer
medication shall be subject to suspension or  | ||
discharge for errors
resulting from the staff
person's acts or  | ||
omissions when performing the functions unless the staff
 | ||
person's actions or omissions constitute willful and wanton  | ||
conduct.
Nothing in this subsection is intended to supersede  | ||
paragraph (4) of subsection
(c).
 | ||
 (j) A registered professional nurse, advanced practice  | ||
nurse,
physician licensed to practice medicine in all its  | ||
branches, or physician
assistant shall be on
duty or
on call at  | ||
all times in any program covered by this Section.
 | ||
 (k) The employer shall be responsible for maintaining  | ||
liability insurance
for any program covered by this Section.
 | ||
 (l) Any direct care staff person who qualifies as  | ||
authorized direct care
staff pursuant to this Section shall be  | ||
granted consideration for a one-time
additional
salary  | ||
differential. The Department shall determine and provide the  | ||
necessary
funding for
the differential in the base. This  | ||
subsection (l) is inoperative on and after
June 30, 2000.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-718, eff. 1-1-15; 98-901, eff. 8-15-14;  | ||
revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 (20 ILCS 1705/18.6) | ||
 (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2019) | ||
 Sec. 18.6. Mental Health Services Strategic Planning Task  | ||
Force. | ||
 (a) Task Force. The Mental Health Services Strategic  | ||
Planning Task Force is created. | ||
 (b) Meeting. The Task Force shall be appointed and hold its  | ||
first meeting within 90 days after the effective date of this  | ||
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly. | ||
 (c) Composition. The Task Force shall be comprised of the  | ||
following members: | ||
  (1) Two members of the Senate appointed by the  | ||
 President of the Senate and 2 members of the Senate  | ||
 appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate. | ||
  (2) Two members of the House of Representatives  | ||
 appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives  | ||
 and 2 members of the House of Representatives appointed by  | ||
 the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives. | ||
  (3) One representative of the Division of Mental Health  | ||
 within the Department of Human Services. | ||
  (4) One representative of the Department of Healthcare  | ||
 and Family Services. | ||
  (5) One representative of the Bureau of Long Term Care  | ||
 within the Department of Public Health. | ||
  (6) One representative of the Illinois Children's  | ||
 Mental Health Partnership.  | ||
  (7) Six representatives of the mental health providers  | ||
 and community stakeholders selected from names submitted  | ||
 by associates representing the various types of providers. | ||
  (8) Three representatives of the consumer community  | ||
 including a primary consumer, secondary consumer, and a  | ||
 representative of a mental health consumer advocacy  | ||
 organization.  | ||
  (9) An individual from a union representing State  | ||
 employees providing services to persons with mental  | ||
 illness.  | ||
  (10) One academic specialist in mental health  | ||
 outcomes, research, and evidence-based practices.  | ||
 (d) Duty. The Task Force shall meet with the Office of the  | ||
Governor and the appropriate legislative committees on mental  | ||
health to develop a 5-year comprehensive strategic plan for the  | ||
State's mental health services. The plan shall address the  | ||
following topics: | ||
  (1) Provide sufficient home and community-based  | ||
 services to give consumers real options in care settings. | ||
  (2) Improve access to care. | ||
  (3) Reduce regulatory redundancy. | ||
  (4) Maintain financial viability for providers in a  | ||
 cost-effective manner to the State. | ||
  (5) Ensure care is effective, efficient, and  | ||
 appropriate regardless of the setting in which it is  | ||
 provided. | ||
  (6) Ensure quality of care in all care settings via the  | ||
 use of appropriate clinical outcomes. | ||
  (7) Ensure hospitalizations and institutional care,  | ||
 when necessary, is available to meet demand now and in the  | ||
 future. | ||
 (e) The Task Force shall work in conjunction with the  | ||
Department of Human Services' Division of Developmental  | ||
Disabilities to ensure effective treatment for those dually  | ||
diagnosed with both mental illness and developmental  | ||
disabilities. The Task Force shall also work in conjunction  | ||
with the Department of Human Services' Division of Alcoholism  | ||
Alcohol and Substance Abuse to ensure effective treatment for  | ||
those who are dually diagnosed with both mental illness as well  | ||
as substance abuse challenges. | ||
 (f) Compensation. Members of the Task Force shall not  | ||
receive compensation nor reimbursement for necessary expenses  | ||
incurred in performing the duties associated with the Task  | ||
Force. | ||
 (g) Reporting. The Task Force shall present its plan to the  | ||
Governor and the General Assembly no later than 18 months after  | ||
the effective date of the amendatory Act of the 97th General  | ||
Assembly. With its approval and authorization, and subject to  | ||
appropriation, the Task Force shall convene quarterly meetings  | ||
during the implementation of the 5-year strategic plan to  | ||
monitor progress, review outcomes, and make ongoing  | ||
recommendations. These ongoing recommendations shall be  | ||
presented to the Governor and the General Assembly for  | ||
feedback, suggestions, support, and approval. Within one year  | ||
after recommendations are presented to the Governor and the  | ||
General Assembly, the General Assembly shall vote on whether  | ||
the recommendations should become law. | ||
 (h) Administrative support. The Department of Human  | ||
Services shall provide administrative and staff support to the  | ||
Task Force.  | ||
 (i) This Section is repealed on December 31, 2019. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-438, eff. 8-18-11; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 85. The Department of Public Health Act is amended  | ||
by changing Section 2.1 as follows:
 | ||
 (20 ILCS 2305/2.1) | ||
 Sec. 2.1. Information sharing. | ||
 (a) Whenever a State or local law enforcement authority  | ||
learns of a case of an illness, health condition, or unusual  | ||
disease or symptom cluster, reportable pursuant to rules  | ||
adopted by the Department or by a local board of health or  | ||
local public health authority, or a suspicious event that may  | ||
be the cause of or related to a public health emergency, as  | ||
that term is defined in Section 4 of the Illinois Emergency  | ||
Management Agency Act, it shall immediately notify the Illinois  | ||
Emergency Management Agency and the Department or local board  | ||
of health or local public health authority. | ||
 (b) Whenever the Department or a local board of health or  | ||
local public health authority learns of a case of an illness,  | ||
health condition, or unusual disease or symptom cluster,  | ||
reportable pursuant to rules adopted by the Department or by a  | ||
local board of health or a local public health authority, or a  | ||
suspicious event that it reasonably believes has the potential  | ||
to be the cause of or related to a public health emergency, as  | ||
that term is defined in Section 4 of the Illinois Emergency  | ||
Management Agency Act, it shall immediately notify the Illinois  | ||
Emergency Management Agency, the appropriate State and local  | ||
law enforcement authorities, other appropriate State agencies,  | ||
and federal health and law enforcement authorities and, after  | ||
that notification, it shall provide law enforcement  | ||
authorities with such other information as law enforcement  | ||
authorities may request for the purpose of conducting a  | ||
criminal investigation or a criminal prosecution of or arising  | ||
out of that matter. No information containing the identity or  | ||
tending to reveal the identity of any person may be redisclosed  | ||
by law enforcement, except in a prosecution of that person for  | ||
the commission of a crime.
 | ||
 (c) Sharing of information on reportable illnesses, health  | ||
conditions, unusual disease or symptom clusters, or suspicious  | ||
events between and among public health and law enforcement  | ||
authorities shall be restricted to the information necessary  | ||
for the treatment in response to, control of, investigation of,  | ||
and prevention of a public health emergency, as that term is  | ||
defined in Section 4 of the Illinois Emergency Management  | ||
Agency Act, or for criminal investigation or criminal  | ||
prosecution of or arising out of that matter.
 | ||
 (d) The operation of the language of this Section is not  | ||
dependent upon a declaration of disaster by the Governor  | ||
pursuant to the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 93-829, eff. 7-28-04; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 90. The Illinois Commission on Volunteerism and  | ||
Community Service Act is amended by changing Section 6.1 as  | ||
follows:
 | ||
 (20 ILCS 2330/6.1)
 (was 20 ILCS 710/6.1)
 | ||
 Sec. 6.1. Functions of Commission. The Commission shall  | ||
meet at least
quarterly and shall advise and consult with the  | ||
Department of Public Health and the Governor's Office on all  | ||
matters relating to community service in Illinois. In
addition,  | ||
the Commission shall have the following duties:
 | ||
  (a) prepare a 3-year State
service plan, developed  | ||
 through an open,
public process and updated annually;
 | ||
  (b) prepare the financial assistance applications of  | ||
 the State under
the National and Community Service Trust  | ||
 Fund Act of 1993, as amended by the Serve America Act;
 | ||
  (c) assist in the preparation of the application by the  | ||
 State Board of
Education for assistance under that Act;
 | ||
  (d) prepare the State's application under that Act for  | ||
 the approval of
national service positions;
 | ||
  (e) assist in the provision of health care and child  | ||
 care benefits under
that Act;
 | ||
  (f) develop a State recruitment, placement, and  | ||
 information dissemination
system for participants in  | ||
 programs that receive assistance under the national
 | ||
 service laws;
 | ||
  (g) administer the State's grant program including  | ||
 selection, oversight, and
evaluation of grant recipients;
 | ||
  (h) make technical assistance available to enable  | ||
 applicants to plan and
implement service programs and to  | ||
 apply for assistance under the national
service laws;
 | ||
  (i) develop projects, training methods, curriculum  | ||
 materials, and other
activities related to service;
 | ||
  (j) coordinate its functions with any division of the  | ||
 federal
Corporation for National and Community Service  | ||
 outlined in the
National and Community Service Trust Fund  | ||
 Act of 1993, as amended by the Serve America Act; .
 | ||
  (k) publicize Commission services and promote  | ||
 community
involvement in the
activities of the Commission;
 | ||
  (l) promote increased visibility and support for  | ||
 volunteers of all ages,
especially youth and senior  | ||
 citizens,
and community
service in meeting the needs of  | ||
 Illinois residents; and
 | ||
  (m) represent the Department of Public Health and the  | ||
 Governor's Office on such occasions and in such manner as
 | ||
 the Department may provide.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-692, eff. 7-1-14; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 95. The Blind Vendors Act is amended by changing  | ||
Section 30 as follows:
 | ||
 (20 ILCS 2421/30)
 | ||
 Sec. 30. Vending machine income and compliance.  | ||
 (a) Except as provided in subsections (b), (c), (d), (e),  | ||
and (i) of this Section, after July 1, 2010, all vending  | ||
machine income, as defined by this Act, from vending machines  | ||
on State property shall accrue to (1) the blind vendor  | ||
operating the vending facilities on the property or (2) in the  | ||
event there is no blind vendor operating a facility on the  | ||
property, the Blind Vendors Trust Fund for use exclusively as  | ||
set forth in subsection (a) of Section 25 of this Act. | ||
 (b) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of  | ||
this Section, all State university cafeterias and vending  | ||
machines are exempt from this Act. | ||
 (c) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of  | ||
this Section, all vending facilities at the Governor Samuel H.  | ||
Shapiro Developmental Center in Kankakee are exempt from this  | ||
Act. | ||
 (d) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of  | ||
this Section, in
the event there is no blind vendor operating a  | ||
vending facility on the
State property, all vending machine  | ||
income, as defined in this Act, from
vending machines on the  | ||
State property of the Department of Corrections
and the  | ||
Department of Juvenile Justice shall accrue to the State agency
 | ||
and be allocated in accordance with the commissary provisions  | ||
in the Unified Code of Corrections.  | ||
 (e) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of  | ||
this Section, in the event a blind vendor is operating a  | ||
vending facility on
the State property of the Department of or  | ||
Corrections or the Department of
Juvenile Justice, a commission  | ||
shall be paid to the State agency equal to
10% of the net  | ||
proceeds from vending machines servicing State employees
and  | ||
25% of the net proceeds from vending machines servicing  | ||
visitors on
the State property. | ||
 (f) The Secretary, directly or by delegation of authority,  | ||
shall ensure compliance with this Section and Section 15 of  | ||
this Act with respect to buildings, installations, facilities,  | ||
roadside rest stops, and any other State property, and shall be  | ||
responsible for the collection of, and accounting for, all  | ||
vending machine income on this property. The Secretary shall  | ||
enforce these provisions through litigation, arbitration, or  | ||
any other legal means available to the State, and each State  | ||
agency in control of this property shall be subject to the  | ||
enforcement. State agencies or departments failing to comply  | ||
with an order of the Department may be held in contempt in any  | ||
court of general jurisdiction. | ||
 (g) Any limitation on the placement or operation of a  | ||
vending machine by a State agency based on a determination that  | ||
such placement or operation would adversely affect the  | ||
interests of the State must be explained in writing to the  | ||
Secretary. The Secretary shall promptly determine whether the  | ||
limitation is justified. If the Secretary determines that the  | ||
limitation is not justified, the State agency seeking the  | ||
limitation shall immediately remove the limitation. | ||
 (h) The amount of vending machine income accruing from  | ||
vending machines on State property that may be used for the  | ||
functions of the Committee shall be determined annually by a  | ||
two-thirds vote of the Committee, except that no more than 25%  | ||
of the annual vending machine income may be used by the  | ||
Committee for this purpose, based upon the income accruing to  | ||
the Blind Vendors Trust Fund in the preceding year. The  | ||
Committee may establish its budget and expend funds through  | ||
contract or otherwise without the approval of the Department. | ||
 (i) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of  | ||
this Section, with respect to vending machines located on any  | ||
facility or property controlled or operated by the Division of  | ||
Mental Health or the Division of Developmental Disabilities  | ||
within the Department of Human Services: | ||
  (1) Any written contract in place as of the effective  | ||
 date of this Act between the Division and the Business  | ||
 Enterprise Program for the Blind shall be maintained and  | ||
 fully adhered to including any moneys paid to the  | ||
 individual facilities. | ||
  (2) With respect to existing vending machines with no  | ||
 written contract or agreement in place as of the effective  | ||
 date of this Act between the Division and a private vendor,  | ||
 bottler, or vending machine supplier, the Business  | ||
 Enterprise Program for the Blind has the right to provide  | ||
 the vending services as provided in this Act, provided that  | ||
 the blind vendor must provide 10% of gross sales from those  | ||
 machines to the individual facilities.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 96-644, eff. 1-1-10; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 100. The Criminal Identification Act is amended by  | ||
changing Sections 4.5 and 5.2 as follows:
 | ||
 (20 ILCS 2630/4.5) | ||
 Sec. 4.5. Ethnic and racial data collection. | ||
 (a) Ethnic and racial data for every adult or juvenile  | ||
arrested shall be collected at the following points of contact  | ||
by the entity identified in this subsection or another entity  | ||
authorized and qualified to collect and report on this data: | ||
  (1) at arrest or booking, by the supervising law  | ||
 enforcement agency; | ||
  (2) upon admittance to the Department of Corrections,  | ||
 by the Department of Corrections; | ||
  (3) upon admittance to the Department of Juvenile  | ||
 Justice, by the Department of Juvenile Justice; and  | ||
  (4) (3) upon transfer from the Department of Juvenile  | ||
 Justice to the Department of Corrections, by the Department  | ||
 of Juvenile Justice. | ||
 (b) Ethnic and racial data shall be collected through  | ||
selection of one of the following categories: | ||
  (1) American Indian or Alaskan Native; | ||
  (2) Asian or Pacific Islander; | ||
  (3) Black or African American; | ||
  (4) White or Caucasian; | ||
  (5) Hispanic or Latino; or | ||
  (6) Unknown. | ||
 (c) The collecting entity shall make a good-faith effort to  | ||
collect race and ethnicity information as self-reported by the  | ||
adult or juvenile. If the adult or juvenile is unable or  | ||
unwilling to provide race and ethnicity information, the  | ||
collecting entity shall make a good-faith effort to deduce the  | ||
race and ethnicity of the adult or juvenile. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-528, eff. 1-1-15; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 (20 ILCS 2630/5.2)
 | ||
 Sec. 5.2. Expungement and sealing. | ||
 (a) General Provisions. | ||
  (1) Definitions. In this Act, words and phrases have
 | ||
 the meanings set forth in this subsection, except when a
 | ||
 particular context clearly requires a different meaning. | ||
   (A) The following terms shall have the meanings  | ||
 ascribed to them in the Unified Code of Corrections,  | ||
 730 ILCS 5/5-1-2 through 5/5-1-22: | ||
    (i) Business Offense (730 ILCS 5/5-1-2), | ||
    (ii) Charge (730 ILCS 5/5-1-3), | ||
    (iii) Court (730 ILCS 5/5-1-6), | ||
    (iv) Defendant (730 ILCS 5/5-1-7), | ||
    (v) Felony (730 ILCS 5/5-1-9), | ||
    (vi) Imprisonment (730 ILCS 5/5-1-10), | ||
    (vii) Judgment (730 ILCS 5/5-1-12), | ||
    (viii) Misdemeanor (730 ILCS 5/5-1-14), | ||
    (ix) Offense (730 ILCS 5/5-1-15), | ||
    (x) Parole (730 ILCS 5/5-1-16), | ||
    (xi) Petty Offense (730 ILCS 5/5-1-17), | ||
    (xii) Probation (730 ILCS 5/5-1-18), | ||
    (xiii) Sentence (730 ILCS 5/5-1-19), | ||
    (xiv) Supervision (730 ILCS 5/5-1-21), and | ||
    (xv) Victim (730 ILCS 5/5-1-22). | ||
   (B) As used in this Section, "charge not initiated  | ||
 by arrest" means a charge (as defined by 730 ILCS  | ||
 5/5-1-3) brought against a defendant where the  | ||
 defendant is not arrested prior to or as a direct  | ||
 result of the charge. | ||
   (C) "Conviction" means a judgment of conviction or  | ||
 sentence entered upon a plea of guilty or upon a  | ||
 verdict or finding of guilty of an offense, rendered by  | ||
 a legally constituted jury or by a court of competent  | ||
 jurisdiction authorized to try the case without a jury.  | ||
 An order of supervision successfully completed by the  | ||
 petitioner is not a conviction. An order of qualified  | ||
 probation (as defined in subsection (a)(1)(J))  | ||
 successfully completed by the petitioner is not a  | ||
 conviction. An order of supervision or an order of  | ||
 qualified probation that is terminated  | ||
 unsatisfactorily is a conviction, unless the  | ||
 unsatisfactory termination is reversed, vacated, or  | ||
 modified and the judgment of conviction, if any, is  | ||
 reversed or vacated. | ||
   (D) "Criminal offense" means a petty offense,  | ||
 business offense, misdemeanor, felony, or municipal  | ||
 ordinance violation (as defined in subsection  | ||
 (a)(1)(H)). As used in this Section, a minor traffic  | ||
 offense (as defined in subsection (a)(1)(G)) shall not  | ||
 be considered a criminal offense. | ||
   (E) "Expunge" means to physically destroy the  | ||
 records or return them to the petitioner and to  | ||
 obliterate the petitioner's name from any official  | ||
 index or public record, or both. Nothing in this Act  | ||
 shall require the physical destruction of the circuit  | ||
 court file, but such records relating to arrests or  | ||
 charges, or both, ordered expunged shall be impounded  | ||
 as required by subsections (d)(9)(A)(ii) and  | ||
 (d)(9)(B)(ii). | ||
   (F) As used in this Section, "last sentence" means  | ||
 the sentence, order of supervision, or order of  | ||
 qualified probation (as defined by subsection  | ||
 (a)(1)(J)), for a criminal offense (as defined by  | ||
 subsection (a)(1)(D)) that terminates last in time in  | ||
 any jurisdiction, regardless of whether the petitioner  | ||
 has included the criminal offense for which the  | ||
 sentence or order of supervision or qualified  | ||
 probation was imposed in his or her petition. If  | ||
 multiple sentences, orders of supervision, or orders  | ||
 of qualified probation terminate on the same day and  | ||
 are last in time, they shall be collectively considered  | ||
 the "last sentence" regardless of whether they were  | ||
 ordered to run concurrently. | ||
   (G) "Minor traffic offense" means a petty offense,  | ||
 business offense, or Class C misdemeanor under the  | ||
 Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar provision of a  | ||
 municipal or local ordinance. | ||
   (H) "Municipal ordinance violation" means an  | ||
 offense defined by a municipal or local ordinance that  | ||
 is criminal in nature and with which the petitioner was  | ||
 charged or for which the petitioner was arrested and  | ||
 released without charging. | ||
   (I) "Petitioner" means an adult or a minor  | ||
 prosecuted as an
adult who has applied for relief under  | ||
 this Section. | ||
   (J) "Qualified probation" means an order of  | ||
 probation under Section 10 of the Cannabis Control Act,  | ||
 Section 410 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act,  | ||
 Section 70 of the Methamphetamine Control and  | ||
 Community Protection Act, Section 5-6-3.3 or 5-6-3.4  | ||
 of the Unified Code of Corrections, Section  | ||
 12-4.3(b)(1) and (2) of the Criminal Code of 1961 (as  | ||
 those provisions existed before their deletion by  | ||
 Public Act 89-313), Section 10-102 of the Illinois  | ||
 Alcoholism and Other Drug Dependency Act, Section  | ||
 40-10 of the Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse and  | ||
 Dependency Act, or Section 10 of the Steroid Control  | ||
 Act. For the purpose of this Section, "successful  | ||
 completion" of an order of qualified probation under  | ||
 Section 10-102 of the Illinois Alcoholism and Other  | ||
 Drug Dependency Act and Section 40-10 of the Alcoholism  | ||
 and Other Drug Abuse and Dependency Act means that the  | ||
 probation was terminated satisfactorily and the  | ||
 judgment of conviction was vacated. | ||
   (K) "Seal" means to physically and electronically  | ||
 maintain the records, unless the records would  | ||
 otherwise be destroyed due to age, but to make the  | ||
 records unavailable without a court order, subject to  | ||
 the exceptions in Sections 12 and 13 of this Act. The  | ||
 petitioner's name shall also be obliterated from the  | ||
 official index required to be kept by the circuit court  | ||
 clerk under Section 16 of the Clerks of Courts Act, but  | ||
 any index issued by the circuit court clerk before the  | ||
 entry of the order to seal shall not be affected. | ||
   (L) "Sexual offense committed against a minor"  | ||
 includes but is
not limited to the offenses of indecent  | ||
 solicitation of a child
or criminal sexual abuse when  | ||
 the victim of such offense is
under 18 years of age. | ||
   (M) "Terminate" as it relates to a sentence or  | ||
 order of supervision or qualified probation includes  | ||
 either satisfactory or unsatisfactory termination of  | ||
 the sentence, unless otherwise specified in this  | ||
 Section. | ||
  (2) Minor Traffic Offenses.
Orders of supervision or  | ||
 convictions for minor traffic offenses shall not affect a  | ||
 petitioner's eligibility to expunge or seal records  | ||
 pursuant to this Section. | ||
  (3) Exclusions. Except as otherwise provided in  | ||
 subsections (b)(5), (b)(6), (b)(8), (e), (e-5), and (e-6)  | ||
 of this Section, the court shall not order: | ||
   (A) the sealing or expungement of the records of  | ||
 arrests or charges not initiated by arrest that result  | ||
 in an order of supervision for or conviction of:
(i)  | ||
 any sexual offense committed against a
minor; (ii)  | ||
 Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a  | ||
 similar provision of a local ordinance; or (iii)  | ||
 Section 11-503 of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a  | ||
 similar provision of a local ordinance, unless the  | ||
 arrest or charge is for a misdemeanor violation of  | ||
 subsection (a) of Section 11-503 or a similar provision  | ||
 of a local ordinance, that occurred prior to the  | ||
 offender reaching the age of 25 years and the offender  | ||
 has no other conviction for violating Section 11-501 or  | ||
 11-503 of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar  | ||
 provision of a local ordinance. | ||
   (B) the sealing or expungement of records of minor  | ||
 traffic offenses (as defined in subsection (a)(1)(G)),  | ||
 unless the petitioner was arrested and released  | ||
 without charging. | ||
   (C) the sealing of the records of arrests or  | ||
 charges not initiated by arrest which result in an  | ||
 order of supervision or a conviction for the following  | ||
 offenses: | ||
    (i) offenses included in Article 11 of the  | ||
 Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012  | ||
 or a similar provision of a local ordinance, except  | ||
 Section 11-14 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the  | ||
 Criminal Code of 2012, or a similar provision of a  | ||
 local ordinance; | ||
    (ii) Section 11-1.50, 12-3.4, 12-15, 12-30,  | ||
 26-5, or 48-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the  | ||
 Criminal Code of 2012, or a similar provision of a  | ||
 local ordinance; | ||
    (iii) Sections 12-3.1 or 12-3.2 of the  | ||
 Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012,  | ||
 or Section 125 of the Stalking No Contact Order  | ||
 Act, or Section 219 of the Civil No Contact Order  | ||
 Act, or a similar provision of a local ordinance; | ||
    (iv) offenses which are Class A misdemeanors  | ||
 under the Humane Care for Animals Act; or | ||
    (v) any offense or attempted offense that  | ||
 would subject a person to registration under the  | ||
 Sex Offender Registration Act. | ||
   (D) the sealing of the records of an arrest which  | ||
 results in
the petitioner being charged with a felony  | ||
 offense or records of a charge not initiated by arrest  | ||
 for a felony offense unless: | ||
    (i) the charge is amended to a misdemeanor and  | ||
 is otherwise
eligible to be sealed pursuant to  | ||
 subsection (c); | ||
    (ii) the charge is brought along with another  | ||
 charge as a part of one case and the charge results  | ||
 in acquittal, dismissal, or conviction when the  | ||
 conviction was reversed or vacated, and another  | ||
 charge brought in the same case results in a  | ||
 disposition for a misdemeanor offense that is  | ||
 eligible to be sealed pursuant to subsection (c) or  | ||
 a disposition listed in paragraph (i), (iii), or  | ||
 (iv) of this subsection;  | ||
    (iii) the charge results in first offender  | ||
 probation as set forth in subsection (c)(2)(E); | ||
    (iv) the charge is for a felony offense listed  | ||
 in subsection (c)(2)(F) or the charge is amended to  | ||
 a felony offense listed in subsection (c)(2)(F); | ||
    (v) the charge results in acquittal,  | ||
 dismissal, or the petitioner's release without  | ||
 conviction; or | ||
    (vi) the charge results in a conviction, but  | ||
 the conviction was reversed or vacated.  | ||
 (b) Expungement. | ||
  (1) A petitioner may petition the circuit court to  | ||
 expunge the
records of his or her arrests and charges not  | ||
 initiated by arrest when: | ||
   (A) He or she has never been convicted of a  | ||
 criminal offense; and | ||
   (B) Each arrest or charge not initiated by arrest
 | ||
 sought to be expunged resulted in:
(i) acquittal,  | ||
 dismissal, or the petitioner's release without  | ||
 charging, unless excluded by subsection (a)(3)(B);
 | ||
 (ii) a conviction which was vacated or reversed, unless  | ||
 excluded by subsection (a)(3)(B);
(iii) an order of  | ||
 supervision and such supervision was successfully  | ||
 completed by the petitioner, unless excluded by  | ||
 subsection (a)(3)(A) or (a)(3)(B); or
(iv) an order of  | ||
 qualified probation (as defined in subsection  | ||
 (a)(1)(J)) and such probation was successfully  | ||
 completed by the petitioner. | ||
  (2) Time frame for filing a petition to expunge. | ||
   (A) When the arrest or charge not initiated by  | ||
 arrest sought to be expunged resulted in an acquittal,  | ||
 dismissal, the petitioner's release without charging,  | ||
 or the reversal or vacation of a conviction, there is  | ||
 no waiting period to petition for the expungement of  | ||
 such records. | ||
   (B) When the arrest or charge not initiated by  | ||
 arrest
sought to be expunged resulted in an order of  | ||
 supervision, successfully
completed by the petitioner,  | ||
 the following time frames will apply: | ||
    (i) Those arrests or charges that resulted in  | ||
 orders of
supervision under Section 3-707, 3-708,  | ||
 3-710, or 5-401.3 of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a  | ||
 similar provision of a local ordinance, or under  | ||
 Section 11-1.50, 12-3.2, or 12-15 of the Criminal  | ||
 Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or a  | ||
 similar provision of a local ordinance, shall not  | ||
 be eligible for expungement until 5 years have  | ||
 passed following the satisfactory termination of  | ||
 the supervision. | ||
    (i-5) Those arrests or charges that resulted  | ||
 in orders of supervision for a misdemeanor  | ||
 violation of subsection (a) of Section 11-503 of  | ||
 the Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar provision of  | ||
 a local ordinance, that occurred prior to the  | ||
 offender reaching the age of 25 years and the  | ||
 offender has no other conviction for violating  | ||
 Section 11-501 or 11-503 of the Illinois Vehicle  | ||
 Code or a similar provision of a local ordinance  | ||
 shall not be eligible for expungement until the  | ||
 petitioner has reached the age of 25 years.  | ||
    (ii) Those arrests or charges that resulted in  | ||
 orders
of supervision for any other offenses shall  | ||
 not be
eligible for expungement until 2 years have  | ||
 passed
following the satisfactory termination of  | ||
 the supervision. | ||
   (C) When the arrest or charge not initiated by  | ||
 arrest sought to
be expunged resulted in an order of  | ||
 qualified probation, successfully
completed by the  | ||
 petitioner, such records shall not be eligible for
 | ||
 expungement until 5 years have passed following the  | ||
 satisfactory
termination of the probation. | ||
  (3) Those records maintained by the Department for
 | ||
 persons arrested prior to their 17th birthday shall be
 | ||
 expunged as provided in Section 5-915 of the Juvenile Court
 | ||
 Act of 1987. | ||
  (4) Whenever a person has been arrested for or  | ||
 convicted of any
offense, in the name of a person whose  | ||
 identity he or she has stolen or otherwise
come into  | ||
 possession of, the aggrieved person from whom the identity
 | ||
 was stolen or otherwise obtained without authorization,
 | ||
 upon learning of the person having been arrested using his
 | ||
 or her identity, may, upon verified petition to the chief  | ||
 judge of
the circuit wherein the arrest was made, have a  | ||
 court order
entered nunc pro tunc by the Chief Judge to  | ||
 correct the
arrest record, conviction record, if any, and  | ||
 all official
records of the arresting authority, the  | ||
 Department, other
criminal justice agencies, the  | ||
 prosecutor, and the trial
court concerning such arrest, if  | ||
 any, by removing his or her name
from all such records in  | ||
 connection with the arrest and
conviction, if any, and by  | ||
 inserting in the records the
name of the offender, if known  | ||
 or ascertainable, in lieu of
the aggrieved's name. The  | ||
 records of the circuit court clerk shall be sealed until  | ||
 further order of
the court upon good cause shown and the  | ||
 name of the
aggrieved person obliterated on the official  | ||
 index
required to be kept by the circuit court clerk under
 | ||
 Section 16 of the Clerks of Courts Act, but the order shall
 | ||
 not affect any index issued by the circuit court clerk
 | ||
 before the entry of the order. Nothing in this Section
 | ||
 shall limit the Department of State Police or other
 | ||
 criminal justice agencies or prosecutors from listing
 | ||
 under an offender's name the false names he or she has
 | ||
 used. | ||
  (5) Whenever a person has been convicted of criminal
 | ||
 sexual assault, aggravated criminal sexual assault,
 | ||
 predatory criminal sexual assault of a child, criminal
 | ||
 sexual abuse, or aggravated criminal sexual abuse, the
 | ||
 victim of that offense may request that the State's
 | ||
 Attorney of the county in which the conviction occurred
 | ||
 file a verified petition with the presiding trial judge at
 | ||
 the petitioner's trial to have a court order entered to  | ||
 seal
the records of the circuit court clerk in connection
 | ||
 with the proceedings of the trial court concerning that
 | ||
 offense. However, the records of the arresting authority
 | ||
 and the Department of State Police concerning the offense
 | ||
 shall not be sealed. The court, upon good cause shown,
 | ||
 shall make the records of the circuit court clerk in
 | ||
 connection with the proceedings of the trial court
 | ||
 concerning the offense available for public inspection. | ||
  (6) If a conviction has been set aside on direct review
 | ||
 or on collateral attack and the court determines by clear
 | ||
 and convincing evidence that the petitioner was factually
 | ||
 innocent of the charge, the court that finds the petitioner  | ||
 factually innocent of the charge shall enter an
expungement  | ||
 order for the conviction for which the petitioner has been  | ||
 determined to be innocent as provided in subsection (b) of  | ||
 Section
5-5-4 of the Unified Code of Corrections. | ||
  (7) Nothing in this Section shall prevent the  | ||
 Department of
State Police from maintaining all records of  | ||
 any person who
is admitted to probation upon terms and  | ||
 conditions and who
fulfills those terms and conditions  | ||
 pursuant to Section 10
of the Cannabis Control Act, Section  | ||
 410 of the Illinois
Controlled Substances Act, Section 70  | ||
 of the
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection  | ||
 Act,
Section 5-6-3.3 or 5-6-3.4 of the Unified Code of  | ||
 Corrections, Section 12-4.3 or subdivision (b)(1) of  | ||
 Section 12-3.05 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the  | ||
 Criminal Code of 2012, Section 10-102
of the Illinois  | ||
 Alcoholism and Other Drug Dependency Act,
Section 40-10 of  | ||
 the Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse and
Dependency Act, or  | ||
 Section 10 of the Steroid Control Act. | ||
  (8) If the petitioner has been granted a certificate of  | ||
 innocence under Section 2-702 of the Code of Civil  | ||
 Procedure, the court that grants the certificate of  | ||
 innocence shall also enter an order expunging the  | ||
 conviction for which the petitioner has been determined to  | ||
 be innocent as provided in subsection (h) of Section 2-702  | ||
 of the Code of Civil Procedure. | ||
 (c) Sealing. | ||
  (1) Applicability. Notwithstanding any other provision  | ||
 of this Act to the contrary, and cumulative with any rights  | ||
 to expungement of criminal records, this subsection  | ||
 authorizes the sealing of criminal records of adults and of  | ||
 minors prosecuted as adults. | ||
  (2) Eligible Records. The following records may be  | ||
 sealed: | ||
   (A) All arrests resulting in release without  | ||
 charging; | ||
   (B) Arrests or charges not initiated by arrest  | ||
 resulting in acquittal, dismissal, or conviction when  | ||
 the conviction was reversed or vacated, except as  | ||
 excluded by subsection (a)(3)(B); | ||
   (C) Arrests or charges not initiated by arrest  | ||
 resulting in orders of supervision, including orders  | ||
 of supervision for municipal ordinance violations,  | ||
 successfully completed by the petitioner, unless  | ||
 excluded by subsection (a)(3); | ||
   (D) Arrests or charges not initiated by arrest  | ||
 resulting in convictions, including convictions on  | ||
 municipal ordinance violations, unless excluded by  | ||
 subsection (a)(3); | ||
   (E) Arrests or charges not initiated by arrest  | ||
 resulting in orders of first offender probation under  | ||
 Section 10 of the Cannabis Control Act, Section 410 of  | ||
 the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, Section 70 of  | ||
 the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection  | ||
 Act, or Section 5-6-3.3 of the Unified Code of  | ||
 Corrections; and | ||
   (F) Arrests or charges not initiated by arrest  | ||
 resulting in felony convictions for the following  | ||
 offenses: | ||
    (i) Class 4 felony convictions for:  | ||
     Prostitution under Section 11-14 of the  | ||
 Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of  | ||
 2012.  | ||
     Possession of cannabis under Section 4 of  | ||
 the Cannabis Control Act.  | ||
     Possession of a controlled substance under  | ||
 Section 402 of the Illinois Controlled  | ||
 Substances Act.  | ||
     Offenses under the Methamphetamine  | ||
 Precursor Control Act.  | ||
     Offenses under the Steroid Control Act.  | ||
     Theft under Section 16-1 of the Criminal  | ||
 Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.  | ||
     Retail theft under Section 16A-3 or  | ||
 paragraph (a) of 16-25 of the Criminal Code of  | ||
 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.  | ||
     Deceptive practices under Section 17-1 of  | ||
 the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code  | ||
 of 2012.  | ||
     Forgery under Section 17-3 of the Criminal  | ||
 Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.  | ||
     Possession of burglary tools under Section  | ||
 19-2 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the  | ||
 Criminal Code of 2012.  | ||
   (ii) Class 3 felony convictions for:  | ||
     Theft under Section 16-1 of the Criminal  | ||
 Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.  | ||
     Retail theft under Section 16A-3 or  | ||
 paragraph (a) of 16-25 of the Criminal Code of  | ||
 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.  | ||
     Deceptive practices under Section 17-1 of  | ||
 the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code  | ||
 of 2012.  | ||
     Forgery under Section 17-3 of the Criminal  | ||
 Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.  | ||
     Possession with intent to manufacture or  | ||
 deliver a controlled substance under Section  | ||
 401 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act.  | ||
  (3) When Records Are Eligible to Be Sealed. Records  | ||
 identified as eligible under subsection (c)(2) may be  | ||
 sealed as follows: | ||
   (A) Records identified as eligible under  | ||
 subsection (c)(2)(A) and (c)(2)(B) may be sealed at any  | ||
 time. | ||
   (B) Records identified as eligible under  | ||
 subsection (c)(2)(C) may be sealed
(i) 3 years after  | ||
 the termination of petitioner's last sentence (as  | ||
 defined in subsection (a)(1)(F)) if the petitioner has  | ||
 never been convicted of a criminal offense (as defined  | ||
 in subsection (a)(1)(D)); or
(ii) 4 years after the  | ||
 termination of the petitioner's last sentence (as  | ||
 defined in subsection (a)(1)(F)) if the petitioner has  | ||
 ever been convicted of a criminal offense (as defined  | ||
 in subsection (a)(1)(D)). | ||
   (C) Records identified as eligible under  | ||
 subsections (c)(2)(D), (c)(2)(E), and (c)(2)(F) may be  | ||
 sealed 4 years after the termination of the  | ||
 petitioner's last sentence (as defined in subsection  | ||
 (a)(1)(F)). | ||
   (D) Records identified in subsection  | ||
 (a)(3)(A)(iii) may be sealed after the petitioner has  | ||
 reached the age of 25 years.  | ||
  (4) Subsequent felony convictions. A person may not  | ||
 have
subsequent felony conviction records sealed as  | ||
 provided in this subsection
(c) if he or she is convicted  | ||
 of any felony offense after the date of the
sealing of  | ||
 prior felony convictions as provided in this subsection  | ||
 (c). The court may, upon conviction for a subsequent felony  | ||
 offense, order the unsealing of prior felony conviction  | ||
 records previously ordered sealed by the court. | ||
  (5) Notice of eligibility for sealing. Upon entry of a  | ||
 disposition for an eligible record under this subsection  | ||
 (c), the petitioner shall be informed by the court of the  | ||
 right to have the records sealed and the procedures for the  | ||
 sealing of the records. | ||
 (d) Procedure. The following procedures apply to  | ||
expungement under subsections (b), (e), and (e-6) and sealing  | ||
under subsections (c) and (e-5): | ||
  (1) Filing the petition. Upon becoming eligible to  | ||
 petition for
the expungement or sealing of records under  | ||
 this Section, the petitioner shall file a petition  | ||
 requesting the expungement
or sealing of records with the  | ||
 clerk of the court where the arrests occurred or the  | ||
 charges were brought, or both. If arrests occurred or  | ||
 charges were brought in multiple jurisdictions, a petition  | ||
 must be filed in each such jurisdiction. The petitioner  | ||
 shall pay the applicable fee, if not waived. | ||
  (2) Contents of petition. The petition shall be
 | ||
 verified and shall contain the petitioner's name, date of
 | ||
 birth, current address and, for each arrest or charge not  | ||
 initiated by
arrest sought to be sealed or expunged, the  | ||
 case number, the date of
arrest (if any), the identity of  | ||
 the arresting authority, and such
other information as the  | ||
 court may require. During the pendency
of the proceeding,  | ||
 the petitioner shall promptly notify the
circuit court  | ||
 clerk of any change of his or her address. If the  | ||
 petitioner has received a certificate of eligibility for  | ||
 sealing from the Prisoner Review Board under paragraph (10)  | ||
 of subsection (a) of Section 3-3-2 of the Unified Code of  | ||
 Corrections, the certificate shall be attached to the  | ||
 petition. | ||
  (3) Drug test. The petitioner must attach to the  | ||
 petition proof that the petitioner has passed a test taken  | ||
 within 30 days before the filing of the petition showing  | ||
 the absence within his or her body of all illegal  | ||
 substances as defined by the Illinois Controlled  | ||
 Substances Act, the Methamphetamine Control and Community  | ||
 Protection Act, and the Cannabis Control Act if he or she  | ||
 is petitioning to: | ||
   (A) seal felony records under clause (c)(2)(E); | ||
   (B) seal felony records for a violation of the  | ||
 Illinois Controlled Substances Act, the  | ||
 Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act,  | ||
 or the Cannabis Control Act under clause (c)(2)(F); | ||
   (C) seal felony records under subsection (e-5); or  | ||
   (D) expunge felony records of a qualified  | ||
 probation under clause (b)(1)(B)(iv). | ||
  (4) Service of petition. The circuit court clerk shall  | ||
 promptly
serve a copy of the petition and documentation to  | ||
 support the petition under subsection (e-5) or (e-6) on the  | ||
 State's Attorney or
prosecutor charged with the duty of  | ||
 prosecuting the
offense, the Department of State Police,  | ||
 the arresting
agency and the chief legal officer of the  | ||
 unit of local
government effecting the arrest. | ||
  (5) Objections. | ||
   (A) Any party entitled to notice of the petition  | ||
 may file an objection to the petition. All objections  | ||
 shall be in writing, shall be filed with the circuit  | ||
 court clerk, and shall state with specificity the basis  | ||
 of the objection. Whenever a person who has been  | ||
 convicted of an offense is granted
a pardon by the  | ||
 Governor which specifically authorizes expungement, an  | ||
 objection to the petition may not be filed. | ||
   (B) Objections to a petition to expunge or seal  | ||
 must be filed within 60 days of the date of service of  | ||
 the petition. | ||
  (6) Entry of order. | ||
   (A) The Chief Judge of the circuit wherein the  | ||
 charge was brought, any judge of that circuit  | ||
 designated by the Chief Judge, or in counties of less  | ||
 than 3,000,000 inhabitants, the presiding trial judge  | ||
 at the petitioner's trial, if any, shall rule on the  | ||
 petition to expunge or seal as set forth in this  | ||
 subsection (d)(6). | ||
   (B) Unless the State's Attorney or prosecutor, the  | ||
 Department of
State Police, the arresting agency, or  | ||
 the chief legal officer
files an objection to the  | ||
 petition to expunge or seal within 60 days from the  | ||
 date of service of the petition, the court shall enter  | ||
 an order granting or denying the petition. | ||
  (7) Hearings. If an objection is filed, the court shall  | ||
 set a date for a hearing and notify the petitioner and all  | ||
 parties entitled to notice of the petition of the hearing  | ||
 date at least 30 days prior to the hearing. Prior to the  | ||
 hearing, the State's Attorney shall consult with the  | ||
 Department as to the appropriateness of the relief sought  | ||
 in the petition to expunge or seal. At the hearing, the  | ||
 court shall hear evidence on whether the petition should or  | ||
 should not be granted, and shall grant or deny the petition  | ||
 to expunge or seal the records based on the evidence  | ||
 presented at the hearing. The court may consider the  | ||
 following: | ||
   (A) the strength of the evidence supporting the  | ||
 defendant's conviction;  | ||
   (B) the reasons for retention of the conviction  | ||
 records by the State;  | ||
   (C) the petitioner's age, criminal record history,  | ||
 and employment history;  | ||
   (D) the period of time between the petitioner's  | ||
 arrest on the charge resulting in the conviction and  | ||
 the filing of the petition under this Section; and  | ||
   (E) the specific adverse consequences the  | ||
 petitioner may be subject to if the petition is denied.  | ||
  (8) Service of order. After entering an order to  | ||
 expunge or
seal records, the court must provide copies of  | ||
 the order to the
Department, in a form and manner  | ||
 prescribed by the Department,
to the petitioner, to the  | ||
 State's Attorney or prosecutor
charged with the duty of  | ||
 prosecuting the offense, to the
arresting agency, to the  | ||
 chief legal officer of the unit of
local government  | ||
 effecting the arrest, and to such other
criminal justice  | ||
 agencies as may be ordered by the court. | ||
  (9) Implementation of order. | ||
   (A) Upon entry of an order to expunge records  | ||
 pursuant to (b)(2)(A) or (b)(2)(B)(ii), or both: | ||
    (i) the records shall be expunged (as defined  | ||
 in subsection (a)(1)(E)) by the arresting agency,  | ||
 the Department, and any other agency as ordered by  | ||
 the court, within 60 days of the date of service of  | ||
 the order, unless a motion to vacate, modify, or  | ||
 reconsider the order is filed pursuant to  | ||
 paragraph (12) of subsection (d) of this Section; | ||
    (ii) the records of the circuit court clerk  | ||
 shall be impounded until further order of the court  | ||
 upon good cause shown and the name of the  | ||
 petitioner obliterated on the official index  | ||
 required to be kept by the circuit court clerk  | ||
 under Section 16 of the Clerks of Courts Act, but  | ||
 the order shall not affect any index issued by the  | ||
 circuit court clerk before the entry of the order;  | ||
 and | ||
    (iii) in response to an inquiry for expunged  | ||
 records, the court, the Department, or the agency  | ||
 receiving such inquiry, shall reply as it does in  | ||
 response to inquiries when no records ever  | ||
 existed. | ||
   (B) Upon entry of an order to expunge records  | ||
 pursuant to (b)(2)(B)(i) or (b)(2)(C), or both: | ||
    (i) the records shall be expunged (as defined  | ||
 in subsection (a)(1)(E)) by the arresting agency  | ||
 and any other agency as ordered by the court,  | ||
 within 60 days of the date of service of the order,  | ||
 unless a motion to vacate, modify, or reconsider  | ||
 the order is filed pursuant to paragraph (12) of  | ||
 subsection (d) of this Section; | ||
    (ii) the records of the circuit court clerk  | ||
 shall be impounded until further order of the court  | ||
 upon good cause shown and the name of the  | ||
 petitioner obliterated on the official index  | ||
 required to be kept by the circuit court clerk  | ||
 under Section 16 of the Clerks of Courts Act, but  | ||
 the order shall not affect any index issued by the  | ||
 circuit court clerk before the entry of the order; | ||
    (iii) the records shall be impounded by the
 | ||
 Department within 60 days of the date of service of  | ||
 the order as ordered by the court, unless a motion  | ||
 to vacate, modify, or reconsider the order is filed  | ||
 pursuant to paragraph (12) of subsection (d) of  | ||
 this Section; | ||
    (iv) records impounded by the Department may  | ||
 be disseminated by the Department only as required  | ||
 by law or to the arresting authority, the State's  | ||
 Attorney, and the court upon a later arrest for the  | ||
 same or a similar offense or for the purpose of  | ||
 sentencing for any subsequent felony, and to the  | ||
 Department of Corrections upon conviction for any  | ||
 offense; and | ||
    (v) in response to an inquiry for such records  | ||
 from anyone not authorized by law to access such  | ||
 records, the court, the Department, or the agency  | ||
 receiving such inquiry shall reply as it does in  | ||
 response to inquiries when no records ever  | ||
 existed. | ||
   (B-5) Upon entry of an order to expunge records  | ||
 under subsection (e-6): | ||
    (i) the records shall be expunged (as defined  | ||
 in subsection (a)(1)(E)) by the arresting agency  | ||
 and any other agency as ordered by the court,  | ||
 within 60 days of the date of service of the order,  | ||
 unless a motion to vacate, modify, or reconsider  | ||
 the order is filed under paragraph (12) of  | ||
 subsection (d) of this Section; | ||
    (ii) the records of the circuit court clerk  | ||
 shall be impounded until further order of the court  | ||
 upon good cause shown and the name of the  | ||
 petitioner obliterated on the official index  | ||
 required to be kept by the circuit court clerk  | ||
 under Section 16 of the Clerks of Courts Act, but  | ||
 the order shall not affect any index issued by the  | ||
 circuit court clerk before the entry of the order; | ||
    (iii) the records shall be impounded by the
 | ||
 Department within 60 days of the date of service of  | ||
 the order as ordered by the court, unless a motion  | ||
 to vacate, modify, or reconsider the order is filed  | ||
 under paragraph (12) of subsection (d) of this  | ||
 Section; | ||
    (iv) records impounded by the Department may  | ||
 be disseminated by the Department only as required  | ||
 by law or to the arresting authority, the State's  | ||
 Attorney, and the court upon a later arrest for the  | ||
 same or a similar offense or for the purpose of  | ||
 sentencing for any subsequent felony, and to the  | ||
 Department of Corrections upon conviction for any  | ||
 offense; and | ||
    (v) in response to an inquiry for these records  | ||
 from anyone not authorized by law to access the  | ||
 records, the court, the Department, or the agency  | ||
 receiving the inquiry shall reply as it does in  | ||
 response to inquiries when no records ever  | ||
 existed.  | ||
   (C) Upon entry of an order to seal records under  | ||
 subsection
(c), the arresting agency, any other agency  | ||
 as ordered by the court, the Department, and the court  | ||
 shall seal the records (as defined in subsection  | ||
 (a)(1)(K)). In response to an inquiry for such records  | ||
 from anyone not authorized by law to access such  | ||
 records, the court, the Department, or the agency  | ||
 receiving such inquiry shall reply as it does in  | ||
 response to inquiries when no records ever existed. | ||
   (D) The Department shall send written notice to the  | ||
 petitioner of its compliance with each order to expunge  | ||
 or seal records within 60 days of the date of service  | ||
 of that order or, if a motion to vacate, modify, or  | ||
 reconsider is filed, within 60 days of service of the  | ||
 order resolving the motion, if that order requires the  | ||
 Department to expunge or seal records. In the event of  | ||
 an appeal from the circuit court order, the Department  | ||
 shall send written notice to the petitioner of its  | ||
 compliance with an Appellate Court or Supreme Court  | ||
 judgment to expunge or seal records within 60 days of  | ||
 the issuance of the court's mandate. The notice is not  | ||
 required while any motion to vacate, modify, or  | ||
 reconsider, or any appeal or petition for  | ||
 discretionary appellate review, is pending.  | ||
  (10) Fees. The Department may charge the petitioner a  | ||
 fee equivalent to the cost of processing any order to  | ||
 expunge or seal records. Notwithstanding any provision of  | ||
 the Clerks of Courts Act to the contrary, the circuit court  | ||
 clerk may charge a fee equivalent to the cost associated  | ||
 with the sealing or expungement of records by the circuit  | ||
 court clerk. From the total filing fee collected for the  | ||
 petition to seal or expunge, the circuit court clerk shall  | ||
 deposit $10 into the Circuit Court Clerk Operation and  | ||
 Administrative Fund, to be used to offset the costs  | ||
 incurred by the circuit court clerk in performing the  | ||
 additional duties required to serve the petition to seal or  | ||
 expunge on all parties. The circuit court clerk shall  | ||
 collect and forward the Department of State Police portion  | ||
 of the fee to the Department and it shall be deposited in  | ||
 the State Police Services Fund. | ||
  (11) Final Order. No court order issued under the  | ||
 expungement or sealing provisions of this Section shall  | ||
 become final for purposes of appeal until 30 days after  | ||
 service of the order on the petitioner and all parties  | ||
 entitled to notice of the petition. | ||
  (12) Motion to Vacate, Modify, or Reconsider. Under  | ||
 Section 2-1203 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the  | ||
 petitioner or any party entitled to notice may file a  | ||
 motion to vacate, modify, or reconsider the order granting  | ||
 or denying the petition to expunge or seal within 60 days  | ||
 of service of the order. If filed more than 60 days after  | ||
 service of the order, a petition to vacate, modify, or  | ||
 reconsider shall comply with subsection (c) of Section  | ||
 2-1401 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Upon filing of a  | ||
 motion to vacate, modify, or reconsider, notice of the  | ||
 motion shall be served upon the petitioner and all parties  | ||
 entitled to notice of the petition.  | ||
  (13) Effect of Order. An order granting a petition  | ||
 under the expungement or sealing provisions of this Section  | ||
 shall not be considered void because it fails to comply  | ||
 with the provisions of this Section or because of any error  | ||
 asserted in a motion to vacate, modify, or reconsider. The  | ||
 circuit court retains jurisdiction to determine whether  | ||
 the order is voidable and to vacate, modify, or reconsider  | ||
 its terms based on a motion filed under paragraph (12) of  | ||
 this subsection (d). | ||
  (14) Compliance with Order Granting Petition to Seal  | ||
 Records. Unless a court has entered a stay of an order  | ||
 granting a petition to seal, all parties entitled to notice  | ||
 of the petition must fully comply with the terms of the  | ||
 order within 60 days of service of the order even if a  | ||
 party is seeking relief from the order through a motion  | ||
 filed under paragraph (12) of this subsection (d) or is  | ||
 appealing the order. | ||
  (15) Compliance with Order Granting Petition to  | ||
 Expunge Records. While a party is seeking relief from the  | ||
 order granting the petition to expunge through a motion  | ||
 filed under paragraph (12) of this subsection (d) or is  | ||
 appealing the order, and unless a court has entered a stay  | ||
 of that order, the parties entitled to notice of the  | ||
 petition must seal, but need not expunge, the records until  | ||
 there is a final order on the motion for relief or, in the  | ||
 case of an appeal, the issuance of that court's mandate. | ||
  (16) The changes to this subsection (d) made by Public  | ||
 Act 98-163 apply to all petitions pending on August 5, 2013  | ||
 (the effective date of Public Act 98-163) and to all orders  | ||
 ruling on a petition to expunge or seal on or after August  | ||
 5, 2013 (the effective date of Public Act 98-163).  | ||
 (e) Whenever a person who has been convicted of an offense  | ||
is granted
a pardon by the Governor which specifically  | ||
authorizes expungement, he or she may,
upon verified petition  | ||
to the Chief Judge of the circuit where the person had
been  | ||
convicted, any judge of the circuit designated by the Chief  | ||
Judge, or in
counties of less than 3,000,000 inhabitants, the  | ||
presiding trial judge at the
defendant's trial, have a court  | ||
order entered expunging the record of
arrest from the official  | ||
records of the arresting authority and order that the
records  | ||
of the circuit court clerk and the Department be sealed until
 | ||
further order of the court upon good cause shown or as  | ||
otherwise provided
herein, and the name of the defendant  | ||
obliterated from the official index
requested to be kept by the  | ||
circuit court clerk under Section 16 of the Clerks
of Courts  | ||
Act in connection with the arrest and conviction for the  | ||
offense for
which he or she had been pardoned but the order  | ||
shall not affect any index issued by
the circuit court clerk  | ||
before the entry of the order. All records sealed by
the  | ||
Department may be disseminated by the Department only to the  | ||
arresting authority, the State's Attorney, and the court upon a  | ||
later
arrest for the same or similar offense or for the purpose  | ||
of sentencing for any
subsequent felony. Upon conviction for  | ||
any subsequent offense, the Department
of Corrections shall  | ||
have access to all sealed records of the Department
pertaining  | ||
to that individual. Upon entry of the order of expungement, the
 | ||
circuit court clerk shall promptly mail a copy of the order to  | ||
the
person who was pardoned. | ||
 (e-5) Whenever a person who has been convicted of an  | ||
offense is granted a certificate of eligibility for sealing by  | ||
the Prisoner Review Board which specifically authorizes  | ||
sealing, he or she may, upon verified petition to the Chief  | ||
Judge of the circuit where the person had been convicted, any  | ||
judge of the circuit designated by the Chief Judge, or in  | ||
counties of less than 3,000,000 inhabitants, the presiding  | ||
trial judge at the petitioner's trial, have a court order  | ||
entered sealing the record of arrest from the official records  | ||
of the arresting authority and order that the records of the  | ||
circuit court clerk and the Department be sealed until further  | ||
order of the court upon good cause shown or as otherwise  | ||
provided herein, and the name of the petitioner obliterated  | ||
from the official index requested to be kept by the circuit  | ||
court clerk under Section 16 of the Clerks of Courts Act in  | ||
connection with the arrest and conviction for the offense for  | ||
which he or she had been granted the certificate but the order  | ||
shall not affect any index issued by the circuit court clerk  | ||
before the entry of the order. All records sealed by the  | ||
Department may be disseminated by the Department only as  | ||
required by this Act or to the arresting authority, a law  | ||
enforcement agency, the State's Attorney, and the court upon a  | ||
later arrest for the same or similar offense or for the purpose  | ||
of sentencing for any subsequent felony. Upon conviction for  | ||
any subsequent offense, the Department of Corrections shall  | ||
have access to all sealed records of the Department pertaining  | ||
to that individual. Upon entry of the order of sealing, the  | ||
circuit court clerk shall promptly mail a copy of the order to  | ||
the person who was granted the certificate of eligibility for  | ||
sealing.  | ||
 (e-6) Whenever a person who has been convicted of an  | ||
offense is granted a certificate of eligibility for expungement  | ||
by the Prisoner Review Board which specifically authorizes  | ||
expungement, he or she may, upon verified petition to the Chief  | ||
Judge of the circuit where the person had been convicted, any  | ||
judge of the circuit designated by the Chief Judge, or in  | ||
counties of less than 3,000,000 inhabitants, the presiding  | ||
trial judge at the petitioner's trial, have a court order  | ||
entered expunging the record of arrest from the official  | ||
records of the arresting authority and order that the records  | ||
of the circuit court clerk and the Department be sealed until  | ||
further order of the court upon good cause shown or as  | ||
otherwise provided herein, and the name of the petitioner  | ||
obliterated from the official index requested to be kept by the  | ||
circuit court clerk under Section 16 of the Clerks of Courts  | ||
Act in connection with the arrest and conviction for the  | ||
offense for which he or she had been granted the certificate  | ||
but the order shall not affect any index issued by the circuit  | ||
court clerk before the entry of the order. All records sealed  | ||
by the Department may be disseminated by the Department only as  | ||
required by this Act or to the arresting authority, a law  | ||
enforcement agency, the State's Attorney, and the court upon a  | ||
later arrest for the same or similar offense or for the purpose  | ||
of sentencing for any subsequent felony. Upon conviction for  | ||
any subsequent offense, the Department of Corrections shall  | ||
have access to all expunged records of the Department  | ||
pertaining to that individual. Upon entry of the order of  | ||
expungement, the circuit court clerk shall promptly mail a copy  | ||
of the order to the person who was granted the certificate of  | ||
eligibility for expungement.  | ||
 (f) Subject to available funding, the Illinois Department
 | ||
of Corrections shall conduct a study of the impact of sealing,
 | ||
especially on employment and recidivism rates, utilizing a
 | ||
random sample of those who apply for the sealing of their
 | ||
criminal records under Public Act 93-211. At the request of the
 | ||
Illinois Department of Corrections, records of the Illinois
 | ||
Department of Employment Security shall be utilized as
 | ||
appropriate to assist in the study. The study shall not
 | ||
disclose any data in a manner that would allow the
 | ||
identification of any particular individual or employing unit.
 | ||
The study shall be made available to the General Assembly no
 | ||
later than September 1, 2010.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-443, eff. 8-19-11; 97-698, eff. 1-1-13;  | ||
97-1026, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1108, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1109, eff.  | ||
1-1-13; 97-1118, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1120, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150,  | ||
eff. 1-25-13; 98-133, eff. 1-1-14; 98-142, eff. 1-1-14; 98-163,  | ||
eff. 8-5-13; 98-164, eff. 1-1-14; 98-399, eff. 8-16-13; 98-635,  | ||
eff. 1-1-15; 98-637, eff. 1-1-15; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14;  | ||
98-1009, eff. 1-1-15; revised 9-30-14.)
 | ||
 Section 105. The Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act is  | ||
amended by changing Sections 3 and 12 as follows:
 | ||
 (20 ILCS 3960/3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1153)
 | ||
 (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2019) | ||
 Sec. 3. Definitions. As used in this Act:
 | ||
 "Health care facilities" means and includes
the following  | ||
facilities, organizations, and related persons:
 | ||
  (1) An ambulatory surgical treatment center required  | ||
 to be licensed
pursuant to the Ambulatory Surgical  | ||
 Treatment Center Act.
 | ||
  (2) An institution, place, building, or agency  | ||
 required to be licensed
pursuant to the Hospital Licensing  | ||
 Act.
 | ||
  (3) Skilled and intermediate long term care facilities  | ||
 licensed under the
Nursing
Home Care Act. | ||
   (A) If a demonstration project under the Nursing  | ||
 Home Care Act applies for a certificate of need to  | ||
 convert to a nursing facility, it shall meet the  | ||
 licensure and certificate of need requirements in  | ||
 effect as of the date of application. | ||
   (B) Except as provided in item (A) of this  | ||
 subsection, this Act does not apply to facilities  | ||
 granted waivers under Section 3-102.2 of the Nursing  | ||
 Home Care Act.
 | ||
  (3.5) Skilled and intermediate care facilities  | ||
 licensed under the ID/DD Community Care Act. (A) No permit  | ||
 or exemption is required for a facility licensed under the  | ||
 ID/DD Community Care Act prior to the reduction of the  | ||
 number of beds at a facility. If there is a total reduction  | ||
 of beds at a facility licensed under the ID/DD Community  | ||
 Care Act, this is a discontinuation or closure of the  | ||
 facility. If a facility licensed under the ID/DD Community  | ||
 Care Act reduces the number of beds or discontinues the  | ||
 facility, that facility must notify the Board as provided  | ||
 in Section 14.1 of this Act.  | ||
  (3.7) Facilities licensed under the Specialized Mental  | ||
 Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013.  | ||
  (4) Hospitals, nursing homes, ambulatory surgical  | ||
 treatment centers, or
kidney disease treatment centers
 | ||
 maintained by the State or any department or agency  | ||
 thereof.
 | ||
  (5) Kidney disease treatment centers, including a  | ||
 free-standing
hemodialysis unit required to be licensed  | ||
 under the End Stage Renal Disease Facility Act.
 | ||
   (A) This Act does not apply to a dialysis facility  | ||
 that provides only dialysis training, support, and  | ||
 related services to individuals with end stage renal  | ||
 disease who have elected to receive home dialysis. | ||
   (B) This Act does not apply to a dialysis unit  | ||
 located in a licensed nursing home that offers or  | ||
 provides dialysis-related services to residents with  | ||
 end stage renal disease who have elected to receive  | ||
 home dialysis within the nursing home. | ||
   (C) The Board, however, may require dialysis  | ||
 facilities and licensed nursing homes under items (A)  | ||
 and (B) of this subsection to report statistical  | ||
 information on a quarterly basis to the Board to be  | ||
 used by the Board to conduct analyses on the need for  | ||
 proposed kidney disease treatment centers.  | ||
  (6) An institution, place, building, or room used for  | ||
 the performance of
outpatient surgical procedures that is  | ||
 leased, owned, or operated by or on
behalf of an  | ||
 out-of-state facility.
 | ||
  (7) An institution, place, building, or room used for  | ||
 provision of a health care category of service, including,  | ||
 but not limited to, cardiac catheterization and open heart  | ||
 surgery. | ||
  (8) An institution, place, building, or room housing  | ||
 major medical equipment used in the direct clinical  | ||
 diagnosis or treatment of patients, and whose project cost  | ||
 is in excess of the capital expenditure minimum.  | ||
 "Health care facilities" does not include the following  | ||
entities or facility transactions: | ||
  (1) Federally-owned facilities. | ||
  (2) Facilities used solely for healing by prayer or  | ||
 spiritual means. | ||
  (3) An existing facility located on any campus facility  | ||
 as defined in Section 5-5.8b of the Illinois Public Aid  | ||
 Code, provided that the campus facility encompasses 30 or  | ||
 more contiguous acres and that the new or renovated  | ||
 facility is intended for use by a licensed residential  | ||
 facility. | ||
  (4) Facilities licensed under the Supportive  | ||
 Residences Licensing Act or the Assisted Living and Shared  | ||
 Housing Act. | ||
  (5) Facilities designated as supportive living  | ||
 facilities that are in good standing with the program  | ||
 established under Section 5-5.01a of the Illinois Public  | ||
 Aid Code. | ||
  (6) Facilities established and operating under the  | ||
 Alternative Health Care Delivery Act as a children's  | ||
 community-based health care center children's respite care  | ||
 center alternative health care model demonstration program  | ||
 or as an Alzheimer's Disease Management Center alternative  | ||
 health care model demonstration program. | ||
  (7) The closure of an entity or a portion of an entity  | ||
 licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act, the Specialized  | ||
 Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013, or the ID/DD  | ||
 Community Care Act, with the exception of facilities  | ||
 operated by a county or Illinois Veterans Homes, that elect  | ||
 to convert, in whole or in part, to an assisted living or  | ||
 shared housing establishment licensed under the Assisted  | ||
 Living and Shared Housing Act and with the exception of a  | ||
 facility licensed under the Specialized Mental Health  | ||
 Rehabilitation Act of 2013 in connection with a proposal to  | ||
 close a facility and re-establish the facility in another  | ||
 location. | ||
  (8) Any change of ownership of a health care healthcare  | ||
 facility that is licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act,  | ||
 the Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013,  | ||
 or the ID/DD Community Care Act, with the exception of  | ||
 facilities operated by a county or Illinois Veterans Homes.  | ||
 Changes of ownership of facilities licensed under the  | ||
 Nursing Home Care Act must meet the requirements set forth  | ||
 in Sections 3-101 through 3-119 of the Nursing Home Care  | ||
 Act. children's community-based health care center of 2013  | ||
 and with the exception of a facility licensed under the  | ||
 Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013 in  | ||
 connection with a proposal to close a facility and  | ||
 re-establish the facility in another location of 2013
 | ||
 With the exception of those health care facilities  | ||
specifically
included in this Section, nothing in this Act  | ||
shall be intended to
include facilities operated as a part of  | ||
the practice of a physician or
other licensed health care  | ||
professional, whether practicing in his
individual capacity or  | ||
within the legal structure of any partnership,
medical or  | ||
professional corporation, or unincorporated medical or
 | ||
professional group. Further, this Act shall not apply to  | ||
physicians or
other licensed health care professional's  | ||
practices where such practices
are carried out in a portion of  | ||
a health care facility under contract
with such health care  | ||
facility by a physician or by other licensed
health care  | ||
professionals, whether practicing in his individual capacity
 | ||
or within the legal structure of any partnership, medical or
 | ||
professional corporation, or unincorporated medical or  | ||
professional
groups, unless the entity constructs, modifies,  | ||
or establishes a health care facility as specifically defined  | ||
in this Section. This Act shall apply to construction or
 | ||
modification and to establishment by such health care facility  | ||
of such
contracted portion which is subject to facility  | ||
licensing requirements,
irrespective of the party responsible  | ||
for such action or attendant
financial obligation. 
 | ||
 "Person" means any one or more natural persons, legal  | ||
entities,
governmental bodies other than federal, or any  | ||
combination thereof.
 | ||
 "Consumer" means any person other than a person (a) whose  | ||
major
occupation currently involves or whose official capacity  | ||
within the last
12 months has involved the providing,  | ||
administering or financing of any
type of health care facility,  | ||
(b) who is engaged in health research or
the teaching of  | ||
health, (c) who has a material financial interest in any
 | ||
activity which involves the providing, administering or  | ||
financing of any
type of health care facility, or (d) who is or  | ||
ever has been a member of
the immediate family of the person  | ||
defined by (a), (b), or (c).
 | ||
 "State Board" or "Board" means the Health Facilities and  | ||
Services Review Board.
 | ||
 "Construction or modification" means the establishment,  | ||
erection,
building, alteration, reconstruction, modernization,  | ||
improvement,
extension, discontinuation, change of ownership,  | ||
of or by a health care
facility, or the purchase or acquisition  | ||
by or through a health care facility
of
equipment or service  | ||
for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes or for
facility  | ||
administration or operation, or any capital expenditure made by
 | ||
or on behalf of a health care facility which
exceeds the  | ||
capital expenditure minimum; however, any capital expenditure
 | ||
made by or on behalf of a health care facility for (i) the  | ||
construction or
modification of a facility licensed under the  | ||
Assisted Living and Shared
Housing Act or (ii) a conversion  | ||
project undertaken in accordance with Section 30 of the Older  | ||
Adult Services Act shall be excluded from any obligations under  | ||
this Act.
 | ||
 "Establish" means the construction of a health care  | ||
facility or the
replacement of an existing facility on another  | ||
site or the initiation of a category of service.
 | ||
 "Major medical equipment" means medical equipment which is  | ||
used for the
provision of medical and other health services and  | ||
which costs in excess
of the capital expenditure minimum,  | ||
except that such term does not include
medical equipment  | ||
acquired
by or on behalf of a clinical laboratory to provide  | ||
clinical laboratory
services if the clinical laboratory is  | ||
independent of a physician's office
and a hospital and it has  | ||
been determined under Title XVIII of the Social
Security Act to  | ||
meet the requirements of paragraphs (10) and (11) of Section
 | ||
1861(s) of such Act. In determining whether medical equipment  | ||
has a value
in excess of the capital expenditure minimum, the  | ||
value of studies, surveys,
designs, plans, working drawings,  | ||
specifications, and other activities
essential to the  | ||
acquisition of such equipment shall be included.
 | ||
 "Capital Expenditure" means an expenditure: (A) made by or  | ||
on behalf of
a health care facility (as such a facility is  | ||
defined in this Act); and
(B) which under generally accepted  | ||
accounting principles is not properly
chargeable as an expense  | ||
of operation and maintenance, or is made to obtain
by lease or  | ||
comparable arrangement any facility or part thereof or any
 | ||
equipment for a facility or part; and which exceeds the capital  | ||
expenditure
minimum.
 | ||
 For the purpose of this paragraph, the cost of any studies,  | ||
surveys, designs,
plans, working drawings, specifications, and  | ||
other activities essential
to the acquisition, improvement,  | ||
expansion, or replacement of any plant
or equipment with  | ||
respect to which an expenditure is made shall be included
in  | ||
determining if such expenditure exceeds the capital  | ||
expenditures minimum.
Unless otherwise interdependent, or  | ||
submitted as one project by the applicant, components of  | ||
construction or modification undertaken by means of a single  | ||
construction contract or financed through the issuance of a  | ||
single debt instrument shall not be grouped together as one  | ||
project. Donations of equipment
or facilities to a health care  | ||
facility which if acquired directly by such
facility would be  | ||
subject to review under this Act shall be considered capital
 | ||
expenditures, and a transfer of equipment or facilities for  | ||
less than fair
market value shall be considered a capital  | ||
expenditure for purposes of this
Act if a transfer of the  | ||
equipment or facilities at fair market value would
be subject  | ||
to review.
 | ||
 "Capital expenditure minimum" means $11,500,000 for  | ||
projects by hospital applicants, $6,500,000 for applicants for  | ||
projects related to skilled and intermediate care long-term  | ||
care facilities licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act, and  | ||
$3,000,000 for projects by all other applicants, which shall be  | ||
annually
adjusted to reflect the increase in construction costs  | ||
due to inflation, for major medical equipment and for all other
 | ||
capital expenditures.
 | ||
 "Non-clinical service area" means an area (i) for the  | ||
benefit of the
patients, visitors, staff, or employees of a  | ||
health care facility and (ii) not
directly related to the  | ||
diagnosis, treatment, or rehabilitation of persons
receiving  | ||
services from the health care facility. "Non-clinical service  | ||
areas"
include, but are not limited to, chapels; gift shops;  | ||
news stands; computer
systems; tunnels, walkways, and  | ||
elevators; telephone systems; projects to
comply with life  | ||
safety codes; educational facilities; student housing;
 | ||
patient, employee, staff, and visitor dining areas;  | ||
administration and
volunteer offices; modernization of  | ||
structural components (such as roof
replacement and masonry  | ||
work); boiler repair or replacement; vehicle
maintenance and  | ||
storage facilities; parking facilities; mechanical systems for
 | ||
heating, ventilation, and air conditioning; loading docks; and  | ||
repair or
replacement of carpeting, tile, wall coverings,  | ||
window coverings or treatments,
or furniture. Solely for the  | ||
purpose of this definition, "non-clinical service
area" does  | ||
not include health and fitness centers.
 | ||
 "Areawide" means a major area of the State delineated on a
 | ||
geographic, demographic, and functional basis for health  | ||
planning and
for health service and having within it one or  | ||
more local areas for
health planning and health service. The  | ||
term "region", as contrasted
with the term "subregion", and the  | ||
word "area" may be used synonymously
with the term "areawide".
 | ||
 "Local" means a subarea of a delineated major area that on  | ||
a
geographic, demographic, and functional basis may be  | ||
considered to be
part of such major area. The term "subregion"  | ||
may be used synonymously
with the term "local".
 | ||
 "Physician" means a person licensed to practice in  | ||
accordance with
the Medical Practice Act of 1987, as amended.
 | ||
 "Licensed health care professional" means a person  | ||
licensed to
practice a health profession under pertinent  | ||
licensing statutes of the
State of Illinois.
 | ||
 "Director" means the Director of the Illinois Department of  | ||
Public Health.
 | ||
 "Agency" means the Illinois Department of Public Health.
 | ||
 "Alternative health care model" means a facility or program  | ||
authorized
under the Alternative Health Care Delivery Act.
 | ||
 "Out-of-state facility" means a person that is both (i)  | ||
licensed as a
hospital or as an ambulatory surgery center under  | ||
the laws of another state
or that
qualifies as a hospital or an  | ||
ambulatory surgery center under regulations
adopted pursuant  | ||
to the Social Security Act and (ii) not licensed under the
 | ||
Ambulatory Surgical Treatment Center Act, the Hospital  | ||
Licensing Act, or the
Nursing Home Care Act. Affiliates of  | ||
out-of-state facilities shall be
considered out-of-state  | ||
facilities. Affiliates of Illinois licensed health
care  | ||
facilities 100% owned by an Illinois licensed health care  | ||
facility, its
parent, or Illinois physicians licensed to  | ||
practice medicine in all its
branches shall not be considered  | ||
out-of-state facilities. Nothing in
this definition shall be
 | ||
construed to include an office or any part of an office of a  | ||
physician licensed
to practice medicine in all its branches in  | ||
Illinois that is not required to be
licensed under the  | ||
Ambulatory Surgical Treatment Center Act.
 | ||
 "Change of ownership of a health care facility" means a  | ||
change in the
person
who has ownership or
control of a health  | ||
care facility's physical plant and capital assets. A change
in  | ||
ownership is indicated by
the following transactions: sale,  | ||
transfer, acquisition, lease, change of
sponsorship, or other  | ||
means of
transferring control.
 | ||
 "Related person" means any person that: (i) is at least 50%  | ||
owned, directly
or indirectly, by
either the health care  | ||
facility or a person owning, directly or indirectly, at
least  | ||
50% of the health
care facility; or (ii) owns, directly or  | ||
indirectly, at least 50% of the
health care facility.
 | ||
 "Charity care" means care provided by a health care  | ||
facility for which the provider does not expect to receive  | ||
payment from the patient or a third-party payer. | ||
 "Freestanding emergency center" means a facility subject  | ||
to licensure under Section 32.5 of the Emergency Medical  | ||
Services (EMS) Systems Act. | ||
 "Category of service" means a grouping by generic class of  | ||
various types or levels of support functions, equipment, care,  | ||
or treatment provided to patients or residents, including, but  | ||
not limited to, classes such as medical-surgical, pediatrics,  | ||
or cardiac catheterization. A category of service may include  | ||
subcategories or levels of care that identify a particular  | ||
degree or type of care within the category of service. Nothing  | ||
in this definition shall be construed to include the practice  | ||
of a physician or other licensed health care professional while  | ||
functioning in an office providing for the care, diagnosis, or  | ||
treatment of patients. A category of service that is subject to  | ||
the Board's jurisdiction must be designated in rules adopted by  | ||
the Board. | ||
 "State Board Staff Report" means the document that sets  | ||
forth the review and findings of the State Board staff, as  | ||
prescribed by the State Board, regarding applications subject  | ||
to Board jurisdiction.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-38, eff. 6-28-11; 97-277, eff. 1-1-12; 97-813,  | ||
eff. 7-13-12; 97-980, eff. 8-17-12; 98-414, eff. 1-1-14;  | ||
98-629, eff. 1-1-15; 98-651, eff. 6-16-14; 98-1086, eff.  | ||
8-26-14; revised 10-22-14.)
 | ||
 (20 ILCS 3960/12) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1162)
 | ||
 (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2019) | ||
 Sec. 12. Powers and duties of State Board. For purposes of  | ||
this Act,
the State Board
shall
exercise the following powers  | ||
and duties:
 | ||
 (1) Prescribe rules,
regulations, standards, criteria,  | ||
procedures or reviews which may vary
according to the purpose  | ||
for which a particular review is being conducted
or the type of  | ||
project reviewed and which are required to carry out the
 | ||
provisions and purposes of this Act. Policies and procedures of  | ||
the State Board shall take into consideration the priorities  | ||
and needs of medically underserved areas and other health care  | ||
services identified through the comprehensive health planning  | ||
process, giving special consideration to the impact of projects  | ||
on access to safety net services. 
 | ||
 (2) Adopt procedures for public
notice and hearing on all  | ||
proposed rules, regulations, standards,
criteria, and plans  | ||
required to carry out the provisions of this Act.
 | ||
 (3) (Blank).
 | ||
 (4) Develop criteria and standards for health care  | ||
facilities planning,
conduct statewide inventories of health  | ||
care facilities, maintain an updated
inventory on the Board's  | ||
web site reflecting the
most recent bed and service
changes and  | ||
updated need determinations when new census data become  | ||
available
or new need formulae
are adopted,
and
develop health  | ||
care facility plans which shall be utilized in the review of
 | ||
applications for permit under
this Act. Such health facility  | ||
plans shall be coordinated by the Board
with pertinent State  | ||
Plans. Inventories pursuant to this Section of skilled or  | ||
intermediate care facilities licensed under the Nursing Home  | ||
Care Act, skilled or intermediate care facilities licensed  | ||
under the ID/DD Community Care Act, facilities licensed under  | ||
the Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act, or nursing  | ||
homes licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act shall be  | ||
conducted on an annual basis no later than July 1 of each year  | ||
and shall include among the information requested a list of all  | ||
services provided by a facility to its residents and to the  | ||
community at large and differentiate between active and  | ||
inactive beds.
 | ||
 In developing health care facility plans, the State Board  | ||
shall consider,
but shall not be limited to, the following:
 | ||
  (a) The size, composition and growth of the population  | ||
 of the area
to be served;
 | ||
  (b) The number of existing and planned facilities  | ||
 offering similar
programs;
 | ||
  (c) The extent of utilization of existing facilities;
 | ||
  (d) The availability of facilities which may serve as  | ||
 alternatives
or substitutes;
 | ||
  (e) The availability of personnel necessary to the  | ||
 operation of the
facility;
 | ||
  (f) Multi-institutional planning and the establishment  | ||
 of
multi-institutional systems where feasible;
 | ||
  (g) The financial and economic feasibility of proposed  | ||
 construction
or modification; and
 | ||
  (h) In the case of health care facilities established  | ||
 by a religious
body or denomination, the needs of the  | ||
 members of such religious body or
denomination may be  | ||
 considered to be public need.
 | ||
 The health care facility plans which are developed and  | ||
adopted in
accordance with this Section shall form the basis  | ||
for the plan of the State
to deal most effectively with  | ||
statewide health needs in regard to health
care facilities.
 | ||
 (5) Coordinate with the Center for Comprehensive Health  | ||
Planning and other state agencies having responsibilities
 | ||
affecting health care facilities, including those of licensure  | ||
and cost
reporting. Beginning no later than January 1, 2013,  | ||
the Department of Public Health shall produce a written annual  | ||
report to the Governor and the General Assembly regarding the  | ||
development of the Center for Comprehensive Health Planning.  | ||
The Chairman of the State Board and the State Board  | ||
Administrator shall also receive a copy of the annual report.
 | ||
 (6) Solicit, accept, hold and administer on behalf of the  | ||
State
any grants or bequests of money, securities or property  | ||
for
use by the State Board or Center for Comprehensive Health  | ||
Planning in the administration of this Act; and enter into  | ||
contracts
consistent with the appropriations for purposes  | ||
enumerated in this Act.
 | ||
 (7) The State Board shall prescribe procedures for review,  | ||
standards,
and criteria which shall be utilized
to make  | ||
periodic reviews and determinations of the appropriateness
of  | ||
any existing health services being rendered by health care  | ||
facilities
subject to the Act. The State Board shall consider  | ||
recommendations of the
Board in making its
determinations.
 | ||
 (8) Prescribe, in consultation
with the Center for  | ||
Comprehensive Health Planning, rules, regulations,
standards,  | ||
and criteria for the conduct of an expeditious review of
 | ||
applications
for permits for projects of construction or  | ||
modification of a health care
facility, which projects are  | ||
classified as emergency, substantive, or non-substantive in  | ||
nature.  | ||
 Six months after June 30, 2009 (the effective date of  | ||
Public Act 96-31), substantive projects shall include no more  | ||
than the following: | ||
  (a) Projects to construct (1) a new or replacement  | ||
 facility located on a new site or
(2) a replacement  | ||
 facility located on the same site as the original facility  | ||
 and the cost of the replacement facility exceeds the  | ||
 capital expenditure minimum, which shall be reviewed by the  | ||
 Board within 120 days; | ||
  (b) Projects proposing a
(1) new service within an  | ||
 existing healthcare facility or
(2) discontinuation of a  | ||
 service within an existing healthcare facility, which  | ||
 shall be reviewed by the Board within 60 days; or | ||
  (c) Projects proposing a change in the bed capacity of  | ||
 a health care facility by an increase in the total number  | ||
 of beds or by a redistribution of beds among various  | ||
 categories of service or by a relocation of beds from one  | ||
 physical facility or site to another by more than 20 beds  | ||
 or more than 10% of total bed capacity, as defined by the  | ||
 State Board, whichever is less, over a 2-year period. | ||
 The Chairman may approve applications for exemption that  | ||
meet the criteria set forth in rules or refer them to the full  | ||
Board. The Chairman may approve any unopposed application that  | ||
meets all of the review criteria or refer them to the full  | ||
Board.  | ||
 Such rules shall
not abridge the right of the Center for  | ||
Comprehensive Health Planning to make
recommendations on the  | ||
classification and approval of projects, nor shall
such rules  | ||
prevent the conduct of a public hearing upon the timely request
 | ||
of an interested party. Such reviews shall not exceed 60 days  | ||
from the
date the application is declared to be complete.
 | ||
 (9) Prescribe rules, regulations,
standards, and criteria  | ||
pertaining to the granting of permits for
construction
and  | ||
modifications which are emergent in nature and must be  | ||
undertaken
immediately to prevent or correct structural  | ||
deficiencies or hazardous
conditions that may harm or injure  | ||
persons using the facility, as defined
in the rules and  | ||
regulations of the State Board. This procedure is exempt
from  | ||
public hearing requirements of this Act.
 | ||
 (10) Prescribe rules,
regulations, standards and criteria  | ||
for the conduct of an expeditious
review, not exceeding 60  | ||
days, of applications for permits for projects to
construct or  | ||
modify health care facilities which are needed for the care
and  | ||
treatment of persons who have acquired immunodeficiency  | ||
syndrome (AIDS)
or related conditions.
 | ||
 (11) Issue written decisions upon request of the applicant  | ||
or an adversely affected party to the Board. Requests for a  | ||
written decision shall be made within 15 days after the Board  | ||
meeting in which a final decision has been made. A "final  | ||
decision" for purposes of this Act is the decision to approve  | ||
or deny an application, or take other actions permitted under  | ||
this Act, at the time and date of the meeting that such action  | ||
is scheduled by the Board. State Board members shall provide  | ||
their rationale when voting on an item before the State Board  | ||
at a State Board meeting in order to comply with subsection (b)  | ||
of Section 3-108 of the Administrative Review Law of the Code  | ||
of Civil Procedure. The transcript of the State Board meeting  | ||
shall be incorporated into the Board's final decision. The  | ||
staff of the Board shall prepare a written copy of the final  | ||
decision and the Board shall approve a final copy for inclusion  | ||
in the formal record. The Board shall consider, for approval,  | ||
the written draft of the final decision no later than the next  | ||
scheduled Board meeting. The written decision shall identify  | ||
the applicable criteria and factors listed in this Act and the  | ||
Board's regulations that were taken into consideration by the  | ||
Board when coming to a final decision. If the Board denies or  | ||
fails to approve an application for permit or exemption, the  | ||
Board shall include in the final decision a detailed  | ||
explanation as to why the application was denied and identify  | ||
what specific criteria or standards the applicant did not  | ||
fulfill. | ||
 (12) Require at least one of its members to participate in  | ||
any public hearing, after the appointment of a majority of the  | ||
members to the Board. | ||
 (13) Provide a mechanism for the public to comment on, and  | ||
request changes to, draft rules and standards. | ||
 (14) Implement public information campaigns to regularly  | ||
inform the general public about the opportunity for public  | ||
hearings and public hearing procedures. | ||
 (15) Establish a separate set of rules and guidelines for  | ||
long-term care that recognizes that nursing homes are a  | ||
different business line and service model from other regulated  | ||
facilities. An open and transparent process shall be developed  | ||
that considers the following: how skilled nursing fits in the  | ||
continuum of care with other care providers, modernization of  | ||
nursing homes, establishment of more private rooms,  | ||
development of alternative services, and current trends in  | ||
long-term care services.
The Chairman of the Board shall  | ||
appoint a permanent Health Services Review Board Long-term Care  | ||
Facility Advisory Subcommittee that shall develop and  | ||
recommend to the Board the rules to be established by the Board  | ||
under this paragraph (15). The Subcommittee shall also provide  | ||
continuous review and commentary on policies and procedures  | ||
relative to long-term care and the review of related projects.  | ||
In consultation with other experts from the health field of  | ||
long-term care, the Board and the Subcommittee shall study new  | ||
approaches to the current bed need formula and Health Service  | ||
Area boundaries to encourage flexibility and innovation in  | ||
design models reflective of the changing long-term care  | ||
marketplace and consumer preferences. The Subcommittee shall  | ||
evaluate, and make recommendations to the State Board  | ||
regarding, the buying, selling, and exchange of beds between  | ||
long-term care facilities within a specified geographic area or  | ||
drive time. The Board shall file the proposed related  | ||
administrative rules for the separate rules and guidelines for  | ||
long-term care required by this paragraph (15) by no later than  | ||
September 30, 2011. The Subcommittee shall be provided a  | ||
reasonable and timely opportunity to review and comment on any  | ||
review, revision, or updating of the criteria, standards,  | ||
procedures, and rules used to evaluate project applications as  | ||
provided under Section 12.3 of this Act.  | ||
 (16) Prescribe and provide forms pertaining to the State  | ||
Board Staff Report. A State Board Staff Report shall pertain to  | ||
applications that include, but are not limited to, applications  | ||
for permit or exemption, applications for permit renewal,  | ||
applications for extension of the obligation period,  | ||
applications requesting a declaratory ruling, or applications  | ||
under the Health Care Worker Self-Referral Self Referral Act.  | ||
State Board Staff Reports shall compare applications to the  | ||
relevant review criteria under the Board's rules.  | ||
 (17) (16) Establish a separate set of rules and guidelines  | ||
for facilities licensed under the Specialized Mental Health  | ||
Rehabilitation Act of 2013. An application for the  | ||
re-establishment of a facility in connection with the  | ||
relocation of the facility shall not be granted unless the  | ||
applicant has a contractual relationship with at least one  | ||
hospital to provide emergency and inpatient mental health  | ||
services required by facility consumers, and at least one  | ||
community mental health agency to provide oversight and  | ||
assistance to facility consumers while living in the facility,  | ||
and appropriate services, including case management, to assist  | ||
them to prepare for discharge and reside stably in the  | ||
community thereafter. No new facilities licensed under the  | ||
Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013 shall be  | ||
established after June 16, 2014 (the effective date of Public  | ||
Act 98-651) this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly  | ||
except in connection with the relocation of an existing  | ||
facility to a new location. An application for a new location  | ||
shall not be approved unless there are adequate community  | ||
services accessible to the consumers within a reasonable  | ||
distance, or by use of public transportation, so as to  | ||
facilitate the goal of achieving maximum individual self-care  | ||
and independence. At no time shall the total number of  | ||
authorized beds under this Act in facilities licensed under the  | ||
Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013 exceed the  | ||
number of authorized beds on June 16, 2014 (the effective date  | ||
of Public Act 98-651) this amendatory Act of the 98th General  | ||
Assembly.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-38, eff. 6-28-11; 97-227, eff. 1-1-12; 97-813,  | ||
eff. 7-13-12; 97-1045, eff. 8-21-13; 97-1115, eff. 8-27-12;  | ||
98-414, eff. 1-1-14; 98-463, eff. 8-16-13; 98-651, eff.  | ||
6-16-14; 98-1086, eff. 8-26-14; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 Section 110. The Home Repair and Construction Task Force  | ||
Act is amended by changing Section 20 as follows:
 | ||
 (20 ILCS 5050/20) | ||
 (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
 | ||
 Sec. 20. Duties.  The Task Force shall: | ||
  (1) discuss whether the residents of Illinois would  | ||
 benefit from legislation requiring home repair and  | ||
 construction service providers to obtain a license from the  | ||
 Department of Financial and Professional Regulation before  | ||
 offering these theses services in Illinois; | ||
  (2) if it is determined that licensure is required,  | ||
 determine: | ||
   (A) the requirements applicants must meet to  | ||
 qualify for a license; | ||
   (B) grounds for denial or revocation of a license;  | ||
 and | ||
   (C) any other considerations relevant to a  | ||
 licensing requirement; and | ||
  (3) make recommendations to the General Assembly.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1030, eff. 8-25-14; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 115. The State Finance Act is amended by setting  | ||
forth and renumbering multiple
versions of Section 5.855 and by  | ||
changing Sections 6z-43 and 8.12 as follows:
 | ||
 (30 ILCS 105/5.855) | ||
 Sec. 5.855. The Special Olympics Illinois and Special  | ||
Children's Charities Fund. | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-649, eff. 6-16-14.)
 | ||
 (30 ILCS 105/5.856) | ||
 Sec. 5.856 5.855. The Supportive Living Facility Fund. | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-651, eff. 6-16-14; revised 9-23-14.)
 | ||
 (30 ILCS 105/5.857) | ||
 (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2016) | ||
 Sec. 5.857 5.855. The Capital Development Board Revolving  | ||
Fund. This Section is repealed July 1, 2016.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-674, eff. 6-30-14; revised 9-23-14.)
 | ||
 (30 ILCS 105/5.858) | ||
 Sec. 5.858 5.855. The Hospital Licensure Fund. | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-683, eff. 6-30-14; revised 9-23-14.)
 | ||
 (30 ILCS 105/5.859) | ||
 Sec. 5.859 5.855. The Illinois National Guard Billeting  | ||
Fund. | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-733, eff. 7-16-14; revised 9-23-14.)
 | ||
 (30 ILCS 105/5.860) | ||
 Sec. 5.860 5.855. The Job Opportunities for Qualified  | ||
Applicants Enforcement Fund. | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-774, eff. 1-1-15; revised 9-23-14.)
 | ||
 (30 ILCS 105/5.861) | ||
 Sec. 5.861 5.855. The Distance Learning Fund. | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-792, eff. 1-1-15; revised 9-23-14.)
 | ||
 (30 ILCS 105/5.862) | ||
 Sec. 5.862 5.855. The State Treasurer's Administrative  | ||
Fund. | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-965, eff. 8-15-14; revised 9-23-14.)
 | ||
 (30 ILCS 105/5.863) | ||
 Sec. 5.863 5.855. The Stroke Data Collection Fund. | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1001, eff. 1-1-15; revised 9-23-14.)
 | ||
 (30 ILCS 105/5.864) | ||
 Sec. 5.864 5.855. The Natural Resources Restoration Trust  | ||
Fund. | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1010, eff. 8-19-14; revised 9-23-14.)
 | ||
 (30 ILCS 105/5.865) | ||
 Sec. 5.865 5.855. The Specialized Services for Survivors of  | ||
Human Trafficking Fund. | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1013, eff. 1-1-15; revised 9-23-14.)
 | ||
 (30 ILCS 105/5.867) | ||
 (This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a  | ||
delayed effective date) | ||
 Sec. 5.867 5.855. The Illinois Secure Choice  | ||
Administrative Fund. | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1150, eff. 6-1-15; revised 2-2-15.)
 | ||
 (30 ILCS 105/6z-43)
 | ||
 Sec. 6z-43. Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund. 
 | ||
 (a) There is created in the State Treasury a special fund  | ||
to be known
as the Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund, which  | ||
shall contain 3 accounts: (i) the General Account, (ii) the  | ||
Tobacco Settlement Bond Proceeds Account and (iii) the Tobacco  | ||
Settlement Residual Account. There shall be deposited into the  | ||
several accounts of the Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund
and  | ||
the Attorney General Tobacco Fund all monies paid to the State  | ||
pursuant to (1) the Master Settlement Agreement
entered in the  | ||
case of People of the State of Illinois v. Philip Morris, et  | ||
al.
(Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 96-L13146) and (2) any  | ||
settlement with or
judgment against any tobacco product  | ||
manufacturer other than one participating
in the Master  | ||
Settlement Agreement in satisfaction of any released claim as
 | ||
defined in the Master Settlement Agreement, as well as any  | ||
other monies as
provided by law. Moneys shall be deposited into
 | ||
the Tobacco Settlement Bond Proceeds Account and the Tobacco  | ||
Settlement Residual Account as provided by the terms of the  | ||
Railsplitter Tobacco Settlement Authority Act, provided that  | ||
an annual amount not less than $2,500,000, subject to  | ||
appropriation, shall be deposited into the Attorney General  | ||
Tobacco Fund for use only by the Attorney General's office. The  | ||
scheduled $2,500,000 deposit into the Tobacco Settlement  | ||
Residual Account for fiscal year 2011 should be transferred to  | ||
the Attorney General Tobacco Fund in fiscal year 2012 as soon  | ||
as this fund has been established. All other moneys available  | ||
to be deposited into the Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund shall  | ||
be deposited into the General Account. An investment made from  | ||
moneys credited to a specific account constitutes part of that  | ||
account and such account shall be credited with all income from  | ||
the investment of such moneys. The Treasurer
may invest the  | ||
moneys in the several accounts the Fund in the same manner, in  | ||
the same types of
investments, and subject to the same  | ||
limitations provided in the Illinois
Pension Code for the  | ||
investment of pension funds other than those established
under  | ||
Article 3 or 4 of the Code. Notwithstanding the foregoing, to  | ||
the extent necessary to preserve the tax-exempt status of any  | ||
bonds issued pursuant to the Railsplitter Tobacco Settlement  | ||
Authority Act, the interest on which is intended to be  | ||
excludable from the gross income of the owners for federal  | ||
income tax purposes, moneys on deposit in the Tobacco  | ||
Settlement Bond Proceeds Account and the Tobacco Settlement  | ||
Residual Account may be invested in obligations the interest  | ||
upon which is tax-exempt under the provisions of Section 103 of  | ||
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as now or hereafter amended,  | ||
or any successor code or provision. 
 | ||
 (b) Moneys on deposit in the Tobacco Settlement Bond  | ||
Proceeds Account and the Tobacco Settlement Residual Account  | ||
may be expended, subject to appropriation, for the purposes  | ||
authorized in subsection (g) of Section 3-6 Section 6(g) of the  | ||
Railsplitter Tobacco Settlement Authority Act.  | ||
 (c) As soon as may be practical after June 30, 2001, upon  | ||
notification
from and at the direction of the Governor, the  | ||
State Comptroller shall direct
and the State Treasurer shall  | ||
transfer the unencumbered balance in the Tobacco
Settlement  | ||
Recovery Fund as of June 30, 2001, as determined by the  | ||
Governor,
into the Budget Stabilization Fund. The Treasurer may  | ||
invest the moneys in the
Budget Stabilization Fund in the same  | ||
manner, in the same types of investments,
and subject to the  | ||
same limitations provided in the Illinois Pension Code for
the  | ||
investment of pension funds other than those established under  | ||
Article 3 or
4 of the Code.
 | ||
 (d) All federal financial participation moneys received
 | ||
pursuant to expenditures from the Fund shall be deposited into  | ||
the General Account.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 96-958, eff. 7-1-10; 97-72, eff. 7-1-11; revised  | ||
12-1-14.)
 | ||
 (30 ILCS 105/8.12)
 (from Ch. 127, par. 144.12)
 | ||
 Sec. 8.12. State Pensions Fund. 
 | ||
 (a) The moneys in the State Pensions Fund shall be used  | ||
exclusively
for the administration of the Uniform Disposition  | ||
of Unclaimed Property Act and
for the expenses incurred by the  | ||
Auditor General for administering the provisions of Section  | ||
2-8.1 of the Illinois State Auditing Act and for the funding of  | ||
the unfunded liabilities of the designated retirement systems.  | ||
Beginning in State fiscal year 2016, payments to the designated  | ||
retirement systems under this Section shall be in addition to,  | ||
and not in lieu of, any State contributions required under the  | ||
Illinois Pension Code.
 | ||
 "Designated retirement systems" means:
 | ||
  (1) the State Employees' Retirement System of  | ||
 Illinois;
 | ||
  (2) the Teachers' Retirement System of the State of  | ||
 Illinois;
 | ||
  (3) the State Universities Retirement System;
 | ||
  (4) the Judges Retirement System of Illinois; and
 | ||
  (5) the General Assembly Retirement System.
 | ||
 (b) Each year the General Assembly may make appropriations  | ||
from
the State Pensions Fund for the administration of the  | ||
Uniform Disposition of
Unclaimed Property Act.
 | ||
 Each month, the Commissioner of the Office of Banks and  | ||
Real Estate shall
certify to the State Treasurer the actual  | ||
expenditures that the Office of
Banks and Real Estate incurred  | ||
conducting unclaimed property examinations under
the Uniform  | ||
Disposition of Unclaimed Property Act during the immediately
 | ||
preceding month. Within a reasonable
time following the  | ||
acceptance of such certification by the State Treasurer, the
 | ||
State Treasurer shall pay from its appropriation from the State  | ||
Pensions Fund
to the Bank and Trust Company Fund, the Savings  | ||
Bank Regulatory Fund, and the Residential Finance
Regulatory  | ||
Fund an amount equal to the expenditures incurred by each Fund  | ||
for
that month.
 | ||
 Each month, the Director of Financial Institutions shall
 | ||
certify to the State Treasurer the actual expenditures that the  | ||
Department of
Financial Institutions incurred conducting  | ||
unclaimed property examinations
under the Uniform Disposition  | ||
of Unclaimed Property Act during the immediately
preceding  | ||
month. Within a reasonable time following the acceptance of  | ||
such
certification by the State Treasurer, the State Treasurer  | ||
shall pay from its
appropriation from the State Pensions Fund
 | ||
to the Financial Institution Fund and the Credit Union Fund
an  | ||
amount equal to the expenditures incurred by each Fund for
that  | ||
month.
 | ||
 (c) As soon as possible after the effective date of this  | ||
amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, the General  | ||
Assembly shall appropriate from the State Pensions Fund (1) to  | ||
the State Universities Retirement System the amount certified  | ||
under Section 15-165 during the prior year, (2) to the Judges  | ||
Retirement System of Illinois the amount certified under  | ||
Section 18-140 during the prior year, and (3) to the General  | ||
Assembly Retirement System the amount certified under Section  | ||
2-134 during the prior year as part of the required
State  | ||
contributions to each of those designated retirement systems;  | ||
except that amounts appropriated under this subsection (c) in  | ||
State fiscal year 2005 shall not reduce the amount in the State  | ||
Pensions Fund below $5,000,000. If the amount in the State  | ||
Pensions Fund does not exceed the sum of the amounts certified  | ||
in Sections 15-165, 18-140, and 2-134 by at least $5,000,000,  | ||
the amount paid to each designated retirement system under this  | ||
subsection shall be reduced in proportion to the amount  | ||
certified by each of those designated retirement systems.
 | ||
 (c-5) For fiscal years 2006 through 2015, the General  | ||
Assembly shall appropriate from the State Pensions Fund to the  | ||
State Universities Retirement System the amount estimated to be  | ||
available during the fiscal year in the State Pensions Fund;  | ||
provided, however, that the amounts appropriated under this  | ||
subsection (c-5) shall not reduce the amount in the State  | ||
Pensions Fund below $5,000,000.
 | ||
 (c-6) For fiscal year 2016 and each fiscal year thereafter,  | ||
as soon as may be practical after any money is deposited into  | ||
the State Pensions Fund from the Unclaimed Property Trust Fund,  | ||
the State Treasurer shall apportion the deposited amount among  | ||
the designated retirement systems as defined in subsection (a)  | ||
to reduce their actuarial reserve deficiencies. The State  | ||
Comptroller and State Treasurer shall pay the apportioned  | ||
amounts to the designated retirement systems to fund the  | ||
unfunded liabilities of the designated retirement systems. The  | ||
amount apportioned to each designated retirement system shall  | ||
constitute a portion of the amount estimated to be available  | ||
for appropriation from the State Pensions Fund that is the same  | ||
as that retirement system's portion of the total actual reserve  | ||
deficiency of the systems, as determined annually by the  | ||
Governor's Office of Management and Budget at the request of  | ||
the State Treasurer. The amounts apportioned under this  | ||
subsection shall not reduce the amount in the State Pensions  | ||
Fund below $5,000,000.  | ||
 (d) The
Governor's Office of Management and Budget shall  | ||
determine the individual and total
reserve deficiencies of the  | ||
designated retirement systems. For this purpose,
the
 | ||
Governor's Office of Management and Budget shall utilize the  | ||
latest available audit and actuarial
reports of each of the  | ||
retirement systems and the relevant reports and
statistics of  | ||
the Public Employee Pension Fund Division of the Department of
 | ||
Insurance.
 | ||
 (d-1) As soon as practicable after the effective date of  | ||
this
amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, the  | ||
Comptroller shall
direct and the Treasurer shall transfer from  | ||
the State Pensions Fund to
the General Revenue Fund, as funds  | ||
become available, a sum equal to the
amounts that would have  | ||
been paid
from the State Pensions Fund to the Teachers'  | ||
Retirement System of the State
of Illinois,
the State  | ||
Universities Retirement System, the Judges Retirement
System  | ||
of Illinois, the
General Assembly Retirement System, and the  | ||
State Employees'
Retirement System
of Illinois
after the  | ||
effective date of this
amendatory Act during the remainder of  | ||
fiscal year 2004 to the
designated retirement systems from the  | ||
appropriations provided for in
this Section if the transfers  | ||
provided in Section 6z-61 had not
occurred. The transfers  | ||
described in this subsection (d-1) are to
partially repay the  | ||
General Revenue Fund for the costs associated with
the bonds  | ||
used to fund the moneys transferred to the designated
 | ||
retirement systems under Section 6z-61.
 | ||
 (e) The changes to this Section made by this amendatory Act  | ||
of 1994 shall
first apply to distributions from the Fund for  | ||
State fiscal year 1996.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-72, eff. 7-1-11; 97-732, eff. 6-30-12; 98-24,  | ||
eff. 6-19-13; 98-463, eff. 8-16-13; 98-674, eff. 6-30-14;  | ||
98-1081, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 Section 120. The Public Funds Investment Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 6.5 as follows:
 | ||
 (30 ILCS 235/6.5) | ||
 Sec. 6.5. Federally insured deposits at Illinois financial  | ||
institutions. | ||
 (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act or any  | ||
other statute, whenever a public agency invests public funds in  | ||
an interest-bearing savings account, demand deposit account,  | ||
interest-bearing certificate of deposit, or interest-bearing  | ||
time deposit under Section 2 of this Act, the provisions of  | ||
Section 6 of this Act and any other statutory requirements  | ||
pertaining to the eligibility of a bank to receive or hold  | ||
public deposits or to the pledging of collateral by a bank to  | ||
secure public deposits do not apply to any bank receiving or  | ||
holding all or part of the invested public funds if (i) the  | ||
public agency initiates the investment at or through a bank  | ||
located in Illinois and (ii) the invested public funds are at  | ||
all times fully insured by an agency or instrumentality of the  | ||
federal government. | ||
 (b) Nothing in this Section is intended to: | ||
  (1) prohibit a public agency from requiring the bank at  | ||
 or through which the investment of public funds is  | ||
 initiated to provide the public agency with the information  | ||
 otherwise required by subsection (a), (b), or (c) of  | ||
 Section 6 of this Act as a condition of investing the  | ||
 public funds at or through that bank; or | ||
  (2) permit a bank to receive or hold public deposits if  | ||
 that bank is prohibited from doing so by any rule,  | ||
 sanction, or order issued by a regulatory agency or by a  | ||
 court. | ||
 (c) For purposes of this Section, the term "bank" includes  | ||
any person doing a banking business whether subject to the laws  | ||
of this or any other jurisdiction.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-703, eff. 7-7-14; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14;  | ||
revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 Section 125. The Illinois Coal Technology Development  | ||
Assistance Act is amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
 | ||
 (30 ILCS 730/3) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 8203)
 | ||
 Sec. 3. Transfers to Coal Technology Development  | ||
Assistance Fund Funds. As soon
as may be practicable after the  | ||
first day of each month, the Department of
Revenue shall  | ||
certify to the Treasurer an amount equal to 1/64 of the revenue
 | ||
realized from the tax imposed by the Electricity Excise Tax  | ||
Law, Section 2
of the Public Utilities Revenue Act,
Section 2  | ||
of the Messages Tax Act, and Section 2 of the Gas Revenue Tax  | ||
Act,
during the preceding month. Upon receipt of the  | ||
certification, the Treasurer
shall transfer the amount shown on  | ||
such certification from the General Revenue
Fund to the Coal  | ||
Technology Development Assistance Fund, which is hereby
 | ||
created as a special fund in the State treasury, except that no  | ||
transfer shall
be made in any month in which the Fund has  | ||
reached the following balance:
 | ||
  (1) $7,000,000 during fiscal year 1994.
 | ||
  (2) $8,500,000 during fiscal year 1995.
 | ||
  (3) $10,000,000 during fiscal years 1996 and 1997.
 | ||
  (4) During fiscal year 1998 through fiscal year 2004,  | ||
 an amount
equal to the sum of $10,000,000 plus additional  | ||
 moneys
deposited into the Coal Technology Development  | ||
 Assistance Fund from the
Renewable Energy Resources and  | ||
 Coal Technology Development Assistance Charge
under  | ||
 Section 6.5 of the Renewable Energy, Energy Efficiency, and  | ||
 Coal
Resources Development Law of 1997. | ||
  (5) During fiscal year 2005, an amount equal to the sum  | ||
 of $7,000,000 plus additional moneys
deposited into the  | ||
 Coal Technology Development Assistance Fund from the
 | ||
 Renewable Energy Resources and Coal Technology Development  | ||
 Assistance Charge
under Section 6.5 of the Renewable  | ||
 Energy, Energy Efficiency, and Coal
Resources Development  | ||
 Law of 1997. | ||
  (6) During fiscal year 2006 and each fiscal year  | ||
 thereafter, an amount equal to the sum of $10,000,000 plus  | ||
 additional moneys
deposited into the Coal Technology  | ||
 Development Assistance Fund from the
Renewable Energy  | ||
 Resources and Coal Technology Development Assistance  | ||
 Charge
under Section 6.5 of the Renewable Energy, Energy  | ||
 Efficiency, and Coal
Resources Development Law of 1997.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04; revised 12-1-14.)
 | ||
 Section 130. The Charitable Trust Stabilization Act is  | ||
amended by changing Section 10 as follows:
 | ||
 (30 ILCS 790/10)
 | ||
 Sec. 10. The Charitable Trust Stabilization Committee.  | ||
 (a) The Charitable Trust Stabilization Committee is  | ||
created. The Committee consists of the following members: | ||
  (1) the Attorney General or his or her designee, who  | ||
 shall serve as co-chair of the Committee; | ||
  (2) a member that represents the Office of the State  | ||
 Treasurer that is appointed by the Treasurer, who shall  | ||
 serve as co-chair of the Committee; | ||
  (3) the Lieutenant Governor or his or her designee; | ||
  (4) the Director of Commerce and Economic Opportunity  | ||
 or his or her designee; | ||
  (5) the chief executive officer of the Division of  | ||
 Financial Institutions in the Department of Financial and  | ||
 Professional Regulation Regulations or his or her  | ||
 designee; and | ||
  (6) six private citizens, who shall serve a term of 6  | ||
 years, appointed by the State Treasurer with advice and  | ||
 consent of the Senate. | ||
 (b) The State Treasurer shall adopt rules, including  | ||
procedures and criteria for grant awards. The Committee must  | ||
meet at least once each
calendar
quarter, and it may establish  | ||
committees and officers as it deems necessary.
For purposes of  | ||
Committee meetings, a quorum is a majority of the members.
 | ||
Meetings of the Committee are subject to the Open Meetings Act.
 | ||
The Committee must afford an opportunity for public comment at  | ||
each of its meetings. | ||
 (c) Committee members shall serve without compensation,  | ||
but may be
reimbursed
for their reasonable travel expenses from  | ||
funds available for that purpose. The
Office of the State  | ||
Treasurer shall, subject to appropriation, provide staff and
 | ||
administrative support services to the Committee. | ||
 (d) The State Treasurer shall administer the Charitable  | ||
Trust Stabilization Fund. | ||
 The State Treasurer may transfer all or a portion of the  | ||
balance of the fund to a third-party administrator to fulfill  | ||
the mission of the Committee and the purposes of the fund in  | ||
accordance with this Act and in compliance with Section 5(c) of  | ||
this Act. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-274, eff. 8-8-11; revised 12-1-14.)
 | ||
 Section 135. The State Mandates Act is amended by changing  | ||
Section 8.38 as follows:
 | ||
 (30 ILCS 805/8.38) | ||
 Sec. 8.38. Exempt mandate. Notwithstanding Sections 6 and 8  | ||
of this Act, no reimbursement by the State is required for the  | ||
implementation of any mandate created by Public Act 98-641,  | ||
98-666, 98-729, 98-930, or 98-1027 this amendatory Act of the  | ||
98th General Assembly.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-641, eff. 6-9-14; 98-666, eff. 1-1-15; 98-729,  | ||
eff. 7-26-14; 98-930, eff. 1-1-15; 98-1027, eff. 1-1-15;  | ||
revised 10-6-14.)
 | ||
 Section 140. The Illinois Income Tax Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 901 as follows:
 | ||
 (35 ILCS 5/901) (from Ch. 120, par. 9-901) | ||
 Sec. 901. Collection authority.  | ||
 (a) In general. | ||
 The Department shall collect the taxes imposed by this Act.  | ||
The Department
shall collect certified past due child support  | ||
amounts under Section 2505-650
of the Department of Revenue Law  | ||
(20 ILCS 2505/2505-650). Except as
provided in subsections (c),  | ||
(e), (f), (g), and (h) of this Section, money collected
 | ||
pursuant to subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act  | ||
shall be
paid into the General Revenue Fund in the State  | ||
treasury; money
collected pursuant to subsections (c) and (d)  | ||
of Section 201 of this Act
shall be paid into the Personal  | ||
Property Tax Replacement Fund, a special
fund in the State  | ||
Treasury; and money collected under Section 2505-650 of the
 | ||
Department of Revenue Law (20 ILCS 2505/2505-650) shall be paid
 | ||
into the
Child Support Enforcement Trust Fund, a special fund  | ||
outside the State
Treasury, or
to the State
Disbursement Unit  | ||
established under Section 10-26 of the Illinois Public Aid
 | ||
Code, as directed by the Department of Healthcare and Family  | ||
Services. | ||
 (b) Local Government Distributive Fund. | ||
 Beginning August 1, 1969, and continuing through June 30,  | ||
1994, the Treasurer
shall transfer each month from the General  | ||
Revenue Fund to a special fund in
the State treasury, to be  | ||
known as the "Local Government Distributive Fund", an
amount  | ||
equal to 1/12 of the net revenue realized from the tax imposed  | ||
by
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act during  | ||
the preceding month.
Beginning July 1, 1994, and continuing  | ||
through June 30, 1995, the Treasurer
shall transfer each month  | ||
from the General Revenue Fund to the Local Government
 | ||
Distributive Fund an amount equal to 1/11 of the net revenue  | ||
realized from the
tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of  | ||
Section 201 of this Act during the
preceding month. Beginning  | ||
July 1, 1995 and continuing through January 31, 2011, the  | ||
Treasurer shall transfer each
month from the General Revenue  | ||
Fund to the Local Government Distributive Fund
an amount equal  | ||
to the net of (i) 1/10 of the net revenue realized from the
tax  | ||
imposed by
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of the  | ||
Illinois Income Tax Act during
the preceding month
(ii) minus,  | ||
beginning July 1, 2003 and ending June 30, 2004, $6,666,666,  | ||
and
beginning July 1,
2004,
zero. Beginning February 1, 2011,  | ||
and continuing through January 31, 2015, the Treasurer shall  | ||
transfer each month from the General Revenue Fund to the Local  | ||
Government Distributive Fund an amount equal to the sum of (i)  | ||
6% (10% of the ratio of the 3% individual income tax rate prior  | ||
to 2011 to the 5% individual income tax rate after 2010) of the  | ||
net revenue realized from the tax imposed by subsections (a)  | ||
and (b) of Section 201 of this Act upon individuals, trusts,  | ||
and estates during the preceding month and (ii) 6.86% (10% of  | ||
the ratio of the 4.8% corporate income tax rate prior to 2011  | ||
to the 7% corporate income tax rate after 2010) of the net  | ||
revenue realized from the tax imposed by subsections (a) and  | ||
(b) of Section 201 of this Act upon corporations during the  | ||
preceding month. Beginning February 1, 2015 and continuing  | ||
through January 31, 2025, the Treasurer shall transfer each  | ||
month from the General Revenue Fund to the Local Government  | ||
Distributive Fund an amount equal to the sum of (i) 8% (10% of  | ||
the ratio of the 3% individual income tax rate prior to 2011 to  | ||
the 3.75% individual income tax rate after 2014) of the net  | ||
revenue realized from the tax imposed by subsections (a) and  | ||
(b) of Section 201 of this Act upon individuals, trusts, and  | ||
estates during the preceding month and (ii) 9.14% (10% of the  | ||
ratio of the 4.8% corporate income tax rate prior to 2011 to  | ||
the 5.25% corporate income tax rate after 2014) of the net  | ||
revenue realized from the tax imposed by subsections (a) and  | ||
(b) of Section 201 of this Act upon corporations during the  | ||
preceding month. Beginning February 1, 2025, the Treasurer  | ||
shall transfer each month from the General Revenue Fund to the  | ||
Local Government Distributive Fund an amount equal to the sum  | ||
of (i) 9.23% (10% of the ratio of the 3% individual income tax  | ||
rate prior to 2011 to the 3.25% individual income tax rate  | ||
after 2024) of the net revenue realized from the tax imposed by  | ||
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act upon  | ||
individuals, trusts, and estates during the preceding month and  | ||
(ii) 10% of the net revenue realized from the tax imposed by  | ||
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act upon  | ||
corporations during the preceding month. Net revenue realized  | ||
for a month shall be defined as the
revenue from the tax  | ||
imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this
Act  | ||
which is deposited in the General Revenue Fund, the Education  | ||
Assistance
Fund, the Income Tax Surcharge Local Government  | ||
Distributive Fund, the Fund for the Advancement of Education,  | ||
and the Commitment to Human Services Fund during the
month  | ||
minus the amount paid out of the General Revenue Fund in State  | ||
warrants
during that same month as refunds to taxpayers for  | ||
overpayment of liability
under the tax imposed by subsections  | ||
(a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act. | ||
 Beginning on August 26, 2014 (the effective date of Public  | ||
Act 98-1052) this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly,  | ||
the Comptroller shall perform the transfers required by this  | ||
subsection (b) no later than 60 days after he or she receives  | ||
the certification from the Treasurer as provided in Section 1  | ||
of the State Revenue Sharing Act.  | ||
 (c) Deposits Into Income Tax Refund Fund. | ||
  (1) Beginning on January 1, 1989 and thereafter, the  | ||
 Department shall
deposit a percentage of the amounts  | ||
 collected pursuant to subsections (a)
and (b)(1), (2), and  | ||
 (3), of Section 201 of this Act into a fund in the State
 | ||
 treasury known as the Income Tax Refund Fund. The  | ||
 Department shall deposit 6%
of such amounts during the  | ||
 period beginning January 1, 1989 and ending on June
30,  | ||
 1989. Beginning with State fiscal year 1990 and for each  | ||
 fiscal year
thereafter, the percentage deposited into the  | ||
 Income Tax Refund Fund during a
fiscal year shall be the  | ||
 Annual Percentage. For fiscal years 1999 through
2001, the  | ||
 Annual Percentage shall be 7.1%.
For fiscal year 2003, the  | ||
 Annual Percentage shall be 8%.
For fiscal year 2004, the  | ||
 Annual Percentage shall be 11.7%. Upon the effective date  | ||
 of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, the  | ||
 Annual Percentage shall be 10% for fiscal year 2005. For  | ||
 fiscal year 2006, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.75%. For  | ||
 fiscal
year 2007, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.75%. For  | ||
 fiscal year 2008, the Annual Percentage shall be 7.75%. For  | ||
 fiscal year 2009, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.75%. For  | ||
 fiscal year 2010, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.75%. For  | ||
 fiscal year 2011, the Annual Percentage shall be 8.75%. For  | ||
 fiscal year 2012, the Annual Percentage shall be 8.75%. For  | ||
 fiscal year 2013, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.75%. For  | ||
 fiscal year 2014, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.5%. For  | ||
 fiscal year 2015, the Annual Percentage shall be 10%. For  | ||
 all other
fiscal years, the
Annual Percentage shall be  | ||
 calculated as a fraction, the numerator of which
shall be  | ||
 the amount of refunds approved for payment by the  | ||
 Department during
the preceding fiscal year as a result of  | ||
 overpayment of tax liability under
subsections (a) and  | ||
 (b)(1), (2), and (3) of Section 201 of this Act plus the
 | ||
 amount of such refunds remaining approved but unpaid at the  | ||
 end of the
preceding fiscal year, minus the amounts  | ||
 transferred into the Income Tax
Refund Fund from the  | ||
 Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund, and
the denominator of  | ||
 which shall be the amounts which will be collected pursuant
 | ||
 to subsections (a) and (b)(1), (2), and (3) of Section 201  | ||
 of this Act during
the preceding fiscal year; except that  | ||
 in State fiscal year 2002, the Annual
Percentage shall in  | ||
 no event exceed 7.6%. The Director of Revenue shall
certify  | ||
 the Annual Percentage to the Comptroller on the last  | ||
 business day of
the fiscal year immediately preceding the  | ||
 fiscal year for which it is to be
effective. | ||
  (2) Beginning on January 1, 1989 and thereafter, the  | ||
 Department shall
deposit a percentage of the amounts  | ||
 collected pursuant to subsections (a)
and (b)(6), (7), and  | ||
 (8), (c) and (d) of Section 201
of this Act into a fund in  | ||
 the State treasury known as the Income Tax
Refund Fund. The  | ||
 Department shall deposit 18% of such amounts during the
 | ||
 period beginning January 1, 1989 and ending on June 30,  | ||
 1989. Beginning
with State fiscal year 1990 and for each  | ||
 fiscal year thereafter, the
percentage deposited into the  | ||
 Income Tax Refund Fund during a fiscal year
shall be the  | ||
 Annual Percentage. For fiscal years 1999, 2000, and 2001,  | ||
 the
Annual Percentage shall be 19%.
For fiscal year 2003,  | ||
 the Annual Percentage shall be 27%. For fiscal year
2004,  | ||
 the Annual Percentage shall be 32%.
Upon the effective date  | ||
 of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, the  | ||
 Annual Percentage shall be 24% for fiscal year 2005.
For  | ||
 fiscal year 2006, the Annual Percentage shall be 20%. For  | ||
 fiscal
year 2007, the Annual Percentage shall be 17.5%. For  | ||
 fiscal year 2008, the Annual Percentage shall be 15.5%. For  | ||
 fiscal year 2009, the Annual Percentage shall be 17.5%. For  | ||
 fiscal year 2010, the Annual Percentage shall be 17.5%. For  | ||
 fiscal year 2011, the Annual Percentage shall be 17.5%. For  | ||
 fiscal year 2012, the Annual Percentage shall be 17.5%. For  | ||
 fiscal year 2013, the Annual Percentage shall be 14%. For  | ||
 fiscal year 2014, the Annual Percentage shall be 13.4%. For  | ||
 fiscal year 2015, the Annual Percentage shall be 14%. For  | ||
 all other fiscal years, the Annual
Percentage shall be  | ||
 calculated
as a fraction, the numerator of which shall be  | ||
 the amount of refunds
approved for payment by the  | ||
 Department during the preceding fiscal year as
a result of  | ||
 overpayment of tax liability under subsections (a) and  | ||
 (b)(6),
(7), and (8), (c) and (d) of Section 201 of this  | ||
 Act plus the
amount of such refunds remaining approved but  | ||
 unpaid at the end of the
preceding fiscal year, and the  | ||
 denominator of
which shall be the amounts which will be  | ||
 collected pursuant to subsections (a)
and (b)(6), (7), and  | ||
 (8), (c) and (d) of Section 201 of this Act during the
 | ||
 preceding fiscal year; except that in State fiscal year  | ||
 2002, the Annual
Percentage shall in no event exceed 23%.  | ||
 The Director of Revenue shall
certify the Annual Percentage  | ||
 to the Comptroller on the last business day of
the fiscal  | ||
 year immediately preceding the fiscal year for which it is  | ||
 to be
effective. | ||
  (3) The Comptroller shall order transferred and the  | ||
 Treasurer shall
transfer from the Tobacco Settlement  | ||
 Recovery Fund to the Income Tax Refund
Fund (i) $35,000,000  | ||
 in January, 2001, (ii) $35,000,000 in January, 2002, and
 | ||
 (iii) $35,000,000 in January, 2003. | ||
 (d) Expenditures from Income Tax Refund Fund. | ||
  (1) Beginning January 1, 1989, money in the Income Tax  | ||
 Refund Fund
shall be expended exclusively for the purpose  | ||
 of paying refunds resulting
from overpayment of tax  | ||
 liability under Section 201 of this Act, for paying
rebates  | ||
 under Section 208.1 in the event that the amounts in the  | ||
 Homeowners'
Tax Relief Fund are insufficient for that  | ||
 purpose,
and for
making transfers pursuant to this  | ||
 subsection (d). | ||
  (2) The Director shall order payment of refunds  | ||
 resulting from
overpayment of tax liability under Section  | ||
 201 of this Act from the
Income Tax Refund Fund only to the  | ||
 extent that amounts collected pursuant
to Section 201 of  | ||
 this Act and transfers pursuant to this subsection (d)
and  | ||
 item (3) of subsection (c) have been deposited and retained  | ||
 in the
Fund. | ||
  (3) As soon as possible after the end of each fiscal  | ||
 year, the Director
shall
order transferred and the State  | ||
 Treasurer and State Comptroller shall
transfer from the  | ||
 Income Tax Refund Fund to the Personal Property Tax
 | ||
 Replacement Fund an amount, certified by the Director to  | ||
 the Comptroller,
equal to the excess of the amount  | ||
 collected pursuant to subsections (c) and
(d) of Section  | ||
 201 of this Act deposited into the Income Tax Refund Fund
 | ||
 during the fiscal year over the amount of refunds resulting  | ||
 from
overpayment of tax liability under subsections (c) and  | ||
 (d) of Section 201
of this Act paid from the Income Tax  | ||
 Refund Fund during the fiscal year. | ||
  (4) As soon as possible after the end of each fiscal  | ||
 year, the Director shall
order transferred and the State  | ||
 Treasurer and State Comptroller shall
transfer from the  | ||
 Personal Property Tax Replacement Fund to the Income Tax
 | ||
 Refund Fund an amount, certified by the Director to the  | ||
 Comptroller, equal
to the excess of the amount of refunds  | ||
 resulting from overpayment of tax
liability under  | ||
 subsections (c) and (d) of Section 201 of this Act paid
 | ||
 from the Income Tax Refund Fund during the fiscal year over  | ||
 the amount
collected pursuant to subsections (c) and (d) of  | ||
 Section 201 of this Act
deposited into the Income Tax  | ||
 Refund Fund during the fiscal year. | ||
  (4.5) As soon as possible after the end of fiscal year  | ||
 1999 and of each
fiscal year
thereafter, the Director shall  | ||
 order transferred and the State Treasurer and
State  | ||
 Comptroller shall transfer from the Income Tax Refund Fund  | ||
 to the General
Revenue Fund any surplus remaining in the  | ||
 Income Tax Refund Fund as of the end
of such fiscal year;  | ||
 excluding for fiscal years 2000, 2001, and 2002
amounts  | ||
 attributable to transfers under item (3) of subsection (c)  | ||
 less refunds
resulting from the earned income tax credit. | ||
  (5) This Act shall constitute an irrevocable and  | ||
 continuing
appropriation from the Income Tax Refund Fund  | ||
 for the purpose of paying
refunds upon the order of the  | ||
 Director in accordance with the provisions of
this Section. | ||
 (e) Deposits into the Education Assistance Fund and the  | ||
Income Tax
Surcharge Local Government Distributive Fund. | ||
 On July 1, 1991, and thereafter, of the amounts collected  | ||
pursuant to
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act,  | ||
minus deposits into the
Income Tax Refund Fund, the Department  | ||
shall deposit 7.3% into the
Education Assistance Fund in the  | ||
State Treasury. Beginning July 1, 1991,
and continuing through  | ||
January 31, 1993, of the amounts collected pursuant to
 | ||
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of the Illinois Income  | ||
Tax Act, minus
deposits into the Income Tax Refund Fund, the  | ||
Department shall deposit 3.0%
into the Income Tax Surcharge  | ||
Local Government Distributive Fund in the State
Treasury.  | ||
Beginning February 1, 1993 and continuing through June 30,  | ||
1993, of
the amounts collected pursuant to subsections (a) and  | ||
(b) of Section 201 of the
Illinois Income Tax Act, minus  | ||
deposits into the Income Tax Refund Fund, the
Department shall  | ||
deposit 4.4% into the Income Tax Surcharge Local Government
 | ||
Distributive Fund in the State Treasury. Beginning July 1,  | ||
1993, and
continuing through June 30, 1994, of the amounts  | ||
collected under subsections
(a) and (b) of Section 201 of this  | ||
Act, minus deposits into the Income Tax
Refund Fund, the  | ||
Department shall deposit 1.475% into the Income Tax Surcharge
 | ||
Local Government Distributive Fund in the State Treasury. | ||
 (f) Deposits into the Fund for the Advancement of  | ||
Education. Beginning February 1, 2015, the Department shall  | ||
deposit the following portions of the revenue realized from the  | ||
tax imposed upon individuals, trusts, and estates by  | ||
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act during the  | ||
preceding month, minus deposits into the Income Tax Refund  | ||
Fund, into the Fund for the Advancement of Education:  | ||
  (1) beginning February 1, 2015, and prior to February  | ||
 1, 2025, 1/30; and  | ||
  (2) beginning February 1, 2025, 1/26.  | ||
 If the rate of tax imposed by subsection (a) and (b) of  | ||
Section 201 is reduced pursuant to Section 201.5 of this Act,  | ||
the Department shall not make the deposits required by this  | ||
subsection (f) on or after the effective date of the reduction.  | ||
 (g) Deposits into the Commitment to Human Services Fund.  | ||
Beginning February 1, 2015, the Department shall deposit the  | ||
following portions of the revenue realized from the tax imposed  | ||
upon individuals, trusts, and estates by subsections (a) and  | ||
(b) of Section 201 of this Act during the preceding month,  | ||
minus deposits into the Income Tax Refund Fund, into the  | ||
Commitment to Human Services Fund:  | ||
  (1) beginning February 1, 2015, and prior to February  | ||
 1, 2025, 1/30; and  | ||
  (2) beginning February 1, 2025, 1/26.  | ||
 If the rate of tax imposed by subsection (a) and (b) of  | ||
Section 201 is reduced pursuant to Section 201.5 of this Act,  | ||
the Department shall not make the deposits required by this  | ||
subsection (g) on or after the effective date of the reduction.  | ||
 (h) Deposits into the Tax Compliance and Administration  | ||
Fund. Beginning on the first day of the first calendar month to  | ||
occur on or after August 26, 2014 (the effective date of Public  | ||
Act 98-1098) this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly,  | ||
each month the Department shall pay into the Tax Compliance and  | ||
Administration Fund, to be used, subject to appropriation, to  | ||
fund additional auditors and compliance personnel at the  | ||
Department, an amount equal to 1/12 of 5% of the cash receipts  | ||
collected during the preceding fiscal year by the Audit Bureau  | ||
of the Department from the tax imposed by subsections (a), (b),  | ||
(c), and (d) of Section 201 of this Act, net of deposits into  | ||
the Income Tax Refund Fund made from those cash receipts.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-72, eff. 7-1-11; 97-732, eff. 6-30-12; 98-24,  | ||
eff. 6-19-13; 98-674, eff. 6-30-14; 98-1052, eff. 8-26-14;  | ||
98-1098, eff. 8-26-14; revised 9-26-14.)
 | ||
 Section 145. The Use Tax Act is amended by changing Section  | ||
2 as follows:
 | ||
 (35 ILCS 105/2) (from Ch. 120, par. 439.2)
 | ||
 Sec. 2. Definitions. | ||
 "Use" means the exercise by any person of any right or  | ||
power over
tangible personal property incident to the ownership  | ||
of that property,
except that it does not include the sale of  | ||
such property in any form as
tangible personal property in the  | ||
regular course of business to the extent
that such property is  | ||
not first subjected to a use for which it was
purchased, and  | ||
does not include the use of such property by its owner for
 | ||
demonstration purposes: Provided that the property purchased  | ||
is deemed to
be purchased for the purpose of resale, despite  | ||
first being used, to the
extent to which it is resold as an  | ||
ingredient of an intentionally produced
product or by-product  | ||
of manufacturing. "Use" does not mean the demonstration
use or  | ||
interim use of tangible personal property by a retailer before  | ||
he sells
that tangible personal property. For watercraft or  | ||
aircraft, if the period of
demonstration use or interim use by  | ||
the retailer exceeds 18 months,
the retailer
shall pay on the  | ||
retailers' original cost price the tax imposed by this Act,
and  | ||
no credit for that tax is permitted if the watercraft or  | ||
aircraft is
subsequently sold by the retailer. "Use" does not  | ||
mean the physical
incorporation of tangible personal property,  | ||
to the extent not first subjected
to a use for which it was  | ||
purchased, as an ingredient or constituent, into
other tangible  | ||
personal property (a) which is sold in the regular course of
 | ||
business or (b) which the person incorporating such ingredient  | ||
or constituent
therein has undertaken at the time of such  | ||
purchase to cause to be transported
in interstate commerce to  | ||
destinations outside the State of Illinois: Provided
that the  | ||
property purchased is deemed to be purchased for the purpose of
 | ||
resale, despite first being used, to the extent to which it is  | ||
resold as an
ingredient of an intentionally produced product or  | ||
by-product of manufacturing.
 | ||
 "Watercraft" means a Class 2, Class 3, or Class 4  | ||
watercraft as defined in
Section 3-2 of the Boat Registration  | ||
and Safety Act, a personal watercraft, or
any boat equipped  | ||
with an inboard motor.
 | ||
 "Purchase at retail" means the acquisition of the ownership  | ||
of or title
to tangible personal property through a sale at  | ||
retail.
 | ||
 "Purchaser" means anyone who, through a sale at retail,  | ||
acquires the
ownership of tangible personal property for a  | ||
valuable consideration.
 | ||
 "Sale at retail" means any transfer of the ownership of or  | ||
title to
tangible personal property to a purchaser, for the  | ||
purpose of use, and not
for the purpose of resale in any form  | ||
as tangible personal property to the
extent not first subjected  | ||
to a use for which it was purchased, for a
valuable  | ||
consideration: Provided that the property purchased is deemed  | ||
to
be purchased for the purpose of resale, despite first being  | ||
used, to the
extent to which it is resold as an ingredient of  | ||
an intentionally produced
product or by-product of  | ||
manufacturing. For this purpose, slag produced as
an incident  | ||
to manufacturing pig iron or steel and sold is considered to be
 | ||
an intentionally produced by-product of manufacturing. "Sale  | ||
at retail"
includes any such transfer made for resale unless  | ||
made in compliance with
Section 2c of the Retailers' Occupation  | ||
Tax Act, as incorporated by
reference into Section 12 of this  | ||
Act. Transactions whereby the possession
of the property is  | ||
transferred but the seller retains the title as security
for  | ||
payment of the selling price are sales.
 | ||
 "Sale at retail" shall also be construed to include any  | ||
Illinois
florist's sales transaction in which the purchase  | ||
order is received in
Illinois by a florist and the sale is for  | ||
use or consumption, but the
Illinois florist has a florist in  | ||
another state deliver the property to the
purchaser or the  | ||
purchaser's donee in such other state.
 | ||
 Nonreusable tangible personal property that is used by  | ||
persons engaged in
the business of operating a restaurant,  | ||
cafeteria, or drive-in is a sale for
resale when it is  | ||
transferred to customers in the ordinary course of business
as  | ||
part of the sale of food or beverages and is used to deliver,  | ||
package, or
consume food or beverages, regardless of where  | ||
consumption of the food or
beverages occurs. Examples of those  | ||
items include, but are not limited to
nonreusable, paper and  | ||
plastic cups, plates, baskets, boxes, sleeves, buckets
or other  | ||
containers, utensils, straws, placemats, napkins, doggie bags,  | ||
and
wrapping or packaging
materials that are transferred to  | ||
customers as part of the sale of food or
beverages in the  | ||
ordinary course of business.
 | ||
 The purchase, employment and transfer of such tangible  | ||
personal property
as newsprint and ink for the primary purpose  | ||
of conveying news (with or
without other information) is not a  | ||
purchase, use or sale of tangible
personal property.
 | ||
 "Selling price" means the consideration for a sale valued  | ||
in money
whether received in money or otherwise, including  | ||
cash, credits, property
other than as hereinafter provided, and  | ||
services, but not including the
value of or credit given for  | ||
traded-in tangible personal property where the
item that is  | ||
traded-in is of like kind and character as that which is being
 | ||
sold, and shall be determined without any deduction on account  | ||
of the cost
of the property sold, the cost of materials used,  | ||
labor or service cost or
any other expense whatsoever, but does  | ||
not include interest or finance
charges which appear as  | ||
separate items on the bill of sale or sales
contract nor  | ||
charges that are added to prices by sellers on account of the
 | ||
seller's tax liability under the "Retailers' Occupation Tax  | ||
Act", or on
account of the seller's duty to collect, from the  | ||
purchaser, the tax that
is imposed by this Act, or, except as  | ||
otherwise provided with respect to any cigarette tax imposed by  | ||
a home rule unit, on account of the seller's tax liability  | ||
under any local occupation tax administered by the Department,  | ||
or, except as otherwise provided with respect to any cigarette  | ||
tax imposed by a home rule unit on account of the seller's duty  | ||
to collect, from the purchasers, the tax that is imposed under  | ||
any local use tax administered by the Department. Effective  | ||
December 1, 1985, "selling price"
shall include charges that  | ||
are added to prices by sellers on account of the
seller's tax  | ||
liability under the Cigarette Tax Act, on account of the  | ||
seller's
duty to collect, from the purchaser, the tax imposed  | ||
under the Cigarette Use
Tax Act, and on account of the seller's  | ||
duty to collect, from the purchaser,
any cigarette tax imposed  | ||
by a home rule unit.
 | ||
 Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, for any motor  | ||
vehicle, as defined in Section 1-146 of the Vehicle Code, that  | ||
is sold on or after January 1, 2015 for the purpose of leasing  | ||
the vehicle for a defined period that is longer than one year  | ||
and (1) is a motor vehicle of the second division that: (A) is  | ||
a self-contained motor vehicle designed or permanently  | ||
converted to provide living quarters for recreational,  | ||
camping, or travel use, with direct walk through access to the  | ||
living quarters from the driver's seat; (B) is of the van  | ||
configuration designed for the transportation of not less than  | ||
7 nor more than 16 passengers; or (C) has a gross vehicle  | ||
weight rating of 8,000 pounds or less or (2) is a motor vehicle  | ||
of the first division, "selling price" or "amount of sale"  | ||
means the consideration received by the lessor pursuant to the  | ||
lease contract, including amounts due at lease signing and all  | ||
monthly or other regular payments charged over the term of the  | ||
lease. Also included in the selling price is any amount  | ||
received by the lessor from the lessee for the leased vehicle  | ||
that is not calculated at the time the lease is executed,  | ||
including, but not limited to, excess mileage charges and  | ||
charges for excess wear and tear. For sales that occur in  | ||
Illinois, with respect to any amount received by the lessor  | ||
from the lessee for the leased vehicle that is not calculated  | ||
at the time the lease is executed, the lessor who purchased the  | ||
motor vehicle does not incur the tax imposed by the Use Tax Act  | ||
on those amounts, and the retailer who makes the retail sale of  | ||
the motor vehicle to the lessor is not required to collect the  | ||
tax imposed by this Act or to pay the tax imposed by the  | ||
Retailers' Occupation Tax Act on those amounts. However, the  | ||
lessor who purchased the motor vehicle assumes the liability  | ||
for reporting and paying the tax on those amounts directly to  | ||
the Department in the same form (Illinois Retailers' Occupation  | ||
Tax, and local retailers' occupation taxes, if applicable) in  | ||
which the retailer would have reported and paid such tax if the  | ||
retailer had accounted for the tax to the Department. For  | ||
amounts received by the lessor from the lessee that are not  | ||
calculated at the time the lease is executed, the lessor must  | ||
file the return and pay the tax to the Department by the due  | ||
date otherwise required by this Act for returns other than  | ||
transaction returns. If the retailer is entitled under this Act  | ||
to a discount for collecting and remitting the tax imposed  | ||
under this Act to the Department with respect to the sale of  | ||
the motor vehicle to the lessor, then the right to the discount  | ||
provided in this Act shall be transferred to the lessor with  | ||
respect to the tax paid by the lessor for any amount received  | ||
by the lessor from the lessee for the leased vehicle that is  | ||
not calculated at the time the lease is executed; provided that  | ||
the discount is only allowed if the return is timely filed and  | ||
for amounts timely paid. The "selling price" of a motor vehicle  | ||
that is sold on or after January 1, 2015 for the purpose of  | ||
leasing for a defined period of longer than one year shall not  | ||
be reduced by the value of or credit given for traded-in  | ||
tangible personal property owned by the lessor, nor shall it be  | ||
reduced by the value of or credit given for traded-in tangible  | ||
personal property owned by the lessee, regardless of whether  | ||
the trade-in value thereof is assigned by the lessee to the  | ||
lessor. In the case of a motor vehicle that is sold for the  | ||
purpose of leasing for a defined period of longer than one  | ||
year, the sale occurs at the time of the delivery of the  | ||
vehicle, regardless of the due date of any lease payments. A  | ||
lessor who incurs a Retailers' Occupation Tax liability on the  | ||
sale of a motor vehicle coming off lease may not take a credit  | ||
against that liability for the Use Tax the lessor paid upon the  | ||
purchase of the motor vehicle (or for any tax the lessor paid  | ||
with respect to any amount received by the lessor from the  | ||
lessee for the leased vehicle that was not calculated at the  | ||
time the lease was executed) if the selling price of the motor  | ||
vehicle at the time of purchase was calculated using the  | ||
definition of "selling price" as defined in this paragraph.  | ||
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act to the  | ||
contrary, lessors shall file all returns and make all payments  | ||
required under this paragraph to the Department by electronic  | ||
means in the manner and form as required by the Department.  | ||
This paragraph does not apply to leases of motor vehicles for  | ||
which, at the time the lease is entered into, the term of the  | ||
lease is not a defined period, including leases with a defined  | ||
initial period with the option to continue the lease on a  | ||
month-to-month or other basis beyond the initial defined  | ||
period.  | ||
 The phrase "like kind and character" shall be liberally  | ||
construed
(including but not limited to any form of motor  | ||
vehicle for any form of
motor vehicle, or any kind of farm or  | ||
agricultural implement for any other
kind of farm or  | ||
agricultural implement), while not including a kind of item
 | ||
which, if sold at retail by that retailer, would be exempt from  | ||
retailers'
occupation tax and use tax as an isolated or  | ||
occasional sale.
 | ||
 "Department" means the Department of Revenue.
 | ||
 "Person" means any natural individual, firm, partnership,  | ||
association,
joint stock company, joint adventure, public or  | ||
private corporation, limited
liability company, or a
receiver,  | ||
executor, trustee, guardian or other representative appointed
 | ||
by order of any court.
 | ||
 "Retailer" means and includes every person engaged in the  | ||
business of
making sales at retail as defined in this Section.
 | ||
 A person who holds himself or herself out as being engaged  | ||
(or who habitually
engages) in selling tangible personal  | ||
property at retail is a retailer
hereunder with respect to such  | ||
sales (and not primarily in a service
occupation)  | ||
notwithstanding the fact that such person designs and produces
 | ||
such tangible personal property on special order for the  | ||
purchaser and in
such a way as to render the property of value  | ||
only to such purchaser, if
such tangible personal property so  | ||
produced on special order serves
substantially the same  | ||
function as stock or standard items of tangible
personal  | ||
property that are sold at retail.
 | ||
 A person whose activities are organized and conducted  | ||
primarily as a
not-for-profit service enterprise, and who  | ||
engages in selling tangible
personal property at retail  | ||
(whether to the public or merely to members and
their guests)  | ||
is a retailer with respect to such transactions, excepting
only  | ||
a person organized and operated exclusively for charitable,  | ||
religious
or educational purposes either (1), to the extent of  | ||
sales by such person
to its members, students, patients or  | ||
inmates of tangible personal property
to be used primarily for  | ||
the purposes of such person, or (2), to the extent
of sales by  | ||
such person of tangible personal property which is not sold or
 | ||
offered for sale by persons organized for profit. The selling  | ||
of school
books and school supplies by schools at retail to  | ||
students is not
"primarily for the purposes of" the school  | ||
which does such selling. This
paragraph does not apply to nor  | ||
subject to taxation occasional dinners,
social or similar  | ||
activities of a person organized and operated exclusively
for  | ||
charitable, religious or educational purposes, whether or not  | ||
such
activities are open to the public.
 | ||
 A person who is the recipient of a grant or contract under  | ||
Title VII of
the Older Americans Act of 1965 (P.L. 92-258) and  | ||
serves meals to
participants in the federal Nutrition Program  | ||
for the Elderly in return for
contributions established in  | ||
amount by the individual participant pursuant
to a schedule of  | ||
suggested fees as provided for in the federal Act is not a
 | ||
retailer under this Act with respect to such transactions.
 | ||
 Persons who engage in the business of transferring tangible  | ||
personal
property upon the redemption of trading stamps are  | ||
retailers hereunder when
engaged in such business.
 | ||
 The isolated or occasional sale of tangible personal  | ||
property at retail
by a person who does not hold himself out as  | ||
being engaged (or who does not
habitually engage) in selling  | ||
such tangible personal property at retail or
a sale through a  | ||
bulk vending machine does not make such person a retailer
 | ||
hereunder. However, any person who is engaged in a business  | ||
which is not
subject to the tax imposed by the "Retailers'  | ||
Occupation Tax Act" because
of involving the sale of or a  | ||
contract to sell real estate or a
construction contract to  | ||
improve real estate, but who, in the course of
conducting such  | ||
business, transfers tangible personal property to users or
 | ||
consumers in the finished form in which it was purchased, and  | ||
which does
not become real estate, under any provision of a  | ||
construction contract or
real estate sale or real estate sales  | ||
agreement entered into with some
other person arising out of or  | ||
because of such nontaxable business, is a
retailer to the  | ||
extent of the value of the tangible personal property so
 | ||
transferred. If, in such transaction, a separate charge is made  | ||
for the
tangible personal property so transferred, the value of  | ||
such property, for
the purposes of this Act, is the amount so  | ||
separately charged, but not less
than the cost of such property  | ||
to the transferor; if no separate charge is
made, the value of  | ||
such property, for the purposes of this Act, is the cost
to the  | ||
transferor of such tangible personal property.
 | ||
 "Retailer maintaining a place of business in this State",  | ||
or any like
term, means and includes any of the following  | ||
retailers:
 | ||
  1. A retailer having or maintaining within this State,  | ||
 directly or by
a subsidiary, an office, distribution house,  | ||
 sales house, warehouse or other
place of business, or any  | ||
 agent or other representative operating within this
State  | ||
 under the authority of the retailer or its subsidiary,  | ||
 irrespective of
whether such place of business or agent or  | ||
 other representative is located here
permanently or  | ||
 temporarily, or whether such retailer or subsidiary is  | ||
 licensed
to do business in this State. However, the  | ||
 ownership of property that is
located at the premises of a  | ||
 printer with which the retailer has contracted for
printing  | ||
 and that consists of the final printed product, property  | ||
 that becomes
a part of the final printed product, or copy  | ||
 from which the printed product is
produced shall not result  | ||
 in the retailer being deemed to have or maintain an
office,  | ||
 distribution house, sales house, warehouse, or other place  | ||
 of business
within this State. | ||
  1.1. A retailer having a contract with a person located  | ||
 in this State under which the person, for a commission or  | ||
 other consideration based upon the sale of tangible  | ||
 personal property by the retailer, directly or indirectly  | ||
 refers potential customers to the retailer by providing to  | ||
 the potential customers a promotional code or other  | ||
 mechanism that allows the retailer to track purchases  | ||
 referred by such persons. Examples of mechanisms that allow  | ||
 the retailer to track purchases referred by such persons  | ||
 include but are not limited to the use of a link on the  | ||
 person's Internet website, promotional codes distributed  | ||
 through the person's hand-delivered or mailed material,  | ||
 and promotional codes distributed by the person through  | ||
 radio or other broadcast media. The provisions of this  | ||
 paragraph 1.1 shall apply only if the cumulative gross  | ||
 receipts from sales of tangible personal property by the  | ||
 retailer to customers who are referred to the retailer by  | ||
 all persons in this State under such contracts exceed  | ||
 $10,000 during the preceding 4 quarterly periods ending on  | ||
 the last day of March, June, September, and December. A  | ||
 retailer meeting the requirements of this paragraph 1.1  | ||
 shall be presumed to be maintaining a place of business in  | ||
 this State but may rebut this presumption by submitting  | ||
 proof that the referrals or other activities pursued within  | ||
 this State by such persons were not sufficient to meet the  | ||
 nexus standards of the United States Constitution during  | ||
 the preceding 4 quarterly periods. | ||
  1.2. Beginning July 1, 2011, a retailer having a  | ||
 contract with a person located in this State under which: | ||
   A. the retailer sells the same or substantially  | ||
 similar line of products as the person located in this  | ||
 State and does so using an identical or substantially  | ||
 similar name, trade name, or trademark as the person  | ||
 located in this State; and | ||
   B. the retailer provides a commission or other  | ||
 consideration to the person located in this State based  | ||
 upon the sale of tangible personal property by the  | ||
 retailer. | ||
 The provisions of this paragraph 1.2 shall apply only if  | ||
 the cumulative gross receipts from sales of tangible  | ||
 personal property by the retailer to customers in this  | ||
 State under all such contracts exceed $10,000 during the  | ||
 preceding 4 quarterly periods ending on the last day of  | ||
 March, June, September, and December. 
 | ||
  2. A retailer soliciting orders for tangible personal  | ||
 property by
means of a telecommunication or television  | ||
 shopping system (which utilizes toll
free numbers) which is  | ||
 intended by the retailer to be broadcast by cable
 | ||
 television or other means of broadcasting, to consumers  | ||
 located in this State.
 | ||
  3. A retailer, pursuant to a contract with a  | ||
 broadcaster or publisher
located in this State, soliciting  | ||
 orders for tangible personal property by
means of  | ||
 advertising which is disseminated primarily to consumers  | ||
 located in
this State and only secondarily to bordering  | ||
 jurisdictions.
 | ||
  4. A retailer soliciting orders for tangible personal  | ||
 property by mail
if the solicitations are substantial and  | ||
 recurring and if the retailer benefits
from any banking,  | ||
 financing, debt collection, telecommunication, or  | ||
 marketing
activities occurring in this State or benefits  | ||
 from the location in this State
of authorized installation,  | ||
 servicing, or repair facilities.
 | ||
  5. A retailer that is owned or controlled by the same  | ||
 interests that own
or control any retailer engaging in  | ||
 business in the same or similar line of
business in this  | ||
 State.
 | ||
  6. A retailer having a franchisee or licensee operating  | ||
 under its trade
name if the franchisee or licensee is  | ||
 required to collect the tax under this
Section.
 | ||
  7. A retailer, pursuant to a contract with a cable  | ||
 television operator
located in this State, soliciting  | ||
 orders for tangible personal property by
means of  | ||
 advertising which is transmitted or distributed over a  | ||
 cable
television system in this State.
 | ||
  8. A retailer engaging in activities in Illinois, which  | ||
 activities in
the state in which the retail business  | ||
 engaging in such activities is located
would constitute  | ||
 maintaining a place of business in that state.
 | ||
 "Bulk vending machine" means a vending machine,
containing  | ||
unsorted confections, nuts, toys, or other items designed
 | ||
primarily to be used or played with by children
which, when a  | ||
coin or coins of a denomination not larger than $0.50 are  | ||
inserted, are dispensed in equal portions, at random and
 | ||
without selection by the customer.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-628, eff. 1-1-15; 98-1080, eff. 8-26-14;  | ||
98-1089, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 Section 150. The Cigarette Tax Act is amended by changing  | ||
Section 4g as follows:
 | ||
 (35 ILCS 130/4g) | ||
 (This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a  | ||
delayed effective date) | ||
 Sec. 4g. Retailer's license. Beginning on January 1, 2016,  | ||
no person may engage in business as a retailer of cigarettes in  | ||
this State without first having obtained a license from the  | ||
Department. Application for license shall be made to the  | ||
Department, by electronic means, in a form prescribed by the  | ||
Department. Each applicant for a license under this Section  | ||
shall furnish to the Department, in an electronic format  | ||
established by the Department, the following information: | ||
  (1) the name and address of the applicant; | ||
  (2) the address of the location at which the applicant  | ||
 proposes to engage in business as a retailer of cigarettes  | ||
 in this State; and | ||
  (3) such other additional information as the  | ||
 Department may lawfully require by its rules and  | ||
 regulations. | ||
 The annual license fee payable to the Department for each  | ||
retailer's license shall be $75. The fee shall be deposited  | ||
into the Tax Compliance and Administration Fund and shall be  | ||
for the cost of tobacco retail inspection and contraband  | ||
tobacco and tobacco smuggling with at least two-thirds of the  | ||
money being used for contraband tobacco and tobacco smuggling  | ||
operations and enforcement. | ||
 Each applicant for a license shall pay the fee to the  | ||
Department at the time of submitting its application for a  | ||
license to the Department. The Department shall require an  | ||
applicant for a license under this Section to electronically  | ||
file and pay the fee.  | ||
 A separate annual license fee shall be paid for each place  | ||
of business at which a person who is required to procure a  | ||
retailer's license under this Section proposes to engage in  | ||
business as a retailer in Illinois under this Act.  | ||
 The following are ineligible to receive a retailer's  | ||
license under this Act:  | ||
  (1) a person who has been convicted of a felony related  | ||
 to the illegal transportation, sale, or distribution of  | ||
 cigarettes, or a tobacco-related felony, under any federal  | ||
 or State law, if the Department, after investigation and a  | ||
 hearing if requested by the applicant, determines that the  | ||
 person has not been sufficiently rehabilitated to warrant  | ||
 the public trust; or | ||
  (2) a corporation, if any officer, manager, or director  | ||
 thereof, or any stockholder or stockholders owning in the  | ||
 aggregate more than 5% of the stock of such corporation,  | ||
 would not be eligible to receive a license under this Act  | ||
 for any reason. | ||
 The Department, upon receipt of an application and license  | ||
fee, in proper form, from a person who is eligible to receive a  | ||
retailer's license under this Act, shall issue to such  | ||
applicant a license in form as prescribed by the Department.  | ||
That license shall permit the applicant to whom it is issued to  | ||
engage in business as a retailer under this Act at the place  | ||
shown in his or her application. All licenses issued by the  | ||
Department under this Section shall be valid for a period not  | ||
to exceed one year after issuance unless sooner revoked,  | ||
canceled, or suspended as provided in this Act. No license  | ||
issued under this Section is transferable or assignable. The  | ||
license shall be conspicuously displayed in the place of  | ||
business conducted by the licensee in Illinois under such  | ||
license. The Department shall not issue a retailer's license to  | ||
a retailer unless the retailer is also registered under the  | ||
Retailers' Occupation Tax Act. A person who obtains a license  | ||
as a retailer who ceases to do business as specified in the  | ||
license, or who never commenced business, or who obtains a  | ||
distributor's license, or whose license is suspended or  | ||
revoked, shall immediately surrender the license to the  | ||
Department.  | ||
 Any person aggrieved by any decision of the Department  | ||
under this Section subsection may, within 30 days after notice  | ||
of the decision, protest and request a hearing. Upon receiving  | ||
a request for a hearing, the Department shall give written  | ||
notice to the person requesting the hearing of the time and  | ||
place fixed for the hearing and shall hold a hearing in  | ||
conformity with the provisions of this Act and then issue its  | ||
final administrative decision in the matter to that person. In  | ||
the absence of a protest and request for a hearing within 30  | ||
days, the Department's decision shall become final without any  | ||
further determination being made or notice given. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1055, eff. 1-1-16; revised 12-1-14.)
 | ||
 Section 155. The Tobacco Products Tax Act of 1995 is  | ||
amended by changing Section 10-21 as follows:
 | ||
 (35 ILCS 143/10-21) | ||
 (This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a  | ||
delayed effective date) | ||
 Sec. 10-21. Retailer's license. Beginning on January 1,  | ||
2016, no person may engage in business as a retailer of tobacco  | ||
products in this State without first having obtained a license  | ||
from the Department. Application for license shall be made to  | ||
the Department, by electronic means, in a form prescribed by  | ||
the Department. Each applicant for a license under this Section  | ||
shall furnish to the Department, in an electronic format  | ||
established by the Department, the following information: | ||
  (1) the name and address of the applicant; | ||
  (2) the address of the location at which the applicant  | ||
 proposes to engage in business as a retailer of tobacco  | ||
 products in this State; | ||
  (3) such other additional information as the  | ||
 Department may lawfully require by its rules and  | ||
 regulations. | ||
 The annual license fee payable to the Department for each  | ||
retailer's license shall be $75. The fee will be deposited into  | ||
the Tax Compliance and Administration Fund and shall be used  | ||
for the cost of tobacco retail inspection and contraband  | ||
tobacco and tobacco smuggling with at least two-thirds of the  | ||
money being used for contraband tobacco and tobacco smuggling  | ||
operations and enforcement. | ||
 Each applicant for license shall pay such fee to the  | ||
Department at the time of submitting its application for  | ||
license to the Department. The Department shall require an  | ||
applicant for a license under this Section to electronically  | ||
file and pay the fee.  | ||
 A separate annual license fee shall be paid for each place  | ||
of business at which a person who is required to procure a  | ||
retailer's license under this Section proposes to engage in  | ||
business as a retailer in Illinois under this Act.  | ||
 The following are ineligible to receive a retailer's  | ||
license under this Act:  | ||
  (1) a person who has been convicted of a felony under  | ||
 any federal or State law for smuggling cigarettes or  | ||
 tobacco products or tobacco tax evasion, if the Department,  | ||
 after investigation and a hearing if requested by the  | ||
 applicant, determines that such person has not been  | ||
 sufficiently rehabilitated to warrant the public trust;  | ||
 and | ||
  (2) a corporation, if any officer, manager or director  | ||
 thereof, or any stockholder or stockholders owning in the  | ||
 aggregate more than 5% of the stock of such corporation,  | ||
 would not be eligible to receive a license under this Act  | ||
 for any reason.  | ||
 The Department, upon receipt of an application and license  | ||
fee, in proper form, from a person who is eligible to receive a  | ||
retailer's license under this Act, shall issue to such  | ||
applicant a license in form as prescribed by the Department,  | ||
which license shall permit the applicant to which it is issued  | ||
to engage in business as a retailer under this Act at the place  | ||
shown in his application. All licenses issued by the Department  | ||
under this Section shall be valid for a period not to exceed  | ||
one year after issuance unless sooner revoked, canceled or  | ||
suspended as provided in this Act. No license issued under this  | ||
Section is transferable or assignable. Such license shall be  | ||
conspicuously displayed in the place of business conducted by  | ||
the licensee in Illinois under such license. A person who  | ||
obtains a license as a retailer who ceases to do business as  | ||
specified in the license, or who never commenced business, or  | ||
who obtains a distributor's license, or whose license is  | ||
suspended or revoked, shall immediately surrender the license  | ||
to the Department. The Department shall not issue a license to  | ||
a retailer unless the retailer is also validly registered under  | ||
the Retailers Occupation Tax Act.  | ||
 A retailer as defined under this Act need not obtain an  | ||
additional license under this Act, but shall be deemed to be  | ||
sufficiently licensed by virtue of his being properly licensed  | ||
as a retailer under Section 4g of the Cigarette Tax Act.  | ||
 Any person aggrieved by any decision of the Department  | ||
under this Section subsection may, within 30 days after notice  | ||
of the decision, protest and request a hearing. Upon receiving  | ||
a request for a hearing, the Department shall give notice to  | ||
the person requesting the hearing of the time and place fixed  | ||
for the hearing and shall hold a hearing in conformity with the  | ||
provisions of this Act and then issue its final administrative  | ||
decision in the matter to that person. In the absence of a  | ||
protest and request for a hearing within 30 days, the  | ||
Department's decision shall become final without any further  | ||
determination being made or notice given. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1055, eff. 1-1-16; revised 12-1-14.)
 | ||
 Section 160. The Local Government Disaster Service  | ||
Volunteer Act is amended by changing Section 15 as follows:
 | ||
 (50 ILCS 122/15)
 | ||
 Sec. 15. Local government disaster service volunteer  | ||
leave. An employee of
a local agency who is a certified  | ||
disaster service volunteer of the American
Red Cross or  | ||
assigned to the Illinois Emergency Management Agency in
 | ||
accordance with the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act,  | ||
the Emergency Management
Assistance Compact Act, or other  | ||
applicable administrative rules may be
granted leave from his  | ||
or her work with pay for not more than
20 working days in any  | ||
12-month period to participate in specialized disaster
relief  | ||
services for the American Red Cross or for the Illinois  | ||
Emergency
Management Agency, as
the case may be, upon
the  | ||
request of the American
Red Cross or the Illinois Emergency  | ||
Management Agency for the services of
that employee and upon
 | ||
the approval of that
employee's agency, without loss of  | ||
seniority, pay, vacation time, compensatory
time, personal  | ||
days, sick time, or earned overtime accumulation. The agency
 | ||
must compensate an employee granted leave under this Section at  | ||
his or her
regular rate of pay for those regular work hours  | ||
during which the employee is
absent from work. Leave under this  | ||
Act shall not be unreasonably denied for
services related to a  | ||
disaster within the United States or its territories.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 92-95, eff. 7-18-01; 93-893, eff. 8-10-04;  | ||
revised 12-1-14.)
 | ||
 Section 165. The Illinois Police Training Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 9 as follows:
 | ||
 (50 ILCS 705/9) (from Ch. 85, par. 509)
 | ||
 Sec. 9. 
A special fund is hereby established in the State  | ||
Treasury to
be known as the "The Traffic and Criminal  | ||
Conviction Surcharge Fund" and shall
be financed as provided in  | ||
Section 9.1 of this Act and Section 5-9-1 of the
"Unified Code  | ||
of Corrections", unless the fines, costs, or additional
amounts  | ||
imposed are subject to disbursement by the circuit clerk under
 | ||
Section 27.5 of the Clerks of Courts Act. Moneys in this Fund  | ||
shall be
expended as follows:
 | ||
  (1) a A portion of the total amount deposited in the  | ||
 Fund may be used, as
appropriated by the General Assembly,  | ||
 for the ordinary and contingent expenses
of the Illinois  | ||
 Law Enforcement Training Standards Board;
 | ||
  (2) a A portion of the total amount deposited in the  | ||
 Fund
shall be appropriated for the reimbursement of local  | ||
 governmental agencies
participating in training programs  | ||
 certified by the Board, in an amount
equaling 1/2 of the  | ||
 total sum paid by such agencies during the State's previous
 | ||
 fiscal year for mandated training for probationary police  | ||
 officers or
probationary county corrections officers and  | ||
 for optional advanced and
specialized law enforcement or  | ||
 county corrections training; these . These
reimbursements  | ||
 may include the costs for tuition at training schools, the
 | ||
 salaries of trainees while in schools, and the necessary  | ||
 travel and room
and board expenses for each trainee; if . If  | ||
 the appropriations under this
paragraph (2) are not  | ||
 sufficient to fully reimburse the participating local
 | ||
 governmental agencies, the available funds shall be  | ||
 apportioned among such
agencies, with priority first given  | ||
 to repayment of the costs of mandatory
training given to  | ||
 law enforcement officer or county corrections officer
 | ||
 recruits, then to repayment of costs of advanced or  | ||
 specialized training
for permanent police officers or  | ||
 permanent county corrections officers;
 | ||
  (3) a A portion of the total amount deposited in the  | ||
 Fund may be used to
fund the "Intergovernmental Law  | ||
 Enforcement Officer's In-Service Training
Act", veto  | ||
 overridden October 29, 1981, as now or hereafter amended,  | ||
 at
a rate and method to be determined by the board;
 | ||
  (4) a A portion of the Fund also may be used by the  | ||
 Illinois Department
of State Police for expenses incurred  | ||
 in the training of employees from
any State, county or  | ||
 municipal agency whose function includes enforcement
of  | ||
 criminal or traffic law;
 | ||
  (5) a A portion of the Fund may be used by the Board to  | ||
 fund grant-in-aid
programs and services for the training of  | ||
 employees from any county or
municipal agency whose  | ||
 functions include corrections or the enforcement of
 | ||
 criminal or traffic
law;
 | ||
  (6) for For fiscal years 2013, 2014, and 2015 only, a  | ||
 portion of the Fund also may be used by the
Department of  | ||
 State Police to finance any of its lawful purposes or  | ||
 functions; and  | ||
  (7) a A portion of the Fund may be used by the Board,  | ||
 subject to appropriation, to administer grants to local law  | ||
 enforcement agencies for the purpose of purchasing  | ||
 bulletproof vests under the Law Enforcement Officer  | ||
 Bulletproof Vest Act.  | ||
 All payments from the Traffic and Criminal Conviction  | ||
Surcharge Fund shall
be made each year from moneys appropriated  | ||
for the purposes specified in
this Section. No more than 50% of  | ||
any appropriation under this Act shall be
spent in any city  | ||
having a population of more than 500,000. The State
Comptroller  | ||
and the State Treasurer shall from time to time, at the
 | ||
direction of the Governor, transfer from the Traffic and  | ||
Criminal
Conviction Surcharge Fund to the General Revenue Fund  | ||
in the State Treasury
such amounts as the Governor determines  | ||
are in excess of the amounts
required to meet the obligations  | ||
of the Traffic and Criminal Conviction
Surcharge Fund.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-732, eff. 6-30-12; 98-24, eff. 6-19-13;  | ||
98-674, eff. 6-30-14; 98-743, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 Section 170. The Children's Advocacy Center Act is amended  | ||
by changing Section 4 as follows:
 | ||
 (55 ILCS 80/4) (from Ch. 23, par. 1804)
 | ||
 Sec. 4. Children's Advocacy Center. 
 | ||
 (a) A CAC may be
established to coordinate the activities  | ||
of the various agencies involved
in the investigation,  | ||
prosecution and treatment of child maltreatment. The  | ||
individual county or regional Advisory Board shall set the  | ||
written protocol of the CAC within the appropriate  | ||
jurisdiction.
The operation of the CAC may be funded through  | ||
public or private grants, contracts, donations, fees, and
other  | ||
available sources under this Act. Each CAC shall operate to the  | ||
best of its ability in accordance with available funding. In  | ||
counties in which a referendum has been adopted
under Section 5  | ||
of this Act, the Advisory Board, by the majority vote of its  | ||
members, shall submit a
proposed annual budget for the  | ||
operation of the CAC to the county board,
which shall  | ||
appropriate funds and levy a tax sufficient to
operate the CAC.  | ||
The county board in each county in which a
referendum has been  | ||
adopted shall establish a Children's Advocacy
Center Fund and  | ||
shall deposit the net proceeds of the tax authorized by
Section  | ||
6 of this Act in that Fund, which shall be kept separate from  | ||
all
other county funds and shall only be used for the purposes  | ||
of this Act.
 | ||
 (b) The Advisory Board shall pay from the Children's  | ||
Advocacy Center
Fund or from other available funds the salaries  | ||
of all employees of the
Center and the expenses of acquiring a  | ||
physical plant for
the Center by construction or lease and  | ||
maintaining the Center, including
the expenses of  | ||
administering the coordination of the investigation,
 | ||
prosecution and treatment referral of child maltreatment under  | ||
the provisions of the protocol
adopted pursuant to this Act.
 | ||
 (c) Every CAC shall include at least the following  | ||
components:
 | ||
  (1) A multidisciplinary, coordinated systems approach  | ||
 to the
investigation of child maltreatment which shall  | ||
 include, at a minimum: ;
 | ||
   (i) an interagency notification procedure;
 | ||
   (ii) a policy on multidisciplinary team  | ||
 collaboration and communication that requires MDT  | ||
 members share information pertinent to investigations  | ||
 and the safety of children;
 | ||
   (iii) (blank);
 | ||
   (iv) a description of the role each agency has in  | ||
 responding to a referral for services in an individual  | ||
 case;
 | ||
   (v) a dispute resolution process between the  | ||
 involved agencies when a conflict arises on how to  | ||
 proceed on the referral of a particular case; | ||
   (vi) a process for the CAC to assist in the  | ||
 forensic interview of children that witness alleged  | ||
 crimes; | ||
   (vii) a child-friendly, trauma informed space for  | ||
 children and their non-offending family members; | ||
   (viii) an MDT approach including law enforcement,  | ||
 prosecution, medical, mental health, victim advocacy,  | ||
 and other community resources; | ||
   (ix) medical evaluation on-site or off-site  | ||
 through referral; | ||
   (x) mental health services on-site or off-site  | ||
 through referral; | ||
   (xi) on-site forensic interviews; | ||
   (xii) culturally competent services; | ||
   (xiii) case tracking and review; | ||
   (xiv) case staffing on each investigation; | ||
   (xv) effective organizational capacity; and  | ||
   (xvi) a policy or procedure to familiarize a child  | ||
 and his or her non-offending family members or  | ||
 guardians with the court process as well as  | ||
 preparations for testifying in court, if necessary; .  | ||
  (2) A safe, separate space with assigned personnel  | ||
 designated for the
investigation and coordination of child  | ||
 maltreatment cases;
 | ||
  (3) A multidisciplinary case review process for  | ||
 purposes of
decision-making, problem solving, systems  | ||
 coordination, and information
sharing;
 | ||
  (4) A comprehensive client tracking system to receive  | ||
 and coordinate
information concerning child maltreatment  | ||
 cases from each participating agency;
 | ||
  (5) Multidisciplinary specialized training for all  | ||
 professionals involved
with the victims and non-offending  | ||
 family members in child maltreatment cases; and
 | ||
  (6) A process for evaluating the effectiveness of the  | ||
 CAC and its
operations.
 | ||
 (d) In the event that a CAC has been established as  | ||
provided in this
Section, the Advisory Board of that CAC may,  | ||
by a majority vote of the members,
authorize the CAC to  | ||
coordinate the activities of the various agencies
involved in  | ||
the investigation, prosecution, and treatment referral in  | ||
cases of serious or fatal injury to a
child. For CACs receiving  | ||
funds under Section 5 or 6 of this Act, the Advisory Board  | ||
shall provide for the financial
support of these activities in  | ||
a manner similar to that set out in subsections
(a) and (b) of  | ||
this Section and shall be allowed to submit a budget that
 | ||
includes support for physical abuse and neglect activities to  | ||
the County Board,
which shall appropriate funds that may be  | ||
available under Section 5 of this
Act. In cooperation with the  | ||
Department of Children and Family Services Child Death Review  | ||
Teams, the Department of Children and Family Services Office of  | ||
the Inspector General, and other stakeholders, this protocol  | ||
must be initially implemented in selected counties to the  | ||
extent that State appropriations or funds from other sources  | ||
for this purpose allow.
 | ||
 (e) CACI may also provide technical
assistance and guidance  | ||
to the Advisory Boards.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-809, eff. 1-1-15; revised 12-2-2014.)
 | ||
 Section 175. The Township Code is amended by changing  | ||
Section 30-50 as follows:
 | ||
 (60 ILCS 1/30-50)
 | ||
 Sec. 30-50. Purchase and use of property. 
 | ||
 (a) The electors may make all orders for the
purchase,  | ||
sale, conveyance,
regulation, or use of the township's  | ||
corporate property (including
the direct
sale or lease of  | ||
single township road district property) that may be deemed  | ||
conducive
to
the interests of its inhabitants, including the  | ||
lease, for up to 10 years, or for up to 25 years if the lease is  | ||
for a wireless telecommunications tower, at
fair market value,  | ||
of corporate property for which no use or need during the
lease  | ||
period is anticipated at the time of leasing. The property may  | ||
be leased
to another governmental body, however,
or to a  | ||
not-for-profit corporation that has contracted to construct or  | ||
fund
the construction of a structure or improvement upon the  | ||
real estate owned by
the township and that has contracted with  | ||
the township to allow the township to
use at least a portion of  | ||
the structure or improvement to be constructed upon
the real  | ||
estate leased and not otherwise used by the township,
for any  | ||
term not exceeding 50 years and
for any consideration.
In the  | ||
case of a not-for-profit corporation, the township shall hold a  | ||
public
hearing on the proposed lease. The township clerk shall  | ||
give
notice of the hearing
by publication in a newspaper  | ||
published in the township,
or in a newspaper published in the  | ||
county and having general
circulation in the township if no  | ||
newspaper is published in the township, and
by posting notices  | ||
in at least 5 public places
at least 15 days before the public  | ||
hearing.
 | ||
 (b) If a new tax is to be levied or an existing tax rate is  | ||
to be increased
above the statutory limits for the purchase of  | ||
the property, however, no action
otherwise authorized in  | ||
subsection (a) shall be taken unless a petition signed
by at  | ||
least 10% of the registered voters residing in the township is  | ||
presented
to the township clerk. If a petition is presented to  | ||
the township clerk, the
clerk shall order a referendum on the  | ||
proposition. The referendum shall be
held at the next annual or  | ||
special township meeting or at an election in
accordance with  | ||
the general election law. If the referendum is ordered to be
 | ||
held at the township meeting, the township clerk shall give  | ||
notice that at the
next annual or special township meeting the  | ||
proposition shall be voted upon.
The notice shall set forth the  | ||
proposition and shall be given by publication in
a newspaper  | ||
published in the township. If there is no newspaper published
 | ||
in the township, the notice shall be published in a newspaper  | ||
published in the
county and having general circulation in the  | ||
township. Notice also shall be
given by posting notices in at  | ||
least 5 public places at least 15 days before
the township  | ||
meeting. If the referendum is ordered to be held at an  | ||
election,
the township clerk shall certify that proposition to  | ||
the proper election
officials, who shall submit the proposition  | ||
at an election. The proposition
shall be submitted in  | ||
accordance with the general election law.
 | ||
 (c) If the leased property is utilized in part for private  | ||
use and in part
for public use, those portions of the  | ||
improvements devoted to private use are
fully taxable. The land  | ||
is exempt from taxation to the extent that the uses on
the land  | ||
are public and taxable to the extent that the uses are private.
 | ||
 (d) Before the township makes a lease or sale of township  | ||
or road
district
real property, the electors shall adopt a  | ||
resolution
stating
the intent to lease or sell the real  | ||
property, describing the
property in full, and stating the  | ||
terms and conditions the electors deem
necessary and desirable  | ||
for the lease or sale. A resolution stating the
intent to sell  | ||
real property shall also contain pertinent information
 | ||
concerning the size, use, and zoning of the property.
The value  | ||
of real property shall be determined
by a State licensed real  | ||
estate appraiser.
The appraisal shall be available for
public  | ||
inspection. The resolution may direct the sale to be conducted  | ||
by the
staff of the township or by listing with local licensed  | ||
real
estate agencies
(in which case the terms of the agent's  | ||
compensation shall be included in the
resolution).
 | ||
 Anytime during the year, the township or township road  | ||
district may lease or sell personal property by a vote of the  | ||
township board or request of the township highway commissioner.
 | ||
 The clerk shall thereafter publish the resolution or  | ||
personal property
sale notice once in a newspaper published in  | ||
the township or, if no newspaper
is published in the township,  | ||
in a newspaper generally circulated in the
township. If no  | ||
newspaper is generally circulated in the township, the clerk
 | ||
shall post the resolution or personal property sale notice in 5  | ||
of the
most public places in the township. In addition to the  | ||
foregoing publication
requirements, the clerk shall post the  | ||
resolution or personal property
sale notice at the office of  | ||
the township (if township property is involved)
or at the  | ||
office of the road district (if road district property is
 | ||
involved). The following information shall be published or  | ||
posted with the
resolution or
personal property sale notice:  | ||
(i) the date by which all bids must be
received by the township  | ||
or road district, which shall not be less than 30
days
after  | ||
the date of publication or posting, and (ii) the place, time,  | ||
and date at
which bids shall be opened, which shall be at a  | ||
regular meeting of the township
board.
 | ||
 All bids shall be opened by the clerk (or someone duly  | ||
appointed to act
for the clerk) at the regular meeting of the  | ||
township board described in the
notice. With respect to  | ||
township personal property, the township board may accept
the  | ||
high bid or any
other bid determined to be in the best  | ||
interests of the township by a majority
vote of the board. With  | ||
respect to township real property, the township
board may  | ||
accept the high bid or any other bid determined to be in the
 | ||
best interests of the township by a vote of three-fourths of  | ||
the township
board then holding office, but in no event at a  | ||
price less than 80% of the
appraised value. With respect to  | ||
road district property, the highway
commissioner may accept
the  | ||
high bid or any other bid determined to be in the best  | ||
interests of the
road district. In each case, the township  | ||
board or commissioner
may
reject
any and all bids. This notice  | ||
and competitive bidding procedure shall not be followed
when  | ||
property is leased to another governmental body.
The notice and
 | ||
competitive bidding procedure shall not be followed when real  | ||
or personal property is declared
surplus by the township board  | ||
or the highway commissioner and sold to another governmental  | ||
body.
 | ||
 The township board or the highway commissioner may  | ||
authorize the sale of personal property by public auction  | ||
conducted by an auctioneer licensed under the Auction License  | ||
Act or through an approved Internet auction service.  | ||
 (e) A trade-in of machinery or equipment on new or  | ||
different machinery or
equipment does not constitute the sale  | ||
of township or road district property.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-337, eff. 8-12-11; 98-549, eff. 8-26-13;  | ||
98-653, eff. 6-18-14; revised 6-24-14.)
 | ||
 Section 180. The Illinois Municipal Code is amended by  | ||
changing Sections 10-1-7.1, 10-2.1-6.3, 11-12-5, and  | ||
11-74.4-3.5 as follows:
 | ||
 (65 ILCS 5/10-1-7.1) | ||
 Sec. 10-1-7.1. Original appointments; full-time fire  | ||
department. | ||
 (a) Applicability. Unless a commission elects to follow the  | ||
provisions of Section 10-1-7.2, this Section shall apply to all  | ||
original appointments to an affected full-time fire  | ||
department. Existing registers of eligibles shall continue to  | ||
be valid until their expiration dates, or up to a maximum of 2  | ||
years after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the  | ||
97th General Assembly. | ||
 Notwithstanding any statute, ordinance, rule, or other law  | ||
to the contrary, all original appointments to an affected  | ||
department to which this Section applies shall be administered  | ||
in the manner provided for in this Section. Provisions of the  | ||
Illinois Municipal Code, municipal ordinances, and rules  | ||
adopted pursuant to such authority and other laws relating to  | ||
initial hiring of firefighters in affected departments shall  | ||
continue to apply to the extent they are compatible with this  | ||
Section, but in the event of a conflict between this Section  | ||
and any other law, this Section shall control. | ||
 A home rule or non-home rule municipality may not  | ||
administer its fire department process for original  | ||
appointments in a manner that is less stringent than this  | ||
Section. This Section 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 the powers and  | ||
functions exercised by the State. | ||
 A municipality that is operating under a court order or  | ||
consent decree regarding original appointments to a full-time  | ||
fire department before the effective date of this amendatory  | ||
Act of the 97th General Assembly is exempt from the  | ||
requirements of this Section for the duration of the court  | ||
order or consent decree.  | ||
 Notwithstanding any other provision of this subsection  | ||
(a), this Section does not apply to a municipality with more  | ||
than 1,000,000 inhabitants.  | ||
 (b) Original appointments. All original appointments made  | ||
to an affected fire department shall be made from a register of  | ||
eligibles established in accordance with the processes  | ||
established by this Section. Only persons who meet or exceed  | ||
the performance standards required by this Section shall be  | ||
placed on a register of eligibles for original appointment to  | ||
an affected fire department. | ||
 Whenever an appointing authority authorizes action to hire  | ||
a person to perform the duties of a firefighter or to hire a  | ||
firefighter-paramedic to fill a position that is a new position  | ||
or vacancy due to resignation, discharge, promotion, death, the  | ||
granting of a disability or retirement pension, or any other  | ||
cause, the appointing authority shall appoint to that position  | ||
the person with the highest ranking on the final eligibility  | ||
list. If the appointing authority has reason to conclude that  | ||
the highest ranked person fails to meet the minimum standards  | ||
for the position or if the appointing authority believes an  | ||
alternate candidate would better serve the needs of the  | ||
department, then the appointing authority has the right to pass  | ||
over the highest ranked person and appoint either: (i) any  | ||
person who has a ranking in the top 5% of the register of  | ||
eligibles or (ii) any person who is among the top 5 highest  | ||
ranked persons on the list of eligibles if the number of people  | ||
who have a ranking in the top 5% of the register of eligibles  | ||
is less than 5 people. | ||
 Any candidate may pass on an appointment once without  | ||
losing his or her position on the register of eligibles. Any  | ||
candidate who passes a second time may be removed from the list  | ||
by the appointing authority provided that such action shall not  | ||
prejudice a person's opportunities to participate in future  | ||
examinations, including an examination held during the time a  | ||
candidate is already on the municipality's register of  | ||
eligibles. | ||
 The sole authority to issue certificates of appointment  | ||
shall be vested in the Civil Service Commission. All  | ||
certificates of appointment issued to any officer or member of  | ||
an affected department shall be signed by the chairperson and  | ||
secretary, respectively, of the commission upon appointment of  | ||
such officer or member to the affected department by the  | ||
commission. Each person who accepts a certificate of  | ||
appointment and successfully completes his or her probationary  | ||
period shall be enrolled as a firefighter and as a regular  | ||
member of the fire department. | ||
 For the purposes of this Section, "firefighter" means any  | ||
person who has been prior to, on, or after the effective date  | ||
of this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly appointed  | ||
to a fire department or fire protection district or employed by  | ||
a State university and sworn or commissioned to perform  | ||
firefighter duties or paramedic duties, or both, except that  | ||
the following persons are not included: part-time  | ||
firefighters; auxiliary, reserve, or voluntary firefighters,  | ||
including paid-on-call firefighters; clerks and dispatchers or  | ||
other civilian employees of a fire department or fire  | ||
protection district who are not routinely expected to perform  | ||
firefighter duties; and elected officials. | ||
 (c) Qualification for placement on register of eligibles.  | ||
The purpose of establishing a register of eligibles is to  | ||
identify applicants who possess and demonstrate the mental  | ||
aptitude and physical ability to perform the duties required of  | ||
members of the fire department in order to provide the highest  | ||
quality of service to the public. To this end, all applicants  | ||
for original appointment to an affected fire department shall  | ||
be subject to examination and testing which shall be public,  | ||
competitive, and open to all applicants unless the municipality  | ||
shall by ordinance limit applicants to residents of the  | ||
municipality, county or counties in which the municipality is  | ||
located, State, or nation. Any examination and testing  | ||
procedure utilized under subsection (e) of this Section shall  | ||
be supported by appropriate validation evidence and shall  | ||
comply with all applicable State state and federal laws.  | ||
Municipalities may establish educational, emergency medical  | ||
service licensure, and other pre-requisites for participation  | ||
in an examination or for hire as a firefighter. Any  | ||
municipality may charge a fee to cover the costs of the  | ||
application process. | ||
 Residency requirements in effect at the time an individual  | ||
enters the fire service of a municipality cannot be made more  | ||
restrictive for that individual during his or her period of  | ||
service for that municipality, or be made a condition of  | ||
promotion, except for the rank or position of fire chief and  | ||
for no more than 2 positions that rank immediately below that  | ||
of the chief rank which are appointed positions pursuant to the  | ||
Fire Department Promotion Act. | ||
 No person who is 35 years of age or older shall be eligible  | ||
to take an examination for a position as a firefighter unless  | ||
the person has had previous employment status as a firefighter  | ||
in the regularly constituted fire department of the  | ||
municipality, except as provided in this Section. The age  | ||
limitation does not apply to: | ||
  (1) any person previously employed as a full-time  | ||
 firefighter in a regularly constituted fire department of  | ||
 (i) any municipality or fire protection district located in  | ||
 Illinois, (ii) a fire protection district whose  | ||
 obligations were assumed by a municipality under Section 21  | ||
 of the Fire Protection District Act, or (iii) a  | ||
 municipality whose obligations were taken over by a fire  | ||
 protection district, or | ||
  (2) any person who has served a municipality as a  | ||
 regularly enrolled volunteer, paid-on-call, or part-time  | ||
 firefighter for the 5 years immediately preceding the time  | ||
 that the municipality begins to use full-time firefighters  | ||
 to provide all or part of its fire protection service. | ||
 No person who is under 21 years of age shall be eligible  | ||
for employment as a firefighter. | ||
 No applicant shall be examined concerning his or her  | ||
political or religious opinions or affiliations. The  | ||
examinations shall be conducted by the commissioners of the  | ||
municipality or their designees and agents. | ||
 No municipality shall require that any firefighter  | ||
appointed to the lowest rank serve a probationary employment  | ||
period of longer than one year of actual active employment,  | ||
which may exclude periods of training, or injury or illness  | ||
leaves, including duty related leave, in excess of 30 calendar  | ||
days. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Section,  | ||
the probationary employment period limitation may be extended  | ||
for a firefighter who is required, as a condition of  | ||
employment, to be a licensed paramedic, during which time the  | ||
sole reason that a firefighter may be discharged without a  | ||
hearing is for failing to meet the requirements for paramedic  | ||
licensure. | ||
 In the event that any applicant who has been found eligible  | ||
for appointment and whose name has been placed upon the final  | ||
eligibility register provided for in this Division 1 has not  | ||
been appointed to a firefighter position within one year after  | ||
the date of his or her physical ability examination, the  | ||
commission may cause a second examination to be made of that  | ||
applicant's physical ability prior to his or her appointment.  | ||
If, after the second examination, the physical ability of the  | ||
applicant shall be found to be less than the minimum standard  | ||
fixed by the rules of the commission, the applicant shall not  | ||
be appointed. The applicant's name may be retained upon the  | ||
register of candidates eligible for appointment and when next  | ||
reached for certification and appointment that applicant may be  | ||
again examined as provided in this Section, and if the physical  | ||
ability of that applicant is found to be less than the minimum  | ||
standard fixed by the rules of the commission, the applicant  | ||
shall not be appointed, and the name of the applicant shall be  | ||
removed from the register. | ||
 (d) Notice, examination, and testing components. Notice of  | ||
the time, place, general scope, merit criteria for any  | ||
subjective component, and fee of every examination shall be  | ||
given by the commission, by a publication at least 2 weeks  | ||
preceding the examination: (i) 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, or (ii) on the  | ||
municipality's Internet website. Additional notice of the  | ||
examination may be given as the commission shall prescribe. | ||
 The examination and qualifying standards for employment of  | ||
firefighters shall be based on: mental aptitude, physical  | ||
ability, preferences, moral character, and health. The mental  | ||
aptitude, physical ability, and preference components shall  | ||
determine an applicant's qualification for and placement on the  | ||
final register of eligibles. The examination may also include a  | ||
subjective component based on merit criteria as determined by  | ||
the commission. Scores from the examination must be made  | ||
available to the public. | ||
 (e) Mental aptitude. No person who does not possess at  | ||
least a high school diploma or an equivalent high school  | ||
education shall be placed on a register of eligibles.  | ||
Examination of an applicant's mental aptitude shall be based  | ||
upon a written examination. The examination shall be practical  | ||
in character and relate to those matters that fairly test the  | ||
capacity of the persons examined to discharge the duties  | ||
performed by members of a fire department. Written examinations  | ||
shall be administered in a manner that ensures the security and  | ||
accuracy of the scores achieved. | ||
 (f) Physical ability. All candidates shall be required to  | ||
undergo an examination of their physical ability to perform the  | ||
essential functions included in the duties they may be called  | ||
upon to perform as a member of a fire department. For the  | ||
purposes of this Section, essential functions of the job are  | ||
functions associated with duties that a firefighter may be  | ||
called upon to perform in response to emergency calls. The  | ||
frequency of the occurrence of those duties as part of the fire  | ||
department's regular routine shall not be a controlling factor  | ||
in the design of examination criteria or evolutions selected  | ||
for testing. These physical examinations shall be open,  | ||
competitive, and based on industry standards designed to test  | ||
each applicant's physical abilities in the following  | ||
dimensions: | ||
  (1) Muscular strength to perform tasks and evolutions  | ||
 that may be required in the performance of duties including  | ||
 grip strength, leg strength, and arm strength. Tests shall  | ||
 be conducted under anaerobic as well as aerobic conditions  | ||
 to test both the candidate's speed and endurance in  | ||
 performing tasks and evolutions. Tasks tested may be based  | ||
 on standards developed, or approved, by the local  | ||
 appointing authority. | ||
  (2) The ability to climb ladders, operate from heights,  | ||
 walk or crawl in the dark along narrow and uneven surfaces,  | ||
 and operate in proximity to hazardous environments. | ||
  (3) The ability to carry out critical, time-sensitive,  | ||
 and complex problem solving during physical exertion in  | ||
 stressful and hazardous environments. The testing  | ||
 environment may be hot and dark with tightly enclosed  | ||
 spaces, flashing lights, sirens, and other distractions. | ||
 The tests utilized to measure each applicant's
 | ||
capabilities in each of these dimensions may be tests based on
 | ||
industry standards currently in use or equivalent tests  | ||
approved by the Joint Labor-Management Committee of the Office  | ||
of the State Fire Marshal. | ||
 Physical ability examinations administered under this  | ||
Section shall be conducted with a reasonable number of proctors  | ||
and monitors, open to the public, and subject to reasonable  | ||
regulations of the commission. | ||
 (g) Scoring of examination components. Appointing  | ||
authorities may create a preliminary eligibility register. A  | ||
person shall be placed on the list based upon his or her  | ||
passage of the written examination or the passage of the  | ||
written examination and the physical ability component.  | ||
Passage of the written examination means attaining the minimum  | ||
score set by the commission. Minimum scores should be set by  | ||
the commission so as to demonstrate a candidate's ability to  | ||
perform the essential functions of the job. The minimum score  | ||
set by the commission shall be supported by appropriate  | ||
validation evidence and shall comply with all applicable State  | ||
state and federal laws. The appointing authority may conduct  | ||
the physical ability component and any subjective components  | ||
subsequent to the posting of the preliminary eligibility  | ||
register. | ||
 The examination components for an initial eligibility  | ||
register shall be graded on a 100-point scale. A person's  | ||
position on the list shall be determined by the following: (i)
 | ||
the person's score on the written examination, (ii) the person
 | ||
successfully passing the physical ability component, and (iii)  | ||
the
person's results on any subjective component as described  | ||
in
subsection (d).  | ||
 In order to qualify for placement on the final eligibility  | ||
register, an applicant's score on the written examination,  | ||
before any applicable preference points or subjective points  | ||
are applied, shall be at or above the minimum score set by the  | ||
commission. The local appointing authority may prescribe the  | ||
score to qualify for placement on the final eligibility  | ||
register, but the score shall not be less than the minimum  | ||
score set by the commission. | ||
 The commission shall prepare and keep a register of persons  | ||
whose total score is not less than the minimum score for  | ||
passage and who have passed the physical ability examination.  | ||
These persons shall take rank upon the register as candidates  | ||
in the order of their relative excellence based on the highest  | ||
to the lowest total points scored on the mental aptitude,  | ||
subjective component, and preference components of the test  | ||
administered in accordance with this Section. No more than 60  | ||
days after each examination, an initial eligibility list shall  | ||
be posted by the commission. The list shall include the final  | ||
grades of the candidates without reference to priority of the  | ||
time of examination and subject to claim for preference credit. | ||
 Commissions may conduct additional examinations, including  | ||
without limitation a polygraph test, after a final eligibility  | ||
register is established and before it expires with the  | ||
candidates ranked by total score without regard to date of  | ||
examination. No more than 60 days after each examination, an  | ||
initial eligibility list shall be posted by the commission  | ||
showing the final grades of the candidates without reference to  | ||
priority of time of examination and subject to claim for  | ||
preference credit. | ||
 (h) Preferences. The following are preferences: | ||
  (1) Veteran preference. Persons who were engaged in the  | ||
 military service of the United States for a period of at  | ||
 least one year of active duty and who were honorably  | ||
 discharged therefrom, or who are now or have been members  | ||
 on inactive or reserve duty in such military or naval  | ||
 service, shall be preferred for appointment to and  | ||
 employment with the fire department of an affected  | ||
 department. | ||
  (2) Fire cadet preference. Persons who have  | ||
 successfully completed 2 years of study in fire techniques  | ||
 or cadet training within a cadet program established under  | ||
 the rules of the Joint Labor and Management Committee  | ||
 (JLMC), as defined in Section 50 of the Fire Department  | ||
 Promotion Act, may be preferred for appointment to and  | ||
 employment with the fire department. | ||
  (3) Educational preference. Persons who have  | ||
 successfully obtained an associate's degree in the field of  | ||
 fire service or emergency medical services, or a bachelor's  | ||
 degree from an accredited college or university may be  | ||
 preferred for appointment to and employment with the fire  | ||
 department. | ||
  (4) Paramedic preference. Persons who have obtained a  | ||
 license as a paramedic may be preferred for appointment to  | ||
 and employment with the fire department of an affected  | ||
 department providing emergency medical services. | ||
  (5) Experience preference. All persons employed by a  | ||
 municipality who have been paid-on-call or part-time  | ||
 certified Firefighter II, certified Firefighter III, State  | ||
 of Illinois or nationally licensed EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT, or  | ||
 paramedic, or any combination of those capacities may be  | ||
 awarded up to a maximum of 5 points. However, the applicant  | ||
 may not be awarded more than 0.5 points for each complete  | ||
 year of paid-on-call or part-time service. Applicants from  | ||
 outside the municipality who were employed as full-time  | ||
 firefighters or firefighter-paramedics by a fire  | ||
 protection district or another municipality may be awarded  | ||
 up to 5 experience preference points. However, the  | ||
 applicant may not be awarded more than one point for each  | ||
 complete year of full-time service. | ||
  Upon request by the commission, the governing body of  | ||
 the municipality or in the case of applicants from outside  | ||
 the municipality the governing body of any fire protection  | ||
 district or any other municipality shall certify to the  | ||
 commission, within 10 days after the request, the number of  | ||
 years of successful paid-on-call, part-time, or full-time  | ||
 service of any person. A candidate may not receive the full  | ||
 amount of preference points under this subsection if the  | ||
 amount of points awarded would place the candidate before a  | ||
 veteran on the eligibility list. If more than one candidate  | ||
 receiving experience preference points is prevented from  | ||
 receiving all of their points due to not being allowed to  | ||
 pass a veteran, the candidates shall be placed on the list  | ||
 below the veteran in rank order based on the totals  | ||
 received if all points under this subsection were to be  | ||
 awarded. Any remaining ties on the list shall be determined  | ||
 by lot.  | ||
  (6) Residency preference. Applicants whose principal  | ||
 residence is located within the fire department's  | ||
 jurisdiction may be preferred for appointment to and  | ||
 employment with the fire department. | ||
  (7) Additional preferences. Up to 5 additional  | ||
 preference points may be awarded for unique categories  | ||
 based on an applicant's experience or background as  | ||
 identified by the commission. | ||
  (8) Scoring of preferences. The commission shall give  | ||
 preference for original appointment to persons designated  | ||
 in item (1)
by adding to the final grade that they receive  | ||
 5 points
for the recognized preference achieved. The  | ||
 commission shall determine the number of preference points  | ||
 for each category except (1). The number of preference  | ||
 points for each category shall range from 0 to 5. In  | ||
 determining the number of preference points, the  | ||
 commission shall prescribe that if a candidate earns the  | ||
 maximum number of preference points in all categories, that  | ||
 number may not be less than 10 nor more than 30. The  | ||
 commission shall give preference for original appointment  | ||
 to persons designated in items (2) through (7) by adding  | ||
 the requisite number of points to the final grade for each  | ||
 recognized preference achieved. The numerical result thus  | ||
 attained shall be applied by the commission in determining  | ||
 the final eligibility list and appointment from the  | ||
 eligibility list. The local appointing authority may  | ||
 prescribe the total number of preference points awarded  | ||
 under this Section, but the total number of preference  | ||
 points shall not be less than 10 points or more than 30  | ||
 points. | ||
 No person entitled to any preference shall be required to  | ||
claim the credit before any examination held under the  | ||
provisions of this Section, but the preference shall be given  | ||
after the posting or publication of the initial eligibility  | ||
list or register at the request of a person entitled to a  | ||
credit before any certification or appointments are made from  | ||
the eligibility register, upon the furnishing of verifiable  | ||
evidence and proof of qualifying preference credit. Candidates  | ||
who are eligible for preference credit shall make a claim in  | ||
writing within 10 days after the posting of the initial  | ||
eligibility list, or the claim shall be deemed waived. Final  | ||
eligibility registers shall be established after the awarding  | ||
of verified preference points. All employment shall be subject  | ||
to the commission's initial hire background review including,  | ||
but not limited to, criminal history, employment history, moral  | ||
character, oral examination, and medical and psychological  | ||
examinations, all on a pass-fail basis. The medical and  | ||
psychological examinations must be conducted last, and may only  | ||
be performed after a conditional offer of employment has been  | ||
extended. | ||
 Any person placed on an eligibility list who exceeds the  | ||
age requirement before being appointed to a fire department  | ||
shall remain eligible for appointment until the list is  | ||
abolished, or his or her name has been on the list for a period  | ||
of 2 years. No person who has attained the age of 35 years  | ||
shall be inducted into a fire department, except as otherwise  | ||
provided in this Section. | ||
 The commission shall strike off the names of candidates for  | ||
original appointment after the names have been on the list for  | ||
more than 2 years. | ||
 (i) Moral character. No person shall be appointed to a fire  | ||
department unless he or she is a person of good character; not  | ||
a habitual drunkard, a gambler, or a person who has been  | ||
convicted of a felony or a crime involving moral turpitude.  | ||
However, no person shall be disqualified from appointment to  | ||
the fire department because of the person's record of  | ||
misdemeanor convictions except those under Sections 11-6,  | ||
11-7, 11-9, 11-14, 11-15, 11-17, 11-18, 11-19, 12-2, 12-6,  | ||
12-15, 14-4, 16-1, 21.1-3, 24-3.1, 24-5, 25-1, 28-3, 31-1,  | ||
31-4, 31-6, 31-7, 32-1, 32-2, 32-3, 32-4, 32-8, and subsections  | ||
1, 6, and 8 of Section 24-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the  | ||
Criminal Code of 2012, or arrest for any cause without  | ||
conviction thereon. Any such person who is in the department  | ||
may be removed on charges brought for violating this subsection  | ||
and after a trial as hereinafter provided. | ||
 A classifiable set of the fingerprints of every person who  | ||
is offered employment as a certificated member of an affected  | ||
fire department whether with or without compensation, shall be  | ||
furnished to the Illinois Department of State Police and to the  | ||
Federal Bureau of Investigation by the commission. | ||
 Whenever a commission is authorized or required by law to  | ||
consider some aspect of criminal history record information for  | ||
the purpose of carrying out its statutory powers and  | ||
responsibilities, then, upon request and payment of fees in  | ||
conformance with the requirements of Section 2605-400 of the  | ||
State Police Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois,  | ||
the Department of State Police is authorized to furnish,  | ||
pursuant to positive identification, the information contained  | ||
in State files as is necessary to fulfill the request. | ||
 (j) Temporary appointments. In order to prevent a stoppage  | ||
of public business, to meet extraordinary exigencies, or to  | ||
prevent material impairment of the fire department, the  | ||
commission may make temporary appointments, to remain in force  | ||
only until regular appointments are made under the provisions  | ||
of this Division, but never to exceed 60 days. No temporary  | ||
appointment of any one person shall be made more than twice in  | ||
any calendar year. | ||
 (k) A person who knowingly divulges or receives test  | ||
questions or answers before a written examination, or otherwise  | ||
knowingly violates or subverts any requirement of this Section,  | ||
commits a violation of this Section and may be subject to  | ||
charges for official misconduct. | ||
 A person who is the knowing recipient of test information  | ||
in advance of the examination shall be disqualified from the  | ||
examination or discharged from the position to which he or she  | ||
was appointed, as applicable, and otherwise subjected to  | ||
disciplinary actions.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-251, eff. 8-4-11; 97-898, eff. 8-6-12;  | ||
97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; 98-760, eff. 7-16-14; 98-973, eff.  | ||
8-15-14; revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 (65 ILCS 5/10-2.1-6.3) | ||
 Sec. 10-2.1-6.3. Original appointments; full-time fire  | ||
department. | ||
 (a) Applicability. Unless a commission elects to follow the  | ||
provisions of Section 10-2.1-6.4, this Section shall apply to  | ||
all original appointments to an affected full-time fire  | ||
department. Existing registers of eligibles shall continue to  | ||
be valid until their expiration dates, or up to a maximum of 2  | ||
years after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the  | ||
97th General Assembly. | ||
 Notwithstanding any statute, ordinance, rule, or other law  | ||
to the contrary, all original appointments to an affected  | ||
department to which this Section applies shall be administered  | ||
in the manner provided for in this Section. Provisions of the  | ||
Illinois Municipal Code, municipal ordinances, and rules  | ||
adopted pursuant to such authority and other laws relating to  | ||
initial hiring of firefighters in affected departments shall  | ||
continue to apply to the extent they are compatible with this  | ||
Section, but in the event of a conflict between this Section  | ||
and any other law, this Section shall control. | ||
 A home rule or non-home rule municipality may not  | ||
administer its fire department process for original  | ||
appointments in a manner that is less stringent than this  | ||
Section. This Section 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 the powers and  | ||
functions exercised by the State. | ||
 A municipality that is operating under a court order or  | ||
consent decree regarding original appointments to a full-time  | ||
fire department before the effective date of this amendatory  | ||
Act of the 97th General Assembly is exempt from the  | ||
requirements of this Section for the duration of the court  | ||
order or consent decree. | ||
 Notwithstanding any other provision of this subsection  | ||
(a), this Section does not apply to a municipality with more  | ||
than 1,000,000 inhabitants.  | ||
 (b) Original appointments. All original appointments made  | ||
to an affected fire department shall be made from a register of  | ||
eligibles established in accordance with the processes  | ||
established by this Section. Only persons who meet or exceed  | ||
the performance standards required by this Section shall be  | ||
placed on a register of eligibles for original appointment to  | ||
an affected fire department. | ||
 Whenever an appointing authority authorizes action to hire  | ||
a person to perform the duties of a firefighter or to hire a  | ||
firefighter-paramedic to fill a position that is a new position  | ||
or vacancy due to resignation, discharge, promotion, death, the  | ||
granting of a disability or retirement pension, or any other  | ||
cause, the appointing authority shall appoint to that position  | ||
the person with the highest ranking on the final eligibility  | ||
list. If the appointing authority has reason to conclude that  | ||
the highest ranked person fails to meet the minimum standards  | ||
for the position or if the appointing authority believes an  | ||
alternate candidate would better serve the needs of the  | ||
department, then the appointing authority has the right to pass  | ||
over the highest ranked person and appoint either: (i) any  | ||
person who has a ranking in the top 5% of the register of  | ||
eligibles or (ii) any person who is among the top 5 highest  | ||
ranked persons on the list of eligibles if the number of people  | ||
who have a ranking in the top 5% of the register of eligibles  | ||
is less than 5 people. | ||
 Any candidate may pass on an appointment once without  | ||
losing his or her position on the register of eligibles. Any  | ||
candidate who passes a second time may be removed from the list  | ||
by the appointing authority provided that such action shall not  | ||
prejudice a person's opportunities to participate in future  | ||
examinations, including an examination held during the time a  | ||
candidate is already on the municipality's register of  | ||
eligibles. | ||
 The sole authority to issue certificates of appointment  | ||
shall be vested in the board of fire and police commissioners.  | ||
All certificates of appointment issued to any officer or member  | ||
of an affected department shall be signed by the chairperson  | ||
and secretary, respectively, of the board upon appointment of  | ||
such officer or member to the affected department by action of  | ||
the board. Each person who accepts a certificate of appointment  | ||
and successfully completes his or her probationary period shall  | ||
be enrolled as a firefighter and as a regular member of the  | ||
fire department. | ||
 For the purposes of this Section, "firefighter" means any  | ||
person who has been prior to, on, or after the effective date  | ||
of this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly appointed  | ||
to a fire department or fire protection district or employed by  | ||
a State university and sworn or commissioned to perform  | ||
firefighter duties or paramedic duties, or both, except that  | ||
the following persons are not included: part-time  | ||
firefighters; auxiliary, reserve, or voluntary firefighters,  | ||
including paid-on-call firefighters; clerks and dispatchers or  | ||
other civilian employees of a fire department or fire  | ||
protection district who are not routinely expected to perform  | ||
firefighter duties; and elected officials. | ||
 (c) Qualification for placement on register of eligibles.  | ||
The purpose of establishing a register of eligibles is to  | ||
identify applicants who possess and demonstrate the mental  | ||
aptitude and physical ability to perform the duties required of  | ||
members of the fire department in order to provide the highest  | ||
quality of service to the public. To this end, all applicants  | ||
for original appointment to an affected fire department shall  | ||
be subject to examination and testing which shall be public,  | ||
competitive, and open to all applicants unless the municipality  | ||
shall by ordinance limit applicants to residents of the  | ||
municipality, county or counties in which the municipality is  | ||
located, State, or nation. Any examination and testing  | ||
procedure utilized under subsection (e) of this Section shall  | ||
be supported by appropriate validation evidence and shall  | ||
comply with all applicable State state and federal laws.  | ||
Municipalities may establish educational, emergency medical  | ||
service licensure, and other pre-requisites for participation  | ||
in an examination or for hire as a firefighter. Any  | ||
municipality may charge a fee to cover the costs of the  | ||
application process. | ||
 Residency requirements in effect at the time an individual  | ||
enters the fire service of a municipality cannot be made more  | ||
restrictive for that individual during his or her period of  | ||
service for that municipality, or be made a condition of  | ||
promotion, except for the rank or position of fire chief and  | ||
for no more than 2 positions that rank immediately below that  | ||
of the chief rank which are appointed positions pursuant to the  | ||
Fire Department Promotion Act. | ||
 No person who is 35 years of age or older shall be eligible  | ||
to take an examination for a position as a firefighter unless  | ||
the person has had previous employment status as a firefighter  | ||
in the regularly constituted fire department of the  | ||
municipality, except as provided in this Section. The age  | ||
limitation does not apply to: | ||
  (1) any person previously employed as a full-time  | ||
 firefighter in a regularly constituted fire department of  | ||
 (i) any municipality or fire protection district located in  | ||
 Illinois, (ii) a fire protection district whose  | ||
 obligations were assumed by a municipality under Section 21  | ||
 of the Fire Protection District Act, or (iii) a  | ||
 municipality whose obligations were taken over by a fire  | ||
 protection district, or | ||
  (2) any person who has served a municipality as a  | ||
 regularly enrolled volunteer, paid-on-call, or part-time  | ||
 firefighter for the 5 years immediately preceding the time  | ||
 that the municipality begins to use full-time firefighters  | ||
 to provide all or part of its fire protection service. | ||
 No person who is under 21 years of age shall be eligible  | ||
for employment as a firefighter. | ||
 No applicant shall be examined concerning his or her  | ||
political or religious opinions or affiliations. The  | ||
examinations shall be conducted by the commissioners of the  | ||
municipality or their designees and agents. | ||
 No municipality shall require that any firefighter  | ||
appointed to the lowest rank serve a probationary employment  | ||
period of longer than one year of actual active employment,  | ||
which may exclude periods of training, or injury or illness  | ||
leaves, including duty related leave, in excess of 30 calendar  | ||
days. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Section,  | ||
the probationary employment period limitation may be extended  | ||
for a firefighter who is required, as a condition of  | ||
employment, to be a licensed paramedic, during which time the  | ||
sole reason that a firefighter may be discharged without a  | ||
hearing is for failing to meet the requirements for paramedic  | ||
licensure. | ||
 In the event that any applicant who has been found eligible  | ||
for appointment and whose name has been placed upon the final  | ||
eligibility register provided for in this Section has not been  | ||
appointed to a firefighter position within one year after the  | ||
date of his or her physical ability examination, the commission  | ||
may cause a second examination to be made of that applicant's  | ||
physical ability prior to his or her appointment. If, after the  | ||
second examination, the physical ability of the applicant shall  | ||
be found to be less than the minimum standard fixed by the  | ||
rules of the commission, the applicant shall not be appointed.  | ||
The applicant's name may be retained upon the register of  | ||
candidates eligible for appointment and when next reached for  | ||
certification and appointment that applicant may be again  | ||
examined as provided in this Section, and if the physical  | ||
ability of that applicant is found to be less than the minimum  | ||
standard fixed by the rules of the commission, the applicant  | ||
shall not be appointed, and the name of the applicant shall be  | ||
removed from the register. | ||
 (d) Notice, examination, and testing components. Notice of  | ||
the time, place, general scope, merit criteria for any  | ||
subjective component, and fee of every examination shall be  | ||
given by the commission, by a publication at least 2 weeks  | ||
preceding the examination: (i) 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, or (ii) on the  | ||
municipality's Internet website. Additional notice of the  | ||
examination may be given as the commission shall prescribe. | ||
 The examination and qualifying standards for employment of  | ||
firefighters shall be based on: mental aptitude, physical  | ||
ability, preferences, moral character, and health. The mental  | ||
aptitude, physical ability, and preference components shall  | ||
determine an applicant's qualification for and placement on the  | ||
final register of eligibles. The examination may also include a  | ||
subjective component based on merit criteria as determined by  | ||
the commission. Scores from the examination must be made  | ||
available to the public. | ||
 (e) Mental aptitude. No person who does not possess at  | ||
least a high school diploma or an equivalent high school  | ||
education shall be placed on a register of eligibles.  | ||
Examination of an applicant's mental aptitude shall be based  | ||
upon a written examination. The examination shall be practical  | ||
in character and relate to those matters that fairly test the  | ||
capacity of the persons examined to discharge the duties  | ||
performed by members of a fire department. Written examinations  | ||
shall be administered in a manner that ensures the security and  | ||
accuracy of the scores achieved. | ||
 (f) Physical ability. All candidates shall be required to  | ||
undergo an examination of their physical ability to perform the  | ||
essential functions included in the duties they may be called  | ||
upon to perform as a member of a fire department. For the  | ||
purposes of this Section, essential functions of the job are  | ||
functions associated with duties that a firefighter may be  | ||
called upon to perform in response to emergency calls. The  | ||
frequency of the occurrence of those duties as part of the fire  | ||
department's regular routine shall not be a controlling factor  | ||
in the design of examination criteria or evolutions selected  | ||
for testing. These physical examinations shall be open,  | ||
competitive, and based on industry standards designed to test  | ||
each applicant's physical abilities in the following  | ||
dimensions: | ||
  (1) Muscular strength to perform tasks and evolutions  | ||
 that may be required in the performance of duties including  | ||
 grip strength, leg strength, and arm strength. Tests shall  | ||
 be conducted under anaerobic as well as aerobic conditions  | ||
 to test both the candidate's speed and endurance in  | ||
 performing tasks and evolutions. Tasks tested may be based  | ||
 on standards developed, or approved, by the local  | ||
 appointing authority. | ||
  (2) The ability to climb ladders, operate from heights,  | ||
 walk or crawl in the dark along narrow and uneven surfaces,  | ||
 and operate in proximity to hazardous environments. | ||
  (3) The ability to carry out critical, time-sensitive,  | ||
 and complex problem solving during physical exertion in  | ||
 stressful and hazardous environments. The testing  | ||
 environment may be hot and dark with tightly enclosed  | ||
 spaces, flashing lights, sirens, and other distractions. | ||
 The tests utilized to measure each applicant's
 | ||
capabilities in each of these dimensions may be tests based on
 | ||
industry standards currently in use or equivalent tests  | ||
approved by the Joint Labor-Management Committee of the Office  | ||
of the State Fire Marshal.  | ||
 Physical ability examinations administered under this  | ||
Section shall be conducted with a reasonable number of proctors  | ||
and monitors, open to the public, and subject to reasonable  | ||
regulations of the commission. | ||
 (g) Scoring of examination components. Appointing  | ||
authorities may create a preliminary eligibility register. A  | ||
person shall be placed on the list based upon his or her  | ||
passage of the written examination or the passage of the  | ||
written examination and the physical ability component.  | ||
Passage of the written examination means attaining the minimum  | ||
score set by the commission. Minimum scores should be set by  | ||
the commission so as to demonstrate a candidate's ability to  | ||
perform the essential functions of the job. The minimum score  | ||
set by the commission shall be supported by appropriate  | ||
validation evidence and shall comply with all applicable State  | ||
state and federal laws. The appointing authority may conduct  | ||
the physical ability component and any subjective components  | ||
subsequent to the posting of the preliminary eligibility  | ||
register. | ||
 The examination components for an initial eligibility  | ||
register shall be graded on a 100-point scale. A person's  | ||
position on the list shall be determined by the following: (i)
 | ||
the person's score on the written examination, (ii) the person
 | ||
successfully passing the physical ability component, and (iii)  | ||
the
person's results on any subjective component as described  | ||
in
subsection (d).  | ||
 In order to qualify for placement on the final eligibility  | ||
register, an applicant's score on the written examination,  | ||
before any applicable preference points or subjective points  | ||
are applied, shall be at or above the minimum score as set by  | ||
the commission. The local appointing authority may prescribe  | ||
the score to qualify for placement on the final eligibility  | ||
register, but the score shall not be less than the minimum  | ||
score set by the commission. | ||
 The commission shall prepare and keep a register of persons  | ||
whose total score is not less than the minimum score for  | ||
passage and who have passed the physical ability examination.  | ||
These persons shall take rank upon the register as candidates  | ||
in the order of their relative excellence based on the highest  | ||
to the lowest total points scored on the mental aptitude,  | ||
subjective component, and preference components of the test  | ||
administered in accordance with this Section. No more than 60  | ||
days after each examination, an initial eligibility list shall  | ||
be posted by the commission. The list shall include the final  | ||
grades of the candidates without reference to priority of the  | ||
time of examination and subject to claim for preference credit. | ||
 Commissions may conduct additional examinations, including  | ||
without limitation a polygraph test, after a final eligibility  | ||
register is established and before it expires with the  | ||
candidates ranked by total score without regard to date of  | ||
examination. No more than 60 days after each examination, an  | ||
initial eligibility list shall be posted by the commission  | ||
showing the final grades of the candidates without reference to  | ||
priority of time of examination and subject to claim for  | ||
preference credit. | ||
 (h) Preferences. The following are preferences: | ||
  (1) Veteran preference. Persons who were engaged in the  | ||
 military service of the United States for a period of at  | ||
 least one year of active duty and who were honorably  | ||
 discharged therefrom, or who are now or have been members  | ||
 on inactive or reserve duty in such military or naval  | ||
 service, shall be preferred for appointment to and  | ||
 employment with the fire department of an affected  | ||
 department. | ||
  (2) Fire cadet preference. Persons who have  | ||
 successfully completed 2 years of study in fire techniques  | ||
 or cadet training within a cadet program established under  | ||
 the rules of the Joint Labor and Management Committee  | ||
 (JLMC), as defined in Section 50 of the Fire Department  | ||
 Promotion Act, may be preferred for appointment to and  | ||
 employment with the fire department. | ||
  (3) Educational preference. Persons who have  | ||
 successfully obtained an associate's degree in the field of  | ||
 fire service or emergency medical services, or a bachelor's  | ||
 degree from an accredited college or university may be  | ||
 preferred for appointment to and employment with the fire  | ||
 department. | ||
  (4) Paramedic preference. Persons who have obtained a  | ||
 license as a paramedic shall be preferred for appointment  | ||
 to and employment with the fire department of an affected  | ||
 department providing emergency medical services. | ||
  (5) Experience preference. All persons employed by a  | ||
 municipality who have been paid-on-call or part-time  | ||
 certified Firefighter II, State of Illinois or nationally  | ||
 licensed EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT, or any combination of those  | ||
 capacities shall be awarded 0.5 point for each year of  | ||
 successful service in one or more of those capacities, up  | ||
 to a maximum of 5 points. Certified Firefighter III and  | ||
 State of Illinois or nationally licensed paramedics shall  | ||
 be awarded one point per year up to a maximum of 5 points.  | ||
 Applicants from outside the municipality who were employed  | ||
 as full-time firefighters or firefighter-paramedics by a  | ||
 fire protection district or another municipality for at  | ||
 least 2 years shall be awarded 5 experience preference  | ||
 points. These additional points presuppose a rating scale  | ||
 totaling 100 points available for the eligibility list. If  | ||
 more or fewer points are used in the rating scale for the  | ||
 eligibility list, the points awarded under this subsection  | ||
 shall be increased or decreased by a factor equal to the  | ||
 total possible points available for the examination  | ||
 divided by 100. | ||
  Upon request by the commission, the governing body of  | ||
 the municipality or in the case of applicants from outside  | ||
 the municipality the governing body of any fire protection  | ||
 district or any other municipality shall certify to the  | ||
 commission, within 10 days after the request, the number of  | ||
 years of successful paid-on-call, part-time, or full-time  | ||
 service of any person. A candidate may not receive the full  | ||
 amount of preference points under this subsection if the  | ||
 amount of points awarded would place the candidate before a  | ||
 veteran on the eligibility list. If more than one candidate  | ||
 receiving experience preference points is prevented from  | ||
 receiving all of their points due to not being allowed to  | ||
 pass a veteran, the candidates shall be placed on the list  | ||
 below the veteran in rank order based on the totals  | ||
 received if all points under this subsection were to be  | ||
 awarded. Any remaining ties on the list shall be determined  | ||
 by lot.  | ||
  (6) Residency preference. Applicants whose principal  | ||
 residence is located within the fire department's  | ||
 jurisdiction shall be preferred for appointment to and  | ||
 employment with the fire department. | ||
  (7) Additional preferences. Up to 5 additional  | ||
 preference points may be awarded for unique categories  | ||
 based on an applicant's experience or background as  | ||
 identified by the commission. | ||
  (8) Scoring of preferences. The commission shall give  | ||
 preference for original appointment
to persons designated  | ||
 in item (1)
by adding to the final grade that they receive  | ||
 5 points
for the recognized preference achieved. The  | ||
 commission shall determine the number of preference points  | ||
 for each category except (1). The number of preference  | ||
 points for each category shall range from 0 to 5. In  | ||
 determining the number of preference points, the  | ||
 commission shall prescribe that if a candidate earns the  | ||
 maximum number of preference points in all categories, that  | ||
 number may not be less than 10 nor more than 30. The  | ||
 commission shall give preference for original appointment  | ||
 to persons designated in items (2) through (7) by adding  | ||
 the requisite number of points to the final grade for each  | ||
 recognized preference achieved. The numerical result thus  | ||
 attained shall be applied by the commission in determining  | ||
 the final eligibility list and appointment from the  | ||
 eligibility list. The local appointing authority may  | ||
 prescribe the total number of preference points awarded  | ||
 under this Section, but the total number of preference  | ||
 points shall not be less than 10 points or more than 30  | ||
 points. | ||
 No person entitled to any preference shall be required to  | ||
claim the credit before any examination held under the  | ||
provisions of this Section, but the preference shall be given  | ||
after the posting or publication of the initial eligibility  | ||
list or register at the request of a person entitled to a  | ||
credit before any certification or appointments are made from  | ||
the eligibility register, upon the furnishing of verifiable  | ||
evidence and proof of qualifying preference credit. Candidates  | ||
who are eligible for preference credit shall make a claim in  | ||
writing within 10 days after the posting of the initial  | ||
eligibility list, or the claim shall be deemed waived. Final  | ||
eligibility registers shall be established after the awarding  | ||
of verified preference points. All employment shall be subject  | ||
to the commission's initial hire background review including,  | ||
but not limited to, criminal history, employment history, moral  | ||
character, oral examination, and medical and psychological  | ||
examinations, all on a pass-fail basis. The medical and  | ||
psychological examinations must be conducted last, and may only  | ||
be performed after a conditional offer of employment has been  | ||
extended. | ||
 Any person placed on an eligibility list who exceeds the  | ||
age requirement before being appointed to a fire department  | ||
shall remain eligible for appointment until the list is  | ||
abolished, or his or her name has been on the list for a period  | ||
of 2 years. No person who has attained the age of 35 years  | ||
shall be inducted into a fire department, except as otherwise  | ||
provided in this Section. | ||
 The commission shall strike off the names of candidates for  | ||
original appointment after the names have been on the list for  | ||
more than 2 years. | ||
 (i) Moral character. No person shall be appointed to a fire  | ||
department unless he or she is a person of good character; not  | ||
a habitual drunkard, a gambler, or a person who has been  | ||
convicted of a felony or a crime involving moral turpitude.  | ||
However, no person shall be disqualified from appointment to  | ||
the fire department because of the person's record of  | ||
misdemeanor convictions except those under Sections 11-6,  | ||
11-7, 11-9, 11-14, 11-15, 11-17, 11-18, 11-19, 12-2, 12-6,  | ||
12-15, 14-4, 16-1, 21.1-3, 24-3.1, 24-5, 25-1, 28-3, 31-1,  | ||
31-4, 31-6, 31-7, 32-1, 32-2, 32-3, 32-4, 32-8, and subsections  | ||
1, 6, and 8 of Section 24-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the  | ||
Criminal Code of 2012, or arrest for any cause without  | ||
conviction thereon. Any such person who is in the department  | ||
may be removed on charges brought for violating this subsection  | ||
and after a trial as hereinafter provided. | ||
 A classifiable set of the fingerprints of every person who  | ||
is offered employment as a certificated member of an affected  | ||
fire department whether with or without compensation, shall be  | ||
furnished to the Illinois Department of State Police and to the  | ||
Federal Bureau of Investigation by the commission. | ||
 Whenever a commission is authorized or required by law to  | ||
consider some aspect of criminal history record information for  | ||
the purpose of carrying out its statutory powers and  | ||
responsibilities, then, upon request and payment of fees in  | ||
conformance with the requirements of Section 2605-400 of the  | ||
State Police Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois,  | ||
the Department of State Police is authorized to furnish,  | ||
pursuant to positive identification, the information contained  | ||
in State files as is necessary to fulfill the request. | ||
 (j) Temporary appointments. In order to prevent a stoppage  | ||
of public business, to meet extraordinary exigencies, or to  | ||
prevent material impairment of the fire department, the  | ||
commission may make temporary appointments, to remain in force  | ||
only until regular appointments are made under the provisions  | ||
of this Division, but never to exceed 60 days. No temporary  | ||
appointment of any one person shall be made more than twice in  | ||
any calendar year. | ||
 (k) A person who knowingly divulges or receives test  | ||
questions or answers before a written examination, or otherwise  | ||
knowingly violates or subverts any requirement of this Section,  | ||
commits a violation of this Section and may be subject to  | ||
charges for official misconduct. | ||
 A person who is the knowing recipient of test information  | ||
in advance of the examination shall be disqualified from the  | ||
examination or discharged from the position to which he or she  | ||
was appointed, as applicable, and otherwise subjected to  | ||
disciplinary actions.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-251, eff. 8-4-11; 97-898, eff. 8-6-12;  | ||
97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; 98-760, eff. 7-16-14; 98-973, eff.  | ||
8-15-14, revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 (65 ILCS 5/11-12-5) (from Ch. 24, par. 11-12-5)
 | ||
 Sec. 11-12-5. 
Every plan commission and planning  | ||
department authorized by
this Division 12 has the following  | ||
powers and whenever in this Division 12
the term plan  | ||
commission is used such term shall be deemed to include the
 | ||
term planning department:
 | ||
  (1) To prepare and recommend to the corporate  | ||
 authorities a
comprehensive plan for the present and future  | ||
 development or redevelopment
of the municipality. Such  | ||
 plan may be adopted in whole or in separate
geographical or  | ||
 functional parts, each of which, when adopted, shall be the
 | ||
 official comprehensive plan, or part thereof, of that  | ||
 municipality. This
plan may include reasonable  | ||
 requirements with reference to streets, alleys,
public  | ||
 grounds, and other improvements hereinafter specified. The  | ||
 plan, as
recommended by the plan commission and as  | ||
 thereafter adopted in any
municipality in this state, may  | ||
 be made applicable, by the terms thereof,
to land situated  | ||
 within the corporate limits and contiguous territory not
 | ||
 more than one and one-half miles beyond the corporate  | ||
 limits and not
included in any municipality. Such plan may  | ||
 be implemented by ordinances
(a) establishing reasonable  | ||
 standards of design for subdivisions and for
 | ||
 resubdivisions of unimproved land and of areas subject to  | ||
 redevelopment in
respect to public improvements as herein  | ||
 defined; (b) establishing
reasonable requirements  | ||
 governing the location, width, course, and
surfacing of  | ||
 public streets and highways, alleys, ways for public  | ||
 service
facilities, curbs, gutters, sidewalks, street  | ||
 lights, parks, playgrounds,
school grounds, size of lots to  | ||
 be used for residential purposes, storm
water drainage,  | ||
 water supply and distribution, sanitary sewers, and sewage
 | ||
 collection and treatment; and (c) may designate land  | ||
 suitable for
annexation to the municipality and the  | ||
 recommended zoning classification
for such land upon  | ||
 annexation.
 | ||
  (2) To recommend changes, from time to time, in the  | ||
 official
comprehensive plan.
 | ||
  (3) To prepare and recommend to the corporate  | ||
 authorities, from time to
time, plans for specific  | ||
 improvements in pursuance of the official
comprehensive  | ||
 plan.
 | ||
  (4) To give aid to the municipal officials charged with  | ||
 the direction of
projects for improvements embraced within  | ||
 the official plan, to further the
making of these projects,  | ||
 and, generally, to promote the realization of the
official  | ||
 comprehensive plan.
 | ||
  (5) To prepare and recommend to the corporate  | ||
 authorities schemes for
regulating or forbidding  | ||
 structures or activities which may hinder access
to solar  | ||
 energy necessary for the proper functioning of solar energy  | ||
 systems,
as defined in Section 1.2 of The Comprehensive  | ||
 Solar Energy Act of 1977,
or to recommend changes in such  | ||
 schemes.
 | ||
  (6) To exercise such other powers germane to the powers  | ||
 granted by this
article as may be conferred by the  | ||
 corporate authorities.
 | ||
 (7) For purposes of implementing ordinances regarding  | ||
developer
donations
or
impact fees,
and specifically for  | ||
expenditures thereof,
"school grounds" is defined as including  | ||
land or site
improvements,
which include
school buildings or  | ||
other infrastructure, including technological infrastructure,  | ||
necessitated and specifically and
uniquely attributed to the
 | ||
development or subdivision in question. This amendatory Act of  | ||
the 93rd
General Assembly applies to all impact fees or  | ||
developer donations paid into a
school district or held in a  | ||
separate account or escrow fund by any school
district
or  | ||
municipality for a school district.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-741, eff. 1-1-15; revised 12-1-14.)
 | ||
 (65 ILCS 5/11-74.4-3.5)
 | ||
 Sec. 11-74.4-3.5. Completion dates for redevelopment  | ||
projects. | ||
 (a) Unless otherwise stated in this Section, the estimated  | ||
dates of completion
of the redevelopment project and retirement  | ||
of obligations issued to finance
redevelopment project costs  | ||
(including refunding bonds under Section 11-74.4-7) may not be
 | ||
later than December 31 of the year in which the payment to the  | ||
municipal
treasurer, as provided in subsection (b) of Section  | ||
11-74.4-8 of this Act, is to
be made with respect to ad valorem  | ||
taxes levied in the 23rd
calendar year after the year in which  | ||
the ordinance approving the
redevelopment project area was  | ||
adopted if the ordinance was adopted on or after
January 15,  | ||
1981. | ||
 (b) The estimated dates of completion of the redevelopment  | ||
project and retirement of obligations issued to finance  | ||
redevelopment project costs (including refunding bonds under  | ||
Section 11-74.4-7) may not be later than December 31 of the  | ||
year in which the payment to the municipal treasurer as  | ||
provided in subsection (b) of Section 11-74.4-8 of this Act is  | ||
to be made with respect to ad valorem taxes levied in the 32nd  | ||
calendar year after the year in which the ordinance approving  | ||
the redevelopment project area was adopted if the ordinance was  | ||
adopted on September 9, 1999 by the Village of Downs.  | ||
 The estimated dates of completion
of the redevelopment  | ||
project and retirement of obligations issued to finance
 | ||
redevelopment project costs (including refunding bonds under  | ||
Section 11-74.4-7) may not be later than December 31 of the  | ||
year in which the payment to the municipal
treasurer as  | ||
provided in subsection (b) of Section 11-74.4-8 of this Act is  | ||
to
be made with respect to ad valorem taxes levied in the 33rd  | ||
calendar
year after the year in which the ordinance approving  | ||
the
redevelopment project area was adopted if the ordinance was  | ||
adopted on May 20, 1985 by the Village of Wheeling. | ||
 The estimated dates of completion of the redevelopment  | ||
project and retirement of obligations issued to finance  | ||
redevelopment project costs (including refunding bonds under  | ||
Section 11-74.4-7) may not be later than December 31 of the  | ||
year in which the payment to the municipal treasurer as  | ||
provided in subsection (b) of Section 11-74.4-8 of this Act is  | ||
to be made with respect to ad valorem taxes levied in the 28th  | ||
calendar year after the year in which the ordinance approving  | ||
the redevelopment project area was adopted if the ordinance was  | ||
adopted on October 12, 1989 by the City of Lawrenceville.  | ||
 (c) The estimated dates of completion
of the redevelopment  | ||
project and retirement of obligations issued to finance
 | ||
redevelopment project costs (including refunding bonds under  | ||
Section 11-74.4-7) may not be later than December 31 of the  | ||
year in which the payment to the municipal
treasurer as  | ||
provided in subsection (b) of Section 11-74.4-8 of this Act is  | ||
to
be made with respect to ad valorem taxes levied in the 35th  | ||
calendar
year after the year in which the ordinance approving  | ||
the
redevelopment project area was adopted: | ||
  (1) If if the ordinance was adopted before January 15,  | ||
 1981. ; | ||
  (2) If if the ordinance was adopted in December 1983,  | ||
 April 1984, July 1985,
or December 1989. ; | ||
  (3) If if the ordinance was adopted in December 1987  | ||
 and the redevelopment
project is located within one mile of  | ||
 Midway Airport. ; | ||
  (4) If if the ordinance was adopted before January 1,  | ||
 1987 by a municipality in
Mason County. ; | ||
  (5) If if the municipality is subject to the Local  | ||
 Government Financial Planning
and Supervision Act or the  | ||
 Financially Distressed City Law. ; | ||
  (6) If if the ordinance was adopted in December 1984 by  | ||
 the Village of Rosemont. ; | ||
  (7) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 31,  | ||
 1986 by a municipality
located in Clinton County for which  | ||
 at least $250,000 of tax increment
bonds were authorized on  | ||
 June 17, 1997, or if the ordinance was adopted on
December  | ||
 31, 1986 by a municipality with a population in 1990 of  | ||
 less than
3,600 that is located in a county with a  | ||
 population in 1990 of less than
34,000 and for which at  | ||
 least $250,000 of tax increment bonds were authorized
on  | ||
 June 17, 1997. ; | ||
  (8) If if the ordinance was adopted on October 5, 1982  | ||
 by the City of Kankakee, or if the ordinance was adopted on  | ||
 December 29, 1986 by East St. Louis. ; | ||
  (9) If if
the ordinance was adopted on November 12,  | ||
 1991 by the Village of Sauget. ; | ||
  (10) If if the ordinance was
adopted on February 11,  | ||
 1985 by the City of Rock Island. ; | ||
  (11) If if the ordinance was adopted before December  | ||
 18, 1986 by the City of
Moline. ; | ||
  (12) If if the ordinance was adopted in September 1988  | ||
 by Sauk Village. ; | ||
  (13) If if the ordinance was adopted in October 1993 by  | ||
 Sauk Village. ; | ||
  (14) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 29,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Galva. ; | ||
  (15) If if the ordinance was adopted in March 1991 by  | ||
 the City of Centreville. ; | ||
  (16) If if the ordinance was adopted on January 23,  | ||
 1991
by the City of East St. Louis. ; | ||
  (17) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 22,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Aledo. ; | ||
  (18) If if the ordinance was adopted on February 5,  | ||
 1990 by the City of Clinton. ; | ||
  (19) If if the ordinance was adopted on September 6,  | ||
 1994 by the City of Freeport. ; | ||
  (20) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 22,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Tuscola. ; | ||
  (21) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 23,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Sparta. ; | ||
  (22) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 23,  | ||
 1986 by the City of
Beardstown. ; | ||
  (23) If if the ordinance was adopted on April 27, 1981,  | ||
 October 21, 1985, or
December 30, 1986 by the City of  | ||
 Belleville. ; | ||
  (24) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 29,  | ||
 1986 by the City of
Collinsville. ; | ||
  (25) If if the ordinance was adopted on September 14,  | ||
 1994 by the
City of Alton. ; | ||
  (26) If if the ordinance was adopted on November 11,  | ||
 1996 by the
City of Lexington. ; | ||
  (27) If if the ordinance was adopted on November 5,  | ||
 1984 by
the City of LeRoy. ; | ||
  (28) If if the ordinance was adopted on April 3, 1991  | ||
 or
June 3, 1992 by the City of Markham. ; | ||
  (29) If if the ordinance was adopted on November 11,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Pekin. ; | ||
  (30) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 15,  | ||
 1981 by the City of Champaign. ; | ||
  (31) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 15,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Urbana. ; | ||
  (32) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 15,  | ||
 1986 by the Village of Heyworth. ; | ||
  (33) If if the ordinance was adopted on February 24,  | ||
 1992 by the Village of Heyworth. ; | ||
  (34) If if the ordinance was adopted on March 16, 1995  | ||
 by the Village of Heyworth. ; | ||
  (35) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 23,  | ||
 1986 by the Town of Cicero. ; | ||
  (36) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 30,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Effingham. ; | ||
  (37) If if the ordinance was adopted on May 9, 1991 by  | ||
 the Village of
Tilton. ; | ||
  (38) If if the ordinance was adopted on October 20,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Elmhurst. ; | ||
  (39) If if the ordinance was adopted on January 19,  | ||
 1988 by the City of
Waukegan. ; | ||
  (40) If if the ordinance was adopted on September 21,  | ||
 1998 by the City of
Waukegan. ; | ||
  (41) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 31,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Sullivan. ; | ||
  (42) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 23,  | ||
 1991 by the City of Sullivan. ; | ||
  (43) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 31,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Oglesby. ; | ||
  (44) If if the ordinance was adopted on July 28, 1987  | ||
 by the City of Marion. ; | ||
  (45) If if the ordinance was adopted on April 23, 1990  | ||
 by the City of Marion. ; | ||
  (46) If if the ordinance was adopted on August 20, 1985  | ||
 by the Village of Mount Prospect. ; | ||
  (47) If if the ordinance was adopted on February 2,  | ||
 1998 by the Village of Woodhull. ; | ||
  (48) If if the ordinance was adopted on April 20, 1993  | ||
 by the Village of Princeville. ; | ||
  (49) If if the ordinance was adopted on July 1, 1986 by  | ||
 the City of Granite City. ; | ||
  (50) If if the ordinance was adopted on February 2,  | ||
 1989 by the Village of Lombard. ; | ||
  (51) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 29,  | ||
 1986 by the Village of Gardner. ; | ||
  (52) If if the ordinance was adopted on July 14, 1999  | ||
 by the Village of Paw Paw. ; | ||
  (53) If if the ordinance was adopted on November 17,  | ||
 1986 by the Village of Franklin Park. ; | ||
  (54) If if the ordinance was adopted on November 20,  | ||
 1989 by the Village of South Holland. ; | ||
  (55) If if the ordinance was adopted on July 14, 1992  | ||
 by the Village of Riverdale. ; | ||
  (56) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 29,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Galesburg. ; | ||
  (57) If if the ordinance was adopted on April 1, 1985  | ||
 by the City of Galesburg. ; | ||
  (58) If if the ordinance was adopted on May 21, 1990 by  | ||
 the City of West Chicago. ; | ||
  (59) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 16,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Oak Forest. ; | ||
  (60) If if the ordinance was adopted in 1999 by the  | ||
 City of Villa Grove. ; | ||
  (61) If if the ordinance was adopted on January 13,  | ||
 1987 by the Village of Mt. Zion. ; | ||
  (62) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 30,  | ||
 1986 by the Village of Manteno. ; | ||
  (63) If if the ordinance was adopted on April 3, 1989  | ||
 by the City of Chicago Heights. ; | ||
  (64) If if the ordinance was adopted on January 6, 1999  | ||
 by the Village of Rosemont. ; | ||
  (65) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 19,  | ||
 2000 by the Village of Stone Park. ; | ||
  (66) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 22,  | ||
 1986 by the City of DeKalb. ; | ||
  (67) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 2,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Aurora. ;
 | ||
  (68) If
if the ordinance was adopted on December 31,  | ||
 1986 by the Village of Milan. ; | ||
  (69) If
if the ordinance was adopted on September 8,  | ||
 1994 by the City of West Frankfort. ; | ||
  (70) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 23,  | ||
 1986 by the Village of Libertyville. ; | ||
  (71) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 22,  | ||
 1986 by the Village of Hoffman Estates. ;
 | ||
  (72) If if the ordinance was adopted on September 17,  | ||
 1986 by the Village of Sherman. ;
 | ||
  (73) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 16,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Macomb. ; | ||
  (74) If if the ordinance was adopted on June 11, 2002  | ||
 by the City of East Peoria to create the West Washington  | ||
 Street TIF. ; | ||
  (75) If if the ordinance was adopted on June 11, 2002  | ||
 by the City of East Peoria to create the Camp Street TIF. ;
 | ||
  (76) If if the ordinance was adopted on August 7, 2000  | ||
 by the City of Des Plaines. ; | ||
  (77) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 22,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Washington to create the Washington  | ||
 Square TIF #2. ; | ||
  (78) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 29,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Morris. ;
 | ||
  (79) If if the ordinance was adopted on July 6, 1998 by  | ||
 the Village of Steeleville. ; | ||
  (80) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 29,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Pontiac to create TIF I (the Main St  | ||
 TIF). ; | ||
  (81) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 29,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Pontiac to create TIF II (the  | ||
 Interstate TIF). ;  | ||
  (82) If if the ordinance was adopted on November 6,  | ||
 2002 by the City of Chicago to create the Madden/Wells TIF  | ||
 District. ;  | ||
  (83) If if the ordinance was adopted on November 4,  | ||
 1998 by the City of Chicago to create the Roosevelt/Racine  | ||
 TIF District. ;  | ||
  (84) If if the ordinance was adopted on June 10, 1998  | ||
 by the City of Chicago to create the Stony Island  | ||
 Commercial/Burnside Industrial Corridors TIF District. ;  | ||
  (85) If if the ordinance was adopted on November 29,  | ||
 1989 by the City of Chicago to create the Englewood Mall  | ||
 TIF District. ; | ||
  (86) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 27,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Mendota. ;  | ||
  (87) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 31,  | ||
 1986 by the Village of Cahokia. ; | ||
  (88) If if the ordinance was adopted on September 20,  | ||
 1999 by the City of Belleville. ; | ||
  (89) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 30,  | ||
 1986 by the Village of Bellevue to create the Bellevue TIF  | ||
 District 1. ; | ||
  (90) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 13,  | ||
 1993 by the Village of Crete. ; | ||
  (91) If if the ordinance was adopted on February 12,  | ||
 2001 by the Village of Crete. ; | ||
  (92) If if the ordinance was adopted on April 23, 2001  | ||
 by the Village of Crete. ; | ||
  (93) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 16,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Champaign. ;  | ||
  (94) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 20,  | ||
 1986 by the City of Charleston. ;  | ||
  (95) If if the ordinance was adopted on June 6, 1989 by  | ||
 the Village of Romeoville. ;  | ||
  (96) If if the ordinance was adopted on October 14,  | ||
 1993 and amended on August 2, 2010 by the City of Venice. ;  | ||
  (97) If if the ordinance was adopted on June 1, 1994 by  | ||
 the City of Markham. ;  | ||
  (98) If if the ordinance was adopted on May 19, 1998 by  | ||
 the Village of Bensenville. ;  | ||
  (99) If if the ordinance was adopted on November 12,  | ||
 1987 by the City of Dixon. ;  | ||
  (100) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 20,  | ||
 1988 by the Village of Lansing. ;  | ||
  (101) If if the ordinance was adopted on October 27,  | ||
 1998 by the City of Moline. ;  | ||
  (102) If if the ordinance was adopted on May 21, 1991  | ||
 by the Village of Glenwood. ;  | ||
  (103) If if the ordinance was adopted on January 28,  | ||
 1992 by the City of East Peoria. ;  | ||
  (104) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 14,  | ||
 1998 by the City of Carlyle. ; | ||
  (105) If if the ordinance was adopted on May 17, 2000,  | ||
 as subsequently amended, by the City of Chicago to create  | ||
 the Midwest Redevelopment TIF District. ;  | ||
  (106) If if the ordinance was adopted on September 13,  | ||
 1989 by the City of Chicago to create the Michigan/Cermak  | ||
 Area TIF District. ;  | ||
  (107) If if the ordinance was adopted on March 30, 1992  | ||
 by the Village of Ohio. ;  | ||
  (108) If if the ordinance was adopted on July 6, 1998  | ||
 by the Village of Orangeville. ; | ||
  (109) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 16,  | ||
 1997 by the Village of Germantown. ;  | ||
  (110) If if the ordinance was adopted on April 28, 2003  | ||
 by Gibson City. ;  | ||
  (111) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 18,  | ||
 1990 by the Village of Washington Park, but only after the  | ||
 Village of Washington Park becomes compliant with the  | ||
 reporting requirements under subsection (d) of Section  | ||
 11-74.4-5, and after the State Comptroller's certification  | ||
 of such compliance. ;  | ||
  (112) If if the ordinance was adopted on February 28,  | ||
 2000 by the City of Harvey. ; or | ||
  (113) If if the ordinance was adopted on January 11,  | ||
 1991 by the City of Chicago to create the Read/Dunning TIF  | ||
 District. ;  | ||
  (114) If if the ordinance was adopted on July 24, 1991  | ||
 by the City of Chicago to create the Sanitary and Ship  | ||
 Canal TIF District. ;  | ||
  (115) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 4,  | ||
 2007 by the City of Naperville. ;  | ||
  (116) If if the ordinance was adopted on July 1, 2002  | ||
 by the Village of Arlington Heights. ;  | ||
  (117) If if the ordinance was adopted on February 11,  | ||
 1991 by the Village of Machesney Park. ;  | ||
  (118) If if the ordinance was adopted on December 29,  | ||
 1993 by the City of Ottawa. ; or  | ||
  (119) If if the ordinance was adopted on June 4, 1991  | ||
 by the Village of Lansing.  | ||
  (120) If (119) if the ordinance was adopted on February  | ||
 10, 2004 by the Village of Fox Lake. ; | ||
  (121) If (120) if the ordinance was adopted on December  | ||
 22, 1992 by the City of Fairfield. ; or | ||
  (122) If (121) if the ordinance was adopted on February  | ||
 10, 1992 by the City of Mt. Sterling.  | ||
  (123) If (113) if the ordinance was adopted on March  | ||
 15, 2004 by the City of Batavia.  | ||
  (124) If (119) if the ordinance was adopted on March  | ||
 18, 2002 by the Village of Lake Zurich. | ||
 (d) For redevelopment project areas for which bonds were  | ||
issued before
July 29, 1991, or for which contracts were  | ||
entered into before June 1,
1988, in connection with a  | ||
redevelopment project in the area within
the State Sales Tax  | ||
Boundary, the estimated dates of completion of the
 | ||
redevelopment project and retirement of obligations to finance  | ||
redevelopment
project costs (including refunding bonds under  | ||
Section 11-74.4-7) may be extended by municipal ordinance to  | ||
December 31, 2013.
The termination procedures of subsection (b)  | ||
of Section 11-74.4-8 are not
required for
these redevelopment  | ||
project areas in 2009 but are required in 2013.
The extension  | ||
allowed by Public Act 87-1272 shall not apply to real
property  | ||
tax increment allocation financing under Section 11-74.4-8. | ||
 (e) Those dates, for purposes of real property tax  | ||
increment allocation
financing pursuant to Section 11-74.4-8  | ||
only, shall be not more than 35 years
for redevelopment project  | ||
areas that were adopted on or after December 16,
1986 and for  | ||
which at least $8 million worth of municipal bonds were  | ||
authorized
on or after December 19, 1989 but before January 1,  | ||
1990; provided that the
municipality elects to extend the life  | ||
of the redevelopment project area to 35
years by the adoption  | ||
of an ordinance after at least 14 but not more than 30
days'  | ||
written notice to the taxing bodies, that would otherwise  | ||
constitute the
joint review board for the redevelopment project  | ||
area, before the adoption of
the ordinance. | ||
 (f) Those dates, for purposes of real property tax  | ||
increment allocation
financing pursuant to Section 11-74.4-8  | ||
only, shall be not more than 35 years
for redevelopment project  | ||
areas that were established on or after December 1,
1981 but  | ||
before January 1, 1982 and for which at least $1,500,000 worth  | ||
of
tax increment revenue bonds were authorized
on or after  | ||
September 30, 1990 but before July 1, 1991; provided that the
 | ||
municipality elects to extend the life of the redevelopment  | ||
project area to 35
years by the adoption of an ordinance after  | ||
at least 14 but not more than 30
days' written notice to the  | ||
taxing bodies, that would otherwise constitute the
joint review  | ||
board for the redevelopment project area, before the adoption  | ||
of
the ordinance. | ||
 (g) In consolidating the material relating to completion  | ||
dates from Sections 11-74.4-3 and 11-74.4-7 into this Section,  | ||
it is not the intent of the General Assembly to make any  | ||
substantive change in the law, except for the extension of the  | ||
completion dates for the City of Aurora, the Village of Milan,
 | ||
the City of West Frankfort, the Village of Libertyville, and  | ||
the Village of Hoffman Estates set forth under items (67),
 | ||
(68), (69), (70), and (71) of subsection (c) of this Section.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-93, eff. 1-1-12; 97-372, eff. 8-15-11; 97-600,  | ||
eff. 8-26-11; 97-633, eff. 12-16-11; 97-635, eff. 12-16-11;  | ||
97-807, eff. 7-13-12; 97-1114, eff. 8-27-12; 98-109, eff.  | ||
7-25-13; 98-135, eff. 8-2-13; 98-230, eff. 8-9-13; 98-463, eff.  | ||
8-16-13; 98-614, eff. 12-27-13; 98-667, eff. 6-25-14; 98-889,  | ||
eff. 8-15-14; 98-893, eff. 8-15-14; 98-1064, eff. 8-26-14;  | ||
98-1136, eff. 12-29-14; 98-1153, eff. 1-9-15; 98-1157, eff.  | ||
1-9-15; 98-1159, eff. 1-9-15; revised 2-2-15.)
 | ||
 Section 185. The Fire Protection District Act is amended by  | ||
changing Sections 11b and 16.06b as follows:
 | ||
 (70 ILCS 705/11b) (from Ch. 127 1/2, par. 31b)
 | ||
 Sec. 11b. 
In case any fire protection district organized  | ||
hereunder is
coterminous with or includes within its corporate  | ||
limits in whole or in
part any city, village or incorporated  | ||
town authorized to provide
protection from fire and to regulate  | ||
the prevention and control of fire
within such city, village or  | ||
incorporated town and to levy taxes for any
such purposes, then  | ||
such city, village or incorporated town shall not
exercise any  | ||
such powers as necessarily conflict with the powers to be
 | ||
exercised by such district in respect to such fire protection  | ||
and
regulation within the fire protection district from and  | ||
after the date
that it receives written notice from the State  | ||
Fire Marshal
to cease or refrain from the operation of any fire
 | ||
protection facilities and the exercise of such powers, which  | ||
notice
shall be given only after the State Fire Marshal
has  | ||
ascertained that the Fire Protection District has placed
its  | ||
fire protection facilities in operation. Such city, village or
 | ||
incorporated town shall not thereafter own, operate, maintain,  | ||
manage,
control or have an interest in any fire protection  | ||
facilities located
within the corporate limits of the fire  | ||
protection district, except
water mains and hydrants and except  | ||
as otherwise provided in this Act. Where any city, village, or
 | ||
incorporated town with 500 or more mre residents is in fact  | ||
owning, operating, and maintaining a fire department or fire  | ||
departments located in whole or in part within or adjacent to
 | ||
the corporate limits of a fire protection district organized  | ||
under this Act, such city, village,
or incorporated town shall  | ||
not cease operating and maintaining the fire department or  | ||
departments unless such proposed cessation of services is first  | ||
submitted by
referendum to voters, as provided by Section 15b  | ||
of this Act. In addition, where any city,
village, or  | ||
incorporated town is in fact owning, operating, and maintaining  | ||
a fire department or fire departments located within the  | ||
corporate limits of a fire protection district organized under
 | ||
this Act, such city, village, or incorporated town
shall
be  | ||
paid and reimbursed for its actual expenditures and for all  | ||
existing
obligations incurred, including all pension and  | ||
annuity plans applicable
to the maintenance of fire protection  | ||
facilities theretofore made in
establishing such facilities  | ||
and in acquiring, constructing, improving
or developing any  | ||
such existing facilities in the manner provided for by
this  | ||
Act. The terms of payment shall provide for reimbursement in  | ||
full
within not less than 20 years from the date of such  | ||
agreement.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-666, eff. 1-1-15; revised 12-1-14.)
 | ||
 (70 ILCS 705/16.06b) | ||
 Sec. 16.06b. Original appointments; full-time fire  | ||
department. | ||
 (a) Applicability. Unless a commission elects to follow the  | ||
provisions of Section 16.06c, this Section shall apply to all  | ||
original appointments to an affected full-time fire  | ||
department. Existing registers of eligibles shall continue to  | ||
be valid until their expiration dates, or up to a maximum of 2  | ||
years after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the  | ||
97th General Assembly. | ||
 Notwithstanding any statute, ordinance, rule, or other law  | ||
to the contrary, all original appointments to an affected  | ||
department to which this Section applies shall be administered  | ||
in a no less stringent manner than the manner provided for in  | ||
this Section. Provisions of the Illinois Municipal Code, Fire  | ||
Protection District Act, fire district ordinances, and rules  | ||
adopted pursuant to such authority and other laws relating to  | ||
initial hiring of firefighters in affected departments shall  | ||
continue to apply to the extent they are compatible with this  | ||
Section, but in the event of a conflict between this Section  | ||
and any other law, this Section shall control. | ||
 A fire protection district that is operating under a court  | ||
order or consent decree regarding original appointments to a  | ||
full-time fire department before the effective date of this  | ||
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly is exempt from the  | ||
requirements of this Section for the duration of the court  | ||
order or consent decree. | ||
 (b) Original appointments. All original appointments made  | ||
to an affected fire department shall be made from a register of  | ||
eligibles established in accordance with the processes  | ||
required by this Section. Only persons who meet or exceed the  | ||
performance standards required by the Section shall be placed  | ||
on a register of eligibles for original appointment to an  | ||
affected fire department. | ||
 Whenever an appointing authority authorizes action to hire  | ||
a person to perform the duties of a firefighter or to hire a  | ||
firefighter-paramedic to fill a position that is a new position  | ||
or vacancy due to resignation, discharge, promotion, death, the  | ||
granting of a disability or retirement pension, or any other  | ||
cause, the appointing authority shall appoint to that position  | ||
the person with the highest ranking on the final eligibility  | ||
list. If the appointing authority has reason to conclude that  | ||
the highest ranked person fails to meet the minimum standards  | ||
for the position or if the appointing authority believes an  | ||
alternate candidate would better serve the needs of the  | ||
department, then the appointing authority has the right to pass  | ||
over the highest ranked person and appoint either: (i) any  | ||
person who has a ranking in the top 5% of the register of  | ||
eligibles or (ii) any person who is among the top 5 highest  | ||
ranked persons on the list of eligibles if the number of people  | ||
who have a ranking in the top 5% of the register of eligibles  | ||
is less than 5 people. | ||
 Any candidate may pass on an appointment once without  | ||
losing his or her position on the register of eligibles. Any  | ||
candidate who passes a second time may be removed from the list  | ||
by the appointing authority provided that such action shall not  | ||
prejudice a person's opportunities to participate in future  | ||
examinations, including an examination held during the time a  | ||
candidate is already on the fire district's register of  | ||
eligibles. | ||
 The sole authority to issue certificates of appointment  | ||
shall be vested in the board of fire commissioners, or board of  | ||
trustees serving in the capacity of a board of fire  | ||
commissioners. All certificates of appointment issued to any  | ||
officer or member of an affected department shall be signed by  | ||
the chairperson and secretary, respectively, of the commission  | ||
upon appointment of such officer or member to the affected  | ||
department by action of the commission. Each person who accepts  | ||
a certificate of appointment and successfully completes his or  | ||
her probationary period shall be enrolled as a firefighter and  | ||
as a regular member of the fire department. | ||
 For the purposes of this Section, "firefighter" means any  | ||
person who has been prior to, on, or after the effective date  | ||
of this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly appointed  | ||
to a fire department or fire protection district or employed by  | ||
a State university and sworn or commissioned to perform  | ||
firefighter duties or paramedic duties, or both, except that  | ||
the following persons are not included: part-time  | ||
firefighters; auxiliary, reserve, or voluntary firefighters,  | ||
including paid-on-call firefighters; clerks and dispatchers or  | ||
other civilian employees of a fire department or fire  | ||
protection district who are not routinely expected to perform  | ||
firefighter duties; and elected officials. | ||
 (c) Qualification for placement on register of eligibles.  | ||
The purpose of establishing a register of eligibles is to  | ||
identify applicants who possess and demonstrate the mental  | ||
aptitude and physical ability to perform the duties required of  | ||
members of the fire department in order to provide the highest  | ||
quality of service to the public. To this end, all applicants  | ||
for original appointment to an affected fire department shall  | ||
be subject to examination and testing which shall be public,  | ||
competitive, and open to all applicants unless the district  | ||
shall by ordinance limit applicants to residents of the  | ||
district, county or counties in which the district is located,  | ||
State, or nation. Any examination and testing procedure  | ||
utilized under subsection (e) of this Section shall be  | ||
supported by appropriate validation evidence and shall comply  | ||
with all applicable State state and federal laws. Districts may  | ||
establish educational, emergency medical service licensure,  | ||
and other pre-requisites for participation in an examination or  | ||
for hire as a firefighter. Any fire protection district may  | ||
charge a fee to cover the costs of the application process. | ||
 Residency requirements in effect at the time an individual  | ||
enters the fire service of a district cannot be made more  | ||
restrictive for that individual during his or her period of  | ||
service for that district, or be made a condition of promotion,  | ||
except for the rank or position of fire chief and for no more  | ||
than 2 positions that rank immediately below that of the chief  | ||
rank which are appointed positions pursuant to the Fire  | ||
Department Promotion Act. | ||
 No person who is 35 years of age or older shall be eligible  | ||
to take an examination for a position as a firefighter unless  | ||
the person has had previous employment status as a firefighter  | ||
in the regularly constituted fire department of the district,  | ||
except as provided in this Section. The age limitation does not  | ||
apply to: | ||
  (1) any person previously employed as a full-time  | ||
 firefighter in a regularly constituted fire department of  | ||
 (i) any municipality or fire protection district located in  | ||
 Illinois, (ii) a fire protection district whose  | ||
 obligations were assumed by a municipality under Section 21  | ||
 of the Fire Protection District Act, or (iii) a  | ||
 municipality whose obligations were taken over by a fire  | ||
 protection district; , or | ||
  (2) any person who has served a fire district as a  | ||
 regularly enrolled volunteer, paid-on-call, or part-time  | ||
 firefighter for the 5 years immediately preceding the time  | ||
 that the district begins to use full-time firefighters to  | ||
 provide all or part of its fire protection service; or | ||
  (3) any person who turned 35 while serving as a member  | ||
 of the active or reserve components of any of the branches  | ||
 of the Armed Forces of the United States or the National  | ||
 Guard of any state, whose service was characterized as  | ||
 honorable or under honorable, if separated from the  | ||
 military, and is currently under the age of 40.  | ||
 No person who is under 21 years of age shall be eligible  | ||
for employment as a firefighter. | ||
 No applicant shall be examined concerning his or her  | ||
political or religious opinions or affiliations. The  | ||
examinations shall be conducted by the commissioners of the  | ||
district or their designees and agents. | ||
 No district shall require that any firefighter appointed to  | ||
the lowest rank serve a probationary employment period of  | ||
longer than one year of actual active employment, which may  | ||
exclude periods of training, or injury or illness leaves,  | ||
including duty related leave, in excess of 30 calendar days.  | ||
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Section, the  | ||
probationary employment period limitation may be extended for a  | ||
firefighter who is required, as a condition of employment, to  | ||
be a licensed paramedic, during which time the sole reason that  | ||
a firefighter may be discharged without a hearing is for  | ||
failing to meet the requirements for paramedic licensure. | ||
 In the event that any applicant who has been found eligible  | ||
for appointment and whose name has been placed upon the final  | ||
eligibility register provided for in this Section has not been  | ||
appointed to a firefighter position within one year after the  | ||
date of his or her physical ability examination, the commission  | ||
may cause a second examination to be made of that applicant's  | ||
physical ability prior to his or her appointment. If, after the  | ||
second examination, the physical ability of the applicant shall  | ||
be found to be less than the minimum standard fixed by the  | ||
rules of the commission, the applicant shall not be appointed.  | ||
The applicant's name may be retained upon the register of  | ||
candidates eligible for appointment and when next reached for  | ||
certification and appointment that applicant may be again  | ||
examined as provided in this Section, and if the physical  | ||
ability of that applicant is found to be less than the minimum  | ||
standard fixed by the rules of the commission, the applicant  | ||
shall not be appointed, and the name of the applicant shall be  | ||
removed from the register. | ||
 (d) Notice, examination, and testing components. Notice of  | ||
the time, place, general scope, merit criteria for any  | ||
subjective component, and fee of every examination shall be  | ||
given by the commission, by a publication at least 2 weeks  | ||
preceding the examination: (i) in one or more newspapers  | ||
published in the district, or if no newspaper is published  | ||
therein, then in one or more newspapers with a general  | ||
circulation within the district, or (ii) on the fire protection  | ||
district's Internet website. Additional notice of the  | ||
examination may be given as the commission shall prescribe. | ||
 The examination and qualifying standards for employment of  | ||
firefighters shall be based on: mental aptitude, physical  | ||
ability, preferences, moral character, and health. The mental  | ||
aptitude, physical ability, and preference components shall  | ||
determine an applicant's qualification for and placement on the  | ||
final register of eligibles. The examination may also include a  | ||
subjective component based on merit criteria as determined by  | ||
the commission. Scores from the examination must be made  | ||
available to the public. | ||
 (e) Mental aptitude. No person who does not possess at  | ||
least a high school diploma or an equivalent high school  | ||
education shall be placed on a register of eligibles.  | ||
Examination of an applicant's mental aptitude shall be based  | ||
upon a written examination. The examination shall be practical  | ||
in character and relate to those matters that fairly test the  | ||
capacity of the persons examined to discharge the duties  | ||
performed by members of a fire department. Written examinations  | ||
shall be administered in a manner that ensures the security and  | ||
accuracy of the scores achieved. | ||
 (f) Physical ability. All candidates shall be required to  | ||
undergo an examination of their physical ability to perform the  | ||
essential functions included in the duties they may be called  | ||
upon to perform as a member of a fire department. For the  | ||
purposes of this Section, essential functions of the job are  | ||
functions associated with duties that a firefighter may be  | ||
called upon to perform in response to emergency calls. The  | ||
frequency of the occurrence of those duties as part of the fire  | ||
department's regular routine shall not be a controlling factor  | ||
in the design of examination criteria or evolutions selected  | ||
for testing. These physical examinations shall be open,  | ||
competitive, and based on industry standards designed to test  | ||
each applicant's physical abilities in the following  | ||
dimensions: | ||
  (1) Muscular strength to perform tasks and evolutions  | ||
 that may be required in the performance of duties including  | ||
 grip strength, leg strength, and arm strength. Tests shall  | ||
 be conducted under anaerobic as well as aerobic conditions  | ||
 to test both the candidate's speed and endurance in  | ||
 performing tasks and evolutions. Tasks tested may be based  | ||
 on standards developed, or approved, by the local  | ||
 appointing authority. | ||
  (2) The ability to climb ladders, operate from heights,  | ||
 walk or crawl in the dark along narrow and uneven surfaces,  | ||
 and operate in proximity to hazardous environments. | ||
  (3) The ability to carry out critical, time-sensitive,  | ||
 and complex problem solving during physical exertion in  | ||
 stressful and hazardous environments. The testing  | ||
 environment may be hot and dark with tightly enclosed  | ||
 spaces, flashing lights, sirens, and other distractions. | ||
 The tests utilized to measure each applicant's
 | ||
capabilities in each of these dimensions may be tests based on
 | ||
industry standards currently in use or equivalent tests  | ||
approved by the Joint Labor-Management Committee of the Office  | ||
of the State Fire Marshal.  | ||
 Physical ability examinations administered under this  | ||
Section shall be conducted with a reasonable number of proctors  | ||
and monitors, open to the public, and subject to reasonable  | ||
regulations of the commission. | ||
 (g) Scoring of examination components. Appointing  | ||
authorities may create a preliminary eligibility register. A  | ||
person shall be placed on the list based upon his or her  | ||
passage of the written examination or the passage of the  | ||
written examination and the physical ability component.  | ||
Passage of the written examination means attaining the minimum  | ||
score set by the commission. Minimum scores should be set by  | ||
the appointing authorities so as to demonstrate a candidate's  | ||
ability to perform the essential functions of the job. The  | ||
minimum score set by the commission shall be supported by  | ||
appropriate validation evidence and shall comply with all  | ||
applicable State state and federal laws. The appointing  | ||
authority may conduct the physical ability component and any  | ||
subjective components subsequent to the posting of the  | ||
preliminary eligibility register. | ||
 The examination components for an initial eligibility  | ||
register shall be graded on a 100-point scale. A person's  | ||
position on the list shall be determined by the following: (i)
 | ||
the person's score on the written examination, (ii) the person
 | ||
successfully passing the physical ability component, and (iii)  | ||
the
person's results on any subjective component as described  | ||
in
subsection (d).  | ||
 In order to qualify for placement on the final eligibility  | ||
register, an applicant's score on the written examination,  | ||
before any applicable preference points or subjective points  | ||
are applied, shall be at or above the minimum score set by the  | ||
commission. The local appointing authority may prescribe the  | ||
score to qualify for placement on the final eligibility  | ||
register, but the score shall not be less than the minimum  | ||
score set by the commission. | ||
 The commission shall prepare and keep a register of persons  | ||
whose total score is not less than the minimum score for  | ||
passage and who have passed the physical ability examination.  | ||
These persons shall take rank upon the register as candidates  | ||
in the order of their relative excellence based on the highest  | ||
to the lowest total points scored on the mental aptitude,  | ||
subjective component, and preference components of the test  | ||
administered in accordance with this Section. No more than 60  | ||
days after each examination, an initial eligibility list shall  | ||
be posted by the commission. The list shall include the final  | ||
grades of the candidates without reference to priority of the  | ||
time of examination and subject to claim for preference credit. | ||
 Commissions may conduct additional examinations, including  | ||
without limitation a polygraph test, after a final eligibility  | ||
register is established and before it expires with the  | ||
candidates ranked by total score without regard to date of  | ||
examination. No more than 60 days after each examination, an  | ||
initial eligibility list shall be posted by the commission  | ||
showing the final grades of the candidates without reference to  | ||
priority of time of examination and subject to claim for  | ||
preference credit. | ||
 (h) Preferences. The following are preferences: | ||
  (1) Veteran preference. Persons who were engaged in the  | ||
 military service of the United States for a period of at  | ||
 least one year of active duty and who were honorably  | ||
 discharged therefrom, or who are now or have been members  | ||
 on inactive or reserve duty in such military or naval  | ||
 service, shall be preferred for appointment to and  | ||
 employment with the fire department of an affected  | ||
 department. | ||
  (2) Fire cadet preference. Persons who have  | ||
 successfully completed 2 years of study in fire techniques  | ||
 or cadet training within a cadet program established under  | ||
 the rules of the Joint Labor and Management Committee  | ||
 (JLMC), as defined in Section 50 of the Fire Department  | ||
 Promotion Act, may be preferred for appointment to and  | ||
 employment with the fire department. | ||
  (3) Educational preference. Persons who have  | ||
 successfully obtained an associate's degree in the field of  | ||
 fire service or emergency medical services, or a bachelor's  | ||
 degree from an accredited college or university may be  | ||
 preferred for appointment to and employment with the fire  | ||
 department. | ||
  (4) Paramedic preference. Persons who have obtained a  | ||
 license as a paramedic may be preferred for appointment to  | ||
 and employment with the fire department of an affected  | ||
 department providing emergency medical services. | ||
  (5) Experience preference. All persons employed by a  | ||
 district who have been paid-on-call or part-time certified  | ||
 Firefighter II, certified Firefighter III, State of  | ||
 Illinois or nationally licensed EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT, or  | ||
 paramedic, or any combination of those capacities may be  | ||
 awarded up to a maximum of 5 points. However, the applicant  | ||
 may not be awarded more than 0.5 points for each complete  | ||
 year of paid-on-call or part-time service. Applicants from  | ||
 outside the district who were employed as full-time  | ||
 firefighters or firefighter-paramedics by a fire  | ||
 protection district or municipality for at least 2 years  | ||
 may be awarded up to 5 experience preference points.  | ||
 However, the applicant may not be awarded more than one  | ||
 point for each complete year of full-time service. | ||
  Upon request by the commission, the governing body of  | ||
 the district or in the case of applicants from outside the  | ||
 district the governing body of any other fire protection  | ||
 district or any municipality shall certify to the  | ||
 commission, within 10 days after the request, the number of  | ||
 years of successful paid-on-call, part-time, or full-time  | ||
 service of any person. A candidate may not receive the full  | ||
 amount of preference points under this subsection if the  | ||
 amount of points awarded would place the candidate before a  | ||
 veteran on the eligibility list. If more than one candidate  | ||
 receiving experience preference points is prevented from  | ||
 receiving all of their points due to not being allowed to  | ||
 pass a veteran, the candidates shall be placed on the list  | ||
 below the veteran in rank order based on the totals  | ||
 received if all points under this subsection were to be  | ||
 awarded. Any remaining ties on the list shall be determined  | ||
 by lot.  | ||
  (6) Residency preference. Applicants whose principal  | ||
 residence is located within the fire department's  | ||
 jurisdiction may be preferred for appointment to and  | ||
 employment with the fire department. | ||
  (7) Additional preferences. Up to 5 additional  | ||
 preference points may be awarded for unique categories  | ||
 based on an applicant's experience or background as  | ||
 identified by the commission. | ||
  (8) Scoring of preferences. The
commission shall give  | ||
 preference for original appointment
to persons designated  | ||
 in item (1)
by adding to the final grade that they receive  | ||
 5 points
for the recognized preference achieved. The  | ||
 commission shall determine the number of preference points  | ||
 for each category except (1). The number of preference  | ||
 points for each category shall range from 0 to 5. In  | ||
 determining the number of preference points, the  | ||
 commission shall prescribe that if a candidate earns the  | ||
 maximum number of preference points in all categories, that  | ||
 number may not be less than 10 nor more than 30. The  | ||
 commission shall give preference for original appointment  | ||
 to persons designated in items (2) through (7) by adding  | ||
 the requisite number of points to the final grade for each  | ||
 recognized preference achieved. The numerical result thus  | ||
 attained shall be applied by the commission in determining  | ||
 the final eligibility list and appointment from the  | ||
 eligibility list. The local appointing authority may  | ||
 prescribe the total number of preference points awarded  | ||
 under this Section, but the total number of preference  | ||
 points shall not be less than 10 points or more than 30  | ||
 points. | ||
 No person entitled to any preference shall be required to  | ||
claim the credit before any examination held under the  | ||
provisions of this Section, but the preference shall be given  | ||
after the posting or publication of the initial eligibility  | ||
list or register at the request of a person entitled to a  | ||
credit before any certification or appointments are made from  | ||
the eligibility register, upon the furnishing of verifiable  | ||
evidence and proof of qualifying preference credit. Candidates  | ||
who are eligible for preference credit shall make a claim in  | ||
writing within 10 days after the posting of the initial  | ||
eligibility list, or the claim shall be deemed waived. Final  | ||
eligibility registers shall be established after the awarding  | ||
of verified preference points. All employment shall be subject  | ||
to the commission's initial hire background review including,  | ||
but not limited to, criminal history, employment history, moral  | ||
character, oral examination, and medical and psychological  | ||
examinations, all on a pass-fail basis. The medical and  | ||
psychological examinations must be conducted last, and may only  | ||
be performed after a conditional offer of employment has been  | ||
extended. | ||
 Any person placed on an eligibility list who exceeds the  | ||
age requirement before being appointed to a fire department  | ||
shall remain eligible for appointment until the list is  | ||
abolished, or his or her name has been on the list for a period  | ||
of 2 years. No person who has attained the age of 35 years  | ||
shall be inducted into a fire department, except as otherwise  | ||
provided in this Section. | ||
 The commission shall strike off the names of candidates for  | ||
original appointment after the names have been on the list for  | ||
more than 2 years. | ||
 (i) Moral character. No person shall be appointed to a fire  | ||
department unless he or she is a person of good character; not  | ||
a habitual drunkard, a gambler, or a person who has been  | ||
convicted of a felony or a crime involving moral turpitude.  | ||
However, no person shall be disqualified from appointment to  | ||
the fire department because of the person's record of  | ||
misdemeanor convictions except those under Sections 11-6,  | ||
11-7, 11-9, 11-14, 11-15, 11-17, 11-18, 11-19, 12-2, 12-6,  | ||
12-15, 14-4, 16-1, 21.1-3, 24-3.1, 24-5, 25-1, 28-3, 31-1,  | ||
31-4, 31-6, 31-7, 32-1, 32-2, 32-3, 32-4, 32-8, and subsections  | ||
1, 6, and 8 of Section 24-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the  | ||
Criminal Code of 2012, or arrest for any cause without  | ||
conviction thereon. Any such person who is in the department  | ||
may be removed on charges brought for violating this subsection  | ||
and after a trial as hereinafter provided. | ||
 A classifiable set of the fingerprints of every person who  | ||
is offered employment as a certificated member of an affected  | ||
fire department whether with or without compensation, shall be  | ||
furnished to the Illinois Department of State Police and to the  | ||
Federal Bureau of Investigation by the commission. | ||
 Whenever a commission is authorized or required by law to  | ||
consider some aspect of criminal history record information for  | ||
the purpose of carrying out its statutory powers and  | ||
responsibilities, then, upon request and payment of fees in  | ||
conformance with the requirements of Section 2605-400 of the  | ||
State Police Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois,  | ||
the Department of State Police is authorized to furnish,  | ||
pursuant to positive identification, the information contained  | ||
in State files as is necessary to fulfill the request. | ||
 (j) Temporary appointments. In order to prevent a stoppage  | ||
of public business, to meet extraordinary exigencies, or to  | ||
prevent material impairment of the fire department, the  | ||
commission may make temporary appointments, to remain in force  | ||
only until regular appointments are made under the provisions  | ||
of this Section, but never to exceed 60 days. No temporary  | ||
appointment of any one person shall be made more than twice in  | ||
any calendar year. | ||
 (k) A person who knowingly divulges or receives test  | ||
questions or answers before a written examination, or otherwise  | ||
knowingly violates or subverts any requirement of this Section,  | ||
commits a violation of this Section and may be subject to  | ||
charges for official misconduct. | ||
 A person who is the knowing recipient of test information  | ||
in advance of the examination shall be disqualified from the  | ||
examination or discharged from the position to which he or she  | ||
was appointed, as applicable, and otherwise subjected to  | ||
disciplinary actions.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-251, eff. 8-4-11; 97-898, eff. 8-6-12;  | ||
97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; 98-760, eff. 7-16-14; 98-973, eff.  | ||
8-15-14; 98-995, eff. 8-18-14; revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 Section 190. The School Code is amended by changing  | ||
Sections 2-3.25g, 3-15.12, 14-7.02, 19-1, 24-12, 27-23.7,  | ||
27A-4, 27A-5, 27A-6, 27A-7, 27A-11, 30-14.2, and 34-85 and by  | ||
setting forth and renumbering multiple versions of Section  | ||
2-3.160 as follows:
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 5/2-3.25g) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.25g) | ||
 Sec. 2-3.25g. Waiver or modification of mandates within the  | ||
School
Code and administrative rules and regulations.  | ||
 (a) In this Section: | ||
  "Board" means a school board or the governing board or  | ||
 administrative district, as the case may be, for a joint  | ||
 agreement. | ||
  "Eligible applicant" means a school district, joint  | ||
 agreement made up of school districts, or regional  | ||
 superintendent of schools on behalf of schools and programs  | ||
 operated by the regional office of education.
 | ||
  "Implementation date" has the meaning set forth in  | ||
 Section 24A-2.5 of this Code.  | ||
  "State Board" means the State Board of Education.
 | ||
 (b) Notwithstanding any other
provisions of this School  | ||
Code or any other law of this State to the
contrary, eligible  | ||
applicants may petition the State Board of Education for the
 | ||
waiver or modification of the mandates of this School Code or  | ||
of the
administrative rules and regulations promulgated by the  | ||
State Board of
Education. Waivers or modifications of  | ||
administrative rules and regulations
and modifications of  | ||
mandates of this School Code may be requested when an eligible  | ||
applicant demonstrates that it can address the intent of the  | ||
rule or
mandate in a more effective, efficient, or economical  | ||
manner or when necessary
to stimulate innovation or improve  | ||
student performance. Waivers of
mandates of
the School Code may  | ||
be requested when the waivers are necessary to stimulate
 | ||
innovation or improve student performance. Waivers may not be  | ||
requested
from laws, rules, and regulations pertaining to  | ||
special education, teacher educator licensure, teacher tenure  | ||
and seniority, or Section 5-2.1 of this Code or from compliance  | ||
with the No
Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (Public Law 107-110).  | ||
Eligible applicants may not seek a waiver or seek a  | ||
modification of a mandate regarding the requirements for (i)  | ||
student performance data to be a significant factor in teacher  | ||
or principal evaluations or (ii) for teachers and principals to  | ||
be rated using the 4 categories of "excellent", "proficient",  | ||
"needs improvement", or "unsatisfactory". On September 1,  | ||
2014, any previously authorized waiver or modification from  | ||
such requirements shall terminate.  | ||
 (c) Eligible applicants, as a matter of inherent managerial  | ||
policy, and any
Independent Authority established under  | ||
Section 2-3.25f-5 of this Code may submit an
application for a  | ||
waiver or modification authorized under this Section. Each
 | ||
application must include a written request by the eligible  | ||
applicant or
Independent Authority and must demonstrate that  | ||
the intent of the mandate can
be addressed in a more effective,  | ||
efficient, or economical manner
or be based
upon a specific  | ||
plan for improved student performance and school improvement.
 | ||
Any eligible applicant requesting a waiver or modification for  | ||
the reason that intent
of the mandate can be addressed in a  | ||
more economical manner shall include in
the application a  | ||
fiscal analysis showing current expenditures on the mandate
and  | ||
projected savings resulting from the waiver
or modification.  | ||
Applications
and plans developed by eligible applicants must be  | ||
approved by the board or regional superintendent of schools  | ||
applying on behalf of schools or programs operated by the  | ||
regional office of education following a public hearing on the  | ||
application and plan and the
opportunity for the board or  | ||
regional superintendent to hear testimony from staff
directly  | ||
involved in
its implementation, parents, and students. The time  | ||
period for such testimony shall be separate from the time  | ||
period established by the eligible applicant for public comment  | ||
on other matters. If the applicant is a school district or  | ||
joint agreement requesting a waiver or modification of Section  | ||
27-6 of this Code, the public hearing shall be held on a day  | ||
other than the day on which a regular meeting of the board is  | ||
held. | ||
 (c-5) If the applicant is a school district, then the  | ||
district shall post information that sets forth the time, date,  | ||
place, and general subject matter of the public hearing on its  | ||
Internet website at least 14 days prior to the hearing. If the  | ||
district is requesting to increase the fee charged for driver  | ||
education authorized pursuant to Section 27-24.2 of this Code,  | ||
the website information shall include the proposed amount of  | ||
the fee the district will request. All school districts must  | ||
publish a notice of the public hearing at least 7 days prior to  | ||
the hearing in a newspaper of general circulation within the  | ||
school district that sets forth the time, date, place, and  | ||
general subject matter of the hearing. Districts requesting to  | ||
increase the fee charged for driver education shall include in  | ||
the published notice the proposed amount of the fee the  | ||
district will request. If the applicant is a joint agreement or  | ||
regional superintendent, then the joint agreement or regional  | ||
superintendent shall post information that sets forth the time,  | ||
date, place, and general subject matter of the public hearing  | ||
on its Internet website at least 14 days prior to the hearing.  | ||
If the joint agreement or regional superintendent is requesting  | ||
to increase the fee charged for driver education authorized  | ||
pursuant to Section 27-24.2 of this Code, the website  | ||
information shall include the proposed amount of the fee the  | ||
applicant will request. All joint agreements and regional  | ||
superintendents must publish a notice of the public hearing at  | ||
least 7 days prior to the hearing in a newspaper of general  | ||
circulation in each school district that is a member of the  | ||
joint agreement or that is served by the educational service  | ||
region that sets forth the time, date, place, and general  | ||
subject matter of the hearing, provided that a notice appearing  | ||
in a newspaper generally circulated in more than one school  | ||
district shall be deemed to fulfill this requirement with  | ||
respect to all of the affected districts. Joint agreements or  | ||
regional superintendents requesting to increase the fee  | ||
charged for driver education shall include in the published  | ||
notice the proposed amount of the fee the applicant will  | ||
request. The
eligible applicant must notify in writing the  | ||
affected exclusive collective
bargaining agent and those State  | ||
legislators representing the eligible applicant's territory of
 | ||
its
intent to seek approval of a
waiver or
modification and of  | ||
the hearing to be held to take testimony from staff.
The  | ||
affected exclusive collective bargaining agents shall be  | ||
notified of such
public hearing at least 7 days prior to the  | ||
date of the hearing and shall be
allowed to attend
such public  | ||
hearing. The eligible applicant shall attest to compliance with  | ||
all of
the notification and procedural requirements set forth  | ||
in this Section. | ||
 (d) A request for a waiver or modification of  | ||
administrative rules and
regulations or for a modification of  | ||
mandates contained in this School Code
shall be submitted to  | ||
the State Board of Education within 15 days after
approval by  | ||
the board or regional superintendent of schools. The  | ||
application as submitted to the
State Board of Education shall  | ||
include a description of the public hearing. Except with  | ||
respect to contracting for adaptive driver education, an  | ||
eligible applicant wishing to request a modification or waiver  | ||
of administrative rules of the State Board of Education  | ||
regarding contracting with a commercial driver training school  | ||
to provide the course of study authorized under Section 27-24.2  | ||
of this Code must provide evidence with its application that  | ||
the commercial driver training school with which it will  | ||
contract holds a license issued by the Secretary of State under  | ||
Article IV of Chapter 6 of the Illinois Vehicle Code and that  | ||
each instructor employed by the commercial driver training  | ||
school to provide instruction to students served by the school  | ||
district holds a valid teaching certificate or teaching  | ||
license, as applicable, issued under the requirements of this  | ||
Code and rules of the State Board of Education. Such evidence  | ||
must include, but need not be limited to, a list of each  | ||
instructor assigned to teach students served by the school  | ||
district, which list shall include the instructor's name,  | ||
personal identification number as required by the State Board  | ||
of Education, birth date, and driver's license number. If the  | ||
modification or waiver is granted, then the eligible applicant  | ||
shall notify the State Board of Education of any changes in the  | ||
personnel providing instruction within 15 calendar days after  | ||
an instructor leaves the program or a new instructor is hired.  | ||
Such notification shall include the instructor's name,  | ||
personal identification number as required by the State Board  | ||
of Education, birth date, and driver's license number. If a  | ||
school district maintains an Internet website, then the  | ||
district shall post a copy of the final contract between the  | ||
district and the commercial driver training school on the  | ||
district's Internet website. If no Internet website exists,  | ||
then the district shall make available the contract upon  | ||
request. A record of all materials in relation to the  | ||
application for contracting must be maintained by the school  | ||
district and made available to parents and guardians upon  | ||
request. The instructor's date of birth and driver's license  | ||
number and any other personally identifying information as  | ||
deemed by the federal Driver's Privacy Protection Act of 1994  | ||
must be redacted from any public materials.
Following receipt  | ||
of the waiver or modification request, the
State Board shall  | ||
have 45 days to review the application and request. If the
 | ||
State Board fails to disapprove the application within that 45  | ||
day period, the
waiver or modification shall be deemed granted.  | ||
The State Board
may disapprove
any request if it is not based  | ||
upon sound educational practices, endangers the
health or  | ||
safety of students or staff, compromises equal opportunities  | ||
for
learning, or fails to demonstrate that the intent of the  | ||
rule or mandate can be
addressed in a more effective,  | ||
efficient, or economical manner or have improved
student  | ||
performance as a primary goal. Any request disapproved by the  | ||
State
Board may be appealed to the General Assembly by the  | ||
eligible applicant
as outlined in this Section.  | ||
 A request for a waiver from mandates contained in this  | ||
School Code shall be
submitted to the State Board within 15  | ||
days after approval by the board or regional superintendent of  | ||
schools.
The application as submitted to the State Board of  | ||
Education
shall include a description of the public hearing.  | ||
The description shall
include, but need not be limited to, the  | ||
means of notice, the number of people
in attendance, the number  | ||
of people who spoke as proponents or opponents of the
waiver, a  | ||
brief description of their comments, and whether there were any
 | ||
written statements submitted.
The State Board shall review the  | ||
applications and requests for
completeness and shall compile  | ||
the requests in reports to be filed with the
General Assembly.
 | ||
The State Board shall file
reports outlining the waivers
 | ||
requested by eligible applicants
and appeals by eligible  | ||
applicants of requests
disapproved by the State Board with the  | ||
Senate and the House of
Representatives before each March 1 and
 | ||
October
1. The General Assembly may disapprove the report of  | ||
the State Board in whole
or in part within 60 calendar days  | ||
after each house of the General Assembly
next
convenes after  | ||
the report is filed by adoption of a resolution by a record  | ||
vote
of the majority of members elected in each house. If the  | ||
General Assembly
fails to disapprove any waiver request or  | ||
appealed request within such 60
day period, the waiver or  | ||
modification shall be deemed granted. Any resolution
adopted by  | ||
the General Assembly disapproving a report of the State Board  | ||
in
whole or in part shall be binding on the State Board. | ||
 (e) An approved waiver or modification (except a waiver  | ||
from or modification to a physical education mandate) may  | ||
remain in effect for a period not to
exceed 5 school years and  | ||
may be renewed upon application by the
eligible applicant.  | ||
However, such waiver or modification may be changed within that
 | ||
5-year period by a board or regional superintendent of schools  | ||
applying on behalf of schools or programs operated by the  | ||
regional office of education following the procedure as set
 | ||
forth in this Section for the initial waiver or modification  | ||
request. If
neither the State Board of Education nor the  | ||
General Assembly disapproves, the
change is deemed granted.  | ||
 An approved waiver from or modification to a physical  | ||
education mandate may remain in effect for a period not to  | ||
exceed 2 school years and may be renewed no more than 2 times  | ||
upon application by the eligible applicant. An approved waiver  | ||
from or modification to a physical education mandate may be  | ||
changed within the 2-year period by the board or regional  | ||
superintendent of schools, whichever is applicable, following  | ||
the procedure set forth in this Section for the initial waiver  | ||
or modification request. If neither the State Board of  | ||
Education nor the General Assembly disapproves, the change is  | ||
deemed granted.
 | ||
 (f) (Blank). | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-1025, eff. 1-1-13; 98-513, eff. 1-1-14;  | ||
98-739, eff. 7-16-14; 98-1155, eff. 1-9-15; revised 2-1-15.)
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 5/2-3.160) | ||
 (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2015) | ||
 Sec. 2-3.160. School Security and Standards Task Force. | ||
 (a) The School Security and Standards Task Force is created  | ||
within the State Board of Education to study the security of  | ||
schools in this State, make recommendations, and draft minimum  | ||
standards for use by schools to make them more secure and to  | ||
provide a safer learning environment for the children of this  | ||
State. The Task Force shall consist of all of the following  | ||
members: | ||
  (1) One member of the public who is a parent and one  | ||
 member of the Senate, appointed by the President of the  | ||
 Senate. | ||
  (2) One member of the public who is a parent and one  | ||
 member of the Senate, appointed by the Minority Leader of  | ||
 the Senate. | ||
  (3) One member of the public who is a parent and one  | ||
 member of the House of Representatives, appointed by the  | ||
 Speaker of the House of Representatives. | ||
  (4) One member of the public who is a parent and one  | ||
 member of the House of Representatives, appointed by the  | ||
 Minority Leader of the House of Representatives. | ||
  (5) A representative from the State Board of Education,  | ||
 appointed by the Chairperson of the State Board of  | ||
 Education. | ||
  (6) A representative from the Department of State  | ||
 Police, appointed by the Director of State Police. | ||
  (7) A representative from an association representing  | ||
 Illinois sheriffs, appointed by the Governor. | ||
  (8) A representative from an association representing  | ||
 Illinois chiefs of police, appointed by the Governor. | ||
  (9) A representative from an association representing  | ||
 Illinois firefighters, appointed by the Governor. | ||
  (10) A representative from an association representing  | ||
 Illinois regional superintendents of schools, appointed by  | ||
 the Governor. | ||
  (11) A representative from an association representing  | ||
 Illinois principals, appointed by the Governor. | ||
  (12) A representative from an association representing  | ||
 Illinois school boards, appointed by the Governor. | ||
  (13) A representative from the security consulting  | ||
 profession, appointed by the Governor. | ||
  (14) An architect or engineer who specializes in  | ||
 security issues, appointed by the Governor. | ||
 Members of the Task Force appointed by the Governor must be  | ||
individuals who have knowledge, experience, and expertise in  | ||
the field of security or who have worked within the school  | ||
system. The appointment of members by the Governor must reflect  | ||
the geographic diversity of this State. | ||
 Members of the Task Force shall serve without compensation  | ||
and shall not be reimbursed for their expenses. | ||
 (b) The Task Force shall meet initially at the call of the  | ||
State Superintendent of Education. At this initial meeting, the  | ||
Task Force shall elect a member as presiding officer of the  | ||
Task Force by a majority vote of the membership of the Task  | ||
Force. Thereafter, the Task Force shall meet at the call of the  | ||
presiding officer. | ||
 (c) The State Board of Education shall provide  | ||
administrative and other support to the Task Force. | ||
 (d) The Task Force shall make recommendations for minimum  | ||
standards for security for the schools in this State. In making  | ||
those recommendations, the Task Force shall do all of the  | ||
following: | ||
  (1) Gather information concerning security in schools  | ||
 as it presently exists. | ||
  (2) Receive reports and testimony from individuals,  | ||
 school district superintendents, principals, teachers,  | ||
 security experts, architects, engineers, and the law  | ||
 enforcement community. | ||
  (3) Create minimum standards for securing schools. | ||
  (4) Give consideration to securing the physical  | ||
 structures, security staffing recommendations,  | ||
 communications, security equipment, alarms, video and  | ||
 audio monitoring, school policies, egress and ingress,  | ||
 security plans, emergency exits and escape, and any other  | ||
 areas of security that the Task Force deems appropriate for  | ||
 securing schools. | ||
  (5) Create a model security plan policy. | ||
  (6) Suggest possible funding recommendations for  | ||
 schools to access for use in implementing enhanced security  | ||
 measures. | ||
  (7) On or before January 1, 2015, submit a report to  | ||
 the General Assembly and the Governor on specific  | ||
 recommendations for changes to the current law or other  | ||
 legislative measures. | ||
  (8) On or before January 1, 2015, submit a report to  | ||
 the State Board of Education on specific recommendations  | ||
 for model security plan policies for schools to access and  | ||
 use as a guideline. This report is exempt from inspection  | ||
 and copying under Section 7 of the Freedom of Information  | ||
 Act. | ||
 The Task Force's recommendations may include proposals for  | ||
specific statutory changes and methods to foster cooperation  | ||
among State agencies and between this State and local  | ||
government. | ||
 (e) The Task Force is abolished and this Section is  | ||
repealed on July 1, 2015.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-695, eff. 7-3-14.)
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 5/2-3.161) | ||
 Sec. 2-3.161 2-3.160. Definition of dyslexia in rules;  | ||
reading instruction advisory group.  | ||
 (a) The State Board of Education shall adopt rules that  | ||
incorporate an international definition of dyslexia into Part  | ||
226 of Title 23 of the Illinois Administrative Code. | ||
 (b) Subject to specific State appropriation or the  | ||
availability of private donations, the State Board of Education  | ||
shall establish an advisory group to develop a training module  | ||
or training modules to provide education and professional  | ||
development to teachers, school administrators, and other  | ||
education professionals regarding multi-sensory, systematic,  | ||
and sequential instruction in reading. This advisory group  | ||
shall complete its work before July 31, 2015 and is abolished  | ||
on July 31, 2015.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-705, eff. 7-14-14; revised 10-14-14.)
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 5/2-3.162) | ||
 Sec. 2-3.162 2-3.160. Student discipline report; school  | ||
discipline improvement plan.  | ||
 (a) On or before October 31, 2015 and on or before October  | ||
31 of each subsequent year, the State Board of Education,  | ||
through the State Superintendent of Education, shall prepare a  | ||
report on student discipline in all school districts in this  | ||
State, including State-authorized charter schools. This report  | ||
shall include data from all public schools within school  | ||
districts, including district-authorized charter schools. This  | ||
report must be posted on the Internet website of the State  | ||
Board of Education. The report shall include data on the  | ||
issuance of out-of-school suspensions, expulsions, and  | ||
removals to alternative settings in lieu of another  | ||
disciplinary action, disaggregated by race and ethnicity,  | ||
gender, age, grade level, limited English proficiency,  | ||
incident type, and discipline duration. | ||
 (b) The State Board of Education shall analyze the data  | ||
under subsection (a) of this Section on an annual basis and  | ||
determine the top 20% of school districts for the following  | ||
metrics: | ||
  (1) Total number of out-of-school suspensions divided  | ||
 by the total district enrollment by the last school day in  | ||
 September for the year in which the data was collected,  | ||
 multiplied by 100. | ||
  (2) Total number of out-of-school expulsions divided  | ||
 by the total district enrollment by the last school day in  | ||
 September for the year in which the data was collected,  | ||
 multiplied by 100. | ||
  (3) Racial disproportionality, defined as the  | ||
 overrepresentation of students of color or white students  | ||
 in comparison to the total number of students of color or  | ||
 white students on October 1st of the school year in which  | ||
 data are collected, with respect to the use of  | ||
 out-of-school suspensions and expulsions, which must be  | ||
 calculated using the same method as the U.S. Department of  | ||
 Education's Office for Civil Rights uses. | ||
 The analysis must be based on data collected over 3  | ||
consecutive school years, beginning with the 2014-2015 school  | ||
year. | ||
 Beginning with the 2017-2018 school year, the State Board  | ||
of Education shall require each of the school districts that  | ||
are identified in the top 20% of any of the metrics described  | ||
in this subsection (b) for 3 consecutive years to submit a plan  | ||
identifying the strategies the school district will implement  | ||
to reduce the use of exclusionary disciplinary practices or  | ||
racial disproportionality or both, if applicable. School  | ||
districts that no longer meet the criteria described in any of  | ||
the metrics described in this subsection (b) for 3 consecutive  | ||
years shall no longer be required to submit a plan.  | ||
 This plan may be combined with any other improvement plans  | ||
required under federal or State law. | ||
 The calculation of the top 20% of any of the metrics  | ||
described in this subsection (b) shall exclude all school  | ||
districts, State-authorized charter schools, and special  | ||
charter districts that issued fewer than a total of 10  | ||
out-of-school suspensions or expulsions, whichever is  | ||
applicable, during the school year. The calculation of the top  | ||
20% of metric described in subdivision (3) of this subsection  | ||
(b) shall exclude all school districts with an enrollment of  | ||
fewer than 50 white students or fewer than 50 students of  | ||
color. | ||
 The plan must be approved at a public school board meeting  | ||
and posted on the school district's Internet website. Within  | ||
one year after being identified, the school district shall  | ||
submit to the State Board of Education and post on the  | ||
district's Internet website a progress report describing the  | ||
implementation of the plan and the results achieved. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1102, eff. 8-26-14; revised 10-14-14.)
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 5/3-15.12) (from Ch. 122, par. 3-15.12)
 | ||
 Sec. 3-15.12. High school equivalency testing program. 
The  | ||
regional
superintendent of schools shall make available for  | ||
qualified individuals
residing within the region a High School  | ||
Equivalency Testing Program.
For that purpose the regional  | ||
superintendent alone or with other
regional superintendents  | ||
may establish and supervise a testing center or
centers to  | ||
administer the secure forms for high school equivalency testing  | ||
to qualified persons. Such centers
shall be under the  | ||
supervision of the regional superintendent in whose
region such  | ||
centers are located, subject to the approval
of the
Executive  | ||
Director of the Illinois Community College Board.
 | ||
 An individual is eligible to apply to the regional  | ||
superintendent of schools
for the region in which he or she
 | ||
resides if he or she is: (a) a person who is 17 years
of age or  | ||
older, has maintained residence in the State of Illinois,
and  | ||
is
not a high school graduate; (b)
a person who is successfully  | ||
completing an
alternative education program under Section  | ||
2-3.81, Article 13A,
or Article 13B; or (c) a
person who is
 | ||
enrolled in a youth education program sponsored by the Illinois  | ||
National
Guard.
For purposes of this Section, residence is that  | ||
abode which the applicant
considers his or her home. Applicants  | ||
may provide as sufficient proof of such
residence and as an  | ||
acceptable form of identification a driver's license, valid  | ||
passport, military ID, or other form of government-issued  | ||
national or foreign identification that shows the applicant's  | ||
name, address, date of birth, signature, and photograph or  | ||
other acceptable identification as may be allowed by law or as  | ||
regulated by the Illinois Community College Board. Such  | ||
regional superintendent shall determine if the
applicant meets  | ||
statutory and regulatory state standards. If qualified the
 | ||
applicant shall at the time of such application pay a fee  | ||
established by the
Illinois Community College Board, which fee  | ||
shall be paid into a special
fund
under the control and  | ||
supervision of the regional superintendent. Such moneys
 | ||
received by the regional superintendent shall be used, first,  | ||
for the
expenses incurred
in administering and scoring the  | ||
examination, and next for other educational
programs that are  | ||
developed and designed by the regional superintendent of
 | ||
schools to assist those who successfully complete high school  | ||
equivalency testing in furthering their academic development  | ||
or
their ability to secure and retain gainful employment,  | ||
including programs for
the competitive award based on test  | ||
scores of college or adult education
scholarship grants or  | ||
similar educational incentives. Any excess moneys shall
be paid  | ||
into the institute fund.
 | ||
 Any applicant who has achieved the minimum passing  | ||
standards as
established by the
Illinois Community College  | ||
Board shall be
notified in writing by the regional  | ||
superintendent and shall be
issued a high school equivalency  | ||
certificate on the forms provided by the
Illinois Community  | ||
College Board. The regional superintendent shall
then certify  | ||
to the Illinois Community College Board
the score of the  | ||
applicant and such other and additional information
that may be  | ||
required by the Illinois Community College Board. The
moneys  | ||
received therefrom shall be used in the same manner as provided
 | ||
for in this Section.
 | ||
 Any applicant who has attained the age of 17 years and  | ||
maintained
residence in the State of Illinois and is not a high  | ||
school graduate, any person who has enrolled in a youth  | ||
education program sponsored by the Illinois National Guard, or  | ||
any person who has successfully completed
an
alternative  | ||
education program under Section 2-3.81,
Article 13A, or Article  | ||
13B is eligible to apply for a high school equivalency
 | ||
certificate (if he or she meets the requirements prescribed by  | ||
the Illinois Community College Board) upon showing evidence  | ||
that he or she has completed, successfully, high school  | ||
equivalency testing, administered by the United
States Armed  | ||
Forces Institute, official high school equivalency testing  | ||
centers established in other
states, Veterans' Administration  | ||
Hospitals, or the office of the State
Superintendent of  | ||
Education for the Illinois State Penitentiary
System and the  | ||
Department of Corrections. Such applicant shall apply to the
 | ||
regional superintendent of the region wherein he or she has  | ||
maintained residence, and,
upon payment of a fee established by  | ||
the Illinois Community College Board,
the regional  | ||
superintendent shall issue a high school
equivalency  | ||
certificate and immediately thereafter certify to the Illinois  | ||
Community College Board the score of the applicant and such  | ||
other and
additional information as may be required by the  | ||
Illinois Community College Board.
 | ||
 Notwithstanding the provisions of this Section, any  | ||
applicant who has
been out of school for at least one year may  | ||
request the regional
superintendent of schools to administer  | ||
restricted high school equivalency testing upon
written  | ||
request of: the director of a program who certifies to the  | ||
Chief
Examiner of an official high school equivalency testing  | ||
center that the applicant has completed a
program of  | ||
instruction provided by such agencies as the Job Corps, the
 | ||
Postal Service Academy, or an apprenticeship training program;  | ||
an employer
or program director for purposes of entry into  | ||
apprenticeship programs;
another state's department of  | ||
education in order to meet regulations
established by that  | ||
department of education; or a post high school
educational  | ||
institution for purposes of admission, the Department of  | ||
Financial and
Professional Regulation for licensing purposes,  | ||
or the Armed Forces
for induction purposes. The regional  | ||
superintendent shall administer
such testing, and the  | ||
applicant shall be notified in writing that he or she is
 | ||
eligible to receive a high school equivalency certificate
upon  | ||
reaching age 17, provided he or she meets the standards  | ||
established by the Illinois Community College Board.
 | ||
 Any test administered under this Section to an applicant  | ||
who does not
speak and understand English may at the discretion  | ||
of the administering
agency be given and answered in any  | ||
language in which the test is
printed. The regional  | ||
superintendent of schools may waive any fees required
by this  | ||
Section in case of hardship.
 | ||
 In counties of over 3,000,000 population, a high school  | ||
equivalency certificate
shall contain the signatures of the  | ||
Executive Director of the Illinois Community College Board and ;  | ||
the superintendent, president, or other chief
executive  | ||
officer of the institution where high school equivalency  | ||
testing instruction occurred,; and any
other signatures  | ||
authorized by the Illinois Community College Board.
 | ||
 The regional superintendent of schools shall furnish the  | ||
Illinois
Community College Board with any information that the  | ||
Illinois
Community College Board requests with regard to  | ||
testing and certificates under this
Section.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-718, eff. 1-1-15; 98-719, eff. 1-1-15; revised  | ||
10-1-14.)
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 5/14-7.02) (from Ch. 122, par. 14-7.02)
 | ||
 Sec. 14-7.02. Children attending private schools, public
 | ||
out-of-state schools, public school residential facilities or  | ||
private
special education facilities. The General Assembly  | ||
recognizes that non-public
schools or special education  | ||
facilities provide an important service in the
educational  | ||
system in Illinois.
 | ||
 If because of his or her disability the special education
 | ||
program of a district is unable to meet the needs of a child  | ||
and the
child attends a non-public school or special education  | ||
facility, a
public out-of-state school or a special education  | ||
facility owned and
operated by a county government unit that  | ||
provides special educational
services required by the child and  | ||
is in compliance with the appropriate
rules and regulations of  | ||
the State Superintendent of Education, the
school district in  | ||
which the child is a resident shall pay the actual
cost of  | ||
tuition for special education and related services provided
 | ||
during the regular school term and during the summer school  | ||
term if the
child's educational needs so require, excluding  | ||
room, board and
transportation costs charged the child by that  | ||
non-public school or
special education facility, public  | ||
out-of-state school or county special
education facility, or  | ||
$4,500 per year, whichever is less, and shall
provide him any  | ||
necessary transportation. "Nonpublic special
education  | ||
facility" shall include a residential facility,
within or  | ||
without the State of Illinois, which provides
special education  | ||
and related services to meet the needs of the child by
 | ||
utilizing private schools or public schools, whether located on  | ||
the site
or off the site of the residential facility.
 | ||
 The State Board of Education shall promulgate rules and  | ||
regulations
for determining when placement in a private special  | ||
education facility
is appropriate. Such rules and regulations  | ||
shall take into account
the various types of services needed by  | ||
a child and the availability
of such services to the particular  | ||
child in the public school.
In developing these rules and  | ||
regulations the State Board of
Education shall consult with the  | ||
Advisory Council on
Education of Children with Disabilities and  | ||
hold public
hearings to secure recommendations from parents,  | ||
school personnel,
and others concerned about this matter.
 | ||
 The State Board of Education shall also promulgate rules  | ||
and
regulations for transportation to and from a residential  | ||
school.
Transportation to and from home to a residential school  | ||
more than once
each school term shall be subject to prior  | ||
approval by the State
Superintendent in accordance with the  | ||
rules and regulations of the State
Board.
 | ||
 A school district making tuition payments pursuant to this
 | ||
Section is eligible for reimbursement from the State for the  | ||
amount of
such payments actually made in excess of the district  | ||
per capita tuition
charge for students not receiving special  | ||
education services.
Such reimbursement shall be approved in  | ||
accordance with Section 14-12.01
and each district shall file  | ||
its claims, computed in accordance with rules
prescribed by the  | ||
State Board of Education, on forms prescribed by the
State  | ||
Superintendent of Education. Data used as a basis of  | ||
reimbursement
claims shall be for the preceding regular school  | ||
term and summer school
term. Each school district shall  | ||
transmit its claims to the State Board of Education
on or  | ||
before
August 15. The State Board of Education, before  | ||
approving any such claims,
shall determine their accuracy and  | ||
whether they are based upon services
and facilities provided  | ||
under approved programs. Upon approval the State
Board shall  | ||
cause vouchers to be prepared showing the amount due
for  | ||
payment of reimbursement claims to school
districts, for  | ||
transmittal to the State Comptroller on
the 30th day of  | ||
September, December, and March, respectively, and the final
 | ||
voucher, no later than June 20. If the
money appropriated by  | ||
the General Assembly for such purpose for any year
is  | ||
insufficient, it shall be apportioned on the basis of the  | ||
claims approved.
 | ||
 No child shall be placed in a special education program  | ||
pursuant to
this Section if the tuition cost for special  | ||
education and related
services increases more than 10 percent  | ||
over the tuition cost for the
previous school year or exceeds  | ||
$4,500 per year unless such costs have
been approved by the  | ||
Illinois Purchased Care Review Board. The
Illinois Purchased  | ||
Care Review Board shall consist of the following
persons, or  | ||
their designees: the Directors of Children and Family
Services,  | ||
Public Health,
Public Aid, and the
Governor's Office of  | ||
Management and Budget; the
Secretary of Human Services; the  | ||
State Superintendent of Education; and such
other persons as  | ||
the
Governor may designate. The Review Board shall also consist  | ||
of one non-voting member who is an administrator of a
private,  | ||
nonpublic, special education school. The Review Board shall  | ||
establish rules and
regulations for its determination of  | ||
allowable costs and payments made by
local school districts for  | ||
special education, room and board, and other related
services  | ||
provided by non-public schools or special education facilities  | ||
and
shall establish uniform standards and criteria which it  | ||
shall follow. The Review Board shall approve the usual and  | ||
customary rate or rates of a special education program that (i)  | ||
is offered by an out-of-state, non-public provider of  | ||
integrated autism specific educational and autism specific  | ||
residential services, (ii) offers 2 or more levels of  | ||
residential care, including at least one locked facility, and  | ||
(iii) serves 12 or fewer Illinois students. 
 | ||
 The Review Board shall establish uniform definitions and  | ||
criteria for
accounting separately by special education, room  | ||
and board and other
related services costs. The Board shall  | ||
also establish guidelines for
the coordination of services and  | ||
financial assistance provided by all
State agencies to assure  | ||
that no otherwise qualified disabled child
receiving services  | ||
under Article 14 shall be excluded from participation
in, be  | ||
denied the benefits of or be subjected to discrimination under
 | ||
any program or activity provided by any State agency.
 | ||
 The Review Board shall review the costs for special  | ||
education and
related services provided by non-public schools  | ||
or special education
facilities and shall approve or disapprove  | ||
such facilities in accordance
with the rules and regulations  | ||
established by it with respect to
allowable costs.
 | ||
 The State Board of Education shall provide administrative  | ||
and staff support
for the Review Board as deemed reasonable by  | ||
the State Superintendent of
Education. This support shall not  | ||
include travel expenses or other
compensation for any Review  | ||
Board member other than the State Superintendent of
Education.
 | ||
 The Review Board shall seek the advice of the Advisory  | ||
Council on
Education of Children with Disabilities on the rules  | ||
and
regulations to be
promulgated by it relative to providing  | ||
special education services.
 | ||
 If a child has been placed in a program in which the actual  | ||
per pupil costs
of tuition for special education and related  | ||
services based on program
enrollment, excluding room, board and  | ||
transportation costs, exceed $4,500 and
such costs have been  | ||
approved by the Review Board, the district shall pay such
total  | ||
costs which exceed $4,500. A district making such tuition  | ||
payments in
excess of $4,500 pursuant to this Section shall be  | ||
responsible for an amount in
excess of $4,500 equal to the  | ||
district per capita
tuition charge and shall be eligible for  | ||
reimbursement from the State for
the amount of such payments  | ||
actually made in excess of the districts per capita
tuition  | ||
charge for students not receiving special education services.
 | ||
 If a child has been placed in an approved individual  | ||
program and the
tuition costs including room and board costs  | ||
have been approved by the
Review Board, then such room and  | ||
board costs shall be paid by the
appropriate State agency  | ||
subject to the provisions of Section 14-8.01 of
this Act. Room  | ||
and board costs not provided by a State agency other
than the  | ||
State Board of Education shall be provided by the State Board
 | ||
of Education on a current basis. In no event, however, shall  | ||
the
State's liability for funding of these tuition costs begin  | ||
until after
the legal obligations of third party payors have  | ||
been subtracted from
such costs. If the money appropriated by  | ||
the General Assembly for such
purpose for any year is  | ||
insufficient, it shall be apportioned on the
basis of the  | ||
claims approved. Each district shall submit estimated claims to  | ||
the State
Superintendent of Education. Upon approval of such  | ||
claims, the State
Superintendent of Education shall direct the  | ||
State Comptroller to make payments
on a monthly basis. The  | ||
frequency for submitting estimated
claims and the method of  | ||
determining payment shall be prescribed in rules
and  | ||
regulations adopted by the State Board of Education. Such  | ||
current state
reimbursement shall be reduced by an amount equal  | ||
to the proceeds which
the child or child's parents are eligible  | ||
to receive under any public or
private insurance or assistance  | ||
program. Nothing in this Section shall
be construed as  | ||
relieving an insurer or similar third party from an
otherwise  | ||
valid obligation to provide or to pay for services provided to
 | ||
a disabled child.
 | ||
 If it otherwise qualifies, a school district is eligible  | ||
for the
transportation reimbursement under Section 14-13.01  | ||
and for the
reimbursement of tuition payments under this  | ||
Section whether the
non-public school or special education  | ||
facility, public out-of-state
school or county special  | ||
education facility, attended by a child who
resides in that  | ||
district and requires special educational services, is
within  | ||
or outside of the State of Illinois. However, a district is not
 | ||
eligible to claim transportation reimbursement under this  | ||
Section unless
the district certifies to the State  | ||
Superintendent of Education that the
district is unable to  | ||
provide special educational services required by
the child for  | ||
the current school year.
 | ||
 Nothing in this Section authorizes the reimbursement of a  | ||
school
district for the amount paid for tuition of a child  | ||
attending a
non-public school or special education facility,  | ||
public out-of-state
school or county special education  | ||
facility unless the school district
certifies to the State  | ||
Superintendent of Education that the special
education program  | ||
of that district is unable to meet the needs of that child
 | ||
because of his disability and the State Superintendent of  | ||
Education finds
that the school district is in substantial  | ||
compliance with Section 14-4.01. However, if a child is  | ||
unilaterally placed by a State agency or any court in a  | ||
non-public school or special education facility, public  | ||
out-of-state school, or county special education facility, a  | ||
school district shall not be required to certify to the State  | ||
Superintendent of Education, for the purpose of tuition  | ||
reimbursement, that the special education program of that  | ||
district is unable to meet the needs of a child because of his  | ||
or her disability.
 | ||
 Any educational or related services provided, pursuant to  | ||
this
Section in a non-public school or special education  | ||
facility or a
special education facility owned and operated by  | ||
a county government
unit shall be at no cost to the parent or  | ||
guardian of the child.
However, current law and practices  | ||
relative to contributions by parents
or guardians for costs  | ||
other than educational or related services are
not affected by  | ||
this amendatory Act of 1978.
 | ||
 Reimbursement for children attending public school  | ||
residential facilities
shall be made in accordance with the  | ||
provisions of this Section.
 | ||
 Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any school  | ||
district
receiving a payment under this Section or under  | ||
Section 14-7.02b, 14-13.01, or
29-5 of this Code may classify  | ||
all or a portion of the funds that
it receives in a particular  | ||
fiscal year or from general State aid pursuant
to Section  | ||
18-8.05 of this Code
as funds received in connection with any  | ||
funding program for which
it is entitled to receive funds from  | ||
the State in that fiscal year (including,
without limitation,  | ||
any funding program referenced in this Section),
regardless of  | ||
the source or timing of the receipt. The district may not
 | ||
classify more funds as funds received in connection with the  | ||
funding
program than the district is entitled to receive in  | ||
that fiscal year for that
program. Any
classification by a  | ||
district must be made by a resolution of its board of
 | ||
education. The resolution must identify the amount of any  | ||
payments or
general State aid to be classified under this  | ||
paragraph and must specify
the funding program to which the  | ||
funds are to be treated as received in
connection therewith.  | ||
This resolution is controlling as to the
classification of  | ||
funds referenced therein. A certified copy of the
resolution  | ||
must be sent to the State Superintendent of Education.
The  | ||
resolution shall still take effect even though a copy of the  | ||
resolution has
not been sent to the State
Superintendent of  | ||
Education in a timely manner.
No
classification under this  | ||
paragraph by a district shall affect the total amount
or timing  | ||
of money the district is entitled to receive under this Code.
 | ||
No classification under this paragraph by a district shall
in  | ||
any way relieve the district from or affect any
requirements  | ||
that otherwise would apply with respect to
that funding  | ||
program, including any
accounting of funds by source, reporting  | ||
expenditures by
original source and purpose,
reporting  | ||
requirements,
or requirements of providing services.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-636, eff. 6-6-14; 98-1008, eff. 1-1-15;  | ||
revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 5/19-1)
 | ||
 Sec. 19-1. Debt limitations of school districts. 
 | ||
 (a) School districts shall not be subject to the provisions  | ||
limiting their
indebtedness prescribed in "An Act to limit the  | ||
indebtedness of counties having
a population of less than  | ||
500,000 and townships, school districts and other
municipal  | ||
corporations having a population of less than 300,000",  | ||
approved
February 15, 1928, as amended.
 | ||
 No school districts maintaining grades K through 8 or 9  | ||
through 12
shall become indebted in any manner or for any  | ||
purpose to an amount,
including existing indebtedness, in the  | ||
aggregate exceeding 6.9% on the
value of the taxable property  | ||
therein to be ascertained by the last assessment
for State and  | ||
county taxes or, until January 1, 1983, if greater, the sum  | ||
that
is produced by multiplying the school district's 1978  | ||
equalized assessed
valuation by the debt limitation percentage  | ||
in effect on January 1, 1979,
previous to the incurring of such  | ||
indebtedness.
 | ||
 No school districts maintaining grades K through 12 shall  | ||
become
indebted in any manner or for any purpose to an amount,  | ||
including
existing indebtedness, in the aggregate exceeding  | ||
13.8% on the value of
the taxable property therein to be  | ||
ascertained by the last assessment
for State and county taxes  | ||
or, until January 1, 1983, if greater, the sum that
is produced  | ||
by multiplying the school district's 1978 equalized assessed
 | ||
valuation by the debt limitation percentage in effect on  | ||
January 1, 1979,
previous to the incurring of such  | ||
indebtedness.
 | ||
 No partial elementary unit district, as defined in Article  | ||
11E of this Code, shall become indebted in any manner or for  | ||
any purpose in an amount, including existing indebtedness, in  | ||
the aggregate exceeding 6.9% of the value of the taxable  | ||
property of the entire district, to be ascertained by the last  | ||
assessment for State and county taxes, plus an amount,  | ||
including existing indebtedness, in the aggregate exceeding  | ||
6.9% of the value of the taxable property of that portion of  | ||
the district included in the elementary and high school  | ||
classification, to be ascertained by the last assessment for  | ||
State and county taxes. Moreover, no partial elementary unit  | ||
district, as defined in Article 11E of this Code, shall become  | ||
indebted on account of bonds issued by the district for high  | ||
school purposes in the aggregate exceeding 6.9% of the value of  | ||
the taxable property of the entire district, to be ascertained  | ||
by the last assessment for State and county taxes, nor shall  | ||
the district become indebted on account of bonds issued by the  | ||
district for elementary purposes in the aggregate exceeding  | ||
6.9% of the value of the taxable property for that portion of  | ||
the district included in the elementary and high school  | ||
classification, to be ascertained by the last assessment for  | ||
State and county taxes.
 | ||
 Notwithstanding the provisions of any other law to the  | ||
contrary, in any
case in which the voters of a school district  | ||
have approved a proposition
for the issuance of bonds of such  | ||
school district at an election held prior
to January 1, 1979,  | ||
and all of the bonds approved at such election have
not been  | ||
issued, the debt limitation applicable to such school district
 | ||
during the calendar year 1979 shall be computed by multiplying  | ||
the value
of taxable property therein, including personal  | ||
property, as ascertained
by the last assessment for State and  | ||
county taxes, previous to the incurring
of such indebtedness,  | ||
by the percentage limitation applicable to such school
district  | ||
under the provisions of this subsection (a).
 | ||
 (b) Notwithstanding the debt limitation prescribed in  | ||
subsection (a)
of this Section, additional indebtedness may be  | ||
incurred in an amount
not to exceed the estimated cost of  | ||
acquiring or improving school sites
or constructing and  | ||
equipping additional building facilities under the
following  | ||
conditions:
 | ||
  (1) Whenever the enrollment of students for the next  | ||
 school year is
estimated by the board of education to  | ||
 increase over the actual present
enrollment by not less  | ||
 than 35% or by not less than 200 students or the
actual  | ||
 present enrollment of students has increased over the  | ||
 previous
school year by not less than 35% or by not less  | ||
 than 200 students and
the board of education determines  | ||
 that additional school sites or
building facilities are  | ||
 required as a result of such increase in
enrollment; and
 | ||
  (2) When the Regional Superintendent of Schools having  | ||
 jurisdiction
over the school district and the State  | ||
 Superintendent of Education
concur in such enrollment  | ||
 projection or increase and approve the need
for such  | ||
 additional school sites or building facilities and the
 | ||
 estimated cost thereof; and
 | ||
  (3) When the voters in the school district approve a  | ||
 proposition for
the issuance of bonds for the purpose of  | ||
 acquiring or improving such
needed school sites or  | ||
 constructing and equipping such needed additional
building  | ||
 facilities at an election called and held for that purpose.
 | ||
 Notice of such an election shall state that the amount of  | ||
 indebtedness
proposed to be incurred would exceed the debt  | ||
 limitation otherwise
applicable to the school district.  | ||
 The ballot for such proposition
shall state what percentage  | ||
 of the equalized assessed valuation will be
outstanding in  | ||
 bonds if the proposed issuance of bonds is approved by
the  | ||
 voters; or
 | ||
  (4) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs (1)  | ||
 through (3) of
this subsection (b), if the school board  | ||
 determines that additional
facilities are needed to  | ||
 provide a quality educational program and not
less than 2/3  | ||
 of those voting in an election called by the school board
 | ||
 on the question approve the issuance of bonds for the  | ||
 construction of
such facilities, the school district may  | ||
 issue bonds for this
purpose; or
 | ||
  (5) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs (1)  | ||
 through (3) of this
subsection (b), if (i) the school  | ||
 district has previously availed itself of the
provisions of  | ||
 paragraph (4) of this subsection (b) to enable it to issue  | ||
 bonds,
(ii) the voters of the school district have not  | ||
 defeated a proposition for the
issuance of bonds since the  | ||
 referendum described in paragraph (4) of this
subsection  | ||
 (b) was held, (iii) the school board determines that  | ||
 additional
facilities are needed to provide a quality  | ||
 educational program, and (iv) a
majority of those voting in  | ||
 an election called by the school board on the
question  | ||
 approve the issuance of bonds for the construction of such  | ||
 facilities,
the school district may issue bonds for this  | ||
 purpose.
 | ||
 In no event shall the indebtedness incurred pursuant to  | ||
this
subsection (b) and the existing indebtedness of the school  | ||
district
exceed 15% of the value of the taxable property  | ||
therein to be
ascertained by the last assessment for State and  | ||
county taxes, previous
to the incurring of such indebtedness  | ||
or, until January 1, 1983, if greater,
the sum that is produced  | ||
by multiplying the school district's 1978 equalized
assessed  | ||
valuation by the debt limitation percentage in effect on  | ||
January 1,
1979.
 | ||
 The indebtedness provided for by this subsection (b) shall  | ||
be in
addition to and in excess of any other debt limitation.
 | ||
 (c) Notwithstanding the debt limitation prescribed in  | ||
subsection (a)
of this Section, in any case in which a public  | ||
question for the issuance
of bonds of a proposed school  | ||
district maintaining grades kindergarten
through 12 received  | ||
at least 60% of the valid ballots cast on the question at
an  | ||
election held on or prior to November 8, 1994, and in which the  | ||
bonds
approved at such election have not been issued, the  | ||
school district pursuant to
the requirements of Section 11A-10  | ||
(now repealed) may issue the total amount of bonds approved
at  | ||
such election for the purpose stated in the question.
 | ||
 (d) Notwithstanding the debt limitation prescribed in  | ||
subsection (a)
of this Section, a school district that meets  | ||
all the criteria set forth in
paragraphs (1) and (2) of this  | ||
subsection (d) may incur an additional
indebtedness in an  | ||
amount not to exceed $4,500,000, even though the amount of
the  | ||
additional indebtedness authorized by this subsection (d),  | ||
when incurred
and added to the aggregate amount of indebtedness  | ||
of the district existing
immediately prior to the district  | ||
incurring the additional indebtedness
authorized by this  | ||
subsection (d), causes the aggregate indebtedness of the
 | ||
district to exceed the debt limitation otherwise applicable to  | ||
that district
under subsection (a):
 | ||
  (1) The additional indebtedness authorized by this  | ||
 subsection (d) is
incurred by the school district through  | ||
 the issuance of bonds under and in
accordance with Section  | ||
 17-2.11a for the purpose of replacing a school
building  | ||
 which, because of mine subsidence damage, has been closed  | ||
 as provided
in paragraph (2) of this subsection (d) or  | ||
 through the issuance of bonds under
and in accordance with  | ||
 Section 19-3 for the purpose of increasing the size of,
or  | ||
 providing for additional functions in, such replacement  | ||
 school buildings, or
both such purposes.
 | ||
  (2) The bonds issued by the school district as provided  | ||
 in paragraph (1)
above are issued for the purposes of  | ||
 construction by the school district of
a new school  | ||
 building pursuant to Section 17-2.11, to replace an  | ||
 existing
school building that, because of mine subsidence  | ||
 damage, is closed as of the
end of the 1992-93 school year  | ||
 pursuant to action of the regional
superintendent of  | ||
 schools of the educational service region in which the
 | ||
 district is located under Section 3-14.22 or are issued for  | ||
 the purpose of
increasing the size of, or providing for  | ||
 additional functions in, the new
school building being  | ||
 constructed to replace a school building closed as the
 | ||
 result of mine subsidence damage, or both such purposes.
 | ||
 (e) (Blank).
 | ||
 (f) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of  | ||
this Section or of
any other law, bonds in not to exceed the  | ||
aggregate amount of $5,500,000 and
issued by a school district  | ||
meeting the following criteria shall not be
considered  | ||
indebtedness for purposes of any statutory limitation and may  | ||
be
issued in an amount or amounts, including existing  | ||
indebtedness, in excess of
any heretofore or hereafter imposed  | ||
statutory limitation as to indebtedness:
 | ||
  (1) At the time of the sale of such bonds, the board of  | ||
 education of the
district shall have determined by  | ||
 resolution that the enrollment of students in
the district  | ||
 is projected to increase by not less than 7% during each of  | ||
 the
next succeeding 2 school years.
 | ||
  (2) The board of education shall also determine by  | ||
 resolution that the
improvements to be financed with the  | ||
 proceeds of the bonds are needed because
of the projected  | ||
 enrollment increases.
 | ||
  (3) The board of education shall also determine by  | ||
 resolution that the
projected increases in enrollment are  | ||
 the result of improvements made or
expected to be made to  | ||
 passenger rail facilities located in the school
district.
 | ||
 Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of this  | ||
Section or of any other law, a school district that has availed  | ||
itself of the provisions of this subsection (f) prior to July  | ||
22, 2004 (the effective date of Public Act 93-799) may also  | ||
issue bonds approved by referendum up to an amount, including  | ||
existing indebtedness, not exceeding 25% of the equalized  | ||
assessed value of the taxable property in the district if all  | ||
of the conditions set forth in items (1), (2), and (3) of this  | ||
subsection (f) are met.
 | ||
 (g) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of  | ||
this Section or any
other law, bonds in not to exceed an  | ||
aggregate amount of 25% of the equalized
assessed value of the  | ||
taxable property of a school district and issued by a
school  | ||
district meeting the criteria in paragraphs (i) through (iv) of  | ||
this
subsection shall not be considered indebtedness for  | ||
purposes of any statutory
limitation and may be issued pursuant  | ||
to resolution of the school board in an
amount or amounts,  | ||
including existing indebtedness, in
excess of any statutory  | ||
limitation of indebtedness heretofore or hereafter
imposed:
 | ||
  (i) The bonds are issued for the purpose of  | ||
 constructing a new high school
building to replace two  | ||
 adjacent existing buildings which together house a
single  | ||
 high school, each of which is more than 65 years old, and  | ||
 which together
are located on more than 10 acres and less  | ||
 than 11 acres of property.
 | ||
  (ii) At the time the resolution authorizing the  | ||
 issuance of the bonds is
adopted, the cost of constructing  | ||
 a new school building to replace the existing
school  | ||
 building is less than 60% of the cost of repairing the  | ||
 existing school
building.
 | ||
  (iii) The sale of the bonds occurs before July 1, 1997.
 | ||
  (iv) The school district issuing the bonds is a unit  | ||
 school district
located in a county of less than 70,000 and  | ||
 more than 50,000 inhabitants,
which has an average daily  | ||
 attendance of less than 1,500 and an equalized
assessed  | ||
 valuation of less than $29,000,000.
 | ||
 (h) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Section or  | ||
the
provisions of any other law, until January 1, 1998, a  | ||
community unit school
district maintaining grades K through 12  | ||
may issue bonds up to an amount,
including existing  | ||
indebtedness, not exceeding 27.6% of the equalized assessed
 | ||
value of the taxable property in the district, if all of the  | ||
following
conditions are met:
 | ||
  (i) The school district has an equalized assessed  | ||
 valuation for calendar
year 1995 of less than $24,000,000;
 | ||
  (ii) The bonds are issued for the capital improvement,  | ||
 renovation,
rehabilitation, or replacement of existing  | ||
 school buildings of the district,
all of which buildings  | ||
 were originally constructed not less than 40 years ago;
 | ||
  (iii) The voters of the district approve a proposition  | ||
 for the issuance of
the bonds at a referendum held after  | ||
 March 19, 1996; and
 | ||
  (iv) The bonds are issued pursuant to Sections 19-2  | ||
 through 19-7 of this
Code.
 | ||
 (i) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Section or  | ||
the provisions
of any other law, until January 1, 1998, a  | ||
community unit school district
maintaining grades K through 12  | ||
may issue bonds up to an amount, including
existing  | ||
indebtedness, not exceeding 27% of the equalized assessed value  | ||
of the
taxable property in the district, if all of the  | ||
following conditions are met:
 | ||
  (i) The school district has an equalized assessed  | ||
 valuation for calendar
year 1995 of less than $44,600,000;
 | ||
  (ii) The bonds are issued for the capital improvement,  | ||
 renovation,
rehabilitation, or replacement
of existing  | ||
 school buildings of the district, all of which
existing  | ||
 buildings were originally constructed not less than 80  | ||
 years ago;
 | ||
  (iii) The voters of the district approve a proposition  | ||
 for the issuance of
the bonds at a referendum held after  | ||
 December 31, 1996; and
 | ||
  (iv) The bonds are issued pursuant to Sections 19-2  | ||
 through 19-7 of this
Code.
 | ||
 (j) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Section or  | ||
the
provisions of any other law, until January 1, 1999, a  | ||
community unit school
district maintaining grades K through 12  | ||
may issue bonds up to an amount,
including existing  | ||
indebtedness, not exceeding 27% of the equalized assessed
value  | ||
of the taxable property in the district if all of the following
 | ||
conditions are met:
 | ||
  (i) The school district has an equalized assessed  | ||
 valuation for calendar
year 1995 of less than $140,000,000  | ||
 and a best 3 months
average daily
attendance for the  | ||
 1995-96 school year of at least 2,800;
 | ||
  (ii) The bonds are issued to purchase a site and build  | ||
 and equip a new
high school, and the school district's  | ||
 existing high school was originally
constructed not less  | ||
 than 35
years prior to the sale of the bonds;
 | ||
  (iii) At the time of the sale of the bonds, the board  | ||
 of education
determines
by resolution that a new high  | ||
 school is needed because of projected enrollment
 | ||
 increases;
 | ||
  (iv) At least 60% of those voting in an election held
 | ||
 after December 31, 1996 approve a proposition
for the  | ||
 issuance of
the bonds; and
 | ||
  (v) The bonds are issued pursuant to Sections 19-2  | ||
 through
19-7 of this Code.
 | ||
 (k) Notwithstanding the debt limitation prescribed in  | ||
subsection (a) of
this Section, a school district that meets  | ||
all the criteria set forth in
paragraphs (1) through (4) of  | ||
this subsection (k) may issue bonds to incur an
additional  | ||
indebtedness in an amount not to exceed $4,000,000 even though  | ||
the
amount of the additional indebtedness authorized by this  | ||
subsection (k), when
incurred and added to the aggregate amount  | ||
of indebtedness of the school
district existing immediately  | ||
prior to the school district incurring such
additional  | ||
indebtedness, causes the aggregate indebtedness of the school
 | ||
district to exceed or increases the amount by which the  | ||
aggregate indebtedness
of the district already exceeds the debt  | ||
limitation otherwise applicable to
that school district under  | ||
subsection (a):
 | ||
  (1) the school district is located in 2 counties, and a  | ||
 referendum to
authorize the additional indebtedness was  | ||
 approved by a majority of the voters
of the school district  | ||
 voting on the proposition to authorize that
indebtedness;
 | ||
  (2) the additional indebtedness is for the purpose of  | ||
 financing a
multi-purpose room addition to the existing  | ||
 high school;
 | ||
  (3) the additional indebtedness, together with the  | ||
 existing indebtedness
of the school district, shall not  | ||
 exceed 17.4% of the value of the taxable
property in the  | ||
 school district, to be ascertained by the last assessment  | ||
 for
State and county taxes; and
 | ||
  (4) the bonds evidencing the additional indebtedness  | ||
 are issued, if at
all, within 120 days of the effective  | ||
 date of this amendatory Act of 1998.
 | ||
 (l) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Section or  | ||
the
provisions of any other law, until January 1, 2000, a  | ||
school district
maintaining grades kindergarten through 8 may  | ||
issue bonds up to an amount,
including existing indebtedness,  | ||
not exceeding 15% of the equalized assessed
value of the  | ||
taxable property in the district if all of the following
 | ||
conditions are met:
 | ||
  (i) the district has an equalized assessed valuation  | ||
 for calendar year
1996 of less than $10,000,000;
 | ||
  (ii) the bonds are issued for capital improvement,  | ||
 renovation,
rehabilitation, or replacement of one or more  | ||
 school buildings of the district,
which buildings were  | ||
 originally constructed not less than 70 years ago;
 | ||
  (iii) the voters of the district approve a proposition  | ||
 for the issuance of
the bonds at a referendum held on or  | ||
 after March 17, 1998; and
 | ||
  (iv) the bonds are issued pursuant to Sections 19-2  | ||
 through 19-7 of this
Code.
 | ||
 (m) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Section or  | ||
the provisions
of
any other law, until January 1, 1999, an  | ||
elementary school district maintaining
grades K through 8 may  | ||
issue bonds up to an amount, excluding existing
indebtedness,  | ||
not exceeding 18% of the equalized assessed value of the  | ||
taxable
property in the district, if all of the following  | ||
conditions are met:
 | ||
  (i) The school district has an equalized assessed  | ||
 valuation for calendar
year 1995 or less than $7,700,000;
 | ||
  (ii) The school district operates 2 elementary  | ||
 attendance centers that
until
1976 were operated as the  | ||
 attendance centers of 2 separate and distinct school
 | ||
 districts;
 | ||
  (iii) The bonds are issued for the construction of a  | ||
 new elementary school
building to replace an existing  | ||
 multi-level elementary school building of the
school  | ||
 district that is not handicapped accessible at all levels  | ||
 and parts of
which were constructed more than 75 years ago;
 | ||
  (iv) The voters of the school district approve a  | ||
 proposition for the
issuance of the bonds at a referendum  | ||
 held after July 1, 1998; and
 | ||
  (v) The bonds are issued pursuant to Sections 19-2  | ||
 through 19-7 of this
Code.
 | ||
 (n) Notwithstanding the debt limitation prescribed in  | ||
subsection (a) of
this Section or any other provisions of this  | ||
Section or of any other law, a
school district that meets all  | ||
of the criteria set forth in paragraphs (i)
through (vi) of  | ||
this subsection (n) may incur additional indebtedness by the
 | ||
issuance of bonds in an amount not exceeding the amount  | ||
certified by the
Capital Development Board to the school  | ||
district as provided in paragraph (iii)
of
this subsection (n),  | ||
even though the amount of the additional indebtedness so
 | ||
authorized, when incurred and added to the aggregate amount of  | ||
indebtedness of
the district existing immediately prior to the  | ||
district incurring the
additional indebtedness authorized by  | ||
this subsection (n), causes the aggregate
indebtedness of the  | ||
district to exceed the debt limitation otherwise applicable
by  | ||
law to that district:
 | ||
  (i) The school district applies to the State Board of  | ||
 Education for a
school construction project grant and  | ||
 submits a district facilities plan in
support
of its  | ||
 application pursuant to Section 5-20 of
the School  | ||
 Construction Law.
 | ||
  (ii) The school district's application and facilities  | ||
 plan are approved
by,
and the district receives a grant  | ||
 entitlement for a school construction project
issued by,  | ||
 the State Board of Education under the School Construction  | ||
 Law.
 | ||
  (iii) The school district has exhausted its bonding  | ||
 capacity or the unused
bonding capacity of the district is  | ||
 less than the amount certified by the
Capital Development  | ||
 Board to the district under Section 5-15 of the School
 | ||
 Construction Law as the dollar amount of the school  | ||
 construction project's cost
that the district will be  | ||
 required to finance with non-grant funds in order to
 | ||
 receive a school construction project grant under the  | ||
 School Construction Law.
 | ||
  (iv) The bonds are issued for a "school construction  | ||
 project", as that
term is defined in Section 5-5 of the  | ||
 School Construction Law, in an amount
that does not exceed  | ||
 the dollar amount certified, as provided in paragraph
(iii)  | ||
 of this subsection (n), by the Capital Development Board
to  | ||
 the school
district under Section 5-15 of the School  | ||
 Construction Law.
 | ||
  (v) The voters of the district approve a proposition  | ||
 for the issuance of
the bonds at a referendum held after  | ||
 the criteria specified in paragraphs (i)
and (iii) of this  | ||
 subsection (n) are met.
 | ||
  (vi) The bonds are issued pursuant to Sections 19-2  | ||
 through 19-7 of the
School Code.
 | ||
 (o) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Section or  | ||
the
provisions of any other law, until November 1, 2007, a  | ||
community unit
school district maintaining grades K through 12  | ||
may issue bonds up to
an amount, including existing  | ||
indebtedness, not exceeding 20% of the
equalized assessed value  | ||
of the taxable property in the district if all of the
following  | ||
conditions are met:
 | ||
  (i) the school district has an equalized assessed  | ||
 valuation
for calendar year 2001 of at least $737,000,000  | ||
 and an enrollment
for the 2002-2003 school year of at least  | ||
 8,500;
 | ||
  (ii) the bonds are issued to purchase school sites,  | ||
 build and
equip a new high school, build and equip a new  | ||
 junior high school,
build and equip 5 new elementary  | ||
 schools, and make technology
and other improvements and  | ||
 additions to existing schools;
 | ||
  (iii) at the time of the sale of the bonds, the board  | ||
 of
education determines by resolution that the sites and  | ||
 new or
improved facilities are needed because of projected  | ||
 enrollment
increases;
 | ||
  (iv) at least 57% of those voting in a general election  | ||
 held
prior to January 1, 2003 approved a proposition for  | ||
 the issuance of
the bonds; and
 | ||
  (v) the bonds are issued pursuant to Sections 19-2  | ||
 through
19-7 of this Code.
 | ||
 (p) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Section or  | ||
the provisions of any other law, a community unit school  | ||
district maintaining grades K through 12 may issue bonds up to  | ||
an amount, including indebtedness, not exceeding 27% of the  | ||
equalized assessed value of the taxable property in the  | ||
district if all of the following conditions are met: | ||
  (i) The school district has an equalized assessed  | ||
 valuation for calendar year 2001 of at least $295,741,187  | ||
 and a best 3 months' average daily attendance for the  | ||
 2002-2003 school year of at least 2,394. | ||
  (ii) The bonds are issued to build and equip 3  | ||
 elementary school buildings; build and equip one middle  | ||
 school building; and alter, repair, improve, and equip all  | ||
 existing school buildings in the district. | ||
  (iii) At the time of the sale of the bonds, the board  | ||
 of education determines by resolution that the project is  | ||
 needed because of expanding growth in the school district  | ||
 and a projected enrollment increase. | ||
  (iv) The bonds are issued pursuant to Sections 19-2  | ||
 through 19-7 of this Code.
 | ||
 (p-5) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Section  | ||
or the provisions of any other law, bonds issued by a community  | ||
unit school district maintaining grades K through 12 shall not  | ||
be considered indebtedness for purposes of any statutory  | ||
limitation and may be issued in an amount or amounts, including  | ||
existing indebtedness, in excess of any heretofore or hereafter  | ||
imposed statutory limitation as to indebtedness, if all of the  | ||
following conditions are met: | ||
  (i) For each of the 4 most recent years, residential  | ||
 property comprises more than 80% of the equalized assessed  | ||
 valuation of the district. | ||
  (ii) At least 2 school buildings that were constructed  | ||
 40 or more years prior to the issuance of the bonds will be  | ||
 demolished and will be replaced by new buildings or  | ||
 additions to one or more existing buildings. | ||
  (iii) Voters of the district approve a proposition for  | ||
 the issuance of the bonds at a regularly scheduled  | ||
 election. | ||
  (iv) At the time of the sale of the bonds, the school  | ||
 board determines by resolution that the new buildings or  | ||
 building additions are needed because of an increase in  | ||
 enrollment projected by the school board. | ||
  (v) The principal amount of the bonds, including  | ||
 existing indebtedness, does not exceed 25% of the equalized  | ||
 assessed value of the taxable property in the district. | ||
  (vi) The bonds are issued prior to January 1, 2007,  | ||
 pursuant to Sections 19-2 through 19-7 of this Code.
 | ||
 (p-10) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this  | ||
Section or the provisions of any other law, bonds issued by a  | ||
community consolidated school district maintaining grades K  | ||
through 8 shall not be considered indebtedness for purposes of  | ||
any statutory limitation and may be issued in an amount or  | ||
amounts, including existing indebtedness, in excess of any  | ||
heretofore or hereafter imposed statutory limitation as to  | ||
indebtedness, if all of the following conditions are met: | ||
  (i) For each of the 4 most recent years, residential  | ||
 and farm property comprises more than 80% of the equalized  | ||
 assessed valuation of the district. | ||
  (ii) The bond proceeds are to be used to acquire and  | ||
 improve school sites and build and equip a school building. | ||
  (iii) Voters of the district approve a proposition for  | ||
 the issuance of the bonds at a regularly scheduled  | ||
 election. | ||
  (iv) At the time of the sale of the bonds, the school  | ||
 board determines by resolution that the school sites and  | ||
 building additions are needed because of an increase in  | ||
 enrollment projected by the school board. | ||
  (v) The principal amount of the bonds, including  | ||
 existing indebtedness, does not exceed 20% of the equalized  | ||
 assessed value of the taxable property in the district. | ||
  (vi) The bonds are issued prior to January 1, 2007,  | ||
 pursuant to Sections 19-2 through 19-7 of this Code.
 | ||
 (p-15) In addition to all other authority to issue bonds,  | ||
the Oswego Community Unit School District Number 308 may issue  | ||
bonds with an aggregate principal amount not to exceed  | ||
$450,000,000, but only if all of the following conditions are  | ||
met: | ||
  (i) The voters of the district have approved a  | ||
 proposition for the bond issue at the general election held  | ||
 on November 7, 2006. | ||
  (ii) At the time of the sale of the bonds, the school  | ||
 board determines, by resolution, that: (A) the building and  | ||
 equipping of the new high school building, new junior high  | ||
 school buildings, new elementary school buildings, early  | ||
 childhood building, maintenance building, transportation  | ||
 facility, and additions to existing school buildings, the  | ||
 altering, repairing, equipping, and provision of  | ||
 technology improvements to existing school buildings, and  | ||
 the acquisition and improvement of school sites, as the  | ||
 case may be, are required as a result of a projected  | ||
 increase in the enrollment of students in the district; and  | ||
 (B) the sale of bonds for these purposes is authorized by  | ||
 legislation that exempts the debt incurred on the bonds  | ||
 from the district's statutory debt limitation.
 | ||
  (iii) The bonds are issued, in one or more bond issues,  | ||
 on or before November 7, 2011, but the aggregate principal  | ||
 amount issued in all such bond issues combined must not  | ||
 exceed $450,000,000.
 | ||
  (iv) The bonds are issued in accordance with this  | ||
 Article 19. | ||
  (v) The proceeds of the bonds are used only to  | ||
 accomplish those projects approved by the voters at the  | ||
 general election held on November 7, 2006. | ||
The debt incurred on any bonds issued under this subsection  | ||
(p-15) shall not be considered indebtedness for purposes of any  | ||
statutory debt limitation.
 | ||
 (p-20) In addition to all other authority to issue bonds,  | ||
the Lincoln-Way Community High School District Number 210 may  | ||
issue bonds with an aggregate principal amount not to exceed  | ||
$225,000,000, but only if all of the following conditions are  | ||
met: | ||
  (i) The voters of the district have approved a  | ||
 proposition for the bond issue at the general primary  | ||
 election held on March 21, 2006. | ||
  (ii) At the time of the sale of the bonds, the school  | ||
 board determines, by resolution, that: (A) the building and  | ||
 equipping of the new high school buildings, the altering,  | ||
 repairing, and equipping of existing school buildings, and  | ||
 the improvement of school sites, as the case may be, are  | ||
 required as a result of a projected increase in the  | ||
 enrollment of students in the district; and (B) the sale of  | ||
 bonds for these purposes is authorized by legislation that  | ||
 exempts the debt incurred on the bonds from the district's  | ||
 statutory debt limitation.
 | ||
  (iii) The bonds are issued, in one or more bond issues,  | ||
 on or before March 21, 2011, but the aggregate principal  | ||
 amount issued in all such bond issues combined must not  | ||
 exceed $225,000,000.
 | ||
  (iv) The bonds are issued in accordance with this  | ||
 Article 19. | ||
  (v) The proceeds of the bonds are used only to  | ||
 accomplish those projects approved by the voters at the  | ||
 primary election held on March 21, 2006. | ||
The debt incurred on any bonds issued under this subsection  | ||
(p-20) shall not be considered indebtedness for purposes of any  | ||
statutory debt limitation.
 | ||
 (p-25) In addition to all other authority to issue bonds,  | ||
Rochester Community Unit School District 3A may issue bonds  | ||
with an aggregate principal amount not to exceed $18,500,000,  | ||
but only if all of the following conditions are met: | ||
  (i) The voters of the district approve a proposition  | ||
 for the bond issuance at the general primary election held  | ||
 in 2008.
 | ||
  (ii) At the time of the sale of the bonds, the school  | ||
 board determines, by resolution, that: (A) the building and  | ||
 equipping of a new high school building; the addition of  | ||
 classrooms and support facilities at the high school,  | ||
 middle school, and elementary school; the altering,  | ||
 repairing, and equipping of existing school buildings; and  | ||
 the improvement of school sites, as the case may be, are  | ||
 required as a result of a projected increase in the  | ||
 enrollment of students in the district; and (B) the sale of  | ||
 bonds for these purposes is authorized by a law that  | ||
 exempts the debt incurred on the bonds from the district's  | ||
 statutory debt limitation. | ||
  (iii) The bonds are issued, in one or more bond issues,  | ||
 on or before December 31, 2012, but the aggregate principal  | ||
 amount issued in all such bond issues combined must not  | ||
 exceed $18,500,000. | ||
  (iv) The bonds are issued in accordance with this  | ||
 Article 19. | ||
  (v) The proceeds of the bonds are used to accomplish  | ||
 only those projects approved by the voters at the primary  | ||
 election held in 2008.
 | ||
The debt incurred on any bonds issued under this subsection  | ||
(p-25) shall not be considered indebtedness for purposes of any  | ||
statutory debt limitation.
 | ||
 (p-30) In addition to all other authority to issue bonds,  | ||
Prairie Grove Consolidated School District 46 may issue bonds  | ||
with an aggregate principal amount not to exceed $30,000,000,  | ||
but only if all of the following conditions are met:
 | ||
  (i) The voters of the district approve a proposition  | ||
 for the bond issuance at an election held in 2008.
 | ||
  (ii) At the time of the sale of the bonds, the school  | ||
 board determines, by resolution, that (A) the building and  | ||
 equipping of a new school building and additions to  | ||
 existing school buildings are required as a result of a  | ||
 projected increase in the enrollment of students in the  | ||
 district and (B) the altering, repairing, and equipping of  | ||
 existing school buildings are required because of the age  | ||
 of the existing school buildings.
 | ||
  (iii) The bonds are issued, in one or more bond  | ||
 issuances, on or before December 31, 2012; however, the  | ||
 aggregate principal amount issued in all such bond  | ||
 issuances combined must not exceed $30,000,000.
 | ||
  (iv) The bonds are issued in accordance with this  | ||
 Article.
 | ||
  (v) The proceeds of the bonds are used to accomplish  | ||
 only those projects approved by the voters at an election  | ||
 held in 2008.
 | ||
The debt incurred on any bonds issued under this subsection  | ||
(p-30) shall not be considered indebtedness for purposes of any  | ||
statutory debt limitation.
 | ||
 (p-35) In addition to all other authority to issue bonds,  | ||
Prairie Hill Community Consolidated School District 133 may  | ||
issue bonds with an aggregate principal amount not to exceed  | ||
$13,900,000, but only if all of the following conditions are  | ||
met:
 | ||
  (i) The voters of the district approved a proposition  | ||
 for the bond issuance at an election held on April 17,  | ||
 2007.
 | ||
  (ii) At the time of the sale of the bonds, the school  | ||
 board determines, by resolution, that (A) the improvement  | ||
 of the site of and the building and equipping of a school  | ||
 building are required as a result of a projected increase  | ||
 in the enrollment of students in the district and (B) the  | ||
 repairing and equipping of the Prairie Hill Elementary  | ||
 School building is required because of the age of that  | ||
 school building.
 | ||
  (iii) The bonds are issued, in one or more bond  | ||
 issuances, on or before December 31, 2011, but the  | ||
 aggregate principal amount issued in all such bond  | ||
 issuances combined must not exceed $13,900,000.
 | ||
  (iv) The bonds are issued in accordance with this  | ||
 Article.
 | ||
  (v) The proceeds of the bonds are used to accomplish  | ||
 only those projects approved by the voters at an election  | ||
 held on April 17, 2007.
 | ||
The debt incurred on any bonds issued under this subsection  | ||
(p-35) shall not be considered indebtedness for purposes of any  | ||
statutory debt limitation.
 | ||
 (p-40) In addition to all other authority to issue bonds,  | ||
Mascoutah Community Unit District 19 may issue bonds with an  | ||
aggregate principal amount not to exceed $55,000,000, but only  | ||
if all of the following conditions are met: | ||
  (1) The voters of the district approve a proposition  | ||
 for the bond issuance at a regular election held on or  | ||
 after November 4, 2008. | ||
  (2) At the time of the sale of the bonds, the school  | ||
 board determines, by resolution, that (i) the building and  | ||
 equipping of a new high school building is required as a  | ||
 result of a projected increase in the enrollment of  | ||
 students in the district and the age and condition of the  | ||
 existing high school building, (ii) the existing high  | ||
 school building will be demolished, and (iii) the sale of  | ||
 bonds is authorized by statute that exempts the debt  | ||
 incurred on the bonds from the district's statutory debt  | ||
 limitation. | ||
  (3) The bonds are issued, in one or more bond  | ||
 issuances, on or before December 31, 2011, but the  | ||
 aggregate principal amount issued in all such bond  | ||
 issuances combined must not exceed $55,000,000. | ||
  (4) The bonds are issued in accordance with this  | ||
 Article. | ||
  (5) The proceeds of the bonds are used to accomplish  | ||
 only those projects approved by the voters at a regular  | ||
 election held on or after November 4, 2008. | ||
 The debt incurred on any bonds issued under this subsection  | ||
(p-40) shall not be considered indebtedness for purposes of any  | ||
statutory debt limitation.  | ||
 (p-45) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of  | ||
this Section or of any other law, bonds issued pursuant to  | ||
Section 19-3.5 of this Code shall not be considered  | ||
indebtedness for purposes of any statutory limitation if the  | ||
bonds are issued in an amount or amounts, including existing  | ||
indebtedness of the school district, not in excess of 18.5% of  | ||
the value of the taxable property in the district to be  | ||
ascertained by the last assessment for State and county taxes.  | ||
 (p-50) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of
 | ||
this Section or of any other law, bonds issued pursuant to
 | ||
Section 19-3.10 of this Code shall not be considered
 | ||
indebtedness for purposes of any statutory limitation if the
 | ||
bonds are issued in an amount or amounts, including existing
 | ||
indebtedness of the school district, not in excess of 43% of
 | ||
the value of the taxable property in the district to be
 | ||
ascertained by the last assessment for State and county taxes.  | ||
 (p-55) In addition to all other authority to issue bonds,  | ||
Belle Valley School District 119 may issue bonds with an  | ||
aggregate principal amount not to exceed $47,500,000, but only  | ||
if all of the following conditions are met: | ||
  (1) The voters of the district approve a proposition  | ||
 for the bond issuance at an election held on or after April  | ||
 7, 2009. | ||
  (2) Prior to the issuance of the bonds, the school  | ||
 board determines, by resolution, that (i) the building and  | ||
 equipping of a new school building is required as a result  | ||
 of mine subsidence in an existing school building and  | ||
 because of the age and condition of another existing school  | ||
 building and (ii) the issuance of bonds is authorized by  | ||
 statute that exempts the debt incurred on the bonds from  | ||
 the district's statutory debt limitation. | ||
  (3) The bonds are issued, in one or more bond  | ||
 issuances, on or before March 31, 2014, but the aggregate  | ||
 principal amount issued in all such bond issuances combined  | ||
 must not exceed $47,500,000. | ||
  (4) The bonds are issued in accordance with this  | ||
 Article. | ||
  (5) The proceeds of the bonds are used to accomplish  | ||
 only those projects approved by the voters at an election  | ||
 held on or after April 7, 2009. | ||
 The debt incurred on any bonds issued under this subsection  | ||
(p-55) shall not be considered indebtedness for purposes of any  | ||
statutory debt limitation. Bonds issued under this subsection  | ||
(p-55) must mature within not to exceed 30 years from their  | ||
date, notwithstanding any other law to the contrary.  | ||
 (p-60) In addition to all other authority to issue bonds,  | ||
Wilmington Community Unit School District Number 209-U may  | ||
issue bonds with an aggregate principal amount not to exceed  | ||
$2,285,000, but only if all of the following conditions are  | ||
met: | ||
  (1) The proceeds of the bonds are used to accomplish  | ||
 only those projects approved by the voters at the general  | ||
 primary election held on March 21, 2006. | ||
  (2) Prior to the issuance of the bonds, the school  | ||
 board determines, by resolution, that (i) the projects  | ||
 approved by the voters were and are required because of the  | ||
 age and condition of the school district's prior and  | ||
 existing school buildings and (ii) the issuance of the  | ||
 bonds is authorized by legislation that exempts the debt  | ||
 incurred on the bonds from the district's statutory debt  | ||
 limitation. | ||
  (3) The bonds are issued in one or more bond issuances  | ||
 on or before March 1, 2011, but the aggregate principal  | ||
 amount issued in all those bond issuances combined must not  | ||
 exceed $2,285,000. | ||
  (4) The bonds are issued in accordance with this  | ||
 Article. | ||
 The debt incurred on any bonds issued under this subsection  | ||
(p-60) shall not be considered indebtedness for purposes of any  | ||
statutory debt limitation.  | ||
 (p-65) In addition to all other authority to issue bonds,  | ||
West Washington County Community Unit School District 10 may  | ||
issue bonds with an aggregate principal amount not to exceed  | ||
$32,200,000 and maturing over a period not exceeding 25 years,  | ||
but only if all of the following conditions are met: | ||
  (1) The voters of the district approve a proposition  | ||
 for the bond issuance at an election held on or after  | ||
 February 2, 2010. | ||
  (2) Prior to the issuance of the bonds, the school  | ||
 board determines, by resolution, that (A) all or a portion  | ||
 of the existing Okawville Junior/Senior High School  | ||
 Building will be demolished; (B) the building and equipping  | ||
 of a new school building to be attached to and the  | ||
 alteration, repair, and equipping of the remaining portion  | ||
 of the Okawville Junior/Senior High School Building is  | ||
 required because of the age and current condition of that  | ||
 school building; and (C) the issuance of bonds is  | ||
 authorized by a statute that exempts the debt incurred on  | ||
 the bonds from the district's statutory debt limitation. | ||
  (3) The bonds are issued, in one or more bond  | ||
 issuances, on or before March 31, 2014, but the aggregate  | ||
 principal amount issued in all such bond issuances combined  | ||
 must not exceed $32,200,000. | ||
  (4) The bonds are issued in accordance with this  | ||
 Article. | ||
  (5) The proceeds of the bonds are used to accomplish  | ||
 only those projects approved by the voters at an election  | ||
 held on or after February 2, 2010. | ||
 The debt incurred on any bonds issued under this subsection  | ||
(p-65) shall not be considered indebtedness for purposes of any  | ||
statutory debt limitation.  | ||
 (p-70) In addition to all other authority to issue bonds,  | ||
Cahokia Community Unit School District 187 may issue bonds with  | ||
an aggregate principal amount not to exceed $50,000,000, but  | ||
only if all the following conditions are met: | ||
  (1) The voters of the district approve a proposition  | ||
 for the bond issuance at an election held on or after  | ||
 November 2, 2010. | ||
  (2) Prior to the issuance of the bonds, the school  | ||
 board determines, by resolution, that (i) the building and  | ||
 equipping of a new school building is required as a result  | ||
 of the age and condition of an existing school building and  | ||
 (ii) the issuance of bonds is authorized by a statute that  | ||
 exempts the debt incurred on the bonds from the district's  | ||
 statutory debt limitation. | ||
  (3) The bonds are issued, in one or more issuances, on  | ||
 or before July 1, 2016, but the aggregate principal amount  | ||
 issued in all such bond issuances combined must not exceed  | ||
 $50,000,000. | ||
  (4) The bonds are issued in accordance with this  | ||
 Article. | ||
  (5) The proceeds of the bonds are used to accomplish  | ||
 only those projects approved by the voters at an election  | ||
 held on or after November 2, 2010. | ||
 The debt incurred on any bonds issued under this subsection  | ||
(p-70) shall not be considered indebtedness for purposes of any  | ||
statutory debt limitation. Bonds issued under this subsection  | ||
(p-70) must mature within not to exceed 25 years from their  | ||
date, notwithstanding any other law, including Section 19-3 of  | ||
this Code, to the contrary.  | ||
 (p-75) Notwithstanding the debt limitation prescribed in  | ||
subsection (a) of this Section
or any other provisions of this  | ||
Section or of any other law, the execution of leases on or
 | ||
after January 1, 2007 and before July 1, 2011 by the Board of  | ||
Education of Peoria School District 150 with a public building  | ||
commission for leases entered into pursuant to the Public
 | ||
Building Commission Act shall not be considered indebtedness  | ||
for purposes of any
statutory debt limitation.  | ||
 This subsection (p-75) applies only if the State Board of  | ||
Education or the Capital Development Board makes one or more  | ||
grants to Peoria School District 150 pursuant to the School  | ||
Construction Law. The amount exempted from the debt limitation  | ||
as prescribed in this subsection (p-75) shall be no greater  | ||
than the amount of one or more grants awarded to Peoria School  | ||
District 150 by the State Board of Education or the Capital  | ||
Development Board. | ||
 (p-80) In addition to all other authority to issue bonds,  | ||
Ridgeland School District 122 may issue bonds with an aggregate  | ||
principal amount not to exceed $50,000,000 for the purpose of  | ||
refunding or continuing to refund bonds originally issued  | ||
pursuant to voter approval at the general election held on  | ||
November 7, 2000, and the debt incurred on any bonds issued  | ||
under this subsection (p-80) shall not be considered  | ||
indebtedness for purposes of any statutory debt limitation.  | ||
Bonds issued under this subsection (p-80) may be issued in one  | ||
or more issuances and must mature within not to exceed 25 years  | ||
from their date, notwithstanding any other law, including  | ||
Section 19-3 of this Code, to the contrary.  | ||
 (p-85) In addition to all other authority to issue bonds,  | ||
Hall High School District 502 may issue bonds with an aggregate  | ||
principal amount not to exceed $32,000,000, but only if all the  | ||
following conditions are met: | ||
  (1) The voters of the district approve a proposition
 | ||
 for the bond issuance at an election held on or after April  | ||
 9, 2013. | ||
  (2) Prior to the issuance of the bonds, the school
 | ||
 board determines, by resolution, that (i) the building and  | ||
 equipping of a new school building is required as a result  | ||
 of the age and condition of an existing school building,  | ||
 (ii) the existing school building should be demolished in  | ||
 its entirety or the existing school building should be  | ||
 demolished except for the 1914 west wing of the building,  | ||
 and (iii) the issuance of bonds is authorized by a statute  | ||
 that exempts the debt incurred on the bonds from the  | ||
 district's statutory debt limitation. | ||
  (3) The bonds are issued, in one or more issuances, not  | ||
 later than 5 years after the date of the referendum  | ||
 approving the issuance of the bonds, but the aggregate  | ||
 principal amount issued in all such bond issuances combined  | ||
 must not exceed $32,000,000. | ||
  (4) The bonds are issued in accordance with this
 | ||
 Article. | ||
  (5) The proceeds of the bonds are used to accomplish
 | ||
 only those projects approved by the voters at an election  | ||
 held on or after April 9, 2013. | ||
 The debt incurred on any bonds issued under this subsection  | ||
(p-85) shall not be considered indebtedness for purposes of any  | ||
statutory debt limitation. Bonds issued under this subsection  | ||
(p-85) must mature within not to exceed 30 years from their  | ||
date, notwithstanding any other law, including Section 19-3 of  | ||
this Code, to the contrary.  | ||
 (p-90) In addition to all other authority to issue bonds,  | ||
Lebanon Community Unit School District 9 may issue bonds with  | ||
an aggregate principal amount not to exceed $7,500,000, but  | ||
only if all of the following conditions are met: | ||
  (1) The voters of the district approved a proposition  | ||
 for the bond issuance at the general primary election on  | ||
 February 2, 2010. | ||
  (2) At or prior to the time of the sale of the bonds,  | ||
 the school board determines, by resolution, that (i) the  | ||
 building and equipping of a new elementary school building  | ||
 is required as a result of a projected increase in the  | ||
 enrollment of students in the district and the age and  | ||
 condition of the existing Lebanon Elementary School  | ||
 building, (ii) a portion of the existing Lebanon Elementary  | ||
 School building will be demolished and the remaining  | ||
 portion will be altered, repaired, and equipped, and (iii)  | ||
 the sale of bonds is authorized by a statute that exempts  | ||
 the debt incurred on the bonds from the district's  | ||
 statutory debt limitation. | ||
  (3) The bonds are issued, in one or more bond  | ||
 issuances, on or before April 1, 2014, but the aggregate  | ||
 principal amount issued in all such bond issuances combined  | ||
 must not exceed $7,500,000. | ||
  (4) The bonds are issued in accordance with this  | ||
 Article. | ||
  (5) The proceeds of the bonds are used to accomplish  | ||
 only those projects approved by the voters at the general  | ||
 primary election held on February 2, 2010. | ||
 The debt incurred on any bonds issued under this subsection  | ||
(p-90) shall not be considered indebtedness for purposes of any  | ||
statutory debt limitation.  | ||
 (p-95) In addition to all other authority to issue bonds,  | ||
Monticello Community Unit School District 25 may issue bonds  | ||
with an aggregate principal amount not to exceed $35,000,000,  | ||
but only if all of the following conditions are met:  | ||
  (1) The voters of the district approve a proposition  | ||
 for the bond issuance at an election held on or after  | ||
 November 4, 2014. | ||
  (2) Prior to the issuance of the bonds, the school  | ||
 board determines, by resolution, that (i) the building and  | ||
 equipping of a new school building is required as a result  | ||
 of the age and condition of an existing school building and  | ||
 (ii) the issuance of bonds is authorized by a statute that  | ||
 exempts the debt incurred on the bonds from the district's  | ||
 statutory debt limitation. | ||
  (3) The bonds are issued, in one or more issuances, on  | ||
 or before July 1, 2020, but the aggregate principal amount  | ||
 issued in all such bond issuances combined must not exceed  | ||
 $35,000,000. | ||
  (4) The bonds are issued in accordance with this  | ||
 Article. | ||
  (5) The proceeds of the bonds are used to accomplish  | ||
 only those projects approved by the voters at an election  | ||
 held on or after November 4, 2014. | ||
 The debt incurred on any bonds issued under this subsection  | ||
(p-95) shall not be considered indebtedness for purposes of any  | ||
statutory debt limitation. Bonds issued under this subsection  | ||
(p-95) must mature within not to exceed 25 years from their  | ||
date, notwithstanding any other law, including Section 19-3 of  | ||
this Code, to the contrary.  | ||
 (p-100) (p-95) In addition to all other authority to issue  | ||
bonds, the community unit school district created in the  | ||
territory comprising Milford Community Consolidated School  | ||
District 280 and Milford Township High School District 233, as  | ||
approved at the general primary election held on March 18,  | ||
2014, may issue bonds with an aggregate principal amount not to  | ||
exceed $17,500,000, but only if all the following conditions  | ||
are met: | ||
  (1) The voters of the district approve a proposition  | ||
 for the bond issuance at an election held on or after  | ||
 November 4, 2014. | ||
  (2) Prior to the issuance of the bonds, the school  | ||
 board determines, by resolution, that (i) the building and  | ||
 equipping of a new school building is required as a result  | ||
 of the age and condition of an existing school building and  | ||
 (ii) the issuance of bonds is authorized by a statute that  | ||
 exempts the debt incurred on the bonds from the district's  | ||
 statutory debt limitation. | ||
  (3) The bonds are issued, in one or more issuances, on  | ||
 or before July 1, 2020, but the aggregate principal amount  | ||
 issued in all such bond issuances combined must not exceed  | ||
 $17,500,000. | ||
  (4) The bonds are issued in accordance with this  | ||
 Article. | ||
  (5) The proceeds of the bonds are used to accomplish  | ||
 only those projects approved by the voters at an election  | ||
 held on or after November 4, 2014. | ||
 The debt incurred on any bonds issued under this subsection  | ||
(p-100) (p-95) shall not be considered indebtedness for  | ||
purposes of any statutory debt limitation. Bonds issued under  | ||
this subsection (p-100) (p-95) must mature within not to exceed  | ||
25 years from their date, notwithstanding any other law,  | ||
including Section 19-3 of this Code, to the contrary.  | ||
 (q) A school district must notify the State Board of  | ||
Education prior to issuing any form of long-term or short-term  | ||
debt that will result in outstanding debt that exceeds 75% of  | ||
the debt limit specified in this Section or any other provision  | ||
of law.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-333, eff. 8-12-11; 97-834, eff. 7-20-12;  | ||
97-1146, eff. 1-18-13; 98-617, eff. 1-7-14; 98-912, eff.  | ||
8-15-14; 98-916, eff. 8-15-14; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 5/24-12) (from Ch. 122, par. 24-12)
 | ||
 Sec. 24-12. Removal or dismissal of teachers in contractual
 | ||
continued service.  | ||
 (a) This subsection (a) applies only to honorable  | ||
dismissals and recalls in which the notice of dismissal is  | ||
provided on or before the end of the 2010-2011 school term. If  | ||
a teacher in contractual continued service is
removed or  | ||
dismissed as a result of a decision of the board to decrease
 | ||
the number of teachers employed by the board or to discontinue  | ||
some
particular type of teaching service, written notice shall  | ||
be mailed to the
teacher and also given the
teacher either by  | ||
certified mail, return receipt requested or
personal delivery  | ||
with receipt at least 60
days before
the end of the school  | ||
term, together with a statement of honorable
dismissal and the  | ||
reason therefor, and in all such cases the board shall
first  | ||
remove or dismiss all teachers who have not entered upon  | ||
contractual
continued service before removing or dismissing  | ||
any teacher who has entered
upon contractual continued service  | ||
and who is legally qualified to hold a
position currently held  | ||
by a teacher who has not entered upon contractual
continued  | ||
service.  | ||
 As between teachers who have entered upon contractual
 | ||
continued service, the teacher or teachers with the shorter  | ||
length of
continuing service with the district shall be  | ||
dismissed first
unless an alternative method of determining the  | ||
sequence of dismissal is
established in a collective bargaining  | ||
agreement or contract between the
board and a professional  | ||
faculty members' organization and except that
this provision  | ||
shall not impair the operation of any affirmative action
 | ||
program in the district, regardless of whether it exists by  | ||
operation of
law or is conducted on a voluntary basis by the  | ||
board. Any teacher
dismissed as a result of such decrease or  | ||
discontinuance shall be paid
all earned compensation on or  | ||
before the third business day following
the last day of pupil  | ||
attendance in the regular school term.  | ||
 If the
board has any vacancies for the following school  | ||
term or within one
calendar year from the beginning of the  | ||
following school term, the
positions thereby becoming  | ||
available shall be tendered to the teachers
so removed or  | ||
dismissed so far as they are legally qualified to hold
such  | ||
positions; provided, however, that if the number of honorable
 | ||
dismissal notices based on economic necessity exceeds 15% of  | ||
the number of
full time equivalent positions filled by  | ||
certified employees (excluding
principals and administrative  | ||
personnel) during the preceding school year,
then if the board  | ||
has any vacancies for the following school term or within
2  | ||
calendar years from the beginning of the following
school term,  | ||
the positions so becoming available shall be tendered to the
 | ||
teachers who were so notified and removed or dismissed whenever  | ||
they are
legally qualified to hold such positions. Each board  | ||
shall, in consultation
with any exclusive employee  | ||
representatives, each year establish a list,
categorized by  | ||
positions, showing the length of continuing service of each
 | ||
teacher who is qualified to hold any such positions, unless an  | ||
alternative
method of determining a sequence of dismissal is  | ||
established as provided
for in this Section, in which case a  | ||
list shall be made in accordance with
the alternative method.  | ||
Copies of the list shall be distributed to the
exclusive  | ||
employee representative on or before February 1 of each year.
 | ||
Whenever the number of honorable dismissal notices based upon  | ||
economic
necessity exceeds 5, or 150% of the average number of  | ||
teachers honorably
dismissed in the preceding 3 years,  | ||
whichever is more, then the board also
shall hold a public  | ||
hearing on the question of the dismissals. Following
the  | ||
hearing and board review the action to approve any such  | ||
reduction shall
require a majority vote of the board members.
 | ||
 (b) This subsection (b) applies only to honorable  | ||
dismissals and recalls in which the notice of dismissal is  | ||
provided during the 2011-2012 school term or a subsequent  | ||
school term. If any teacher, whether or not in contractual  | ||
continued service, is removed or dismissed as a result of a  | ||
decision of a school board to decrease the number of teachers  | ||
employed by the board, a decision of a school board to  | ||
discontinue some particular type of teaching service, or a  | ||
reduction in the number of programs or positions in a special  | ||
education joint agreement, then written notice must be mailed  | ||
to the teacher and also given to the teacher either by  | ||
certified mail, return receipt requested, or personal delivery  | ||
with receipt at least 45 days before the end of the school  | ||
term, together with a statement of honorable dismissal and the  | ||
reason therefor, and in all such cases the sequence of  | ||
dismissal shall occur in accordance with this subsection (b);  | ||
except that this subsection (b) shall not impair the operation  | ||
of any affirmative action program in the school district,  | ||
regardless of whether it exists by operation of law or is  | ||
conducted on a voluntary basis by the board. | ||
 Each teacher must be categorized into one or more positions  | ||
for which the teacher is qualified to hold, based upon legal  | ||
qualifications and any other qualifications established in a  | ||
district or joint agreement job description, on or before the  | ||
May 10 prior to the school year during which the sequence of  | ||
dismissal is determined. Within each position and subject to  | ||
agreements made by the joint committee on honorable dismissals  | ||
that are authorized by subsection (c) of this Section, the  | ||
school district or joint agreement must establish 4 groupings  | ||
of teachers qualified to hold the position as follows: | ||
  (1) Grouping one shall consist of each teacher who is  | ||
 not in contractual continued service and who (i) has not  | ||
 received a performance evaluation rating, (ii) is employed  | ||
 for one school term or less to replace a teacher on leave,  | ||
 or (iii) is employed on a part-time basis. "Part-time  | ||
 basis" for the purposes of this subsection (b) means a  | ||
 teacher who is employed to teach less than a full-day,  | ||
 teacher workload or less than 5 days of the normal student  | ||
 attendance week, unless otherwise provided for in a  | ||
 collective bargaining agreement between the district and  | ||
 the exclusive representative of the district's teachers.  | ||
 For the purposes of this Section, a teacher (A) who is  | ||
 employed as a full-time teacher but who actually teaches or  | ||
 is otherwise present and participating in the district's  | ||
 educational program for less than a school term or (B) who,  | ||
 in the immediately previous school term, was employed on a  | ||
 full-time basis and actually taught or was otherwise  | ||
 present and participated in the district's educational  | ||
 program for 120 days or more is not considered employed on  | ||
 a part-time basis. | ||
  (2) Grouping 2 shall consist of each teacher with a  | ||
 Needs Improvement or Unsatisfactory performance evaluation  | ||
 rating on either of the teacher's last 2 performance  | ||
 evaluation ratings. | ||
  (3) Grouping 3 shall consist of each teacher with a  | ||
 performance evaluation rating of at least Satisfactory or  | ||
 Proficient on both of the teacher's last 2 performance  | ||
 evaluation ratings, if 2 ratings are available, or on the  | ||
 teacher's last performance evaluation rating, if only one  | ||
 rating is available, unless the teacher qualifies for  | ||
 placement into grouping 4. | ||
  (4) Grouping 4 shall consist of each teacher whose last  | ||
 2 performance evaluation ratings are Excellent and each  | ||
 teacher with 2 Excellent performance evaluation ratings  | ||
 out of the teacher's last 3 performance evaluation ratings  | ||
 with a third rating of Satisfactory or Proficient. | ||
 Among teachers qualified to hold a position, teachers must  | ||
be dismissed in the order of their groupings, with teachers in  | ||
grouping one dismissed first and teachers in grouping 4  | ||
dismissed last. | ||
 Within grouping one, the sequence of dismissal must be at  | ||
the discretion of the school district or joint agreement.  | ||
Within grouping 2, the sequence of dismissal must be based upon  | ||
average performance evaluation ratings, with the teacher or  | ||
teachers with the lowest average performance evaluation rating  | ||
dismissed first. A teacher's average performance evaluation  | ||
rating must be calculated using the average of the teacher's  | ||
last 2 performance evaluation ratings, if 2 ratings are  | ||
available, or the teacher's last performance evaluation  | ||
rating, if only one rating is available, using the following  | ||
numerical values: 4 for Excellent; 3 for Proficient or  | ||
Satisfactory; 2 for Needs Improvement; and 1 for  | ||
Unsatisfactory. As between or among teachers in grouping 2 with  | ||
the same average performance evaluation rating and within each  | ||
of groupings 3 and 4, the teacher or teachers with the shorter  | ||
length of continuing service with the school district or joint  | ||
agreement must be dismissed first unless an alternative method  | ||
of determining the sequence of dismissal is established in a  | ||
collective bargaining agreement or contract between the board  | ||
and a professional faculty members' organization. | ||
 Each board, including the governing board of a joint  | ||
agreement, shall, in consultation with any exclusive employee  | ||
representatives, each year establish a sequence of honorable  | ||
dismissal list categorized by positions and the groupings  | ||
defined in this subsection (b). Copies of the list showing each  | ||
teacher by name and categorized by positions and the groupings  | ||
defined in this subsection (b) must be distributed to the  | ||
exclusive bargaining representative at least 75 days before the  | ||
end of the school term, provided that the school district or  | ||
joint agreement may, with notice to any exclusive employee  | ||
representatives, move teachers from grouping one into another  | ||
grouping during the period of time from 75 days until 45 days  | ||
before the end of the school term. Each year, each board shall  | ||
also establish, in consultation with any exclusive employee  | ||
representatives, a list showing the length of continuing  | ||
service of each teacher who is qualified to hold any such  | ||
positions, unless an alternative method of determining a  | ||
sequence of dismissal is established as provided for in this  | ||
Section, in which case a list must be made in accordance with  | ||
the alternative method. Copies of the list must be distributed  | ||
to the exclusive employee representative at least 75 days  | ||
before the end of the school term.  | ||
 Any teacher dismissed as a result of such decrease or  | ||
discontinuance must be paid all earned compensation on or  | ||
before the third business day following the last day of pupil  | ||
attendance in the regular school term. | ||
 If the board or joint agreement has any vacancies for the  | ||
following school term or within one calendar year from the  | ||
beginning of the following school term, the positions thereby  | ||
becoming available must be tendered to the teachers so removed  | ||
or dismissed who were in groupings 3 or 4 of the sequence of  | ||
dismissal and are qualified to hold the positions, based upon  | ||
legal qualifications and any other qualifications established  | ||
in a district or joint agreement job description, on or before  | ||
the May 10 prior to the date of the positions becoming  | ||
available, provided that if the number of honorable dismissal  | ||
notices based on economic necessity exceeds 15% of the number  | ||
of full-time equivalent positions filled by certified  | ||
employees (excluding principals and administrative personnel)  | ||
during the preceding school year, then the recall period is for  | ||
the following school term or within 2 calendar years from the  | ||
beginning of the following school term. If the board or joint  | ||
agreement has any vacancies within the period from the  | ||
beginning of the following school term through February 1 of  | ||
the following school term (unless a date later than February 1,  | ||
but no later than 6 months from the beginning of the following  | ||
school term, is established in a collective bargaining  | ||
agreement), the positions thereby becoming available must be  | ||
tendered to the teachers so removed or dismissed who were in  | ||
grouping 2 of the sequence of dismissal due to one "needs  | ||
improvement" rating on either of the teacher's last 2  | ||
performance evaluation ratings, provided that, if 2 ratings are  | ||
available, the other performance evaluation rating used for  | ||
grouping purposes is "satisfactory", "proficient", or  | ||
"excellent", and are qualified to hold the positions, based  | ||
upon legal qualifications and any other qualifications  | ||
established in a district or joint agreement job description,  | ||
on or before the May 10 prior to the date of the positions  | ||
becoming available. On and after the effective date of this  | ||
amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, the preceding  | ||
sentence shall apply to teachers removed or dismissed by  | ||
honorable dismissal, even if notice of honorable dismissal  | ||
occurred during the 2013-2014 school year. Among teachers  | ||
eligible for recall pursuant to the preceding sentence, the  | ||
order of recall must be in inverse order of dismissal, unless  | ||
an alternative order of recall is established in a collective  | ||
bargaining agreement or contract between the board and a  | ||
professional faculty members' organization. Whenever the  | ||
number of honorable dismissal notices based upon economic  | ||
necessity exceeds 5 notices or 150% of the average number of  | ||
teachers honorably dismissed in the preceding 3 years,  | ||
whichever is more, then the school board or governing board of  | ||
a joint agreement, as applicable, shall also hold a public  | ||
hearing on the question of the dismissals. Following the  | ||
hearing and board review, the action to approve any such  | ||
reduction shall require a majority vote of the board members. | ||
 For purposes of this subsection (b), subject to agreement  | ||
on an alternative definition reached by the joint committee  | ||
described in subsection (c) of this Section, a teacher's  | ||
performance evaluation rating means the overall performance  | ||
evaluation rating resulting from an annual or biennial  | ||
performance evaluation conducted pursuant to Article 24A of  | ||
this Code by the school district or joint agreement determining  | ||
the sequence of dismissal, not including any performance  | ||
evaluation conducted during or at the end of a remediation  | ||
period. No more than one evaluation rating each school term  | ||
shall be one of the evaluation ratings used for the purpose of  | ||
determining the sequence of dismissal. Except as otherwise  | ||
provided in this subsection for any performance evaluations  | ||
conducted during or at the end of a remediation period, if  | ||
multiple performance evaluations are conducted in a school  | ||
term, only the rating from the last evaluation conducted prior  | ||
to establishing the sequence of honorable dismissal list in  | ||
such school term shall be the one evaluation rating from that  | ||
school term used for the purpose of determining the sequence of  | ||
dismissal. Averaging ratings from multiple evaluations is not  | ||
permitted unless otherwise agreed to in a collective bargaining  | ||
agreement or contract between the board and a professional  | ||
faculty members' organization. The preceding 3 sentences are  | ||
not a legislative declaration that existing law does or does  | ||
not already require that only one performance evaluation each  | ||
school term shall be used for the purpose of determining the  | ||
sequence of dismissal. For performance evaluation ratings  | ||
determined prior to September 1, 2012, any school district or  | ||
joint agreement with a performance evaluation rating system  | ||
that does not use either of the rating category systems  | ||
specified in subsection (d) of Section 24A-5 of this Code for  | ||
all teachers must establish a basis for assigning each teacher  | ||
a rating that complies with subsection (d) of Section 24A-5 of  | ||
this Code for all of the performance evaluation ratings that  | ||
are to be used to determine the sequence of dismissal. A  | ||
teacher's grouping and ranking on a sequence of honorable  | ||
dismissal shall be deemed a part of the teacher's performance  | ||
evaluation, and that information shall be disclosed to the  | ||
exclusive bargaining representative as part of a sequence of  | ||
honorable dismissal list, notwithstanding any laws prohibiting  | ||
disclosure of such information. A performance evaluation  | ||
rating may be used to determine the sequence of dismissal,  | ||
notwithstanding the pendency of any grievance resolution or  | ||
arbitration procedures relating to the performance evaluation.  | ||
If a teacher has received at least one performance evaluation  | ||
rating conducted by the school district or joint agreement  | ||
determining the sequence of dismissal and a subsequent  | ||
performance evaluation is not conducted in any school year in  | ||
which such evaluation is required to be conducted under Section  | ||
24A-5 of this Code, the teacher's performance evaluation rating  | ||
for that school year for purposes of determining the sequence  | ||
of dismissal is deemed Proficient. If a performance evaluation  | ||
rating is nullified as the result of an arbitration,  | ||
administrative agency, or court determination, then the school  | ||
district or joint agreement is deemed to have conducted a  | ||
performance evaluation for that school year, but the  | ||
performance evaluation rating may not be used in determining  | ||
the sequence of dismissal. | ||
 Nothing in this subsection (b) shall be construed as  | ||
limiting the right of a school board or governing board of a  | ||
joint agreement to dismiss a teacher not in contractual  | ||
continued service in accordance with Section 24-11 of this  | ||
Code. | ||
 Any provisions regarding the sequence of honorable  | ||
dismissals and recall of honorably dismissed teachers in a  | ||
collective bargaining agreement entered into on or before  | ||
January 1, 2011 and in effect on the effective date of this  | ||
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly that may conflict  | ||
with this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly shall  | ||
remain in effect through the expiration of such agreement or  | ||
June 30, 2013, whichever is earlier. | ||
 (c) Each school district and special education joint  | ||
agreement must use a joint committee composed of equal  | ||
representation selected by the school board and its teachers  | ||
or, if applicable, the exclusive bargaining representative of  | ||
its teachers, to address the matters described in paragraphs  | ||
(1) through (5) of this subsection (c) pertaining to honorable  | ||
dismissals under subsection (b) of this Section. | ||
  (1) The joint committee must consider and may agree to  | ||
 criteria for excluding from grouping 2 and placing into  | ||
 grouping 3 a teacher whose last 2 performance evaluations  | ||
 include a Needs Improvement and either a Proficient or  | ||
 Excellent. | ||
  (2) The joint committee must consider and may agree to  | ||
 an alternative definition for grouping 4, which definition  | ||
 must take into account prior performance evaluation  | ||
 ratings and may take into account other factors that relate  | ||
 to the school district's or program's educational  | ||
 objectives. An alternative definition for grouping 4 may  | ||
 not permit the inclusion of a teacher in the grouping with  | ||
 a Needs Improvement or Unsatisfactory performance  | ||
 evaluation rating on either of the teacher's last 2  | ||
 performance evaluation ratings. | ||
  (3) The joint committee may agree to including within  | ||
 the definition of a performance evaluation rating a  | ||
 performance evaluation rating administered by a school  | ||
 district or joint agreement other than the school district  | ||
 or joint agreement determining the sequence of dismissal. | ||
  (4) For each school district or joint agreement that  | ||
 administers performance evaluation ratings that are  | ||
 inconsistent with either of the rating category systems  | ||
 specified in subsection (d) of Section 24A-5 of this Code,  | ||
 the school district or joint agreement must consult with  | ||
 the joint committee on the basis for assigning a rating  | ||
 that complies with subsection (d) of Section 24A-5 of this  | ||
 Code to each performance evaluation rating that will be  | ||
 used in a sequence of dismissal. | ||
  (5) Upon request by a joint committee member submitted  | ||
 to the employing board by no later than 10 days after the  | ||
 distribution of the sequence of honorable dismissal list, a  | ||
 representative of the employing board shall, within 5 days  | ||
 after the request, provide to members of the joint  | ||
 committee a list showing the most recent and prior  | ||
 performance evaluation ratings of each teacher identified  | ||
 only by length of continuing service in the district or  | ||
 joint agreement and not by name. If, after review of this  | ||
 list, a member of the joint committee has a good faith  | ||
 belief that a disproportionate number of teachers with  | ||
 greater length of continuing service with the district or  | ||
 joint agreement have received a recent performance  | ||
 evaluation rating lower than the prior rating, the member  | ||
 may request that the joint committee review the list to  | ||
 assess whether such a trend may exist. Following the joint  | ||
 committee's review, but by no later than the end of the  | ||
 applicable school term, the joint committee or any member  | ||
 or members of the joint committee may submit a report of  | ||
 the review to the employing board and exclusive bargaining  | ||
 representative, if any. Nothing in this paragraph (5) shall  | ||
 impact the order of honorable dismissal or a school  | ||
 district's or joint agreement's authority to carry out a  | ||
 dismissal in accordance with subsection (b) of this  | ||
 Section. | ||
 Agreement by the joint committee as to a matter requires  | ||
the majority vote of all committee members, and if the joint  | ||
committee does not reach agreement on a matter, then the  | ||
otherwise applicable requirements of subsection (b) of this  | ||
Section shall apply. Except as explicitly set forth in this  | ||
subsection (c), a joint committee has no authority to agree to  | ||
any further modifications to the requirements for honorable  | ||
dismissals set forth in subsection (b) of this Section.
The  | ||
joint committee must be established, and the first meeting of  | ||
the joint committee each school year must occur on or before  | ||
December 1. | ||
 The joint committee must reach agreement on a matter on or  | ||
before February 1 of a school year in order for the agreement  | ||
of the joint committee to apply to the sequence of dismissal  | ||
determined during that school year. Subject to the February 1  | ||
deadline for agreements, the agreement of a joint committee on  | ||
a matter shall apply to the sequence of dismissal until the  | ||
agreement is amended or terminated by the joint committee.  | ||
 (d) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this  | ||
subsection (d), the requirements and dismissal procedures of  | ||
Section 24-16.5 of this Code shall apply to any dismissal  | ||
sought under Section 24-16.5 of this Code. | ||
  (1) If a dismissal of a teacher in contractual  | ||
 continued service is sought for any reason or cause other  | ||
 than an honorable dismissal under subsections (a) or (b) of  | ||
 this Section or a dismissal sought under Section 24-16.5 of  | ||
 this Code,
including those under Section 10-22.4, the board  | ||
 must first approve a
motion containing specific charges by  | ||
 a majority vote of all its
members. Written notice of such  | ||
 charges, including a bill of particulars and the teacher's  | ||
 right to request a hearing, must be mailed to the teacher  | ||
 and also given to the teacher either by certified mail,  | ||
 return receipt requested, or personal delivery with  | ||
 receipt
within 5 days of the adoption of the motion. Any  | ||
 written notice sent on or after July 1, 2012 shall inform  | ||
 the teacher of the right to request a hearing before a  | ||
 mutually selected hearing officer, with the cost of the  | ||
 hearing officer split equally between the teacher and the  | ||
 board, or a hearing before a board-selected hearing  | ||
 officer, with the cost of the hearing officer paid by the  | ||
 board. | ||
  Before setting a hearing on charges stemming from  | ||
 causes that are considered remediable, a board must give  | ||
 the teacher reasonable warning in writing, stating  | ||
 specifically the causes that, if not removed, may result in  | ||
 charges; however, no such written warning is required if  | ||
 the causes have been the subject of a remediation plan  | ||
 pursuant to Article 24A of this Code. | ||
  If, in the opinion of the board, the interests of the  | ||
 school require it, the board may suspend the teacher  | ||
 without pay, pending the hearing, but if the board's  | ||
 dismissal or removal is not sustained, the teacher shall  | ||
 not suffer the loss of any salary or benefits by reason of  | ||
 the suspension. | ||
  (2) No hearing upon the charges is required unless the
 | ||
 teacher within 17 days after receiving notice requests in  | ||
 writing of the
board that a hearing be scheduled before a  | ||
 mutually selected hearing officer or a hearing officer  | ||
 selected by the board.
The secretary of the school board  | ||
 shall forward a copy of the notice to the
State Board of  | ||
 Education. | ||
  (3) Within 5 business days after receiving a notice of
 | ||
 hearing in which either notice to the teacher was sent  | ||
 before July 1, 2012 or, if the notice was sent on or after  | ||
 July 1, 2012, the teacher has requested a hearing before a  | ||
 mutually selected hearing officer, the State Board of  | ||
 Education shall provide a list of 5
prospective, impartial  | ||
 hearing officers from the master list of qualified,  | ||
 impartial hearing officers maintained by the State Board of  | ||
 Education. Each person on the master list must (i) be
 | ||
 accredited by a national arbitration organization and have  | ||
 had a minimum of 5
years of experience directly related to  | ||
 labor and employment
relations matters between employers  | ||
 and employees or
their exclusive bargaining  | ||
 representatives and (ii) beginning September 1, 2012, have  | ||
 participated in training provided or approved by the State  | ||
 Board of Education for teacher dismissal hearing officers  | ||
 so that he or she is familiar with issues generally  | ||
 involved in evaluative and non-evaluative dismissals. | ||
  If notice to the teacher was sent before July 1, 2012  | ||
 or, if the notice was sent on or after July 1, 2012, the  | ||
 teacher has requested a hearing before a mutually selected  | ||
 hearing officer, the board and the teacher or their
legal  | ||
 representatives within 3 business days shall alternately  | ||
 strike one name from
the list provided by the State Board  | ||
 of Education until only one name remains. Unless waived by  | ||
 the teacher, the
teacher shall have the right to
proceed  | ||
 first with the striking.
Within 3 business days of receipt  | ||
 of the list provided by the State Board of
Education, the  | ||
 board and the teacher or their legal representatives shall  | ||
 each
have the right to reject all prospective hearing  | ||
 officers named on the
list and notify the State Board of  | ||
 Education of such rejection. Within 3 business days after  | ||
 receiving this notification, the State
Board of Education  | ||
 shall appoint a qualified person from the master list who  | ||
 did not appear on the list sent to the parties to serve as  | ||
 the hearing officer, unless the parties notify it that they  | ||
 have chosen to alternatively select a hearing officer under  | ||
 paragraph (4) of this subsection (d). | ||
  If the teacher has requested a hearing before a hearing  | ||
 officer selected by the board, the board shall select one  | ||
 name from the master list of qualified impartial hearing  | ||
 officers maintained by the State Board of Education within  | ||
 3 business days after receipt and shall notify the State  | ||
 Board of Education of its selection. | ||
  A hearing officer mutually selected by the parties,  | ||
 selected by the board, or selected through an alternative  | ||
 selection process under paragraph (4) of this subsection  | ||
 (d) (A) must not be a resident of the school district, (B)  | ||
 must be available to commence the hearing within 75 days  | ||
 and conclude the hearing within 120 days after being  | ||
 selected as the hearing officer, and (C) must issue a  | ||
 decision as to whether the teacher must be dismissed and  | ||
 give a copy of that decision to both the teacher and the  | ||
 board within 30 days from the conclusion of the hearing or  | ||
 closure of the record, whichever is later. | ||
  (4) In the alternative
to selecting a hearing officer  | ||
 from the list received from the
State Board of Education or  | ||
 accepting the appointment of a hearing officer by the State  | ||
 Board of Education or if the State Board of Education  | ||
 cannot provide a list or appoint a hearing officer that  | ||
 meets the foregoing requirements, the board and the teacher  | ||
 or their legal
representatives may mutually agree to select  | ||
 an impartial hearing officer who
is not on the master list  | ||
 either by direct
appointment by the parties or by using  | ||
 procedures for the appointment of an
arbitrator  | ||
 established by the Federal Mediation and Conciliation  | ||
 Service or the
American Arbitration Association. The  | ||
 parties shall notify the State Board of
Education of their  | ||
 intent to select a hearing officer using an alternative
 | ||
 procedure within 3 business days of receipt of a list of  | ||
 prospective hearing officers
provided by the State Board of  | ||
 Education, notice of appointment of a hearing officer by  | ||
 the State Board of Education, or receipt of notice from the  | ||
 State Board of Education that it cannot provide a list that  | ||
 meets the foregoing requirements, whichever is later.  | ||
  (5) If the notice of dismissal was sent to the teacher  | ||
 before July 1, 2012, the fees and costs for the hearing  | ||
 officer must be paid by the State Board of Education. If  | ||
 the notice of dismissal was sent to the teacher on or after  | ||
 July 1, 2012, the hearing officer's fees and costs must be  | ||
 paid as follows in this paragraph (5). The fees and  | ||
 permissible costs for the hearing officer must be  | ||
 determined by the State Board of Education. If the board  | ||
 and the teacher or their legal representatives mutually  | ||
 agree to select an impartial hearing officer who is not on  | ||
 a list received from the State Board of Education, they may  | ||
 agree to supplement the fees determined by the State Board  | ||
 to the hearing officer, at a rate consistent with the  | ||
 hearing officer's published professional fees. If the  | ||
 hearing officer is mutually selected by the parties, then  | ||
 the board and the teacher or their legal representatives  | ||
 shall each pay 50% of the fees and costs and any  | ||
 supplemental allowance to which they agree. If the hearing  | ||
 officer is selected by the board, then the board shall pay  | ||
 100% of the hearing officer's fees and costs. The fees and  | ||
 costs must be paid to the hearing officer within 14 days  | ||
 after the board and the teacher or their legal  | ||
 representatives receive the hearing officer's decision set  | ||
 forth in paragraph (7) of this subsection (d). | ||
  (6) The teacher is required to answer the bill of  | ||
 particulars and aver affirmative matters in his or her  | ||
 defense, and the time for initially doing so and the time  | ||
 for updating such answer and defenses after pre-hearing  | ||
 discovery must be set by the hearing officer.
The State  | ||
 Board of Education shall
promulgate rules so that each  | ||
 party has a fair opportunity to present its case and to  | ||
 ensure that the dismissal process proceeds in a fair and  | ||
 expeditious manner. These rules shall address, without  | ||
 limitation, discovery and hearing scheduling conferences;  | ||
 the teacher's initial answer and affirmative defenses to  | ||
 the bill of particulars and the updating of that  | ||
 information after pre-hearing discovery; provision for  | ||
 written interrogatories and requests for production of  | ||
 documents; the requirement that each party initially  | ||
 disclose to the other party and then update the disclosure  | ||
 no later than 10 calendar days prior to the commencement of  | ||
 the hearing, the names and addresses of persons who may be  | ||
 called as
witnesses at the hearing, a summary of the facts  | ||
 or opinions each witness will testify to, and all other
 | ||
 documents and materials, including information maintained  | ||
 electronically, relevant to its own as well as the other  | ||
 party's case (the hearing officer may exclude witnesses and  | ||
 exhibits not identified and shared, except those offered in  | ||
 rebuttal for which the party could not reasonably have  | ||
 anticipated prior to the hearing); pre-hearing discovery  | ||
 and preparation, including provision for written  | ||
 interrogatories and requests for production of documents,  | ||
 provided that discovery depositions are prohibited; the  | ||
 conduct of the hearing; the right of each party to be  | ||
 represented by counsel, the offer of evidence and witnesses  | ||
 and the cross-examination of witnesses; the authority of  | ||
 the hearing officer to issue subpoenas and subpoenas duces  | ||
 tecum, provided that the hearing officer may limit the  | ||
 number of witnesses to be subpoenaed on behalf of each  | ||
 party to no more than 7; the length of post-hearing briefs;  | ||
 and the form, length, and content of hearing officers'  | ||
 decisions. The hearing officer
shall hold a hearing and  | ||
 render a final decision for dismissal pursuant to Article  | ||
 24A of this Code or shall report to the school board  | ||
 findings of fact and a recommendation as to whether or not  | ||
 the teacher must be dismissed for conduct. The hearing  | ||
 officer shall commence the hearing within 75 days and  | ||
 conclude the hearing within 120 days after being selected  | ||
 as the hearing officer, provided that the hearing officer  | ||
 may modify these timelines upon the showing of good cause  | ||
 or mutual agreement of the parties. Good cause for the  | ||
 purpose of this subsection (d) shall mean the illness or  | ||
 otherwise unavoidable emergency of the teacher, district  | ||
 representative, their legal representatives, the hearing  | ||
 officer, or an essential witness as indicated in each  | ||
 party's pre-hearing submission. In a dismissal hearing  | ||
 pursuant to Article 24A of this Code, the hearing officer  | ||
 shall consider and give weight to all of the teacher's  | ||
 evaluations written pursuant to Article 24A that are  | ||
 relevant to the issues in the hearing. | ||
  Each party shall have no more than 3 days to present  | ||
 its case, unless extended by the hearing officer to enable  | ||
 a party to present adequate evidence and testimony,  | ||
 including due to the other party's cross-examination of the  | ||
 party's witnesses, for good cause or by mutual agreement of  | ||
 the parties. The State Board of Education shall define in  | ||
 rules the meaning of "day" for such purposes. All testimony  | ||
 at the hearing shall be taken under oath
administered by  | ||
 the hearing officer. The hearing officer shall cause a
 | ||
 record of the proceedings to be kept and shall employ a  | ||
 competent reporter
to take stenographic or stenotype notes  | ||
 of all the testimony. The costs of
the reporter's  | ||
 attendance and services at the hearing shall be paid by the  | ||
 party or parties who are responsible for paying the fees  | ||
 and costs of the hearing officer. Either party desiring a  | ||
 transcript of the hearing
shall pay for the cost thereof.  | ||
 Any post-hearing briefs must be submitted by the parties by  | ||
 no later than 21 days after a party's receipt of the  | ||
 transcript of the hearing, unless extended by the hearing  | ||
 officer for good cause or by mutual agreement of the  | ||
 parties. | ||
  (7) The hearing officer shall, within 30 days from the  | ||
 conclusion of the
hearing or closure of the record,  | ||
 whichever is later,
make a decision as to whether or not  | ||
 the teacher shall be dismissed pursuant to Article 24A of  | ||
 this Code or report to the school board findings of fact  | ||
 and a recommendation as to whether or not the teacher shall  | ||
 be dismissed for cause and
shall give a copy of the  | ||
 decision or findings of fact and recommendation to both the  | ||
 teacher and the school
board.
If a hearing officer fails
 | ||
 without good cause, specifically provided in writing to  | ||
 both parties and the State Board of Education, to render a  | ||
 decision or findings of fact and recommendation within 30  | ||
 days after the hearing is
concluded or the
record is  | ||
 closed, whichever is later,
the
parties may mutually agree  | ||
 to select a hearing officer pursuant to the
alternative
 | ||
 procedure, as provided in this Section,
to rehear the  | ||
 charges heard by the hearing officer who failed to render a
 | ||
 decision or findings of fact and recommendation or to  | ||
 review the record and render a decision.
If any hearing
 | ||
 officer fails without good cause, specifically provided in  | ||
 writing to both parties and the State Board of Education,  | ||
 to render a decision or findings of fact and recommendation  | ||
 within 30 days after the
hearing is concluded or the record  | ||
 is closed, whichever is later, the hearing
officer shall be  | ||
 removed
from the master
list of hearing officers maintained  | ||
 by the State Board of Education for not more than 24  | ||
 months. The parties and the State Board of Education may  | ||
 also take such other actions as it deems appropriate,  | ||
 including recovering, reducing, or withholding any fees  | ||
 paid or to be paid to the hearing officer. If any hearing  | ||
 officer repeats such failure, he or she must be permanently  | ||
 removed from the master list maintained by the State Board  | ||
 of Education and may not be selected by parties through the  | ||
 alternative selection process under this paragraph (7) or  | ||
 paragraph (4) of this subsection (d).
The board shall not  | ||
 lose jurisdiction to discharge a teacher if the hearing
 | ||
 officer fails to render a decision or findings of fact and  | ||
 recommendation within the time specified in this
Section.  | ||
 If the decision of the hearing officer for dismissal  | ||
 pursuant to Article 24A of this Code or of the school board  | ||
 for dismissal for cause is in favor of the teacher, then  | ||
 the hearing officer or school board shall order  | ||
 reinstatement to the same or substantially equivalent  | ||
 position and shall determine the amount for which the  | ||
 school board is liable, including, but not limited to, loss  | ||
 of income and benefits. | ||
  (8) The school board, within 45 days after receipt of  | ||
 the hearing officer's findings of fact and recommendation  | ||
 as to whether (i) the conduct at issue occurred, (ii) the  | ||
 conduct that did occur was remediable, and (iii) the  | ||
 proposed dismissal should be sustained, shall issue a  | ||
 written order as to whether the teacher must be retained or  | ||
 dismissed for cause from its employ. The school board's  | ||
 written order shall incorporate the hearing officer's  | ||
 findings of fact, except that the school board may modify  | ||
 or supplement the findings of fact if, in its opinion, the  | ||
 findings of fact are against the manifest weight of the  | ||
 evidence. | ||
  If the school board dismisses the teacher  | ||
 notwithstanding the hearing officer's findings of fact and  | ||
 recommendation, the school board shall make a conclusion in  | ||
 its written order, giving its reasons therefor, and such  | ||
 conclusion and reasons must be included in its written  | ||
 order. The failure of the school board to strictly adhere  | ||
 to the timelines contained in this Section shall not render  | ||
 it without jurisdiction to dismiss the teacher. The school  | ||
 board shall not lose jurisdiction to discharge the teacher  | ||
 for cause if the hearing officer fails to render a  | ||
 recommendation within the time specified in this Section.  | ||
 The decision of the school board is final, unless reviewed  | ||
 as provided in paragraph (9) of this subsection (d). | ||
  If the school board retains the teacher, the school  | ||
 board shall enter a written order stating the amount of  | ||
 back pay and lost benefits, less mitigation, to be paid to  | ||
 the teacher, within 45 days after its retention order.  | ||
 Should the teacher object to the amount of the back pay and  | ||
 lost benefits or amount mitigated, the teacher shall give  | ||
 written objections to the amount within 21 days. If the  | ||
 parties fail to reach resolution within 7 days, the dispute  | ||
 shall be referred to the hearing officer, who shall  | ||
 consider the school board's written order and teacher's  | ||
 written objection and determine the amount to which the  | ||
 school board is liable. The costs of the hearing officer's  | ||
 review and determination must be paid by the board. | ||
  (9)
The decision of the hearing officer pursuant to  | ||
 Article 24A of this Code or of the school board's decision  | ||
 to dismiss for cause is final unless reviewed as
provided  | ||
 in Section 24-16 of this Act. If the school board's  | ||
 decision to dismiss for cause is contrary to the hearing  | ||
 officer's recommendation, the court on review shall give  | ||
 consideration to the school board's decision and its  | ||
 supplemental findings of fact, if applicable, and the  | ||
 hearing officer's findings of fact and recommendation in  | ||
 making its decision. In the event such review is
 | ||
 instituted, the school board shall be responsible for  | ||
 preparing and filing the record of proceedings, and such  | ||
 costs associated therewith must be divided equally between  | ||
 the parties.
 | ||
  (10) If a decision of the hearing officer for dismissal  | ||
 pursuant to Article 24A of this Code or of the school board  | ||
 for dismissal for cause is adjudicated upon review or
 | ||
 appeal in favor of the teacher, then the trial court shall  | ||
 order
reinstatement and shall remand the matter to the  | ||
 school board with direction for entry of an order setting  | ||
 the amount of back pay, lost benefits, and costs, less  | ||
 mitigation. The teacher may challenge the school board's  | ||
 order setting the amount of back pay, lost benefits, and  | ||
 costs, less mitigation, through an expedited arbitration  | ||
 procedure, with the costs of the arbitrator borne by the  | ||
 school board.
 | ||
  Any teacher who is reinstated by any hearing or  | ||
 adjudication brought
under this Section shall be assigned  | ||
 by the board to a position
substantially similar to the one  | ||
 which that teacher held prior to that
teacher's suspension  | ||
 or dismissal.
 | ||
  (11) Subject to any later effective date referenced in  | ||
 this Section for a specific aspect of the dismissal  | ||
 process, the changes made by Public Act 97-8 this  | ||
 amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly shall apply to  | ||
 dismissals instituted on or after September 1, 2011. Any  | ||
 dismissal instituted prior to September 1, 2011 must be  | ||
 carried out in accordance with the requirements of this  | ||
 Section prior to amendment by Public Act 97-8 this  | ||
 amendatory Act of 97th General Assembly. 
 | ||
 (e) Nothing contained in this amendatory Act of the 98th  | ||
General Assembly repeals, supersedes, invalidates, or  | ||
nullifies final decisions in lawsuits pending on the effective  | ||
date of this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly in  | ||
Illinois courts involving the interpretation of Public Act  | ||
97-8.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-8, eff. 6-13-11; 98-513, eff. 1-1-14; 98-648,  | ||
eff. 7-1-14; revised 12-1-14.)
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 5/27-23.7) | ||
 Sec. 27-23.7. Bullying prevention. | ||
 (a) The General Assembly finds that a safe and civil school  | ||
environment is necessary for students to learn and achieve and  | ||
that bullying causes physical, psychological, and emotional  | ||
harm to students and interferes with students' ability to learn  | ||
and participate in school activities. The General Assembly  | ||
further finds that bullying has been linked to other forms of  | ||
antisocial behavior, such as vandalism, shoplifting, skipping  | ||
and dropping out of school, fighting, using drugs and alcohol,  | ||
sexual harassment, and sexual violence. Because of the negative  | ||
outcomes associated with bullying in schools, the General  | ||
Assembly finds that school districts, charter schools, and  | ||
non-public, non-sectarian elementary and secondary schools  | ||
should educate students, parents, and school district, charter  | ||
school, or non-public, non-sectarian elementary or secondary  | ||
school personnel about what behaviors constitute prohibited  | ||
bullying. | ||
 Bullying on the basis of actual or perceived race, color,  | ||
religion, sex, national origin, ancestry, age, marital status,  | ||
physical or mental disability, military status, sexual  | ||
orientation, gender-related identity or expression,  | ||
unfavorable discharge from military service, association with  | ||
a person or group with one or more of the aforementioned actual  | ||
or perceived characteristics, or any other distinguishing  | ||
characteristic is prohibited in all school districts, charter  | ||
schools, and non-public, non-sectarian elementary and  | ||
secondary schools.
No student shall be subjected to bullying: | ||
  (1) during any school-sponsored education program or  | ||
 activity; | ||
  (2) while in school, on school property, on school  | ||
 buses or other school vehicles, at designated school bus  | ||
 stops waiting for the school bus, or at school-sponsored or  | ||
 school-sanctioned events or activities; | ||
  (3) through the transmission of information from a  | ||
 school computer, a school computer network, or other  | ||
 similar electronic school equipment; or  | ||
  (4) through the transmission of information from a  | ||
 computer that is accessed at a nonschool-related location,  | ||
 activity, function, or program or from the use of  | ||
 technology or an electronic device that is not owned,  | ||
 leased, or used by a school district or school if the  | ||
 bullying causes a substantial disruption to the  | ||
 educational process or orderly operation of a school. This  | ||
 item (4) applies only in cases in which a school  | ||
 administrator or teacher receives a report that bullying  | ||
 through this means has occurred and does not require a  | ||
 district or school to staff or monitor any  | ||
 nonschool-related activity, function, or program.  | ||
 (a-5) Nothing in this Section is intended to infringe upon  | ||
any right to exercise free expression or the free exercise of  | ||
religion or religiously based views protected under the First  | ||
Amendment to the United States Constitution or under Section 3  | ||
of Article I of the Illinois Constitution.  | ||
 (b) In this Section:
 | ||
 "Bullying" includes "cyber-bullying" and means any severe  | ||
or pervasive physical or verbal act or conduct, including  | ||
communications made in writing or electronically, directed  | ||
toward a student or students that has or can be reasonably  | ||
predicted to have the effect of one or more of the following: | ||
  (1) placing the student or students in reasonable fear  | ||
 of harm to the student's or students' person or property; | ||
  (2) causing a substantially detrimental effect on the  | ||
 student's or students' physical or mental health; | ||
  (3) substantially interfering with the student's or  | ||
 students' academic performance; or | ||
  (4) substantially interfering with the student's or  | ||
 students' ability to participate in or benefit from the  | ||
 services, activities, or privileges provided by a school. | ||
 Bullying, as defined in this subsection (b), may take  | ||
various forms, including without limitation one or more of the  | ||
following: harassment, threats, intimidation, stalking,  | ||
physical violence, sexual harassment, sexual violence, theft,  | ||
public humiliation, destruction of property, or retaliation  | ||
for asserting or alleging an act of bullying. This list is  | ||
meant to be illustrative and non-exhaustive. | ||
 "Cyber-bullying" means bullying through the use of  | ||
technology or any electronic communication, including without  | ||
limitation any transfer of signs, signals, writing, images,  | ||
sounds, data, or intelligence of any nature transmitted in  | ||
whole or in part by a wire, radio, electromagnetic system,  | ||
photoelectronic system, or photooptical system, including  | ||
without limitation electronic mail, Internet communications,  | ||
instant messages, or facsimile communications.  | ||
"Cyber-bullying" includes the creation of a webpage or weblog  | ||
in which the creator assumes the identity of another person or  | ||
the knowing impersonation of another person as the author of  | ||
posted content or messages if the creation or impersonation  | ||
creates any of the effects enumerated in the definition of  | ||
bullying in this Section. "Cyber-bullying" also includes the  | ||
distribution by electronic means of a communication to more  | ||
than one person or the posting of material on an electronic  | ||
medium that may be accessed by one or more persons if the  | ||
distribution or posting creates any of the effects enumerated  | ||
in the definition of bullying in this Section.  | ||
 "Policy on bullying" means a bullying prevention policy  | ||
that meets the following criteria: | ||
  (1) Includes the bullying definition provided in this  | ||
 Section. | ||
  (2) Includes a statement that bullying is contrary to  | ||
 State law and the policy of the school district, charter  | ||
 school, or non-public, non-sectarian elementary or  | ||
 secondary school and is consistent with subsection (a-5) of  | ||
 this Section. | ||
  (3) Includes procedures for promptly reporting  | ||
 bullying, including, but not limited to, identifying and  | ||
 providing the school e-mail address (if applicable) and  | ||
 school telephone number for the staff person or persons  | ||
 responsible for receiving such reports and a procedure for  | ||
 anonymous reporting; however, this shall not be construed  | ||
 to permit formal disciplinary action solely on the basis of  | ||
 an anonymous report. | ||
  (4) Consistent with federal and State laws and rules  | ||
 governing student privacy rights, includes procedures for  | ||
 promptly informing parents or guardians of all students  | ||
 involved in the alleged incident of bullying and  | ||
 discussing, as appropriate, the availability of social  | ||
 work services, counseling, school psychological services,  | ||
 other interventions, and restorative measures. | ||
  (5) Contains procedures for promptly investigating and  | ||
 addressing reports of bullying, including the following: | ||
   (A) Making all reasonable efforts to complete the  | ||
 investigation within 10 school days after the date the  | ||
 report of the incident of bullying was received and  | ||
 taking into consideration additional relevant  | ||
 information received during the course of the  | ||
 investigation about the reported incident of bullying. | ||
   (B) Involving appropriate school support personnel  | ||
 and other staff persons with knowledge, experience,  | ||
 and training on bullying prevention, as deemed  | ||
 appropriate, in the investigation process. | ||
   (C) Notifying the principal or school  | ||
 administrator or his or her designee of the report of  | ||
 the incident of bullying as soon as possible after the  | ||
 report is received. | ||
   (D) Consistent with federal and State laws and  | ||
 rules governing student privacy rights, providing  | ||
 parents and guardians of the students who are parties  | ||
 to the investigation information about the  | ||
 investigation and an opportunity to meet with the  | ||
 principal or school administrator or his or her  | ||
 designee to discuss the investigation, the findings of  | ||
 the investigation, and the actions taken to address the  | ||
 reported incident of bullying. | ||
  (6) Includes the interventions that can be taken to  | ||
 address bullying, which may include, but are not limited  | ||
 to, school social work services, restorative measures,  | ||
 social-emotional skill building, counseling, school  | ||
 psychological services, and community-based services. | ||
  (7) Includes a statement prohibiting reprisal or  | ||
 retaliation against any person who reports an act of  | ||
 bullying and the consequences and appropriate remedial  | ||
 actions for a person who engages in reprisal or  | ||
 retaliation. | ||
  (8) Includes consequences and appropriate remedial  | ||
 actions for a person found to have falsely accused another  | ||
 of bullying as a means of retaliation or as a means of  | ||
 bullying. | ||
  (9) Is based on the engagement of a range of school  | ||
 stakeholders, including students and parents or guardians. | ||
  (10) Is posted on the school district's, charter
 | ||
 school's, or non-public, non-sectarian elementary or
 | ||
 secondary school's existing Internet website and is
 | ||
 included in the student handbook, and, where applicable,
 | ||
 posted where other policies, rules, and standards of
 | ||
 conduct are currently posted in the school, and is
 | ||
 distributed annually to parents, guardians, students, and
 | ||
 school personnel, including new employees when hired. | ||
  (11) As part of the process of reviewing and  | ||
 re-evaluating the policy under subsection (d) of this  | ||
 Section, contains a policy evaluation process to assess the  | ||
 outcomes and effectiveness of the policy that includes, but  | ||
 is not limited to, factors such as the frequency of  | ||
 victimization; student, staff, and family observations of  | ||
 safety at a school; identification of areas of a school  | ||
 where bullying occurs; the types of bullying utilized; and  | ||
 bystander intervention or participation. The school  | ||
 district, charter school, or non-public, non-sectarian  | ||
 elementary or secondary school may use relevant data and  | ||
 information it already collects for other purposes in the  | ||
 policy evaluation. The information developed as a result of  | ||
 the policy evaluation must be made available on the  | ||
 Internet website of the school district, charter school, or  | ||
 non-public, non-sectarian elementary or secondary school.  | ||
 If an Internet website is not available, the information  | ||
 must be provided to school administrators, school board  | ||
 members, school personnel, parents, guardians, and  | ||
 students. | ||
  (12) Is consistent with the policies of the school  | ||
 board, charter school, or non-public, non-sectarian  | ||
 elementary or secondary school. | ||
 "Restorative measures" means a continuum of school-based  | ||
alternatives to exclusionary discipline, such as suspensions  | ||
and expulsions, that: (i) are adapted to the particular needs  | ||
of the school and community, (ii) contribute to maintaining  | ||
school safety, (iii) protect the integrity of a positive and  | ||
productive learning climate, (iv) teach students the personal  | ||
and interpersonal skills they will need to be successful in  | ||
school and society, (v) serve to build and restore  | ||
relationships among students, families, schools, and  | ||
communities, and (vi) reduce the likelihood of future  | ||
disruption by balancing accountability with an understanding  | ||
of students' behavioral health needs in order to keep students  | ||
in school.  | ||
 "School personnel" means persons employed by, on contract  | ||
with, or who volunteer in a school district, charter school  | ||
schools, or non-public, non-sectarian elementary or secondary  | ||
school, including without limitation school and school  | ||
district administrators, teachers, school guidance counselors,  | ||
school social workers, school counselors, school  | ||
psychologists, school nurses, cafeteria workers, custodians,  | ||
bus drivers, school resource officers, and security guards.  | ||
 (c) (Blank).
 | ||
 (d) Each school district, charter school, and non-public,  | ||
non-sectarian elementary or secondary school shall create,  | ||
maintain, and implement a policy on bullying, which policy must  | ||
be filed with the State Board of Education. The policy or  | ||
implementing procedure shall include a process to investigate  | ||
whether a reported act of bullying is within the permissible  | ||
scope of the district's or school's jurisdiction and shall  | ||
require that the district or school provide the victim with  | ||
information regarding services that are available within the  | ||
district and community, such as counseling, support services,  | ||
and other programs. Every 2 years, each school district,  | ||
charter school, and non-public, non-sectarian elementary or  | ||
secondary school shall conduct a review and re-evaluation of  | ||
its policy and make any necessary and appropriate revisions.  | ||
The policy must be filed with the State Board of Education  | ||
after being updated. The State Board of Education shall monitor  | ||
and provide technical support for the implementation of  | ||
policies created under this subsection (d). | ||
 (e) This Section shall not be interpreted to prevent a  | ||
victim from seeking redress under any other available civil or  | ||
criminal law.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-669, eff. 6-26-14; 98-801, eff. 1-1-15;  | ||
revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 5/27A-4)
 | ||
 Sec. 27A-4. General provisions Provisions. 
 | ||
 (a) The General Assembly does not intend to alter or amend  | ||
the provisions
of any court-ordered desegregation plan in  | ||
effect for any school district. A
charter school shall be  | ||
subject to all federal and State laws and
constitutional  | ||
provisions prohibiting discrimination on the basis of
 | ||
disability, race, creed, color, gender, national origin,  | ||
religion, ancestry,
marital status, or need for special  | ||
education services.
 | ||
 (b) The total number of charter schools operating under  | ||
this Article at any
one time shall not exceed 120. Not more  | ||
than 70 charter
schools
shall operate at any one time in any  | ||
city having a population exceeding
500,000, with at least 5  | ||
charter schools devoted exclusively to students from  | ||
low-performing or overcrowded schools operating at any one time  | ||
in that city; and not more than 45
charter schools shall  | ||
operate at any one time in the remainder of the State, with not
 | ||
more than one charter school that
has been initiated by a board  | ||
of education, or
by an intergovernmental agreement between or  | ||
among boards of education,
operating at any one
time in the  | ||
school district where the charter school is located. In  | ||
addition to these charter schools, up to but no more than 5  | ||
charter schools devoted exclusively to re-enrolled high school  | ||
dropouts and/or students 16 or 15 years old at risk of dropping  | ||
out may operate at any one time in any city having a population  | ||
exceeding 500,000. Notwithstanding any provision to the  | ||
contrary in subsection (b) of Section 27A-5 of this Code, each  | ||
such dropout charter may operate up to 15 campuses within the  | ||
city. Any of these dropout charters may have a maximum of 1,875  | ||
enrollment seats, any one of the campuses of the dropout  | ||
charter may have a maximum of 165 enrollment seats, and each  | ||
campus of the dropout charter must be operated, through a  | ||
contract or payroll, by the same legal entity as that for which  | ||
the charter is approved and certified.
 | ||
 For purposes of implementing this Section, the State Board  | ||
shall assign a
number to each charter submission it receives  | ||
under Section 27A-6 for its
review and certification, based on  | ||
the chronological order in which the
submission is received by  | ||
it. The State Board shall promptly notify local
school boards  | ||
when the maximum numbers of certified charter schools  | ||
authorized
to operate have been reached.
 | ||
 (c) No charter shall be granted under this Article that  | ||
would convert any
existing private, parochial, or non-public  | ||
school to a charter school.
 | ||
 (d) Enrollment in a charter school shall be open to any  | ||
pupil who resides
within the geographic boundaries of the area  | ||
served by the local school board, provided that the board of  | ||
education in a city having a population exceeding 500,000 may  | ||
designate attendance boundaries for no more than one-third of  | ||
the charter schools permitted in the city if the board of  | ||
education determines that attendance boundaries are needed to  | ||
relieve overcrowding or to better serve low-income and at-risk  | ||
students. Students residing within an attendance boundary may  | ||
be given priority for enrollment, but must not be required to  | ||
attend the charter school.
 | ||
 (e) Nothing in this Article shall prevent 2 or more local  | ||
school boards from
jointly
issuing a charter to a single shared  | ||
charter school, provided that all of the
provisions of this  | ||
Article are met as to those local school boards.
 | ||
 (f) No local school board shall require any employee of the  | ||
school district
to be employed in a charter school.
 | ||
 (g) No local school board shall require any pupil residing  | ||
within the
geographic boundary of its district to enroll in a  | ||
charter school.
 | ||
 (h) If there are more eligible applicants for enrollment in  | ||
a charter school
than there are spaces available, successful  | ||
applicants shall be selected by
lottery. However, priority  | ||
shall be given to siblings of pupils enrolled in
the charter  | ||
school and to pupils who were enrolled in the charter school  | ||
the
previous school year, unless expelled for cause, and  | ||
priority may be given to pupils residing within the charter  | ||
school's attendance boundary, if a boundary has been designated  | ||
by the board of education in a city having a population  | ||
exceeding 500,000.  | ||
 Beginning with student enrollment for the 2015-2016 school  | ||
year, any lottery required under this subsection (h) must be  | ||
administered and videotaped by the charter school. The  | ||
authorizer or its designee must be allowed to be present or  | ||
view the lottery in real time. The charter school must maintain  | ||
a videotaped record of the lottery, including a time/date  | ||
stamp. The charter school shall transmit copies of the  | ||
videotape and all records relating to the lottery to the  | ||
authorizer on or before September 1 of each year.  | ||
 Subject to the requirements for priority applicant groups  | ||
set forth in paragraph (1) of this subsection (h), any lottery  | ||
required under this subsection (h) must be administered in a  | ||
way that provides each student an equal chance at admission. If  | ||
an authorizer makes a determination that a charter school's  | ||
lottery is in violation of this subsection (h), it may  | ||
administer the lottery directly. After a lottery, each student  | ||
randomly selected for admission to the charter school must be  | ||
notified. Charter schools may not create an admissions process  | ||
subsequent to a lottery that may operate as a barrier to  | ||
registration or enrollment. | ||
 Charter schools may undertake additional intake  | ||
activities, including without limitation student essays,  | ||
school-parent compacts, or open houses, but in no event may a  | ||
charter school require participation in these activities as a  | ||
condition of enrollment. A charter school must submit an  | ||
updated waitlist to the authorizer on a quarterly basis. A  | ||
waitlist must be submitted to the authorizer at the same time  | ||
as quarterly financial statements, if quarterly financial  | ||
statements are required by the authorizer.  | ||
 Dual enrollment at both a
charter school and a public  | ||
school or non-public school shall not be allowed.
A pupil who  | ||
is suspended or expelled from a charter school shall be deemed  | ||
to
be suspended or expelled from the public schools of the  | ||
school district in
which the pupil resides. Notwithstanding  | ||
anything to the contrary in this subsection (h):  | ||
  (1) any charter school with a mission exclusive to  | ||
 educating high school dropouts may grant priority  | ||
 admission to students who are high school dropouts and/or  | ||
 students 16 or 15 years old at risk of dropping out and any  | ||
 charter school with a mission exclusive to educating  | ||
 students from low-performing or overcrowded schools may  | ||
 restrict admission to students who are from low-performing  | ||
 or overcrowded schools; "priority admission" for charter  | ||
 schools exclusively devoted to re-enrolled dropouts or  | ||
 students at risk of dropping out means a minimum of 90% of  | ||
 students enrolled shall be high school dropouts; and
 | ||
  (2) any charter school located in a school district  | ||
 that contains all or part of a federal military base may  | ||
 set aside up to 33% of its current charter enrollment to  | ||
 students with parents assigned to the federal military  | ||
 base, with the remaining 67% subject to the general  | ||
 enrollment and lottery requirements of subsection (d) of  | ||
 this Section and this subsection (h); if a student with a  | ||
 parent assigned to the federal military base withdraws from  | ||
 the charter school during the course of a school year for  | ||
 reasons other than grade promotion, those students with  | ||
 parents assigned to the federal military base shall have  | ||
 preference in filling the vacancy.  | ||
 (i) (Blank).
 | ||
 (j) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the  | ||
contrary, a
school district in a city having a population  | ||
exceeding 500,000 shall not
have a duty to collectively bargain  | ||
with an exclusive representative of its
employees over  | ||
decisions to grant or deny a charter school proposal
under  | ||
Section 27A-8 of this Code, decisions to renew or revoke a  | ||
charter
under Section 27A-9 of this Code, and the impact of  | ||
these decisions,
provided that nothing in this Section shall  | ||
have the effect of negating,
abrogating, replacing, reducing,  | ||
diminishing, or limiting in any way
employee rights,  | ||
guarantees, or privileges granted in Sections 2, 3, 7, 8,
10,  | ||
14, and 15 of the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Act.
 | ||
 (k) In this Section: | ||
 "Low-performing school" means a public school in a school  | ||
district organized under Article 34 of this Code that enrolls  | ||
students in any of grades kindergarten through 8 and that is  | ||
ranked within the lowest 10% of schools in that district in  | ||
terms of the percentage of students meeting or exceeding  | ||
standards on the assessments required under Section 2-3.64a-5  | ||
of this Code. | ||
 "Overcrowded school" means a public school in a school  | ||
district organized under Article 34 of this Code that (i)  | ||
enrolls students in any of grades kindergarten through 8, (ii)  | ||
has a percentage of low-income students of 70% or more, as  | ||
identified in the most recently available School Report Card  | ||
published by the State Board of Education, and (iii) is  | ||
determined by the Chicago Board of Education to be in the most  | ||
severely overcrowded 5% of schools in the district. On or  | ||
before November 1 of each year, the Chicago Board of Education  | ||
shall file a report with the State Board of Education on which  | ||
schools in the district meet the definition of "overcrowded  | ||
school". "Students at risk of dropping out" means students 16  | ||
or 15 years old in a public school in a district organized  | ||
under Article 34 of this Code that enrolls students in any  | ||
grades 9-12 who have been absent at least 90 school attendance  | ||
days of the previous 180 school attendance days. | ||
 (l) For advertisements created after January 1, 2015 (the  | ||
effective date of Public Act 98-783) this amendatory Act of the  | ||
98th General Assembly, any advertisement, including a radio,  | ||
television, print, Internet, social media, or billboard  | ||
advertisement, purchased by a school district or public school,  | ||
including a charter school, with public funds must include a  | ||
disclaimer stating that the advertisement was paid for using  | ||
public funds. | ||
 This disclaimer requirement does not extend to materials  | ||
created by the charter school, including, but not limited to, a  | ||
school website, informational pamphlets or leaflets, or  | ||
clothing with affixed school logos.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-151, eff. 1-1-12; 97-624, eff. 11-28-11;  | ||
97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 98-474, eff. 8-16-13; 98-783, eff.  | ||
1-1-15; 98-972, eff. 8-15-14; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 5/27A-5)
 | ||
 Sec. 27A-5. Charter school; legal entity; requirements. 
 | ||
 (a) A charter school shall be a public, nonsectarian,  | ||
nonreligious, non-home
based, and non-profit school. A charter  | ||
school shall be organized and operated
as a nonprofit  | ||
corporation or other discrete, legal, nonprofit entity
 | ||
authorized under the laws of the State of Illinois.
 | ||
 (b) A charter school may be established under this Article  | ||
by creating a new
school or by converting an existing public  | ||
school or attendance center to
charter
school status.
Beginning  | ||
on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd  | ||
General
Assembly, in all new
applications to establish
a  | ||
charter
school in a city having a population exceeding 500,000,  | ||
operation of the
charter
school shall be limited to one campus.  | ||
The changes made to this Section by this
amendatory Act
of the  | ||
93rd General
Assembly do not apply to charter schools existing  | ||
or approved on or before the
effective date of this
amendatory  | ||
Act. | ||
 (b-5) In this subsection (b-5), "virtual-schooling" means  | ||
a cyber school where students engage in online curriculum and  | ||
instruction via the Internet and electronic communication with  | ||
their teachers at remote locations and with students  | ||
participating at different times.  | ||
 From April 1, 2013 through December 31, 2016, there is a  | ||
moratorium on the establishment of charter schools with  | ||
virtual-schooling components in school districts other than a  | ||
school district organized under Article 34 of this Code. This  | ||
moratorium does not apply to a charter school with  | ||
virtual-schooling components existing or approved prior to  | ||
April 1, 2013 or to the renewal of the charter of a charter  | ||
school with virtual-schooling components already approved  | ||
prior to April 1, 2013. | ||
 On or before March 1, 2014, the Commission shall submit to  | ||
the General Assembly a report on the effect of  | ||
virtual-schooling, including without limitation the effect on  | ||
student performance, the costs associated with  | ||
virtual-schooling, and issues with oversight. The report shall  | ||
include policy recommendations for virtual-schooling. 
 | ||
 (c) A charter school shall be administered and governed by  | ||
its board of
directors or other governing body
in the manner  | ||
provided in its charter. The governing body of a charter school
 | ||
shall be subject to the Freedom of Information Act and the Open  | ||
Meetings Act.
 | ||
 (d) A charter school shall comply with all applicable  | ||
health and safety
requirements applicable to public schools  | ||
under the laws of the State of
Illinois.
 | ||
 (e) Except as otherwise provided in the School Code, a  | ||
charter school shall
not charge tuition; provided that a  | ||
charter school may charge reasonable fees
for textbooks,  | ||
instructional materials, and student activities.
 | ||
 (f) A charter school shall be responsible for the  | ||
management and operation
of its fiscal affairs including,
but  | ||
not limited to, the preparation of its budget. An audit of each  | ||
charter
school's finances shall be conducted annually by an  | ||
outside, independent
contractor retained by the charter  | ||
school. To ensure financial accountability for the use of  | ||
public funds, on or before December 1 of every year of  | ||
operation, each charter school shall submit to its authorizer  | ||
and the State Board a copy of its audit and a copy of the Form  | ||
990 the charter school filed that year with the federal  | ||
Internal Revenue Service. In addition, if deemed necessary for  | ||
proper financial oversight of the charter school, an authorizer  | ||
may require quarterly financial statements from each charter  | ||
school. 
 | ||
 (g) A charter school shall comply with all provisions of  | ||
this Article; the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Act; all  | ||
federal and State laws and rules applicable to public schools  | ||
that pertain to special education and the instruction of  | ||
English language learners, referred to in this Code as  | ||
"children of limited English-speaking ability"; and
its  | ||
charter. A charter
school is exempt from all other State laws  | ||
and regulations in this Code
governing public
schools and local  | ||
school board policies, except the following:
 | ||
  (1) Sections 10-21.9 and 34-18.5 of this Code regarding  | ||
 criminal
history records checks and checks of the Statewide  | ||
 Sex Offender Database and Statewide Murderer and Violent  | ||
 Offender Against Youth Database of applicants for  | ||
 employment;
 | ||
  (2) Sections 24-24 and 34-84A of this Code regarding  | ||
 discipline of
students;
 | ||
  (3) the Local Governmental and Governmental Employees  | ||
 Tort Immunity Act;
 | ||
  (4) Section 108.75 of the General Not For Profit  | ||
 Corporation Act of 1986
regarding indemnification of  | ||
 officers, directors, employees, and agents;
 | ||
  (5) the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act;
 | ||
  (6) the Illinois School Student Records Act;
 | ||
  (7) Section 10-17a of this Code regarding school report  | ||
 cards;
 | ||
  (8) the P-20 Longitudinal Education Data System Act;  | ||
 and | ||
  (9) Section 27-23.7 of this Code regarding bullying  | ||
 prevention; and . | ||
  (10) (9) Section 2-3.162 2-3.160 of this the School  | ||
 Code regarding student discipline reporting. | ||
 The change made by Public Act 96-104 to this subsection (g)  | ||
is declaratory of existing law. | ||
 (h) A charter school may negotiate and contract with a  | ||
school district, the
governing body of a State college or  | ||
university or public community college, or
any other public or  | ||
for-profit or nonprofit private entity for: (i) the use
of a  | ||
school building and grounds or any other real property or  | ||
facilities that
the charter school desires to use or convert  | ||
for use as a charter school site,
(ii) the operation and  | ||
maintenance thereof, and
(iii) the provision of any service,  | ||
activity, or undertaking that the charter
school is required to  | ||
perform in order to carry out the terms of its charter.
 | ||
However, a charter school
that is established on
or
after the  | ||
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General
 | ||
Assembly and that operates
in a city having a population  | ||
exceeding
500,000 may not contract with a for-profit entity to
 | ||
manage or operate the school during the period that commences  | ||
on the
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd  | ||
General Assembly and
concludes at the end of the 2004-2005  | ||
school year.
Except as provided in subsection (i) of this  | ||
Section, a school district may
charge a charter school  | ||
reasonable rent for the use of the district's
buildings,  | ||
grounds, and facilities. Any services for which a charter  | ||
school
contracts
with a school district shall be provided by  | ||
the district at cost. Any services
for which a charter school  | ||
contracts with a local school board or with the
governing body  | ||
of a State college or university or public community college
 | ||
shall be provided by the public entity at cost.
 | ||
 (i) In no event shall a charter school that is established  | ||
by converting an
existing school or attendance center to  | ||
charter school status be required to
pay rent for space
that is  | ||
deemed available, as negotiated and provided in the charter  | ||
agreement,
in school district
facilities. However, all other  | ||
costs for the operation and maintenance of
school district  | ||
facilities that are used by the charter school shall be subject
 | ||
to negotiation between
the charter school and the local school  | ||
board and shall be set forth in the
charter.
 | ||
 (j) A charter school may limit student enrollment by age or  | ||
grade level.
 | ||
 (k) If the charter school is approved by the Commission,  | ||
then the Commission charter school is its own local education  | ||
agency.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-152, eff. 7-20-11; 97-154, eff. 1-1-12;  | ||
97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 98-16, eff. 5-24-13; 98-639, eff. 6-9-14;  | ||
98-669, eff. 6-26-14; 98-739, eff. 7-16-14; 98-783, eff.  | ||
1-1-15; 98-1059, eff. 8-26-14; 98-1102, eff. 8-26-14; revised  | ||
10-14-14.)
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 5/27A-6)
 | ||
 Sec. 27A-6. Contract contents; applicability of laws and  | ||
regulations. 
 | ||
 (a) A certified charter shall constitute a binding contract  | ||
and agreement
between
the charter school and a local school  | ||
board under the terms of which the local
school board  | ||
authorizes the governing body of the charter school to operate  | ||
the
charter
school on the terms specified in the contract.
 | ||
 (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article,  | ||
the certified
charter
may
not waive or release the charter  | ||
school from the State goals, standards, and
assessments  | ||
established pursuant to Section 2-3.64a-5 of this Code.
 | ||
Beginning with the 2003-2004 school year, the certified charter  | ||
for a charter
school operating in a city having a population  | ||
exceeding 500,000 shall
require the charter school to  | ||
administer any other nationally recognized
standardized tests  | ||
to its students that the chartering entity administers to
other
 | ||
students, and the results on such tests shall be included in  | ||
the
chartering entity's assessment reports.
 | ||
 (c) Subject to the provisions of subsection (e), a material  | ||
revision to a
previously certified contract or a renewal shall  | ||
be made with
the approval of both the local school board and  | ||
the governing body of the
charter school.
 | ||
 (c-5) The proposed contract shall include a provision on  | ||
how both parties
will address minor violations of the contract.
 | ||
 (d) The proposed contract between the governing body of a  | ||
proposed charter
school and the local school board as described  | ||
in Section 27A-7 must be
submitted to and certified by the  | ||
State Board before it can take effect. If
the State Board  | ||
recommends that the proposed contract be modified for
 | ||
consistency with this Article before it can be certified, the  | ||
modifications
must be consented to by both the governing body  | ||
of
the charter school and the local school board, and  | ||
resubmitted to the State
Board for its certification. If the  | ||
proposed contract is resubmitted in a form
that is not  | ||
consistent with this Article, the State
Board may refuse to  | ||
certify the charter.
 | ||
 The State Board shall assign a number to each submission or  | ||
resubmission in
chronological order of receipt, and shall  | ||
determine whether the proposed
contract is consistent with the  | ||
provisions of this Article. If the proposed
contract complies,  | ||
the State Board shall so certify.
 | ||
 (e) No renewal of a previously certified contract is  | ||
effective unless and until the State Board certifies that the  | ||
renewal is consistent with the provisions of this Article. A  | ||
material revision to a previously certified contract may go  | ||
into effect immediately upon approval of both the local school  | ||
board and the governing body of the charter school, unless  | ||
either party requests in writing that the State Board certify  | ||
that the material revision is consistent with the provisions of  | ||
this Article. If such a request is made, the proposed material  | ||
revision is not effective unless and until the State Board so  | ||
certifies.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-972, eff. 8-15-14; 98-1048, eff. 8-25-14;  | ||
revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 5/27A-7)
 | ||
 Sec. 27A-7. Charter submission. 
 | ||
 (a) A proposal to establish a charter school shall be  | ||
submitted to the local school board and the State Board for  | ||
certification under Section 27A-6 of this Code in the form of a  | ||
proposed contract
entered
into between the local school board  | ||
and the governing body of a proposed
charter school. The
 | ||
charter school proposal shall include:
 | ||
  (1) The name of the proposed charter school, which must  | ||
 include the words
"Charter School".
 | ||
  (2) The age or grade range, areas of focus, minimum and  | ||
 maximum numbers of
pupils to be enrolled in the charter  | ||
 school, and any other admission criteria
that would be  | ||
 legal if used by a school district.
 | ||
  (3) A description of and address for the physical plant  | ||
 in which the
charter school will be located; provided that  | ||
 nothing in the Article shall be
deemed to justify delaying  | ||
 or withholding favorable action on or approval of a
charter  | ||
 school proposal because the building or buildings in which  | ||
 the charter
school is to be located have not been acquired  | ||
 or rented at the time a charter
school proposal is  | ||
 submitted or approved or a charter school contract is
 | ||
 entered
into or submitted for certification or certified,  | ||
 so long as the proposal or
submission identifies and names  | ||
 at least 2 sites that are potentially available
as a  | ||
 charter school facility by the time the charter school is  | ||
 to open.
 | ||
  (4) The mission statement of the charter school, which  | ||
 must be consistent
with the General Assembly's declared  | ||
 purposes; provided that nothing in this
Article shall be  | ||
 construed to require that, in order to receive favorable
 | ||
 consideration and approval, a charter school proposal  | ||
 demonstrate unequivocally
that the charter school will be  | ||
 able to meet each of those declared purposes,
it
being the  | ||
 intention of the Charter Schools Law that those purposes be
 | ||
 recognized as goals that
charter schools must aspire to  | ||
 attain.
 | ||
  (5) The goals, objectives, and pupil performance  | ||
 standards to be achieved
by the charter school.
 | ||
  (6) In the case of a proposal to establish a charter  | ||
 school by
converting an existing public school or  | ||
 attendance center to charter school
status, evidence that  | ||
 the proposed formation of the charter school has received
 | ||
 the approval of certified teachers, parents
and
guardians,  | ||
 and, if applicable, a local school council as provided in
 | ||
 subsection
(b) of Section 27A-8.
 | ||
  (7) A description of the charter school's educational  | ||
 program, pupil
performance standards, curriculum, school  | ||
 year, school days, and hours of
operation.
 | ||
  (8) A description of the charter school's plan for  | ||
 evaluating pupil
performance, the types of assessments  | ||
 that will be used to measure pupil
progress towards  | ||
 achievement of the school's pupil performance standards,  | ||
 the
timeline for achievement of those standards, and the  | ||
 procedures for taking
corrective action in the event that  | ||
 pupil performance at the charter school
falls below those  | ||
 standards.
 | ||
  (9) Evidence that the terms of the charter as proposed  | ||
 are economically
sound
for both the charter school and the  | ||
 school district, a proposed budget for the
term of the  | ||
 charter, a description of the manner in which an annual
 | ||
 audit of the financial and administrative operations of the  | ||
 charter school,
including any services provided by the  | ||
 school district, are to be conducted,
and
a plan for the  | ||
 displacement of pupils, teachers, and other employees who  | ||
 will
not attend or be employed in the charter school.
 | ||
  (10) A description of the governance and operation of  | ||
 the charter school,
including the nature and extent of  | ||
 parental, professional educator, and
community involvement  | ||
 in the governance and operation of the charter school.
 | ||
  (11) An explanation of the relationship that will exist  | ||
 between the
charter school and its employees, including  | ||
 evidence that the terms and
conditions of employment have  | ||
 been addressed with affected employees and their
 | ||
 recognized representative, if any. However, a bargaining  | ||
 unit of charter
school employees shall be separate and
 | ||
 distinct from any bargaining units formed from employees of  | ||
 a school district
in
which the charter school is located.
 | ||
  (12) An agreement between the parties regarding their  | ||
 respective
legal liability and applicable insurance  | ||
 coverage.
 | ||
  (13) A description of how the charter school plans to  | ||
 meet the
transportation needs of its pupils, and a plan for  | ||
 addressing the
transportation needs
of low-income and  | ||
 at-risk pupils.
 | ||
  (14) The proposed effective date and term of the  | ||
 charter; provided that
the
first day of the first academic  | ||
 year shall be no earlier than August 15 and no later than  | ||
 September 15 of a
calendar year, and the first day of the  | ||
 fiscal year shall be July 1.
 | ||
  (15) Any other information reasonably required by the  | ||
 State Board of
Education.
 | ||
 (b) A proposal to establish a charter school may be  | ||
initiated by individuals
or organizations that will have
 | ||
majority representation on the board of directors or other  | ||
governing body of
the corporation or other discrete legal  | ||
entity that is to be established to
operate the proposed  | ||
charter school, by a board of education or an
intergovernmental  | ||
agreement between or among boards of education, or by the
board  | ||
of directors or other
governing body of a discrete legal entity  | ||
already existing or established to
operate the proposed
charter  | ||
school. The individuals or organizations referred to in this
 | ||
subsection may be school teachers, school administrators,  | ||
local school
councils, colleges or
universities or their  | ||
faculty
members, public community colleges or their  | ||
instructors or other
representatives, corporations, or other  | ||
entities or their
representatives. The proposal shall be
 | ||
submitted to the local school board for consideration and, if
 | ||
appropriate, for
development of a proposed contract to be  | ||
submitted to the State Board for
certification under
Section  | ||
27A-6.
 | ||
 (c) The local school board may not without the consent of  | ||
the governing body
of the charter school condition its approval  | ||
of a charter school proposal on
acceptance of an agreement to  | ||
operate under State laws and regulations and
local school board  | ||
policies from which the charter school is otherwise exempted
 | ||
under this Article.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-739, eff. 7-16-14; 98-1048, eff. 8-25-14;  | ||
revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 5/27A-11)
 | ||
 Sec. 27A-11. Local financing. 
 | ||
 (a) For purposes of the School Code, pupils enrolled in a  | ||
charter school
shall be included in the pupil enrollment of the  | ||
school district within which
the
pupil resides. Each charter  | ||
school (i) shall determine the school district in
which each  | ||
pupil who is enrolled in the charter school resides,
(ii) shall
 | ||
report the aggregate number of pupils resident of a school  | ||
district who are
enrolled in the charter school to the school  | ||
district in which those pupils
reside, and (iii) shall maintain  | ||
accurate records of daily attendance that
shall be deemed  | ||
sufficient to file claims under Section 18-8 notwithstanding
 | ||
any other requirements of that Section regarding hours of  | ||
instruction and
teacher certification.
 | ||
 (b) Except for a charter school established by referendum  | ||
under Section
27A-6.5, as part of a charter school contract,  | ||
the charter school and the
local
school board shall agree on  | ||
funding and any services to be provided by the
school district  | ||
to the charter school.
Agreed funding that a charter school is  | ||
to receive from the local school
board for a school year shall  | ||
be paid in
equal quarterly installments with the payment of the
 | ||
installment for the first quarter being made not later than  | ||
July 1, unless the
charter establishes a different payment  | ||
schedule. However, if a charter school dismisses a pupil from  | ||
the charter school after receiving a quarterly payment, the  | ||
charter school shall return to the school district, on a  | ||
quarterly basis, the prorated portion of public funding  | ||
provided for the education of that pupil for the time the  | ||
student is not enrolled at the charter school. Likewise, if a  | ||
pupil transfers to a charter school between quarterly payments,  | ||
the school district shall provide, on a quarterly basis, a  | ||
prorated portion of the public funding to the charter school to  | ||
provide for the education of that pupil. 
 | ||
 All services centrally or otherwise provided by the school  | ||
district
including, but not limited to, rent, food services,  | ||
custodial services,
maintenance,
curriculum, media services,  | ||
libraries, transportation, and warehousing shall be
subject to
 | ||
negotiation between a charter school and the local school board  | ||
and paid
for out
of the revenues negotiated pursuant to this  | ||
subsection (b); provided that the
local school board shall not  | ||
attempt, by negotiation or otherwise, to obligate
a charter  | ||
school to provide pupil transportation for pupils for whom a  | ||
district
is not required to provide transportation under the  | ||
criteria set forth in
subsection (a)(13) of Section 27A-7.
 | ||
 In no event shall the funding be less than 75% or more than
 | ||
125% of the
school district's per capita student tuition  | ||
multiplied by
the
number of students residing in the district  | ||
who are enrolled in the charter
school.
 | ||
 It is the intent of the General Assembly that funding and  | ||
service agreements
under this subsection (b) shall be neither a  | ||
financial incentive nor a
financial disincentive to the  | ||
establishment of a charter school.
 | ||
 The charter school may set and collect reasonable fees.  | ||
Fees collected
from students enrolled at a charter school shall  | ||
be retained
by the charter school.
 | ||
 (c) Notwithstanding subsection (b) of this Section, the  | ||
proportionate share
of State and federal resources generated by  | ||
students with disabilities or staff
serving them shall be  | ||
directed to charter schools enrolling those students by
their  | ||
school districts or administrative units. The proportionate  | ||
share of
moneys generated under other federal or State  | ||
categorical aid programs shall be
directed to charter schools  | ||
serving students eligible for that aid.
 | ||
 (d) The governing body of a charter school is authorized to  | ||
accept
gifts,
donations, or grants of any kind made to the  | ||
charter school and to expend or
use gifts, donations, or grants  | ||
in accordance with the conditions prescribed by
the donor;  | ||
however, a gift, donation, or grant may not be accepted by the
 | ||
governing body if it is subject to any condition contrary to  | ||
applicable law or
contrary
to the terms of the contract between  | ||
the charter school and the local school
board. Charter schools  | ||
shall be encouraged to solicit and utilize community
volunteer  | ||
speakers and other instructional resources when providing  | ||
instruction
on the Holocaust and other historical events.
 | ||
 (e) (Blank).
 | ||
 (f) The Commission shall provide technical assistance to
 | ||
persons and groups
preparing or revising charter applications.
 | ||
 (g) At the non-renewal or revocation of its charter, each
 | ||
charter school
shall refund to the local board of education all  | ||
unspent funds.
 | ||
 (h) A charter school is authorized to incur temporary,  | ||
short
term debt to
pay operating expenses in anticipation of  | ||
receipt of funds from the local
school board.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-640, eff. 6-9-14; 98-739, eff. 7-16-14;  | ||
revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 5/30-14.2) (from Ch. 122, par. 30-14.2)
 | ||
 Sec. 30-14.2. MIA/POW scholarships. 
 | ||
 (a) Any spouse, natural child, legally adopted child, or  | ||
any
step-child of an eligible veteran or serviceperson who  | ||
possesses all necessary
entrance requirements shall, upon  | ||
application and proper proof, be awarded
a MIA/POW Scholarship  | ||
consisting of the equivalent of 4 calendar years of
full-time  | ||
enrollment including summer terms, to the state supported
 | ||
Illinois institution of higher learning of his choice, subject  | ||
to the
restrictions listed below.
 | ||
 "Eligible veteran or serviceperson" means any veteran or  | ||
serviceperson, including an Illinois National Guard member who  | ||
is on active duty or is active on a training assignment,
who  | ||
has been declared by the U.S. Department of Defense or the
U.S.  | ||
Department of Veterans' Affairs to be a prisoner of war, be  | ||
missing
in action, have died as the result of a  | ||
service-connected disability or be
permanently disabled from  | ||
service-connected causes with 100% disability and
who (i) at  | ||
the time of entering service was an Illinois resident, (ii) was  | ||
an
Illinois resident within 6 months after entering such  | ||
service, or (iii) until July 1, 2014, became an Illinois  | ||
resident within 6 months after leaving the service and can  | ||
establish at least 30 years of continuous residency in the  | ||
State of Illinois.
 | ||
 Full-time enrollment means 12 or more semester hours of  | ||
courses per semester,
or 12 or more quarter hours of courses  | ||
per quarter, or the equivalent thereof
per term. Scholarships  | ||
utilized by dependents enrolled in less than full-time
study  | ||
shall be computed in the proportion which the number of hours  | ||
so carried
bears to full-time enrollment.
 | ||
 Scholarships awarded under this Section may be used by a  | ||
spouse or child
without regard to his or her age. The holder of  | ||
a Scholarship
awarded under this Section shall be subject to  | ||
all examinations and academic
standards, including the  | ||
maintenance of minimum grade levels, that are
applicable  | ||
generally to other enrolled students at the Illinois  | ||
institution of
higher learning where the Scholarship is being  | ||
used.
If the surviving spouse
remarries or if there is a  | ||
divorce between the veteran or serviceperson and
his or her  | ||
spouse while the dependent is pursuing his or her course of
 | ||
study, Scholarship benefits will be terminated at the end of  | ||
the term for
which he or she is presently enrolled. Such  | ||
dependents shall also be
entitled, upon proper proof and  | ||
application, to enroll in any extension
course offered by a  | ||
State supported Illinois institution of higher learning
 | ||
without payment of tuition and approved fees.
 | ||
 The holder of a MIA/POW Scholarship authorized under this  | ||
Section shall
not be required to pay any matriculation or  | ||
application fees, tuition,
activities fees, graduation fees or  | ||
other fees, except multipurpose
building fees or similar fees  | ||
for supplies and materials.
 | ||
 Any dependent who has been or shall be awarded a MIA/POW  | ||
Scholarship shall
be reimbursed by the appropriate institution  | ||
of higher learning for any
fees which he or she has paid and  | ||
for which exemption is granted under this
Section if  | ||
application for reimbursement is made within 2 months following
 | ||
the end of the school term for which the fees were paid.
 | ||
 (b) In lieu of the benefit provided in subsection (a), any  | ||
spouse,
natural child, legally adopted child, or step-child of  | ||
an eligible veteran
or serviceperson, which spouse or child has  | ||
a physical, mental or
developmental disability, shall be  | ||
entitled to receive, upon application and
proper proof, a  | ||
benefit to be used for the purpose of defraying the cost of
the  | ||
attendance or treatment of such spouse or child at one or more
 | ||
appropriate therapeutic, rehabilitative or educational  | ||
facilities. The
application and proof may be made by the parent  | ||
or legal guardian of the
spouse or child on his or her behalf.
 | ||
 The total benefit provided to any beneficiary under this  | ||
subsection shall
not exceed the cost equivalent of 4 calendar  | ||
years of full-time enrollment,
including summer terms, at the  | ||
University of Illinois. Whenever
practicable in the opinion of  | ||
the Department of Veterans' Affairs, payment
of benefits under  | ||
this subsection shall be made directly to the facility,
the  | ||
cost of attendance or treatment at which is being defrayed, as  | ||
such
costs accrue.
 | ||
 (c) The benefits of this Section shall be administered by  | ||
and paid for out
of funds made available to the Illinois  | ||
Department of Veterans' Affairs.
The amounts that become due to  | ||
any state supported Illinois institution of
higher learning  | ||
shall be payable by the Comptroller to such institution on
 | ||
vouchers approved by the Illinois Department of Veterans'  | ||
Affairs. The
amounts that become due under subsection (b) of  | ||
this Section shall be
payable by warrant upon vouchers issued  | ||
by the Illinois Department of
Veterans' Affairs and approved by  | ||
the Comptroller. The Illinois Department
of Veterans' Affairs  | ||
shall determine the eligibility of the persons
who make  | ||
application for the benefits provided for in this Section.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 96-1415, eff. 7-30-10; revised 12-1-14.)
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 5/34-85) (from Ch. 122, par. 34-85)
 | ||
 Sec. 34-85. Removal for cause; Notice and hearing;  | ||
Suspension.  | ||
 (a) No
teacher employed by the board of education shall  | ||
(after serving the
probationary period specified in Section  | ||
34-84) be removed
except for cause. Teachers (who have  | ||
completed the probationary period specified in Section 34-84 of  | ||
this Code) shall be removed for cause in accordance with the  | ||
procedures set forth in this Section or, at the board's option,  | ||
the procedures set forth in Section 24-16.5 of this Code or  | ||
such other procedures established in an agreement entered into  | ||
between the board and the exclusive representative of the  | ||
district's teachers under Section 34-85c of this Code for  | ||
teachers (who have completed the probationary period specified  | ||
in Section 34-84 of this Code) assigned to schools identified  | ||
in that agreement. No principal employed by the board of  | ||
education shall be
removed during the term of his or her  | ||
performance contract except for
cause, which may include but is  | ||
not limited to the principal's repeated
failure to implement  | ||
the school improvement plan or to comply with the
provisions of  | ||
the Uniform Performance Contract, including additional
 | ||
criteria established by the Council for inclusion in the  | ||
performance
contract pursuant to Section 34-2.3.
 | ||
 Before service of notice of charges on account of causes  | ||
that may be deemed to be remediable, the teacher or principal  | ||
must be given reasonable warning in writing, stating  | ||
specifically the causes that, if not removed, may result in  | ||
charges; however, no such written warning is required if the  | ||
causes have been the subject of a remediation plan pursuant to  | ||
Article 24A of this Code or if the board and the exclusive  | ||
representative of the district's teachers have entered into an  | ||
agreement pursuant to Section 34-85c of this Code, pursuant to  | ||
an alternative system of remediation. No written warning shall  | ||
be required for conduct on the part of a teacher or principal  | ||
that is cruel, immoral, negligent, or criminal or that in any  | ||
way causes psychological or physical harm or injury to a  | ||
student, as that conduct is deemed to be irremediable. No  | ||
written warning shall be required for a material breach of the  | ||
uniform principal performance contract, as that conduct is  | ||
deemed to be irremediable; provided that not less than 30 days  | ||
before the vote of the local school council to seek the  | ||
dismissal of a principal for a material breach of a uniform  | ||
principal performance contract, the local school council shall  | ||
specify the nature of the alleged breach in writing and provide  | ||
a copy of it to the principal. | ||
  (1) To initiate dismissal proceedings against a  | ||
 teacher or principal, the general superintendent must  | ||
 first approve written charges and specifications against  | ||
 the
teacher or
principal. A local school council may direct  | ||
 the
general superintendent to approve written charges  | ||
 against its principal on behalf of the Council
upon the  | ||
 vote of 7 members of the Council. The general  | ||
 superintendent must
approve those charges within 45  | ||
 calendar days
or provide a written
reason for not approving  | ||
 those charges. A
written notice of those charges, including  | ||
 specifications,
shall be served upon the teacher or  | ||
 principal within 10 business days of the
approval of the  | ||
 charges. Any written notice sent on or after July 1, 2012  | ||
 shall also inform the teacher or principal of the right to  | ||
 request a hearing before a mutually selected hearing  | ||
 officer, with the cost of the hearing officer split equally  | ||
 between the teacher or principal and the board, or a  | ||
 hearing before a qualified hearing officer chosen by the  | ||
 general superintendent, with the cost of the hearing  | ||
 officer paid by the board. If the teacher or principal  | ||
 cannot be found upon diligent
inquiry, such charges may be  | ||
 served upon him by mailing a copy thereof in a
sealed  | ||
 envelope by prepaid certified mail, return receipt  | ||
 requested, to the
teacher's or principal's last known  | ||
 address. A return receipt showing
delivery to such address  | ||
 within 20 calendar days after the date of the
approval of  | ||
 the charges shall constitute proof of service.
 | ||
  (2) No hearing upon the charges is required unless the  | ||
 teacher or principal
within 17 calendar
days after  | ||
 receiving notice requests in writing of the general
 | ||
 superintendent that a hearing
be scheduled. Pending the  | ||
 hearing of the charges, the general superintendent or his  | ||
 or her designee may suspend the teacher or principal  | ||
 charged without pay in accordance with rules prescribed by  | ||
 the board, provided that if the teacher or principal  | ||
 charged is not dismissed based on the charges, he or she  | ||
 must be made whole for lost earnings, less setoffs for  | ||
 mitigation. | ||
  (3) The board shall maintain a list of at least 9  | ||
 qualified hearing officers who will conduct hearings on  | ||
 charges and specifications. The list must be developed in  | ||
 good faith consultation with the exclusive representative  | ||
 of the board's teachers and professional associations that  | ||
 represent the board's principals. The list may be revised  | ||
 on July 1st of each year or earlier as needed. To be a  | ||
 qualified hearing officer, the person must (i)
be  | ||
 accredited by a national arbitration organization and have  | ||
 had a minimum
of 5 years of experience as an arbitrator in  | ||
 cases involving labor and
employment
relations matters  | ||
 between employers and employees or
their exclusive  | ||
 bargaining representatives and (ii) beginning September 1,  | ||
 2012, have participated in training provided or approved by  | ||
 the State Board of Education for teacher dismissal hearing  | ||
 officers so that he or she is familiar with issues  | ||
 generally involved in evaluative and non-evaluative  | ||
 dismissals.
 | ||
  (3) Within 5 business days after receiving the notice  | ||
 of request for a hearing, the general superintendent and  | ||
 the teacher or principal or
their legal representatives
 | ||
 shall alternately strike one name
from the list until only  | ||
 one name remains. Unless waived by the teacher,
the teacher  | ||
 or principal shall
have the right to proceed first with the  | ||
 striking. If the teacher or principal fails to participate  | ||
 in the striking process, the general superintendent shall  | ||
 either select the hearing officer from the list developed  | ||
 pursuant to this paragraph (3) or select another qualified  | ||
 hearing officer from the master list maintained by the  | ||
 State Board of Education pursuant to subsection (c) of  | ||
 Section 24-12 of this Code.
 | ||
  (4) If the notice of dismissal was sent to the teacher  | ||
 or principal before July 1, 2012, the fees and costs for  | ||
 the hearing officer shall be paid by the State
Board of  | ||
 Education. If the notice of dismissal was sent to the  | ||
 teacher or principal on or after July 1, 2012, the hearing  | ||
 officer's fees and costs must be paid as follows in this  | ||
 paragraph (4). The fees and permissible costs for the  | ||
 hearing officer shall be determined by the State Board of  | ||
 Education. If the hearing officer is mutually selected by  | ||
 the parties through alternate striking in accordance with  | ||
 paragraph (3) of this subsection (a), then the board and  | ||
 the teacher or their legal representative shall each pay  | ||
 50% of the fees and costs and any supplemental allowance to  | ||
 which they agree. If the hearing officer is selected by the  | ||
 general superintendent without the participation of the  | ||
 teacher or principal, then the board shall pay 100% of the  | ||
 hearing officer fees and costs. The hearing officer shall  | ||
 submit for payment a billing statement to the parties that  | ||
 itemizes the charges and expenses and divides them in  | ||
 accordance with this Section.  | ||
  (5) The teacher or the principal charged is required to  | ||
 answer the charges and specifications and aver affirmative  | ||
 matters in his or her defense, and the time for doing so  | ||
 must be set by the hearing officer. The State Board of  | ||
 Education shall adopt rules so that each party has a fair  | ||
 opportunity to present its case and to ensure that the  | ||
 dismissal proceeding is concluded in an expeditious  | ||
 manner. The rules shall address, without limitation, the  | ||
 teacher or principal's answer and affirmative defenses to  | ||
 the charges and specifications; a requirement that each  | ||
 party make mandatory disclosures without request to the  | ||
 other party and then update the disclosure no later than 10  | ||
 calendar days prior to the commencement of the hearing,  | ||
 including a list of the names and addresses of persons who  | ||
 may be called as witnesses at the hearing, a summary of the  | ||
 facts or opinions each witness will testify to, and all  | ||
 other documents and materials, including information  | ||
 maintained electronically, relevant to its own as well as  | ||
 the other party's case (the hearing officer may exclude  | ||
 witnesses and exhibits not identified and shared, except  | ||
 those offered in rebuttal for which the party could not  | ||
 reasonably have anticipated prior to the hearing);  | ||
 pre-hearing discovery and preparation, including provision  | ||
 for written interrogatories and requests for production of  | ||
 documents, provided that discovery depositions are  | ||
 prohibited; the conduct of the hearing; the right of each  | ||
 party to be represented by counsel, the offer of evidence  | ||
 and witnesses and the cross-examination of witnesses; the  | ||
 authority of the hearing officer to issue subpoenas and  | ||
 subpoenas duces tecum, provided that the hearing officer  | ||
 may limit the number of witnesses to be subpoenaed in  | ||
 behalf of each party to no more than 7; the length of  | ||
 post-hearing briefs; and the form, length, and content of  | ||
 hearing officers' reports and recommendations to the  | ||
 general superintendent. | ||
  The hearing officer shall commence the hearing within  | ||
 75 calendar days and conclude the hearing within 120  | ||
 calendar days after being selected by the parties as the  | ||
 hearing officer, provided that these timelines may be  | ||
 modified upon the showing of good cause or mutual agreement  | ||
 of the parties. Good cause for the purposes of this  | ||
 paragraph (5) shall mean the illness or otherwise  | ||
 unavoidable emergency of the teacher, district  | ||
 representative, their legal representatives, the hearing  | ||
 officer, or an essential witness as indicated in each  | ||
 party's pre-hearing submission. In a dismissal hearing,  | ||
 the hearing officer shall consider and give weight to all  | ||
 of the teacher's evaluations written pursuant to Article  | ||
 24A that are relevant to the issues in the hearing. The  | ||
 teacher or principal has the
privilege of being present at  | ||
 the hearing with counsel and of
cross-examining witnesses  | ||
 and may offer evidence and witnesses and present
defenses  | ||
 to the charges. Each party shall have no more than 3 days  | ||
 to present its case, unless extended by the hearing officer  | ||
 to enable a party to present adequate evidence and  | ||
 testimony, including due to the other party's  | ||
 cross-examination of the party's witnesses, for good cause  | ||
 or by mutual agreement of the parties. The State Board of  | ||
 Education shall define in rules the meaning of "day" for  | ||
 such purposes.
All testimony at the hearing shall be taken  | ||
 under oath administered by the
hearing officer. The hearing  | ||
 officer shall cause a record of the
proceedings to be kept  | ||
 and shall employ a competent reporter to take
stenographic  | ||
 or stenotype notes of all the testimony. The costs of the
 | ||
 reporter's attendance and services at the hearing shall be  | ||
 paid by the party or parties who are paying the fees and  | ||
 costs of the hearing officer. Either party desiring a  | ||
 transcript of the
hearing shall pay for the cost thereof.  | ||
 At the close of the hearing, the hearing officer shall  | ||
 direct the parties to submit post-hearing briefs no later  | ||
 than 21 calendar days after receipt of the transcript.  | ||
 Either or both parties may waive submission of briefs. 
 | ||
  (6) The hearing officer shall within 30 calendar days  | ||
 from the conclusion of the hearing
report to the general  | ||
 superintendent findings of fact and a recommendation as to  | ||
 whether or not the teacher or principal shall
be dismissed  | ||
 and shall give a copy of the report to both the
teacher or
 | ||
 principal and the general superintendent. The State Board  | ||
 of Education shall provide by rule the form of the hearing  | ||
 officer's report and recommendation.  | ||
  (7) The board, within 45
days of receipt of the hearing  | ||
 officer's findings of fact and recommendation,
shall make a  | ||
 decision as to whether the teacher or principal shall be  | ||
 dismissed
from its employ. The failure of the board to  | ||
 strictly adhere to the timeliness
contained herein shall  | ||
 not render it without jurisdiction to dismiss the
teacher
 | ||
 or principal. In the event that the board declines to  | ||
 dismiss the teacher or principal after review of a hearing  | ||
 officer's recommendation, the board shall set the amount of  | ||
 back pay and benefits to award the teacher or principal,  | ||
 which shall include offsets for interim earnings and  | ||
 failure to mitigate losses. The board shall establish  | ||
 procedures for the teacher's or principal's submission of  | ||
 evidence to it regarding lost earnings, lost benefits,  | ||
 mitigation, and offsets. The decision
of the board is final  | ||
 unless reviewed in accordance with paragraph (8) of this  | ||
 subsection (a).
 | ||
  (8) The teacher may seek judicial review of the board's  | ||
 decision in accordance with the Administrative Review Law,  | ||
 which is specifically incorporated in this Section, except  | ||
 that the review must be initiated in the Illinois Appellate  | ||
 Court for the First District. In the event judicial review  | ||
 is instituted, any costs of preparing and
filing the record  | ||
 of proceedings shall be paid by the party instituting
the  | ||
 review. In the event the appellate court reverses a board  | ||
 decision to dismiss a teacher or principal and directs the  | ||
 board to pay the teacher or the principal back pay and  | ||
 benefits, the appellate court shall remand the matter to  | ||
 the board to issue an administrative decision as to the  | ||
 amount of back pay and benefits, which shall include a  | ||
 calculation of the lost earnings, lost benefits,  | ||
 mitigation, and offsets based on evidence submitted to the  | ||
 board in accordance with procedures established by the  | ||
 board.
 | ||
 (b) Nothing in this Section affects the validity of removal  | ||
for cause hearings
commenced prior to June 13, 2011 (the  | ||
effective date of Public Act 97-8) this amendatory Act of the  | ||
97th General Assembly.
 | ||
 The changes made by Public Act 97-8 this amendatory Act of  | ||
the 97th General Assembly shall apply to dismissals instituted  | ||
on or after September 1, 2011 or the effective date of Public  | ||
Act 97-8 this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly,  | ||
whichever is later. Any dismissal instituted prior to the  | ||
effective date of these changes must be carried out in  | ||
accordance with the requirements of this Section prior to  | ||
amendment by Public Act 97-8 this amendatory Act of 97th  | ||
General Assembly.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-8, eff. 6-13-11; revised 12-1-14.)
 | ||
 Section 195. The Illinois School Student Records Act is  | ||
amended by changing Section 6 as follows:
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 10/6) (from Ch. 122, par. 50-6)
 | ||
 Sec. 6. (a) No school student records or information
 | ||
contained therein may be released, transferred, disclosed or  | ||
otherwise
disseminated, except as follows:
 | ||
  (1) to To a parent or student or person specifically
 | ||
 designated as a representative by a parent, as provided in  | ||
 paragraph (a)
of Section 5;
 | ||
  (2) to To an employee or official of the school or
 | ||
 school district or State Board with current demonstrable  | ||
 educational
or administrative interest in the student, in  | ||
 furtherance of such interest;
 | ||
  (3) to To the official records custodian of another  | ||
 school within
Illinois or an official with similar  | ||
 responsibilities of a school
outside Illinois, in which the  | ||
 student has enrolled, or intends to enroll,
upon the  | ||
 request of such official or student;
 | ||
  (4) to To any person for the purpose of research,
 | ||
 statistical reporting, or planning, provided that such  | ||
 research, statistical reporting, or planning is  | ||
 permissible under and undertaken in accordance with the  | ||
 federal Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (20  | ||
 U.S.C. 1232g);
 | ||
  (5) pursuant Pursuant to a court order, provided that  | ||
 the
parent shall be given prompt written notice upon  | ||
 receipt
of such order of the terms of the order, the nature  | ||
 and
substance of the information proposed to be released
in  | ||
 compliance with such order and an opportunity to
inspect  | ||
 and copy the school student records and to
challenge their  | ||
 contents pursuant to Section 7;
 | ||
  (6) to To any person as specifically required by State
 | ||
 or federal law;
 | ||
  (6.5) to To juvenile authorities
when necessary for the  | ||
 discharge of their official duties
who request information  | ||
 prior to
adjudication of the student and who certify in  | ||
 writing that the information
will not be disclosed to any  | ||
 other party except as provided under law or order
of court.  | ||
 For purposes of this Section "juvenile authorities" means:
 | ||
 (i) a judge of
the circuit court and members of the staff  | ||
 of the court designated by the
judge; (ii) parties to the  | ||
 proceedings under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and
their  | ||
 attorneys; (iii) probation
officers and court appointed  | ||
 advocates for the juvenile authorized by the judge
hearing  | ||
 the case; (iv) any individual, public or private agency  | ||
 having custody
of the child pursuant to court order; (v)  | ||
 any individual, public or private
agency providing  | ||
 education, medical or mental health service to the child  | ||
 when
the requested information is needed to determine the  | ||
 appropriate service or
treatment for the minor; (vi) any  | ||
 potential placement provider when such
release
is  | ||
 authorized by the court for the limited purpose of  | ||
 determining the
appropriateness of the potential  | ||
 placement; (vii) law enforcement officers and
prosecutors;
 | ||
 (viii) adult and juvenile prisoner review boards; (ix)  | ||
 authorized military
personnel; (x)
individuals authorized  | ||
 by court;
 | ||
  (7) subject Subject to regulations of the State Board,
 | ||
 in connection with an emergency, to appropriate persons
if  | ||
 the knowledge of such information is necessary to protect
 | ||
 the health or safety of the student or other
persons;
 | ||
  (8) to To any person, with the prior specific dated
 | ||
 written consent of the parent designating the person
to  | ||
 whom the records may be released, provided that at
the time  | ||
 any such consent is requested or obtained,
the parent shall  | ||
 be advised in writing that he has the right
to inspect and  | ||
 copy such records in accordance with Section 5, to
 | ||
 challenge their contents in accordance with Section 7 and  | ||
 to limit any such
consent to
designated records or  | ||
 designated portions of the information contained
therein;
 | ||
  (9) to To a governmental agency, or social service  | ||
 agency contracted by a
governmental agency, in furtherance  | ||
 of an investigation of a student's school
attendance  | ||
 pursuant to the compulsory student attendance laws of this  | ||
 State,
provided that the records are released to the  | ||
 employee or agent designated by
the agency;
 | ||
  (10) to To those SHOCAP committee members who fall  | ||
 within the meaning of
"state and local officials and  | ||
 authorities", as those terms are used within the
meaning of  | ||
 the federal Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, for
 | ||
 the
purposes of identifying serious habitual juvenile  | ||
 offenders and matching those
offenders with community  | ||
 resources pursuant to Section 5-145 of the Juvenile
Court  | ||
 Act of 1987, but only to the extent that the release,  | ||
 transfer,
disclosure, or dissemination is consistent with  | ||
 the Family Educational Rights
and Privacy Act;
 | ||
  (11) to To the Department of Healthcare and Family  | ||
 Services in furtherance of the
requirements of Section  | ||
 2-3.131, 3-14.29, 10-28, or 34-18.26 of
the School Code or  | ||
 Section 10 of the School Breakfast and Lunch
Program Act;  | ||
 or
 | ||
  (12) to To the State Board or another State government  | ||
 agency or between or among State government agencies in  | ||
 order to evaluate or audit federal and State programs or  | ||
 perform research and planning, but only to the extent that  | ||
 the release, transfer, disclosure, or dissemination is  | ||
 consistent with the federal Family Educational Rights and  | ||
 Privacy Act (20 U.S.C. 1232g).  | ||
 (b) No information may be released pursuant to subparagraph  | ||
subparagraphs (3) or
(6) of paragraph (a) of this Section 6  | ||
unless the parent receives
prior written notice of the nature  | ||
and substance of the information
proposed to be released, and  | ||
an opportunity to inspect
and copy such records in accordance  | ||
with Section 5 and to
challenge their contents in accordance  | ||
with Section 7. Provided, however,
that such notice shall be  | ||
sufficient if published in a local newspaper of
general  | ||
circulation or other publication directed generally to the  | ||
parents
involved where the proposed release of information is  | ||
pursuant to
subparagraph (6) 6 of paragraph (a) of in this  | ||
Section 6 and relates to more
than 25 students.
 | ||
 (c) A record of any release of information pursuant
to this  | ||
Section must be made and kept as a part of the
school student  | ||
record and subject to the access granted by Section 5.
Such  | ||
record of release shall be maintained for the life of the
 | ||
school student records and shall be available only to the  | ||
parent
and the official records custodian.
Each record of  | ||
release shall also include:
 | ||
  (1) the The nature and substance of the information  | ||
 released;
 | ||
  (2) the The name and signature of the official records
 | ||
 custodian releasing such information;
 | ||
  (3) the The name of the person requesting such  | ||
 information,
the capacity in which such a request has been  | ||
 made, and the purpose of such
request;
 | ||
  (4) the The date of the release; and
 | ||
  (5) a A copy of any consent to such release.
 | ||
 (d) Except for the student and his parents, no person
to  | ||
whom information is released pursuant to this Section
and no  | ||
person specifically designated as a representative by a parent
 | ||
may permit any other person to have access to such information  | ||
without a prior
consent of the parent obtained in accordance  | ||
with the requirements
of subparagraph (8) of paragraph (a) of  | ||
this Section.
 | ||
 (e) Nothing contained in this Act shall prohibit the
 | ||
publication of student directories which list student names,  | ||
addresses
and other identifying information and similar  | ||
publications which
comply with regulations issued by the State  | ||
Board.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 95-793, eff. 1-1-09;  | ||
96-107, eff. 7-30-09; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10; revised 11-26-14.)
 | ||
 Section 200. The Critical Health Problems and  | ||
Comprehensive Health
Education Act is amended by changing  | ||
Section 2 as follows:
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 110/2) (from Ch. 122, par. 862)
 | ||
 Sec. 2. Definitions. The following term has terms shall  | ||
have the following meaning meanings respectively
prescribed  | ||
for them, except as the context otherwise requires:
 | ||
 (a) "Comprehensive Health Education Program": a systematic  | ||
and extensive
educational program designed to provide a variety  | ||
of learning experiences
based upon scientific knowledge of the  | ||
human organism as it functions
within its environment which  | ||
will favorably influence the knowledge,
attitudes, values and  | ||
practices of Illinois school youth; and which will
aid them in  | ||
making wise personal decisions in matters of health.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 77-1405; revised 11-26-14.)
 | ||
 Section 205. The School Safety Drill Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 25 as follows:
 | ||
 (105 ILCS 128/25)
 | ||
 Sec. 25. Annual review.  | ||
 (a) Each public school district, through its school board  | ||
or the board's designee, shall conduct a minimum of one annual  | ||
meeting at which it will review each school building's  | ||
emergency and crisis response plans, protocols, and procedures  | ||
and each building's compliance with the school safety drill  | ||
programs. The purpose of this annual review shall be to review  | ||
and update the emergency and crisis response plans, protocols,  | ||
and procedures and the school safety drill programs of the  | ||
district and each of its school buildings. This review must be  | ||
at no cost to the school district. In updating a school  | ||
building's emergency and crisis response plans, consideration  | ||
may be given to making the emergency and crisis response plans  | ||
available to first responders, administrators, and teachers  | ||
for implementation and utilization through the use of  | ||
electronic applications on electronic devices, including, but  | ||
not limited to, smartphones, tablets, and laptop computers. | ||
 (b) Each school board or the board's designee is required  | ||
to participate in the annual review and to invite each of the  | ||
following parties to the annual review and provide each party  | ||
with a minimum of 30 days' 30-days' notice before the date of  | ||
the annual review: | ||
  (1) The principal of each school within the school  | ||
 district or his or her official designee. | ||
  (2) Representatives from any other education-related  | ||
 organization or association deemed appropriate by the  | ||
 school district. | ||
  (3) Representatives from all local first responder  | ||
 organizations to participate, advise, and consult in the  | ||
 review process, including, but not limited to: | ||
   (A) the appropriate local fire department or  | ||
 district; | ||
   (B) the appropriate local law enforcement agency; | ||
   (C) the appropriate local emergency medical  | ||
 services agency if the agency is a separate, local  | ||
 first responder unit; and | ||
   (D) any other member of the first responder or  | ||
 emergency management community that has contacted the  | ||
 district superintendent or his or her designee during  | ||
 the past year to request involvement in a school's  | ||
 emergency planning or drill process. | ||
  (4) The school board or its designee may also choose to  | ||
 invite to the annual review any other persons whom it  | ||
 believes will aid in the review process, including, but not  | ||
 limited to, any members of any other education-related  | ||
 organization or the first responder or emergency  | ||
 management community. | ||
 (c) Upon the conclusion of the annual review, the school  | ||
board or the board's designee shall sign a one page report,  | ||
which may be in either a check-off format or a narrative  | ||
format, that does the following: | ||
  (1) summarizes the review's recommended changes to the  | ||
 existing school safety plans and drill plans; | ||
  (2) lists the parties that participated in the annual  | ||
 review, and includes the annual review's attendance  | ||
 record; | ||
  (3) certifies that an effective review of the emergency  | ||
 and crisis response plans, protocols, and procedures and  | ||
 the school safety drill programs of the district and each  | ||
 of its school buildings has occurred; | ||
  (4) states that the school district will implement  | ||
 those plans, protocols, procedures, and programs, during  | ||
 the academic year; and | ||
  (5) includes the authorization of the school board or  | ||
 the board's designee. | ||
 (d) The school board or its designee shall send a copy of  | ||
the report to each party that participates in the annual review  | ||
process and to the appropriate regional superintendent of  | ||
schools. If any of the participating parties have comments on  | ||
the certification document, those parties shall submit their  | ||
comments in writing to the appropriate regional  | ||
superintendent. The regional superintendent shall maintain a  | ||
record of these comments. The certification document may be in  | ||
a check-off format or narrative format, at the discretion of  | ||
the district superintendent. | ||
 (e) The review must occur at least once during the fiscal  | ||
year, at a specific time chosen at the school district  | ||
superintendent's discretion.
 | ||
 (f) A private school shall conduct a minimum of one annual  | ||
meeting at which the school must review each school building's  | ||
emergency and crisis response plans, protocols, and procedures  | ||
and each building's compliance with the school safety drill  | ||
programs of the school. The purpose of this annual review shall  | ||
be to review and update the emergency and crisis response  | ||
plans, protocols, and procedures and the school safety drill  | ||
programs of the school. This review must be at no cost to the  | ||
private school. | ||
 The private school shall invite representatives from all  | ||
local first responder organizations to participate, advise,  | ||
and consult in the review process, including, but not limited  | ||
to, the following: | ||
  (1) the appropriate local fire department or fire  | ||
 protection district; | ||
  (2) the appropriate local law enforcement agency; | ||
  (3) the appropriate local emergency medical services  | ||
 agency if the agency is a separate, local first responder  | ||
 unit; and | ||
  (4) any other member of the first responder or  | ||
 emergency management community that has contacted the  | ||
 school's chief administrative officer or his or her  | ||
 designee during the past year to request involvement in the  | ||
 school's emergency planning or drill process.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-661, eff. 1-1-15; 98-663, eff. 6-23-14;  | ||
revised 7-15-14.)
 | ||
 Section 210. The Illinois Credit Union Act is amended by  | ||
changing Sections 46 and 57.1 as follows:
 | ||
 (205 ILCS 305/46) (from Ch. 17, par. 4447)
 | ||
 Sec. 46. Loans and interest rate.
 | ||
 (1) A credit union may make loans
to its members for such  | ||
purpose and upon such security and terms, including
rates of  | ||
interest, as the credit committee, credit manager, or loan  | ||
officer
approves.
Notwithstanding the provisions of any other  | ||
law in connection with extensions
of credit, a credit union may  | ||
elect to
contract for and receive interest and fees and other  | ||
charges for extensions of
credit subject only to the provisions  | ||
of this Act and rules promulgated under
this Act, except that  | ||
extensions of credit secured by residential real estate
shall  | ||
be subject to the laws applicable thereto.
The rates of  | ||
interest to be charged on loans to members shall be
set by the  | ||
board of directors of each individual credit union in  | ||
accordance with Section 30 of this Act and such
rates may be  | ||
less than, but may not exceed, the maximum rate set forth in
 | ||
this Section. A borrower may repay his loan prior to maturity,  | ||
in whole or
in part, without penalty. The credit contract may  | ||
provide for the payment
by the member and receipt by the credit  | ||
union of all costs and
disbursements, including reasonable  | ||
attorney's fees and collection agency
charges, incurred by the  | ||
credit union to collect or enforce the debt in the
event of a  | ||
delinquency by the member, or in the event of a breach of any
 | ||
obligation of the member under the credit contract. A  | ||
contingency or
hourly arrangement established under an  | ||
agreement entered into by a credit
union with an attorney or  | ||
collection agency to collect a loan of a member
in default  | ||
shall be presumed prima facie reasonable.
 | ||
 (2) Credit unions may make loans based upon the security of  | ||
any
interest or equity in real estate, subject to rules and  | ||
regulations
promulgated by the Secretary. In any contract or  | ||
loan which
is secured by a mortgage, deed of
trust, or  | ||
conveyance in the nature of a mortgage, on residential real
 | ||
estate, the interest which is computed, calculated, charged, or  | ||
collected
pursuant to such contract or loan, or pursuant to any  | ||
regulation or rule
promulgated pursuant to this Act, may not be  | ||
computed, calculated, charged
or collected for any period of  | ||
time occurring after the date on which the
total indebtedness,  | ||
with the exception of late payment penalties, is paid
in full.
 | ||
 For purposes of this subsection (2) of this Section 46, a  | ||
prepayment
shall mean the payment of the total indebtedness,  | ||
with the exception of
late payment penalties if incurred or  | ||
charged, on any date before the date
specified in the contract  | ||
or loan agreement on which the total indebtedness
shall be paid  | ||
in full, or before the date on which all payments, if timely
 | ||
made, shall have been made. In the event of a prepayment of the
 | ||
indebtedness which is made on a date
after the date on which  | ||
interest on the indebtedness was last computed,
calculated,  | ||
charged, or collected but before the next date on which  | ||
interest
on the indebtedness was to be calculated, computed,  | ||
charged, or collected,
the lender may calculate, charge and  | ||
collect interest on the indebtedness
for the period which  | ||
elapsed between the date on which the prepayment is
made and  | ||
the date on which interest on the indebtedness was last  | ||
computed,
calculated, charged or collected at a rate equal to  | ||
1/360 of the annual
rate for each day which so elapsed, which  | ||
rate shall be applied to the
indebtedness outstanding as of the  | ||
date of prepayment. The lender shall
refund to the borrower any  | ||
interest charged or collected which exceeds that
which the  | ||
lender may charge or collect pursuant to the preceding  | ||
sentence.
The provisions of this amendatory Act of 1985 shall  | ||
apply only to contracts
or loans entered into on or after the  | ||
effective date of this amendatory
Act.
 | ||
 (3) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, a  | ||
credit union
authorized under this Act to make loans secured by  | ||
an interest or equity in
real estate may engage in making  | ||
"reverse mortgage" loans to persons for
the purpose of making  | ||
home improvements or repairs, paying insurance
premiums or  | ||
paying real estate taxes on the homestead properties
of such  | ||
persons. If made, such loans shall be made on such terms and
 | ||
conditions as the credit union shall determine and as shall be  | ||
consistent
with the provisions of this Section and such rules  | ||
and regulations as the Secretary
shall promulgate hereunder.  | ||
For purposes of this Section, a
"reverse mortgage" loan shall  | ||
be a loan extended on the basis of existing
equity in homestead  | ||
property and secured by a mortgage on such property.
Such loans  | ||
shall be repaid upon the sale of the property or upon the death
 | ||
of the owner or, if the property is in joint tenancy, upon the  | ||
death of the
last surviving joint tenant who had such an  | ||
interest in the property at the
time the loan was initiated,  | ||
provided, however, that the credit union and
its member may by  | ||
mutual agreement, establish other repayment terms. A
credit  | ||
union, in making a "reverse mortgage" loan, may add deferred
 | ||
interest to principal or otherwise provide for the charging of  | ||
interest or
premiums on such deferred interest. "Homestead"  | ||
property, for purposes of
this Section, means the domicile and  | ||
contiguous real estate owned and
occupied by the mortgagor.
 | ||
 (4) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act, a  | ||
credit union
authorized under this Act to make loans secured by  | ||
an interest or equity
in real property may engage in making  | ||
revolving credit loans secured by
mortgages or deeds of trust  | ||
on such real property or by security
assignments of beneficial  | ||
interests in land trusts.
 | ||
 For purposes of this Section, "revolving credit" has the  | ||
meaning defined
in Section 4.1 of the Interest Act.
 | ||
 Any mortgage or deed of trust given to secure a revolving  | ||
credit loan may,
and when so expressed therein shall, secure  | ||
not only the existing indebtedness
but also such future  | ||
advances, whether such advances are obligatory or to
be made at  | ||
the option of the lender, or otherwise, as are made within  | ||
twenty
years from the date thereof, to the same extent as if  | ||
such future advances
were made on the date of the execution of  | ||
such mortgage or deed of trust,
although there may be no  | ||
advance made at the time of execution of such mortgage
or other  | ||
instrument, and although there may be no indebtedness  | ||
outstanding
at the time any advance is made. The lien of such  | ||
mortgage or deed of trust,
as to third persons
without actual  | ||
notice thereof, shall be valid as to all such indebtedness
and  | ||
future advances form the time said mortgage or deed of trust is  | ||
filed
for record in the office of the recorder of deeds or the  | ||
registrar of titles
of the county where the real property  | ||
described therein is located. The
total amount of indebtedness  | ||
that may be so secured may increase or decrease
from time to  | ||
time, but the total unpaid balance so secured at any one time
 | ||
shall not exceed a maximum principal amount which must be  | ||
specified in such
mortgage or deed of trust, plus interest  | ||
thereon, and any disbursements
made for the payment of taxes,  | ||
special assessments, or insurance on said
real property, with  | ||
interest on such disbursements.
 | ||
 Any such mortgage or deed of trust shall be valid and have  | ||
priority over
all subsequent liens and encumbrances, including  | ||
statutory liens, except
taxes and assessments levied on said  | ||
real property.
 | ||
 (4-5) For purposes of this Section, "real estate" and "real  | ||
property" include a manufactured home as defined in subdivision  | ||
(53) of Section 9-102 of the Uniform Commercial Code which is  | ||
real property as defined in Section 5-35 of the Conveyance and  | ||
Encumbrance of Manufactured Homes as Real Property and  | ||
Severance Act.  | ||
 (5) Compliance with federal or Illinois preemptive laws or  | ||
regulations
governing loans made by a credit union chartered  | ||
under this Act shall
constitute compliance with this Act.
 | ||
 (6) Credit unions may make residential real estate mortgage  | ||
loans on terms and conditions established by the United States  | ||
Department of Agriculture through its Rural Development  | ||
Housing and Community Facilities Program. The portion of any  | ||
loan in excess of the appraised value of the real estate shall  | ||
be allocable only to the guarantee fee required under the  | ||
program.  | ||
 (7) For a renewal, refinancing, or restructuring of an  | ||
existing loan that is secured by an interest or equity in real  | ||
estate, a new appraisal of the collateral shall not be required  | ||
when the transaction involves an existing extension of credit  | ||
at the credit union, no new moneys are advanced other than  | ||
funds necessary to cover reasonable closing costs, and there  | ||
has been no obvious or material change in market conditions or  | ||
physical aspects of the real estate that threatens the adequacy  | ||
of the credit union's real estate collateral protection after  | ||
the transaction.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-133, eff. 1-1-12; 98-749, eff. 7-16-14;  | ||
98-784, eff. 7-24-14; revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 (205 ILCS 305/57.1) | ||
 Sec. 57.1. Services to other credit unions. | ||
 (a) A credit union may act as a representative of and enter  | ||
into an agreement with credit unions or other organizations for  | ||
the purposes purpose of: | ||
  (1) sharing, utilizing, renting, leasing, purchasing,  | ||
 selling, and joint ownership of fixed assets or engaging in  | ||
 activities and services that relate to the daily operations  | ||
 of credit unions; and | ||
  (2) providing correspondent services to other credit  | ||
 unions that the service provider credit union is authorized  | ||
 to perform for its own members or as part of its  | ||
 operations, including, but not limited to, loan  | ||
 processing, loan servicing, member check cashing services,  | ||
 disbursing share withdrawals and loan proceeds, cashing  | ||
 and selling money orders, ACH and wire transfer services,  | ||
 coin and currency services, performing internal audits,  | ||
 and automated teller machine deposit services.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-784, eff. 7-24-14; revised 11-26-14.)
 | ||
 Section 215. The Residential Mortgage License Act of 1987  | ||
is amended by changing Section 1-4 as follows:
 | ||
 (205 ILCS 635/1-4) | ||
 Sec. 1-4. Definitions. The following words and phrases have  | ||
the meanings given to them in this Section:  | ||
  (a) "Residential real property" or "residential real  | ||
 estate" shall mean any real property located in Illinois,  | ||
 upon which is constructed or intended to be constructed a  | ||
 dwelling. Those terms include a manufactured home as  | ||
 defined in subdivision (53) of Section 9-102 of the Uniform  | ||
 Commercial Code which is real property as defined in  | ||
 Section 5-35 of the Conveyance and Encumbrance of  | ||
 Manufactured Homes as Real Property and Severance Act. | ||
  (b) "Making a residential mortgage loan" or "funding a  | ||
 residential mortgage
loan" shall mean for compensation or  | ||
 gain, either directly or indirectly,
advancing funds or  | ||
 making a commitment to advance funds to a loan applicant
 | ||
 for a residential mortgage loan. | ||
  (c) "Soliciting, processing, placing, or negotiating a  | ||
 residential
mortgage loan" shall mean for compensation or  | ||
 gain, either directly or
indirectly, accepting or offering  | ||
 to accept an application for a
residential mortgage loan,  | ||
 assisting or offering to assist in the
processing of an  | ||
 application for a residential mortgage loan on behalf of a
 | ||
 borrower, or negotiating or offering to negotiate the terms  | ||
 or conditions
of a residential mortgage loan with a lender  | ||
 on behalf of a borrower
including, but not limited to, the  | ||
 submission of credit packages for the
approval of lenders,  | ||
 the preparation of residential mortgage loan closing
 | ||
 documents, including a closing in the name of a broker. | ||
  (d) "Exempt person or entity" shall mean the following: | ||
   (1) (i) Any banking organization or foreign  | ||
 banking corporation
licensed by the Illinois  | ||
 Commissioner of Banks and Real Estate or the
United  | ||
 States Comptroller of the Currency to transact  | ||
 business in this
State; (ii) any national bank,  | ||
 federally chartered savings and loan
association,  | ||
 federal savings bank, federal credit union; (iii)  | ||
 (blank); (iv) any bank, savings and loan
association,  | ||
 savings bank, or credit union organized under the laws  | ||
 of this
or any other state; (v) any Illinois Consumer  | ||
 Installment Loan Act licensee;
(vi) any insurance  | ||
 company authorized to transact business in this State;
 | ||
 (vii) any entity engaged solely in commercial mortgage  | ||
 lending; (viii) any
service corporation of a savings  | ||
 and loan association or savings bank organized
under  | ||
 the laws of this State or the service corporation of a  | ||
 federally
chartered savings and loan association or  | ||
 savings bank having
its principal place of business in  | ||
 this State, other than a service
corporation licensed  | ||
 or entitled to reciprocity under the Real Estate
 | ||
 License Act of 2000; or (ix) any first tier subsidiary  | ||
 of a
bank, the charter of which is issued under the  | ||
 Illinois Banking Act
by the Illinois Commissioner of  | ||
 Banks and Real Estate,
or the first tier subsidiary of  | ||
 a bank chartered by the United States
Comptroller of  | ||
 the Currency and that has its principal place of  | ||
 business
in this State, provided that the first tier  | ||
 subsidiary is regularly
examined by the Illinois  | ||
 Commissioner of Banks and Real Estate
or the  | ||
 Comptroller of the Currency, or a consumer compliance  | ||
 examination is
regularly conducted by the Federal  | ||
 Reserve Board. | ||
   (1.5) Any employee of a person or entity mentioned  | ||
 in
item (1) of this subsection, when acting for such  | ||
 person or entity, or any registered mortgage loan  | ||
 originator when acting for an entity described in  | ||
 subsection (tt) of this Section. | ||
   (1.8) Any person or entity that does not originate  | ||
 mortgage loans in the ordinary course of business, but  | ||
 makes or acquires residential mortgage loans with his  | ||
 or her own funds for his or her or its own investment  | ||
 without intent to make, acquire, or resell more than 3  | ||
 residential mortgage loans in any one calendar year.  | ||
   (2) (Blank). | ||
   (3) Any person employed by a licensee to assist in  | ||
 the performance of
the residential mortgage licensee's  | ||
 activities regulated by this Act who is compensated in  | ||
 any manner by
only one licensee. | ||
   (4) (Blank). | ||
   (5) Any individual, corporation, partnership, or  | ||
 other entity that
originates, services, or brokers  | ||
 residential mortgage loans, as these
activities are  | ||
 defined in this Act, and who or which receives no
 | ||
 compensation for those activities, subject to the  | ||
 Commissioner's
regulations and the federal Secure and  | ||
 Fair Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing Act of 2008 and  | ||
 the rules promulgated under that Act with regard to the  | ||
 nature and amount of compensation. | ||
   (6) (Blank). | ||
  (e) "Licensee" or "residential mortgage licensee"  | ||
 shall mean a person,
partnership, association,  | ||
 corporation, or any other entity who or which is
licensed  | ||
 pursuant to this Act to engage in the activities regulated  | ||
 by
this Act. | ||
  (f) "Mortgage loan" "residential mortgage loan" or  | ||
 "home
mortgage loan" shall mean any loan primarily for  | ||
 personal, family, or household use that is secured by a  | ||
 mortgage, deed of trust, or other equivalent consensual  | ||
 security interest on a dwelling as defined in Section  | ||
 103(v) of the federal Truth in Lending Act, or residential  | ||
 real estate upon which is constructed or intended to be  | ||
 constructed a dwelling. | ||
  (g) "Lender" shall mean any person, partnership,  | ||
 association,
corporation, or any other entity who either  | ||
 lends or invests money in
residential mortgage loans. | ||
  (h) "Ultimate equitable owner" shall mean a person who,  | ||
 directly
or indirectly, owns or controls an ownership  | ||
 interest in a corporation,
foreign corporation, alien  | ||
 business organization, trust, or any other form
of business  | ||
 organization regardless of whether the person owns or  | ||
 controls
the ownership interest through one or more persons  | ||
 or one or more proxies,
powers of attorney, nominees,  | ||
 corporations, associations, partnerships,
trusts, joint  | ||
 stock companies, or other entities or devices, or any
 | ||
 combination thereof. | ||
  (i) "Residential mortgage financing transaction" shall  | ||
 mean the negotiation,
acquisition, sale, or arrangement  | ||
 for or the offer to negotiate, acquire,
sell, or arrange  | ||
 for, a residential mortgage loan or residential mortgage
 | ||
 loan commitment. | ||
  (j) "Personal residence address" shall mean a street  | ||
 address and shall
not include a post office box number. | ||
  (k) "Residential mortgage loan commitment" shall mean  | ||
 a contract for
residential mortgage loan financing. | ||
  (l) "Party to a residential mortgage financing  | ||
 transaction" shall mean a
borrower, lender, or loan broker  | ||
 in a residential mortgage financing
transaction. | ||
  (m) "Payments" shall mean payment of all or any of the  | ||
 following:
principal, interest and escrow reserves for  | ||
 taxes, insurance and other related
reserves, and  | ||
 reimbursement for lender advances. | ||
  (n) "Commissioner" shall mean the Commissioner of  | ||
 Banks and Real Estate, except that, beginning on April 6,  | ||
 2009 (the effective date of Public Act 95-1047), all  | ||
 references in this Act to the Commissioner of Banks and  | ||
 Real Estate are deemed, in appropriate contexts, to be  | ||
 references to the Secretary of Financial and Professional  | ||
 Regulation, or his or her designee, including the Director  | ||
 of the Division of Banking of the Department of Financial  | ||
 and Professional Regulation. | ||
  (n-1) "Director" shall mean the Director of the  | ||
 Division of Banking of the Department of Financial and  | ||
 Professional Regulation, except that, beginning on July  | ||
 31, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act 96-112), all  | ||
 references in this Act to the Director are deemed, in  | ||
 appropriate contexts, to be the Secretary of Financial and  | ||
 Professional Regulation, or his or her designee, including  | ||
 the Director of the Division of Banking of the Department  | ||
 of Financial and Professional Regulation.  | ||
  (o) "Loan brokering", "brokering", or "brokerage  | ||
 service" shall mean the act
of helping to obtain from  | ||
 another entity, for a borrower, a loan secured by
 | ||
 residential real estate situated in Illinois or assisting a  | ||
 borrower in
obtaining a loan secured by residential real  | ||
 estate situated in Illinois in
return for consideration to  | ||
 be paid by either the borrower or the lender
including, but  | ||
 not limited to, contracting for the delivery of residential
 | ||
 mortgage loans to a third party lender and soliciting,  | ||
 processing, placing,
or negotiating residential mortgage  | ||
 loans. | ||
  (p) "Loan broker" or "broker" shall mean a person,  | ||
 partnership,
association, corporation, or limited  | ||
 liability company, other than
those persons, partnerships,
 | ||
 associations, corporations, or limited liability companies  | ||
 exempted
from licensing pursuant to Section
1-4,  | ||
 subsection (d), of this Act, who performs the activities  | ||
 described
in subsections (c), (o), and (yy) of this  | ||
 Section. | ||
  (q) "Servicing" shall mean the collection or  | ||
 remittance for or the
right or obligation to collect or  | ||
 remit for any lender, noteowner,
noteholder, or for a  | ||
 licensee's own account, of payments, interests,
principal,  | ||
 and trust items such as hazard insurance and taxes on a
 | ||
 residential mortgage loan in accordance with the terms of  | ||
 the residential
mortgage loan; and includes loan payment  | ||
 follow-up, delinquency loan
follow-up, loan analysis and  | ||
 any notifications to the borrower that are
necessary to  | ||
 enable the borrower to keep the loan current and in good  | ||
 standing. "Servicing" includes management of third-party  | ||
 entities acting on behalf of a residential mortgage  | ||
 licensee for the collection of delinquent payments and the  | ||
 use by such third-party entities of said licensee's  | ||
 servicing records or information, including their use in  | ||
 foreclosure.  | ||
  (r) "Full service office" shall mean an office,  | ||
 provided by the licensee and not subleased from the  | ||
 licensee's employees, and staff in Illinois
reasonably  | ||
 adequate to handle efficiently communications, questions,  | ||
 and
other matters relating to any application for, or an  | ||
 existing home mortgage
secured by residential real estate  | ||
 situated in Illinois
with respect to which the licensee is  | ||
 brokering, funding originating,
purchasing, or servicing.  | ||
 The management and operation of each full service
office  | ||
 must include observance of good business practices such as  | ||
 proper signage; adequate,
organized, and accurate books  | ||
 and records; ample phone lines, hours of
business, staff  | ||
 training and supervision, and provision for a mechanism to
 | ||
 resolve consumer inquiries, complaints, and problems. The  | ||
 Commissioner
shall issue regulations with regard to these  | ||
 requirements and shall include
an evaluation of compliance  | ||
 with this Section in his or her periodic
examination of  | ||
 each licensee. | ||
  (s) "Purchasing" shall mean the purchase of  | ||
 conventional or
government-insured mortgage loans secured  | ||
 by residential real estate
situated in Illinois from either  | ||
 the lender or from the secondary market. | ||
  (t) "Borrower" shall mean the person or persons who  | ||
 seek the services of
a loan broker, originator, or lender. | ||
  (u) "Originating" shall mean the issuing of  | ||
 commitments for and funding of
residential mortgage loans. | ||
  (v) "Loan brokerage agreement" shall mean a written  | ||
 agreement in which a
broker or loan broker agrees to do  | ||
 either of the following: | ||
   (1) obtain a residential mortgage loan for the  | ||
 borrower or assist the
borrower in obtaining a  | ||
 residential mortgage loan; or | ||
   (2) consider making a residential mortgage loan to  | ||
 the borrower. | ||
  (w) "Advertisement" shall mean the attempt by  | ||
 publication,
dissemination, or circulation to induce,  | ||
 directly or indirectly,
any person to enter into a  | ||
 residential mortgage loan agreement or
residential  | ||
 mortgage loan brokerage agreement relative to a
mortgage  | ||
 secured by residential real estate situated in Illinois. | ||
  (x) "Residential Mortgage Board" shall mean the  | ||
 Residential Mortgage
Board created in Section 1-5 of this  | ||
 Act. | ||
  (y) "Government-insured mortgage loan" shall mean any  | ||
 mortgage loan made
on the security of residential real  | ||
 estate insured by the Department of
Housing and Urban  | ||
 Development or Farmers Home Loan Administration, or
 | ||
 guaranteed by the Veterans Administration. | ||
  (z) "Annual audit" shall mean a certified audit of the  | ||
 licensee's books and
records and systems of internal  | ||
 control performed by a certified public
accountant in  | ||
 accordance with generally accepted accounting principles
 | ||
 and generally accepted auditing standards. | ||
  (aa) "Financial institution" shall mean a savings and  | ||
 loan
association, savings bank, credit union, or a bank  | ||
 organized under the
laws of Illinois or a savings and loan  | ||
 association, savings bank,
credit union or a bank organized  | ||
 under the laws of the United States and
headquartered in  | ||
 Illinois. | ||
  (bb) "Escrow agent" shall mean a third party,  | ||
 individual or entity
charged with the fiduciary obligation  | ||
 for holding escrow funds on a
residential mortgage loan  | ||
 pending final payout of those funds
in accordance with the  | ||
 terms of the residential mortgage loan. | ||
  (cc) "Net worth" shall have the meaning ascribed  | ||
 thereto in Section 3-5
of this Act. | ||
  (dd) "Affiliate" shall mean: | ||
   (1) any entity that directly controls or is  | ||
 controlled by the licensee
and any other company that  | ||
 is directly affecting activities regulated by
this Act  | ||
 that is controlled by the company that controls the  | ||
 licensee; | ||
   (2) any entity: | ||
    (A) that is controlled, directly or  | ||
 indirectly, by a trust or otherwise,
by or for the  | ||
 benefit of shareholders who beneficially or  | ||
 otherwise
control, directly or indirectly, by  | ||
 trust or otherwise, the licensee or any
company  | ||
 that controls the licensee; or | ||
    (B) a majority of the directors or trustees of  | ||
 which constitute a
majority of the persons holding  | ||
 any such office with the licensee or any
company  | ||
 that controls the licensee; | ||
   (3) any company, including a real estate  | ||
 investment trust, that is
sponsored and advised on a  | ||
 contractual basis by the licensee or any
subsidiary or  | ||
 affiliate of the licensee. | ||
  The Commissioner may define by rule and regulation any  | ||
 terms used
in this Act for the efficient and clear  | ||
 administration of this Act. | ||
  (ee) "First tier subsidiary" shall be defined by  | ||
 regulation
incorporating the comparable definitions used  | ||
 by the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency and the  | ||
 Illinois Commissioner of Banks
and Real Estate. | ||
  (ff) "Gross delinquency rate" means the quotient  | ||
 determined by dividing
(1) the sum of (i) the number of  | ||
 government-insured residential mortgage loans
funded or  | ||
 purchased by a licensee in the preceding calendar year that  | ||
 are
delinquent and (ii) the number of conventional  | ||
 residential mortgage loans
funded or purchased by the  | ||
 licensee in the preceding calendar year that are
delinquent  | ||
 by (2) the sum of (i) the number of government-insured  | ||
 residential
mortgage loans funded or purchased by the  | ||
 licensee in the preceding calendar
year and (ii) the number  | ||
 of conventional residential mortgage loans funded or
 | ||
 purchased by the licensee in the preceding calendar year. | ||
  (gg) "Delinquency rate factor" means the factor set by  | ||
 rule of the
Commissioner that is multiplied by the average  | ||
 gross delinquency rate of
licensees, determined annually  | ||
 for the immediately preceding calendar year, for
the  | ||
 purpose of determining which licensees shall be examined by  | ||
 the
Commissioner pursuant to subsection (b) of Section 4-8  | ||
 of this Act. | ||
  (hh) "Loan originator" means any natural person who,  | ||
 for compensation or in
the expectation of compensation,  | ||
 either directly or indirectly makes, offers to
make,  | ||
 solicits, places, or negotiates a residential mortgage  | ||
 loan. This definition applies only to Section 7-1 of this  | ||
 Act.  | ||
  (ii) "Confidential supervisory information" means any  | ||
 report of examination, visitation, or investigation  | ||
 prepared by the Commissioner under this Act, any report of  | ||
 examination visitation, or investigation prepared by the  | ||
 state regulatory authority of another state that examines a  | ||
 licensee, any document or record prepared or obtained in  | ||
 connection with or relating to any examination,  | ||
 visitation, or investigation, and any record prepared or  | ||
 obtained by the Commissioner to the extent that the record  | ||
 summarizes or contains information derived from any  | ||
 report, document, or record described in this subsection.  | ||
 "Confidential supervisory information" does not include  | ||
 any information or record routinely prepared by a licensee  | ||
 and maintained in the ordinary course of business or any  | ||
 information or record that is required to be made publicly  | ||
 available pursuant to State or federal law or rule.
 | ||
  (jj) "Mortgage loan originator" means an individual  | ||
 who for compensation or gain or in the expectation of  | ||
 compensation or gain: | ||
   (i) takes a residential mortgage loan application;  | ||
 or | ||
   (ii) offers or negotiates terms of a residential  | ||
 mortgage loan. | ||
  "Mortgage loan originator" includes an individual  | ||
 engaged in loan modification activities as defined in  | ||
 subsection (yy) of this Section. A mortgage loan originator  | ||
 engaged in loan modification activities shall report those  | ||
 activities to the Department of Financial and Professional  | ||
 Regulation in the manner provided by the Department;  | ||
 however, the Department shall not impose a fee for  | ||
 reporting, nor require any additional qualifications to  | ||
 engage in those activities beyond those provided pursuant  | ||
 to this Act for mortgage loan originators.  | ||
  "Mortgage loan originator" does not include an  | ||
 individual engaged solely as a loan processor or  | ||
 underwriter except as otherwise provided in subsection (d)  | ||
 of Section 7-1A of this Act. | ||
  "Mortgage loan originator" does not include a person or  | ||
 entity that only performs real estate brokerage activities  | ||
 and is licensed in accordance with the Real Estate License  | ||
 Act of 2000, unless the person or entity is compensated by  | ||
 a lender, a mortgage broker, or other mortgage loan  | ||
 originator, or by any agent of that lender, mortgage  | ||
 broker, or other mortgage loan originator. | ||
  "Mortgage loan originator" does not include a person or  | ||
 entity solely involved in extensions of credit relating to  | ||
 timeshare plans, as that term is defined in Section  | ||
 101(53D) of Title 11, United States Code. | ||
  (kk) "Depository institution" has the same meaning as  | ||
 in Section 3 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, and  | ||
 includes any credit union.  | ||
  (ll) "Dwelling" means a residential structure or  | ||
 mobile home which contains one to 4 family housing units,  | ||
 or individual units of condominiums or cooperatives.  | ||
  (mm) "Immediate family member" means a spouse, child,  | ||
 sibling, parent, grandparent, or grandchild, and includes  | ||
 step-parents, step-children, step-siblings, or adoptive  | ||
 relationships. | ||
  (nn) "Individual" means a natural person.  | ||
  (oo) "Loan processor or underwriter" means an  | ||
 individual who performs clerical or support duties as an  | ||
 employee at the direction of and subject to the supervision  | ||
 and instruction of a person licensed, or exempt from  | ||
 licensing, under this Act. "Clerical or support duties"  | ||
 includes subsequent to the receipt of an application: | ||
   (i) the receipt, collection, distribution, and  | ||
 analysis of information common for the processing or  | ||
 underwriting of a residential mortgage loan; and | ||
   (ii) communicating with a consumer to obtain the  | ||
 information necessary for the processing or  | ||
 underwriting of a loan, to the extent that the  | ||
 communication does not include offering or negotiating  | ||
 loan rates or terms, or counseling consumers about  | ||
 residential mortgage loan rates or terms. An  | ||
 individual engaging solely in loan processor or  | ||
 underwriter activities shall not represent to the  | ||
 public, through advertising or other means of  | ||
 communicating or providing information, including the  | ||
 use of business cards, stationery, brochures, signs,  | ||
 rate lists, or other promotional items, that the  | ||
 individual can or will perform any of the activities of  | ||
 a mortgage loan originator.  | ||
  (pp) "Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System and  | ||
 Registry" means a mortgage licensing system developed and  | ||
 maintained by the Conference of State Bank Supervisors and  | ||
 the American Association of Residential Mortgage  | ||
 Regulators for the licensing and registration of licensed  | ||
 mortgage loan originators.  | ||
  (qq) "Nontraditional mortgage product" means any  | ||
 mortgage product other than a 30-year fixed rate mortgage. | ||
  (rr) "Person" means a natural person, corporation,  | ||
 company, limited liability company, partnership, or  | ||
 association. | ||
  (ss) "Real estate brokerage activity" means any  | ||
 activity that involves offering or providing real estate  | ||
 brokerage services to the public, including: | ||
   (1) acting as a real estate agent or real estate  | ||
 broker for a buyer, seller, lessor, or lessee of real  | ||
 property; | ||
   (2) bringing together parties interested in the  | ||
 sale, purchase, lease, rental, or exchange of real  | ||
 property; | ||
   (3) negotiating, on behalf of any party, any  | ||
 portion of a contract relating to the sale, purchase,  | ||
 lease, rental, or exchange of real property, other than  | ||
 in connection with providing financing with respect to  | ||
 any such transaction; | ||
   (4) engaging in any activity for which a person  | ||
 engaged in the activity is required to be registered or  | ||
 licensed as a real estate agent or real estate broker  | ||
 under any applicable law; or | ||
   (5) offering to engage in any activity, or act in  | ||
 any capacity, described in this subsection (ss).  | ||
  (tt) "Registered mortgage loan originator" means any  | ||
 individual that: | ||
   (1) meets the definition of mortgage loan  | ||
 originator and is an employee of: | ||
    (A) a depository institution; | ||
    (B) a subsidiary that is: | ||
     (i) owned and controlled by a depository  | ||
 institution; and | ||
     (ii) regulated by a federal banking  | ||
 agency; or | ||
    (C) an institution regulated by the Farm  | ||
 Credit Administration; and | ||
   (2) is registered with, and maintains a unique  | ||
 identifier through, the Nationwide Mortgage Licensing  | ||
 System and Registry. | ||
  (uu) "Unique identifier" means a number or other  | ||
 identifier assigned by protocols established by the  | ||
 Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System and Registry.  | ||
  (vv) "Residential mortgage license" means a license  | ||
 issued pursuant to Section 1-3, 2-2, or 2-6 of this Act.  | ||
  (ww) "Mortgage loan originator license" means a  | ||
 license issued pursuant to Section 7-1A, 7-3, or 7-6 of  | ||
 this Act.  | ||
  (xx) "Secretary" means the Secretary of the Department  | ||
 of Financial and Professional Regulation, or a person  | ||
 authorized by the Secretary or by this Act to act in the  | ||
 Secretary's stead.  | ||
  (yy) "Loan modification" means, for compensation or  | ||
 gain, either directly or indirectly offering or  | ||
 negotiating on behalf of a borrower or homeowner to adjust  | ||
 the terms of a residential mortgage loan in a manner not  | ||
 provided for in the original or previously modified  | ||
 mortgage loan.  | ||
  (zz) "Short sale facilitation" means, for compensation  | ||
 or gain, either directly or indirectly offering or  | ||
 negotiating on behalf of a borrower or homeowner to  | ||
 facilitate the sale of residential real estate subject to  | ||
 one or more residential mortgage loans or debts  | ||
 constituting liens on the property in which the proceeds  | ||
 from selling the residential real estate will fall short of  | ||
 the amount owed and the lien holders are contacted to agree  | ||
 to release their lien on the residential real estate and  | ||
 accept less than the full amount owed on the debt.  | ||
 The Commissioner may define by rule and regulation any  | ||
terms used
in this Act for the efficient and clear  | ||
administration of this Act. | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-143, eff. 7-14-11; 97-891, eff. 8-3-12;  | ||
98-749, eff. 7-16-14; 98-1081, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-6-14.)
 | ||
 Section 220. The Alternative Health Care Delivery Act is  | ||
amended by changing Section 30 as follows:
 | ||
 (210 ILCS 3/30)
 | ||
 Sec. 30. Demonstration program requirements. The  | ||
requirements set forth in
this Section shall apply to  | ||
demonstration programs.
 | ||
 (a) (Blank).
 | ||
 (a-5) There shall be no more than the total number of  | ||
postsurgical
recovery care centers with a certificate of need  | ||
for beds as of January 1, 2008.
 | ||
 (a-10) There shall be no more than a total of 9 children's  | ||
community-based health care center alternative health care  | ||
models in the demonstration program, which shall
be located as  | ||
follows:
 | ||
  (1) Two in the City of Chicago.
 | ||
  (2) One in Cook County outside the City of Chicago.
 | ||
  (3) A total of 2 in the area comprised of DuPage, Kane,  | ||
 Lake, McHenry, and
Will counties.
 | ||
  (4) A total of 2 in municipalities with a population of  | ||
 50,000 or more and
not
located in the areas described in  | ||
 paragraphs (1), (2), or (3).
 | ||
  (5) A total of 2 in rural areas, as defined by the  | ||
 Health Facilities
and Services Review Board.
 | ||
 No more than one children's community-based health care  | ||
center owned and operated by a
licensed skilled pediatric  | ||
facility shall be located in each of the areas
designated in  | ||
this subsection (a-10).
 | ||
 (a-15) There shall be 5 authorized community-based  | ||
residential
rehabilitation center alternative health care  | ||
models in the demonstration
program.
 | ||
 (a-20) There shall be an authorized
Alzheimer's disease  | ||
management center alternative health care model in the
 | ||
demonstration program. The Alzheimer's disease management  | ||
center shall be
located in Will
County, owned by a
 | ||
not-for-profit entity, and endorsed by a resolution approved by  | ||
the county
board before the effective date of this amendatory  | ||
Act of the 91st General
Assembly.
 | ||
 (a-25) There shall be no more than 10 birth center  | ||
alternative health care
models in the demonstration program,  | ||
located as follows:
 | ||
  (1) Four in the area comprising Cook, DuPage, Kane,  | ||
 Lake, McHenry, and
Will counties, one of
which shall be  | ||
 owned or operated by a hospital and one of which shall be  | ||
 owned
or operated by a federally qualified health center.
 | ||
  (2) Three in municipalities with a population of 50,000  | ||
 or more not
located in the area described in paragraph (1)  | ||
 of this subsection, one of
which shall be owned or operated  | ||
 by a hospital and one of which shall be owned
or operated  | ||
 by a federally qualified health center.
 | ||
  (3) Three in rural areas, one of which shall be owned  | ||
 or operated by a
hospital and one of which shall be owned  | ||
 or operated by a federally qualified
health center.
 | ||
 The first 3 birth centers authorized to operate by the  | ||
Department shall be
located in or predominantly serve the  | ||
residents of a health professional
shortage area as determined  | ||
by the United States Department of Health and Human
Services.  | ||
There shall be no more than 2 birth centers authorized to  | ||
operate in
any single health planning area for obstetric  | ||
services as determined under the
Illinois Health Facilities  | ||
Planning Act. If a birth center is located outside
of a
health  | ||
professional shortage area, (i) the birth center shall be  | ||
located in a
health planning
area with a demonstrated need for  | ||
obstetrical service beds, as determined by
the Health  | ||
Facilities and Services Review Board or (ii) there must be a
 | ||
reduction in
the existing number of obstetrical service beds in  | ||
the planning area so that
the establishment of the birth center  | ||
does not result in an increase in the
total number of  | ||
obstetrical service beds in the health planning area.
 | ||
 (b) Alternative health care models, other than a model  | ||
authorized under subsection (a-10) or
(a-20), shall obtain a  | ||
certificate of
need from the Health Facilities and Services  | ||
Review Board under the Illinois
Health Facilities Planning Act  | ||
before receiving a license by the
Department.
If, after  | ||
obtaining its initial certificate of need, an alternative  | ||
health
care delivery model that is a community based  | ||
residential rehabilitation center
seeks to
increase the bed  | ||
capacity of that center, it must obtain a certificate of need
 | ||
from the Health Facilities and Services Review Board before  | ||
increasing the bed
capacity. Alternative
health care models in  | ||
medically underserved areas
shall receive priority in  | ||
obtaining a certificate of need.
 | ||
 (c) An alternative health care model license shall be  | ||
issued for a
period of one year and shall be annually renewed  | ||
if the facility or
program is in substantial compliance with  | ||
the Department's rules
adopted under this Act. A licensed  | ||
alternative health care model that continues
to be in  | ||
substantial compliance after the conclusion of the  | ||
demonstration
program shall be eligible for annual renewals  | ||
unless and until a different
licensure program for that type of  | ||
health care model is established by
legislation, except that a  | ||
postsurgical recovery care center meeting the following  | ||
requirements may apply within 3 years after August 25, 2009  | ||
(the effective date of Public Act 96-669) for a Certificate of  | ||
Need permit to operate as a hospital: | ||
  (1) The postsurgical recovery care center shall apply  | ||
 to the Health Facilities and Services Review Board for a  | ||
 Certificate of Need permit to discontinue the postsurgical  | ||
 recovery care center and to establish a hospital. | ||
  (2) If the postsurgical recovery care center obtains a  | ||
 Certificate of Need permit to operate as a hospital, it  | ||
 shall apply for licensure as a hospital under the Hospital  | ||
 Licensing Act and shall meet all statutory and regulatory  | ||
 requirements of a hospital. | ||
  (3) After obtaining licensure as a hospital, any  | ||
 license as an ambulatory surgical treatment center and any  | ||
 license as a postsurgical recovery care center shall be  | ||
 null and void. | ||
  (4) The former postsurgical recovery care center that  | ||
 receives a hospital license must seek and use its best  | ||
 efforts to maintain certification under Titles XVIII and  | ||
 XIX of the federal Social Security Act.  | ||
 The Department may issue a provisional license to any
 | ||
alternative health care model that does not substantially  | ||
comply with the
provisions of this Act and the rules adopted  | ||
under this Act if (i)
the Department finds that the alternative  | ||
health care model has undertaken
changes and corrections which  | ||
upon completion will render the alternative
health care model  | ||
in substantial compliance with this Act and rules and
(ii) the  | ||
health and safety of the patients of the alternative
health  | ||
care model will be protected during the period for which the  | ||
provisional
license is issued. The Department shall advise the  | ||
licensee of
the conditions under which the provisional license  | ||
is issued, including
the manner in which the alternative health  | ||
care model fails to comply with
the provisions of this Act and  | ||
rules, and the time within which the changes
and corrections  | ||
necessary for the alternative health care model to
 | ||
substantially comply with this Act and rules shall be  | ||
completed.
 | ||
 (d) Alternative health care models shall seek  | ||
certification under Titles
XVIII and XIX of the federal Social  | ||
Security Act. In addition, alternative
health care models shall  | ||
provide charitable care consistent with that provided
by  | ||
comparable health care providers in the geographic area.
 | ||
 (d-5) (Blank).
 | ||
 (e) Alternative health care models shall, to the extent  | ||
possible,
link and integrate their services with nearby health  | ||
care facilities.
 | ||
 (f) Each alternative health care model shall implement a  | ||
quality
assurance program with measurable benefits and at  | ||
reasonable cost.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-135, eff. 7-14-11; 97-333, eff. 8-12-11;  | ||
97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 98-629, eff. 1-1-15; 98-756, eff.  | ||
7-16-14; revised 10-3-14.)
 | ||
 Section 225. The Nursing Home Care Act is amended by  | ||
changing Sections 1-125.1 and 3-206.01 as follows:
 | ||
 (210 ILCS 45/1-125.1) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4151-125.1)
 | ||
 Sec. 1-125.1. 
"Student intern" means any person whose total  | ||
term of employment
in any facility during any 12-month period  | ||
is equal to or less than 90 continuous
days, and whose term of  | ||
employment: is either,
 | ||
  (1) is an academic credit requirement in a high school  | ||
 or undergraduate or graduate institution;
 | ||
  (2) immediately succeeds a full quarter, semester, or  | ||
 trimester of academic
enrollment in either a high school or  | ||
 undergraduate or graduate institution, provided
that such  | ||
 person is registered for another full quarter, semester, or  | ||
 trimester
of academic enrollment in either a high school or  | ||
 undergraduate or graduate institution,
which quarter,  | ||
 semester, or trimester will commence immediately following
 | ||
 the term of employment; or
 | ||
  (3) immediately succeeds graduation from the high  | ||
 school or undergraduate or graduate institution.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-121, eff. 7-30-13; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 (210 ILCS 45/3-206.01) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4153-206.01)
 | ||
 Sec. 3-206.01. Health care worker registry. 
 | ||
 (a) The Department shall establish and maintain a registry  | ||
of all
individuals who (i) have satisfactorily completed the  | ||
training required
by Section 3-206, (ii) have begun a current  | ||
course of training as set forth in Section 3-206, or (iii) are  | ||
otherwise acting as a nursing assistant, habilitation aide,  | ||
home health aide, psychiatric services rehabilitation aide, or  | ||
child care aide. The registry shall include the individual's  | ||
name, his or her
current address, Social Security number, and  | ||
the date and location of
the training course completed by the  | ||
individual, and whether the individual has any of the  | ||
disqualifying convictions listed in Section 25 of the Health  | ||
Care Worker Background Check Act from the date of the
 | ||
individual's last criminal records check. Any individual  | ||
placed on the
registry is required to inform the Department of  | ||
any change of address
within 30 days. A facility shall not  | ||
employ an individual as a nursing
assistant, habilitation aide,  | ||
home health aide, psychiatric services rehabilitation aide, or  | ||
child care aide, or newly hired as an individual who may have  | ||
access to a resident, a resident's living quarters, or a  | ||
resident's personal, financial, or medical records,
unless the  | ||
facility has inquired of the Department's health care worker  | ||
registry as to information in the
registry concerning the  | ||
individual. The facility shall not employ an individual as a  | ||
nursing assistant, habilitation aide, or child care aide if  | ||
that individual is not on the
registry unless the individual is  | ||
enrolled in a training program under
paragraph (5) of  | ||
subsection (a) of Section 3-206 of this Act.
 | ||
 If the Department finds that a nursing assistant,  | ||
habilitation aide, home health aide, psychiatric services  | ||
rehabilitation aide, or
child care aide, or an unlicensed  | ||
individual, has abused or neglected a resident or an individual  | ||
under his or her care or misappropriated
property of a resident  | ||
or an individual under his or her care, the Department shall  | ||
notify the individual of
this finding by certified mail sent to  | ||
the address contained in the registry. The notice shall give  | ||
the individual an opportunity to contest the finding in a
 | ||
hearing before the Department or to submit a written response  | ||
to the findings
in lieu of requesting a hearing. If, after a  | ||
hearing or if the individual does
not request a hearing, the  | ||
Department finds that the individual abused a
resident,  | ||
neglected a resident, or misappropriated resident property in a
 | ||
facility, the finding shall be included as part of the registry  | ||
as well as a clear and accurate summary
from the individual, if  | ||
he or she chooses to make such a
statement. The Department  | ||
shall make the following information in the registry available  | ||
to
the public: an individual's full name; the date an  | ||
individual successfully completed a nurse aide training or  | ||
competency evaluation; and whether the Department has made a  | ||
finding that an individual has been guilty of abuse or neglect  | ||
of a resident or misappropriation of resident property. In the  | ||
case of inquiries to the registry concerning an individual
 | ||
listed in the registry, any information disclosed concerning  | ||
such a finding
shall also include disclosure of the  | ||
individual's statement in the registry relating to the
finding  | ||
or a clear and accurate summary of the statement.
 | ||
 (b) The Department shall add to the health care worker  | ||
registry records
of findings as reported by the Inspector  | ||
General or remove from
the health care worker registry records  | ||
of findings as reported by the
Department of Human Services,  | ||
under subsection (s) (g-5) of Section 1-17 of the Department of  | ||
Human Services Act.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 95-545, eff. 8-28-07; 96-1372, eff. 7-29-10;  | ||
revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 230. The ID/DD Community Care Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 3-206.01 as follows:
 | ||
 (210 ILCS 47/3-206.01)
 | ||
 Sec. 3-206.01. Health care worker registry.  | ||
 (a) The Department shall establish and maintain a registry  | ||
of all individuals who (i) have satisfactorily completed the  | ||
training required by Section 3-206, (ii) have begun a current  | ||
course of training as set forth in Section 3-206, or (iii) are  | ||
otherwise acting as a nursing assistant, habilitation aide,  | ||
home health aide, or child care aide. The registry shall  | ||
include the individual's name, his or her current address,  | ||
Social Security number, and whether the individual has any of  | ||
the disqualifying convictions listed in Section 25 of the  | ||
Health Care Worker Background Check Act from the date and  | ||
location of the training course completed by the individual,  | ||
and the date of the individual's last criminal records check.  | ||
Any individual placed on the registry is required to inform the  | ||
Department of any change of address within 30 days. A facility  | ||
shall not employ an individual as a nursing assistant,  | ||
habilitation aide, home health aide, or child care aide, or  | ||
newly hired as an individual who may have access to a resident,  | ||
a resident's living quarters, or a resident's personal,  | ||
financial, or medical records, unless the facility has inquired  | ||
of the Department's health care worker registry as to  | ||
information in the registry concerning the individual. The  | ||
facility shall not employ an individual as a nursing assistant,  | ||
habilitation aide, or child care aide if that individual is not  | ||
on the registry unless the individual is enrolled in a training  | ||
program under paragraph (5) of subsection (a) of Section 3-206  | ||
of this Act. | ||
 If the Department finds that a nursing assistant,  | ||
habilitation aide, home health aide, child care aide, or an  | ||
unlicensed individual, has abused or neglected a resident or an  | ||
individual under his or her care, or misappropriated property  | ||
of a resident or an individual under his or her care in a  | ||
facility, the Department shall notify the individual of this  | ||
finding by certified mail sent to the address contained in the  | ||
registry. The notice shall give the individual an opportunity  | ||
to contest the finding in a hearing before the Department or to  | ||
submit a written response to the findings in lieu of requesting  | ||
a hearing. If, after a hearing or if the individual does not  | ||
request a hearing, the Department finds that the individual  | ||
abused a resident, neglected a resident, or misappropriated  | ||
resident property in a facility, the finding shall be included  | ||
as part of the registry as well as a clear and accurate summary  | ||
statement from the individual, if he or she chooses to make  | ||
such a statement. The Department shall make the following  | ||
information in the registry available to the public: an  | ||
individual's full name; the date an individual successfully  | ||
completed a nurse aide training or competency evaluation; and  | ||
whether the Department has made a finding that an individual  | ||
has been guilty of abuse or neglect of a resident or  | ||
misappropriation of resident's property. In the case of  | ||
inquiries to the registry concerning an individual listed in  | ||
the registry, any information disclosed concerning such a  | ||
finding shall also include disclosure of the individual's  | ||
statement in the registry relating to the finding or a clear  | ||
and accurate summary of the statement. | ||
 (b) The Department shall add to the health care worker  | ||
registry records of findings as reported by the Inspector  | ||
General or remove from the health care worker registry records  | ||
of findings as reported by the Department of Human Services,  | ||
under subsection (s) (g-5) of Section 1-17 of
the Department of  | ||
Human Services Act.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 96-339, eff. 7-1-10; 97-38, eff. 6-28-11; revised  | ||
12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 235. The Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation  | ||
Act of 2013 is amended by changing Section 1-101.6 as follows:
 | ||
 (210 ILCS 49/1-101.6)
 | ||
 (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2016) | ||
 Sec. 1-101.6. Mental health system planning. The General  | ||
Assembly finds the services contained in this Act are necessary  | ||
for the effective delivery of mental health services for the  | ||
citizens of the State of Illinois.  | ||
 The General Assembly also finds that the mental health and  | ||
substance use system in the State requires further review to  | ||
develop additional needed services. | ||
  To ensure the adequacy of community-based services and to  | ||
offer choice to all individuals with serious mental illness and  | ||
substance use disorders or conditions who choose to live in the  | ||
community, and for whom the community is the appropriate  | ||
setting, but are at risk of institutional care, the Governor's  | ||
Office of Health Innovation and Transformation shall oversee a  | ||
process for (i) identifying needed services in the different  | ||
geographic regions in the State and (ii) identifying the  | ||
financing strategies for developing those needed services.  | ||
 The process shall address or examine the need and financing  | ||
strategies for the following: | ||
  (1) Network adequacy in all 102 counties of the State  | ||
 for: (i) health homes authorized under Section 2703 of the  | ||
 federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act; (ii)  | ||
 systems of care for children; (iii) care coordination; and  | ||
 (iv) access to a full continuum of quality care, treatment,  | ||
 services, and supports for persons with serious emotional  | ||
 disturbance, serious mental illness, or substance use  | ||
 disorder. | ||
  (2) Workforce development for the workforce of  | ||
 community providers of care, treatment, services, and  | ||
 supports for persons with mental health and substance use  | ||
 disorders and conditions. | ||
  (3) Information technology to manage the delivery of  | ||
 integrated services for persons with mental health and  | ||
 substance use disorders and medical conditions. | ||
  (4) The needed continuum of statewide community health  | ||
 care, treatment, services, and supports for persons with  | ||
 mental health and substance use disorders and conditions. | ||
  (5) Reducing health care disparities in access to a  | ||
 continuum of care, care coordination, and engagement in  | ||
 networks. | ||
 The Governor's Office of Health Innovation and  | ||
Transformation shall include the Division of Alcoholism and  | ||
Substance Abuse and the Division of Mental Health in the  | ||
Department of Human Services, the Department of Healthcare and  | ||
Family Services, the Department of Public Health, community  | ||
mental health and substance use providers, statewide  | ||
associations of mental health and substance use providers,  | ||
mental health and substance use advocacy groups, and any other  | ||
entity as deemed appropriate for participation in the process  | ||
of identifying needed services and financing strategies as  | ||
described in this Section.  | ||
 The Office of Health Innovation and Transformation shall  | ||
report its findings and recommendations to the General Assembly  | ||
by July 1, 2015. | ||
 This Section is repealed on July 1, 2016. 
 | ||
 Before September 1, 2014, the State shall develop and  | ||
implement a service authorization system available 24 hours a  | ||
day, 7 days a week for approval of services in the following 3  | ||
levels of care under this Act: crisis stabilization; recovery  | ||
and rehabilitation supports; and transitional living units.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-104, eff. 7-22-13; 98-651, eff. 6-16-14;  | ||
98-878, eff. 8-11-14; revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 Section 240. The Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems  | ||
Act is amended by changing Sections 3.87 and 3.210 as follows:
 | ||
 (210 ILCS 50/3.87) | ||
 Sec. 3.87. Ambulance service provider and vehicle service  | ||
provider upgrades; rural population. | ||
 (a) In this Section, "rural ambulance service provider"  | ||
means an ambulance service provider licensed under this Act  | ||
that serves a rural population of 7,500 or fewer inhabitants.  | ||
 In this Section, "rural vehicle service provider" means an  | ||
entity that serves a rural population of 7,500 or fewer  | ||
inhabitants and is licensed by the Department to provide  | ||
emergency or non-emergency medical services in compliance with  | ||
this Act, the rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this  | ||
Act, and an operational plan approved by the entity's EMS  | ||
System, utilizing at least an ambulance, alternate response  | ||
vehicle as defined by the Department in rules, or specialized  | ||
emergency medical services vehicle.  | ||
 (b) A rural ambulance service provider or rural vehicle  | ||
service provider may submit a proposal to the EMS System  | ||
Medical Director requesting approval of either or both of the  | ||
following: | ||
  (1) Rural ambulance service provider or rural vehicle  | ||
 service provider in-field service level upgrade. | ||
   (A) An ambulance operated by a rural ambulance  | ||
 service provider or a specialized emergency medical  | ||
 services vehicle or alternate response vehicle  | ||
 operated by a rural vehicle service provider may be  | ||
 upgraded, as defined by the EMS System Medical Director  | ||
 in a policy or procedure, as long as the EMS System  | ||
 Medical Director and the Department have approved the  | ||
 proposal, to the highest level of EMT license (advanced  | ||
 life support/paramedic, intermediate life support, or  | ||
 basic life support) or Pre-Hospital RN certification  | ||
 held by any person staffing that ambulance,  | ||
 specialized emergency medical services vehicle, or  | ||
 alternate response vehicle. The ambulance service  | ||
 provider's or rural vehicle service provider's  | ||
 proposal for an upgrade must include all of the  | ||
 following: | ||
    (i) The manner in which the provider will  | ||
 secure and store advanced life support equipment,  | ||
 supplies, and medications. | ||
    (ii) The type of quality assurance the  | ||
 provider will perform. | ||
    (iii) An assurance that the provider will  | ||
 advertise only the level of care that can be  | ||
 provided 24 hours a day. | ||
    (iv) A statement that the provider will have  | ||
 that vehicle inspected by the Department annually.  | ||
   (B) If a rural ambulance service provider or rural  | ||
 vehicle service provider is approved to provide an  | ||
 in-field service level upgrade based on the licensed  | ||
 personnel on the vehicle, all the advanced life support  | ||
 medical supplies, durable medical equipment, and  | ||
 medications must be environmentally controlled,  | ||
 secured, and locked with access by only the personnel  | ||
 who have been authorized by the EMS System Medical  | ||
 Director to utilize those supplies. | ||
   (C) The EMS System shall routinely perform quality  | ||
 assurance, in compliance with the EMS System's quality  | ||
 assurance plan approved by the Department, on in-field  | ||
 service level upgrades authorized under this Section  | ||
 to ensure compliance with the EMS System plan. | ||
  (2) Rural ambulance service provider or rural vehicle  | ||
 service provider in-field service level upgrade. The EMS  | ||
 System Medical Director may define what constitutes an  | ||
 in-field service level upgrade through an EMS System policy  | ||
 or procedure.
An in-field service level upgrade may  | ||
 include, but need not be limited to, an upgrade to a  | ||
 licensed ambulance, alternate response vehicle, or  | ||
 specialized emergency medical services vehicle. | ||
 (c) If the EMS System Medical Director approves a proposal  | ||
for a rural in-field service level upgrade under this Section,  | ||
he or she shall submit the proposal to the Department along  | ||
with a statement of approval signed by him or her. Once the  | ||
Department has approved the proposal, the rural ambulance  | ||
service provider or rural vehicle service provider will be  | ||
authorized to function at the highest level of EMT license  | ||
(advanced life support/paramedic, intermediate life support,  | ||
or basic life support) or Pre-Hospital RN certification held by  | ||
any person staffing the vehicle.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-608, eff. 12-27-13; 98-880, eff. 1-1-15;  | ||
98-881, eff. 8-13-14; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 (210 ILCS 50/3.210)
 | ||
 Sec. 3.210. EMS Medical Consultant. If the Chief of the  | ||
Department's Division of Emergency
Medical Services and  | ||
Highway Safety is not a physician
licensed to practice medicine  | ||
in all of its branches, with
extensive emergency medical  | ||
services experience, and
certified by the American Board of  | ||
Emergency Medicine or the Osteopathic
American Osteopathic  | ||
Board of Emergency Medicine, then the
Director shall appoint  | ||
such a physician to serve as EMS
Medical Consultant to the  | ||
Division Chief.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-973, eff. 8-15-14; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 245. The Health Maintenance Organization Act is  | ||
amended by changing Section 1-2 as follows:
 | ||
 (215 ILCS 125/1-2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1402)
 | ||
 Sec. 1-2. Definitions. As used in this Act, unless the  | ||
context otherwise
requires, the following terms shall have the  | ||
meanings ascribed to them:
 | ||
 (1) "Advertisement" means any printed or published  | ||
material,
audiovisual material and descriptive literature of  | ||
the health care plan
used in direct mail, newspapers,  | ||
magazines, radio scripts, television
scripts, billboards and  | ||
similar displays; and any descriptive literature or
sales aids  | ||
of all kinds disseminated by a representative of the health  | ||
care
plan for presentation to the public including, but not  | ||
limited to, circulars,
leaflets, booklets, depictions,  | ||
illustrations, form letters and prepared
sales presentations.
 | ||
 (2) "Director" means the Director of Insurance.
 | ||
 (3) "Basic health care services" means emergency care, and  | ||
inpatient
hospital and physician care, outpatient medical  | ||
services, mental
health services and care for alcohol and drug  | ||
abuse, including any
reasonable deductibles and co-payments,  | ||
all of which are subject to the
limitations described in  | ||
Section 4-20 of this Act and as determined by the Director  | ||
pursuant to rule.
 | ||
 (4) "Enrollee" means an individual who has been enrolled in  | ||
a health
care plan.
 | ||
 (5) "Evidence of coverage" means any certificate,  | ||
agreement,
or contract issued to an enrollee setting out the  | ||
coverage to which he is
entitled in exchange for a per capita  | ||
prepaid sum.
 | ||
 (6) "Group contract" means a contract for health care  | ||
services which
by its terms limits eligibility to members of a  | ||
specified group.
 | ||
 (7) "Health care plan" means any arrangement whereby any  | ||
organization
undertakes to provide or arrange for and pay for  | ||
or reimburse the
cost of basic health care services, excluding  | ||
any reasonable deductibles and copayments, from providers  | ||
selected by
the Health Maintenance Organization and such  | ||
arrangement
consists of arranging for or the provision of such  | ||
health care services, as
distinguished from mere  | ||
indemnification against the cost of such services,
except as  | ||
otherwise authorized by Section 2-3 of this Act,
on a per  | ||
capita prepaid basis, through insurance or otherwise. A "health
 | ||
care plan" also includes any arrangement whereby an  | ||
organization undertakes to
provide or arrange for or pay for or  | ||
reimburse the cost of any health care
service for persons who  | ||
are enrolled under Article V of the Illinois Public Aid
Code or  | ||
under the Children's Health Insurance Program Act through
 | ||
providers selected by the organization and the arrangement  | ||
consists of making
provision for the delivery of health care  | ||
services, as distinguished from mere
indemnification. A  | ||
"health care plan" also includes any arrangement pursuant
to  | ||
Section 4-17. Nothing in this definition, however, affects the  | ||
total
medical services available to persons eligible for  | ||
medical assistance under the
Illinois Public Aid Code.
 | ||
 (8) "Health care services" means any services included in  | ||
the furnishing
to any individual of medical or dental care, or  | ||
the hospitalization or
incident to the furnishing of such care  | ||
or hospitalization as well as the
furnishing to any person of  | ||
any and all other services for the purpose of
preventing,  | ||
alleviating, curing or healing human illness or injury.
 | ||
 (9) "Health Maintenance Organization" means any  | ||
organization formed
under the laws of this or another state to  | ||
provide or arrange for one or
more health care plans under a  | ||
system which causes any part of the risk of
health care  | ||
delivery to be borne by the organization or its providers.
 | ||
 (10) "Net worth" means admitted assets, as defined in  | ||
Section 1-3 of
this Act, minus liabilities.
 | ||
 (11) "Organization" means any insurance company, a  | ||
nonprofit
corporation authorized under the Dental
Service Plan  | ||
Act or the Voluntary
Health Services Plans Act,
or a  | ||
corporation organized under the laws of this or another state  | ||
for the
purpose of operating one or more health care plans and  | ||
doing no business other
than that of a Health Maintenance  | ||
Organization or an insurance company.
"Organization" shall  | ||
also mean the University of Illinois Hospital as
defined in the  | ||
University of Illinois Hospital Act or a unit of local  | ||
government health system operating within a county with a  | ||
population of 3,000,000 or more.
 | ||
 (12) "Provider" means any physician, hospital facility,
 | ||
facility licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act, or facility  | ||
or long-term care facility as those terms are defined in the  | ||
Nursing Home Care Act or other person which is licensed or  | ||
otherwise authorized
to furnish health care services and also  | ||
includes any other entity that
arranges for the delivery or  | ||
furnishing of health care service.
 | ||
 (13) "Producer" means a person directly or indirectly  | ||
associated with a
health care plan who engages in solicitation  | ||
or enrollment.
 | ||
 (14) "Per capita prepaid" means a basis of prepayment by  | ||
which a fixed
amount of money is prepaid per individual or any  | ||
other enrollment unit to
the Health Maintenance Organization or  | ||
for health care services which are
provided during a definite  | ||
time period regardless of the frequency or
extent of the  | ||
services rendered
by the Health Maintenance Organization,  | ||
except for copayments and deductibles
and except as provided in  | ||
subsection (f) of Section 5-3 of this Act.
 | ||
 (15) "Subscriber" means a person who has entered into a  | ||
contractual
relationship with the Health Maintenance  | ||
Organization for the provision of
or arrangement of at least  | ||
basic health care services to the beneficiaries
of such  | ||
contract.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-1148, eff. 1-24-13; 98-651, eff. 6-16-14;  | ||
98-841, eff. 8-1-14; revised 10-24-14.)
 | ||
 Section 250. The Managed Care Reform and Patient Rights Act  | ||
is amended by changing Section 10 as follows:
 | ||
 (215 ILCS 134/10)
 | ||
 Sec. 10. Definitions. : 
 | ||
 "Adverse determination" means a determination by a health  | ||
care plan under
Section 45 or by a utilization review program  | ||
under Section
85 that
a health care service is not medically  | ||
necessary.
 | ||
 "Clinical peer" means a health care professional who is in  | ||
the same
profession and the same or similar specialty as the  | ||
health care provider who
typically manages the medical  | ||
condition, procedures, or treatment under
review.
 | ||
 "Department" means the Department of Insurance.
 | ||
 "Emergency medical condition" means a medical condition  | ||
manifesting itself by
acute symptoms of sufficient severity  | ||
(including, but not limited to, severe
pain) such that a  | ||
prudent
layperson, who possesses an average knowledge of health  | ||
and medicine, could
reasonably expect the absence of immediate  | ||
medical attention to result in: 
 | ||
  (1) placing the health of the individual (or, with  | ||
 respect to a pregnant
woman, the
health of the woman or her  | ||
 unborn child) in serious jeopardy;
 | ||
  (2) serious
impairment to bodily functions; or
 | ||
  (3) serious dysfunction of any bodily organ
or part.
 | ||
 "Emergency medical screening examination" means a medical  | ||
screening
examination and
evaluation by a physician licensed to  | ||
practice medicine in all its branches, or
to the extent  | ||
permitted
by applicable laws, by other appropriately licensed  | ||
personnel under the
supervision of or in
collaboration with a  | ||
physician licensed to practice medicine in all its
branches to  | ||
determine whether
the need for emergency services exists.
 | ||
 "Emergency services" means, with respect to an enrollee of  | ||
a health care
plan,
transportation services, including but not  | ||
limited to ambulance services, and
covered inpatient and  | ||
outpatient hospital services
furnished by a provider
qualified  | ||
to furnish those services that are needed to evaluate or  | ||
stabilize an
emergency medical condition. "Emergency services"  | ||
does not
refer to post-stabilization medical services.
 | ||
 "Enrollee" means any person and his or her dependents  | ||
enrolled in or covered
by a health care plan.
 | ||
 "Health care plan" means a plan, including, but not limited  | ||
to, a health maintenance organization, a managed care community  | ||
network as defined in the Illinois Public Aid Code, or an  | ||
accountable care entity as defined in the Illinois Public Aid  | ||
Code that receives capitated payments to cover medical services  | ||
from the Department of Healthcare and Family Services, that  | ||
establishes, operates, or maintains a
network of health care  | ||
providers that has entered into an agreement with the
plan to  | ||
provide health care services to enrollees to whom the plan has  | ||
the
ultimate obligation to arrange for the provision of or  | ||
payment for services
through organizational arrangements for  | ||
ongoing quality assurance,
utilization review programs, or  | ||
dispute resolution.
Nothing in this definition shall be  | ||
construed to mean that an independent
practice association or a  | ||
physician hospital organization that subcontracts
with
a  | ||
health care plan is, for purposes of that subcontract, a health  | ||
care plan.
 | ||
 For purposes of this definition, "health care plan" shall  | ||
not include the
following:
 | ||
  (1) indemnity health insurance policies including  | ||
 those using a contracted
provider network;
 | ||
  (2) health care plans that offer only dental or only  | ||
 vision coverage;
 | ||
  (3) preferred provider administrators, as defined in  | ||
 Section 370g(g) of
the
Illinois Insurance Code;
 | ||
  (4) employee or employer self-insured health benefit  | ||
 plans under the
federal Employee Retirement Income  | ||
 Security Act of 1974;
 | ||
  (5) health care provided pursuant to the Workers'  | ||
 Compensation Act or the
Workers' Occupational Diseases  | ||
 Act; and
 | ||
  (6) not-for-profit voluntary health services plans  | ||
 with health maintenance
organization
authority in  | ||
 existence as of January 1, 1999 that are affiliated with a  | ||
 union
and that
only extend coverage to union members and  | ||
 their dependents.
 | ||
 "Health care professional" means a physician, a registered  | ||
professional
nurse,
or other individual appropriately licensed  | ||
or registered
to provide health care services.
 | ||
 "Health care provider" means any physician, hospital  | ||
facility, facility licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act,  | ||
long-term care facility as defined in Section 1-113 of the  | ||
Nursing Home Care Act, or other
person that is licensed or  | ||
otherwise authorized to deliver health care
services. Nothing  | ||
in this
Act shall be construed to define Independent Practice  | ||
Associations or
Physician-Hospital Organizations as health  | ||
care providers.
 | ||
 "Health care services" means any services included in the  | ||
furnishing to any
individual of medical care, or the
 | ||
hospitalization incident to the furnishing of such care, as  | ||
well as the
furnishing to any person of
any and all other  | ||
services for the purpose of preventing,
alleviating, curing, or  | ||
healing human illness or injury including home health
and  | ||
pharmaceutical services and products.
 | ||
 "Medical director" means a physician licensed in any state  | ||
to practice
medicine in all its
branches appointed by a health  | ||
care plan.
 | ||
 "Person" means a corporation, association, partnership,
 | ||
limited liability company, sole proprietorship, or any other  | ||
legal entity.
 | ||
 "Physician" means a person licensed under the Medical
 | ||
Practice Act of 1987.
 | ||
 "Post-stabilization medical services" means health care  | ||
services
provided to an enrollee that are furnished in a  | ||
licensed hospital by a provider
that is qualified to furnish  | ||
such services, and determined to be medically
necessary and  | ||
directly related to the emergency medical condition following
 | ||
stabilization.
 | ||
 "Stabilization" means, with respect to an emergency  | ||
medical condition, to
provide such medical treatment of the  | ||
condition as may be necessary to assure,
within reasonable  | ||
medical probability, that no material deterioration
of the  | ||
condition is likely to result.
 | ||
 "Utilization review" means the evaluation of the medical  | ||
necessity,
appropriateness, and efficiency of the use of health  | ||
care services, procedures,
and facilities.
 | ||
 "Utilization review program" means a program established  | ||
by a person to
perform utilization review.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-651, eff. 6-16-14; 98-841, eff. 8-1-14;  | ||
revised 10-24-14.)
 | ||
 Section 255. The Service Contract Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 45 as follows:
 | ||
 (215 ILCS 152/45)
 | ||
 Sec. 45. Record keeping requirements. 
 | ||
 (a) The service contract provider shall keep accurate  | ||
accounts, books, and
records
concerning transactions regulated  | ||
under this Act.
 | ||
 (b) The service contract provider's accounts, books, and  | ||
records shall
include the
following:
 | ||
  (1) copies of each type of service contract sold;
 | ||
  (2) the name and address of each service contract  | ||
 holder, to the extent extend
that
the name and address has  | ||
 been furnished by the service contract holder;
 | ||
  (3) a list of the locations where service contracts are  | ||
 marketed, sold, or
offered
for sale; and
 | ||
  (4) written claims files which shall contain at least  | ||
 the date and
description of
claims related to the service  | ||
 contracts.
 | ||
 (c) Except as provided in subsection (e) of this Section,  | ||
the service
contract provider
shall retain all
records required  | ||
to be maintained by Section 45 for at least 3 years after
the
 | ||
specified period of coverage has expired.
 | ||
 (d) The records required under this Act may be, but are not  | ||
required to
be,
maintained on a computer disk or other record  | ||
keeping technology. If the
records are maintained in other than  | ||
hard copy, the records shall be capable of
duplication to  | ||
legible hard copy at the request of the Director.
 | ||
 (e) A service contract provider discontinuing business in  | ||
this State shall
maintain its records
until it furnishes the  | ||
Director satisfactory proof that it has discharged all
 | ||
obligations to service
contract holders in this State.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 90-711, eff. 8-7-98; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 260. The Child Care Act of 1969 is amended by  | ||
changing Sections 2.04 and 2.17 as follows:
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 10/2.04) (from Ch. 23, par. 2212.04)
 | ||
 Sec. 2.04. 
"Related" means any of the following  | ||
relationships by
blood, marriage, civil union, or adoption:  | ||
parent, grandparent, great-grandparent, great-uncle,
 | ||
great-aunt, brother, sister,
stepgrandparent, stepparent,  | ||
stepbrother, stepsister, uncle, aunt, nephew, niece, fictive  | ||
kin as defined in Section 7 of the Children and Family Services  | ||
Act, or
first cousin or second cousin. A person is related to a  | ||
child as a first cousin or a second cousin if they are both  | ||
related to the same ancestor as either grandchild or  | ||
great-grandchild. A child whose parent has executed a consent,  | ||
a surrender, or a waiver pursuant to Section 10 of the Adoption  | ||
Act, whose parent has signed a denial of paternity pursuant to  | ||
Section 12 of the Vital Records Act or Section 12a of the  | ||
Adoption Act, or whose parent has had his or her parental  | ||
rights terminated is not a related child to that person, unless  | ||
(1) the consent is determined to be void or is void pursuant to  | ||
subsection O of Section 10 of the Adoption Act; or (2) the  | ||
parent of the child executed a consent to adoption by a  | ||
specified person or persons pursuant to subsection A-1 of  | ||
Section 10 of the Adoption Act and a court finds that the  | ||
consent is void; or (3) the order terminating the parental  | ||
rights of the parent is vacated by a court of competent  | ||
jurisdiction.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-804, eff. 1-1-15; 98-846, eff. 1-1-15; revised  | ||
10-2-14.)
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 10/2.17) (from Ch. 23, par. 2212.17)
 | ||
 Sec. 2.17. 
"Foster family home" means a facility for child  | ||
care in
residences of families who receive no more than 8  | ||
children unrelated to them,
unless all the children are of  | ||
common parentage, or residences of relatives who
receive no  | ||
more than 8 related children placed by the Department, unless  | ||
the
children are of common parentage, for the purpose of  | ||
providing family care and
training for the children on a  | ||
full-time basis, except the Director of Children
and Family  | ||
Services, pursuant to Department regulations, may waive the  | ||
limit of
8 children unrelated to an adoptive family for good  | ||
cause and only to
facilitate an adoptive placement. The  | ||
family's or relative's own children,
under 18 years of age,  | ||
shall be included in determining the
maximum number of children  | ||
served. For purposes of this Section, a "relative"
includes any  | ||
person, 21 years of age or over, other than the parent, who (i)  | ||
is
currently related to the child in any of the following ways  | ||
by blood or
adoption: grandparent, sibling, great-grandparent,  | ||
uncle, aunt, nephew, niece,
first cousin, great-uncle, or  | ||
great-aunt; or (ii) is the spouse of such a
relative; or (iii)  | ||
is a child's step-father, step-mother, or adult step-brother
or  | ||
step-sister; or (iv) is a fictive kin; "relative" also includes  | ||
a person related in any of the
foregoing ways to a sibling of a  | ||
child, even though the person is not related
to the child, when  | ||
the child and its sibling are placed together with that
person.  | ||
For purposes of placement of children pursuant to Section 7 of  | ||
the Children and Family Services Act and for purposes of  | ||
licensing requirements set forth in Section 4 of this Act, for  | ||
children under the custody or guardianship of the Department  | ||
pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, after a parent  | ||
signs a consent, surrender, or waiver or after a parent's  | ||
rights are otherwise terminated, and while the child remains in  | ||
the custody or guardianship of the Department, the child is  | ||
considered to be related to those to whom the child was related  | ||
under this Section prior to the signing of the consent,  | ||
surrender, or waiver or the order of termination of parental  | ||
rights. The term "foster family home" includes homes receiving  | ||
children from
any State-operated institution for child care; or  | ||
from any agency established
by a municipality or other  | ||
political subdivision of the State of Illinois
authorized to  | ||
provide care for children outside their own homes. The term
 | ||
"foster family home" does not include an "adoption-only home"  | ||
as defined in
Section 2.23 of this Act. The types of
foster  | ||
family homes are defined as follows:
 | ||
  (a) "Boarding home" means a foster family home which  | ||
 receives payment
for regular full-time care of a child or  | ||
 children.
 | ||
  (b) "Free home" means a foster family home other than  | ||
 an adoptive home
which does not receive payments for the  | ||
 care of a child or children.
 | ||
  (c) "Adoptive home" means a foster family home which  | ||
 receives a child or
children for the purpose of adopting  | ||
 the child or children.
 | ||
  (d) "Work-wage home" means a foster family home which  | ||
 receives a child
or children who pay part or all of their  | ||
 board by rendering some services
to the family not  | ||
 prohibited by the Child Labor Law or by standards or
 | ||
 regulations of the Department prescribed under this Act.  | ||
 The child or
children may receive a wage in connection with  | ||
 the services rendered the
foster family.
 | ||
  (e) "Agency-supervised home" means a foster family  | ||
 home under the direct
and regular supervision of a licensed  | ||
 child welfare agency, of the
Department of Children and  | ||
 Family Services, of a circuit court, or of any
other State  | ||
 agency which has authority to place children in child care
 | ||
 facilities, and which receives no more than 8 children,  | ||
 unless of common
parentage, who are placed and are  | ||
 regularly supervised by one of the
specified agencies.
 | ||
  (f) "Independent home" means a foster family home,  | ||
 other than an
adoptive home, which receives no more than 4  | ||
 children, unless of common
parentage, directly from  | ||
 parents, or other legally responsible persons, by
 | ||
 independent arrangement and which is not subject to direct  | ||
 and regular
supervision of a specified agency except as  | ||
 such supervision pertains to
licensing by the Department.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-804, eff. 1-1-15; 98-846, eff. 1-1-15; revised  | ||
10-2-14.)
 | ||
 Section 265. The Health Care Worker Background Check Act is  | ||
amended by changing Section 70 as follows:
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 46/70) | ||
 Sec. 70. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMMS)  | ||
grant; Voluntary FBI Fingerprint Demonstration Project. | ||
 (a) The General Assembly authorizes the establishment of  | ||
the Voluntary FBI Fingerprint Demonstration Project  | ||
(Demonstration Project), which shall be consistent with the  | ||
provisions of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services  | ||
grant awarded to and distributed by the Department of Public  | ||
Health pursuant to Title VI, Subtitle B, Part III, Subtitle C,  | ||
Section 6201 of the Affordable Care Act of 2010. The  | ||
Demonstration Project is authorized to operate for the period  | ||
of January 1, 2014 through December 31, 2014 and shall operate  | ||
until the conclusion of this grant period or until the  | ||
long-term care facility terminates its participation in the  | ||
Demonstration Project, whichever occurs sooner. | ||
 (b) The Long-Term Care Facility Advisory Board established  | ||
under the Nursing Home Care Act shall act in an advisory  | ||
capacity to the Demonstration Project. | ||
 (c) Long-term care facilities voluntarily participating in  | ||
the Demonstration Project shall, in addition to the provisions  | ||
of this Section, comply with all requirements set forth in this  | ||
Act. When conflict between the Act and the provisions of this  | ||
Section occurs, the provisions of this Section shall supersede  | ||
until the conclusion of the grant period or until the long-term  | ||
care facility terminates its participation in the  | ||
Demonstration Project, whichever occurs sooner. | ||
 (d) The Department of Public Health shall select at least  | ||
one facility in the State to participate in the Demonstration  | ||
Project. | ||
 (e) For the purposes of determining who shall be required  | ||
to undergo a State and an FBI fingerprint-based criminal  | ||
history records check under the Demonstration Project, "direct  | ||
access employee" means any individual who has access to a  | ||
patient or resident of a long-term care facility or provider  | ||
through employment or through a contract with a long-term care  | ||
facility or provider and has duties that involve or may involve  | ||
one-on-one contact with a resident of the facility or provider,  | ||
as determined by the State for purposes of the Demonstration  | ||
Project. | ||
 (f) All long-term care facilities licensed under the  | ||
Nursing Home Care Act are qualified to volunteer for the  | ||
Demonstration Project. | ||
 (g) The Department of Public Health shall notify qualified  | ||
long-term care facilities within 30 days after the effective  | ||
date of this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly of the  | ||
opportunity to volunteer for the Demonstration Project. The  | ||
notice shall include information concerning application  | ||
procedures and deadlines, termination rights, requirements for  | ||
participation, the selection process, and a  | ||
question-and-answer document addressing potential conflicts  | ||
between this Act and the provisions of this Section. | ||
 (h) Qualified long-term care facilities shall be given a  | ||
minimum of 30 days after the date of receiving the notice to  | ||
inform the Department of Public Health, in the form and manner  | ||
prescribed by the Department of Public Health, of their  | ||
interest in volunteering for the Demonstration Project.  | ||
Facilities selected for the Demonstration Project shall be  | ||
notified, within 30 days after the date of application, of the  | ||
effective date that their participation in the Demonstration  | ||
Project will begin, which may vary. | ||
 (i) The individual applicant shall be responsible for the  | ||
cost of each individual fingerprint inquiry, which may be  | ||
offset with grant funds, if available. Community-Integrated | ||
 (j) Each applicant seeking employment in a position  | ||
described in subsection (e) of this Section with a selected  | ||
health care employer shall, as a condition of employment, have  | ||
his or her fingerprints submitted to the Department of State  | ||
Police in an electronic format that complies with the form and  | ||
manner for requesting and furnishing criminal history record  | ||
information by the Department of State Police and the Federal  | ||
Bureau of Investigation criminal history record databases now  | ||
and hereafter filed. The Department of State Police shall  | ||
forward the fingerprints to the Federal Bureau of Investigation  | ||
for a national criminal history records check. The Department  | ||
of State Police shall charge a fee for conducting the criminal  | ||
history records check, which shall not exceed the actual cost  | ||
of the records check and shall be deposited into the State  | ||
Police Services Fund. The Department of State Police shall  | ||
furnish, pursuant to positive identification, records of  | ||
Illinois convictions to the Department of Public Health. | ||
 (k) A fingerprint-based criminal history records check  | ||
submitted in accordance with subsection (j) of this Section  | ||
shall be submitted as a fee applicant inquiry in the form and  | ||
manner prescribed by the Department of State Police.
 | ||
 (l) A long-term care facility may terminate its  | ||
participation in the Demonstration Project without prejudice  | ||
by providing the Department of Public Health with notice of its  | ||
intent to terminate at least 30 days prior to its voluntary  | ||
termination. | ||
 (m) This Section shall be inapplicable upon the conclusion  | ||
of the CMMS grant period.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-756, eff. 7-16-14; 98-1041, eff. 8-25-14;  | ||
revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 Section 270. The Home Medical Equipment and Services  | ||
Provider License Act is amended by changing Section 35 as  | ||
follows:
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 51/35)
 | ||
 (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
 | ||
 Sec. 35. Qualifications for licensure. 
 | ||
 (a) An entity
is qualified to
receive a license as a home  | ||
medical equipment and services
provider if the entity meets  | ||
each of the following requirements:
 | ||
  (1) complies with all applicable federal and State  | ||
 licensure and
regulatory requirements;
 | ||
  (2) maintains a physical facility and medical  | ||
 equipment
inventory. There shall only be one license  | ||
 permitted at each
address;
 | ||
  (3) establishes proof of commercial general liability  | ||
 insurance,
including but not limited to coverage for  | ||
 products liability and professional
liability;
 | ||
  (4) establishes and provides records of annual  | ||
 continuing
education for personnel engaged in the  | ||
 delivery, maintenance,
repair, cleaning, inventory  | ||
 control, and financial management of
home medical  | ||
 equipment and services; 
 | ||
  (5) maintains records on all patients to whom it  | ||
 provides home medical
equipment and services;
 | ||
  (6) establishes equipment management and personnel  | ||
 policies;
 | ||
  (7) makes life-sustaining life sustaining home medical  | ||
 equipment and services available 24
hours per day and
7  | ||
 days per week;
 | ||
  (8) complies with any additional qualifications
for  | ||
 licensure as determined by rule of the Department.
 | ||
 (b) The Department may request a personal interview of an  | ||
applicant
before the Board to further evaluate the entity's
 | ||
qualifications for licensure.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 90-532, eff. 11-14-97; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 275. The Nurse Practice Act is amended by changing  | ||
Section 80-40 as follows:
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 65/80-40) | ||
 Sec. 80-40. Licensure by examination. An applicant for  | ||
licensure by examination to practice as a licensed medication  | ||
aide
must: | ||
  (1) submit a completed written application on forms  | ||
 provided by the Department and fees
as established by the  | ||
 Department; | ||
  (2) be age 18 or older; | ||
  (3) have a high school diploma or a high school  | ||
 equivalency certificate of general education development  | ||
 (GED); | ||
  (4) demonstrate the ability able to speak, read, and  | ||
 write the English language, as determined by
rule; | ||
  (5) demonstrate competency in math, as determined by  | ||
 rule; | ||
  (6) be currently certified in good standing as a  | ||
 certified nursing assistant and provide
proof of 2,000  | ||
 hours of practice as a certified nursing assistant within 3  | ||
 years before
application for licensure; | ||
  (7) submit to the criminal history records check  | ||
 required under Section 50-35 of this Act; | ||
  (8) have not engaged in conduct or behavior determined  | ||
 to be grounds for discipline under
this Act; | ||
  (9) be currently certified to perform cardiopulmonary  | ||
 resuscitation by the American Heart
Association or  | ||
 American Red Cross; | ||
  (10) have successfully completed a course of study  | ||
 approved by the Department as defined
by rule; to be  | ||
 approved, the program must include a minimum of 60 hours of  | ||
 classroom-based medication aide education, a minimum of 10  | ||
 hours of simulation laboratory study, and
a minimum of 30  | ||
 hours of registered nurse-supervised clinical practicum  | ||
 with progressive responsibility
of patient medication  | ||
 assistance; | ||
  (11) have successfully completed the Medication Aide  | ||
 Certification Examination or other
examination authorized  | ||
 by the Department; and | ||
  (12) submit proof of employment by a qualifying  | ||
 facility.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-990, eff. 8-18-14; revised 11-26-14.)
 | ||
 Section 280. The Veterinary Medicine and Surgery Practice  | ||
Act of 2004 is amended by changing Section 25 as follows:
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 115/25) (from Ch. 111, par. 7025)
 | ||
 (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2024)
 | ||
 Sec. 25. Disciplinary actions. 
 | ||
 1. The Department may refuse to issue or renew, or may  | ||
revoke,
suspend, place on probation, reprimand, or take other  | ||
disciplinary or non-disciplinary
action as the Department may  | ||
deem appropriate, including imposing fines not to
exceed  | ||
$10,000 for each violation and the assessment of costs as  | ||
provided for in Section 25.3 of this Act, with regard to any
 | ||
license or certificate for any one or combination of the  | ||
following:
 | ||
  A. Material misstatement in furnishing information to  | ||
 the
Department.
 | ||
  B. Violations of this Act, or of the rules adopted  | ||
 pursuant to this Act.
 | ||
  C. Conviction by plea of guilty or nolo contendere,  | ||
 finding of guilt, jury verdict, or entry of judgment or by  | ||
 sentencing of any crime, including, but not limited to,  | ||
 convictions, preceding sentences of supervision,  | ||
 conditional discharge, or first offender probation, under  | ||
 the laws of any jurisdiction of the United States that is  | ||
 (i) a felony or (ii) a misdemeanor, an essential element of  | ||
 which is dishonesty, or that is directly related to the  | ||
 practice of the profession.
 | ||
  D. Fraud or any misrepresentation in applying for or  | ||
 procuring a license under this Act or in connection with  | ||
 applying for renewal of a license under this Act.
 | ||
  E. Professional incompetence.
 | ||
  F. Malpractice.
 | ||
  G. Aiding or assisting another person in violating any  | ||
 provision of this
Act or rules.
 | ||
  H. Failing, within 60 days, to provide information in  | ||
 response to a
written request made by the Department.
 | ||
  I. Engaging in dishonorable, unethical, or  | ||
 unprofessional conduct of a
character likely to deceive,  | ||
 defraud, or harm the public.
 | ||
  J. Habitual or excessive use or abuse of drugs defined  | ||
 in law as controlled substances, alcohol, or any other  | ||
 substance that results in the inability
to practice with  | ||
 reasonable judgment, skill, or safety.
 | ||
  K. Discipline by another state, unit of government,  | ||
 government agency, District of Columbia, territory, or
 | ||
 foreign nation, if at least one of the grounds for the  | ||
 discipline is the same
or substantially equivalent to those  | ||
 set forth herein.
 | ||
  L. Charging for professional services not rendered,  | ||
 including filing false statements for the collection of  | ||
 fees for which services are not rendered.
 | ||
  M. A finding by the Board that the licensee or  | ||
 certificate holder,
after having his license or  | ||
 certificate placed on probationary status, has
violated  | ||
 the terms of probation.
 | ||
  N. Willfully making or filing false records or reports  | ||
 in his practice,
including but not limited to false records  | ||
 filed with State agencies or
departments.
 | ||
  O. Physical illness, including but not limited to,  | ||
 deterioration through
the aging process, or loss of motor  | ||
 skill which results in the inability
to practice under this  | ||
 Act with reasonable judgment, skill, or safety.
 | ||
  P. Solicitation of professional services other than  | ||
 permitted
advertising.
 | ||
  Q. Allowing one's license under this Act to be used by  | ||
 an unlicensed person in violation of this Act.
 | ||
  R. Conviction of or cash compromise of a charge or  | ||
 violation of the
Harrison Act or the Illinois Controlled  | ||
 Substances Act, regulating narcotics.
 | ||
  S. Fraud or dishonesty in applying, treating, or  | ||
 reporting on
tuberculin or other biological tests.
 | ||
  T. Failing to report, as required by law, or making  | ||
 false report of any
contagious or infectious diseases.
 | ||
  U. Fraudulent use or misuse of any health certificate,  | ||
 shipping
certificate, brand inspection certificate, or  | ||
 other blank forms used in
practice that might lead to the  | ||
 dissemination of disease or the transportation
of diseased  | ||
 animals dead or alive; or dilatory methods, willful  | ||
 neglect, or
misrepresentation in the inspection of milk,  | ||
 meat, poultry, and the by-products
thereof.
 | ||
  V. Conviction on a charge of cruelty to animals.
 | ||
  W. Failure to keep one's premises and all equipment  | ||
 therein in a clean
and sanitary condition.
 | ||
  X. Failure to provide satisfactory proof of having  | ||
 participated in
approved continuing education programs.
 | ||
  Y. Mental illness or disability that results in the  | ||
 inability to practice under this Act with reasonable  | ||
 judgment, skill, or safety.
 | ||
  Z. Conviction by any court of competent jurisdiction,  | ||
 either within or
outside this State, of any violation of  | ||
 any law governing the practice of
veterinary medicine, if  | ||
 the Department determines, after investigation, that
the  | ||
 person has not been sufficiently rehabilitated to warrant  | ||
 the public trust.
 | ||
  AA. Promotion of the sale of drugs, devices,  | ||
 appliances, or goods provided
for a patient in any manner  | ||
 to exploit the client for financial gain of the
 | ||
 veterinarian.
 | ||
  BB. Gross, willful, or continued overcharging for  | ||
 professional services.
 | ||
  CC. Practicing under a false or, except as provided by  | ||
 law, an assumed
name.
 | ||
  DD. Violating state or federal laws or regulations  | ||
 relating to controlled substances or legend drugs.
 | ||
  EE. Cheating on or attempting to subvert the licensing  | ||
 examination
administered under this Act.
 | ||
  FF. Using, prescribing, or selling a prescription drug  | ||
 or the
extra-label use of a prescription drug by any means  | ||
 in the absence of a valid
veterinarian-client-patient  | ||
 relationship.
 | ||
  GG. Failing to report a case of suspected aggravated  | ||
 cruelty, torture,
or
animal fighting pursuant to Section  | ||
 3.07 or 4.01 of the Humane Care for
Animals Act or Section  | ||
 26-5 or 48-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal  | ||
 Code of 2012.
 | ||
 All fines imposed under this Section shall be paid within  | ||
60 days after the effective date of the order imposing the fine  | ||
or in accordance with the terms set forth in the order imposing  | ||
the fine.  | ||
 2. The determination by a circuit court that a licensee or  | ||
certificate
holder is subject to involuntary admission or  | ||
judicial admission as provided in
the Mental Health and  | ||
Developmental Disabilities Code operates as an automatic
 | ||
suspension. The suspension will end only upon a finding by a  | ||
court that the
patient is no longer subject to involuntary  | ||
admission or judicial admission and
issues an order so finding  | ||
and discharging the patient. In any case where a license is  | ||
suspended under this provision, the licensee shall file a  | ||
petition for restoration and shall include evidence acceptable  | ||
to the Department that the licensee can resume practice in  | ||
compliance with acceptable and prevailing standards of his or  | ||
her their profession.
 | ||
 3. All proceedings to suspend, revoke, place on  | ||
probationary status, or
take any other disciplinary action as  | ||
the Department may deem proper, with
regard to a license or  | ||
certificate on any of the foregoing grounds, must be
commenced  | ||
within 5 years after receipt by the Department of a complaint
 | ||
alleging the commission of or notice of the conviction order  | ||
for any of the
acts described in this Section. Except for  | ||
proceedings brought for violations
of items (CC), (DD), or  | ||
(EE), no action shall be commenced more than 5 years
after the  | ||
date of the incident or act alleged to have violated this  | ||
Section.
In the event of the settlement of any claim or cause  | ||
of action in favor of the
claimant or the reduction to final  | ||
judgment of any civil action in favor of the
plaintiff, the  | ||
claim, cause of action, or civil action being grounded on the
 | ||
allegation that a person licensed or certified under this Act  | ||
was negligent in
providing care, the Department shall have an  | ||
additional period of one year from
the date of the settlement  | ||
or final judgment in which to investigate and begin
formal  | ||
disciplinary proceedings under Section 25.2 of this Act, except  | ||
as
otherwise provided by law. The time during which the holder  | ||
of the license or
certificate was outside the State of Illinois  | ||
shall not be included within any
period of time limiting the  | ||
commencement of disciplinary action by the
Department.
 | ||
 4. The Department may refuse to issue or may suspend  | ||
without hearing, as provided for in the Illinois Code of Civil  | ||
Procedure,
the license of any person who fails to file a  | ||
return, to pay the tax, penalty,
or interest
shown in a filed  | ||
return, or to pay any final assessment of tax, penalty, or
 | ||
interest as
required by any tax Act administered by the  | ||
Illinois Department of Revenue, until such
time as
the  | ||
requirements of any such tax Act are satisfied in accordance  | ||
with subsection (g) of Section 2105-15 of the Civil  | ||
Administrative Code of Illinois.
 | ||
 5. In enforcing this Section, the Department, upon a  | ||
showing of a possible violation, may compel any individual who  | ||
is registered under this Act or any individual who has applied  | ||
for registration to submit to a mental or physical examination  | ||
or evaluation, or both, which may include a substance abuse or  | ||
sexual offender evaluation, at the expense of the Department.  | ||
The Department shall specifically designate the examining  | ||
physician licensed to practice medicine in all of its branches  | ||
or, if applicable, the multidisciplinary team involved in  | ||
providing the mental or physical examination and evaluation.  | ||
The multidisciplinary team shall be led by a physician licensed  | ||
to practice medicine in all of its branches and may consist of  | ||
one or more or a combination of physicians licensed to practice  | ||
medicine in all of its branches, licensed chiropractic  | ||
physicians, licensed clinical psychologists, licensed clinical  | ||
social workers, licensed clinical professional counselors, and  | ||
other professional and administrative staff. Any examining  | ||
physician or member of the multidisciplinary team may require  | ||
any person ordered to submit to an examination and evaluation  | ||
pursuant to this Section to submit to any additional  | ||
supplemental testing deemed necessary to complete any  | ||
examination or evaluation process, including, but not limited  | ||
to, blood testing, urinalysis, psychological testing, or  | ||
neuropsychological testing. | ||
 The Department may order the examining physician or any  | ||
member of the multidisciplinary team to provide to the  | ||
Department any and all records, including business records,  | ||
that relate to the examination and evaluation, including any  | ||
supplemental testing performed. The Department may order the  | ||
examining physician or any member of the multidisciplinary team  | ||
to present testimony concerning this examination and  | ||
evaluation of the registrant or applicant, including testimony  | ||
concerning any supplemental testing or documents relating to  | ||
the examination and evaluation. No information, report,  | ||
record, or other documents in any way related to the  | ||
examination and evaluation shall be excluded by reason of any  | ||
common law or statutory privilege relating to communication  | ||
between the licensee or applicant and the examining physician  | ||
or any member of the multidisciplinary team. No authorization  | ||
is necessary from the registrant or applicant ordered to  | ||
undergo an evaluation and examination for the examining  | ||
physician or any member of the multidisciplinary team to  | ||
provide information, reports, records, or other documents or to  | ||
provide any testimony regarding the examination and  | ||
evaluation. The individual to be examined may have, at his or  | ||
her own expense, another physician of his or her choice present  | ||
during all aspects of the examination. | ||
 Failure of any individual to submit to mental or physical  | ||
examination or evaluation, or both, when directed, shall result  | ||
in an automatic suspension without hearing, until such time as  | ||
the individual submits to the examination. If the Department  | ||
finds a registrant unable to practice because of the reasons  | ||
set forth in this Section, the Department shall require such  | ||
registrant to submit to care, counseling, or treatment by  | ||
physicians approved or designated by the Department as a  | ||
condition for continued, reinstated, or renewed registration.  | ||
 In instances in which the Secretary immediately suspends a  | ||
registration under this Section, a hearing upon such person's  | ||
registration must be convened by the Department within 15 days  | ||
after such suspension and completed without appreciable delay.  | ||
The Department shall have the authority to review the  | ||
registrant's record of treatment and counseling regarding the  | ||
impairment to the extent permitted by applicable federal  | ||
statutes and regulations safeguarding the confidentiality of  | ||
medical records. | ||
 Individuals registered under this Act who that are affected  | ||
under this Section, shall be afforded an opportunity to  | ||
demonstrate to the Department that they can resume practice in  | ||
compliance with acceptable and prevailing standards under the  | ||
provisions of their registration.
 | ||
 6. The Department shall deny a license or renewal  | ||
authorized by this Act to a person who has defaulted on an  | ||
educational loan or scholarship provided or guaranteed by the  | ||
Illinois Student Assistance Commission or any governmental  | ||
agency of this State in accordance with paragraph (5) of  | ||
subsection (a) of Section 2105-15 of the Civil Administrative  | ||
Code of Illinois.  | ||
 7. In cases where the Department of Healthcare and Family  | ||
Services has previously determined a licensee or a potential  | ||
licensee is more than 30 days delinquent in the payment of  | ||
child support and has subsequently certified the delinquency to  | ||
the Department, the Department may refuse to issue or renew or  | ||
may revoke or suspend that person's license or may take other  | ||
disciplinary action against that person based solely upon the  | ||
certification of delinquency made by the Department of  | ||
Healthcare and Family Services in accordance with paragraph (5)  | ||
of subsection (a) of Section 2105-15 1205-15 of the Civil  | ||
Administrative Code of Illinois.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-1108, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13;  | ||
98-339, eff. 12-31-13; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 285. The Professional Engineering Practice Act of  | ||
1989 is amended by changing Section 11 as follows:
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 325/11) (from Ch. 111, par. 5211)
 | ||
 (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2020) | ||
 Sec. 11. Minimum standards for examination for enrollment  | ||
as
engineer intern.  Each of the following is considered a  | ||
minimum standard
that an applicant must satisfy to qualify for  | ||
enrollment as an engineer
intern: . | ||
  (a) A graduate of an approved engineering curriculum of  | ||
 at least 4
years, who has passed an examination in the
 | ||
 fundamentals of engineering as defined by rule, shall be  | ||
 enrolled as an engineer intern, if
the applicant is  | ||
 otherwise qualified; or | ||
  (b) An applicant in the last year of an approved  | ||
 engineering
curriculum who passes an examination in the
 | ||
 fundamentals of engineering as defined by rule and  | ||
 furnishes proof that the applicant graduated within a
12  | ||
 month period following the examination shall be enrolled
as  | ||
 an engineer intern, if the applicant is otherwise  | ||
 qualified; or | ||
  (c) A graduate of a non-approved engineering  | ||
 curriculum or a related
science curriculum of at least 4  | ||
 years and which meets the requirements as set
forth by rule  | ||
 by submitting an application to the Department for its  | ||
 review and approval, who submits acceptable evidence to the  | ||
 Board of an
additional 4 years or more of progressive  | ||
 experience in engineering
work, and who has passed an  | ||
 examination in the
fundamentals of engineering as defined  | ||
 by rule shall be enrolled as an engineer intern, if
the  | ||
 applicant is otherwise qualified. | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-713, eff. 7-16-14; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 290. The Barber, Cosmetology, Esthetics, Hair  | ||
Braiding, and Nail
Technology Act of 1985 is amended by  | ||
changing Section 2-4 as follows:
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 410/2-4) (from Ch. 111, par. 1702-4)
 | ||
 (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
 | ||
 Sec. 2-4. Licensure as a barber
teacher; qualifications. A  | ||
person is qualified to receive a license as a barber teacher if  | ||
that person files an
application on forms provided by the  | ||
Department, pays the required fee, and: | ||
  a. Is at least 18 years of age;
 | ||
  b. Has graduated from high school or its equivalent;
 | ||
  c. Has a current license as a barber or cosmetologist;
 | ||
  d. Has graduated from a barber school or school of  | ||
 cosmetology approved by the Department
having:
 | ||
   (1) completed a total of 500 hours in barber  | ||
 teacher training extending
over a period of not less  | ||
 than 3 months nor more than 2 years and has had 3
years  | ||
 of practical experience as a licensed barber;
 | ||
   (2) completed a total of 1,000 hours of barber  | ||
 teacher training extending
over a period of not less  | ||
 than 6 months nor more than 2 years; or
 | ||
   (3) completed the cosmetology teacher training as  | ||
 specified in paragraph (4) of subsection (a) of Section  | ||
 3-4 of this Act and completed a supplemental barbering  | ||
 course as established by rule; and  | ||
  e. Has passed an examination authorized by the  | ||
 Department
to determine fitness to receive a license
as a  | ||
 barber teacher or a cosmetology teacher; and
 | ||
  f. Has met any other requirements set forth in this  | ||
 Act.
 | ||
 An applicant who is issued a license as a Barber Teacher is  | ||
not required
to maintain a barber license in order to practice  | ||
barbering as defined in this
Act.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-777, eff. 7-13-12; 98-911, eff. 1-1-15;  | ||
revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 295. The Cemetery Oversight Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 5-25 as follows:
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 411/5-25) | ||
 (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2021)
 | ||
 Sec. 5-25. Powers of the Department.  Subject to the  | ||
provisions of this Act, the Department may exercise the  | ||
following powers: | ||
  (1) Authorize certification programs to ascertain the  | ||
 qualifications and fitness of applicants for licensing as a  | ||
 licensed cemetery manager or as a customer service employee  | ||
 to ascertain whether they possess the requisite level of  | ||
 knowledge for such position. | ||
  (2) Examine a licensed cemetery authority's records  | ||
 from any year or any other aspects of cemetery operation as  | ||
 the Department deems appropriate.  | ||
  (3) Investigate any and all cemetery operations. | ||
  (4) Conduct hearings on proceedings to refuse to issue  | ||
 or renew licenses or to revoke, suspend, place on  | ||
 probation, reprimand, or otherwise discipline a license  | ||
 under this Act or take other non-disciplinary action.  | ||
  (5) Adopt reasonable rules required for the  | ||
 administration of this Act. | ||
  (6) Prescribe forms to be issued for the administration  | ||
 and enforcement of this Act. | ||
  (7) Maintain rosters of the names and addresses of all  | ||
 licensees and all persons whose licenses have been  | ||
 suspended, revoked, denied renewal, or otherwise  | ||
 disciplined within the previous calendar year. These  | ||
 rosters shall be available upon written request and payment  | ||
 of the required fee as established by rule. | ||
  (8) Work with the Office of the Comptroller and the  | ||
 Department of Public Health, Division of Vital Records to  | ||
 exchange information and request additional information  | ||
 relating to a licensed cemetery authority. ; | ||
  (9) Investigate cemetery contracts, grounds, or  | ||
 employee records. | ||
 If the Department exercises its authority to conduct  | ||
investigations under this Section, the Department shall  | ||
provide the cemetery authority with information sufficient to  | ||
challenge the allegation. If the complainant consents, then the  | ||
Department shall provide the cemetery authority with the  | ||
identity of and contact information for the complainant so as  | ||
to allow the cemetery authority and the complainant to resolve  | ||
the complaint directly. Except as otherwise provided in this  | ||
Act, any complaint received by the Department and any  | ||
information collected to investigate the complaint shall be  | ||
maintained by the Department for the confidential use of the  | ||
Department and shall not be disclosed. The Department may not  | ||
disclose the information to anyone other than law enforcement  | ||
officials or other regulatory agencies or persons that have an  | ||
appropriate regulatory interest, as determined by the  | ||
Secretary, or to a party presenting a lawful subpoena to the  | ||
Department. Information and documents disclosed to a federal,  | ||
state, county, or local law enforcement agency shall not be  | ||
disclosed by the agency for any purpose to any other agency or  | ||
person. A formal complaint filed against a licensee by the  | ||
Department or any order issued by the Department against a  | ||
licensee or applicant shall be a public record, except as  | ||
otherwise prohibited by law. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 96-863, eff. 3-1-10; 97-679, eff. 2-6-12; revised  | ||
11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 300. The Community Association Manager Licensing  | ||
and Disciplinary Act is amended by changing Section 155 as  | ||
follows:
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 427/155)
 | ||
 (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2020) | ||
 Sec. 155. Violations; penalties.  | ||
 (a) A person who violates any of the following provisions  | ||
shall be guilty of a Class A misdemeanor; a person who commits  | ||
a second or subsequent violation of these provisions is guilty  | ||
of a Class 4 felony: | ||
  (1) The practice of or attempted practice of or holding  | ||
 out as available to practice as a community association  | ||
 manager, or supervising community association manager  | ||
 without a license. | ||
  (2) Operation of or attempt to operate a community  | ||
 association management firm without a firm license or a  | ||
 designated supervising community association manager. | ||
  (3) The obtaining of or the attempt to obtain any  | ||
 license or authorization issued under this Act by  | ||
 fraudulent misrepresentation. | ||
 (b) Whenever a licensee is convicted of a felony related to  | ||
the violations set forth in this Section, the clerk of the  | ||
court in any jurisdiction shall promptly report the conviction  | ||
to the Department and the Department shall immediately revoke  | ||
any license authorized under this Act held by that licensee.  | ||
The licensee shall not be eligible for licensure under this Act  | ||
until at least 10 years have elapsed since the time of full  | ||
discharge from any sentence imposed for a felony conviction. If  | ||
any person in making any oath or affidavit required by this Act  | ||
swears falsely, the person is guilty of perjury and may be  | ||
punished accordingly.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-365, eff. 1-1-14; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 305. The Illinois Public Accounting Act is amended  | ||
by changing Sections 0.02, 0.03, and 14.4 as follows:
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 450/0.02) (from Ch. 111, par. 5500.02)
 | ||
 (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2024)
 | ||
 Sec. 0.02. Declaration of public policy. It is the policy  | ||
of this State and the purpose of this Act:
 | ||
  (a) to To promote the dependability of information  | ||
 which is used for guidance
in financial transactions or for  | ||
 accounting for or assessing the status
or performance of  | ||
 commercial and noncommercial enterprises, whether public,
 | ||
 private, or governmental; and
 | ||
  (b) to To protect the public interest by requiring that  | ||
 persons engaged in
the practice of public accounting be  | ||
 qualified; that a public authority
competent to prescribe  | ||
 and assess the qualifications of public accountants
be  | ||
 established; and that
 | ||
  (c) that preparing Preparing, auditing, or examining  | ||
 financial statements and issuing
a report expressing or  | ||
 disclaiming an opinion on such statements or expressing
 | ||
 assurance on such statements be reserved to persons who  | ||
 demonstrate their
ability and fitness to observe and apply  | ||
 the standards of the accounting
profession; and that the  | ||
 use of accounting titles likely to confuse the
public be  | ||
 prohibited.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-254, eff. 8-9-13; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 450/0.03) (from Ch. 111, par. 5500.03)
 | ||
 (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2024)
 | ||
 Sec. 0.03. Definitions. As used in this Act, unless the  | ||
context
otherwise requires:
 | ||
 "Accountancy activities" means the services as set forth in  | ||
Section 8.05 of the Act. | ||
 "Address of record" means the designated address recorded  | ||
by the Department in the applicant's, licensee's, or  | ||
registrant's application file or license file maintained by the  | ||
Department's licensure maintenance unit. It is the duty of the  | ||
applicant, licensee, or registrant to inform the Department of  | ||
any change of address, and those changes must be made either  | ||
through the Department's website or by directly contacting the  | ||
Department. | ||
 "Certificate" means a certificate issued by the Board or  | ||
University or similar jurisdictions specifying an individual  | ||
has successfully passed all sections and requirements of the  | ||
Uniform Certified Public Accountant Examination. A certificate  | ||
issued by the Board or University or similar jurisdiction does  | ||
not confer the ability to use the CPA title and is not  | ||
equivalent to a registration or license under this Act. | ||
 "Compilation" means providing a service to be performed in  | ||
accordance with Statements on Standards for Accounting and  | ||
Review Services that is presented in the form of financial  | ||
statements or information that is the representation of  | ||
management or owners without undertaking to express any  | ||
assurance on the statements. | ||
 "CPA" or "C.P.A." means a certified public accountant who  | ||
holds a license or registration issued by the Department or an  | ||
individual authorized to use the CPA title under Section 5.2 of  | ||
this Act.  | ||
 "CPA firm" means a sole proprietorship, a corporation,  | ||
registered limited liability partnership, limited liability  | ||
company, partnership, professional service corporation, or any  | ||
other form of organization issued a license in accordance with  | ||
this Act. | ||
 "CPA (inactive)" means a licensed certified public  | ||
accountant who elects to have the Department place his or her  | ||
license on inactive status pursuant to Section 17.2 of this  | ||
Act. | ||
 "Financial statement" means a structured presentation of  | ||
historical financial information, including, but not limited  | ||
to, related notes intended to communicate an entity's economic  | ||
resources and obligations at a point in time or the changes  | ||
therein for a period of time in accordance with generally  | ||
accepted accounting principles (GAAP) or other comprehensive  | ||
basis of accounting (OCBOA). | ||
 "Other attestation engagements" means an engagement  | ||
performed in accordance with the Statements on Standards for  | ||
Attestation Engagements.  | ||
 "Registered Certified Public Accountant" or "registered  | ||
CPA" means any person who has been issued
a registration under  | ||
this Act as a Registered Certified Public Accountant.
 | ||
 "Report", when used with reference to financial  | ||
statements, means an opinion, report, or other form of language  | ||
that states or implies assurance as to the reliability of any  | ||
financial statements and that also includes or is accompanied  | ||
by any statement or implication that the person or firm issuing  | ||
it has special knowledge or competence in accounting or  | ||
auditing. Such a statement or implication of special knowledge  | ||
or competence may arise from use by the issuer of the report of  | ||
names or titles indicating that the person or firm is an  | ||
accountant or auditor, or from the language of the report  | ||
itself. "Report" includes any form of language that disclaims  | ||
an opinion when the form of language is conventionally  | ||
understood to imply any positive assurance as to the  | ||
reliability of the financial statements referred to or special  | ||
competence on the part of the person or firm issuing such  | ||
language; it includes any other form of language that is  | ||
conventionally understood to imply such assurance or such  | ||
special knowledge or competence.  | ||
 "Licensed Certified Public Accountant" or "licensed CPA"  | ||
means any person licensed
under this Act as a Licensed  | ||
Certified Public Accountant.
 | ||
 "Committee" means the Public Accountant Registration and  | ||
Licensure Committee appointed by the Secretary.
 | ||
 "Department" means the Department of Financial and  | ||
Professional Regulation.
 | ||
 "License", "licensee", and "licensure" refer refers to the  | ||
authorization
to practice under the provisions of this Act.
 | ||
 "Peer review" means a study, appraisal, or review of one or
 | ||
more aspects of a CPA firm's or sole practitioner's compliance  | ||
with applicable accounting, auditing, and other attestation  | ||
standards adopted by generally recognized standard-setting  | ||
bodies.
 | ||
 "Principal place of business" means the office location  | ||
designated by the licensee from which the person directs,  | ||
controls, and coordinates his or her professional services.  | ||
 "Review committee" means any person or persons conducting,  | ||
reviewing,
administering, or supervising a peer review  | ||
program.
 | ||
 "Secretary" means the Secretary of the Department of  | ||
Financial and Professional Regulation.  | ||
 "University" means the University of Illinois.
 | ||
 "Board" means the Board of Examiners established under  | ||
Section 2.
 | ||
 "Registration", "registrant", and "registered" refer to  | ||
the authorization to hold oneself out as or use the title  | ||
"Registered Certified Public Accountant" or "Certified Public  | ||
Accountant", unless the context otherwise requires.
 | ||
 "Peer Review Administrator" means an organization  | ||
designated by the Department that meets the requirements of  | ||
subsection (f) of Section 16 of this Act and other rules that  | ||
the Department may adopt.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-254, eff. 8-9-13; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 450/14.4) | ||
 (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2024) | ||
 Sec. 14.4. Qualifications for licensure as a CPA firm.  The  | ||
Department may license as licensed CPA firms individuals or  | ||
entities meeting the following requirements: | ||
  (1) A majority of the ownership of the firm, in terms  | ||
 of financial interests and voting rights of all partners,  | ||
 officers, shareholders, or members, belongs to persons  | ||
 licensed or registered in some state. All partners,  | ||
 officers, shareholders, or members, whose principal place  | ||
 of business is in this State and who have overall  | ||
 responsibility for accountancy activities in this State,  | ||
 as defined in paragraph (1) of subsection (a) of Section  | ||
 8.05 of this Act, must hold a valid license as a licensed  | ||
 CPA issued by this State. An individual exercising the  | ||
 practice privilege afforded under Section 5.2 who performs  | ||
 services for which a firm license is required under  | ||
 subsection (d) of Section 5.2 shall not be required to  | ||
 obtain an individual license under this Act. | ||
  (2) All owners of the CPA firm, whether licensed as a  | ||
 licensed CPA or not, shall be active participants in the  | ||
 CPA firm or its affiliated entities and shall comply with  | ||
 the rules adopted under this Act. | ||
  (3) It shall be lawful for a nonprofit cooperative  | ||
 association engaged in rendering an auditing and  | ||
 accounting service to its members only to continue to  | ||
 render that service provided that the rendering of an  | ||
 auditing and accounting service by the cooperative  | ||
 association shall at all times be under the control and  | ||
 supervision of licensed CPAs. | ||
  (4) An individual who supervises services for which a  | ||
 license is required under paragraph (1) of subsection (a)  | ||
 of Section 8.05 of this Act, who signs or authorizes  | ||
 another to sign any report for which a license is required  | ||
 under paragraph (1) of subsection (a) of Section 8.05 of  | ||
 this Act, or who supervises services for which a CPA firm  | ||
 license is required under subsection (d) of Section 5.2 of  | ||
 this Act shall hold a valid, active licensed CPA license  | ||
 from this State or another state considered to be  | ||
 substantially equivalent under paragraph (1) of subsection  | ||
 (a) of Section 5.2. | ||
  (5) The CPA firm shall designate to the Department in  | ||
 writing an individual licensed as a licensed CPA under this  | ||
 Act or, in the case of a firm that must have a CPA firm  | ||
 license pursuant to subsection (b) of Section 13 of this  | ||
 Act, a licensee of another state who meets the requirements  | ||
 set out in paragraph (1) or (2) of subsection (a) of  | ||
 Section 5.2 of this Act, who shall be responsible for the  | ||
 proper licensure of the CPA firm. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-254, eff. 8-9-13; 98-730, eff. 1-1-15; revised  | ||
11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 310. The Real Estate Appraiser Licensing Act of  | ||
2002 is amended by changing Section 5-5 as follows:
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 458/5-5)
 | ||
 (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2022)
 | ||
 Sec. 5-5. Necessity of license; use of title; exemptions. 
 | ||
 (a) It
is unlawful for a person to (i) act, offer services,  | ||
or advertise services
as a State certified general real estate
 | ||
appraiser, State certified residential real estate appraiser,  | ||
or associate real estate trainee appraiser, (ii)
develop a real  | ||
estate appraisal,
(iii)
practice as a real estate
appraiser, or  | ||
(iv)
advertise or hold himself or herself out to be a real  | ||
estate
appraiser
without a license issued under this Act. A  | ||
person who
violates this subsection is
guilty of a Class A  | ||
misdemeanor for a first offense and a Class 4 felony for any  | ||
subsequent offense.
 | ||
 (a-5) It is unlawful for a person, unless registered as an  | ||
appraisal management company, to solicit clients or enter into  | ||
an appraisal engagement with clients without either a certified  | ||
residential real estate appraiser license or a certified  | ||
general real estate appraiser license issued under this Act. A  | ||
person who violates this subsection is guilty of a Class A  | ||
misdemeanor for a first offense and a Class 4 felony for any  | ||
subsequent offense.  | ||
 (b) It
is unlawful for a person, other than a
person who  | ||
holds a valid license issued pursuant to this
Act as a State  | ||
certified general real estate appraiser, a
State
certified
 | ||
residential real estate appraiser,
or an associate real estate  | ||
trainee appraiser to use these titles or any other title,  | ||
designation, or
abbreviation likely to create the
impression  | ||
that the person is licensed as a real estate appraiser pursuant  | ||
to
this Act. A person who
violates this subsection is guilty of  | ||
a Class A misdemeanor for a first offense and a Class 4 felony  | ||
for any subsequent offense.
 | ||
 (c)
This Act does not apply to a person who holds a valid  | ||
license as a real estate broker or managing broker pursuant to  | ||
the Real Estate License Act of 2000 who prepares or provides a  | ||
broker price opinion or comparative market analysis in  | ||
compliance with Section 10-45 of the Real Estate License Act of  | ||
2000. | ||
 (d) Nothing in this Act shall preclude a State certified  | ||
general real estate appraiser, a State certified residential  | ||
real estate appraiser, or an associate real estate trainee  | ||
appraiser from rendering appraisals for or on behalf of a  | ||
partnership, association, corporation, firm, or group.  | ||
However, no State appraisal license or certification shall be  | ||
issued under this Act to a partnership, association,  | ||
corporation, firm, or group.
 | ||
 (e) This Act does not apply to a county assessor, township  | ||
assessor, multi-township assessor, county supervisor of  | ||
assessments, or any deputy or employee of any county assessor,  | ||
township assessor, multi-township assessor, or county  | ||
supervisor of assessments who is performing his or her  | ||
respective duties in accordance with the provisions of the  | ||
Property Tax Code.
 | ||
 (e-5) For the purposes of this Act, valuation waivers may  | ||
be prepared by a licensed appraiser notwithstanding any other  | ||
provision of this Act, and the following types of valuations  | ||
are not appraisals and may not be represented to be appraisals,  | ||
and a license is not required under this Act to
perform such  | ||
valuations if the valuations are performed by (1) an employee  | ||
of the Illinois Department of Transportation who has completed  | ||
a minimum of 45 hours of course work in real estate appraisal,  | ||
including the principals of real estate appraisals, appraisal  | ||
of partial acquisitions, easement valuation, reviewing  | ||
appraisals in eminent domain, appraisal for federal aid highway  | ||
programs, and appraisal review for federal aid highway programs  | ||
and has at least 2 years' experience in a field closely related  | ||
to real estate; (2) a county engineer who is a registered  | ||
professional engineer under the Professional Engineering  | ||
Practice Act of 1989; (3) an employee of a municipality who has  | ||
(i) completed a minimum of 45 hours of coursework in real  | ||
estate appraisal, including the principals of real estate  | ||
appraisals, appraisal of partial acquisitions, easement  | ||
valuation, reviewing appraisals in eminent domain, appraisal  | ||
for federal aid highway programs, and appraisal review for  | ||
federal aid highway programs and (ii) has either 2 years'  | ||
experience in a field clearly related to real estate or has  | ||
completed 20 hours of additional coursework that is sufficient  | ||
for a person to complete waiver valuations as approved by the  | ||
Federal Highway Administration; or (4) a municipal engineer who  | ||
has completed coursework that is sufficient for his or her  | ||
waiver valuations to be approved by the Federal Highway  | ||
Administration and who is a registered professional engineer  | ||
under the Professional Engineering Act of 1989, under the  | ||
following circumstances:  | ||
  (A) a valuation waiver in an amount not to exceed  | ||
 $10,000 prepared pursuant to the federal Uniform  | ||
 Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition  | ||
 Policies Act of 1970, or prepared pursuant to the federal  | ||
 Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property  | ||
 Acquisition for Federal and Federally-Assisted Programs  | ||
 regulations and which is performed by (1) an employee of  | ||
 the Illinois Department of Transportation and co-signed,  | ||
 with a license number affixed, by another employee of the  | ||
 Illinois Department of Transportation who is a registered  | ||
 professional engineer under the Professional Engineering  | ||
 Practice Act of 1989 or (2) an employee of a municipality  | ||
 and co-signed with a license number affixed by a county or  | ||
 municipal engineer who is a registered professional  | ||
 engineer under the Professional Engineering Practice Act  | ||
 of 1989; and | ||
  (B) a valuation waiver in an amount not to exceed  | ||
 $10,000 prepared pursuant to the federal Uniform  | ||
 Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition  | ||
 Policies Act of 1970, or prepared pursuant to the federal  | ||
 Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property  | ||
 Acquisition for Federal and Federally-Assisted Programs  | ||
 regulations and which is performed by a county or municipal  | ||
 engineer who is employed by a county or municipality and is  | ||
 a registered professional engineer under the Professional  | ||
 Engineering Practice Act of 1989. In addition to his or her  | ||
 signature, the county or municipal engineer shall affix his  | ||
 or her license number to the valuation. | ||
 Nothing in this subsection (e-5) shall be construed to  | ||
allow the State of Illinois, a political subdivision thereof,  | ||
or any public body to acquire real estate by eminent domain in  | ||
any manner
other than provided for in the Eminent Domain Act.  | ||
 (f) A State real estate appraisal certification or license  | ||
is not required under this Act for any of the following: | ||
  (1) A person, partnership, association, or corporation  | ||
 that performs appraisals of property owned by that person,  | ||
 partnership, association, or corporation for the sole use  | ||
 of that person, partnership, association, or corporation. | ||
  (2) A court-appointed commissioner who conducts an  | ||
 appraisal pursuant to a judicially ordered evaluation of  | ||
 property. | ||
However, any person who is certified or licensed under this Act  | ||
and who performs any of the activities set forth in this  | ||
subsection (f) must comply with the provisions of this Act. A  | ||
person who violates this subsection (f) is guilty of a Class A  | ||
misdemeanor for a first offense and a Class 4 felony for any  | ||
subsequent offense. | ||
 (g) This Act does not apply to an employee, officer,  | ||
director, or member of a credit or loan committee of a  | ||
financial institution or any other person engaged by a  | ||
financial institution when performing an evaluation of real  | ||
property for the sole use of the financial institution in a  | ||
transaction for which the financial institution would not be  | ||
required to use the services of a State licensed or State  | ||
certified appraiser pursuant to federal regulations adopted  | ||
under Title XI of the federal Financial Institutions Reform,  | ||
Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989, nor does this Act apply  | ||
to the procurement of an automated valuation model. | ||
 "Automated valuation model" means an automated system that  | ||
is used to derive a property value through the use of publicly  | ||
available property records and various analytic methodologies  | ||
such as comparable sales prices, home characteristics, and  | ||
historical home price appreciations.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-602, eff. 8-26-11; 98-444, eff. 8-16-13;  | ||
98-933, eff. 1-1-15; 98-1109, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 Section 315. The Illinois Oil and Gas Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 1 as follows:
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 725/1) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 5401)
 | ||
 Sec. 1. 
Unless the context otherwise requires, the words  | ||
defined in this
Section have the following meanings as used in  | ||
this Act.
 | ||
 "Person" means any natural person, corporation,  | ||
association,
partnership, governmental agency or other legal  | ||
entity, receiver, trustee,
guardian, executor, administrator,  | ||
fiduciary or representative of any kind.
 | ||
 "Oil" means natural crude oil or petroleum and other  | ||
hydrocarbons,
regardless of gravity, which are produced at the  | ||
well in liquid form by
ordinary production methods or by the  | ||
use of an oil and gas separator and
which are not the result of  | ||
condensation of gas after it leaves the
underground reservoir.
 | ||
 "Gas" means all natural gas, including casinghead gas, and  | ||
all other
natural hydrocarbons not defined above as oil.
 | ||
 "Pool" means a natural, underground reservoir containing  | ||
in whole or in
part, a natural accumulation of oil or gas, or  | ||
both. Each productive zone
or stratum of a general structure,  | ||
which is completely separated from any
other zone or stratum in  | ||
the structure, is deemed a separate "pool" as used
herein.
 | ||
 "Field" means the same general surface area which is  | ||
underlaid or
appears to be underlaid by one or more pools.
 | ||
 "Permit" means the Department's written authorization  | ||
allowing a well
to be drilled, deepened, converted, or operated  | ||
by an owner.
 | ||
 "Permittee" means the owner holding or required to hold the
 | ||
permit, and
who is also responsible for paying assessments in  | ||
accordance with Section
19.7 of this Act and, where applicable,  | ||
executing and filing the bond
associated with the well as  | ||
principal and who is responsible for compliance
with all  | ||
statutory and regulatory requirements pertaining to the well.
 | ||
 When the right and responsibility for operating a well is  | ||
vested in a
receiver or trustee appointed by a court of  | ||
competent jurisdiction, the
permit shall be issued to the  | ||
receiver or trustee.
 | ||
 "Orphan Well" means a well for which: (1) no fee assessment  | ||
under
Section 19.7 of this Act has been paid or no other bond  | ||
coverage has been
provided for 2 consecutive years; (2) no oil  | ||
or gas has been produced from
the well or from the lease or  | ||
unit on which the well is located for 2
consecutive years; and  | ||
(3) no permittee or owner can be identified or
located by the  | ||
Department. Orphaned wells include wells that may have been
 | ||
drilled for purposes other than those for which a permit is  | ||
required under
this Act if the well is a conduit for oil or  | ||
salt water intrusions into
fresh water zones or onto the  | ||
surface which may be caused by oil and gas
operations.
 | ||
 "Owner" means the person who has the right to drill into  | ||
and produce
from any pool, and to appropriate the production  | ||
either for the person or for
the person and another, or others,  | ||
or solely for others, excluding the
mineral owner's royalty if
 | ||
the right to drill and produce has been granted under an oil  | ||
and gas lease.
An owner may also be a person granted the right  | ||
to drill and operate an
injection (Class II UIC) well  | ||
independent of the right to drill for and produce
oil or gas.  | ||
When the right to drill, produce, and appropriate production is
 | ||
held by more than one person, then all persons holding these  | ||
rights may
designate the owner by a written operating agreement  | ||
or similar written
agreement. In the absence of such an  | ||
agreement, and subject to the provisions
of Sections 22.2 and  | ||
23.1 through 23.16 of this Act, the owner shall be the
person  | ||
designated in writing by a majority in interest of the persons  | ||
holding
these rights.
 | ||
 "Department" means the Department of Natural Resources.
 | ||
 "Director" means the Director of Natural Resources.
 | ||
 "Mining Board" means the State Mining Board in the  | ||
Department of Natural
Resources, Office of Mines
and Minerals.
 | ||
 "Mineral Owner's Royalty" means the share of oil and gas  | ||
production
reserved in an oil and gas lease free of all costs  | ||
by an owner of the
minerals whether denominated royalty or  | ||
overriding royalty.
 | ||
 "Waste" means "physical waste" as that term is generally  | ||
understood in
the oil and gas industry, and further includes:
 | ||
  (1) the locating, drilling, and producing of any oil or  | ||
 gas well or wells
drilled contrary to the valid order,  | ||
 rules and regulations adopted by the
Department under the  | ||
 provisions of this Act; .
 | ||
  (2) permitting the migration of oil, gas, or water from  | ||
 the stratum in
which it is found, into other strata,  | ||
 thereby ultimately resulting in the
loss of recoverable  | ||
 oil, gas or both;
 | ||
  (3) the drowning with water of any stratum or part  | ||
 thereof capable of
producing oil or gas, except for  | ||
 secondary recovery purposes;
 | ||
  (4) the unreasonable damage to underground, fresh or  | ||
 mineral water
supply, workable coal seams, or other mineral  | ||
 deposits in the operations
for the discovery, development,  | ||
 production, or handling of oil and gas;
 | ||
  (5) the unnecessary or excessive surface loss or  | ||
 destruction of oil or
gas resulting from evaporation,  | ||
 seepage, leakage or fire, especially such
loss or  | ||
 destruction incident to or resulting from the escape of gas  | ||
 into
the open air in excessive or unreasonable amounts,  | ||
 provided, however,
it shall not be unlawful for the  | ||
 operator
or owner of any well producing both oil and gas to  | ||
 burn such gas in flares
when such gas is, under the other  | ||
 provisions of this Act, lawfully
produced, and where there  | ||
 is no market at the well for such escaping gas;
and where  | ||
 the same is used for the extraction of casinghead gas, it  | ||
 shall
not be unlawful for the operator of the plant after  | ||
 the process of
extraction is completed, to burn such  | ||
 residue in flares when there is no
market at such plant for  | ||
 such residue gas;
 | ||
  (6) permitting unnecessary fire hazards;
 | ||
  (7) permitting unnecessary damage to or destruction of  | ||
 the surface,
soil, animal, fish or aquatic life or property  | ||
 from oil or gas operations.
 | ||
 "Drilling Unit" means the surface area allocated by an  | ||
order or
regulation of the Department to the drilling of a  | ||
single well for the
production of oil or gas from an individual  | ||
pool.
 | ||
 "Enhanced Recovery Method" means any method used in an  | ||
effort to
recover hydrocarbons from a pool by injection of  | ||
fluids, gases or other
substances to maintain, restore or  | ||
augment natural reservoir energy, or by
introducing immiscible  | ||
or miscible gases, chemicals, other substances or
heat or by  | ||
in-situ combustion, or by any combination thereof.
 | ||
 "Well-Site Equipment" means any production-related  | ||
equipment or materials
specific to the well, including motors,  | ||
pumps, pump jacks, tanks, tank
batteries, separators,  | ||
compressors, casing, tubing, and rods.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 89-243, eff. 8-4-95; 89-445, eff. 2-7-96; revised  | ||
11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 320. The Hydraulic Fracturing Regulatory Act is  | ||
amended by changing Sections 1-40, 1-96, 1-100, 1-101, and  | ||
1-110 as follows:
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 732/1-40)
 | ||
 Sec. 1-40. Public notice.  | ||
 (a) Within 5 calendar days after the Department's receipt  | ||
of the high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing  | ||
application, the Department shall post notice of its receipt  | ||
and a copy of the permit application on its website. The notice  | ||
shall include the dates of the public comment period and  | ||
directions for interested parties to submit comments.
 | ||
 (b) Within 5 calendar days after the Department's receipt  | ||
of the permit application and notice to the applicant that the  | ||
high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit application  | ||
was received, the Department shall provide the Agency, the  | ||
Office of the State Fire Marshal, the Illinois State Water  | ||
Survey, and the Illinois State Geological Survey with notice of  | ||
the application.
 | ||
 (c) The applicant shall provide the following public  | ||
notice: | ||
  (1) Applicants shall mail specific public notice by  | ||
 U.S. Postal Service certified mail, return receipt  | ||
 requested, within 3 calendar days after submittal of the  | ||
 high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit  | ||
 application to the Department, to all persons identified as  | ||
 owners of real property within 1,500 feet of the proposed  | ||
 well site, as disclosed by the records in the office of the  | ||
 recorder of the county or counties, and to each  | ||
 municipality and county in which the well site is proposed  | ||
 to be located.
 | ||
  (2) Except as otherwise provided in this paragraph (2)  | ||
 of subsection (c), applicants shall provide general public  | ||
 notice by publication, once each week for 2 consecutive  | ||
 weeks, beginning no later than 3 calendar days after  | ||
 submittal of the high volume horizontal hydraulic  | ||
 fracturing permit application to the Department, in a  | ||
 newspaper of general circulation published in each county  | ||
 where the well proposed for high volume hydraulic  | ||
 fracturing operations is proposed to be located.
 | ||
  If a well is proposed for high volume hydraulic  | ||
 fracturing operations in a county where there is no daily  | ||
 newspaper of general circulation, the applicant shall  | ||
 provide general public notice, by publication, once each  | ||
 week for 2 consecutive weeks, in a weekly newspaper of  | ||
 general circulation in that county beginning as soon as the  | ||
 publication schedule of the weekly newspaper permits, but  | ||
 in no case later than 10 days after submittal of the high  | ||
 volume hydraulic fracturing permit application to the  | ||
 Department. | ||
  (3) The specific and general public notices required  | ||
 under this subsection shall contain the following  | ||
 information:
 | ||
   (A) the name and address of the applicant;
 | ||
   (B) the date the application for a high volume  | ||
 horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit was filed;
 | ||
   (C) the dates for the public comment period and a  | ||
 statement that anyone may file written comments about  | ||
 any portion of the applicant's submitted high volume  | ||
 horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit application  | ||
 with the Department during the public comment period;
 | ||
   (D) the proposed well name, reference number  | ||
 assigned by the Department, and the address and legal  | ||
 description of the well site and its unit area;
 | ||
   (E) a statement that the information filed by the  | ||
 applicant in their application for a high volume  | ||
 horizontal hydraulic fracturing permit is available  | ||
 from the Department through its website;
 | ||
   (F) the Department's website and the address and  | ||
 telephone number for the Department's Oil and Gas  | ||
 Division;
 | ||
   (G) a statement that any person having an interest  | ||
 that is or may be adversely affected, any government  | ||
 agency that is or may be affected, or the county board  | ||
 of a county to be affected under a proposed permit, may  | ||
 file written objections to a permit application and may  | ||
 request a public hearing.
 | ||
 (d) After providing the public notice as required under  | ||
paragraph (2) of subsection (c) of this Section, the applicant  | ||
shall supplement its permit application by providing the  | ||
Department with a certification and documentation that the  | ||
applicant fulfilled the public notice requirements of this  | ||
Section. The Department shall not issue a permit until the  | ||
applicant has provided the supplemental material required  | ||
under this subsection.
 | ||
 (e) If multiple applications are submitted at the same time  | ||
for wells located on the same well site, the applicant may use  | ||
one public notice for all applications provided the notice is  | ||
clear that it pertains to multiple applications and conforms to  | ||
the requirements of this Section. Notice shall not constitute  | ||
standing for purposes of requesting a public hearing or for  | ||
standing to appeal the decision of the Department in accordance  | ||
with the Administrative Review Law.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-22, eff. 6-17-13; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 732/1-96)
 | ||
 Sec. 1-96. Seismicity. | ||
 (a) For purposes of this Section, "induced seismicity"  | ||
means an earthquake event that is felt, recorded by the  | ||
national seismic network, and attributable to a Class II  | ||
injection well used for disposal of flowback flow-back and  | ||
produced fluid from hydraulic fracturing operations. | ||
 (b) The Department shall adopt rules, in consultation with  | ||
the Illinois State Geological Survey, establishing a protocol  | ||
for controlling operational activity of Class II injection  | ||
wells in an instance of induced seismicity. | ||
 (c) The rules adopted by the Department under this Section  | ||
shall employ a "traffic light" control system allowing for low  | ||
levels of seismicity while including additional monitoring and  | ||
mitigation requirements when seismic events are of sufficient  | ||
intensity to result in a concern for public health and safety.
 | ||
 (d) The additional mitigation requirements referenced in  | ||
subsection (c) of this Section shall provide for either the  | ||
scaling back of injection operations with monitoring for  | ||
establishment of a potentially safe operation level or the  | ||
immediate cessation of injection operations.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-22, eff. 6-17-13; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 732/1-100)
 | ||
 Sec. 1-100. Criminal offenses; penalties. | ||
 (a) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, it shall  | ||
be a Class A misdemeanor to knowingly violate this Act, its  | ||
rules, or any permit or term or condition thereof, or knowingly  | ||
to submit any false information under this Act or regulations  | ||
adopted thereunder, or under any permit or term or condition  | ||
thereof. A person convicted or sentenced under this subsection  | ||
(a) shall be subject to a fine of not to exceed $10,000 for  | ||
each day of violation. | ||
 (b) It is unlawful for a person knowingly to violate: | ||
  (1) subsection (c) of Section 1-25 of this Act; | ||
  (2) subsection (d) of Section 1-25 of this Act; | ||
  (3) subsection (a) of Section 1-30 of this Act; | ||
  (4) paragraph (9) of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of  | ||
 this Act; or | ||
  (5) subsection (a) of Section 1-87 of this Act. | ||
 A person convicted or sentenced for any knowing violation  | ||
of the requirements or prohibitions listed in this subsection  | ||
(b) commits a Class 4 felony, and in addition to any other  | ||
penalty prescribed by law is subject to a fine not to exceed  | ||
$25,000 for each day of violation. A person who commits a  | ||
second or subsequent knowing violation of the requirements or  | ||
prohibitions listed in this subsection (b) commits a Class 3  | ||
felony and, in addition to any other penalties provided by law,  | ||
is subject to a fine not to exceed $50,000 for each day of  | ||
violation. | ||
 (c) Any person who knowingly makes a false, fictitious, or  | ||
fraudulent material statement, orally or in writing, to the  | ||
Department or Agency as required by this Act, its rules, or any  | ||
permit, term, or condition of a permit, commits a Class 4  | ||
felony, and each false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or  | ||
writing shall be considered a separate violation. In addition  | ||
to any other penalty prescribed by law, a person persons in  | ||
violation of this subsection (c) is subject to a fine of not to  | ||
exceed $25,000 for each day of violation. A person who commits  | ||
a second or subsequent knowing violation of this subsection (c)  | ||
commits a Class 3 felony and, in addition to any other  | ||
penalties provided by law, is subject to a fine not to exceed  | ||
$50,000 for each day of violation. | ||
 (d) Any criminal action provided for under this Section  | ||
shall be brought by the State's Attorney of the county in which  | ||
the violation occurred or by the Attorney General and shall be  | ||
conducted in accordance with the applicable provision of the  | ||
Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963. For criminal conduct in  | ||
this Section, the period for commencing prosecution shall not  | ||
begin to run until the offense is discovered by or reported to  | ||
a State or local agency having authority to investigate  | ||
violations of this Act.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-22, eff. 6-17-13; revised 11-26-14.)
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 732/1-101)
 | ||
 Sec. 1-101. Violations; civil penalties and injunctions. 
 | ||
 (a) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, any  | ||
person who violates any provision of this Act or any rule or  | ||
order adopted under this Act or any permit issued under this  | ||
Act shall be liable for a civil penalty not to exceed $50,000  | ||
for the violation and an additional civil penalty not to exceed  | ||
$10,000 for each day during which the violation continues. | ||
 (b) Any person who violates any requirements or  | ||
prohibitions of provisions listed in this subsection (b) is  | ||
subject to a civil penalty not to exceed $100,000 for the  | ||
violation and an additional civil penalty not to exceed $20,000  | ||
for each day during which the violation continues. The  | ||
following are violations are subject to the penalties of this  | ||
subsection (b): | ||
  (1) subsection (c) of Section 1-25 of this Act; | ||
  (2) subsection (d) of Section 1-25 of this Act; | ||
  (3) subsection (a) of Section 1-30 of this Act;
 | ||
  (4) paragraph (9) of subsection (c) of Section 1-75 of  | ||
 this Act; or | ||
  (5) subsection (a) of Section 1-87 of this Act. | ||
 (c) Any person who knowingly makes, submits, causes to be  | ||
made, or causes to be submitted a false report of pollution,  | ||
diminution, or water pollution attributable to high volume  | ||
horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations that results in an  | ||
investigation by the Department or Agency under this Act shall  | ||
be liable for a civil penalty not to exceed $1,000 for the  | ||
violation. | ||
 (d) The penalty shall be recovered by a civil action before  | ||
the circuit court of the county in which the well site is  | ||
located or in the circuit court of Sangamon County. Venue shall  | ||
be considered proper in either court. These penalties may, upon  | ||
the order of a court of competent jurisdiction, be made payable  | ||
to the Environmental Protection Trust Fund, to be used in  | ||
accordance with the provisions of the Environmental Protection  | ||
Trust Fund Act.
 | ||
 (e) The State's Attorney of the county in which the  | ||
violation occurred, or the Attorney General, may, at the  | ||
request of the Department or on his or her own motion,  | ||
institute a civil action for the recovery of costs, an  | ||
injunction, prohibitory or mandatory, to restrain violations  | ||
of this Act, any rule adopted under this Act, the permit or  | ||
term or condition of the permit, or to require other actions as  | ||
may be necessary to address violations of this Act, any rule  | ||
adopted under this Act, or the permit or term or condition of  | ||
the permit. | ||
 (f) The State's Attorney of the county in which the  | ||
violation occurred, or the Attorney General, shall bring  | ||
actions under this Section in the name of the People of the  | ||
State of Illinois. Without limiting any other authority that  | ||
may exist for the awarding of attorney's fees and costs, a  | ||
court of competent jurisdiction may award costs and reasonable  | ||
attorney's fees, including the reasonable costs of expert  | ||
witnesses and consultants, to the State's Attorney or the  | ||
Attorney General in a case where he or she has prevailed  | ||
against a person who has committed a knowing or repeated  | ||
violation of this Act, any rule adopted under this Act, or the  | ||
permit or term or condition of the permit. | ||
 (g) All final orders imposing civil penalties under this  | ||
Section shall prescribe the time for payment of those  | ||
penalties. If any penalty is not paid within the time  | ||
prescribed, interest on the penalty at the rate set forth in  | ||
subsection (a) of Section 1003 of the Illinois Income Tax Act,  | ||
shall be paid for the period from the date payment is due until  | ||
the date payment is received. However, if the time for payment  | ||
is stayed during the pendency of an appeal, interest shall not  | ||
accrue during the stay.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-22, eff. 6-17-13; revised 11-26-14.)
 | ||
 (225 ILCS 732/1-110)
 | ||
 Sec. 1-110. Public information; website. | ||
 (a) All information submitted to the Department under this  | ||
Act is deemed public information, except information deemed to  | ||
constitute a trade secret under Section 1-77 of this Act and  | ||
private information and personal information as defined in the  | ||
Freedom of Information Act. | ||
 (b) To provide the public and concerned citizens with a  | ||
centralized repository of information, the Department shall  | ||
create and maintain a comprehensive website dedicated to  | ||
providing information concerning high volume horizontal  | ||
hydraulic fracturing operations. The website shall contain,  | ||
assemble, and link the documents and information required by  | ||
this Act to be posted on the Department's or other agencies'  | ||
websites. The Department shall also create and maintain an  | ||
online searchable database that provides information related  | ||
to high volume horizontal hydraulic fracturing operations on  | ||
wells that, at a minimum, includes include, for each well it  | ||
permits, the identity of its operators, its waste disposal, its  | ||
chemical disclosure information, and any complaints or  | ||
violations under this Act. The website created under this  | ||
Section shall allow users to search for completion reports by  | ||
well name and location, dates of fracturing and drilling  | ||
operations, operator, and by chemical additives.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-22, eff. 6-17-13; revised 11-26-14.)
 | ||
 Section 325. The Illinois Horse Racing Act of 1975 is  | ||
amended by changing Section 12.2 as follows:
 | ||
 (230 ILCS 5/12.2) | ||
 Sec. 12.2. Business enterprise program.  | ||
 (a) For the purposes of this Section, the terms "minority",  | ||
"minority owned business", "female", "female owned business",  | ||
"person with a disability", and "business owned by a person  | ||
with a disability" have the meanings meaning ascribed to them  | ||
in the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Females, and Persons  | ||
with Disabilities Act.  | ||
 (b) The Board shall, by rule, establish goals for the award  | ||
of contracts by each organization licensee or inter-track  | ||
wagering licensee to businesses owned by minorities, females,  | ||
and persons with disabilities, expressed as percentages of an  | ||
organization licensee's or inter-track wagering licensee's  | ||
total dollar amount of contracts awarded during each calendar  | ||
year. Each organization licensee or inter-track wagering  | ||
licensee must make every effort to meet the goals established  | ||
by the Board pursuant to this Section. When setting the goals  | ||
for the award of contracts, the Board shall not include  | ||
contracts where: (1) licensees are purchasing goods or services  | ||
from vendors or suppliers or in markets where there are no or a  | ||
limited number of minority owned businesses, women owned  | ||
businesses, or businesses owned by persons with disabilities  | ||
that would be sufficient to satisfy the goal; (2) there are no  | ||
or a limited number of suppliers licensed by the Board; (3) the  | ||
licensee or its parent company owns a company that provides the  | ||
goods or services; or (4) the goods or services are provided to  | ||
the licensee by a publicly traded company. | ||
 (c) Each organization licensee or inter-track wagering  | ||
licensee shall file with the Board an annual report of its  | ||
utilization of minority owned businesses, female owned  | ||
businesses, and businesses owned by persons with disabilities  | ||
during the preceding calendar year. The reports shall include a  | ||
self-evaluation of the efforts of the organization licensee or  | ||
inter-track wagering licensee to meet its goals under this  | ||
Section. | ||
 (d) The organization licensee or inter-track wagering
 | ||
licensee shall have the right to request a waiver from the  | ||
requirements of this Section. The Board shall grant the waiver  | ||
where the organization licensee or inter-track wagering
 | ||
licensee demonstrates that there has been made a good faith  | ||
effort to comply with the goals for participation by minority  | ||
owned businesses, female
owned businesses, and businesses  | ||
owned by persons with
disabilities.  | ||
 (e) If the Board determines that its goals and policies are  | ||
not being met by any organization licensee or inter-track  | ||
wagering licensee, then the Board may: | ||
  (1) adopt remedies for such violations; and | ||
  (2) recommend that the organization licensee or  | ||
 inter-track wagering licensee provide additional  | ||
 opportunities for participation by minority owned  | ||
 businesses, female owned businesses, and businesses owned  | ||
 by persons with disabilities; such recommendations may  | ||
 include, but shall not be limited to: | ||
   (A) assurances of stronger and better focused
 | ||
 solicitation efforts to obtain more minority owned  | ||
 businesses, female owned businesses, and businesses  | ||
 owned by persons with disabilities as potential  | ||
 sources of supply; | ||
   (B) division of job or project requirements, when
 | ||
 economically feasible, into tasks or quantities to  | ||
 permit participation of minority owned businesses,  | ||
 female owned businesses, and businesses owned by  | ||
 persons with disabilities; | ||
   (C) elimination of extended experience or
 | ||
 capitalization requirements, when programmatically  | ||
 feasible, to permit participation of minority owned  | ||
 businesses, female owned businesses, and businesses  | ||
 owned by persons with disabilities; | ||
   (D) identification of specific proposed contracts  | ||
 as
particularly attractive or appropriate for  | ||
 participation by minority owned businesses, female  | ||
 owned businesses, and businesses owned by persons with  | ||
 disabilities, such identification to result from and  | ||
 be coupled with the efforts of items (A) through (C);
 | ||
 and | ||
   (E) implementation of regulations established
for  | ||
 the use of the sheltered market process.  | ||
 (f) The Board shall file, no later than March 1 of each  | ||
year, an annual report that shall detail the level of  | ||
achievement toward the goals specified in this Section over the  | ||
3 most recent fiscal years. The annual report shall include,  | ||
but need not be limited to: | ||
  (1) a summary detailing expenditures subject
to the  | ||
 goals, the actual goals specified, and the goals attained  | ||
 by each organization licensee or inter-track wagering  | ||
 licensee; | ||
  (2) a summary of the number of contracts awarded and
 | ||
 the average contract amount by each organization licensee  | ||
 or inter-track wagering licensee; | ||
  (3) an analysis of the level of overall goal
 | ||
 achievement concerning purchases from minority owned  | ||
 businesses, female owned businesses, and businesses owned  | ||
 by persons with disabilities; | ||
  (4) an analysis of the number of minority owned  | ||
 businesses, female owned businesses, and businesses owned  | ||
 by persons with disabilities that are certified under the  | ||
 program as well as the number of those businesses that  | ||
 received State procurement contracts; and | ||
  (5) a summary of the number of contracts awarded to
 | ||
 businesses with annual gross sales of less than $1,000,000;  | ||
 of $1,000,000 or more, but less than $5,000,000; of  | ||
 $5,000,000 or more, but less than $10,000,000; and of  | ||
 $10,000,000 or more.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-490, eff. 8-16-13; revised 11-26-14.)
 | ||
 Section 330. The Riverboat Gambling Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 7.6 as follows:
 | ||
 (230 ILCS 10/7.6) | ||
 Sec. 7.6. Business enterprise program.  | ||
 (a) For the purposes of this Section, the terms "minority",  | ||
"minority owned business", "female", "female owned business",  | ||
"person with a disability", and "business owned by a person  | ||
with a disability" have the meanings meaning ascribed to them  | ||
in the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Females, and Persons  | ||
with Disabilities Act.  | ||
 (b) The Board shall, by rule, establish goals for the award  | ||
of contracts by each owners licensee to businesses owned by  | ||
minorities, females, and persons with disabilities, expressed  | ||
as percentages of an owners licensee's total dollar amount of  | ||
contracts awarded during each calendar year. Each owners  | ||
licensee must make every effort to meet the goals established  | ||
by the Board pursuant to this Section. When setting the goals  | ||
for the award of contracts, the Board shall not include  | ||
contracts where: (1) any purchasing mandates would be dependent  | ||
upon the availability of minority owned businesses, female  | ||
owned businesses, and businesses owned by persons with  | ||
disabilities ready, willing, and able with capacity to provide  | ||
quality goods and services to a gaming operation at reasonable  | ||
prices; (2) there are no or a limited number of licensed  | ||
suppliers as defined by this Act for the goods or services  | ||
provided to the licensee; (3) the licensee or its parent  | ||
company owns a company that provides the goods or services; or  | ||
(4) the goods or services are provided to the licensee by a  | ||
publicly traded company. | ||
 (c) Each owners licensee shall file with the Board an  | ||
annual report of its utilization of minority owned businesses,  | ||
female owned businesses, and businesses owned by persons with  | ||
disabilities during the preceding calendar year. The reports  | ||
shall include a self-evaluation of the efforts of the owners  | ||
licensee to meet its goals under this Section. | ||
 (d) The owners licensee shall have the right to request a  | ||
waiver from the requirements of this Section. The Board shall  | ||
grant the waiver where the owners licensee demonstrates that  | ||
there has been made a good faith effort to comply with the  | ||
goals for participation by minority owned businesses, female
 | ||
owned businesses, and businesses owned by persons with
 | ||
disabilities.  | ||
 (e) If the Board determines that its goals and policies are  | ||
not being met by any owners licensee, then the Board may: | ||
  (1) adopt remedies for such violations; and | ||
  (2) recommend that the owners licensee provide  | ||
 additional opportunities for participation by minority  | ||
 owned businesses, female owned businesses, and businesses  | ||
 owned by persons with disabilities; such recommendations  | ||
 may include, but shall not be limited to: | ||
   (A) assurances of stronger and better focused
 | ||
 solicitation efforts to obtain more minority owned  | ||
 businesses, female owned businesses, and businesses  | ||
 owned by persons with disabilities as potential  | ||
 sources of supply; | ||
   (B) division of job or project requirements, when
 | ||
 economically feasible, into tasks or quantities to  | ||
 permit participation of minority owned businesses,  | ||
 female owned businesses, and businesses owned by  | ||
 persons with disabilities; | ||
   (C) elimination of extended experience or
 | ||
 capitalization requirements, when programmatically  | ||
 feasible, to permit participation of minority owned  | ||
 businesses, female owned businesses, and businesses  | ||
 owned by persons with disabilities; | ||
   (D) identification of specific proposed contracts  | ||
 as
particularly attractive or appropriate for  | ||
 participation by minority owned businesses, female  | ||
 owned businesses, and businesses owned by persons with  | ||
 disabilities, such identification to result from and  | ||
 be coupled with the efforts of items (A) through (C);
 | ||
 and | ||
   (E) implementation of regulations established
for  | ||
 the use of the sheltered market process.  | ||
 (f) The Board shall file, no later than March 1 of each  | ||
year, an annual report that shall detail the level of  | ||
achievement toward the goals specified in this Section over the  | ||
3 most recent fiscal years. The annual report shall include,  | ||
but need not be limited to: | ||
  (1) a summary detailing expenditures subject
to the  | ||
 goals, the actual goals specified, and the goals attained  | ||
 by each owners licensee; and | ||
  (2) an analysis of the level of overall goal
 | ||
 achievement concerning purchases from minority owned  | ||
 businesses, female owned businesses, and businesses owned  | ||
 by persons with disabilities.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-490, eff. 8-16-13; revised 11-26-14.)
 | ||
 Section 335. The Liquor Control Act of 1934 is amended by  | ||
changing Sections 3-12, 6-15, and 6-36 as follows:
 | ||
 (235 ILCS 5/3-12)
 | ||
 (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 98-939) | ||
 Sec. 3-12. Powers and duties of State Commission.
 | ||
 (a) The State commission shall have the following powers,  | ||
functions, and
duties:
 | ||
  (1) To receive applications and to issue licenses to  | ||
 manufacturers,
foreign importers, importing distributors,  | ||
 distributors, non-resident dealers,
on premise consumption  | ||
 retailers, off premise sale retailers, special event
 | ||
 retailer licensees, special use permit licenses, auction  | ||
 liquor licenses, brew
pubs, caterer retailers,  | ||
 non-beverage users, railroads, including owners and
 | ||
 lessees of sleeping, dining and cafe cars, airplanes,  | ||
 boats, brokers, and wine
maker's premises licensees in  | ||
 accordance with the provisions of this Act, and
to suspend  | ||
 or revoke such licenses upon the State commission's  | ||
 determination,
upon notice after hearing, that a licensee  | ||
 has violated any provision of this
Act or any rule or  | ||
 regulation issued pursuant thereto and in effect for 30  | ||
 days
prior to such violation. Except in the case of an  | ||
 action taken pursuant to a
violation of Section 6-3, 6-5,  | ||
 or 6-9, any action by the State Commission to
suspend or  | ||
 revoke a licensee's license may be limited to the license  | ||
 for the
specific premises where the violation occurred.
 | ||
  In lieu of suspending or revoking a license, the  | ||
 commission may impose
a fine, upon the State commission's  | ||
 determination and notice after hearing,
that a licensee has  | ||
 violated any provision of this Act or any rule or
 | ||
 regulation issued pursuant thereto and in effect for 30  | ||
 days prior to such
violation. | ||
  For the purpose of this paragraph (1), when determining  | ||
 multiple violations for the sale of alcohol to a person  | ||
 under the age of 21, a second or subsequent violation for  | ||
 the sale of alcohol to a person under the age of 21 shall  | ||
 only be considered if it was committed within 5 years after  | ||
 the date when a prior violation for the sale of alcohol to  | ||
 a person under the age of 21 was committed.  | ||
  The fine imposed under this paragraph may not exceed  | ||
 $500 for each
violation. Each day that the activity, which  | ||
 gave rise to the original fine,
continues is a separate  | ||
 violation. The maximum fine that may be levied against
any  | ||
 licensee, for the period of the license, shall not exceed  | ||
 $20,000.
The maximum penalty that may be imposed on a  | ||
 licensee for selling a bottle of
alcoholic liquor with a  | ||
 foreign object in it or serving from a bottle of
alcoholic  | ||
 liquor with a foreign object in it shall be the destruction  | ||
 of that
bottle of alcoholic liquor for the first 10 bottles  | ||
 so sold or served from by
the licensee. For the eleventh  | ||
 bottle of alcoholic liquor and for each third
bottle  | ||
 thereafter sold or served from by the licensee with a  | ||
 foreign object in
it, the maximum penalty that may be  | ||
 imposed on the licensee is the destruction
of the bottle of  | ||
 alcoholic liquor and a fine of up to $50.
 | ||
  (2) To adopt such rules and regulations consistent with  | ||
 the
provisions of this Act which shall be necessary to  | ||
 carry on its
functions and duties to the end that the  | ||
 health, safety and welfare of
the People of the State of  | ||
 Illinois shall be protected and temperance in
the  | ||
 consumption of alcoholic liquors shall be fostered and  | ||
 promoted and
to distribute copies of such rules and  | ||
 regulations to all licensees
affected thereby.
 | ||
  (3) To call upon other administrative departments of  | ||
 the State,
county and municipal governments, county and  | ||
 city police departments and
upon prosecuting officers for  | ||
 such information and assistance as it
deems necessary in  | ||
 the performance of its duties.
 | ||
  (4) To recommend to local commissioners rules and  | ||
 regulations, not
inconsistent with the law, for the  | ||
 distribution and sale of alcoholic
liquors throughout the  | ||
 State.
 | ||
  (5) To inspect, or cause to be inspected, any
premises  | ||
 in this State
where alcoholic liquors are manufactured,  | ||
 distributed, warehoused, or
sold. Nothing in this Act
 | ||
 authorizes an agent of the Commission to inspect private
 | ||
 areas within the premises without reasonable suspicion or a  | ||
 warrant
during an inspection. "Private areas" include, but  | ||
 are not limited to, safes, personal property, and closed  | ||
 desks.
 | ||
  (5.1) Upon receipt of a complaint or upon having  | ||
 knowledge that any person
is engaged in business as a  | ||
 manufacturer, importing distributor, distributor,
or  | ||
 retailer without a license or valid license, to notify the  | ||
 local liquor
authority, file a complaint with the State's  | ||
 Attorney's Office of the county
where the incident  | ||
 occurred, or initiate an investigation with the  | ||
 appropriate
law enforcement officials.
 | ||
  (5.2) To issue a cease and desist notice to persons  | ||
 shipping alcoholic
liquor
into this State from a point  | ||
 outside of this State if the shipment is in
violation of  | ||
 this Act.
 | ||
  (5.3) To receive complaints from licensees, local  | ||
 officials, law
enforcement agencies, organizations, and  | ||
 persons stating that any licensee has
been or is violating  | ||
 any provision of this Act or the rules and regulations
 | ||
 issued pursuant to this Act. Such complaints shall be in  | ||
 writing, signed and
sworn to by the person making the  | ||
 complaint, and shall state with specificity
the facts in  | ||
 relation to the alleged violation. If the Commission has
 | ||
 reasonable grounds to believe that the complaint  | ||
 substantially alleges a
violation of this Act or rules and  | ||
 regulations adopted pursuant to this Act, it
shall conduct  | ||
 an investigation. If, after conducting an investigation,  | ||
 the
Commission is satisfied that the alleged violation did  | ||
 occur, it shall proceed
with disciplinary action against  | ||
 the licensee as provided in this Act.
 | ||
  (6) To hear and determine appeals from orders of a  | ||
 local commission
in accordance with the provisions of this  | ||
 Act, as hereinafter set forth.
Hearings under this  | ||
 subsection shall be held in Springfield or Chicago,
at  | ||
 whichever location is the more convenient for the majority  | ||
 of persons
who are parties to the hearing.
 | ||
  (7) The commission shall establish uniform systems of  | ||
 accounts to be
kept by all retail licensees having more  | ||
 than 4 employees, and for this
purpose the commission may  | ||
 classify all retail licensees having more
than 4 employees  | ||
 and establish a uniform system of accounts for each
class  | ||
 and prescribe the manner in which such accounts shall be  | ||
 kept.
The commission may also prescribe the forms of  | ||
 accounts to be kept by
all retail licensees having more  | ||
 than 4 employees, including but not
limited to accounts of  | ||
 earnings and expenses and any distribution,
payment, or  | ||
 other distribution of earnings or assets, and any other
 | ||
 forms, records and memoranda which in the judgment of the  | ||
 commission may
be necessary or appropriate to carry out any  | ||
 of the provisions of this
Act, including but not limited to  | ||
 such forms, records and memoranda as
will readily and  | ||
 accurately disclose at all times the beneficial
ownership  | ||
 of such retail licensed business. The accounts, forms,
 | ||
 records and memoranda shall be available at all reasonable  | ||
 times for
inspection by authorized representatives of the  | ||
 State commission or by
any local liquor control  | ||
 commissioner or his or her authorized representative.
The  | ||
 commission, may, from time to time, alter, amend or repeal,  | ||
 in whole
or in part, any uniform system of accounts, or the  | ||
 form and manner of
keeping accounts.
 | ||
  (8) In the conduct of any hearing authorized to be held  | ||
 by the
commission, to appoint, at the commission's  | ||
 discretion, hearing officers
to conduct hearings involving  | ||
 complex issues or issues that will require a
protracted  | ||
 period of time to resolve, to examine, or cause to be  | ||
 examined,
under oath, any licensee, and to examine or cause  | ||
 to be examined the books and
records
of such licensee; to  | ||
 hear testimony and take proof material for its
information  | ||
 in the discharge of its duties hereunder; to administer or
 | ||
 cause to be administered oaths; for any such purpose to  | ||
 issue
subpoena or subpoenas to require the attendance of  | ||
 witnesses and the
production of books, which shall be  | ||
 effective in any part of this State, and
to adopt rules to  | ||
 implement its powers under this paragraph (8).
 | ||
  Any Circuit Court may by order duly entered,
require  | ||
 the attendance of witnesses and the production of relevant  | ||
 books
subpoenaed by the State commission and the court may  | ||
 compel
obedience to its order by proceedings for contempt.
 | ||
  (9) To investigate the administration of laws in  | ||
 relation to
alcoholic liquors in this and other states and  | ||
 any foreign countries,
and to recommend from time to time  | ||
 to the Governor and through him or
her to the legislature  | ||
 of this State, such amendments to this Act, if any, as
it  | ||
 may think desirable and as will serve to further the  | ||
 general broad
purposes contained in Section 1-2 hereof.
 | ||
  (10) To adopt such rules and regulations consistent  | ||
 with the
provisions of this Act which shall be necessary  | ||
 for the control, sale or
disposition of alcoholic liquor  | ||
 damaged as a result of an accident, wreck,
flood, fire or  | ||
 other similar occurrence.
 | ||
  (11) To develop industry educational programs related  | ||
 to responsible
serving and selling, particularly in the  | ||
 areas of overserving consumers and
illegal underage  | ||
 purchasing and consumption of alcoholic beverages.
 | ||
  (11.1) To license persons providing education and  | ||
 training to alcohol
beverage sellers and servers under the
 | ||
 Beverage Alcohol Sellers and Servers
Education and  | ||
 Training (BASSET) programs and to develop and administer a  | ||
 public
awareness program in Illinois to reduce or eliminate  | ||
 the illegal purchase and
consumption of alcoholic beverage  | ||
 products by persons under the age of 21.
Application for a  | ||
 license shall be made on forms provided by the State
 | ||
 Commission.
 | ||
  (12) To develop and maintain a repository of license  | ||
 and regulatory
information.
 | ||
  (13) On or before January 15, 1994, the Commission  | ||
 shall issue
a written report to the Governor and General  | ||
 Assembly that is to be based on a
comprehensive study of  | ||
 the impact on and implications for the State of Illinois
of  | ||
 Section 1926 of the Federal ADAMHA Reorganization Act of  | ||
 1992 (Public Law
102-321). This study shall address the  | ||
 extent to which Illinois currently
complies with the  | ||
 provisions of P.L. 102-321 and the rules promulgated  | ||
 pursuant
thereto.
 | ||
  As part of its report, the Commission shall provide the  | ||
 following essential
information:
 | ||
   (i) the number of retail distributors of tobacco  | ||
 products, by type and
geographic area, in the State;
 | ||
   (ii) the number of reported citations and  | ||
 successful convictions,
categorized by type and  | ||
 location of retail distributor, for violation of the
 | ||
 Prevention of Tobacco Use by Minors and Sale and  | ||
 Distribution of Tobacco Products Act and the Smokeless
 | ||
 Tobacco Limitation Act;
 | ||
   (iii) the extent and nature of organized  | ||
 educational and governmental
activities that are  | ||
 intended to promote, encourage or otherwise secure
 | ||
 compliance with any Illinois laws that prohibit the  | ||
 sale or distribution of
tobacco products to minors; and
 | ||
   (iv) the level of access and availability of  | ||
 tobacco products to
individuals under the age of 18.
 | ||
  To obtain the data necessary to comply with the  | ||
 provisions of P.L. 102-321
and the requirements of this  | ||
 report, the Commission shall conduct random,
unannounced  | ||
 inspections of a geographically and scientifically  | ||
 representative
sample of the State's retail tobacco  | ||
 distributors.
 | ||
  The Commission shall consult with the Department of  | ||
 Public Health, the
Department of Human Services, the
 | ||
 Illinois State Police and any
other executive branch  | ||
 agency, and private organizations that may have
 | ||
 information relevant to this report.
 | ||
  The Commission may contract with the Food and Drug  | ||
 Administration of the
U.S. Department of Health and Human  | ||
 Services to conduct unannounced
investigations of Illinois  | ||
 tobacco vendors to determine compliance with federal
laws  | ||
 relating to the illegal sale of cigarettes and smokeless  | ||
 tobacco products
to persons under the age of 18.
 | ||
  (14) On or before April 30, 2008 and every 2 years
 | ||
 thereafter, the Commission shall present a written
report  | ||
 to the Governor and the General Assembly that shall
be  | ||
 based on a study of the impact of this amendatory Act of
 | ||
 the 95th General Assembly on the business of soliciting,
 | ||
 selling, and shipping wine from inside and outside of this
 | ||
 State directly to residents of this State. As part of its
 | ||
 report, the Commission shall provide all of the
following  | ||
 information: | ||
   (A) The amount of State excise and sales tax
 | ||
 revenues generated. | ||
   (B) The amount of licensing fees received. | ||
   (C) The number of cases of wine shipped from inside
 | ||
 and outside of this State directly to residents of this
 | ||
 State. | ||
   (D) The number of alcohol compliance operations
 | ||
 conducted. | ||
   (E) The number of winery shipper's licenses
 | ||
 issued. | ||
   (F) The number of each of the following: reported
 | ||
 violations; cease and desist notices issued by the
 | ||
 Commission; notices of violations issued by
the  | ||
 Commission and to the Department of Revenue;
and  | ||
 notices and complaints of violations to law
 | ||
 enforcement officials, including, without limitation,
 | ||
 the Illinois Attorney General and the U.S. Department
 | ||
 of Treasury's Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau. | ||
  (15) As a means to reduce the underage consumption of
 | ||
 alcoholic liquors, the Commission shall conduct
alcohol  | ||
 compliance operations to investigate whether
businesses  | ||
 that are soliciting, selling, and shipping wine
from inside  | ||
 or outside of this State directly to residents
of this  | ||
 State are licensed by this State or are selling or
 | ||
 attempting to sell wine to persons under 21 years of age in
 | ||
 violation of this Act. | ||
  (16) The Commission shall, in addition to
notifying any  | ||
 appropriate law enforcement agency, submit
notices of  | ||
 complaints or violations of Sections 6-29 and
6-29.1 by  | ||
 persons who do not hold a winery shipper's
license under  | ||
 this amendatory Act to the Illinois Attorney General and
to  | ||
 the U.S. Department of Treasury's Alcohol and Tobacco Tax  | ||
 and Trade Bureau. | ||
  (17) (A) A person licensed to make wine under the laws  | ||
 of another state who has a winery shipper's license under  | ||
 this amendatory Act and annually produces less than 25,000  | ||
 gallons of wine or a person who has a first-class or  | ||
 second-class wine manufacturer's license, a first-class or  | ||
 second-class wine-maker's license, or a limited wine  | ||
 manufacturer's license under this Act and annually  | ||
 produces less than 25,000 gallons of wine may make  | ||
 application to the Commission for a self-distribution  | ||
 exemption to allow the sale of not more than 5,000 gallons  | ||
 of the exemption holder's wine to retail licensees per  | ||
 year. | ||
   (B) In the application, which shall be sworn under  | ||
 penalty of perjury, such person shall state (1) the  | ||
 date it was established; (2) its volume of production  | ||
 and sales for each year since its establishment; (3)  | ||
 its efforts to establish distributor relationships;  | ||
 (4) that a self-distribution exemption is necessary to  | ||
 facilitate the marketing of its wine; and (5) that it  | ||
 will comply with the liquor and revenue laws of the  | ||
 United States, this State, and any other state where it  | ||
 is licensed. | ||
   (C) The Commission shall approve the application  | ||
 for a self-distribution exemption if such person: (1)  | ||
 is in compliance with State revenue and liquor laws;  | ||
 (2) is not a member of any affiliated group that  | ||
 produces more than 25,000 gallons of wine per annum or  | ||
 produces any other alcoholic liquor; (3) will not  | ||
 annually produce for sale more than 25,000 gallons of  | ||
 wine; and (4) will not annually sell more than 5,000  | ||
 gallons of its wine to retail licensees. | ||
   (D) A self-distribution exemption holder shall  | ||
 annually certify to the Commission its production of  | ||
 wine in the previous 12 months and its anticipated  | ||
 production and sales for the next 12 months. The  | ||
 Commission may fine, suspend, or revoke a  | ||
 self-distribution exemption after a hearing if it  | ||
 finds that the exemption holder has made a material  | ||
 misrepresentation in its application, violated a  | ||
 revenue or liquor law of Illinois, exceeded production  | ||
 of 25,000 gallons of wine in any calendar year, or  | ||
 become part of an affiliated group producing more than  | ||
 25,000 gallons of wine or any other alcoholic liquor. | ||
   (E) Except in hearings for violations of this Act  | ||
 or amendatory Act or a bona fide investigation by duly  | ||
 sworn law enforcement officials, the Commission, or  | ||
 its agents, the Commission shall maintain the  | ||
 production and sales information of a  | ||
 self-distribution exemption holder as confidential and  | ||
 shall not release such information to any person. | ||
   (F) The Commission shall issue regulations  | ||
 governing self-distribution exemptions consistent with  | ||
 this Section and this Act. | ||
   (G) Nothing in this subsection (17) shall prohibit  | ||
 a self-distribution exemption holder from entering  | ||
 into or simultaneously having a distribution agreement  | ||
 with a licensed Illinois distributor. | ||
   (H) It is the intent of this subsection (17) to  | ||
 promote and continue orderly markets. The General  | ||
 Assembly finds that in order to preserve Illinois'  | ||
 regulatory distribution system it is necessary to  | ||
 create an exception for smaller makers of wine as their  | ||
 wines are frequently adjusted in varietals, mixes,  | ||
 vintages, and taste to find and create market niches  | ||
 sometimes too small for distributor or importing  | ||
 distributor business strategies. Limited  | ||
 self-distribution rights will afford and allow smaller  | ||
 makers of wine access to the marketplace in order to  | ||
 develop a customer base without impairing the  | ||
 integrity of the 3-tier system.
 | ||
  (18) (A) A craft brewer licensee, who must also be  | ||
 either a licensed brewer or licensed non-resident dealer  | ||
 and annually manufacture less than 930,000 gallons of beer,  | ||
 may make application to the Commission for a  | ||
 self-distribution exemption to allow the sale of not more  | ||
 than 232,500 gallons of the exemption holder's beer to  | ||
 retail licensees per year. | ||
   (B) In the application, which shall be sworn under  | ||
 penalty of perjury, the craft brewer licensee shall  | ||
 state (1) the date it was established; (2) its volume  | ||
 of beer manufactured and sold for each year since its  | ||
 establishment; (3) its efforts to establish  | ||
 distributor relationships; (4) that a  | ||
 self-distribution exemption is necessary to facilitate  | ||
 the marketing of its beer; and (5) that it will comply  | ||
 with the alcoholic beverage and revenue laws of the  | ||
 United States, this State, and any other state where it  | ||
 is licensed. | ||
   (C) Any application submitted shall be posted on  | ||
 the Commission's website at least 45 days prior to  | ||
 action by the Commission. The Commission shall approve  | ||
 the application for a self-distribution exemption if  | ||
 the craft brewer licensee: (1) is in compliance with  | ||
 the State, revenue, and alcoholic beverage laws; (2) is  | ||
 not a member of any affiliated group that manufacturers  | ||
 more than 930,000 gallons of beer per annum or produces  | ||
 any other alcoholic beverages; (3) shall not annually  | ||
 manufacture for sale more than 930,000 gallons of beer;  | ||
 and (4) shall not annually sell more than 232,500  | ||
 gallons of its beer to retail licensees. | ||
   (D) A self-distribution exemption holder shall  | ||
 annually certify to the Commission its manufacture of  | ||
 beer during the previous 12 months and its anticipated  | ||
 manufacture and sales of beer for the next 12 months.  | ||
 The Commission may fine, suspend, or revoke a  | ||
 self-distribution exemption after a hearing if it  | ||
 finds that the exemption holder has made a material  | ||
 misrepresentation in its application, violated a  | ||
 revenue or alcoholic beverage law of Illinois,  | ||
 exceeded the manufacture of 930,000 gallons of beer in  | ||
 any calendar year or became part of an affiliated group  | ||
 manufacturing more than 930,000 gallons of beer or any  | ||
 other alcoholic beverage. | ||
   (E) The Commission shall issue rules and  | ||
 regulations governing self-distribution exemptions  | ||
 consistent with this Act. | ||
   (F) Nothing in this paragraph (18) shall prohibit a  | ||
 self-distribution exemption holder from entering into  | ||
 or simultaneously having a distribution agreement with  | ||
 a licensed Illinois importing distributor or a  | ||
 distributor. If a self-distribution exemption holder  | ||
 enters into a distribution agreement and has assigned  | ||
 distribution rights to an importing distributor or  | ||
 distributor, then the self-distribution exemption  | ||
 holder's distribution rights in the assigned  | ||
 territories shall cease in a reasonable time not to  | ||
 exceed 60 days. | ||
   (G) It is the intent of this paragraph (18) to  | ||
 promote and continue orderly markets. The General  | ||
 Assembly finds that in order to preserve Illinois'  | ||
 regulatory distribution system, it is necessary to  | ||
 create an exception for smaller manufacturers in order  | ||
 to afford and allow such smaller manufacturers of beer  | ||
 access to the marketplace in order to develop a  | ||
 customer base without impairing the integrity of the  | ||
 3-tier system.  | ||
 (b) On or before April 30, 1999, the Commission shall  | ||
present a written
report to the Governor and the General  | ||
Assembly that shall be based on a study
of the impact of this  | ||
amendatory Act of 1998 on the business of soliciting,
selling,  | ||
and shipping
alcoholic liquor from outside of this State  | ||
directly to residents of this
State.
 | ||
 As part of its report, the Commission shall provide the  | ||
following
information:
 | ||
  (i) the amount of State excise and sales tax revenues  | ||
 generated as a
result of this amendatory Act of 1998;
 | ||
  (ii) the amount of licensing fees received as a result  | ||
 of this amendatory
Act of 1998;
 | ||
  (iii) the number of reported violations, the number of  | ||
 cease and desist
notices issued by the Commission, the  | ||
 number of notices of violations issued
to the Department of  | ||
 Revenue, and the number of notices and complaints of
 | ||
 violations to law enforcement officials.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-5, eff. 6-1-11; 98-401, eff. 8-16-13; 98-941,  | ||
eff. 1-1-15.)
 | ||
 (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 98-939)
 | ||
 Sec. 3-12. Powers and duties of State Commission.
 | ||
 (a) The State commission shall have the following powers,  | ||
functions, and
duties:
 | ||
  (1) To receive applications and to issue licenses to  | ||
 manufacturers,
foreign importers, importing distributors,  | ||
 distributors, non-resident dealers,
on premise consumption  | ||
 retailers, off premise sale retailers, special event
 | ||
 retailer licensees, special use permit licenses, auction  | ||
 liquor licenses, brew
pubs, caterer retailers,  | ||
 non-beverage users, railroads, including owners and
 | ||
 lessees of sleeping, dining and cafe cars, airplanes,  | ||
 boats, brokers, and wine
maker's premises licensees in  | ||
 accordance with the provisions of this Act, and
to suspend  | ||
 or revoke such licenses upon the State commission's  | ||
 determination,
upon notice after hearing, that a licensee  | ||
 has violated any provision of this
Act or any rule or  | ||
 regulation issued pursuant thereto and in effect for 30  | ||
 days
prior to such violation. Except in the case of an  | ||
 action taken pursuant to a
violation of Section 6-3, 6-5,  | ||
 or 6-9, any action by the State Commission to
suspend or  | ||
 revoke a licensee's license may be limited to the license  | ||
 for the
specific premises where the violation occurred.
 | ||
  In lieu of suspending or revoking a license, the  | ||
 commission may impose
a fine, upon the State commission's  | ||
 determination and notice after hearing,
that a licensee has  | ||
 violated any provision of this Act or any rule or
 | ||
 regulation issued pursuant thereto and in effect for 30  | ||
 days prior to such
violation. | ||
  For the purpose of this paragraph (1), when determining  | ||
 multiple violations for the sale of alcohol to a person  | ||
 under the age of 21, a second or subsequent violation for  | ||
 the sale of alcohol to a person under the age of 21 shall  | ||
 only be considered if it was committed within 5 years after  | ||
 the date when a prior violation for the sale of alcohol to  | ||
 a person under the age of 21 was committed.  | ||
  The fine imposed under this paragraph may not exceed  | ||
 $500 for each
violation. Each day that the activity, which  | ||
 gave rise to the original fine,
continues is a separate  | ||
 violation. The maximum fine that may be levied against
any  | ||
 licensee, for the period of the license, shall not exceed  | ||
 $20,000.
The maximum penalty that may be imposed on a  | ||
 licensee for selling a bottle of
alcoholic liquor with a  | ||
 foreign object in it or serving from a bottle of
alcoholic  | ||
 liquor with a foreign object in it shall be the destruction  | ||
 of that
bottle of alcoholic liquor for the first 10 bottles  | ||
 so sold or served from by
the licensee. For the eleventh  | ||
 bottle of alcoholic liquor and for each third
bottle  | ||
 thereafter sold or served from by the licensee with a  | ||
 foreign object in
it, the maximum penalty that may be  | ||
 imposed on the licensee is the destruction
of the bottle of  | ||
 alcoholic liquor and a fine of up to $50.
 | ||
  (2) To adopt such rules and regulations consistent with  | ||
 the
provisions of this Act which shall be necessary to  | ||
 carry on its
functions and duties to the end that the  | ||
 health, safety and welfare of
the People of the State of  | ||
 Illinois shall be protected and temperance in
the  | ||
 consumption of alcoholic liquors shall be fostered and  | ||
 promoted and
to distribute copies of such rules and  | ||
 regulations to all licensees
affected thereby.
 | ||
  (3) To call upon other administrative departments of  | ||
 the State,
county and municipal governments, county and  | ||
 city police departments and
upon prosecuting officers for  | ||
 such information and assistance as it
deems necessary in  | ||
 the performance of its duties.
 | ||
  (4) To recommend to local commissioners rules and  | ||
 regulations, not
inconsistent with the law, for the  | ||
 distribution and sale of alcoholic
liquors throughout the  | ||
 State.
 | ||
  (5) To inspect, or cause to be inspected, any
premises  | ||
 in this State
where alcoholic liquors are manufactured,  | ||
 distributed, warehoused, or
sold. Nothing in this Act
 | ||
 authorizes an agent of the Commission to inspect private
 | ||
 areas within the premises without reasonable suspicion or a  | ||
 warrant
during an inspection. "Private areas" include, but  | ||
 are not limited to, safes, personal property, and closed  | ||
 desks.
 | ||
  (5.1) Upon receipt of a complaint or upon having  | ||
 knowledge that any person
is engaged in business as a  | ||
 manufacturer, importing distributor, distributor,
or  | ||
 retailer without a license or valid license, to notify the  | ||
 local liquor
authority, file a complaint with the State's  | ||
 Attorney's Office of the county
where the incident  | ||
 occurred, or initiate an investigation with the  | ||
 appropriate
law enforcement officials.
 | ||
  (5.2) To issue a cease and desist notice to persons  | ||
 shipping alcoholic
liquor
into this State from a point  | ||
 outside of this State if the shipment is in
violation of  | ||
 this Act.
 | ||
  (5.3) To receive complaints from licensees, local  | ||
 officials, law
enforcement agencies, organizations, and  | ||
 persons stating that any licensee has
been or is violating  | ||
 any provision of this Act or the rules and regulations
 | ||
 issued pursuant to this Act. Such complaints shall be in  | ||
 writing, signed and
sworn to by the person making the  | ||
 complaint, and shall state with specificity
the facts in  | ||
 relation to the alleged violation. If the Commission has
 | ||
 reasonable grounds to believe that the complaint  | ||
 substantially alleges a
violation of this Act or rules and  | ||
 regulations adopted pursuant to this Act, it
shall conduct  | ||
 an investigation. If, after conducting an investigation,  | ||
 the
Commission is satisfied that the alleged violation did  | ||
 occur, it shall proceed
with disciplinary action against  | ||
 the licensee as provided in this Act.
 | ||
  (6) To hear and determine appeals from orders of a  | ||
 local commission
in accordance with the provisions of this  | ||
 Act, as hereinafter set forth.
Hearings under this  | ||
 subsection shall be held in Springfield or Chicago,
at  | ||
 whichever location is the more convenient for the majority  | ||
 of persons
who are parties to the hearing.
 | ||
  (7) The commission shall establish uniform systems of  | ||
 accounts to be
kept by all retail licensees having more  | ||
 than 4 employees, and for this
purpose the commission may  | ||
 classify all retail licensees having more
than 4 employees  | ||
 and establish a uniform system of accounts for each
class  | ||
 and prescribe the manner in which such accounts shall be  | ||
 kept.
The commission may also prescribe the forms of  | ||
 accounts to be kept by
all retail licensees having more  | ||
 than 4 employees, including but not
limited to accounts of  | ||
 earnings and expenses and any distribution,
payment, or  | ||
 other distribution of earnings or assets, and any other
 | ||
 forms, records and memoranda which in the judgment of the  | ||
 commission may
be necessary or appropriate to carry out any  | ||
 of the provisions of this
Act, including but not limited to  | ||
 such forms, records and memoranda as
will readily and  | ||
 accurately disclose at all times the beneficial
ownership  | ||
 of such retail licensed business. The accounts, forms,
 | ||
 records and memoranda shall be available at all reasonable  | ||
 times for
inspection by authorized representatives of the  | ||
 State commission or by
any local liquor control  | ||
 commissioner or his or her authorized representative.
The  | ||
 commission, may, from time to time, alter, amend or repeal,  | ||
 in whole
or in part, any uniform system of accounts, or the  | ||
 form and manner of
keeping accounts.
 | ||
  (8) In the conduct of any hearing authorized to be held  | ||
 by the
commission, to appoint, at the commission's  | ||
 discretion, hearing officers
to conduct hearings involving  | ||
 complex issues or issues that will require a
protracted  | ||
 period of time to resolve, to examine, or cause to be  | ||
 examined,
under oath, any licensee, and to examine or cause  | ||
 to be examined the books and
records
of such licensee; to  | ||
 hear testimony and take proof material for its
information  | ||
 in the discharge of its duties hereunder; to administer or
 | ||
 cause to be administered oaths; for any such purpose to  | ||
 issue
subpoena or subpoenas to require the attendance of  | ||
 witnesses and the
production of books, which shall be  | ||
 effective in any part of this State, and
to adopt rules to  | ||
 implement its powers under this paragraph (8).
 | ||
  Any Circuit Court may by order duly entered,
require  | ||
 the attendance of witnesses and the production of relevant  | ||
 books
subpoenaed by the State commission and the court may  | ||
 compel
obedience to its order by proceedings for contempt.
 | ||
  (9) To investigate the administration of laws in  | ||
 relation to
alcoholic liquors in this and other states and  | ||
 any foreign countries,
and to recommend from time to time  | ||
 to the Governor and through him or
her to the legislature  | ||
 of this State, such amendments to this Act, if any, as
it  | ||
 may think desirable and as will serve to further the  | ||
 general broad
purposes contained in Section 1-2 hereof.
 | ||
  (10) To adopt such rules and regulations consistent  | ||
 with the
provisions of this Act which shall be necessary  | ||
 for the control, sale or
disposition of alcoholic liquor  | ||
 damaged as a result of an accident, wreck,
flood, fire or  | ||
 other similar occurrence.
 | ||
  (11) To develop industry educational programs related  | ||
 to responsible
serving and selling, particularly in the  | ||
 areas of overserving consumers and
illegal underage  | ||
 purchasing and consumption of alcoholic beverages.
 | ||
  (11.1) To license persons providing education and  | ||
 training to alcohol
beverage sellers and servers for  | ||
 mandatory and non-mandatory training under the
Beverage  | ||
 Alcohol Sellers and Servers
Education and Training  | ||
 (BASSET) programs and to develop and administer a public
 | ||
 awareness program in Illinois to reduce or eliminate the  | ||
 illegal purchase and
consumption of alcoholic beverage  | ||
 products by persons under the age of 21.
Application for a  | ||
 license shall be made on forms provided by the State
 | ||
 Commission.
 | ||
  (12) To develop and maintain a repository of license  | ||
 and regulatory
information.
 | ||
  (13) On or before January 15, 1994, the Commission  | ||
 shall issue
a written report to the Governor and General  | ||
 Assembly that is to be based on a
comprehensive study of  | ||
 the impact on and implications for the State of Illinois
of  | ||
 Section 1926 of the Federal ADAMHA Reorganization Act of  | ||
 1992 (Public Law
102-321). This study shall address the  | ||
 extent to which Illinois currently
complies with the  | ||
 provisions of P.L. 102-321 and the rules promulgated  | ||
 pursuant
thereto.
 | ||
  As part of its report, the Commission shall provide the  | ||
 following essential
information:
 | ||
   (i) the number of retail distributors of tobacco  | ||
 products, by type and
geographic area, in the State;
 | ||
   (ii) the number of reported citations and  | ||
 successful convictions,
categorized by type and  | ||
 location of retail distributor, for violation of the
 | ||
 Prevention of Tobacco Use by Minors and Sale and  | ||
 Distribution of Tobacco Products Act and the Smokeless
 | ||
 Tobacco Limitation Act;
 | ||
   (iii) the extent and nature of organized  | ||
 educational and governmental
activities that are  | ||
 intended to promote, encourage or otherwise secure
 | ||
 compliance with any Illinois laws that prohibit the  | ||
 sale or distribution of
tobacco products to minors; and
 | ||
   (iv) the level of access and availability of  | ||
 tobacco products to
individuals under the age of 18.
 | ||
  To obtain the data necessary to comply with the  | ||
 provisions of P.L. 102-321
and the requirements of this  | ||
 report, the Commission shall conduct random,
unannounced  | ||
 inspections of a geographically and scientifically  | ||
 representative
sample of the State's retail tobacco  | ||
 distributors.
 | ||
  The Commission shall consult with the Department of  | ||
 Public Health, the
Department of Human Services, the
 | ||
 Illinois State Police and any
other executive branch  | ||
 agency, and private organizations that may have
 | ||
 information relevant to this report.
 | ||
  The Commission may contract with the Food and Drug  | ||
 Administration of the
U.S. Department of Health and Human  | ||
 Services to conduct unannounced
investigations of Illinois  | ||
 tobacco vendors to determine compliance with federal
laws  | ||
 relating to the illegal sale of cigarettes and smokeless  | ||
 tobacco products
to persons under the age of 18.
 | ||
  (14) On or before April 30, 2008 and every 2 years
 | ||
 thereafter, the Commission shall present a written
report  | ||
 to the Governor and the General Assembly that shall
be  | ||
 based on a study of the impact of this amendatory Act of
 | ||
 the 95th General Assembly on the business of soliciting,
 | ||
 selling, and shipping wine from inside and outside of this
 | ||
 State directly to residents of this State. As part of its
 | ||
 report, the Commission shall provide all of the
following  | ||
 information: | ||
   (A) The amount of State excise and sales tax
 | ||
 revenues generated. | ||
   (B) The amount of licensing fees received. | ||
   (C) The number of cases of wine shipped from inside
 | ||
 and outside of this State directly to residents of this
 | ||
 State. | ||
   (D) The number of alcohol compliance operations
 | ||
 conducted. | ||
   (E) The number of winery shipper's licenses
 | ||
 issued. | ||
   (F) The number of each of the following: reported
 | ||
 violations; cease and desist notices issued by the
 | ||
 Commission; notices of violations issued by
the  | ||
 Commission and to the Department of Revenue;
and  | ||
 notices and complaints of violations to law
 | ||
 enforcement officials, including, without limitation,
 | ||
 the Illinois Attorney General and the U.S. Department
 | ||
 of Treasury's Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau. | ||
  (15) As a means to reduce the underage consumption of
 | ||
 alcoholic liquors, the Commission shall conduct
alcohol  | ||
 compliance operations to investigate whether
businesses  | ||
 that are soliciting, selling, and shipping wine
from inside  | ||
 or outside of this State directly to residents
of this  | ||
 State are licensed by this State or are selling or
 | ||
 attempting to sell wine to persons under 21 years of age in
 | ||
 violation of this Act. | ||
  (16) The Commission shall, in addition to
notifying any  | ||
 appropriate law enforcement agency, submit
notices of  | ||
 complaints or violations of Sections 6-29 and
6-29.1 by  | ||
 persons who do not hold a winery shipper's
license under  | ||
 this amendatory Act to the Illinois Attorney General and
to  | ||
 the U.S. Department of Treasury's Alcohol and Tobacco Tax  | ||
 and Trade Bureau. | ||
  (17) (A) A person licensed to make wine under the laws  | ||
 of another state who has a winery shipper's license under  | ||
 this amendatory Act and annually produces less than 25,000  | ||
 gallons of wine or a person who has a first-class or  | ||
 second-class wine manufacturer's license, a first-class or  | ||
 second-class wine-maker's license, or a limited wine  | ||
 manufacturer's license under this Act and annually  | ||
 produces less than 25,000 gallons of wine may make  | ||
 application to the Commission for a self-distribution  | ||
 exemption to allow the sale of not more than 5,000 gallons  | ||
 of the exemption holder's wine to retail licensees per  | ||
 year. | ||
   (B) In the application, which shall be sworn under  | ||
 penalty of perjury, such person shall state (1) the  | ||
 date it was established; (2) its volume of production  | ||
 and sales for each year since its establishment; (3)  | ||
 its efforts to establish distributor relationships;  | ||
 (4) that a self-distribution exemption is necessary to  | ||
 facilitate the marketing of its wine; and (5) that it  | ||
 will comply with the liquor and revenue laws of the  | ||
 United States, this State, and any other state where it  | ||
 is licensed. | ||
   (C) The Commission shall approve the application  | ||
 for a self-distribution exemption if such person: (1)  | ||
 is in compliance with State revenue and liquor laws;  | ||
 (2) is not a member of any affiliated group that  | ||
 produces more than 25,000 gallons of wine per annum or  | ||
 produces any other alcoholic liquor; (3) will not  | ||
 annually produce for sale more than 25,000 gallons of  | ||
 wine; and (4) will not annually sell more than 5,000  | ||
 gallons of its wine to retail licensees. | ||
   (D) A self-distribution exemption holder shall  | ||
 annually certify to the Commission its production of  | ||
 wine in the previous 12 months and its anticipated  | ||
 production and sales for the next 12 months. The  | ||
 Commission may fine, suspend, or revoke a  | ||
 self-distribution exemption after a hearing if it  | ||
 finds that the exemption holder has made a material  | ||
 misrepresentation in its application, violated a  | ||
 revenue or liquor law of Illinois, exceeded production  | ||
 of 25,000 gallons of wine in any calendar year, or  | ||
 become part of an affiliated group producing more than  | ||
 25,000 gallons of wine or any other alcoholic liquor. | ||
   (E) Except in hearings for violations of this Act  | ||
 or amendatory Act or a bona fide investigation by duly  | ||
 sworn law enforcement officials, the Commission, or  | ||
 its agents, the Commission shall maintain the  | ||
 production and sales information of a  | ||
 self-distribution exemption holder as confidential and  | ||
 shall not release such information to any person. | ||
   (F) The Commission shall issue regulations  | ||
 governing self-distribution exemptions consistent with  | ||
 this Section and this Act. | ||
   (G) Nothing in this subsection (17) shall prohibit  | ||
 a self-distribution exemption holder from entering  | ||
 into or simultaneously having a distribution agreement  | ||
 with a licensed Illinois distributor. | ||
   (H) It is the intent of this subsection (17) to  | ||
 promote and continue orderly markets. The General  | ||
 Assembly finds that in order to preserve Illinois'  | ||
 regulatory distribution system it is necessary to  | ||
 create an exception for smaller makers of wine as their  | ||
 wines are frequently adjusted in varietals, mixes,  | ||
 vintages, and taste to find and create market niches  | ||
 sometimes too small for distributor or importing  | ||
 distributor business strategies. Limited  | ||
 self-distribution rights will afford and allow smaller  | ||
 makers of wine access to the marketplace in order to  | ||
 develop a customer base without impairing the  | ||
 integrity of the 3-tier system.
 | ||
  (18) (A) A craft brewer licensee, who must also be  | ||
 either a licensed brewer or licensed non-resident dealer  | ||
 and annually manufacture less than 930,000 gallons of beer,  | ||
 may make application to the Commission for a  | ||
 self-distribution exemption to allow the sale of not more  | ||
 than 232,500 gallons of the exemption holder's beer to  | ||
 retail licensees per year. | ||
   (B) In the application, which shall be sworn under  | ||
 penalty of perjury, the craft brewer licensee shall  | ||
 state (1) the date it was established; (2) its volume  | ||
 of beer manufactured and sold for each year since its  | ||
 establishment; (3) its efforts to establish  | ||
 distributor relationships; (4) that a  | ||
 self-distribution exemption is necessary to facilitate  | ||
 the marketing of its beer; and (5) that it will comply  | ||
 with the alcoholic beverage and revenue laws of the  | ||
 United States, this State, and any other state where it  | ||
 is licensed. | ||
   (C) Any application submitted shall be posted on  | ||
 the Commission's website at least 45 days prior to  | ||
 action by the Commission. The Commission shall approve  | ||
 the application for a self-distribution exemption if  | ||
 the craft brewer licensee: (1) is in compliance with  | ||
 the State, revenue, and alcoholic beverage laws; (2) is  | ||
 not a member of any affiliated group that manufacturers  | ||
 more than 930,000 gallons of beer per annum or produces  | ||
 any other alcoholic beverages; (3) shall not annually  | ||
 manufacture for sale more than 930,000 gallons of beer;  | ||
 and (4) shall not annually sell more than 232,500  | ||
 gallons of its beer to retail licensees. | ||
   (D) A self-distribution exemption holder shall  | ||
 annually certify to the Commission its manufacture of  | ||
 beer during the previous 12 months and its anticipated  | ||
 manufacture and sales of beer for the next 12 months.  | ||
 The Commission may fine, suspend, or revoke a  | ||
 self-distribution exemption after a hearing if it  | ||
 finds that the exemption holder has made a material  | ||
 misrepresentation in its application, violated a  | ||
 revenue or alcoholic beverage law of Illinois,  | ||
 exceeded the manufacture of 930,000 gallons of beer in  | ||
 any calendar year or became part of an affiliated group  | ||
 manufacturing more than 930,000 gallons of beer or any  | ||
 other alcoholic beverage. | ||
   (E) The Commission shall issue rules and  | ||
 regulations governing self-distribution exemptions  | ||
 consistent with this Act. | ||
   (F) Nothing in this paragraph (18) shall prohibit a  | ||
 self-distribution exemption holder from entering into  | ||
 or simultaneously having a distribution agreement with  | ||
 a licensed Illinois importing distributor or a  | ||
 distributor. If a self-distribution exemption holder  | ||
 enters into a distribution agreement and has assigned  | ||
 distribution rights to an importing distributor or  | ||
 distributor, then the self-distribution exemption  | ||
 holder's distribution rights in the assigned  | ||
 territories shall cease in a reasonable time not to  | ||
 exceed 60 days. | ||
   (G) It is the intent of this paragraph (18) to  | ||
 promote and continue orderly markets. The General  | ||
 Assembly finds that in order to preserve Illinois'  | ||
 regulatory distribution system, it is necessary to  | ||
 create an exception for smaller manufacturers in order  | ||
 to afford and allow such smaller manufacturers of beer  | ||
 access to the marketplace in order to develop a  | ||
 customer base without impairing the integrity of the  | ||
 3-tier system.  | ||
 (b) On or before April 30, 1999, the Commission shall  | ||
present a written
report to the Governor and the General  | ||
Assembly that shall be based on a study
of the impact of this  | ||
amendatory Act of 1998 on the business of soliciting,
selling,  | ||
and shipping
alcoholic liquor from outside of this State  | ||
directly to residents of this
State.
 | ||
 As part of its report, the Commission shall provide the  | ||
following
information:
 | ||
  (i) the amount of State excise and sales tax revenues  | ||
 generated as a
result of this amendatory Act of 1998;
 | ||
  (ii) the amount of licensing fees received as a result  | ||
 of this amendatory
Act of 1998;
 | ||
  (iii) the number of reported violations, the number of  | ||
 cease and desist
notices issued by the Commission, the  | ||
 number of notices of violations issued
to the Department of  | ||
 Revenue, and the number of notices and complaints of
 | ||
 violations to law enforcement officials.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-5, eff. 6-1-11; 98-401, eff. 8-16-13; 98-939,  | ||
eff. 7-1-15; 98-941, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-6-14.)
 | ||
 (235 ILCS 5/6-15) (from Ch. 43, par. 130)
 | ||
 Sec. 6-15. No alcoholic liquors shall be sold or delivered  | ||
in any
building belonging to or under the control of the State  | ||
or any political
subdivision thereof except as provided in this  | ||
Act. The corporate
authorities of any city, village,  | ||
incorporated town, township, or county may provide by
 | ||
ordinance, however, that alcoholic liquor may be sold or  | ||
delivered in any
specifically designated building belonging to  | ||
or under the control of the
municipality, township, or county,  | ||
or in any building located on land under the
control of the  | ||
municipality, township, or county; provided that such township  | ||
or county complies with all
applicable local ordinances in any  | ||
incorporated area of the township or county.
Alcoholic liquor  | ||
may be delivered to and sold under the authority of a special  | ||
use permit on any property owned by a conservation district  | ||
organized under the Conservation District Act, provided that  | ||
(i) the alcoholic liquor is sold only at an event authorized by  | ||
the governing board of the conservation district, (ii) the  | ||
issuance of the special use permit is authorized by the local  | ||
liquor control commissioner of the territory in which the  | ||
property is located, and (iii) the special use permit  | ||
authorizes the sale of alcoholic liquor for one day or less.  | ||
Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at any airport  | ||
belonging to
or under the control of a municipality of more  | ||
than 25,000 inhabitants, or
in any building or on any golf  | ||
course owned by a park district organized under
the Park  | ||
District
Code, subject to the approval of the governing board  | ||
of the district, or
in any building or on any golf course owned  | ||
by a forest preserve district
organized under the Downstate  | ||
Forest Preserve District Act, subject to the
approval of the  | ||
governing board of the district, or on the grounds
within 500  | ||
feet of any building owned by a forest preserve district
 | ||
organized under the Downstate Forest Preserve District Act  | ||
during
times when food is dispensed for consumption within
500  | ||
feet of the building from which the food is dispensed,
subject  | ||
to the
approval of the
governing board of the district, or in a  | ||
building owned by a Local Mass
Transit District organized under  | ||
the Local Mass Transit District Act, subject
to the approval of  | ||
the governing Board of the District, or in Bicentennial
Park,  | ||
or
on the premises of the City of Mendota Lake Park
located  | ||
adjacent to Route 51 in Mendota, Illinois, or on the premises  | ||
of
Camden Park in Milan, Illinois, or in the community center  | ||
owned by the
City of Loves Park that is located at 1000 River  | ||
Park Drive in Loves Park,
Illinois, or, in connection with the  | ||
operation of an established food
serving facility during times  | ||
when food is dispensed for consumption on the
premises, and at  | ||
the following aquarium and museums located in public
parks: Art  | ||
Institute of Chicago, Chicago Academy of Sciences, Chicago
 | ||
Historical Society, Field Museum of Natural History, Museum of  | ||
Science and
Industry, DuSable Museum of African American  | ||
History, John G. Shedd
Aquarium and Adler Planetarium, or at  | ||
Lakeview Museum of Arts and Sciences
in Peoria, or in  | ||
connection with the operation of the facilities of the
Chicago  | ||
Zoological Society or the Chicago Horticultural Society on land
 | ||
owned by the Forest Preserve District of Cook County,
or on any  | ||
land used for a golf course or for recreational purposes
owned  | ||
by the Forest Preserve District of Cook County, subject to the  | ||
control
of the Forest Preserve District Board of Commissioners  | ||
and applicable local
law, provided that dram shop liability  | ||
insurance is provided at
maximum coverage limits so as to hold  | ||
the
District harmless from all financial loss, damage, and  | ||
harm,
or in any building
located on land owned by the Chicago  | ||
Park District if approved by the Park
District Commissioners,  | ||
or on any land used for a golf course or for
recreational  | ||
purposes and owned by the Illinois International Port District  | ||
if
approved by the District's governing board, or at any  | ||
airport, golf course,
faculty center, or
facility in which  | ||
conference and convention type activities take place
belonging  | ||
to or under control of any State university or public community
 | ||
college district, provided that with respect to a facility for  | ||
conference
and convention type activities alcoholic liquors  | ||
shall be limited to the
use of the convention or conference  | ||
participants or participants
in cultural, political or  | ||
educational activities held in such facilities,
and provided  | ||
further that the faculty or staff of the State university or
a  | ||
public community college district, or members of an  | ||
organization of
students, alumni, faculty or staff of the State  | ||
university or a public
community college district are active  | ||
participants in the conference
or convention, or in Memorial  | ||
Stadium on the campus of the University of
Illinois at  | ||
Urbana-Champaign during games in which the
Chicago Bears  | ||
professional football team is playing in that stadium during  | ||
the
renovation of Soldier Field, not more than one and a half  | ||
hours before the
start of the game and not after the end of the  | ||
third quarter of the game,
or in the Pavilion Facility on the  | ||
campus of the University of Illinois at Chicago during games in  | ||
which the Chicago Storm professional soccer team is playing in  | ||
that facility, not more than one and a half hours before the  | ||
start of the game and not after the end of the third quarter of  | ||
the game, or in the Pavilion Facility on the campus of the  | ||
University of Illinois at Chicago during games in which the  | ||
WNBA professional women's basketball team is playing in that  | ||
facility, not more than one and a half hours before the start  | ||
of the game and not after the 10-minute mark of the second half  | ||
of the game, or by a catering establishment which has rented  | ||
facilities
from a board of trustees of a public community  | ||
college district, or in a restaurant that is operated by a  | ||
commercial tenant in the North Campus Parking Deck building  | ||
that (1) is located at 1201 West University Avenue, Urbana,  | ||
Illinois and (2) is owned by the Board of Trustees of the  | ||
University of Illinois, or, if
approved by the District board,  | ||
on land owned by the Metropolitan Sanitary
District of Greater  | ||
Chicago and leased to others for a term of at least
20 years.  | ||
Nothing in this Section precludes the sale or delivery of
 | ||
alcoholic liquor in the form of original packaged goods in  | ||
premises located
at 500 S. Racine in Chicago belonging to the  | ||
University of Illinois and
used primarily as a grocery store by  | ||
a commercial tenant during the term of
a lease that predates  | ||
the University's acquisition of the premises; but the
 | ||
University shall have no power or authority to renew, transfer,  | ||
or extend
the lease with terms allowing the sale of alcoholic  | ||
liquor; and the sale of
alcoholic liquor shall be subject to  | ||
all local laws and regulations.
After the acquisition by  | ||
Winnebago County of the property located at 404
Elm Street in  | ||
Rockford, a commercial tenant who sold alcoholic liquor at
 | ||
retail on a portion of the property under a valid license at  | ||
the time of
the acquisition may continue to do so for so long  | ||
as the tenant and the
County may agree under existing or future  | ||
leases, subject to all local laws
and regulations regarding the  | ||
sale of alcoholic liquor. Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to  | ||
and sold at Memorial Hall, located at 211 North Main Street,  | ||
Rockford, under conditions approved by Winnebago County and  | ||
subject to all local laws and regulations regarding the sale of  | ||
alcoholic liquor. Each
facility shall provide dram shop  | ||
liability in maximum insurance coverage
limits so as to save  | ||
harmless the State, municipality, State university,
airport,  | ||
golf course, faculty center, facility in which conference and
 | ||
convention type activities take place, park district, Forest  | ||
Preserve
District, public community college district,  | ||
aquarium, museum, or sanitary
district from all financial loss,  | ||
damage or harm. Alcoholic liquors may be
sold at retail in  | ||
buildings of golf courses owned by municipalities or Illinois  | ||
State University in
connection with the operation of an  | ||
established food serving facility
during times when food is  | ||
dispensed for consumption upon the premises.
Alcoholic liquors  | ||
may be delivered to and sold at retail in any building
owned by  | ||
a fire protection district organized under the Fire Protection
 | ||
District Act, provided that such delivery and sale is approved  | ||
by the board
of trustees of the district, and provided further  | ||
that such delivery and
sale is limited to fundraising events  | ||
and to a maximum of 6 events per year. However, the limitation  | ||
to fundraising events and to a maximum of 6 events per year  | ||
does not apply to the delivery, sale, or manufacture of  | ||
alcoholic liquors at the building located at 59 Main Street in  | ||
Oswego, Illinois, owned by the Oswego Fire Protection District  | ||
if the alcoholic liquor is sold or dispensed as approved by the  | ||
Oswego Fire Protection District and the property is no longer  | ||
being utilized for fire protection purposes.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be served or sold in buildings under  | ||
the control of the Board of Trustees of the University of  | ||
Illinois for events that the Board may determine are public  | ||
events and not related student activities. The Board of  | ||
Trustees shall issue a written policy within 6 months of the  | ||
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 95th General  | ||
Assembly concerning the types of events that would be eligible  | ||
for an exemption. Thereafter, the Board of Trustees may issue  | ||
revised, updated, new, or amended policies as it deems  | ||
necessary and appropriate. In preparing its written policy, the  | ||
Board of Trustees shall, among other factors it considers  | ||
relevant and important, give consideration to the following:  | ||
(i) whether the event is a student activity or student related  | ||
activity; (ii) whether the physical setting of the event is  | ||
conducive to control of liquor sales and distribution; (iii)  | ||
the ability of the event operator to ensure that the sale or  | ||
serving of alcoholic liquors and the demeanor of the  | ||
participants are in accordance with State law and University  | ||
policies; (iv) regarding the anticipated attendees at the  | ||
event, the relative proportion of individuals under the age of  | ||
21 to individuals age 21 or older; (v) the ability of the venue  | ||
operator to prevent the sale or distribution of alcoholic  | ||
liquors to individuals under the age of 21; (vi) whether the  | ||
event prohibits participants from removing alcoholic beverages  | ||
from the venue; and (vii) whether the event prohibits  | ||
participants from providing their own alcoholic liquors to the  | ||
venue. In addition, any policy submitted by the Board of  | ||
Trustees to the Illinois Liquor Control Commission must require  | ||
that any event at which alcoholic liquors are served or sold in  | ||
buildings under the control of the Board of Trustees shall  | ||
require the prior written approval of the Office of the  | ||
Chancellor for the University campus where the event is  | ||
located. The Board of Trustees shall submit its policy, and any  | ||
subsequently revised, updated, new, or amended policies, to the  | ||
Illinois Liquor Control Commission, and any University event,  | ||
or location for an event, exempted under such policies shall  | ||
apply for a license under the applicable Sections of this Act.  | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be served or sold in buildings under
 | ||
the control of the Board of Trustees of Northern Illinois  | ||
University
for events that the Board may determine are public
 | ||
events and not student-related activities. The Board of
 | ||
Trustees shall issue a written policy within 6 months after  | ||
June 28, 2011 (the
effective date of Public Act 97-45)  | ||
concerning the types of events that would be eligible
for an  | ||
exemption. Thereafter, the Board of Trustees may issue
revised,  | ||
updated, new, or amended policies as it deems
necessary and  | ||
appropriate. In preparing its written policy, the
Board of  | ||
Trustees shall, in addition to other factors it considers
 | ||
relevant and important, give consideration to the following:
 | ||
(i) whether the event is a student activity or student-related
 | ||
activity; (ii) whether the physical setting of the event is
 | ||
conducive to control of liquor sales and distribution; (iii)
 | ||
the ability of the event operator to ensure that the sale or
 | ||
serving of alcoholic liquors and the demeanor of the
 | ||
participants are in accordance with State law and University
 | ||
policies; (iv) the anticipated attendees at the
event and the  | ||
relative proportion of individuals under the age of
21 to  | ||
individuals age 21 or older; (v) the ability of the venue
 | ||
operator to prevent the sale or distribution of alcoholic
 | ||
liquors to individuals under the age of 21; (vi) whether the
 | ||
event prohibits participants from removing alcoholic beverages
 | ||
from the venue; and (vii) whether the event prohibits
 | ||
participants from providing their own alcoholic liquors to the
 | ||
venue.  | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be served or sold in buildings under  | ||
the control of the Board of Trustees of Chicago State  | ||
University for events that the Board may determine are public  | ||
events and not student-related activities. The Board of  | ||
Trustees shall issue a written policy within 6 months after  | ||
August 2, 2013 (the effective date of Public Act 98-132)  | ||
concerning the types of events that would be eligible for an  | ||
exemption. Thereafter, the Board of Trustees may issue revised,  | ||
updated, new, or amended policies as it deems necessary and  | ||
appropriate. In preparing its written policy, the Board of  | ||
Trustees shall, in addition to other factors it considers  | ||
relevant and important, give consideration to the following:  | ||
(i) whether the event is a student activity or student-related  | ||
activity; (ii) whether the physical setting of the event is  | ||
conducive to control of liquor sales and distribution; (iii)  | ||
the ability of the event operator to ensure that the sale or  | ||
serving of alcoholic liquors and the demeanor of the  | ||
participants are in accordance with State law and University  | ||
policies; (iv) the anticipated attendees at the event and the  | ||
relative proportion of individuals under the age of 21 to  | ||
individuals age 21 or older; (v) the ability of the venue  | ||
operator to prevent the sale or distribution of alcoholic  | ||
liquors to individuals under the age of 21; (vi) whether the  | ||
event prohibits participants from removing alcoholic beverages  | ||
from the venue; and (vii) whether the event prohibits  | ||
participants from providing their own alcoholic liquors to the  | ||
venue.  | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be served or sold in buildings under
 | ||
the control of the Board of Trustees of Illinois State  | ||
University
for events that the Board may determine are public
 | ||
events and not student-related activities. The Board of
 | ||
Trustees shall issue a written policy within 6 months after the  | ||
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General  | ||
Assembly concerning the types of events that would be eligible
 | ||
for an exemption. Thereafter, the Board of Trustees may issue
 | ||
revised, updated, new, or amended policies as it deems
 | ||
necessary and appropriate. In preparing its written policy, the
 | ||
Board of Trustees shall, in addition to other factors it  | ||
considers
relevant and important, give consideration to the  | ||
following:
(i) whether the event is a student activity or  | ||
student-related
activity; (ii) whether the physical setting of  | ||
the event is
conducive to control of liquor sales and  | ||
distribution; (iii)
the ability of the event operator to ensure  | ||
that the sale or
serving of alcoholic liquors and the demeanor  | ||
of the
participants are in accordance with State law and  | ||
University
policies; (iv) the anticipated attendees at the
 | ||
event and the relative proportion of individuals under the age  | ||
of
21 to individuals age 21 or older; (v) the ability of the  | ||
venue
operator to prevent the sale or distribution of alcoholic
 | ||
liquors to individuals under the age of 21; (vi) whether the
 | ||
event prohibits participants from removing alcoholic beverages
 | ||
from the venue; and (vii) whether the event prohibits
 | ||
participants from providing their own alcoholic liquors to the
 | ||
venue.  | ||
 Alcoholic liquor may be delivered to and sold at retail in  | ||
the
Dorchester Senior Business Center owned by the Village of  | ||
Dolton if the
alcoholic liquor is sold or dispensed only in  | ||
connection with organized
functions for which the planned  | ||
attendance is 20 or more persons, and if
the person or facility  | ||
selling or dispensing the alcoholic liquor has
provided dram  | ||
shop liability insurance in maximum limits so as to hold
 | ||
harmless the Village of Dolton and the State from all financial  | ||
loss,
damage and harm.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at retail in  | ||
any
building used as an Illinois State Armory provided:
 | ||
  (i) the Adjutant General's written consent to the  | ||
 issuance of a
license to sell alcoholic liquor in such  | ||
 building is filed with the
Commission;
 | ||
  (ii) the alcoholic liquor is sold or dispensed only in  | ||
 connection
with organized functions held on special  | ||
 occasions;
 | ||
  (iii) the organized function is one for which the  | ||
 planned attendance
is 25 or more persons; and
 | ||
  (iv) the facility selling or dispensing the alcoholic  | ||
 liquors has
provided dram shop liability insurance in  | ||
 maximum limits so as to save
harmless the facility and the  | ||
 State from all financial loss, damage or harm.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at retail in  | ||
the Chicago
Civic Center, provided that:
 | ||
  (i) the written consent of the Public Building  | ||
 Commission which
administers the Chicago Civic Center is  | ||
 filed with the Commission;
 | ||
  (ii) the alcoholic liquor is sold or dispensed only in  | ||
 connection with
organized functions held on special  | ||
 occasions;
 | ||
  (iii) the organized function is one for which the  | ||
 planned attendance is
25 or more persons;
 | ||
  (iv) the facility selling or dispensing the alcoholic  | ||
 liquors has
provided dram shop liability insurance in  | ||
 maximum limits so as to hold
harmless the Civic Center, the  | ||
 City of Chicago and the State from all
financial loss,  | ||
 damage or harm; and
 | ||
  (v) all applicable local ordinances are complied with.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be delivered or sold in any building  | ||
belonging to
or under the control of any city, village or  | ||
incorporated town where more
than 75% of the physical  | ||
properties of the building is used for commercial
or  | ||
recreational purposes, and the building is located upon a pier  | ||
extending
into or over the waters of a navigable lake or stream  | ||
or on the shore of a
navigable lake or stream.
In accordance  | ||
with a license issued under this Act, alcoholic liquor may be  | ||
sold, served, or delivered in buildings and facilities under
 | ||
the control
of the Department of Natural Resources during  | ||
events or activities lasting no more than 7 continuous days  | ||
upon the written approval of the
Director of
Natural Resources  | ||
acting as the controlling government authority. The Director
of
 | ||
Natural Resources may specify conditions on that approval,  | ||
including but not
limited to
requirements for insurance and  | ||
hours of operation.
Notwithstanding any other provision of this  | ||
Act, alcoholic liquor sold by a
United States Army Corps of  | ||
Engineers or Department of Natural
Resources
concessionaire  | ||
who was operating on June 1, 1991 for on-premises consumption
 | ||
only is not subject to the provisions of Articles IV and IX.  | ||
Beer and wine
may be sold on the premises of the Joliet Park  | ||
District Stadium owned by
the Joliet Park District when written  | ||
consent to the issuance of a license
to sell beer and wine in  | ||
such premises is filed with the local liquor
commissioner by  | ||
the Joliet Park District. Beer and wine may be sold in
 | ||
buildings on the grounds of State veterans' homes when written  | ||
consent to
the issuance of a license to sell beer and wine in  | ||
such buildings is filed
with the Commission by the Department  | ||
of Veterans' Affairs, and the
facility shall provide dram shop  | ||
liability in maximum insurance coverage
limits so as to save  | ||
the facility harmless from all financial loss, damage
or harm.  | ||
Such liquors may be delivered to and sold at any property owned  | ||
or
held under lease by a Metropolitan Pier and Exposition  | ||
Authority or
Metropolitan Exposition and Auditorium Authority.
 | ||
 Beer and wine may be sold and dispensed at professional  | ||
sporting events
and at professional concerts and other  | ||
entertainment events conducted on
premises owned by the Forest  | ||
Preserve District of Kane County, subject to
the control of the  | ||
District Commissioners and applicable local law,
provided that  | ||
dram shop liability insurance is provided at maximum coverage
 | ||
limits so as to hold the District harmless from all financial  | ||
loss, damage
and harm.
 | ||
 Nothing in this Section shall preclude the sale or delivery  | ||
of beer and
wine at a State or county fair or the sale or  | ||
delivery of beer or wine at a
city fair in any otherwise lawful  | ||
manner.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be sold at retail in buildings in  | ||
State parks
under the control of the Department of Natural  | ||
Resources,
provided:
 | ||
  a. the State park has overnight lodging facilities with  | ||
 some
restaurant facilities or, not having overnight  | ||
 lodging facilities, has
restaurant facilities which serve  | ||
 complete luncheon and dinner or
supper meals,
 | ||
  b. (blank), and
 | ||
  c. the alcoholic liquors are sold by the State park  | ||
 lodge or
restaurant concessionaire only during the hours  | ||
 from 11 o'clock a.m. until
12 o'clock midnight.  | ||
 Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act,
alcoholic  | ||
 liquor sold by the State park or restaurant concessionaire  | ||
 is not
subject to the provisions of Articles IV and IX.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be sold at retail in buildings on  | ||
properties
under the control of the Historic Sites and  | ||
Preservation Division of the
Historic Preservation
Agency or  | ||
the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum provided:
 | ||
  a. the property has overnight lodging facilities with  | ||
 some restaurant
facilities or, not having overnight  | ||
 lodging facilities, has restaurant
facilities which serve  | ||
 complete luncheon and dinner or supper meals,
 | ||
  b. consent to the issuance of a license to sell  | ||
 alcoholic liquors in
the buildings has been filed with the  | ||
 commission by the Historic Sites and
Preservation Division
 | ||
 of the Historic
Preservation Agency or the Abraham Lincoln  | ||
 Presidential Library and Museum,
and
 | ||
  c. the alcoholic liquors are sold by the lodge or  | ||
 restaurant
concessionaire only during the hours from 11  | ||
 o'clock a.m. until 12 o'clock
midnight.
 | ||
 The sale of alcoholic liquors pursuant to this Section does  | ||
not
authorize the establishment and operation of facilities  | ||
commonly called
taverns, saloons, bars, cocktail lounges, and  | ||
the like except as a part
of lodge and restaurant facilities in  | ||
State parks or golf courses owned
by Forest Preserve Districts  | ||
with a population of less than 3,000,000 or
municipalities or  | ||
park districts.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be sold at retail in the Springfield
 | ||
Administration Building of the Department of Transportation  | ||
and the
Illinois State Armory in Springfield; provided, that  | ||
the controlling
government authority may consent to such sales  | ||
only if
 | ||
  a. the request is from a not-for-profit organization;
 | ||
  b. such sales would not impede normal operations of the  | ||
 departments
involved;
 | ||
  c. the not-for-profit organization provides dram shop  | ||
 liability in
maximum insurance coverage limits and agrees  | ||
 to defend, save harmless
and indemnify the State of  | ||
 Illinois from all financial loss, damage or harm;
 | ||
  d. no such sale shall be made during normal working  | ||
 hours of the
State of Illinois; and
 | ||
  e. the consent is in writing.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be sold at retail in buildings in  | ||
recreational
areas of river conservancy districts under the  | ||
control of, or leased
from, the river conservancy districts.  | ||
Such sales are subject to
reasonable local regulations as  | ||
provided in Article IV; however, no such
regulations may  | ||
prohibit or substantially impair the sale of alcoholic
liquors  | ||
on Sundays or Holidays.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be provided in long term care  | ||
facilities owned or
operated by a county under Division 5-21 or  | ||
5-22 of the Counties Code,
when approved by the facility  | ||
operator and not in conflict
with the regulations of the  | ||
Illinois Department of Public Health, to
residents of the  | ||
facility who have had their consumption of the alcoholic
 | ||
liquors provided approved in writing by a physician licensed to  | ||
practice
medicine in all its branches.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and dispensed in  | ||
State housing
assigned to employees of the Department of  | ||
Corrections.
No person shall furnish or allow to be furnished  | ||
any alcoholic
liquors to any prisoner confined in any jail,  | ||
reformatory, prison or house
of correction except upon a  | ||
physician's prescription for medicinal purposes.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be sold at retail or dispensed at the  | ||
Willard Ice
Building in Springfield, at the State Library in  | ||
Springfield, and at
Illinois State Museum facilities by (1) an
 | ||
agency of the State, whether legislative, judicial or  | ||
executive, provided
that such agency first obtains written  | ||
permission to sell or dispense
alcoholic liquors from the  | ||
controlling government authority, or by (2) a
not-for-profit  | ||
organization, provided that such organization:
 | ||
  a. Obtains written consent from the controlling  | ||
 government authority;
 | ||
  b. Sells or dispenses the alcoholic liquors in a manner  | ||
 that does not
impair normal operations of State offices  | ||
 located in the building;
 | ||
  c. Sells or dispenses alcoholic liquors only in  | ||
 connection with an
official activity in the building;
 | ||
  d. Provides, or its catering service provides, dram  | ||
 shop liability
insurance in maximum coverage limits and in  | ||
 which the carrier agrees to
defend, save harmless and  | ||
 indemnify the State of Illinois from all
financial loss,  | ||
 damage or harm arising out of the selling or dispensing of
 | ||
 alcoholic liquors.
 | ||
 Nothing in this Act shall prevent a not-for-profit  | ||
organization or agency
of the State from employing the services  | ||
of a catering establishment for
the selling or dispensing of  | ||
alcoholic liquors at authorized functions.
 | ||
 The controlling government authority for the Willard Ice  | ||
Building in
Springfield shall be the Director of the Department  | ||
of Revenue. The
controlling government authority for Illinois  | ||
State Museum facilities shall
be the Director of the Illinois  | ||
State Museum. The controlling government
authority for the  | ||
State Library in Springfield shall be the Secretary of State.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at retail or  | ||
dispensed
at any facility, property or building under the  | ||
jurisdiction of the
Historic Sites and Preservation Division of  | ||
the
Historic Preservation Agency
or the Abraham
Lincoln  | ||
Presidential Library and Museum
where the delivery, sale or
 | ||
dispensing is by (1)
an agency of the State, whether  | ||
legislative, judicial or executive,
provided that such agency  | ||
first obtains written permission to sell or
dispense alcoholic  | ||
liquors from a controlling government authority, or by (2) an  | ||
individual or organization provided that such individual or  | ||
organization:
 | ||
  a. Obtains written consent from the controlling  | ||
 government authority;
 | ||
  b. Sells or dispenses the alcoholic liquors in a manner  | ||
 that does not
impair normal workings of State offices or  | ||
 operations located at the
facility, property or building;
 | ||
  c. Sells or dispenses alcoholic liquors only in  | ||
 connection with an
official activity of the individual or  | ||
 organization in the facility,
property or building;
 | ||
  d. Provides, or its catering service provides, dram  | ||
 shop liability
insurance in maximum coverage limits and in  | ||
 which the carrier agrees to
defend, save harmless and  | ||
 indemnify the State of Illinois from all
financial loss,  | ||
 damage or harm arising out of the selling or dispensing of
 | ||
 alcoholic liquors.
 | ||
 The controlling government authority for the
Historic  | ||
Sites and Preservation Division of the
Historic Preservation  | ||
Agency
shall be the Director of the Historic Sites and  | ||
Preservation, and the
controlling
government authority for the  | ||
Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum
shall be the  | ||
Director of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and  | ||
Museum.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at retail or  | ||
dispensed for
consumption at the Michael Bilandic Building at  | ||
160 North LaSalle Street,
Chicago IL 60601, after the normal  | ||
business hours of any day care or child care
facility located  | ||
in the building, by (1) a commercial tenant or subtenant
 | ||
conducting business on the premises under a lease made pursuant  | ||
to Section
405-315 of the Department of Central Management  | ||
Services Law (20 ILCS
405/405-315), provided that such tenant  | ||
or subtenant who accepts delivery of,
sells, or dispenses  | ||
alcoholic liquors shall procure and maintain dram shop
 | ||
liability insurance in maximum coverage limits and in which the  | ||
carrier
agrees to defend, indemnify, and save harmless the  | ||
State of Illinois from
all financial loss, damage, or harm  | ||
arising out of the delivery, sale, or
dispensing of alcoholic  | ||
liquors, or by (2) an agency of the State, whether
legislative,  | ||
judicial, or executive, provided that such agency first obtains
 | ||
written permission to accept delivery of and sell or dispense  | ||
alcoholic liquors
from the Director of Central Management  | ||
Services, or by (3) a not-for-profit
organization, provided  | ||
that such organization:
 | ||
  a. obtains written consent from the Department of  | ||
 Central Management
Services;
 | ||
  b. accepts delivery of and sells or dispenses the  | ||
 alcoholic liquors in a
manner that does not impair normal  | ||
 operations of State offices located in the
building;
 | ||
  c. accepts delivery of and sells or dispenses alcoholic  | ||
 liquors only in
connection with an official activity in the  | ||
 building; and
 | ||
  d. provides, or its catering service provides, dram  | ||
 shop liability
insurance in maximum coverage limits and in  | ||
 which the carrier agrees to
defend, save harmless, and  | ||
 indemnify the State of Illinois from all
financial loss,  | ||
 damage, or harm arising out of the selling or dispensing of
 | ||
 alcoholic liquors.
 | ||
 Nothing in this Act shall prevent a not-for-profit  | ||
organization or agency
of the State from employing the services  | ||
of a catering establishment for
the selling or dispensing of  | ||
alcoholic liquors at functions authorized by
the Director of  | ||
Central Management Services.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be sold at retail or dispensed at the  | ||
James R.
Thompson Center in Chicago, subject to the provisions  | ||
of Section 7.4 of the
State Property Control Act, and 222 South  | ||
College Street in Springfield,
Illinois by (1) a commercial  | ||
tenant or subtenant conducting business on the
premises under a  | ||
lease or sublease made pursuant to Section 405-315 of the
 | ||
Department of Central Management Services Law (20 ILCS  | ||
405/405-315), provided
that such tenant or subtenant who
sells  | ||
or dispenses alcoholic liquors shall procure and maintain dram  | ||
shop
liability insurance in maximum coverage limits and in  | ||
which the carrier
agrees to defend, indemnify and save harmless  | ||
the State of Illinois from
all financial loss, damage or harm  | ||
arising out of the sale or dispensing of
alcoholic liquors, or  | ||
by (2) an agency of the State, whether legislative,
judicial or  | ||
executive, provided that such agency first obtains written
 | ||
permission to sell or dispense alcoholic liquors from the  | ||
Director of
Central Management Services, or by (3) a  | ||
not-for-profit organization,
provided that such organization:
 | ||
  a. Obtains written consent from the Department of  | ||
 Central Management
Services;
 | ||
  b. Sells or dispenses the alcoholic liquors in a manner  | ||
 that does not
impair normal operations of State offices  | ||
 located in the building;
 | ||
  c. Sells or dispenses alcoholic liquors only in  | ||
 connection with an
official activity in the building;
 | ||
  d. Provides, or its catering service provides, dram  | ||
 shop liability
insurance in maximum coverage limits and in  | ||
 which the carrier agrees to
defend, save harmless and  | ||
 indemnify the State of Illinois from all
financial loss,  | ||
 damage or harm arising out of the selling or dispensing of
 | ||
 alcoholic liquors.
 | ||
 Nothing in this Act shall prevent a not-for-profit  | ||
organization or agency
of the State from employing the services  | ||
of a catering establishment for
the selling or dispensing of  | ||
alcoholic liquors at functions authorized by
the Director of  | ||
Central Management Services.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be sold or delivered at any facility  | ||
owned by the
Illinois Sports Facilities Authority provided that  | ||
dram shop liability
insurance has been made available in a  | ||
form, with such coverage and in such
amounts as the Authority  | ||
reasonably determines is necessary.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be sold at retail or dispensed at the  | ||
Rockford
State Office Building by (1) an agency of the State,  | ||
whether legislative,
judicial or executive, provided that such  | ||
agency first obtains written
permission to sell or dispense  | ||
alcoholic liquors from the Department of
Central Management  | ||
Services, or by (2) a not-for-profit organization,
provided  | ||
that such organization:
 | ||
  a. Obtains written consent from the Department of  | ||
 Central Management
Services;
 | ||
  b. Sells or dispenses the alcoholic liquors in a manner  | ||
 that does not
impair normal operations of State offices  | ||
 located in the building;
 | ||
  c. Sells or dispenses alcoholic liquors only in  | ||
 connection with an
official activity in the building;
 | ||
  d. Provides, or its catering service provides, dram  | ||
 shop liability
insurance in maximum coverage limits and in  | ||
 which the carrier agrees to defend,
save harmless and  | ||
 indemnify the State of Illinois from all financial loss,
 | ||
 damage or harm arising out of the selling or dispensing of  | ||
 alcoholic liquors.
 | ||
 Nothing in this Act shall prevent a not-for-profit  | ||
organization or agency
of the State from employing the services  | ||
of a catering establishment for
the selling or dispensing of  | ||
alcoholic liquors at functions authorized by
the Department of  | ||
Central Management Services.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be sold or delivered in a building  | ||
that is owned
by McLean County, situated on land owned by the  | ||
county in the City of
Bloomington, and used by the McLean  | ||
County Historical Society if the sale
or delivery is approved  | ||
by an ordinance adopted by the county board, and
the  | ||
municipality in which the building is located may not prohibit  | ||
that
sale or delivery, notwithstanding any other provision of  | ||
this Section. The
regulation of the sale and delivery of  | ||
alcoholic liquor in a building that
is owned by McLean County,  | ||
situated on land owned by the county, and used
by the McLean  | ||
County Historical Society as provided in this paragraph is an
 | ||
exclusive power and function of the State and is a denial and  | ||
limitation
under Article VII, Section 6, subsection (h) of the  | ||
Illinois Constitution
of the power of a home rule municipality  | ||
to regulate that sale and delivery.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be sold or delivered in any building  | ||
situated on
land held in trust for any school district  | ||
organized under Article 34 of
the School Code, if the building  | ||
is not used for school purposes and if the
sale or delivery is  | ||
approved by the board of education.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at retail in  | ||
any building owned by the Six Mile Regional Library District,  | ||
provided that the delivery and sale is approved by the board of  | ||
trustees of the Six Mile Regional Library District and the  | ||
delivery and sale is limited to a maximum of 6 library district  | ||
events per year. The Six Mile Regional Library District shall  | ||
provide dram shop liability in maximum insurance coverage  | ||
limits so as to save harmless the library district from all  | ||
financial loss, damage, or harm.  | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be sold or delivered in buildings  | ||
owned
by the Community Building Complex Committee of Boone  | ||
County,
Illinois if the person or facility selling or  | ||
dispensing the
alcoholic liquor has provided dram shop  | ||
liability insurance with coverage and
in amounts that the  | ||
Committee reasonably determines are necessary.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be sold or delivered in the building  | ||
located at
1200 Centerville Avenue in Belleville, Illinois and  | ||
occupied by either the
Belleville Area Special Education  | ||
District or the Belleville Area Special
Services
Cooperative. | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at the Louis  | ||
Joliet
Renaissance Center, City Center Campus, located at 214  | ||
N. Ottawa Street,
Joliet, and
the Food Services/Culinary Arts  | ||
Department facilities, Main Campus, located at
1215 Houbolt  | ||
Road, Joliet, owned by or under the control of Joliet Junior
 | ||
College,
Illinois Community College District No. 525.
 | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at Triton  | ||
College, Illinois Community College District No. 504.  | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at the  | ||
College of DuPage, Illinois Community College District No. 502.  | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at the  | ||
building located at 446 East Hickory Avenue in Apple River,  | ||
Illinois, owned by the Apple River Fire Protection District,  | ||
and occupied by the Apple River Community Association if the  | ||
alcoholic liquor is sold or dispensed only in connection with  | ||
organized functions approved by the Apple River Community  | ||
Association for which the planned attendance is 20 or more  | ||
persons and if the person or facility selling or dispensing the  | ||
alcoholic liquor has provided dram shop liability insurance in  | ||
maximum limits so as to hold harmless the Apple River Fire  | ||
Protection District, the Village of Apple River, and the Apple  | ||
River Community Association from all financial loss, damage,  | ||
and harm.  | ||
 Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at the Sikia  | ||
Restaurant, Kennedy King College Campus, located at 740 West  | ||
63rd Street, Chicago, and at the Food Services in the Great  | ||
Hall/Washburne Culinary Institute Department facility, Kennedy  | ||
King College Campus, located at 740 West 63rd Street, Chicago,  | ||
owned by or under the control of City Colleges of Chicago,  | ||
Illinois Community College District No. 508.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-33, eff. 6-28-11; 97-45, eff. 6-28-11; 97-51,  | ||
eff. 6-28-11; 97-167, eff. 7-22-11; 97-250, eff. 8-4-11;  | ||
97-395, eff. 8-16-11; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 97-1166, eff.  | ||
3-1-13; 98-132, eff. 8-2-13; 98-201, eff. 8-9-13; 98-692, eff.  | ||
7-1-14; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14; 98-1092, eff. 8-26-14; revised  | ||
10-3-14.)
 | ||
 (235 ILCS 5/6-36) | ||
 Sec. 6-36. Homemade brewed beverages.  | ||
 (a) No license or permit is required under this Act for the  | ||
making of homemade brewed beverages or for the possession,  | ||
transportation, or storage of homemade brewed beverages by any  | ||
person 21 years of age or older, if all of the following apply: | ||
  (1) the person who makes the homemade brewed beverages  | ||
 receives no compensation; | ||
  (2) the homemade brewed beverages are is not sold or  | ||
 offered for sale; and | ||
  (3) the total quantity of homemade brewed beverages  | ||
 made, in a calendar year, by the person does not exceed 100  | ||
 gallons if the household has only one person 21 years of  | ||
 age or older or 200 gallons if the household has 2 or more  | ||
 persons 21 years of age or older. | ||
 (b) A person who makes, possesses, transports, or stores  | ||
homemade brewed beverages in compliance with the limitations  | ||
specified in subsection (a) is not a brewer, craft brewer,  | ||
wholesaler, retailer, or a manufacturer of beer for the  | ||
purposes of this Act. | ||
 (c) Homemade brewed beverages made in compliance with the  | ||
limitations specified in subsection (a) may be consumed by the  | ||
person who made it and his or her family, neighbors, and  | ||
friends at any private residence or other private location  | ||
where the possession and consumption of alcohol are is  | ||
permissible under this Act, local ordinances, and other  | ||
applicable law, provided that the homemade brewed beverages are  | ||
not made available for consumption by the general public. | ||
 (d) Homemade brewed beverages made in compliance with the  | ||
limitations specified in subsection (a) may be used for  | ||
purposes of a public exhibition, demonstration, tasting, or  | ||
sampling with sampling sizes as authorized by Section 6-31, if  | ||
the event is held at a private residence or at a location other  | ||
than a retail licensed premises. If the public event is not  | ||
held at a private residence, the event organizer shall obtain a  | ||
homebrewer special event permit for each location, and is  | ||
subject to the provisions in subsection (a) of Section 6-21.  | ||
Homemade brewed beverages used for purposes described in this  | ||
subsection (d), including the submission or consumption of the  | ||
homemade brewed beverages, are not considered sold or offered  | ||
for sale under this Act. A public exhibition, demonstration,  | ||
tasting, or sampling with sampling sizes as authorized by  | ||
Section 6-31 held by a licensee on a location other than a  | ||
retail licensed premises may require an admission charge to the  | ||
event, but no separate or additional fee may be charged for the  | ||
consumption of a person's homemade brewed beverages at the  | ||
public exhibition, demonstration, tasting, or sampling with  | ||
sampling sizes as authorized by Section 6-31. Event admission  | ||
charges that are collected may be partially used to provide  | ||
prizes to makers of homemade brewed beverages, but the  | ||
admission charges may not be divided in any fashion among the  | ||
makers of the homemade brewed beverages who participate in the  | ||
event. Homemade brewed beverages used for purposes described in  | ||
this subsection (d) are not considered sold or offered for sale  | ||
under this Act if a maker of homemade brewed beverages receives  | ||
free event admission or discounted event admission in return  | ||
for the maker's donation of the homemade brewed beverages to an  | ||
event specified in this subsection (d) that collects event  | ||
admission charges; free admission or discounted admission to  | ||
the event is not considered compensation under this Act. No  | ||
admission fee and no charge for the consumption of a person's  | ||
homemade brewed beverage may be collected if the public  | ||
exhibition, demonstration, tasting, or sampling with sampling  | ||
sizes as authorized by Section 6-31 is held at a private  | ||
residence.  | ||
 (e) A person who is not a licensee under this Act may at a  | ||
private residence, and a person who is a licensee under this  | ||
Act may on the licensed premises, conduct, sponsor, or host a  | ||
contest, competition, or other event for the exhibition,  | ||
demonstration, judging, tasting, or sampling of homemade  | ||
brewed beverages made in compliance with the limitations  | ||
specified in subsection (a), if the person does not sell the  | ||
homemade brewed beverages and, unless the person is the brewer  | ||
of the homemade brewed beverages, does not acquire any  | ||
ownership interest in the homemade brewed beverages. If the  | ||
contest, competition, exhibition, demonstration, or judging is  | ||
not held at a private residence, the consumption of the  | ||
homemade brewed beverages is limited to qualified judges and  | ||
stewards as defined by a national or international beer judging  | ||
program, who are identified by the event organizer in advance  | ||
of the contest, competition, exhibition, demonstration, or  | ||
judging. Homemade brewed beverages used for the purposes  | ||
described in this subsection (e), including the submission or  | ||
consumption of the homemade brewed beverages, are not  | ||
considered sold or offered for sale under this Act and any  | ||
prize awarded at a contest or competition or as a result of an  | ||
exhibition, demonstration, or judging is not considered  | ||
compensation under this Act. An exhibition, demonstration,  | ||
judging, contest, or competition held by a licensee on a  | ||
licensed premises may require an admission charge to the event,  | ||
but no separate or additional fee may be charged for the  | ||
consumption of a person's homemade brewed beverage at the  | ||
exhibition, demonstration, judging, contest, or competition. A  | ||
portion of event admission charges that are collected may be  | ||
used to provide prizes to makers of homemade brewed beverages,  | ||
but the admission charges may not be divided in any fashion  | ||
among the makers of the homemade brewed beverages who  | ||
participate in the event. Homemade brewed beverages used for  | ||
purposes described in this subsection (e) are not considered  | ||
sold or offered for sale under this Act if a maker of homemade  | ||
brewed beverages receives free event admission or discounted  | ||
event admission in return for the maker's donation of the  | ||
homemade brewed beverages to an event specified in this  | ||
subsection (e) that collects event admission charges; free  | ||
admission or discounted admission to the event is not  | ||
considered compensation under this Act. No admission fee and no  | ||
charge for the consumption of a person's homemade brewed  | ||
beverage may be charged if the exhibition, demonstration,  | ||
judging, contest, or competition is held at a private  | ||
residence. The fact that a person is acting in a manner  | ||
authorized by this Section is not, by itself, sufficient to  | ||
constitute a public nuisance under Section 10-7 of this Act. If  | ||
the contest, competition, or other event is held on licensed  | ||
premises, the licensee may allow the homemade brewed beverages  | ||
to be stored on the premises if the homemade brewed beverages  | ||
are clearly identified and , kept separate from any alcohol  | ||
beverages owned by the licensee. If the contest, competition,  | ||
or other event is held on licensed premises, other provisions  | ||
of this Act not inconsistent with this Section apply.  | ||
 (f) A commercial enterprise engaged primarily in selling  | ||
supplies and equipment to the public for use by homebrewers may  | ||
manufacture homemade brewed beverages for the purpose of  | ||
tasting the homemade brewed beverages at the location of the  | ||
commercial enterprise, provided that the homemade brewed  | ||
beverages are not sold or offered for sale. Homemade brewed  | ||
beverages provided at a commercial enterprise for tasting under  | ||
this subsection (f) shall be in compliance with Sections 6-16,  | ||
6-21, and 6-31 of this Act. A commercial enterprise engaged  | ||
solely in selling supplies and equipment for use by homebrewers  | ||
shall not be required to secure a license under this Act,  | ||
however, such commercial enterprise shall secure liquor  | ||
liability insurance coverage in an amount at least equal to the  | ||
maximum liability amounts set forth in subsection (a) of  | ||
Section 6-21 of this Act.  | ||
 (g) Homemade brewed beverages are not subject to Section  | ||
8-1 of this Act. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-55, eff. 7-5-13; revised 11-26-14.)
 | ||
 Section 340. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by  | ||
changing Sections 5-5, 5-5.2, 5A-5, and 5A-8 and by setting  | ||
forth and renumbering multiple versions of Section 12-4.47 as  | ||
follows:
 | ||
 (305 ILCS 5/5-5) (from Ch. 23, par. 5-5)
 | ||
 Sec. 5-5. Medical services.  The Illinois Department, by  | ||
rule, shall
determine the quantity and quality of and the rate  | ||
of reimbursement for the
medical assistance for which
payment  | ||
will be authorized, and the medical services to be provided,
 | ||
which may include all or part of the following: (1) inpatient  | ||
hospital
services; (2) outpatient hospital services; (3) other  | ||
laboratory and
X-ray services; (4) skilled nursing home  | ||
services; (5) physicians'
services whether furnished in the  | ||
office, the patient's home, a
hospital, a skilled nursing home,  | ||
or elsewhere; (6) medical care, or any
other type of remedial  | ||
care furnished by licensed practitioners; (7)
home health care  | ||
services; (8) private duty nursing service; (9) clinic
 | ||
services; (10) dental services, including prevention and  | ||
treatment of periodontal disease and dental caries disease for  | ||
pregnant women, provided by an individual licensed to practice  | ||
dentistry or dental surgery; for purposes of this item (10),  | ||
"dental services" means diagnostic, preventive, or corrective  | ||
procedures provided by or under the supervision of a dentist in  | ||
the practice of his or her profession; (11) physical therapy  | ||
and related
services; (12) prescribed drugs, dentures, and  | ||
prosthetic devices; and
eyeglasses prescribed by a physician  | ||
skilled in the diseases of the eye,
or by an optometrist,  | ||
whichever the person may select; (13) other
diagnostic,  | ||
screening, preventive, and rehabilitative services, including  | ||
to ensure that the individual's need for intervention or  | ||
treatment of mental disorders or substance use disorders or  | ||
co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders is  | ||
determined using a uniform screening, assessment, and  | ||
evaluation process inclusive of criteria, for children and  | ||
adults; for purposes of this item (13), a uniform screening,  | ||
assessment, and evaluation process refers to a process that  | ||
includes an appropriate evaluation and, as warranted, a  | ||
referral; "uniform" does not mean the use of a singular  | ||
instrument, tool, or process that all must utilize; (14)
 | ||
transportation and such other expenses as may be necessary;  | ||
(15) medical
treatment of sexual assault survivors, as defined  | ||
in
Section 1a of the Sexual Assault Survivors Emergency  | ||
Treatment Act, for
injuries sustained as a result of the sexual  | ||
assault, including
examinations and laboratory tests to  | ||
discover evidence which may be used in
criminal proceedings  | ||
arising from the sexual assault; (16) the
diagnosis and  | ||
treatment of sickle cell anemia; and (17)
any other medical  | ||
care, and any other type of remedial care recognized
under the  | ||
laws of this State, but not including abortions, or induced
 | ||
miscarriages or premature births, unless, in the opinion of a  | ||
physician,
such procedures are necessary for the preservation  | ||
of the life of the
woman seeking such treatment, or except an  | ||
induced premature birth
intended to produce a live viable child  | ||
and such procedure is necessary
for the health of the mother or  | ||
her unborn child. The Illinois Department,
by rule, shall  | ||
prohibit any physician from providing medical assistance
to  | ||
anyone eligible therefor under this Code where such physician  | ||
has been
found guilty of performing an abortion procedure in a  | ||
wilful and wanton
manner upon a woman who was not pregnant at  | ||
the time such abortion
procedure was performed. The term "any  | ||
other type of remedial care" shall
include nursing care and  | ||
nursing home service for persons who rely on
treatment by  | ||
spiritual means alone through prayer for healing.
 | ||
 Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, a  | ||
comprehensive
tobacco use cessation program that includes  | ||
purchasing prescription drugs or
prescription medical devices  | ||
approved by the Food and Drug Administration shall
be covered  | ||
under the medical assistance
program under this Article for  | ||
persons who are otherwise eligible for
assistance under this  | ||
Article.
 | ||
 Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, the  | ||
Illinois
Department may not require, as a condition of payment  | ||
for any laboratory
test authorized under this Article, that a  | ||
physician's handwritten signature
appear on the laboratory  | ||
test order form. The Illinois Department may,
however, impose  | ||
other appropriate requirements regarding laboratory test
order  | ||
documentation.
 | ||
 Upon receipt of federal approval of an amendment to the  | ||
Illinois Title XIX State Plan for this purpose, the Department  | ||
shall authorize the Chicago Public Schools (CPS) to procure a  | ||
vendor or vendors to manufacture eyeglasses for individuals  | ||
enrolled in a school within the CPS system. CPS shall ensure  | ||
that its vendor or vendors are enrolled as providers in the  | ||
medical assistance program and in any capitated Medicaid  | ||
managed care entity (MCE) serving individuals enrolled in a  | ||
school within the CPS system. Under any contract procured under  | ||
this provision, the vendor or vendors must serve only  | ||
individuals enrolled in a school within the CPS system. Claims  | ||
for services provided by CPS's vendor or vendors to recipients  | ||
of benefits in the medical assistance program under this Code,  | ||
the Children's Health Insurance Program, or the Covering ALL  | ||
KIDS Health Insurance Program shall be submitted to the  | ||
Department or the MCE in which the individual is enrolled for  | ||
payment and shall be reimbursed at the Department's or the  | ||
MCE's established rates or rate methodologies for eyeglasses.  | ||
 On and after July 1, 2012, the Department of Healthcare and  | ||
Family Services may provide the following services to
persons
 | ||
eligible for assistance under this Article who are  | ||
participating in
education, training or employment programs  | ||
operated by the Department of Human
Services as successor to  | ||
the Department of Public Aid:
 | ||
  (1) dental services provided by or under the  | ||
 supervision of a dentist; and
 | ||
  (2) eyeglasses prescribed by a physician skilled in the  | ||
 diseases of the
eye, or by an optometrist, whichever the  | ||
 person may select.
 | ||
 Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code and  | ||
subject to federal approval, the Department may adopt rules to  | ||
allow a dentist who is volunteering his or her service at no  | ||
cost to render dental services through an enrolled  | ||
not-for-profit health clinic without the dentist personally  | ||
enrolling as a participating provider in the medical assistance  | ||
program. A not-for-profit health clinic shall include a public  | ||
health clinic or Federally Qualified Health Center or other  | ||
enrolled provider, as determined by the Department, through  | ||
which dental services covered under this Section are performed.  | ||
The Department shall establish a process for payment of claims  | ||
for reimbursement for covered dental services rendered under  | ||
this provision.  | ||
 The Illinois Department, by rule, may distinguish and  | ||
classify the
medical services to be provided only in accordance  | ||
with the classes of
persons designated in Section 5-2.
 | ||
 The Department of Healthcare and Family Services must  | ||
provide coverage and reimbursement for amino acid-based  | ||
elemental formulas, regardless of delivery method, for the  | ||
diagnosis and treatment of (i) eosinophilic disorders and (ii)  | ||
short bowel syndrome when the prescribing physician has issued  | ||
a written order stating that the amino acid-based elemental  | ||
formula is medically necessary.
 | ||
 The Illinois Department shall authorize the provision of,  | ||
and shall
authorize payment for, screening by low-dose  | ||
mammography for the presence of
occult breast cancer for women  | ||
35 years of age or older who are eligible
for medical  | ||
assistance under this Article, as follows: | ||
  (A) A baseline
mammogram for women 35 to 39 years of  | ||
 age.
 | ||
  (B) An annual mammogram for women 40 years of age or  | ||
 older. | ||
  (C) A mammogram at the age and intervals considered  | ||
 medically necessary by the woman's health care provider for  | ||
 women under 40 years of age and having a family history of  | ||
 breast cancer, prior personal history of breast cancer,  | ||
 positive genetic testing, or other risk factors. | ||
  (D) A comprehensive ultrasound screening of an entire  | ||
 breast or breasts if a mammogram demonstrates  | ||
 heterogeneous or dense breast tissue, when medically  | ||
 necessary as determined by a physician licensed to practice  | ||
 medicine in all of its branches.  | ||
 All screenings
shall
include a physical breast exam,  | ||
instruction on self-examination and
information regarding the  | ||
frequency of self-examination and its value as a
preventative  | ||
tool. For purposes of this Section, "low-dose mammography"  | ||
means
the x-ray examination of the breast using equipment  | ||
dedicated specifically
for mammography, including the x-ray  | ||
tube, filter, compression device,
and image receptor, with an  | ||
average radiation exposure delivery
of less than one rad per  | ||
breast for 2 views of an average size breast.
The term also  | ||
includes digital mammography.
 | ||
 On and after January 1, 2012, providers participating in a  | ||
quality improvement program approved by the Department shall be  | ||
reimbursed for screening and diagnostic mammography at the same  | ||
rate as the Medicare program's rates, including the increased  | ||
reimbursement for digital mammography. | ||
 The Department shall convene an expert panel including  | ||
representatives of hospitals, free-standing mammography  | ||
facilities, and doctors, including radiologists, to establish  | ||
quality standards. | ||
 Subject to federal approval, the Department shall  | ||
establish a rate methodology for mammography at federally  | ||
qualified health centers and other encounter-rate clinics.  | ||
These clinics or centers may also collaborate with other  | ||
hospital-based mammography facilities. | ||
 The Department shall establish a methodology to remind  | ||
women who are age-appropriate for screening mammography, but  | ||
who have not received a mammogram within the previous 18  | ||
months, of the importance and benefit of screening mammography. | ||
 The Department shall establish a performance goal for  | ||
primary care providers with respect to their female patients  | ||
over age 40 receiving an annual mammogram. This performance  | ||
goal shall be used to provide additional reimbursement in the  | ||
form of a quality performance bonus to primary care providers  | ||
who meet that goal. | ||
 The Department shall devise a means of case-managing or  | ||
patient navigation for beneficiaries diagnosed with breast  | ||
cancer. This program shall initially operate as a pilot program  | ||
in areas of the State with the highest incidence of mortality  | ||
related to breast cancer. At least one pilot program site shall  | ||
be in the metropolitan Chicago area and at least one site shall  | ||
be outside the metropolitan Chicago area. An evaluation of the  | ||
pilot program shall be carried out measuring health outcomes  | ||
and cost of care for those served by the pilot program compared  | ||
to similarly situated patients who are not served by the pilot  | ||
program.  | ||
 Any medical or health care provider shall immediately  | ||
recommend, to
any pregnant woman who is being provided prenatal  | ||
services and is suspected
of drug abuse or is addicted as  | ||
defined in the Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse
and Dependency  | ||
Act, referral to a local substance abuse treatment provider
 | ||
licensed by the Department of Human Services or to a licensed
 | ||
hospital which provides substance abuse treatment services.  | ||
The Department of Healthcare and Family Services
shall assure  | ||
coverage for the cost of treatment of the drug abuse or
 | ||
addiction for pregnant recipients in accordance with the  | ||
Illinois Medicaid
Program in conjunction with the Department of  | ||
Human Services.
 | ||
 All medical providers providing medical assistance to  | ||
pregnant women
under this Code shall receive information from  | ||
the Department on the
availability of services under the Drug  | ||
Free Families with a Future or any
comparable program providing  | ||
case management services for addicted women,
including  | ||
information on appropriate referrals for other social services
 | ||
that may be needed by addicted women in addition to treatment  | ||
for addiction.
 | ||
 The Illinois Department, in cooperation with the  | ||
Departments of Human
Services (as successor to the Department  | ||
of Alcoholism and Substance
Abuse) and Public Health, through a  | ||
public awareness campaign, may
provide information concerning  | ||
treatment for alcoholism and drug abuse and
addiction, prenatal  | ||
health care, and other pertinent programs directed at
reducing  | ||
the number of drug-affected infants born to recipients of  | ||
medical
assistance.
 | ||
 Neither the Department of Healthcare and Family Services  | ||
nor the Department of Human
Services shall sanction the  | ||
recipient solely on the basis of
her substance abuse.
 | ||
 The Illinois Department shall establish such regulations  | ||
governing
the dispensing of health services under this Article  | ||
as it shall deem
appropriate. The Department
should
seek the  | ||
advice of formal professional advisory committees appointed by
 | ||
the Director of the Illinois Department for the purpose of  | ||
providing regular
advice on policy and administrative matters,  | ||
information dissemination and
educational activities for  | ||
medical and health care providers, and
consistency in  | ||
procedures to the Illinois Department.
 | ||
 The Illinois Department may develop and contract with  | ||
Partnerships of
medical providers to arrange medical services  | ||
for persons eligible under
Section 5-2 of this Code.  | ||
Implementation of this Section may be by
demonstration projects  | ||
in certain geographic areas. The Partnership shall
be  | ||
represented by a sponsor organization. The Department, by rule,  | ||
shall
develop qualifications for sponsors of Partnerships.  | ||
Nothing in this
Section shall be construed to require that the  | ||
sponsor organization be a
medical organization.
 | ||
 The sponsor must negotiate formal written contracts with  | ||
medical
providers for physician services, inpatient and  | ||
outpatient hospital care,
home health services, treatment for  | ||
alcoholism and substance abuse, and
other services determined  | ||
necessary by the Illinois Department by rule for
delivery by  | ||
Partnerships. Physician services must include prenatal and
 | ||
obstetrical care. The Illinois Department shall reimburse  | ||
medical services
delivered by Partnership providers to clients  | ||
in target areas according to
provisions of this Article and the  | ||
Illinois Health Finance Reform Act,
except that:
 | ||
  (1) Physicians participating in a Partnership and  | ||
 providing certain
services, which shall be determined by  | ||
 the Illinois Department, to persons
in areas covered by the  | ||
 Partnership may receive an additional surcharge
for such  | ||
 services.
 | ||
  (2) The Department may elect to consider and negotiate  | ||
 financial
incentives to encourage the development of  | ||
 Partnerships and the efficient
delivery of medical care.
 | ||
  (3) Persons receiving medical services through  | ||
 Partnerships may receive
medical and case management  | ||
 services above the level usually offered
through the  | ||
 medical assistance program.
 | ||
 Medical providers shall be required to meet certain  | ||
qualifications to
participate in Partnerships to ensure the  | ||
delivery of high quality medical
services. These  | ||
qualifications shall be determined by rule of the Illinois
 | ||
Department and may be higher than qualifications for  | ||
participation in the
medical assistance program. Partnership  | ||
sponsors may prescribe reasonable
additional qualifications  | ||
for participation by medical providers, only with
the prior  | ||
written approval of the Illinois Department.
 | ||
 Nothing in this Section shall limit the free choice of  | ||
practitioners,
hospitals, and other providers of medical  | ||
services by clients.
In order to ensure patient freedom of  | ||
choice, the Illinois Department shall
immediately promulgate  | ||
all rules and take all other necessary actions so that
provided  | ||
services may be accessed from therapeutically certified  | ||
optometrists
to the full extent of the Illinois Optometric  | ||
Practice Act of 1987 without
discriminating between service  | ||
providers.
 | ||
 The Department shall apply for a waiver from the United  | ||
States Health
Care Financing Administration to allow for the  | ||
implementation of
Partnerships under this Section.
 | ||
 The Illinois Department shall require health care  | ||
providers to maintain
records that document the medical care  | ||
and services provided to recipients
of Medical Assistance under  | ||
this Article. Such records must be retained for a period of not  | ||
less than 6 years from the date of service or as provided by  | ||
applicable State law, whichever period is longer, except that  | ||
if an audit is initiated within the required retention period  | ||
then the records must be retained until the audit is completed  | ||
and every exception is resolved. The Illinois Department shall
 | ||
require health care providers to make available, when  | ||
authorized by the
patient, in writing, the medical records in a  | ||
timely fashion to other
health care providers who are treating  | ||
or serving persons eligible for
Medical Assistance under this  | ||
Article. All dispensers of medical services
shall be required  | ||
to maintain and retain business and professional records
 | ||
sufficient to fully and accurately document the nature, scope,  | ||
details and
receipt of the health care provided to persons  | ||
eligible for medical
assistance under this Code, in accordance  | ||
with regulations promulgated by
the Illinois Department. The  | ||
rules and regulations shall require that proof
of the receipt  | ||
of prescription drugs, dentures, prosthetic devices and
 | ||
eyeglasses by eligible persons under this Section accompany  | ||
each claim
for reimbursement submitted by the dispenser of such  | ||
medical services.
No such claims for reimbursement shall be  | ||
approved for payment by the Illinois
Department without such  | ||
proof of receipt, unless the Illinois Department
shall have put  | ||
into effect and shall be operating a system of post-payment
 | ||
audit and review which shall, on a sampling basis, be deemed  | ||
adequate by
the Illinois Department to assure that such drugs,  | ||
dentures, prosthetic
devices and eyeglasses for which payment  | ||
is being made are actually being
received by eligible  | ||
recipients. Within 90 days after the effective date of
this  | ||
amendatory Act of 1984, the Illinois Department shall establish  | ||
a
current list of acquisition costs for all prosthetic devices  | ||
and any
other items recognized as medical equipment and  | ||
supplies reimbursable under
this Article and shall update such  | ||
list on a quarterly basis, except that
the acquisition costs of  | ||
all prescription drugs shall be updated no
less frequently than  | ||
every 30 days as required by Section 5-5.12.
 | ||
 The rules and regulations of the Illinois Department shall  | ||
require
that a written statement including the required opinion  | ||
of a physician
shall accompany any claim for reimbursement for  | ||
abortions, or induced
miscarriages or premature births. This  | ||
statement shall indicate what
procedures were used in providing  | ||
such medical services.
 | ||
 Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the Illinois  | ||
Department shall, within 365 days after July 22, 2013, (the  | ||
effective date of Public Act 98-104), establish procedures to  | ||
permit skilled care facilities licensed under the Nursing Home  | ||
Care Act to submit monthly billing claims for reimbursement  | ||
purposes. Following development of these procedures, the  | ||
Department shall have an additional 365 days to test the  | ||
viability of the new system and to ensure that any necessary  | ||
operational or structural changes to its information  | ||
technology platforms are implemented.  | ||
 Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the Illinois  | ||
Department shall, within 365 days after August 15, 2014 (the  | ||
effective date of Public Act 98-963) this amendatory Act of the  | ||
98th General Assembly, establish procedures to permit ID/DD  | ||
facilities licensed under the ID/DD Community Care Act to  | ||
submit monthly billing claims for reimbursement purposes.  | ||
Following development of these procedures, the Department  | ||
shall have an additional 365 days to test the viability of the  | ||
new system and to ensure that any necessary operational or  | ||
structural changes to its information technology platforms are  | ||
implemented.  | ||
 The Illinois Department shall require all dispensers of  | ||
medical
services, other than an individual practitioner or  | ||
group of practitioners,
desiring to participate in the Medical  | ||
Assistance program
established under this Article to disclose  | ||
all financial, beneficial,
ownership, equity, surety or other  | ||
interests in any and all firms,
corporations, partnerships,  | ||
associations, business enterprises, joint
ventures, agencies,  | ||
institutions or other legal entities providing any
form of  | ||
health care services in this State under this Article.
 | ||
 The Illinois Department may require that all dispensers of  | ||
medical
services desiring to participate in the medical  | ||
assistance program
established under this Article disclose,  | ||
under such terms and conditions as
the Illinois Department may  | ||
by rule establish, all inquiries from clients
and attorneys  | ||
regarding medical bills paid by the Illinois Department, which
 | ||
inquiries could indicate potential existence of claims or liens  | ||
for the
Illinois Department.
 | ||
 Enrollment of a vendor
shall be
subject to a provisional  | ||
period and shall be conditional for one year. During the period  | ||
of conditional enrollment, the Department may
terminate the  | ||
vendor's eligibility to participate in, or may disenroll the  | ||
vendor from, the medical assistance
program without cause.  | ||
Unless otherwise specified, such termination of eligibility or  | ||
disenrollment is not subject to the
Department's hearing  | ||
process.
However, a disenrolled vendor may reapply without  | ||
penalty. 
 | ||
 The Department has the discretion to limit the conditional  | ||
enrollment period for vendors based upon category of risk of  | ||
the vendor. | ||
 Prior to enrollment and during the conditional enrollment  | ||
period in the medical assistance program, all vendors shall be  | ||
subject to enhanced oversight, screening, and review based on  | ||
the risk of fraud, waste, and abuse that is posed by the  | ||
category of risk of the vendor. The Illinois Department shall  | ||
establish the procedures for oversight, screening, and review,  | ||
which may include, but need not be limited to: criminal and  | ||
financial background checks; fingerprinting; license,  | ||
certification, and authorization verifications; unscheduled or  | ||
unannounced site visits; database checks; prepayment audit  | ||
reviews; audits; payment caps; payment suspensions; and other  | ||
screening as required by federal or State law. | ||
 The Department shall define or specify the following: (i)  | ||
by provider notice, the "category of risk of the vendor" for  | ||
each type of vendor, which shall take into account the level of  | ||
screening applicable to a particular category of vendor under  | ||
federal law and regulations; (ii) by rule or provider notice,  | ||
the maximum length of the conditional enrollment period for  | ||
each category of risk of the vendor; and (iii) by rule, the  | ||
hearing rights, if any, afforded to a vendor in each category  | ||
of risk of the vendor that is terminated or disenrolled during  | ||
the conditional enrollment period.  | ||
 To be eligible for payment consideration, a vendor's  | ||
payment claim or bill, either as an initial claim or as a  | ||
resubmitted claim following prior rejection, must be received  | ||
by the Illinois Department, or its fiscal intermediary, no  | ||
later than 180 days after the latest date on the claim on which  | ||
medical goods or services were provided, with the following  | ||
exceptions: | ||
  (1) In the case of a provider whose enrollment is in  | ||
 process by the Illinois Department, the 180-day period  | ||
 shall not begin until the date on the written notice from  | ||
 the Illinois Department that the provider enrollment is  | ||
 complete. | ||
  (2) In the case of errors attributable to the Illinois  | ||
 Department or any of its claims processing intermediaries  | ||
 which result in an inability to receive, process, or  | ||
 adjudicate a claim, the 180-day period shall not begin  | ||
 until the provider has been notified of the error. | ||
  (3) In the case of a provider for whom the Illinois  | ||
 Department initiates the monthly billing process. | ||
  (4) In the case of a provider operated by a unit of  | ||
 local government with a population exceeding 3,000,000  | ||
 when local government funds finance federal participation  | ||
 for claims payments.  | ||
 For claims for services rendered during a period for which  | ||
a recipient received retroactive eligibility, claims must be  | ||
filed within 180 days after the Department determines the  | ||
applicant is eligible. For claims for which the Illinois  | ||
Department is not the primary payer, claims must be submitted  | ||
to the Illinois Department within 180 days after the final  | ||
adjudication by the primary payer. | ||
 In the case of long term care facilities, within 5 days of  | ||
receipt by the facility of required prescreening information,  | ||
data for new admissions shall be entered into the Medical  | ||
Electronic Data Interchange (MEDI) or the Recipient  | ||
Eligibility Verification (REV) System or successor system, and  | ||
within 15 days of receipt by the facility of required  | ||
prescreening information, admission documents shall be  | ||
submitted through MEDI or REV or shall be submitted directly to  | ||
the Department of Human Services using required admission  | ||
forms. Effective September
1, 2014, admission documents,  | ||
including all prescreening
information, must be submitted  | ||
through MEDI or REV. Confirmation numbers assigned to an  | ||
accepted transaction shall be retained by a facility to verify  | ||
timely submittal. Once an admission transaction has been  | ||
completed, all resubmitted claims following prior rejection  | ||
are subject to receipt no later than 180 days after the  | ||
admission transaction has been completed. | ||
 Claims that are not submitted and received in compliance  | ||
with the foregoing requirements shall not be eligible for  | ||
payment under the medical assistance program, and the State  | ||
shall have no liability for payment of those claims. | ||
 To the extent consistent with applicable information and  | ||
privacy, security, and disclosure laws, State and federal  | ||
agencies and departments shall provide the Illinois Department  | ||
access to confidential and other information and data necessary  | ||
to perform eligibility and payment verifications and other  | ||
Illinois Department functions. This includes, but is not  | ||
limited to: information pertaining to licensure;  | ||
certification; earnings; immigration status; citizenship; wage  | ||
reporting; unearned and earned income; pension income;  | ||
employment; supplemental security income; social security  | ||
numbers; National Provider Identifier (NPI) numbers; the  | ||
National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB); program and agency  | ||
exclusions; taxpayer identification numbers; tax delinquency;  | ||
corporate information; and death records. | ||
 The Illinois Department shall enter into agreements with  | ||
State agencies and departments, and is authorized to enter into  | ||
agreements with federal agencies and departments, under which  | ||
such agencies and departments shall share data necessary for  | ||
medical assistance program integrity functions and oversight.  | ||
The Illinois Department shall develop, in cooperation with  | ||
other State departments and agencies, and in compliance with  | ||
applicable federal laws and regulations, appropriate and  | ||
effective methods to share such data. At a minimum, and to the  | ||
extent necessary to provide data sharing, the Illinois  | ||
Department shall enter into agreements with State agencies and  | ||
departments, and is authorized to enter into agreements with  | ||
federal agencies and departments, including but not limited to:  | ||
the Secretary of State; the Department of Revenue; the  | ||
Department of Public Health; the Department of Human Services;  | ||
and the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. | ||
 Beginning in fiscal year 2013, the Illinois Department  | ||
shall set forth a request for information to identify the  | ||
benefits of a pre-payment, post-adjudication, and post-edit  | ||
claims system with the goals of streamlining claims processing  | ||
and provider reimbursement, reducing the number of pending or  | ||
rejected claims, and helping to ensure a more transparent  | ||
adjudication process through the utilization of: (i) provider  | ||
data verification and provider screening technology; and (ii)  | ||
clinical code editing; and (iii) pre-pay, pre- or  | ||
post-adjudicated predictive modeling with an integrated case  | ||
management system with link analysis. Such a request for  | ||
information shall not be considered as a request for proposal  | ||
or as an obligation on the part of the Illinois Department to  | ||
take any action or acquire any products or services.  | ||
 The Illinois Department shall establish policies,  | ||
procedures,
standards and criteria by rule for the acquisition,  | ||
repair and replacement
of orthotic and prosthetic devices and  | ||
durable medical equipment. Such
rules shall provide, but not be  | ||
limited to, the following services: (1)
immediate repair or  | ||
replacement of such devices by recipients; and (2) rental,  | ||
lease, purchase or lease-purchase of
durable medical equipment  | ||
in a cost-effective manner, taking into
consideration the  | ||
recipient's medical prognosis, the extent of the
recipient's  | ||
needs, and the requirements and costs for maintaining such
 | ||
equipment. Subject to prior approval, such rules shall enable a  | ||
recipient to temporarily acquire and
use alternative or  | ||
substitute devices or equipment pending repairs or
 | ||
replacements of any device or equipment previously authorized  | ||
for such
recipient by the Department.
 | ||
 The Department shall execute, relative to the nursing home  | ||
prescreening
project, written inter-agency agreements with the  | ||
Department of Human
Services and the Department on Aging, to  | ||
effect the following: (i) intake
procedures and common  | ||
eligibility criteria for those persons who are receiving
 | ||
non-institutional services; and (ii) the establishment and  | ||
development of
non-institutional services in areas of the State  | ||
where they are not currently
available or are undeveloped; and  | ||
(iii) notwithstanding any other provision of law, subject to  | ||
federal approval, on and after July 1, 2012, an increase in the  | ||
determination of need (DON) scores from 29 to 37 for applicants  | ||
for institutional and home and community-based long term care;  | ||
if and only if federal approval is not granted, the Department  | ||
may, in conjunction with other affected agencies, implement  | ||
utilization controls or changes in benefit packages to  | ||
effectuate a similar savings amount for this population; and  | ||
(iv) no later than July 1, 2013, minimum level of care  | ||
eligibility criteria for institutional and home and  | ||
community-based long term care; and (v) no later than October  | ||
1, 2013, establish procedures to permit long term care  | ||
providers access to eligibility scores for individuals with an  | ||
admission date who are seeking or receiving services from the  | ||
long term care provider. In order to select the minimum level  | ||
of care eligibility criteria, the Governor shall establish a  | ||
workgroup that includes affected agency representatives and  | ||
stakeholders representing the institutional and home and  | ||
community-based long term care interests. This Section shall  | ||
not restrict the Department from implementing lower level of  | ||
care eligibility criteria for community-based services in  | ||
circumstances where federal approval has been granted.
 | ||
 The Illinois Department shall develop and operate, in  | ||
cooperation
with other State Departments and agencies and in  | ||
compliance with
applicable federal laws and regulations,  | ||
appropriate and effective
systems of health care evaluation and  | ||
programs for monitoring of
utilization of health care services  | ||
and facilities, as it affects
persons eligible for medical  | ||
assistance under this Code.
 | ||
 The Illinois Department shall report annually to the  | ||
General Assembly,
no later than the second Friday in April of  | ||
1979 and each year
thereafter, in regard to:
 | ||
  (a) actual statistics and trends in utilization of  | ||
 medical services by
public aid recipients;
 | ||
  (b) actual statistics and trends in the provision of  | ||
 the various medical
services by medical vendors;
 | ||
  (c) current rate structures and proposed changes in  | ||
 those rate structures
for the various medical vendors; and
 | ||
  (d) efforts at utilization review and control by the  | ||
 Illinois Department.
 | ||
 The period covered by each report shall be the 3 years  | ||
ending on the June
30 prior to the report. The report shall  | ||
include suggested legislation
for consideration by the General  | ||
Assembly. The filing of one copy of the
report with the  | ||
Speaker, one copy with the Minority Leader and one copy
with  | ||
the Clerk of the House of Representatives, one copy with the  | ||
President,
one copy with the Minority Leader and one copy with  | ||
the Secretary of the
Senate, one copy with the Legislative  | ||
Research Unit, and such additional
copies
with the State  | ||
Government Report Distribution Center for the General
Assembly  | ||
as is required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State
 | ||
Library Act shall be deemed sufficient to comply with this  | ||
Section.
 | ||
 Rulemaking authority to implement Public Act 95-1045, if  | ||
any, is conditioned on the rules being adopted in accordance  | ||
with all provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure  | ||
Act and all rules and procedures of the Joint Committee on  | ||
Administrative Rules; any purported rule not so adopted, for  | ||
whatever reason, is unauthorized.  | ||
 On and after July 1, 2012, the Department shall reduce any  | ||
rate of reimbursement for services or other payments or alter  | ||
any methodologies authorized by this Code to reduce any rate of  | ||
reimbursement for services or other payments in accordance with  | ||
Section 5-5e.  | ||
 Because kidney transplantation can be an appropriate, cost  | ||
effective
alternative to renal dialysis when medically  | ||
necessary and notwithstanding the provisions of Section 1-11 of  | ||
this Code, beginning October 1, 2014, the Department shall  | ||
cover kidney transplantation for noncitizens with end-stage  | ||
renal disease who are not eligible for comprehensive medical  | ||
benefits, who meet the residency requirements of Section 5-3 of  | ||
this Code, and who would otherwise meet the financial  | ||
requirements of the appropriate class of eligible persons under  | ||
Section 5-2 of this Code. To qualify for coverage of kidney  | ||
transplantation, such person must be receiving emergency renal  | ||
dialysis services covered by the Department. Providers under  | ||
this Section shall be prior approved and certified by the  | ||
Department to perform kidney transplantation and the services  | ||
under this Section shall be limited to services associated with  | ||
kidney transplantation.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-48, eff. 6-28-11; 97-638, eff. 1-1-12; 97-689,  | ||
eff. 6-14-12; 97-1061, eff. 8-24-12; 98-104, Article 9, Section  | ||
9-5, eff. 7-22-13; 98-104, Article 12, Section 12-20, eff.  | ||
7-22-13; 98-303, eff. 8-9-13; 98-463, eff. 8-16-13; 98-651,  | ||
eff. 6-16-14; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14; 98-963, eff. 8-15-14;  | ||
revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 (305 ILCS 5/5-5.2) (from Ch. 23, par. 5-5.2)
 | ||
 Sec. 5-5.2. Payment. 
 | ||
 (a) All nursing facilities that are grouped pursuant to  | ||
Section
5-5.1 of this Act shall receive the same rate of  | ||
payment for similar
services.
 | ||
 (b) It shall be a matter of State policy that the Illinois  | ||
Department
shall utilize a uniform billing cycle throughout the  | ||
State for the
long-term care providers.
 | ||
 (c) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Code, the  | ||
methodologies for reimbursement of nursing services as  | ||
provided under this Article shall no longer be applicable for  | ||
bills payable for nursing services rendered on or after a new  | ||
reimbursement system based on the Resource Utilization Groups  | ||
(RUGs) has been fully operationalized, which shall take effect  | ||
for services provided on or after January 1, 2014.  | ||
 (d) The new nursing services reimbursement methodology  | ||
utilizing RUG-IV 48 grouper model, which shall be referred to  | ||
as the RUGs reimbursement system, taking effect January 1,  | ||
2014, shall be based on the following:  | ||
  (1) The methodology shall be resident-driven,  | ||
 facility-specific, and cost-based.  | ||
  (2) Costs shall be annually rebased and case mix index  | ||
 quarterly updated. The nursing services methodology will  | ||
 be assigned to the Medicaid enrolled residents on record as  | ||
 of 30 days prior to the beginning of the rate period in the  | ||
 Department's Medicaid Management Information System (MMIS)  | ||
 as present on the last day of the second quarter preceding  | ||
 the rate period based upon the Assessment Reference Date of  | ||
 the Minimum Data Set (MDS).  | ||
  (3) Regional wage adjustors based on the Health Service  | ||
 Areas (HSA) groupings and adjusters in effect on April 30,  | ||
 2012 shall be included.  | ||
  (4) Case mix index shall be assigned to each resident  | ||
 class based on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid  | ||
 Services staff time measurement study in effect on July 1,  | ||
 2013, utilizing an index maximization approach. | ||
  (5) The pool of funds available for distribution by  | ||
 case mix and the base facility rate shall be determined  | ||
 using the formula contained in subsection (d-1).  | ||
 (d-1) Calculation of base year Statewide RUG-IV nursing  | ||
base per diem rate.  | ||
  (1) Base rate spending pool shall be:  | ||
   (A) The base year resident days which are  | ||
 calculated by multiplying the number of Medicaid  | ||
 residents in each nursing home as indicated in the MDS  | ||
 data defined in paragraph (4) by 365. | ||
   (B) Each facility's nursing component per diem in  | ||
 effect on July 1, 2012 shall be multiplied by  | ||
 subsection (A). | ||
   (C) Thirteen million is added to the product of  | ||
 subparagraph (A) and subparagraph (B) to adjust for the  | ||
 exclusion of nursing homes defined in paragraph (5).  | ||
  (2) For each nursing home with Medicaid residents as  | ||
 indicated by the MDS data defined in paragraph (4),  | ||
 weighted days adjusted for case mix and regional wage  | ||
 adjustment shall be calculated. For each home this  | ||
 calculation is the product of: | ||
   (A) Base year resident days as calculated in  | ||
 subparagraph (A) of paragraph (1). | ||
   (B) The nursing home's regional wage adjustor  | ||
 based on the Health Service Areas (HSA) groupings and  | ||
 adjustors in effect on April 30, 2012. | ||
   (C) Facility weighted case mix which is the number  | ||
 of Medicaid residents as indicated by the MDS data  | ||
 defined in paragraph (4) multiplied by the associated  | ||
 case weight for the RUG-IV 48 grouper model using  | ||
 standard RUG-IV procedures for index maximization. | ||
   (D) The sum of the products calculated for each  | ||
 nursing home in subparagraphs (A) through (C) above  | ||
 shall be the base year case mix, rate adjusted weighted  | ||
 days. | ||
  (3) The Statewide RUG-IV nursing base per diem rate: | ||
   (A) on January 1, 2014 shall be the quotient of the  | ||
 paragraph (1) divided by the sum calculated under  | ||
 subparagraph (D) of paragraph (2); and | ||
   (B) on and after July 1, 2014, shall be the amount  | ||
 calculated under subparagraph (A) of this paragraph  | ||
 (3) plus $1.76.  | ||
  (4) Minimum Data Set (MDS) comprehensive assessments  | ||
 for Medicaid residents on the last day of the quarter used  | ||
 to establish the base rate. | ||
  (5) Nursing facilities designated as of July 1, 2012 by  | ||
 the Department as "Institutions for Mental Disease" shall  | ||
 be excluded from all calculations under this subsection.  | ||
 The data from these facilities shall not be used in the  | ||
 computations described in paragraphs (1) through (4) above  | ||
 to establish the base rate.  | ||
 (e) Beginning July 1, 2014, the Department shall allocate  | ||
funding in the amount up to $10,000,000 for per diem add-ons to  | ||
the RUGS methodology for dates of service on and after July 1,  | ||
2014: | ||
  (1) $0.63 for each resident who scores in I4200  | ||
 Alzheimer's Disease or I4800 non-Alzheimer's Dementia. | ||
  (2) $2.67 for each resident who scores either a "1" or  | ||
 "2" in any items S1200A through S1200I and also scores in  | ||
 RUG groups PA1, PA2, BA1, or BA2.  | ||
 (e-1) (Blank). | ||
 (e-2) For dates of services beginning January 1, 2014, the  | ||
RUG-IV nursing component per diem for a nursing home shall be  | ||
the product of the statewide RUG-IV nursing base per diem rate,  | ||
the facility average case mix index, and the regional wage  | ||
adjustor. Transition rates for services provided between  | ||
January 1, 2014 and December 31, 2014 shall be as follows: | ||
  (1) The transition RUG-IV per diem nursing rate for  | ||
 nursing homes whose rate calculated in this subsection  | ||
 (e-2) is greater than the nursing component rate in effect  | ||
 July 1, 2012 shall be paid the sum of: | ||
   (A) The nursing component rate in effect July 1,  | ||
 2012; plus | ||
   (B) The difference of the RUG-IV nursing component  | ||
 per diem calculated for the current quarter minus the  | ||
 nursing component rate in effect July 1, 2012  | ||
 multiplied by 0.88. | ||
  (2) The transition RUG-IV per diem nursing rate for  | ||
 nursing homes whose rate calculated in this subsection  | ||
 (e-2) is less than the nursing component rate in effect  | ||
 July 1, 2012 shall be paid the sum of: | ||
   (A) The nursing component rate in effect July 1,  | ||
 2012; plus | ||
   (B) The difference of the RUG-IV nursing component  | ||
 per diem calculated for the current quarter minus the  | ||
 nursing component rate in effect July 1, 2012  | ||
 multiplied by 0.13.  | ||
 (f) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, on  | ||
and after July 1, 2012, reimbursement rates associated with the  | ||
nursing or support components of the current nursing facility  | ||
rate methodology shall not increase beyond the level effective  | ||
May 1, 2011 until a new reimbursement system based on the RUGs  | ||
IV 48 grouper model has been fully operationalized. | ||
 (g) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, on  | ||
and after July 1, 2012, for facilities not designated by the  | ||
Department of Healthcare and Family Services as "Institutions  | ||
for Mental Disease", rates effective May 1, 2011 shall be  | ||
adjusted as follows: | ||
  (1) Individual nursing rates for residents classified  | ||
 in RUG IV groups PA1, PA2, BA1, and BA2 during the quarter  | ||
 ending March 31, 2012 shall be reduced by 10%; | ||
  (2) Individual nursing rates for residents classified  | ||
 in all other RUG IV groups shall be reduced by 1.0%; | ||
  (3) Facility rates for the capital and support  | ||
 components shall be reduced by 1.7%. | ||
 (h) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, on  | ||
and after July 1, 2012, nursing facilities designated by the  | ||
Department of Healthcare and Family Services as "Institutions  | ||
for Mental Disease" and "Institutions for Mental Disease" that  | ||
are facilities licensed under the Specialized Mental Health  | ||
Rehabilitation Act of 2013 shall have the nursing,  | ||
socio-developmental, capital, and support components of their  | ||
reimbursement rate effective May 1, 2011 reduced in total by  | ||
2.7%. | ||
 (i) On and after July 1, 2014, the reimbursement rates for  | ||
the support component of the nursing facility rate for  | ||
facilities licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act as skilled  | ||
or intermediate care facilities shall be the rate in effect on  | ||
June 30, 2014 increased by 8.17%.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-689, eff. 6-14-12; 98-104, Article 6, Section  | ||
6-240, eff. 7-22-13; 98-104, Article 11, Section 11-35, eff.  | ||
7-22-13; 98-651, eff. 6-16-14; 98-727, eff. 7-16-14; 98-756,  | ||
eff. 7-16-14; revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 (305 ILCS 5/5A-5) (from Ch. 23, par. 5A-5) | ||
 Sec. 5A-5. Notice; penalty; maintenance of records.
 | ||
 (a)
The Illinois Department shall send a
notice of  | ||
assessment to every hospital provider subject
to assessment  | ||
under this Article. The notice of assessment shall notify the  | ||
hospital of its assessment and shall be sent after receipt by  | ||
the Department of notification from the Centers for Medicare  | ||
and Medicaid Services of the U.S. Department of Health and  | ||
Human Services that the payment methodologies required under  | ||
this Article and, if necessary, the waiver granted under 42 CFR  | ||
433.68 have been approved. The notice
shall be on a form
 | ||
prepared by the Illinois Department and shall state the  | ||
following:
 | ||
  (1) The name of the hospital provider.
 | ||
  (2) The address of the hospital provider's principal  | ||
 place
of business from which the provider engages in the  | ||
 occupation of hospital
provider in this State, and the name  | ||
 and address of each hospital
operated, conducted, or  | ||
 maintained by the provider in this State.
 | ||
  (3) The occupied bed days, occupied bed days less  | ||
 Medicare days, adjusted gross hospital revenue, or  | ||
 outpatient gross revenue of the
hospital
provider  | ||
 (whichever is applicable), the amount of
assessment  | ||
 imposed under Section 5A-2 for the State fiscal year
for  | ||
 which the notice is sent, and the amount of
each
 | ||
 installment to be paid during the State fiscal year.
 | ||
  (4) (Blank).
 | ||
  (5) Other reasonable information as determined by the  | ||
 Illinois
Department.
 | ||
 (b) If a hospital provider conducts, operates, or
maintains  | ||
more than one hospital licensed by the Illinois
Department of  | ||
Public Health, the provider shall pay the
assessment for each  | ||
hospital separately.
 | ||
 (c) Notwithstanding any other provision in this Article, in
 | ||
the case of a person who ceases to conduct, operate, or  | ||
maintain a
hospital in respect of which the person is subject  | ||
to assessment
under this Article as a hospital provider, the  | ||
assessment for the State
fiscal year in which the cessation  | ||
occurs shall be adjusted by
multiplying the assessment computed  | ||
under Section 5A-2 by a
fraction, the numerator of which is the  | ||
number of days in the
year during which the provider conducts,  | ||
operates, or maintains
the hospital and the denominator of  | ||
which is 365. Immediately
upon ceasing to conduct, operate, or  | ||
maintain a hospital, the person
shall pay the assessment
for  | ||
the year as so adjusted (to the extent not previously paid).
 | ||
 (d) Notwithstanding any other provision in this Article, a
 | ||
provider who commences conducting, operating, or maintaining a
 | ||
hospital, upon notice by the Illinois Department,
shall pay the  | ||
assessment computed under Section 5A-2 and
subsection (e) in  | ||
installments on the due dates stated in the
notice and on the  | ||
regular installment due dates for the State
fiscal year  | ||
occurring after the due dates of the initial
notice.
 | ||
 (e)
Notwithstanding any other provision in this Article,  | ||
for State fiscal years 2009 through 2018 2015, in the case of a  | ||
hospital provider that did not conduct, operate, or maintain a  | ||
hospital in 2005, the assessment for that State fiscal year  | ||
shall be computed on the basis of hypothetical occupied bed  | ||
days for the full calendar year as determined by the Illinois  | ||
Department. Notwithstanding any other provision in this  | ||
Article, for the portion of State fiscal year 2012 beginning  | ||
June 10, 2012 through June 30, 2012, and for State fiscal years  | ||
2013 through 2018, in the case of a hospital provider that did  | ||
not conduct, operate, or maintain a hospital in 2009, the  | ||
assessment under subsection (b-5) of Section 5A-2 for that  | ||
State fiscal year shall be computed on the basis of  | ||
hypothetical gross outpatient revenue for the full calendar  | ||
year as determined by the Illinois Department. 
 | ||
 (f) Every hospital provider subject to assessment under  | ||
this Article shall keep sufficient records to permit the  | ||
determination of adjusted gross hospital revenue for the  | ||
hospital's fiscal year. All such records shall be kept in the  | ||
English language and shall, at all times during regular  | ||
business hours of the day, be subject to inspection by the  | ||
Illinois Department or its duly authorized agents and  | ||
employees.
 | ||
 (g) The Illinois Department may, by rule, provide a  | ||
hospital provider a reasonable opportunity to request a  | ||
clarification or correction of any clerical or computational  | ||
errors contained in the calculation of its assessment, but such  | ||
corrections shall not extend to updating the cost report  | ||
information used to calculate the assessment.
 | ||
 (h) (Blank).
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-688, eff. 6-14-12; 97-689, eff. 6-14-12;  | ||
98-104, eff. 7-22-13; 98-463, eff. 8-16-13; 98-651, eff.  | ||
6-16-14; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14; revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 (305 ILCS 5/5A-8) (from Ch. 23, par. 5A-8)
 | ||
 Sec. 5A-8. Hospital Provider Fund.
 | ||
 (a) There is created in the State Treasury the Hospital  | ||
Provider Fund.
Interest earned by the Fund shall be credited to  | ||
the Fund. The
Fund shall not be used to replace any moneys  | ||
appropriated to the
Medicaid program by the General Assembly.
 | ||
 (b) The Fund is created for the purpose of receiving moneys
 | ||
in accordance with Section 5A-6 and disbursing moneys only for  | ||
the following
purposes, notwithstanding any other provision of  | ||
law:
 | ||
  (1) For making payments to hospitals as required under  | ||
 this Code, under the Children's Health Insurance Program  | ||
 Act, under the Covering ALL KIDS Health Insurance Act, and  | ||
 under the Long Term Acute Care Hospital Quality Improvement  | ||
 Transfer Program Act.
 | ||
  (2) For the reimbursement of moneys collected by the
 | ||
 Illinois Department from hospitals or hospital providers  | ||
 through error or
mistake in performing the
activities  | ||
 authorized under this Code.
 | ||
  (3) For payment of administrative expenses incurred by  | ||
 the
Illinois Department or its agent in performing  | ||
 activities
under this Code, under the Children's Health  | ||
 Insurance Program Act, under the Covering ALL KIDS Health  | ||
 Insurance Act, and under the Long Term Acute Care Hospital  | ||
 Quality Improvement Transfer Program Act.
 | ||
  (4) For payments of any amounts which are reimbursable  | ||
 to
the federal government for payments from this Fund which  | ||
 are
required to be paid by State warrant.
 | ||
  (5) For making transfers, as those transfers are  | ||
 authorized
in the proceedings authorizing debt under the  | ||
 Short Term Borrowing Act,
but transfers made under this  | ||
 paragraph (5) shall not exceed the
principal amount of debt  | ||
 issued in anticipation of the receipt by
the State of  | ||
 moneys to be deposited into the Fund.
 | ||
  (6) For making transfers to any other fund in the State  | ||
 treasury, but
transfers made under this paragraph (6) shall  | ||
 not exceed the amount transferred
previously from that  | ||
 other fund into the Hospital Provider Fund plus any  | ||
 interest that would have been earned by that fund on the  | ||
 monies that had been transferred.
 | ||
  (6.5) For making transfers to the Healthcare Provider  | ||
 Relief Fund, except that transfers made under this  | ||
 paragraph (6.5) shall not exceed $60,000,000 in the  | ||
 aggregate.  | ||
  (7) For making transfers not exceeding the following  | ||
 amounts, related to State fiscal years 2013 through 2018 in  | ||
 each State fiscal year during which an assessment is  | ||
 imposed pursuant to Section 5A-2, to the following  | ||
 designated funds: | ||
   Health and Human Services Medicaid Trust | ||
    Fund..............................$20,000,000 | ||
   Long-Term Care Provider Fund..........$30,000,000 | ||
   General Revenue Fund.................$80,000,000. | ||
 Transfers under this paragraph shall be made within 7 days  | ||
 after the payments have been received pursuant to the  | ||
 schedule of payments provided in subsection (a) of Section  | ||
 5A-4. | ||
  (7.1) (Blank).
 | ||
  (7.5) (Blank). | ||
  (7.8) (Blank). | ||
  (7.9) (Blank). | ||
  (7.10) For State fiscal year 2014, for making transfers  | ||
 of the moneys resulting from the assessment under  | ||
 subsection (b-5) of Section 5A-2 and received from hospital  | ||
 providers under Section 5A-4 and transferred into the  | ||
 Hospital Provider Fund under Section 5A-6 to the designated  | ||
 funds not exceeding the following amounts in that State  | ||
 fiscal year: | ||
   Health Care Provider Relief Fund.....$100,000,000 | ||
  Transfers under this paragraph shall be made within 7  | ||
 days after the payments have been received pursuant to the  | ||
 schedule of payments provided in subsection (a) of Section  | ||
 5A-4.  | ||
  The additional amount of transfers in this paragraph  | ||
 (7.10), authorized by Public Act 98-651 this amendatory Act  | ||
 of the 98th General Assembly, shall be made within 10 State  | ||
 business days after June 16, 2014 (the effective date of  | ||
 Public Act 98-651) this amendatory Act of the 98th General  | ||
 Assembly. That authority shall remain in effect even if  | ||
 Public Act 98-651 this amendatory Act of the 98th General  | ||
 Assembly does not become law until State fiscal year 2015. | ||
  (7.10a) For State fiscal years 2015 through 2018, for  | ||
 making transfers of the moneys resulting from the  | ||
 assessment under subsection (b-5) of Section 5A-2 and  | ||
 received from hospital providers under Section 5A-4 and  | ||
 transferred into the Hospital Provider Fund under Section  | ||
 5A-6 to the designated funds not exceeding the following  | ||
 amounts related to each State fiscal year:  | ||
   Health Care Provider Relief Fund ....$50,000,000  | ||
  Transfers under this paragraph shall be made within 7  | ||
 days after the payments have been received pursuant to the  | ||
 schedule of payments provided in subsection (a) of Section  | ||
 5A-4.  | ||
  (7.11) (Blank).  | ||
  (7.12) For State fiscal year 2013, for increasing by  | ||
 21/365ths the transfer of the moneys resulting from the  | ||
 assessment under subsection (b-5) of Section 5A-2 and  | ||
 received from hospital providers under Section 5A-4 for the  | ||
 portion of State fiscal year 2012 beginning June 10, 2012  | ||
 through June 30, 2012 and transferred into the Hospital  | ||
 Provider Fund under Section 5A-6 to the designated funds  | ||
 not exceeding the following amounts in that State fiscal  | ||
 year:  | ||
   Health Care Provider Relief Fund......$2,870,000  | ||
  Since the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid  | ||
 Services approval of the assessment authorized under  | ||
 subsection (b-5) of Section 5A-2, received from hospital  | ||
 providers under Section 5A-4 and the payment methodologies  | ||
 to hospitals required under Section 5A-12.4 was not  | ||
 received by the Department until State fiscal year 2014 and  | ||
 since the Department made retroactive payments during  | ||
 State fiscal year 2014 related to the referenced period of  | ||
 June 2012, the transfer authority granted in this paragraph  | ||
 (7.12) is extended through the date that is 10 State  | ||
 business days after June 16, 2014 (the effective date of  | ||
 Public Act 98-651) this amendatory Act of the 98th General  | ||
 Assembly.  | ||
  (8) For making refunds to hospital providers pursuant  | ||
 to Section 5A-10.
 | ||
  (9) For making payment to capitated managed care  | ||
 organizations as described in subsections (s) and (t) of  | ||
 Section 5A-12.2 of this Code.  | ||
 Disbursements from the Fund, other than transfers  | ||
authorized under
paragraphs (5) and (6) of this subsection,  | ||
shall be by
warrants drawn by the State Comptroller upon  | ||
receipt of vouchers
duly executed and certified by the Illinois  | ||
Department.
 | ||
 (c) The Fund shall consist of the following:
 | ||
  (1) All moneys collected or received by the Illinois
 | ||
 Department from the hospital provider assessment imposed  | ||
 by this
Article.
 | ||
  (2) All federal matching funds received by the Illinois
 | ||
 Department as a result of expenditures made by the Illinois
 | ||
 Department that are attributable to moneys deposited in the  | ||
 Fund.
 | ||
  (3) Any interest or penalty levied in conjunction with  | ||
 the
administration of this Article.
 | ||
  (3.5) As applicable, proceeds from surety bond  | ||
 payments payable to the Department as referenced in  | ||
 subsection (s) of Section 5A-12.2 of this Code.  | ||
  (4) Moneys transferred from another fund in the State  | ||
 treasury.
 | ||
  (5) All other moneys received for the Fund from any  | ||
 other
source, including interest earned thereon.
 | ||
 (d) (Blank).
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-688, eff. 6-14-12; 97-689, eff. 6-14-12;  | ||
98-104, eff. 7-22-13; 98-463, eff. 8-16-13; 98-651, eff.  | ||
6-16-14; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14; revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 (305 ILCS 5/12-4.47) | ||
 Sec. 12-4.47. Continued eligibility for developmental  | ||
disability services for dependents of military service  | ||
members. | ||
 (a) As used in this Section:  | ||
 "Dependent" means a spouse, birth child, adopted child, or
 | ||
stepchild of a military service member. | ||
 "Legal resident" means a person who maintains Illinois as  | ||
his
or her principal establishment, home of record, or  | ||
permanent home and
to where, whenever absent due to military  | ||
obligation, he or she intends
to return. | ||
 "Military service" means service in the armed forces or  | ||
armed
forces reserves of the United States, or membership in  | ||
the Illinois National Guard. | ||
 "Military service member" means a person who is currently  | ||
in military service or who
has separated from military service  | ||
in the previous 18 months through
either retirement or military  | ||
separation.  | ||
 (b) A dependent, who is a legal resident of the State,  | ||
having
previously been determined to be eligible for  | ||
developmental disability
services provided by the Department  | ||
of Human Services, including waiver services provided under the  | ||
home and community based services programs authorized under  | ||
Section 1915(c) of the Social Security Act, shall retain  | ||
eligibility for those developmental disability services as  | ||
long as he
or she remains a legal resident of the State,  | ||
regardless of having left the State due to the military service  | ||
member's military assignment
outside the State, and as long as  | ||
he or she is otherwise eligible for such services.  | ||
 (c) The Department of Human Services shall permit a  | ||
dependent who resides out-of-state to be placed on the waiting  | ||
list for developmental disabilities services if the dependent  | ||
left the State due to the military service member's military  | ||
assignment outside the State, is otherwise eligible for those  | ||
services, and furnishes the following:  | ||
  (1) a copy of the military service member's DD-214 or  | ||
 other
equivalent discharge paperwork; and | ||
  (2) proof of the military service member's legal  | ||
 residence in the
State, as prescribed by the Department.  | ||
 (d) For dependents who received developmental disability  | ||
services
and who left the State due to the military service  | ||
member's military
assignment outside the State, upon the  | ||
dependent's return to the State and when a request for services  | ||
is made, the Department shall: | ||
  (1) determine the dependent's eligibility for  | ||
 services, which may include a request
for waiver services  | ||
 provided under the home and community based services  | ||
 programs authorized under Section 1915(c) of the Social  | ||
 Security Act; | ||
  (2) provide to the dependent notification of the  | ||
 determination of eligibility for services,
which includes  | ||
 notification of a denial of services if applicable; | ||
  (3) provide the dependent an opportunity to contest the  | ||
 Department's determination through the appeals processes  | ||
 established
by the Department; and  | ||
  (4) resume services if the individual remains  | ||
 eligible.  | ||
 (e) As a condition of continued eligibility for services  | ||
under subsection (b) of this Section,
a dependent must inform  | ||
the Department of his or her
current address and provide  | ||
updates as requested by the Department. | ||
 (f) No payment pursuant to this Section shall be made for  | ||
developmental disability services authorized under the  | ||
Illinois Title XIX State Plan and provided outside the State  | ||
unless those services satisfy the conditions specified in 42  | ||
CFR 431.52. No payment pursuant to this Section shall be made  | ||
for home and community based services provided outside the  | ||
State of Illinois.  | ||
 (g) The Department shall request a waiver from the  | ||
appropriate
federal agency if a waiver is necessary to  | ||
implement the provisions of this
Section. | ||
 (h) The Department may adopt rules necessary to implement  | ||
the
provisions of this Section. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1000, eff. 8-18-14.)
 | ||
 (305 ILCS 5/12-4.48) | ||
 Sec. 12-4.48 12-4.47. Long-Term Services and Supports  | ||
Disparities Task Force. | ||
 (a) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall  | ||
establish a Long-Term Services and Supports Disparities Task  | ||
Force. | ||
 (b) Members of the Task Force shall be appointed by the  | ||
Director of the Department of Healthcare and Family Services  | ||
and shall include representatives of the following agencies,  | ||
organizations, or groups: | ||
  (1) The Governor's office. | ||
  (2) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services. | ||
  (3) The Department of Human Services. | ||
  (4) The Department on Aging. | ||
  (5) The Department of Human Rights. | ||
  (6) Area Agencies on Aging. | ||
  (7) The Department of Public Health. | ||
  (8) Managed Care Plans. | ||
  (9) The for-profit urban nursing home or assisted  | ||
 living industry. | ||
  (10) The for-profit rural nursing home or assisted  | ||
 living industry. | ||
  (11) The not-for-profit nursing home or assisted  | ||
 living industry. | ||
  (12) The home care association or home care industry. | ||
  (13) The adult day care association or adult day care  | ||
 industry. | ||
  (14) An association representing workers who provide  | ||
 long-term services and supports. | ||
  (15) A representative of providers that serve the  | ||
 predominantly ethnic minority populations. | ||
  (16) Case Management Organizations.  | ||
  (17) Three consumer representatives which may include  | ||
 a consumer of long-term services and supports or an  | ||
 individual who advocates for such consumers. For purposes  | ||
 of this provision, "consumer representative" means a  | ||
 person who is not an elected official and who has no  | ||
 financial interest in a health or long-term care delivery  | ||
 system.  | ||
 (c) The Task Force shall not meet unless all consumer  | ||
representative positions are filled. The Task Force shall  | ||
reflect diversity in race, ethnicity, and gender. | ||
 (d) The Chair of the Task Force shall be appointed by the  | ||
Director of the Department of Healthcare and Family Services. | ||
 (e) The Director of the Department of Healthcare and Family  | ||
Services shall assign appropriate staff and resources to  | ||
support the efforts of the Task Force. The Task Force shall  | ||
meet as often as necessary but not less than 4 times per  | ||
calendar year. | ||
 (f) The Task Force shall promote and facilitate  | ||
communication, coordination, and collaboration among relevant  | ||
State agencies and communities of color, limited  | ||
English-speaking communities, and the private and public  | ||
entities providing services to those communities. | ||
 (g) The Task Force shall do all of the following: | ||
  (1) Document the number and types of Long-Term Services  | ||
 and Supports (LTSS) providers in the State and the number  | ||
 of clients served in each setting. | ||
  (2) Document the number and racial profiles of  | ||
 residents using LTSS, including, but not limited to,  | ||
 residential nursing facilities, assisted living  | ||
 facilities, adult day care, home health services, and other  | ||
 home and community based long-term care services. | ||
  (3) Document the number and profiles of family or  | ||
 informal caregivers who provide care for minority elders. | ||
  (4) Compare data over multiple years to identify trends  | ||
 in the delivery of LTSS for each racial or ethnic category  | ||
 including: Alaskan Native or American Indian, Asian or  | ||
 Pacific Islander, black or African American, Hispanic, or  | ||
 white. | ||
  (5) Identify any racial disparities in the provision of  | ||
 care in various LTSS settings and determine factors that  | ||
 might influence the disparities found. | ||
  (6) Identify any disparities uniquely experienced in  | ||
 metropolitan or rural areas and make recommendations to  | ||
 address these areas. | ||
  (7) Assess whether the LTSS industry, including  | ||
 managed care plans and independent providers, is equipped  | ||
 to offer culturally sensitive, competent, and  | ||
 linguistically appropriate care to meet the needs of a  | ||
 diverse aging population and their informal and formal  | ||
 caregivers. | ||
  (8) Consider whether to recommend that the State  | ||
 require all home and community based services as a  | ||
 condition of licensure to report data similar to that  | ||
 gathered under the Minimum Data Set and required when a new  | ||
 resident is admitted to a nursing home. | ||
  (9) Identify and prioritize recommendations for  | ||
 actions to be taken by the State to address disparity  | ||
 issues identified in the course of these studies. | ||
  (10) Monitor the progress of the State in eliminating  | ||
 racial disparities in the delivery of LTSS. | ||
 (h) The Task Force shall conduct public hearings,  | ||
inquiries, studies, and other forms of information gathering to  | ||
identify how the actions of State government contribute to or  | ||
reduce racial disparities in long-term care settings. | ||
 (i) The Task Force shall report its findings and  | ||
recommendations to the Governor and the General Assembly no  | ||
later than one year after the effective date of this amendatory  | ||
Act of the 98th General Assembly. Annual reports shall be  | ||
issued every year thereafter and shall include documentation of  | ||
progress made to eliminate disparities in long-term care  | ||
service settings.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-825, eff. 8-1-14; revised 10-14-14.)
 | ||
 Section 345. The Adult Protective Services Act is amended  | ||
by changing Sections 7.5 and 15 as follows:
 | ||
 (320 ILCS 20/7.5) | ||
 Sec. 7.5. Registry. | ||
 (a) To protect individuals receiving in-home and  | ||
community-based services, the Department on Aging shall  | ||
establish an Adult Protective Service Registry that will be  | ||
hosted by the Department of Public Health on its website  | ||
effective January 1, 2015, and, if practicable, shall propose  | ||
rules for the Registry by January 1, 2015.  | ||
 (a-5) The Registry shall identify caregivers against whom a  | ||
verified and substantiated finding was made under this Act of  | ||
abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation.  | ||
 The information in the Registry shall be confidential  | ||
except as specifically authorized in this Act and shall not be  | ||
deemed a public record.  | ||
 (a-10) Reporting to the Registry. The Department on Aging  | ||
shall report to the Registry the identity of the caregiver when  | ||
a verified and substantiated finding of abuse, neglect, or  | ||
financial exploitation of an eligible adult under this Act is  | ||
made against a caregiver, and all appeals, challenges, and  | ||
reviews, if any, have been completed and a finding for  | ||
placement on the Registry has been sustained or upheld.  | ||
 A finding against a caregiver that is placed in the  | ||
Registry shall preclude that caregiver from providing direct  | ||
care, as defined in this Section, in a position with or that is  | ||
regulated by or paid with public funds from the Department on  | ||
Aging, the Department of Healthcare and Family Services, the  | ||
Department of Human Services, or the Department of Public  | ||
Health or with an entity or provider licensed, certified, or  | ||
regulated by or paid with public funds from any of these State  | ||
agencies. | ||
 (b) Definitions. As used in this Section: | ||
 "Direct care" includes, but is not limited to, direct  | ||
access to a person aged 60 or older or to an adult with  | ||
disabilities aged 18 through 59, his or her living quarters, or  | ||
his or her personal, financial, or medical records for the  | ||
purpose of providing nursing care or assistance with feeding,  | ||
dressing, movement, bathing, toileting, other personal needs  | ||
and activities of daily living or instrumental activities of  | ||
daily living, or assistance with financial transactions. | ||
 "Participant" means an individual who uses the services of  | ||
an in-home care program funded through the Department on Aging,  | ||
the Department of Healthcare and Family Services, the  | ||
Department of Human Services, or the Department of Public  | ||
Health.  | ||
 (c) Access to and use of the Registry. Access to the  | ||
Registry shall be limited to the Department on Aging, the  | ||
Department of Healthcare and Family Services, the Department of  | ||
Human Services, and the Department of Public Health and  | ||
providers of direct care as described in subsection (a-10) of  | ||
this Section. These State agencies and providers shall not  | ||
hire, compensate either directly or on behalf of a participant,  | ||
or utilize the services of any person seeking to provide direct  | ||
care without first conducting an online check of whether the  | ||
person has been placed on the Registry. These State agencies  | ||
and providers shall maintain a copy of the results of the  | ||
online check to demonstrate compliance with this requirement.  | ||
These State agencies and providers are prohibited from  | ||
retaining, hiring, compensating either directly or on behalf of  | ||
a participant, or utilizing the services of a person to provide  | ||
direct care if the online check of the person reveals a  | ||
verified and substantiated finding of abuse, neglect, or  | ||
financial exploitation that has been placed on the Registry or  | ||
when the State agencies or providers otherwise gain knowledge  | ||
of such placement on the Registry. Failure to comply with this  | ||
requirement may subject such a provider to corrective action by  | ||
the appropriate regulatory agency or other lawful remedies  | ||
provided under the applicable licensure, certification, or  | ||
regulatory laws and rules.  | ||
 (d) Notice to caregiver. The Department on Aging shall
 | ||
establish rules concerning notice to the caregiver in cases of  | ||
a verified and substantiated finding of abuse, neglect, or  | ||
financial exploitation against him or her that may make him or  | ||
her eligible for placement on the Registry. | ||
 (e) Notification to eligible adults, guardians, or agents.  | ||
As part of its investigation, the Department on Aging shall  | ||
notify an eligible adult, or an eligible adult's guardian or  | ||
agent, that his or her caregiver's name may be placed on the  | ||
Registry based on a finding as described in subsection (a-10)  | ||
(a) of this Section.  | ||
 (f) Notification to employer. The Department on Aging shall  | ||
notify the appropriate State agency or provider of direct care,  | ||
as described in subsection (a-10), when there is a verified and  | ||
substantiated finding of abuse, neglect, or financial  | ||
exploitation in a case under this Act that is reported on the  | ||
Registry and that involves one of its caregivers. That State  | ||
agency or provider is prohibited from retaining or compensating  | ||
that individual in a position that involves direct care, and if  | ||
there is an imminent risk of danger to the victim or an  | ||
imminent risk of misuse of personal, medical, or financial  | ||
information, that caregiver shall immediately be barred from  | ||
providing direct care to the victim pending the outcome of any  | ||
challenge, appeal, criminal prosecution, or other type of  | ||
collateral action.  | ||
 (g) Challenges and appeals. The Department on Aging
shall  | ||
establish, by rule, procedures concerning challenges and  | ||
appeals to placement on the Registry pursuant to legislative  | ||
intent. The Department shall not make any report to the  | ||
Registry pending challenges or appeals.  | ||
 (h) Caregiver's rights to collateral action. The  | ||
Department on Aging shall not make any report to the Registry  | ||
if a caregiver notifies the Department in writing that he or  | ||
she is formally challenging an adverse employment action  | ||
resulting from a verified and substantiated finding of abuse,  | ||
neglect, or financial exploitation by complaint filed with the  | ||
Illinois Civil Service Commission, or by another means which  | ||
seeks to enforce the caregiver's rights pursuant to any  | ||
applicable collective bargaining agreement. If an action taken  | ||
by an employer against a caregiver as a result of such a  | ||
finding is overturned through an action filed with the Illinois  | ||
Civil Service Commission or under any applicable collective  | ||
bargaining agreement after that caregiver's name has already  | ||
been sent to the Registry, the caregiver's name shall be  | ||
removed from the Registry. | ||
 (i) Removal from Registry. At any time after a report to  | ||
the Registry, but no more than once in each successive 3-year  | ||
period thereafter, for a maximum of 3 such requests, a  | ||
caregiver may request removal of his or her name from the  | ||
Registry in relationship to a single incident. The caregiver  | ||
shall bear the burden of establishing, by a preponderance of  | ||
the evidence, that removal of his or her name from the Registry  | ||
is in the public interest. Upon receiving such a request, the  | ||
Department on Aging shall conduct an investigation and consider  | ||
any evidentiary material provided. The Department shall issue a  | ||
decision either granting or denying removal to the caregiver  | ||
and report it to the Registry. The Department shall, by rule,  | ||
establish standards and a process for requesting the removal of  | ||
a name from the Registry. | ||
 (j) Referral of Registry reports to health care facilities.  | ||
In the event an eligible adult receiving services from a  | ||
provider agency changes his or her residence from a domestic  | ||
living situation to that of a health care or long term care  | ||
facility, the provider agency shall use reasonable efforts to  | ||
promptly inform the facility and the appropriate Regional Long  | ||
Term Care Ombudsman about any Registry reports relating to the  | ||
eligible adult. For purposes of this Section, a health care or  | ||
long term care facility includes, but is not limited to, any  | ||
residential facility licensed, certified, or regulated by the  | ||
Department of Public Health, Healthcare and Family Services, or  | ||
Human Services.
 | ||
 (k) The Department on Aging and its employees and agents  | ||
shall have immunity, except for intentional willful and wanton  | ||
misconduct, from any liability, civil, criminal, or otherwise,  | ||
for reporting information to and maintaining the Registry.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-49, eff. 1-1-14; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14;  | ||
98-1039, eff. 8-25-14; revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 (320 ILCS 20/15) | ||
 Sec. 15. Fatality Review Teams. | ||
 (a) State policy. | ||
  (1) Both the State and the community maintain a  | ||
 commitment to preventing the abuse, neglect, and financial  | ||
 exploitation of at-risk adults. This includes a charge to  | ||
 bring perpetrators of crimes against at-risk adults to  | ||
 justice and prevent untimely deaths in the community.  | ||
  (2) When an at-risk adult dies, the response to the  | ||
 death by the community, law enforcement, and the State must  | ||
 include an accurate and complete determination of the cause  | ||
 of death, and the development and implementation of  | ||
 measures to prevent future deaths from similar causes.  | ||
  (3) Multidisciplinary and multi-agency reviews of  | ||
 deaths can assist the State and counties in developing a  | ||
 greater understanding of the incidence and causes of  | ||
 premature deaths and the methods for preventing those  | ||
 deaths, improving methods for investigating deaths, and  | ||
 identifying gaps in services to at-risk adults.  | ||
  (4) Access to information regarding the deceased  | ||
 person and his or her family by multidisciplinary and  | ||
 multi-agency fatality review teams is necessary in order to  | ||
 fulfill their purposes and duties.  | ||
 (a-5) Definitions. As used in this Section:  | ||
  "Advisory Council" means the Illinois Fatality Review  | ||
 Team Advisory Council.  | ||
  "Review Team" means a regional interagency fatality  | ||
 review team.  | ||
 (b) The Director, in consultation with the Advisory  | ||
Council, law enforcement, and other professionals who work in  | ||
the fields of investigating, treating, or preventing abuse or  | ||
neglect of at-risk adults, shall appoint members to a minimum  | ||
of one review team in each of the Department's planning and  | ||
service areas. Each member of a review team shall be appointed  | ||
for a 2-year term and shall be eligible for reappointment upon  | ||
the expiration of the term. A review team's purpose in  | ||
conducting review of at-risk adult deaths is: (i) to assist  | ||
local agencies in identifying and reviewing suspicious deaths  | ||
of adult victims of alleged, suspected, or substantiated abuse  | ||
or neglect in domestic living situations; (ii) to facilitate  | ||
communications between officials responsible for autopsies and  | ||
inquests and persons involved in reporting or investigating  | ||
alleged or suspected cases of abuse, neglect, or financial  | ||
exploitation of at-risk adults and persons involved in  | ||
providing services to at-risk adults; (iii) to evaluate means  | ||
by which the death might have been prevented; and (iv) to  | ||
report its findings to the appropriate agencies and the  | ||
Advisory Council and make recommendations that may help to  | ||
reduce the number of at-risk adult deaths caused by abuse and  | ||
neglect and that may help to improve the investigations of  | ||
deaths of at-risk adults and increase prosecutions, if  | ||
appropriate. | ||
 (b-5) Each such team shall be composed of representatives  | ||
of entities and individuals including, but not limited to:  | ||
  (1) the Department on Aging; | ||
  (2) coroners or medical examiners (or both); | ||
  (3) State's Attorneys; | ||
  (4) local police departments; | ||
  (5) forensic units; | ||
  (6) local health departments; | ||
  (7) a social service or health care agency that  | ||
 provides services to persons with mental illness, in a  | ||
 program whose accreditation to provide such services is  | ||
 recognized by the Division of Mental Health within the  | ||
 Department of Human Services; | ||
  (8) a social service or health care agency that  | ||
 provides services to persons with developmental  | ||
 disabilities, in a program whose accreditation to provide  | ||
 such services is recognized by the Division of  | ||
 Developmental Disabilities within the Department of Human  | ||
 Services; | ||
  (9) a local hospital, trauma center, or provider of  | ||
 emergency medicine; | ||
  (10) providers of services for eligible adults in  | ||
 domestic living situations; and | ||
  (11) a physician, psychiatrist, or other health care  | ||
 provider knowledgeable about abuse and neglect of at-risk  | ||
 adults. | ||
 (c) A review team shall review cases of deaths of at-risk  | ||
adults occurring in its planning and service area (i) involving  | ||
blunt force trauma or an undetermined manner or suspicious  | ||
cause of death; , (ii) if requested by the deceased's attending  | ||
physician or an emergency room physician; , (iii) upon referral  | ||
by a health care provider; , (iv) upon referral by a coroner or  | ||
medical examiner; , (v) constituting an open or closed case from  | ||
an adult protective services agency, law enforcement agency,  | ||
State's Attorney's office, or the Department of Human Services'  | ||
Office of the Inspector General that involves alleged or  | ||
suspected abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation; or
(vi)  | ||
upon referral by a law enforcement agency or State's Attorney's  | ||
office. If such a death occurs in a planning and service area  | ||
where a review team has not yet been established, the Director  | ||
shall request that the Advisory Council or another review team  | ||
review that death. A team may also review deaths of at-risk  | ||
adults if the alleged abuse or neglect occurred while the  | ||
person was residing in a domestic living situation. | ||
 A review team shall meet not less than 6 times a year to  | ||
discuss cases for its possible review. Each review team, with  | ||
the advice and consent of the Department, shall establish  | ||
criteria to be used in discussing cases of alleged, suspected,  | ||
or substantiated abuse or neglect for review and shall conduct  | ||
its activities in accordance with any applicable policies and  | ||
procedures established by the Department. | ||
 (c-5) The Illinois Fatality Review Team Advisory Council,  | ||
consisting of one member from each review team in Illinois,  | ||
shall be the coordinating and oversight body for review teams  | ||
and activities in Illinois. The Director may appoint to the  | ||
Advisory Council any ex-officio members deemed necessary.  | ||
Persons with expertise needed by the Advisory Council may be  | ||
invited to meetings. The Advisory Council must select from its  | ||
members a chairperson and a vice-chairperson, each to serve a  | ||
2-year term. The chairperson or vice-chairperson may be  | ||
selected to serve additional, subsequent terms. The Advisory  | ||
Council must meet at least 4 times during each calendar year.  | ||
 The Department may provide or arrange for the staff support  | ||
necessary for the Advisory Council to carry out its duties. The  | ||
Director, in cooperation and consultation with the Advisory  | ||
Council, shall appoint, reappoint, and remove review team  | ||
members.  | ||
 The Advisory Council has, but is not limited to, the  | ||
following duties:  | ||
  (1) To serve as the voice of review teams in Illinois.  | ||
  (2) To oversee the review teams in order to ensure that  | ||
 the review teams' work is coordinated and in compliance  | ||
 with State statutes and the operating protocol.  | ||
  (3) To ensure that the data, results, findings, and  | ||
 recommendations of the review teams are adequately used in  | ||
 a timely manner to make any necessary changes to the  | ||
 policies, procedures, and State statutes in order to  | ||
 protect at-risk adults.  | ||
  (4) To collaborate with the Department in order to  | ||
 develop any legislation needed to prevent unnecessary  | ||
 deaths of at-risk adults.  | ||
  (5) To ensure that the review teams' review processes  | ||
 are standardized in order to convey data, findings, and  | ||
 recommendations in a usable format.  | ||
  (6) To serve as a link with review teams throughout the  | ||
 country and to participate in national review team  | ||
 activities.  | ||
  (7) To provide the review teams with the most current  | ||
 information and practices concerning at-risk adult death  | ||
 review and related topics.  | ||
  (8) To perform any other functions necessary to enhance  | ||
 the capability of the review teams to reduce and prevent  | ||
 at-risk adult fatalities.  | ||
 The Advisory Council may prepare an annual report, in  | ||
consultation with the Department, using aggregate data  | ||
gathered by review teams and using the review teams'  | ||
recommendations to develop education, prevention, prosecution,  | ||
or other strategies designed to improve the coordination of  | ||
services for at-risk adults and their families.  | ||
 In any instance where a review team does not operate in  | ||
accordance with established protocol, the Director, in  | ||
consultation and cooperation with the Advisory Council, must  | ||
take any necessary actions to bring the review team into  | ||
compliance with the protocol.  | ||
 (d) Any document or oral or written communication shared  | ||
within or produced by the review team relating to a case  | ||
discussed or reviewed by the review team is confidential and is  | ||
not admissible as evidence in any civil or criminal proceeding,  | ||
except for use by a State's Attorney's office in prosecuting a  | ||
criminal case against a caregiver. Those records and  | ||
information are, however, subject to discovery or subpoena, and  | ||
are admissible as evidence, to the extent they are otherwise  | ||
available to the public. | ||
 Any document or oral or written communication provided to a  | ||
review team by an individual or entity, and created by that  | ||
individual or entity solely for the use of the review team, is  | ||
confidential, is not subject to disclosure to or discoverable  | ||
by another party, and is not admissible as evidence in any  | ||
civil or criminal proceeding, except for use by a State's  | ||
Attorney's office in prosecuting a criminal case against a  | ||
caregiver. Those records and information are, however, subject  | ||
to discovery or subpoena, and are admissible as evidence, to  | ||
the extent they are otherwise available to the public. | ||
 Each entity or individual represented on the fatality  | ||
review team may share with other members of the team  | ||
information in the entity's or individual's possession  | ||
concerning the decedent who is the subject of the review or  | ||
concerning any person who was in contact with the decedent, as  | ||
well as any other information deemed by the entity or  | ||
individual to be pertinent to the review. Any such information  | ||
shared by an entity or individual with other members of the  | ||
review team is confidential. The intent of this paragraph is to  | ||
permit the disclosure to members of the review team of any  | ||
information deemed confidential or privileged or prohibited  | ||
from disclosure by any other provision of law. Release of  | ||
confidential communication between domestic violence advocates  | ||
and a domestic violence victim shall follow subsection (d) of  | ||
Section 227 of the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986 which  | ||
allows for the waiver of privilege afforded to guardians,  | ||
executors, or administrators of the estate of the domestic  | ||
violence victim. This provision relating to the release of  | ||
confidential communication between domestic violence advocates  | ||
and a domestic violence victim shall exclude adult protective  | ||
service providers.
 | ||
 A coroner's or medical examiner's office may share with the  | ||
review team medical records that have been made available to  | ||
the coroner's or medical examiner's office in connection with  | ||
that office's investigation of a death. | ||
 Members of a review team and the Advisory Council are not  | ||
subject to examination, in any civil or criminal proceeding,  | ||
concerning information presented to members of the review team  | ||
or the Advisory Council or opinions formed by members of the  | ||
review team or the Advisory Council based on that information.  | ||
A person may, however, be examined concerning information  | ||
provided to a review team or the Advisory Council.  | ||
 (d-5) Meetings of the review teams and the Advisory Council  | ||
may be closed to the public under the Open Meetings Act.  | ||
Records and information provided to a review team and the  | ||
Advisory Council, and records maintained by a team or the  | ||
Advisory Council, are exempt from release under the Freedom of  | ||
Information Act.  | ||
 (e) A review team's recommendation in relation to a case  | ||
discussed or reviewed by the review team, including, but not  | ||
limited to, a recommendation concerning an investigation or  | ||
prosecution, may be disclosed by the review team upon the  | ||
completion of its review and at the discretion of a majority of  | ||
its members who reviewed the case. | ||
 (e-5) The State shall indemnify and hold harmless members  | ||
of a review team and the Advisory Council for all their acts,  | ||
omissions, decisions, or other conduct arising out of the scope  | ||
of their service on the review team or Advisory Council, except  | ||
those involving willful or wanton misconduct. The method of  | ||
providing indemnification shall be as provided in the State  | ||
Employee Indemnification Act.  | ||
 (f) The Department, in consultation with coroners, medical  | ||
examiners, and law enforcement agencies, shall use aggregate  | ||
data gathered by and recommendations from the Advisory Council  | ||
and the review teams to create an annual report and may use  | ||
those data and recommendations to develop education,  | ||
prevention, prosecution, or other strategies designed to  | ||
improve the coordination of services for at-risk adults and  | ||
their families. The Department or other State or county agency,  | ||
in consultation with coroners, medical examiners, and law  | ||
enforcement agencies, also may use aggregate data gathered by  | ||
the review teams to create a database of at-risk individuals.
 | ||
 (g) The Department shall adopt such rules and regulations  | ||
as it deems necessary to implement this Section.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-49, eff. 7-1-13; 98-1039, eff. 8-25-14;  | ||
revised 11-26-14.)
 | ||
 Section 350. The Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act  | ||
is amended by changing Sections 7.8 and 7.14 as follows:
 | ||
 (325 ILCS 5/7.8) (from Ch. 23, par. 2057.8)
 | ||
 Sec. 7.8. 
Upon receiving an oral or written report of  | ||
suspected
child abuse or neglect, the Department shall  | ||
immediately notify, either
orally or electronically, the Child  | ||
Protective Service Unit of a previous
report concerning a  | ||
subject of the present report or other pertinent
information.  | ||
In addition, upon satisfactory identification procedures, to
 | ||
be established by Department regulation, any person authorized  | ||
to have
access to records under Section 11.1 relating to child  | ||
abuse and neglect
may request and shall be immediately provided  | ||
the information requested in
accordance with this Act. However,  | ||
no information shall be released unless
it prominently states  | ||
the report is "indicated", and only information from
 | ||
"indicated" reports shall be released, except that information  | ||
concerning
pending reports may be released pursuant to Sections  | ||
7.14 and 7.22 of this Act to the attorney or guardian ad litem  | ||
appointed under Section 2-17 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987  | ||
and to any person authorized under
paragraphs (1), (2), (3) and  | ||
(11) of Section 11.1. In addition, State's
Attorneys are  | ||
authorized to receive unfounded reports for prosecution
 | ||
purposes related to the transmission of false reports of child  | ||
abuse or
neglect in violation of subsection (a), paragraph (7)  | ||
of Section 26-1
of the Criminal Code of 2012 and attorneys and  | ||
guardians ad litem appointed under
Article II of the Juvenile  | ||
Court Act of 1987 shall receive the
reports set forth in  | ||
Section 7.14 of this Act in conformance with paragraph
(19) of  | ||
Section 11.1 and Section 7.14 of this Act. The names and other
 | ||
identifying data and the dates and the circumstances of any  | ||
persons
requesting or receiving information from the central  | ||
register shall be
entered in the register record.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; 98-807, eff. 8-1-14;  | ||
revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 (325 ILCS 5/7.14) (from Ch. 23, par. 2057.14)
 | ||
 Sec. 7.14. All reports in the central register shall be  | ||
classified in one
of three categories: "indicated",  | ||
"unfounded" or "undetermined", as the
case may be. Prior to  | ||
classifying the report, the person making the
classification  | ||
shall determine whether the child named in the
report is the  | ||
subject of an action under Article II of the Juvenile Court
Act  | ||
of 1987. If the child is the subject of an action under Article  | ||
II of the
Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and the Department intends  | ||
to classify the report as indicated, the Department shall,  | ||
within 45 days of classification of the report, transmit a copy  | ||
of the report to
the attorney or guardian ad litem appointed  | ||
for the child under Section 2-17 of the
Juvenile Court Act of  | ||
1987. If the child is the subject of an action under Article II  | ||
of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and the Department intends to  | ||
classify the report as unfounded, the Department shall, within  | ||
45 days of deciding its intent to classify the report as  | ||
unfounded, transmit a copy of the report and written notice of  | ||
the Department's intent to the attorney or guardian ad litem  | ||
appointed for the child under Section 2-17 of the Juvenile  | ||
Court Act of 1987. All information identifying the subjects of  | ||
an unfounded
report shall be expunged from the register
 | ||
forthwith, except as provided in Section 7.7.
Unfounded reports  | ||
may only be made available to the Child
Protective Service Unit  | ||
when investigating a subsequent report of suspected
abuse or  | ||
maltreatment involving a child named in the unfounded report;  | ||
and to
the subject of the report, provided the Department has  | ||
not expunged the file in accordance with Section 7.7. The Child  | ||
Protective
Service Unit shall not indicate the subsequent  | ||
report solely based upon the
existence of the prior unfounded  | ||
report or reports. Notwithstanding any other
provision of law  | ||
to the contrary, an unfounded report shall not be admissible
in  | ||
any judicial or administrative proceeding or action.
 | ||
Identifying information on all other records shall be
removed  | ||
from the register no later than 5 years after the report is  | ||
indicated.
However, if another report is received involving the  | ||
same child, his sibling
or offspring, or a child in the care of  | ||
the persons responsible for the
child's welfare, or involving  | ||
the same alleged offender, the
identifying
information may be  | ||
maintained in the register
until 5 years after the subsequent  | ||
case or report is closed.
 | ||
 Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section,  | ||
identifying
information in indicated reports involving serious  | ||
physical injury to a child as defined by the
Department in  | ||
rules, may be retained longer than 5 years after the report
is  | ||
indicated or after the subsequent case or report is closed, and  | ||
may not
be removed from the register except as provided by the  | ||
Department in rules. Identifying information in indicated  | ||
reports involving sexual penetration of a child, sexual  | ||
molestation of a child, sexual exploitation of a child, torture  | ||
of a child, or the death of a child, as defined by the  | ||
Department in rules, shall be retained for a period of not less  | ||
than 50 years after the report is indicated or after the  | ||
subsequent case or report is closed.
 | ||
 For purposes of this Section "child" includes an adult  | ||
resident as defined in this Act. | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-333, eff. 8-12-11; 98-453, eff. 8-16-13;  | ||
98-807, eff. 8-1-14; revised 11-25-14.)
 | ||
 Section 355. The Lead Poisoning Prevention Act is amended  | ||
by changing Sections 4, 5, 6.2, 7.2, 9.4, and 10 as follows:
 | ||
 (410 ILCS 45/4) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1304)
 | ||
 Sec. 4. Sale of items containing lead-bearing substance. No  | ||
person shall sell, have, offer for sale, or transfer toys,
 | ||
furniture, clothing, accessories, jewelry, decorative objects,  | ||
edible items, candy, food, dietary supplements, or other  | ||
articles used by or intended to be chewable by children that  | ||
contain contains a lead-bearing substance.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-690, eff. 1-1-15; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (410 ILCS 45/5) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1305)
 | ||
 Sec. 5. Sale of objects containing lead-bearing substance.  | ||
No person
shall sell or transfer or offer for sale or transfer  | ||
any fixtures or other
objects intended to be used, installed,  | ||
or located in or upon any surface
of a regulated facility, that  | ||
contain
contains a lead-bearing substance and that, in the  | ||
ordinary course of use,
are accessible to or chewable by  | ||
children.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-690, eff. 1-1-15; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (410 ILCS 45/6.2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1306.2)
 | ||
 Sec. 6.2. Testing children and pregnant persons. 
 | ||
 (a) Any physician licensed to practice medicine in all its  | ||
branches or health care provider who sees or treats children 6  | ||
years
of age or younger shall test those children for
lead  | ||
poisoning when those children reside in an area defined as high  | ||
risk
by the Department. Children residing in areas defined as  | ||
low risk by the
Department shall be evaluated for risk by the  | ||
Childhood Lead Risk Questionnaire developed
by the Department  | ||
and tested if indicated. Children shall be evaluated in  | ||
accordance with rules adopted by the Department.
 | ||
 (b) Each licensed, registered, or approved health care  | ||
facility serving
children 6 years of age or younger, including,  | ||
but not
limited to,
health departments, hospitals, clinics, and  | ||
health maintenance
organizations approved, registered, or  | ||
licensed by the Department, shall take
the appropriate steps to  | ||
ensure that children 6 years of age or younger be evaluated for  | ||
risk or tested for lead poisoning or both.
 | ||
 (c) Children 7 years and older and pregnant persons may  | ||
also be tested by physicians or
health care providers, in  | ||
accordance with rules adopted by the Department. Physicians and  | ||
health care providers shall also evaluate
children for lead  | ||
poisoning in conjunction with the school health
examination, as  | ||
required under the School Code, when, in the medical judgement
 | ||
of the physician, advanced practice nurse who has a written  | ||
collaborative
agreement with a
collaborating
physician
that  | ||
authorizes the advance practice nurse to perform health  | ||
examinations, or
physician
assistant who has been delegated to  | ||
perform health examinations by the
supervising
physician, the  | ||
child is potentially at high risk of lead poisoning.
 | ||
 (d) (Blank).
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-690, eff. 1-1-15; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (410 ILCS 45/7.2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1307.2)
 | ||
 Sec. 7.2. Fees; reimbursement; Lead Poisoning Screening,  | ||
Prevention, and Abatement Fund. 
 | ||
 (a) The Department may establish fees according to a  | ||
reasonable fee
structure to cover the cost of providing a  | ||
testing service for laboratory
analysis of blood lead tests and  | ||
any necessary follow-up. Fees collected
from the Department's  | ||
testing service shall be placed in a special fund in
the State  | ||
treasury known as the Lead Poisoning Screening, Prevention, and
 | ||
Abatement Fund. Other State and federal funds for expenses  | ||
related to lead
poisoning screening, follow-up, treatment, and  | ||
abatement programs may also
be placed in the Fund. Moneys shall  | ||
be appropriated from the Fund to the
Department for the  | ||
implementation and enforcement of this Act.
 | ||
 (b) The Department shall certify, as required by the  | ||
Department of Healthcare and Family Services, any  | ||
non-reimbursed public expenditures for all approved lead  | ||
testing and evaluation activities for Medicaid-eligible  | ||
children expended by the Department from the non-federal  | ||
portion of funds, including, but not limited to, assessment of  | ||
home, physical, and family environments; comprehensive  | ||
environmental lead investigation; and laboratory services for  | ||
Medicaid-eligible children. The Department of Healthcare and  | ||
Family Services shall provide appropriate Current Procedural  | ||
Terminology (CPT) Codes for all billable services and claim  | ||
federal financial participation for the properly certified  | ||
public expenditures submitted to it by the Department. Any  | ||
federal financial participation revenue received pursuant to  | ||
this Act shall be deposited in the Lead Poisoning Screening,  | ||
Prevention, and Abatement Fund. | ||
 (c) Any delegate agency may establish fees, according to a  | ||
reasonable
fee structure, to cover the costs of drawing blood  | ||
for blood lead testing and evaluation
and any necessary  | ||
follow-up.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-690, eff. 1-1-15; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (410 ILCS 45/9.4) | ||
 Sec. 9.4. Owner's obligation to post notice. The owner of a  | ||
regulated facility who has received a mitigation notice under  | ||
Section 9 of this Act shall post notices at all entrances to  | ||
the regulated facility specifying the identified lead hazards.  | ||
The posted notices, drafted by the Department and sent to the  | ||
property owner with the notification of lead hazards, shall  | ||
indicate the following: | ||
  (1) that a unit or units in the building have been  | ||
 found to have lead hazards; | ||
  (2) that other units in the building may have lead  | ||
 hazards; | ||
  (3) that the Department recommends that children 6  | ||
 years of age or younger receive a blood lead testing; | ||
  (4) where to seek further information; and | ||
  (5) whether 2 or more mitigation notices have been  | ||
 issued for the regulated facility within a 5-year period of  | ||
 time. | ||
 Once the owner has complied with a mitigation notice or  | ||
mitigation order issued by the Department, the owner may remove  | ||
the notices posted pursuant to this Section.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-690, eff. 1-1-15; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (410 ILCS 45/10) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1310)
 | ||
 Sec. 10. 
The Department, or representative of a unit of  | ||
local government or
health department approved by the  | ||
Department for this purpose, shall report any
violation of this  | ||
Act to the State's Attorney of the county in which the
 | ||
regulated facility is located. The State's Attorney has the  | ||
authority to charge the owner with a Class
A misdemeanor, and  | ||
who shall take additional measures to ensure that rent is
 | ||
withheld from the owner by the occupants of the dwelling units
 | ||
affected, until the mitigation requirements under Section 9 of  | ||
this Act are
complied with.
 | ||
 No tenant shall be evicted because rent is withheld under  | ||
the provisions of this Act, or because of
any action required  | ||
of the owner of the regulated facility as a result of  | ||
enforcement of
this Act.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-690, eff. 1-1-15; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 360. The AIDS Confidentiality Act is amended by  | ||
changing Sections 9 and 9.7 as follows:
 | ||
 (410 ILCS 305/9) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7309)
 | ||
 Sec. 9. (1) No person may disclose or be compelled to  | ||
disclose HIV-related information, except to the following  | ||
persons:
 | ||
  (a) The subject of an HIV test or the subject's legally
 | ||
 authorized representative. A physician may notify the  | ||
 spouse of the
test subject, if the test result is positive  | ||
 and has been confirmed
pursuant to rules adopted by the  | ||
 Department, provided that the physician has
first sought  | ||
 unsuccessfully to persuade the patient to notify the spouse  | ||
 or
that, a reasonable time after the patient has agreed to  | ||
 make the
notification, the physician has reason to believe  | ||
 that the patient has not
provided the notification. This  | ||
 paragraph shall not create a duty or
obligation under which  | ||
 a physician must notify the spouse of the test
results, nor  | ||
 shall such duty or obligation be implied. No civil  | ||
 liability
or criminal sanction under this Act shall be  | ||
 imposed for any disclosure or
non-disclosure of a test  | ||
 result to a spouse by a physician acting in good
faith  | ||
 under this paragraph. For the purpose of any proceedings,  | ||
 civil or
criminal, the good faith of any physician acting  | ||
 under this paragraph shall
be presumed.
 | ||
  (b) Any person designated in a legally effective  | ||
 authorization for release of the HIV-related information  | ||
 executed by the subject of the HIV-related information or  | ||
 the subject's legally
authorized representative.
 | ||
  (c) An authorized agent or employee of a health  | ||
 facility or health care
provider if the health facility or  | ||
 health care provider itself is
authorized to obtain the  | ||
 test results, the agent or employee provides
patient care  | ||
 or handles or processes specimens of body fluids or  | ||
 tissues,
and the agent or employee has a need to know such  | ||
 information.
 | ||
  (d) The Department and local health authorities  | ||
 serving a population of over 1,000,000 residents or other  | ||
 local health authorities as designated by the Department,  | ||
 in accordance with rules for reporting, preventing, and
 | ||
 controlling the spread of disease and the conduct of public  | ||
 health surveillance, public health investigations, and  | ||
 public health interventions, as otherwise provided by  | ||
 State law.
The Department,
local health authorities, and  | ||
 authorized representatives shall not disclose HIV test  | ||
 results and HIV-related
information, publicly or in any  | ||
 action of any kind in any court or
before any tribunal,  | ||
 board, or agency. HIV test results and HIV-related  | ||
 information shall be
protected from disclosure in  | ||
 accordance with the provisions of Sections 8-2101
through  | ||
 8-2105 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
 | ||
  (e) A health facility, health care provider, or health  | ||
 care professional which procures, processes,
distributes  | ||
 or uses: (i) a human body part from a deceased person
with  | ||
 respect to medical information regarding that person; or  | ||
 (ii) semen
provided prior to the effective date of this Act  | ||
 for the purpose of
artificial insemination.
 | ||
  (f) Health facility staff committees for the purposes  | ||
 of conducting
program monitoring, program evaluation or  | ||
 service reviews.
 | ||
  (f-5) A court in accordance with the provisions of  | ||
 Section 12-5.01 of the Criminal Code of 2012.  | ||
  (g) (Blank).
 | ||
  (h) Any health care provider, health care  | ||
 professional, or employee of a health facility, and any
 | ||
 firefighter or EMR, EMT, A-EMT, paramedic, PHRN, or EMT-I,  | ||
 involved in an accidental direct
skin or mucous membrane  | ||
 contact with the blood or bodily fluids of an
individual  | ||
 which is of a nature that may transmit HIV, as determined  | ||
 by a
physician in his medical judgment.
 | ||
  (i) Any law enforcement officer, as defined in  | ||
 subsection (c) of
Section 7, involved in the line of duty  | ||
 in a direct skin or mucous membrane
contact with the blood  | ||
 or bodily fluids of an individual which is of a
nature that  | ||
 may transmit HIV, as determined by a physician in his  | ||
 medical
judgment.
 | ||
  (j) A temporary caretaker of a child taken into  | ||
 temporary protective
custody by the Department of Children  | ||
 and Family Services pursuant to Section 5
of the Abused and  | ||
 Neglected Child Reporting Act, as now or hereafter amended.
 | ||
  (k) In the case of a minor under 18 years of age whose  | ||
 test result is
positive and has been confirmed
pursuant to  | ||
 rules adopted by the Department, the health care  | ||
 professional who ordered the test shall make a reasonable
 | ||
 effort to notify the minor's parent or legal guardian if,  | ||
 in the
professional judgment
of the health care  | ||
 professional, notification would be
in the best interest of  | ||
 the child and the health care professional has first
sought  | ||
 unsuccessfully to persuade the minor to notify the parent  | ||
 or legal
guardian or a reasonable time after the minor has  | ||
 agreed to notify
the parent or legal guardian, the health  | ||
 care professional has reason to
believe that the minor has  | ||
 not made the notification. This subsection
shall not create  | ||
 a duty or obligation under which a health care professional
 | ||
 must notify the minor's parent or legal guardian of the  | ||
 test results, nor
shall a duty or obligation be implied. No  | ||
 civil liability or criminal sanction
under this Act shall  | ||
 be imposed for any notification or non-notification of a
 | ||
 minor's test result by a health care professional acting in  | ||
 good faith under this
subsection. For the purpose of any  | ||
 proceeding, civil or criminal, the good
faith of any health  | ||
 care professional acting under this subsection shall be
 | ||
 presumed.
 | ||
 (2) All information and records held by a State agency,  | ||
local health authority, or health oversight agency pertaining  | ||
to HIV-related information shall be strictly confidential and  | ||
exempt from copying and inspection under the Freedom of  | ||
Information Act. The information and records shall not be  | ||
released or made public by the State agency, local health  | ||
authority, or health oversight agency, shall not be admissible  | ||
as evidence nor discoverable in any action of any kind in any  | ||
court or before any tribunal, board, agency, or person, and  | ||
shall be treated in the same manner as the information and  | ||
those records subject to the provisions of Part 21 of Article  | ||
VIII of the Code of Civil Procedure, except under the following  | ||
circumstances: | ||
  (A) when made with the written consent of all persons  | ||
 to whom the information pertains; or | ||
  (B) when authorized by Section 5-4-3 of the Unified  | ||
 Code of Corrections.  | ||
 Disclosure shall be limited to those who have a need to  | ||
know the information, and no additional disclosures may be  | ||
made.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-1046, eff. 8-21-12; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13;  | ||
98-973, eff. 8-15-14; 98-1046, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 (410 ILCS 305/9.7) | ||
 Sec. 9.7. Record locator service to support HIE. Section  | ||
9.9 of the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities and  | ||
Confidentiality Act is herein incorporated by reference.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1046, eff. 1-1-15; revised 11-26-14.)
 | ||
 Section 365. The Health Care Professional Credentials Data  | ||
Collection Act is amended by changing Section 51 as follows:
 | ||
 (410 ILCS 517/51) | ||
 Sec. 51. Licensure records. Licensure records designated  | ||
confidential and considered expunged for reporting purposes by  | ||
the licensee under Section 2105-207 of the Civil Administrative  | ||
Code of Illinois are not reportable under this Act. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-816, eff. 8-1-14; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 370. The Illinois Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act is  | ||
amended by changing Section 3.21 as follows:
 | ||
 (410 ILCS 620/3.21) (from Ch. 56 1/2, par. 503.21)
 | ||
 Sec. 3.21. Except as authorized by this Act, the Illinois  | ||
Controlled Substances
Act, the Pharmacy Practice Act, the  | ||
Dental Practice Act, the Medical
Practice Act of 1987, the  | ||
Veterinary Medicine and Surgery Practice Act of
2004, the  | ||
Podiatric Medical Practice Act of 1987, or Section 22-30 of the  | ||
School Code, to sell or dispense a
prescription drug without a  | ||
prescription.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-361, eff. 8-15-11; revised 11-26-14.)
 | ||
 Section 375. The Food Handling Regulation Enforcement Act  | ||
is amended by changing Section 3.06 and setting forth and  | ||
renumbering multiple versions of Section 3.4 as follows:
 | ||
 (410 ILCS 625/3.06) | ||
 Sec. 3.06. Food handler training; restaurants. | ||
 (a) For the purpose of this Section, "restaurant" means any  | ||
business that is primarily engaged in the sale of ready-to-eat  | ||
food for immediate consumption. "Primarily engaged" means  | ||
having sales of ready-to-eat food for immediate consumption  | ||
comprising at least 51% of the total sales, excluding the sale  | ||
of liquor. | ||
 (b) Unless otherwise provided, all food handlers employed  | ||
by a restaurant, other than someone holding a food service  | ||
sanitation manager certificate, must receive or obtain  | ||
American National Standards Institute-accredited training in  | ||
basic safe food handling principles within 30 days after  | ||
employment and every 3 years thereafter. Notwithstanding the  | ||
provisions of Section 3.05 of this Act, food handlers employed  | ||
in nursing homes, licensed day care homes and facilities,  | ||
hospitals, schools, and long-term care facilities must renew  | ||
their training every 3 years. There is no limit to how many  | ||
times an employee may take the training. The training indicated  | ||
in subsections (e) and (f) of this Section is transferable  | ||
between employers, but not individuals. The training indicated  | ||
in subsections (c) and (d) of this Section is not transferable  | ||
between individuals or employers. Proof that a food handler has  | ||
been trained must be available upon reasonable request by a  | ||
State or local health department inspector and may be provided  | ||
electronically. | ||
 (c) If a business with an internal training program is  | ||
approved in another state prior to the effective date of this  | ||
amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, then the  | ||
business's training program and assessment shall be  | ||
automatically approved by the Department upon the business  | ||
providing proof that the program is approved in said state. | ||
 (d) The Department shall approve the training program of  | ||
any multi-state business with a plan that follows the  | ||
guidelines in subsection (b) of Section 3.05 of this Act and is  | ||
on file with the Department by May 15, 2013.  | ||
 (e) If an entity uses an American National Standards  | ||
Institute food handler training accredited program, that  | ||
training program shall be automatically approved by the  | ||
Department. | ||
 (f) Certified local health departments in counties serving  | ||
jurisdictions with a population of 100,000 or less, as reported  | ||
by the U.S. Census Bureau in the 2010 Census of Population, may  | ||
have a training program. The training program must meet the  | ||
requirements of Section 3.05(b) and be approved by the  | ||
Department. This Section notwithstanding, certified local  | ||
health departments in the following counties may have a  | ||
training program: | ||
  (1) a county with a population of 677,560 as reported  | ||
 by the U.S. Census Bureau in the 2010 Census of Population; | ||
  (2) a county with a population of 308,760 as reported  | ||
 by the U.S. Census Bureau in the 2010 Census of Population; | ||
  (3) a county with a population of 515,269 as reported  | ||
 by the U.S. Census Bureau in the 2010 Census of Population; | ||
  (4) a county with a population of 114,736 as reported  | ||
 by the U.S. Census Bureau in the 2010 Census of Population; | ||
  (5) a county with a population of 110,768 as reported  | ||
 by the U.S. Census Bureau in the 2010 Census of Population; | ||
  (6) a county with a population of 135,394 as reported  | ||
 by the U.S. Census Bureau in the 2010 Census of Population. | ||
 The certified local health departments in paragraphs (1)  | ||
through (6) of this subsection (f) must have their training  | ||
programs program on file with the Department no later than 90  | ||
days after the effective date of this Act. Any modules that  | ||
meet the requirements of subsection (b) of Section 3.05 of this  | ||
Act and are not approved within 180 days after the Department's  | ||
receipt of the application of the entity seeking to conduct the  | ||
training shall automatically be considered approved by the  | ||
Department. | ||
 (g) Any and all documents, materials, or information  | ||
related to a restaurant or business food handler training  | ||
module submitted to the Department is confidential and shall  | ||
not be open to public inspection or dissemination and is exempt  | ||
from disclosure under Section 7 of the Freedom of Information  | ||
Act. Training may be conducted by any means available,  | ||
including, but not limited to, on-line, computer, classroom,  | ||
live trainers, remote trainers, and certified food service  | ||
sanitation managers. There must be at least one commercially  | ||
available, approved food handler training module at a cost of  | ||
no more than $15 per employee; if an approved food handler  | ||
training module is not available at that cost, then the  | ||
provisions of this Section 3.06 shall not apply. | ||
 (h) The regulation of food handler training is considered  | ||
to be an exclusive function of the State, and local regulation  | ||
is prohibited. This subsection (h) is a denial and limitation  | ||
of home rule powers and functions under subsection (h) of  | ||
Section 6 of Article VII of the Illinois Constitution. | ||
 (i) The provisions of this Section apply beginning July 1,  | ||
2014. From July 1, 2014 through December 31, 2014, enforcement  | ||
of the provisions of this Section shall be limited to education  | ||
and notification of requirements to encourage compliance.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-566, eff. 8-27-13; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (410 ILCS 625/3.4) | ||
 Sec. 3.4. Product samples. | ||
 (a) For the purpose of this Section, "food product  | ||
sampling" means food product samples distributed free of charge  | ||
for promotional or educational purposes only. | ||
 (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, except as  | ||
provided in subsection (c) of this Section, a vendor who  | ||
engages in food product sampling at a farmers' market may do so  | ||
without obtaining a State or local permit to provide those food  | ||
product samples, provided the vendor complies with the State  | ||
and local permit requirements to sell the food product to be  | ||
sampled and with the food preparation, food handling, food  | ||
storage, and food sampling requirements specified in the  | ||
administrative rules adopted by the Department to implement  | ||
Section 3.3 and Section 3.4 of this Act. | ||
 The Department of Public Health is instructed to work with  | ||
the Farmers' Market Task Force as created in Section 3.3 of  | ||
this Act to establish a food sampling at farmers' market  | ||
training and certification program to fulfill this  | ||
requirement. The Department shall adopt rules for the food  | ||
sampling training and certification program and product  | ||
sampling requirements at farmers' markets in accordance with  | ||
subsection (j) of Section 3.3. The Department may charge a  | ||
reasonable fee for the training and certification program. The  | ||
Department may delegate or contract authority to administer the  | ||
food sampling training to other qualified public and private  | ||
entities. | ||
 (c) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (b) of  | ||
this Section, the Department of Public Health, the Department  | ||
of Agriculture, a local municipal health department, or a  | ||
certified local health department may inspect a vendor at a  | ||
farmers' market to ensure compliance with the provisions in  | ||
this Section. If an imminent health hazard exists or a vendor's  | ||
product has been found to be misbranded, adulterated, or not in  | ||
compliance with the permit exemption for vendors pursuant to  | ||
this Section, then the regulatory authority may invoke  | ||
cessation of sales until it deems that the situation has been  | ||
addressed.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-660, eff. 6-23-14.)
 | ||
 (410 ILCS 625/3.6) | ||
 Sec. 3.6 3.4. Home kitchen operation. | ||
 (a) For the purpose of this Section, "home kitchen  | ||
operation" means a person who produces or packages  | ||
non-potentially hazardous food in a kitchen of that person's  | ||
primary domestic residence for direct sale by the owner or a  | ||
family member, or for sale by a religious, charitable, or  | ||
nonprofit organization, stored in the residence where the food  | ||
is made. The following conditions must be met in order to  | ||
qualify as a home kitchen operation: | ||
  (1) Monthly gross sales do not exceed $1,000. | ||
  (2) The food is not a potentially hazardous baked food,  | ||
 as defined in Section 4 of this Act. | ||
  (3) A notice is provided to the purchaser that the  | ||
 product was produced in a home kitchen. | ||
 (b) The Department of Public Health or the health  | ||
department of a unit of local government may inspect a home  | ||
kitchen operation in the event of a complaint or disease  | ||
outbreak.  | ||
 (c) This Section applies only to a home kitchen operation  | ||
located in a municipality, township, or county where the local  | ||
governing body has adopted an ordinance authorizing the direct  | ||
sale of baked goods as described in Section 4 of this Act. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-643, eff. 6-10-14; revised 10-20-14.)
 | ||
 Section 380. The Public Water Supply Operations Act is  | ||
amended by changing Sections 1 and 13 as follows:
 | ||
 (415 ILCS 45/1) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 501)
 | ||
 Sec. 1. 
(1) In order to safeguard the health and well-being  | ||
of the
populace, every community water supply in Illinois,  | ||
other than an exempt community water supply as specified in  | ||
Section 9.1, shall have on its
operational staff, and shall  | ||
designate to the Agency in writing, either (i) one Responsible  | ||
Operator in Charge who directly supervises both the treatment  | ||
and distribution facilities of the community water supply or  | ||
(ii) one Responsible Operator in Charge who directly supervises  | ||
the treatment facilities of the community water supply and one  | ||
Responsible Operator in Charge who directly supervises the  | ||
distribution facilities of the community water supply.
 | ||
 Except for exempt community water supplies as specified in  | ||
Section 9.1 of
this Act, all portions of a community water  | ||
supply system shall be under the
direct supervision of a  | ||
Responsible Operator in Charge.
 | ||
 (2) The following class requirements apply:
 | ||
  (a) Each Class A community water supply shall have in
 | ||
 its employ at least one individual certified as competent  | ||
 as a Class A
community water supply operator.
 | ||
  (b) Each Class B community water supply
shall have in  | ||
 its employ at least one individual certified as competent
 | ||
 as a Class B or Class A community water supply operator.
 | ||
  (c) Each Class C community water supply
shall have in  | ||
 its employ at least one individual certified as competent
 | ||
 as a Class C, Class B, or Class A community water supply  | ||
 operator.
 | ||
  (d) Each Class D community water supply shall have in  | ||
 its employ at least one
individual certified as competent  | ||
 as a Class D, Class C, Class B, or
Class A community water  | ||
 supply operator.
 | ||
 (2.5) The Agency may adopt rules that classify or  | ||
reclassify community water supplies as Class A, Class B, Class  | ||
C, or Class D community water supplies. A community water  | ||
supply that cannot be clearly classified under Section 5.1 or  | ||
Agency rules shall be considered individually and
designated,  | ||
in writing, by the Agency, as a Class A, Class B, Class C, or  | ||
Class D community water supply. Classifications made under this  | ||
subsection (2.5) shall be based on the nature of the community  | ||
water
supply and on the education and experience necessary to  | ||
operate it.
 | ||
 (3) A community water supply may satisfy the requirements  | ||
of this
Section by contracting the services of an individual  | ||
who is a properly qualified certified operator
of the required  | ||
class or higher, and will directly supervise the operation of  | ||
the community water supply. That individual shall serve as the  | ||
Responsible Operator in Charge of the community water supply. A
 | ||
written agreement to this effect must be on file with the  | ||
Agency certifying
that such an agreement exists, and delegating  | ||
responsibility and authority
to the contracted party. This  | ||
written agreement shall be signed by both the
certified  | ||
operator to be contracted and the responsible community water
 | ||
supply owner or official custodian and must be approved in  | ||
writing by the
Agency.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-822, eff. 8-1-14; 98-856, eff. 8-4-14; revised  | ||
10-1-14.)
 | ||
 (415 ILCS 45/13) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 513)
 | ||
 Sec. 13. 
Community Water Supply Operators shall be  | ||
certified in accordance with the
following classifications:
 | ||
  (a) A "Class A" Water Supply Operator Certificate shall  | ||
 be issued to
those individuals who, in accordance with this  | ||
 Act, demonstrate the skills, knowledge, ability, and
 | ||
 judgment that are necessary to operate a Class A community  | ||
 water supply in a manner that will provide safe, potable  | ||
 water for human consumption, as well as the skills,  | ||
 knowledge, ability, and judgment necessary to operate  | ||
 Class B, Class C, and Class D community water supplies in a
 | ||
 manner that will provide safe, potable water for human  | ||
 consumption.
 | ||
  (b) A "Class B" Water Supply Operator Certificate shall  | ||
 be issued to
those individuals who, in accordance with this  | ||
 Act, demonstrate the skills, knowledge, ability, and
 | ||
 judgment that are necessary to operate a Class B community  | ||
 water supply in a manner that will provide safe, potable  | ||
 water for human consumption, as well as the skills,  | ||
 knowledge, ability, and judgment necessary to operate  | ||
 Class C and Class D community water supplies in a manner  | ||
 that will provide safe, potable water for human
 | ||
 consumption.
 | ||
  (c) A "Class C" Water Supply Operator Certificate shall  | ||
 be issued to
those individuals who, in accordance with this  | ||
 Act, demonstrate the skills, knowledge, ability, and
 | ||
 judgment that are necessary to operate a Class C community  | ||
 water supply in a manner that will provide safe, potable  | ||
 water for human consumption, as well as the skills,  | ||
 knowledge, ability, and judgment necessary to operate a  | ||
 Class D community water supply in a manner that will
 | ||
 provide safe, potable water for human consumption.
 | ||
  (d) A "Class D" Water Supply Operator Certificate shall  | ||
 be issued to
those individuals who, in accordance with this  | ||
 Act, demonstrate the skills, knowledge, ability, and
 | ||
 judgment that are necessary to operate a Class D community  | ||
 water supply in a manner that will provide safe,
potable  | ||
 water for human consumption.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-822, eff. 8-1-14; 98-856, eff. 8-4-14; revised  | ||
10-2-14.)
 | ||
 Section 385. The Illinois Pesticide Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 19.3 as follows:
 | ||
 (415 ILCS 60/19.3)
 | ||
 Sec. 19.3. Agrichemical Facility Response Action Program. 
 | ||
 (a) It is the policy of the State of Illinois that an  | ||
Agrichemical Facility
Response Action Program be implemented  | ||
to reduce potential agrichemical pollution
and minimize  | ||
environmental degradation risk potential at these sites. In  | ||
this
Section, "agrichemical facility" means a site where  | ||
agrichemicals are
stored or handled, or both, in preparation  | ||
for end use. "Agrichemical
facility" does not include basic  | ||
manufacturing or central distribution sites
utilized only for  | ||
wholesale purposes. As used in this Section, "agrichemical"
 | ||
means pesticides or commercial fertilizers at an agrichemical  | ||
facility.
 | ||
 The program shall provide guidance for assessing the threat  | ||
of soil
agrichemical
contaminants to groundwater and  | ||
recommending which sites need to establish a
voluntary  | ||
corrective action program.
 | ||
 The program shall establish appropriate site-specific soil  | ||
cleanup
objectives, which shall be based on the potential for  | ||
the agrichemical
contaminants to move from the soil to  | ||
groundwater and the potential of the
specific soil agrichemical  | ||
contaminants to cause an
exceedence of a Class I
or Class III  | ||
groundwater quality standard or a health advisory level. The
 | ||
Department shall use the information found and procedures  | ||
developed in the
Agrichemical Facility Site Contamination  | ||
Study or other appropriate physical
evidence to establish the  | ||
soil agrichemical contaminant
levels of concern to
groundwater  | ||
in the various hydrological settings to establish  | ||
site-specific
cleanup objectives.
 | ||
 No remediation of a site may be recommended unless (i) the  | ||
agrichemical
contamination
level in the soil exceeds the  | ||
site-specific cleanup objectives
or (ii) the agrichemical  | ||
contaminant level in the soil
exceeds levels where physical  | ||
evidence and risk evaluation indicates
probability of the site  | ||
causing an
exceedence of a groundwater quality standard.
 | ||
 When a remediation plan must be carried out over a number  | ||
of years due to
limited financial resources of the owner or  | ||
operator of the agrichemical
facility, those soil agrichemical  | ||
contaminated areas that
have the greatest potential to  | ||
adversely impact vulnerable Class I groundwater
aquifers and  | ||
adjacent potable water wells shall
receive the highest priority  | ||
rating and be remediated first.
 | ||
 (b) (Blank).
 | ||
 (c) (Blank).
 | ||
 (d) The Director has the authority to do the following:
 | ||
  (1) When requested by the owner or operator of an  | ||
 agrichemical
facility, may investigate the agrichemical  | ||
 facility site contamination.
 | ||
  (2) After completion of the investigation under item  | ||
 (1) of this
subsection, recommend to the owner or operator  | ||
 of an
agrichemical facility that a
voluntary assessment be  | ||
 made of the soil agrichemical
contaminant when there is
 | ||
 evidence that the evaluation of risk indicates that
 | ||
 groundwater could be
adversely impacted.
 | ||
  (3) Review and make recommendations on any corrective  | ||
 action plan
submitted by the owner or operator of an  | ||
 agrichemical facility.
 | ||
  (4) On approval by the Director, issue an order to the  | ||
 owner or operator of
an
agrichemical facility that has  | ||
 filed a voluntary corrective action plan that
the owner or  | ||
 operator may proceed with that plan.
 | ||
  (5) Provide remedial project oversight and monitor  | ||
 remedial work progress.
 | ||
  (6) Provide staff to support program activities.
 | ||
  (7) (Blank).
 | ||
  (8) Incorporate the following into a
handbook or  | ||
 manual: the procedures for site assessment; pesticide  | ||
 constituents
of concern and associated parameters;  | ||
 guidance on remediation techniques, land
application, and  | ||
 corrective action plans; and other information or  | ||
 instructions
that the Department may find necessary.
 | ||
  (9) Coordinate preventive response actions at  | ||
 agrichemical facilities
pursuant to the
Groundwater  | ||
 Quality Standards adopted pursuant to Section 8 of the  | ||
 Illinois
Groundwater Protection Act to mitigate resource  | ||
 groundwater impairment.
 | ||
 Upon completion of the corrective action plan, the  | ||
Department shall issue a notice of closure stating that
 | ||
site-specific cleanup objectives have been met and no further  | ||
remedial action
is required to remedy the past agrichemical  | ||
contamination.
 | ||
 When a soil agrichemical contaminant assessment confirms
 | ||
that remedial action
is not required in accordance with the  | ||
Agrichemical Facility Response Action
Program, a notice of  | ||
closure shall be
issued by the Department stating that no
 | ||
further remedial action is required to remedy the past  | ||
agrichemical
contamination.
 | ||
 (e) Upon receipt of notification of an agrichemical
 | ||
contaminant in
groundwater pursuant to the Groundwater Quality  | ||
Standards, the Department shall
evaluate the severity of the  | ||
agrichemical contamination and
shall submit to the
 | ||
Environmental Protection Agency an informational notice  | ||
characterizing it as
follows:
 | ||
  (1) An agrichemical contaminant in Class I or Class III
 | ||
 groundwater has
exceeded
the levels of a standard adopted  | ||
 pursuant to the Illinois Groundwater
Protection Act or a  | ||
 health advisory established by the Illinois Environmental
 | ||
 Protection Agency or the United States Environmental  | ||
 Protection Agency; or
 | ||
  (2) An agrichemical has been detected at a level that
 | ||
 requires
preventive notification pursuant to a standard  | ||
 adopted pursuant to the Illinois
Groundwater Protection  | ||
 Act.
 | ||
 (f) When agrichemical contamination is characterized as in
 | ||
subsection (e)(1) of this Section, a facility may elect to  | ||
participate in the
Agrichemical Facility
Response Action  | ||
Program. In these instances, the scope of the corrective
action  | ||
plans developed, approved, and completed under this program  | ||
shall be
limited to the soil agrichemical
contamination present  | ||
at the site unless implementation of the plan is
coordinated  | ||
with the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency as follows:
 | ||
  (1) Upon receipt of notice of intent to include  | ||
 groundwater in an action
by a facility, the Department  | ||
 shall also
notify the Illinois Environmental Protection  | ||
 Agency.
 | ||
  (2) Upon receipt of the corrective action plan, the  | ||
 Department shall
coordinate a joint review of the plan with  | ||
 the Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency.
 | ||
  (3) The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency may  | ||
 provide a written
endorsement of the corrective action  | ||
 plan.
 | ||
  (4) The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency may  | ||
 approve a
groundwater
management zone for a period
of 5  | ||
 years after the implementation of the corrective action  | ||
 plan to allow for
groundwater impairment mitigation  | ||
 results.
 | ||
  (5) (Blank).
 | ||
  (6) The Department, in cooperation with the Illinois  | ||
 Environmental
Protection Agency, shall provide remedial  | ||
 project oversight and , monitor remedial
work progress.
 | ||
  (7) The Department shall, upon completion of the  | ||
 corrective action plan, issue a notice of closure stating  | ||
 that no
further remedial action is required to remedy the  | ||
 past agrichemical
contamination.
 | ||
 (g) When an owner or operator of an agrichemical facility  | ||
initiates a soil
contamination assessment on the owner's or  | ||
operator's own volition and
independent of any requirement  | ||
under this Section 19.3, information
contained in that  | ||
assessment may be held as confidential information by the
owner  | ||
or operator of the facility.
 | ||
 (h) Except as otherwise provided by Department rule, on and  | ||
after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 98th  | ||
General Assembly, any Agrichemical Facility Response Action  | ||
Program requirement that may be satisfied by an industrial  | ||
hygienist licensed pursuant to the Industrial Hygienists  | ||
Licensure Act repealed in this amendatory Act may be satisfied  | ||
by a Certified Industrial Hygienist certified by the American  | ||
Board of Industrial Hygiene.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-78, eff. 7-15-13; 98-692, eff. 7-1-14; revised  | ||
12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 390. The Firearm Owners Identification Card Act is  | ||
amended by changing Section 10 as follows:
 | ||
 (430 ILCS 65/10) (from Ch. 38, par. 83-10)
 | ||
 Sec. 10. Appeal to director; hearing; relief from firearm  | ||
prohibitions.   | ||
 (a) Whenever an application for a Firearm Owner's  | ||
Identification
Card is denied, whenever the Department fails to  | ||
act on an application
within 30 days of its receipt, or  | ||
whenever such a Card is revoked or seized
as provided for in  | ||
Section 8 of this Act, the aggrieved party may
appeal
to the  | ||
Director of State Police for a hearing upon
such denial,  | ||
revocation or seizure, unless the denial, revocation, or  | ||
seizure
was based upon a forcible felony, stalking, aggravated  | ||
stalking, domestic
battery, any violation of the Illinois  | ||
Controlled Substances Act, the Methamphetamine Control and  | ||
Community Protection Act, or the
Cannabis Control Act that is  | ||
classified as a Class 2 or greater felony,
any
felony violation  | ||
of Article 24 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code  | ||
of 2012, or any
adjudication as a delinquent minor for the  | ||
commission of an
offense that if committed by an adult would be  | ||
a felony, in which case the
aggrieved party may petition the  | ||
circuit court in writing in the county of
his or her residence  | ||
for a hearing upon such denial, revocation, or seizure.
 | ||
 (b) At least 30 days before any hearing in the circuit  | ||
court, the
petitioner shall serve the
relevant State's Attorney  | ||
with a copy of the petition. The State's Attorney
may object to  | ||
the petition and present evidence. At the hearing the court
 | ||
shall
determine whether substantial justice has been done.  | ||
Should the court
determine that substantial justice has not  | ||
been done, the court shall issue an
order directing the  | ||
Department of State Police to issue a Card. However, the court  | ||
shall not issue the order if the petitioner is otherwise  | ||
prohibited from obtaining, possessing, or using a firearm under
 | ||
federal law. 
 | ||
 (c) Any person prohibited from possessing a firearm under  | ||
Sections 24-1.1
or 24-3.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012 or  | ||
acquiring a Firearm Owner's
Identification Card under Section 8  | ||
of this Act may apply to
the Director
of State Police
or  | ||
petition the circuit court in the county where the petitioner  | ||
resides,
whichever is applicable in accordance with subsection  | ||
(a) of this Section,
requesting relief
from such prohibition  | ||
and the Director or court may grant such relief if it
is
 | ||
established by the applicant to the court's or Director's  | ||
satisfaction
that:
 | ||
  (0.05) when in the circuit court, the State's Attorney  | ||
 has been served
with a written
copy of the
petition at  | ||
 least 30 days before any such hearing in the circuit court  | ||
 and at
the hearing the
State's Attorney was afforded an  | ||
 opportunity to present evidence and object to
the petition;
 | ||
  (1) the applicant has not been convicted of a forcible  | ||
 felony under the
laws of this State or any other  | ||
 jurisdiction within 20 years of the
applicant's  | ||
 application for a Firearm Owner's Identification Card, or  | ||
 at
least 20 years have passed since the end of any period  | ||
 of imprisonment
imposed in relation to that conviction;
 | ||
  (2) the circumstances regarding a criminal conviction,  | ||
 where applicable,
the applicant's criminal history and his  | ||
 reputation are such that the applicant
will not be likely  | ||
 to act in a manner dangerous to public safety;
 | ||
  (3) granting relief would not be contrary to the public  | ||
 interest; and | ||
  (4) granting relief would not be contrary to federal  | ||
 law.
 | ||
 (c-5) (1) An active law enforcement officer employed by a  | ||
unit of government, who is denied, revoked, or has his or her  | ||
Firearm Owner's Identification Card seized under subsection  | ||
(e) of Section 8 of this Act may apply to the Director of State  | ||
Police requesting relief if the officer did not act in a manner  | ||
threatening to the officer, another person, or the public as  | ||
determined by the treating clinical psychologist or physician,  | ||
and as a result of his or her work is referred by the employer  | ||
for or voluntarily seeks mental health evaluation or treatment  | ||
by a licensed clinical psychologist, psychiatrist, or  | ||
qualified examiner, and: | ||
  (A) the officer has not received treatment  | ||
 involuntarily at a mental health facility, regardless of  | ||
 the length of admission; or has not been voluntarily  | ||
 admitted to a mental health facility for more than 30 days  | ||
 and not for more than one incident within the past 5 years;  | ||
 and | ||
  (B) the officer has not left the mental institution  | ||
 against medical advice. | ||
 (2) The Director of State Police shall grant expedited  | ||
relief to active law enforcement officers described in  | ||
paragraph (1) of this subsection (c-5) upon a determination by  | ||
the Director that the officer's possession of a firearm does  | ||
not present a threat to themselves, others, or public safety.  | ||
The Director shall act on the request for relief within 30  | ||
business days of receipt of: | ||
  (A) a notarized statement from the officer in the form  | ||
 prescribed by the Director detailing the circumstances  | ||
 that led to the hospitalization; | ||
  (B) all documentation regarding the admission,  | ||
 evaluation, treatment and discharge from the treating  | ||
 licensed clinical psychologist or psychiatrist of the  | ||
 officer; | ||
  (C) a psychological fitness for duty evaluation of the  | ||
 person completed after the time of discharge; and | ||
  (D) written confirmation in the form prescribed by the  | ||
 Director from the treating licensed clinical psychologist  | ||
 or psychiatrist that the provisions set forth in paragraph  | ||
 (1) of this subsection (c-5) have been met, the person  | ||
 successfully completed treatment, and their professional  | ||
 opinion regarding the person's ability to possess  | ||
 firearms. | ||
 (3) Officers eligible for the expedited relief in paragraph  | ||
(2) of this subsection (c-5) have the burden of proof on  | ||
eligibility and must provide all information required. The  | ||
Director may not consider granting expedited relief until the  | ||
proof and information is received. | ||
 (4) "Clinical psychologist", "psychiatrist", and  | ||
"qualified examiner" shall have the same meaning as provided in  | ||
Chapter I 1 of the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities  | ||
Code.  | ||
 (d) When a minor is adjudicated delinquent for an offense  | ||
which if
committed by an adult would be a felony, the court  | ||
shall notify the Department
of State Police.
 | ||
 (e) The court shall review the denial of an application or  | ||
the revocation of
a Firearm Owner's Identification Card of a  | ||
person who has been adjudicated
delinquent for an offense that  | ||
if
committed by an adult would be a felony if an
application  | ||
for relief has been filed at least 10 years after the  | ||
adjudication
of delinquency and the court determines that the  | ||
applicant should be
granted relief from disability to obtain a  | ||
Firearm Owner's Identification Card.
If the court grants  | ||
relief, the court shall notify the Department of State
Police  | ||
that the disability has
been removed and that the applicant is  | ||
eligible to obtain a Firearm Owner's
Identification Card.
 | ||
 (f) Any person who is subject to the disabilities of 18  | ||
U.S.C. 922(d)(4) and 922(g)(4) of the federal Gun Control Act  | ||
of 1968 because of an adjudication or commitment that occurred  | ||
under the laws of this State or who was determined to be  | ||
subject to the provisions of subsections (e), (f), or (g) of  | ||
Section 8 of this Act may apply to the Department of State  | ||
Police requesting relief from that prohibition. The Director  | ||
shall grant the relief if it is established by a preponderance  | ||
of the evidence that the person will not be likely to act in a  | ||
manner dangerous to public safety and that granting relief  | ||
would not be contrary to the public interest. In making this  | ||
determination, the Director shall receive evidence concerning  | ||
(i) the circumstances regarding the firearms disabilities from  | ||
which relief is sought; (ii) the petitioner's mental health and  | ||
criminal history records, if any; (iii) the petitioner's  | ||
reputation, developed at a minimum through character witness  | ||
statements, testimony, or other character evidence; and (iv)  | ||
changes in the petitioner's condition or circumstances since  | ||
the disqualifying events relevant to the relief sought. If  | ||
relief is granted under this subsection or by order of a court  | ||
under this Section, the Director shall as soon as practicable  | ||
but in no case later than 15 business days, update, correct,  | ||
modify, or remove the person's record in any database that the  | ||
Department of State Police makes available to the National  | ||
Instant Criminal Background Check System and notify the United  | ||
States Attorney General that the basis for the record being  | ||
made available no longer applies. The Department of State  | ||
Police shall adopt rules for the administration of this  | ||
Section. | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-1131, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13;  | ||
97-1167, eff. 6-1-13; 98-63, eff. 7-9-13; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 395. The Firearm Concealed Carry Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 40 as follows:
 | ||
 (430 ILCS 66/40)
 | ||
 Sec. 40. Non-resident license applications.  | ||
 (a) For the purposes of this Section, "non-resident" means  | ||
a person who has not resided within this State for more than 30  | ||
days and resides in another state or territory. | ||
 (b) The Department shall by rule allow for non-resident  | ||
license applications from any state or territory of the United  | ||
States with laws related to firearm ownership, possession, and  | ||
carrying, that are substantially similar to the requirements to  | ||
obtain a license under this Act. | ||
 (c) A resident of a state or territory approved by the  | ||
Department under subsection (b) of this Section may apply for a  | ||
non-resident license. The applicant shall apply to the  | ||
Department and must meet all of the qualifications established  | ||
in Section 25 of this Act, except for the Illinois residency  | ||
requirement in item (xiv) of paragraph (2) of subsection (a) of  | ||
Section 4 of the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act. The  | ||
applicant shall submit: | ||
  (1) the application and documentation required under  | ||
 Section 30 of this Act and the applicable fee; | ||
  (2) a notarized document stating that the applicant: | ||
   (A) is eligible under federal law and the laws of  | ||
 his or her state or territory of residence to own or  | ||
 possess a firearm; | ||
   (B) if applicable, has a license or permit to carry  | ||
 a firearm or concealed firearm issued by his or her  | ||
 state or territory of residence and attach a copy of  | ||
 the license or permit to the application; | ||
   (C) understands Illinois laws pertaining to the  | ||
 possession and transport of firearms; , and | ||
   (D) acknowledges that the applicant is subject to  | ||
 the jurisdiction of the Department and Illinois courts  | ||
 for any violation of this Act; and | ||
  (3) a photocopy of any certificates or other evidence  | ||
 of compliance with the training requirements under Section  | ||
 75 of this Act; and | ||
  (4) a head and shoulder color photograph in a size  | ||
 specified by the Department taken within the 30 days  | ||
 preceding the date of the application. | ||
 (d) In lieu of an Illinois driver's license or Illinois  | ||
identification card, a non-resident applicant shall provide  | ||
similar documentation from his or her state or territory of  | ||
residence. In lieu of a valid Firearm Owner's Identification  | ||
Card, the applicant shall submit documentation and information  | ||
required by the Department to obtain a Firearm Owner's  | ||
Identification Card, including an affidavit that the  | ||
non-resident meets the mental health standards to obtain a  | ||
firearm under Illinois law, and the Department shall ensure  | ||
that the applicant would meet the eligibility criteria to  | ||
obtain a Firearm Owner's Identification card if he or she was a  | ||
resident of this State. | ||
 (e) Nothing in this Act shall prohibit a non-resident from  | ||
transporting a concealed firearm within his or her vehicle in  | ||
Illinois, if the concealed firearm remains within his or her  | ||
vehicle and the non-resident: | ||
  (1) is not prohibited from owning or possessing a  | ||
 firearm under federal law; | ||
  (2) is eligible to carry a firearm in public under the  | ||
 laws of his or her state or territory of residence, as
 | ||
 evidenced by the possession of a concealed carry license or  | ||
 permit issued by his or her state of residence, if
 | ||
 applicable; and | ||
  (3) is not in possession of a license under this Act. | ||
 If the non-resident leaves his or her vehicle unattended,  | ||
he or she shall store the firearm within a locked vehicle or  | ||
locked container within the vehicle in accordance with  | ||
subsection (b) of Section 65 of this Act.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-63, eff. 7-9-13; 98-600, eff. 12-6-13; revised  | ||
12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 400. The Amusement Ride and Attraction Safety Act  | ||
is amended by changing Section 2-12 as follows:
 | ||
 (430 ILCS 85/2-12) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4062)
 | ||
 Sec. 2-12. Order for cessation of operation of amusement  | ||
ride or
attraction. | ||
 (a) The Department of Labor
may order, in writing, a  | ||
temporary and immediate cessation of operation of
any amusement  | ||
ride or amusement attraction if it:
 | ||
  (1) it has been determined
after
inspection to be  | ||
 hazardous or unsafe;
 | ||
  (2) it is in operation before the Director
has issued a  | ||
 permit to operate such equipment; or
 | ||
  (3) the owner or operator is not in compliance with the  | ||
 insurance
requirements contained in
Section 2-14 of this  | ||
 Act and any rules or regulations adopted hereunder.
 | ||
 (b) Operation of the
amusement ride or
amusement attraction  | ||
shall not resume until:
 | ||
  (1) the unsafe or hazardous
condition is corrected to  | ||
 the satisfaction of the Director or such inspector;
 | ||
  (2) the Director has issued a permit to operate such  | ||
 equipment; or
 | ||
  (3) the
owner or operator is in compliance with the  | ||
 insurance requirements contained in
Section 2-14 of this  | ||
 Act and any rules or regulations adopted hereunder,  | ||
 respectively. | ||
 (c) The Department shall notify the owner or operator in  | ||
writing of the grounds for the cessation of operation of the  | ||
amusement ride or attraction and of the conditions in need of  | ||
correction at the time the order for cessation is issued. | ||
 (d) The owner or operator may appeal an order of cessation  | ||
by filing a request for a hearing. The Department shall afford  | ||
the owner or operator 10 working days after the date of the  | ||
notice to request a hearing. Upon written request for hearing,  | ||
the Department shall schedule a formal administrative hearing  | ||
in compliance with Article 10 of the Illinois Administrative  | ||
Procedure Act and pursuant to the provisions of the  | ||
Department's rules of procedure in administrative hearings,  | ||
except that formal discovery, such as production requests,  | ||
interrogatories, requests to admit, and depositions will not be  | ||
allowed. The parties shall exchange documents and witness lists  | ||
prior to hearing and may request third party subpoenas to be  | ||
issued. | ||
 (e) The final determination by the Department of Labor  | ||
shall be rendered within 5 working days after the conclusion of  | ||
the hearing. | ||
 (f) The provisions of the Administrative Review Law shall  | ||
apply to and govern all proceedings for the judicial review of  | ||
a final determination under this Section. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-541, eff. 8-23-13; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14;  | ||
revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 405. The Illinois Modular Dwelling and Mobile  | ||
Structure Safety Act is amended by changing Section 2 as  | ||
follows:
 | ||
 (430 ILCS 115/2) (from Ch. 67 1/2, par. 502)
 | ||
 Sec. 2. 
Unless clearly indicated otherwise by the context,  | ||
the
following words and terms when used in this Act, for the  | ||
purpose of this
Act, shall have the following meanings:
 | ||
 (a) (Blank) a manufactured home as defined in subdivision  | ||
(53) of Section 9-102 of the Uniform Commercial Code. "Mobile  | ||
home" means a factory-assembled, completely integrated  | ||
structure, constructed on or before June 30, 1976, designed for  | ||
permanent habitation, with a permanent chassis, and so  | ||
constructed as to permit its transport, on wheels temporarily  | ||
or permanently attached to its frame, that is a movable or  | ||
portable unit that is constructed to be towed on its own  | ||
chassis (comprised of frame and wheels) from the place of its  | ||
construction to the location, or subsequent locations, at which  | ||
it is connected to utilities for year-round occupancy for use  | ||
as a permanent habitation, and designed and situated so as to  | ||
permit its occupancy as a dwelling place for one or more  | ||
persons. terms "manufactured home" and "mobile home" otherwise  | ||
meeting their respective definitions terms "mobile home" and  | ||
"manufactured home" exclude.
 | ||
 (b) "Person" means any individual, group of individuals,  | ||
association, trust, partnership, limited liability company,  | ||
corporation, person doing business under an assumed name,  | ||
county, municipality, the State of Illinois, or any political  | ||
subdivision or department thereof, or any other entity.
 | ||
 (c) "Manufacturer" means any person who manufactures  | ||
mobile structures or modular dwellings
at the place or places,  | ||
either on or away from the
building site, at which machinery,  | ||
equipment, and other capital goods are
assembled and operated  | ||
for the purpose of making, fabricating, forming,
or assembling  | ||
mobile structures or modular dwellings.
 | ||
 (d) "Department" means the Department of Public Health.
 | ||
 (e) "Director" means the Director of the Department of  | ||
Public
Health.
 | ||
 (f) (Blank).
 | ||
 (g) "Codes" means the safety codes for modular dwellings  | ||
and
mobile structures adopted by the Department and is  | ||
synonymous with "rules". The Codes shall contain the
standards  | ||
and requirements for modular dwellings and mobile structures so
 | ||
that adequate performance for the intended use is made the test  | ||
of
acceptability. The Code of Standards shall permit the use of  | ||
new technology, techniques, methods and materials, for both  | ||
modular dwellings
and mobile structures, consistent with  | ||
recognized and
accepted codes and standards developed by the  | ||
International Code Council (ICC) or by the organizations that  | ||
formed the ICC in 1994, the National Fire Protection
 | ||
Association, the International Association of Plumbing and  | ||
Mechanical
Officials, the American National Standards  | ||
Institute, and the Illinois State
Plumbing Code.
 | ||
 (h) "Seal" means a device or insignia issued by the  | ||
Department to be
displayed on the exterior of the mobile  | ||
structure or the interior of a modular dwelling
unit to  | ||
evidence compliance with the applicable safety code.
 | ||
 (i) "Modular dwelling" means a
building assembly or system  | ||
of building sub-assemblies, designed for
habitation as a  | ||
dwelling for one or more persons, including the
necessary  | ||
electrical, plumbing, heating, ventilating and other service
 | ||
systems, which is of closed construction and which is made or
 | ||
assembled by a manufacturer, on or off the building site, for
 | ||
installation, or assembly and installation, on the building  | ||
site, installed and set up according to the manufacturer's  | ||
instructions on an approved foundation and support system. The  | ||
construction of modular dwelling units located in Illinois is  | ||
regulated by the Illinois Department of Public Health.
 | ||
 (j) "Closed construction" is any building, component,  | ||
assembly or
system manufactured in such a manner that all  | ||
portions cannot readily be
inspected at the installation site  | ||
without disassembly, damage to, or
destruction thereof.
 | ||
 (k) (Blank).
 | ||
 (l) "Approved foundation and support system" means, for a  | ||
modular dwelling unit, a closed perimeter formation
consisting  | ||
of materials such as concrete, mortared concrete block,
 | ||
mortared brick, steel, or treated lumber extending into the  | ||
ground below the frost line which
shall include, but not  | ||
necessarily be limited to, cellars, basements, or
crawl spaces,  | ||
and does include the use of piers supporting the marriage wall  | ||
of the home that extend below the frost line.
 | ||
 (m) "Code compliance certificate" means the certificate  | ||
provided by
the manufacturer to the Department that warrants  | ||
that the modular dwelling unit or mobile structure complies  | ||
with the applicable code.
 | ||
 (n) "Mobile structure" means a movable or portable unit,  | ||
which, when assembled, is 8 feet or more in width and is 32  | ||
body feet in length, constructed to be towed on its own chassis  | ||
(comprised of frame and wheels), and designed for occupancy  | ||
with or without a permanent foundation. "Mobile structure"  | ||
includes units designed to be used for multi-family  | ||
residential, commercial, educational, or industrial purposes,  | ||
excluding, however, recreational vehicles and single family  | ||
residences.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-749, eff. 7-16-14; 98-959, eff. 8-15-14;  | ||
revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 Section 410. The Illinois Fertilizer Act of 1961 is amended  | ||
by changing Sections 4 and 20 as follows:
 | ||
 (505 ILCS 80/4) (from Ch. 5, par. 55.4)
 | ||
 Sec. 4. License and product registration. 
 | ||
 (a) Each brand and grade of fertilizer shall be registered  | ||
by the entity whose name appears upon the label
before being  | ||
distributed in this State. The application for registration
 | ||
shall be submitted with a label or facsimile of same to the  | ||
Director on
forms furnished by the Director, and shall be  | ||
accompanied by a fee of $20 per
grade within a brand. Upon  | ||
approval by the Director a copy of the
registration shall be  | ||
furnished to the applicant. All registrations expire
on  | ||
December 31 of each year.
 | ||
 The application shall include the following information:
 | ||
  (1) The net weight. 
 | ||
  (2) The brand and grade. 
 | ||
  (3) The guaranteed analysis. 
 | ||
  (4) The name and address of the registrant.
 | ||
 (a-5) No entity whose name appears on the label shall  | ||
distribute a fertilizer in the State unless the entity has  | ||
secured a license under this Act on forms provided by the  | ||
Director. The license application shall be accompanied by a fee  | ||
of $100. Entities that store anhydrous ammonia as a fertilizer,  | ||
store bulk fertilizer, or custom blend a fertilizer at more  | ||
than one site under the same entity's name shall list any and  | ||
all additional sites with a complete address for each site and  | ||
remit a license fee of $50 for each site identified. Entities  | ||
performing lawn care applications for hire are exempt from  | ||
obtaining a license under this Act. All licenses expire on  | ||
December 31 of each year.  | ||
 (b) A distributor shall not be required to register any  | ||
brand of
fertilizer or a custom blend which is already  | ||
registered under this
Act by another entity.
 | ||
 (c) The plant nutrient content of each and every fertilizer
 | ||
must remain uniform for the period of registration and, in no  | ||
case, shall
the percentage of any guaranteed plant nutrient  | ||
element be changed in such
a manner that the crop-producing  | ||
quality of the fertilizer is
lowered.
 | ||
 (d) (Blank).
 | ||
 (e) A custom blend, as defined in Section 3, prepared for  | ||
one consumer or end user
shall not be co-mingled with the  | ||
custom blended fertilizer prepared for
another consumer or end  | ||
user.
 | ||
 (f) All fees collected pursuant to this Section shall be  | ||
paid to the Fertilizer Control Fund for activities related to  | ||
the administration and enforcement of this Act.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-960, eff. 8-15-12; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14;  | ||
revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (505 ILCS 80/20) (from Ch. 5, par. 55.20)
 | ||
 Sec. 20. Administrative hearings; notice. Any entity so  | ||
notified of violating this Act or its rules, shall be given the  | ||
opportunity to be heard as may be prescribed by the Director.  | ||
When an administrative hearing is held, the hearing officer,  | ||
upon determination of a violation of this Act, shall levy and  | ||
the Department shall collect administrative penalties in  | ||
addition to any initial penalty levied by this Act as follows: | ||
  (1) A penalty of $1,000 shall be imposed for: | ||
   (A) neglect or refusal by any entity, after notice  | ||
 in writing, to comply with provisions of this Act or  | ||
 its rules or any lawful order of the Director; | ||
   (B) every sale, disposal, or distribution of a  | ||
 fertilizer that is under a stop-sale order; or | ||
   (C) concealing facts or conditions, impeding,  | ||
 obstructing, hindering, or otherwise preventing or  | ||
 attempting to prevent the Director, or his or her duly  | ||
 authorized agent, in the performance of his or her duty  | ||
 in connection with the provisions of this Act. | ||
  (2) A penalty of $500 shall be imposed for the  | ||
 following violations: | ||
   (A) distribution of a fertilizer that is  | ||
 misbranded or adulterated; | ||
   (B) distribution of a fertilizer that does not have  | ||
 an accompanying label attached or displayed; | ||
   (C) failure to comply with any provisions of this  | ||
 Act or its rules other than described under this  | ||
 Section. | ||
 The Department, over the signature of the Director, is  | ||
authorized to issue subpoenas and bring before the Department  | ||
any entity in this State to take testimony orally, by  | ||
deposition, or by exhibit, in the same manner prescribed by law  | ||
in judicial proceedings or civil cases in the circuit courts of  | ||
this State. The Director is authorized to issue subpoenas duces  | ||
tecum for records relating to a fertilizer distributor's or  | ||
registrant's business.  | ||
 When a fertilizer-soil amendment combination labeled in  | ||
accordance with 8 Ill. Adm. Code 211.40 Subpart (b) is subject  | ||
to penalties, the larger penalty shall be assessed.  | ||
 All penalties collected by the Department under this  | ||
Section shall be deposited into the Fertilizer Control Fund.  | ||
Any penalty not paid within 60 days after receiving the notice  | ||
from the Department shall be submitted to the Attorney  | ||
General's office for collection.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-960, eff. 8-15-12; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 415. The Illinois Seed Law is amended by changing  | ||
Section 4.1 as follows:
 | ||
 (505 ILCS 110/4.1) (from Ch. 5, par. 404.1)
 | ||
 Sec. 4.1. 
All seeds named and treated as defined in this  | ||
Act (for which a separate
label may be used) must be labeled  | ||
with:
 | ||
  (1) A word or statement indicating that the seed has  | ||
 been treated.
 | ||
  (2) The commonly accepted, coined, chemical or  | ||
 abbreviated chemical
(generic) name of the applied  | ||
 substance or description of the process used.
 | ||
  (3) If the substance in the amount present with the  | ||
 seed is harmful to
human or other vertebrate animals, a  | ||
 caution statement such as "Do not use
for food, feed, oil  | ||
 purposes" or otherwise as required by the Uniform
Hazardous  | ||
 Substances Substance Act of Illinois. The caution for toxic
 | ||
 substances shall be a poison statement or symbol.
 | ||
  (4) If the seed is treated with an inoculant, the date  | ||
 beyond which the
inoculant is not to be considered  | ||
 effective (date of expiration).
 | ||
  (5) Require symbol statement and the appropriate  | ||
 Environmental
Protection Agency signal word -- DANGER,  | ||
 CAUTION OR WARNING.
 | ||
  (6) All treated seeds are required to be stained so  | ||
 that they are easily
distinguished by the ordinary observer  | ||
 when examined regardless of the
proportion of treated to  | ||
 untreated seeds. The color used on treated seed
shall  | ||
 persist as long as seed bear pesticide residue.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 85-717; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 420. The Illinois Bovine Brucellosis Eradication  | ||
Act is amended by changing Section 1 as follows:
 | ||
 (510 ILCS 30/1) (from Ch. 8, par. 134)
 | ||
 Sec. 1. 
As used in this Act, unless the context otherwise  | ||
requires, words and
phrases have the meanings ascribed to them  | ||
in the Sections following this Section and preceding Section 2  | ||
Sections 1.1 to 1.12,
inclusive.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 78-818; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 425. The Herptiles-Herps Act is amended by changing  | ||
Section 105-95 as follows:
 | ||
 (510 ILCS 68/105-95)
 | ||
 Sec. 105-95. Financial value of herptiles.  | ||
 (a) For purposes of this Section, the financial value of  | ||
all reptiles and amphibians described under this Act taken,  | ||
possessed, or used in violation of this Act, whether in whole  | ||
or in part, is as follows: | ||
  (1) for processed turtle parts, $8 for each pound or  | ||
 fraction of a pound; for each non-processed turtle, $15 per  | ||
 whole turtle or fair market value, whichever is greater;
 | ||
  (2) for frogs, toads, salamanders, lizards, and  | ||
 snakes, $5 per herptile or fair market value, whichever is  | ||
 greater, in whole or in part, unless specified as a special  | ||
 use herptile; | ||
  (3) for any special use herptile, the value shall be no  | ||
 less than $250 per special use herptile or fair market  | ||
 value, whichever is greater;  | ||
  (4) for any endangered or threatened herptile, the  | ||
 value shall be no less than $150 per endangered or  | ||
 threatened threatend herptile or fair market value,  | ||
 whichever is greater; and | ||
  (5) any person who, for profit or commercial purposes,  | ||
 knowingly captures or kills, possesses, offers for sale,  | ||
 sells, offers to barter, barters, offers to purchase,  | ||
 purchases, delivers for shipment, ships, exports, imports,  | ||
 causes to be shipped, exported, or imported, delivers for  | ||
 transportation, transports, or causes to be transported,  | ||
 carries or causes to be carried, or receives for shipment,  | ||
 transportation, carriage, or export any reptile or  | ||
 amphibian life, in part or in whole, of any of the reptiles  | ||
 and amphibians protected by this Act, and that reptile or  | ||
 amphibian life, in whole or in part, is valued at or in  | ||
 excess of a total of $300 or fair market value, whichever  | ||
 is greater, as per value specified in paragraphs (1), (2),  | ||
 (3), and (4) of this subsection commits a Class 3 felony.
 | ||
 (b) The trier of fact may infer that a person "knowingly  | ||
possesses" a reptile or amphibian, in whole or in part,  | ||
captured or killed in violation of this Act, valued at or in  | ||
excess of $600, as per value specified in paragraphs (1), (2),  | ||
(3), and (4) of subsection (a) of this Section.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-752, eff. 1-1-15; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 430. The Humane Care for Animals Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 2 as follows:
 | ||
 (510 ILCS 70/2) (from Ch. 8, par. 702)
 | ||
 Sec. 2. 
As used in this Act, unless the context otherwise  | ||
requires, the terms
specified in the Sections following this  | ||
Section and preceding Section 3 Sections 2.01 through 2.07 have  | ||
the meanings ascribed to them
in those Sections.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 78-905; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 435. The Illinois Swine Brucellosis Eradication  | ||
Act is amended by changing Section 1 as follows:
 | ||
 (510 ILCS 95/1) (from Ch. 8, par. 148f)
 | ||
 Sec. 1. 
As used in this Act, unless the context otherwise  | ||
requires, words
and phrases have the meanings ascribed to them  | ||
in the Sections following this Section and preceding Section 2  | ||
Sections 1.1 to 1.7,
inclusive.
 | ||
(Source: Laws 1959, p. 2259; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 440. The Fish and Aquatic Life Code is amended by  | ||
changing Sections 1-20, 15-155, and 20-55 as follows:
 | ||
 (515 ILCS 5/1-20) (from Ch. 56, par. 1-20)
 | ||
 Sec. 1-20. Aquatic life. "Aquatic life" means all
fish,  | ||
mollusks, crustaceans, algae, aquatic
plants, aquatic  | ||
invertebrates, and any other aquatic animals or plants that the  | ||
Department identifies in rules adopted after consultation with  | ||
biologists, zoologists, or other wildlife experts. "Aquatic  | ||
life" does not mean any herptiles that are found in the  | ||
Herptiles-Herps Act.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-752, eff. 1-1-15; 98-771, eff. 1-1-15; revised  | ||
10-2-14.)
 | ||
 (515 ILCS 5/15-155) | ||
 Sec. 15-155. Watercraft used as a primary collection device  | ||
for commercial fishes. Any person licensed as a commercial  | ||
fisherman who wishes to use his or her their watercraft as a  | ||
primary collection device for commercial fishes must first  | ||
obtain a commercial watercraft device tag. All watercraft used  | ||
as a primary collection device must be legally licensed by the  | ||
State and be in compliance with all Coast Guard boating  | ||
regulations. This Section does not apply to any person taking  | ||
Asian Carp by the aid of a boat for non-commercial purposes.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-336, eff. 1-1-14; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (515 ILCS 5/20-55) (from Ch. 56, par. 20-55)
 | ||
 Sec. 20-55. License fees for non-residents. Fees for  | ||
licenses for
non-residents of the State of Illinois are as  | ||
follows:
 | ||
 (a) For sport fishing devices as defined by Section
10-95,  | ||
or spearing
devices as defined in Section 10-110, non-residents  | ||
age 16 or older shall be
charged $31 for a fishing license to  | ||
fish. For sport fishing devices as defined
by Section 10-95, or  | ||
spearing devices as defined in Section 10-110, for a
period not  | ||
to exceed 3 consecutive days fishing in the State of Illinois  | ||
the
fee is $15.00.
 | ||
 For sport fishing devices as defined in Section 10-95,
or  | ||
spearing
devices as defined in Section 10-110, for 24 hours of  | ||
fishing the fee is $10. This license does not exempt the  | ||
licensee from
the salmon or inland trout stamp requirement.
 | ||
 (b) All non-residents before using any commercial fishing  | ||
device
shall obtain a non-resident commercial fishing license,  | ||
the fee for
which shall be $300, and a non-resident fishing  | ||
license licensing. Each and every commercial device shall be
 | ||
licensed by a non-resident commercial fisherman as follows:
 | ||
  (1) For each 100 lineal yards, or fraction thereof, of  | ||
 seine
(excluding minnow seines) the fee is $36.
 | ||
  (2) For each device to fish with a 100 hook trot line
 | ||
 device,
basket trap, hoop net, or dip net the fee is $6.
 | ||
  (3) For each 100 lineal yards, or fraction thereof, of  | ||
 trammel net
the fee is $36.
 | ||
  (4) For each 100 lineal yards, or fraction thereof, of  | ||
 gill net
the fee is $36.
 | ||
 All persons required to have and failing to have the  | ||
license provided
for in subsection (a) of this Section shall be  | ||
fined under Section 20-35
of this Code. Each person required to  | ||
have and failing to have the
licenses required under subsection  | ||
(b) of this Section shall be guilty of a
Class B misdemeanor.
 | ||
 All licenses provided for in this Section shall expire on  | ||
March 31 of
each year; except that the 24-hour license for  | ||
sport fishing devices or
spearing devices shall
expire 24 hours  | ||
after the effective date and time listed on the face of the
 | ||
license and licenses for sport fishing devices
or spearing
 | ||
devices for a period not to exceed 3 consecutive days fishing  | ||
in the
State of Illinois as provided in subsection (a) of this  | ||
Section shall
expire at midnight on the tenth day after issued,  | ||
not counting the day
issued.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 96-831, eff. 1-1-10; 97-1136, eff. 1-1-13;  | ||
revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 445. The Wildlife Code is amended by changing  | ||
Sections 2.2b, 2.5, and 3.1-9 as follows:
 | ||
 (520 ILCS 5/2.2b) | ||
 Sec. 2.2b. Imminent threat; nuisance permits. | ||
 (a) It shall not be illegal for an owner or tenant of land,  | ||
or his or her their designated agent, to immediately take on  | ||
his or her property a gray wolf, Canis lupus; American black  | ||
bear, Ursus americanus; or cougar, Puma concolor if, at any  | ||
time, the gray wolf, American black bear, or cougar is stalking  | ||
or , causing an imminent threat, or there is a reasonable  | ||
expectation that it causes an imminent threat of physical harm  | ||
or death to a human, livestock, or domestic animals or harm to  | ||
structures or other property on the owner's or tenant's land. | ||
 (b) The Department may grant a nuisance permit to the owner  | ||
or tenant of land, or his or her their designated agent, for  | ||
the taking of a gray wolf, American black bear, or cougar that  | ||
is causing a threat to an owner or tenant of land or his or her  | ||
property that is not an immediate threat under subsection (a)  | ||
of this Section.  | ||
 (c) The Department shall adopt rules to implement this  | ||
Section.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1033, eff. 1-1-15; revised 11-26-14.)
 | ||
 (520 ILCS 5/2.5) | ||
 Sec. 2.5. Crossbow conditions. A person may use a crossbow  | ||
if one or more of the following conditions are met: | ||
  (1) the user is a person age 62 and older; | ||
  (2) the user is a handicapped person to whom the  | ||
 Director has issued a permit to use a crossbow, as provided  | ||
 by administrative rule; or | ||
  (3) the date of using the crossbow is during the period  | ||
 of the second Monday following the Thanksgiving holiday  | ||
 through the last day of the archery deer hunting season  | ||
 (both inclusive) set annually by the Director.  | ||
 As used in this Section, "handicapped person" means a  | ||
person who has a physical impairment due to injury or disease,  | ||
congenital or acquired, which renders the person them so  | ||
severely disabled as to be unable to use a longbow, recurve  | ||
bow, or compound bow. Permits must be issued only after the  | ||
receipt of a physician's statement confirming the applicant is  | ||
handicapped as defined above.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-907, eff. 8-7-12; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (520 ILCS 5/3.1-9) | ||
 Sec. 3.1-9. Youth Hunting License. Any resident youth age  | ||
16 and under may apply to the Department for a Youth Hunting  | ||
License, which extends limited hunting privileges. The Youth  | ||
Hunting License shall be a renewable license that shall expire  | ||
on the March 31 following the date of issuance. | ||
 For youth age 16 and under, the Youth Hunting License shall  | ||
entitle the licensee to hunt while supervised by a parent,  | ||
grandparent, or guardian who is 21 years of age or older and  | ||
has a valid Illinois hunting license. Possession of a Youth  | ||
Hunting License shall serve in lieu of a valid hunting license,  | ||
but does not exempt the licensee from compliance with the  | ||
requirements of this Code and any rules adopted under this  | ||
Code. | ||
 A youth licensed under this Section shall not hunt or carry  | ||
a hunting device, including, but not limited to, a firearm, bow  | ||
and arrow, or crossbow unless the youth is accompanied by and  | ||
under the close personal supervision of a parent, grandparent,  | ||
or guardian who is 21 years of age or older and has a valid  | ||
Illinois hunting license. | ||
 At age 17 years or when the youth chooses to hunt by  | ||
himself or herself, he or she is themselves, they are required  | ||
to successfully complete a hunter safety course approved by the  | ||
Department prior to being able to obtain a full hunting license  | ||
and subsequently hunt by himself or herself themselves. | ||
 In order to be approved for the Youth Hunting License, the  | ||
applicant must request a Youth Hunting License from the  | ||
Department and submit a $7 fee, which shall be separate from  | ||
and additional to any other stamp, permit, tag, or license fee  | ||
that may be required for hunting under this Code. The  | ||
Department shall adopt rules for the administration of the  | ||
program, but shall not require any certificate of competency or  | ||
other hunting education as a condition of the Youth Hunting  | ||
License.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-620, eff. 1-7-14; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 450. The Railroad Police Act is amended by changing  | ||
Section 2 as follows:
 | ||
 (610 ILCS 80/2) (from Ch. 114, par. 98)
 | ||
 Sec. 2. Conductors of all railroad trains, and the captain  | ||
or master of any
boat carrying passengers within the  | ||
jurisdiction of this State state, are is vested
with police  | ||
powers while on duty on their respective trains and boats, and
 | ||
may wear an appropriate badge indicative of this authority.
 | ||
 In the policing of its properties any registered rail  | ||
carrier, as defined in Section 18c-7201 of the Illinois Vehicle  | ||
Code, may provide for the
appointment and maintenance of a  | ||
police force to aid and supplement the police forces of any  | ||
municipality
in the protection of its property and the  | ||
protection of the persons and
property of its passengers and  | ||
employees, or in furtherance of
the purposes for which the  | ||
railroad was organized. While engaged in the
conduct of their  | ||
employment, the members of the railroad police force have
and  | ||
may exercise the same police powers conferred upon any peace  | ||
officer employed by a law enforcement agency of this State,  | ||
including the authority to issue administrative citations in  | ||
accordance with the provisions of county or municipal  | ||
ordinances.
 | ||
 Any registered rail carrier that appoints and maintains a  | ||
police force shall comply with the following requirements: | ||
  (1) Establish an internal policy that includes  | ||
 procedures to ensure objective oversight in addressing  | ||
 allegations of abuse of authority or other misconduct on  | ||
 the part of its police officers. | ||
  (2) Adopt appropriate policies and guidelines for  | ||
 employee investigations by police officers. These policies  | ||
 and guidelines shall provide for initiating employee  | ||
 investigations only under the following conditions: | ||
   (A) There is reason to believe criminal misconduct  | ||
 has occurred. | ||
   (B) In response to an employee accident. | ||
   (C) There is reason to believe that the interview  | ||
 of an employee could result in workplace violence. | ||
   (D) There is a legitimate concern for the personal  | ||
 safety of one or more employees. | ||
  These policies and guidelines shall provide for the  | ||
 right of an employee to request a representative to be  | ||
 present during any interview concerning a non-criminal  | ||
 matter. | ||
  (3) File copies of the policies and guidelines adopted  | ||
 under paragraphs (1) and (2) with the Illinois Law  | ||
 Enforcement Training Standards Board, which shall make  | ||
 them available for public inspection. The Board shall  | ||
 review the policies and guidelines, and approve them if  | ||
 they comply with the Act.  | ||
  (4) Appeal of a rail carrier's decision.
A person  | ||
 adversely affected or aggrieved by a decision of a rail  | ||
 carrier's internal investigation under this Act may appeal  | ||
 the decision to the Illinois State Police. The appeal shall  | ||
 be filed no later than 90 days after the issuance of the  | ||
 decision. The State Police shall review the depth,  | ||
 completeness, and objectivity of the rail carrier's  | ||
 investigation, and may conduct its own investigation of the  | ||
 complaint. The State Police may uphold, overturn, or modify  | ||
 the rail carrier's decision by filing a report of its  | ||
 findings and recommendations with the Illinois Commerce  | ||
 Commission. Consistent with authority under Chapter 18C of  | ||
 the Illinois Vehicle Code and the Commission rules of  | ||
 practice, the Commission shall have the power to conduct  | ||
 evidentiary hearings, make findings, and issue and enforce  | ||
 orders, including sanctions under Section 18c-1704 of the  | ||
 Illinois Vehicle Code. | ||
 Rulemaking authority to implement this amendatory Act of  | ||
the 95th General Assembly, if any, is conditioned on the rules  | ||
being adopted in accordance with all provisions of the Illinois  | ||
Administrative Procedure Act and all rules and procedures of  | ||
the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules; any purported rule  | ||
not so adopted, for whatever reason, is unauthorized.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-791, eff. 7-25-14; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 455. The Rivers, Lakes, and Streams Act is amended  | ||
by changing Section 18j as follows:
 | ||
 (615 ILCS 5/18j) | ||
 Sec. 18j. ESDA critical facility evacuation plans. Any  | ||
critical facility that gives shelter to a person who would be  | ||
unable to evacuate without assistance during a flooding event,  | ||
and that is located in an area deemed by operation of law not  | ||
to be within the 100-year floodplain because the area in which  | ||
the critical facility is located lies within an area protected  | ||
by a federal levee and is located in a flood prevention  | ||
district established in accordance with the Flood Prevention  | ||
District Act shall develop an evacuation plan and certify to  | ||
the Emergency Services and Disaster Agency (ESDA), as defined  | ||
by Section 4 of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act,  | ||
on a form provided by the ESDA, that it has developed an  | ||
evacuation plan which the critical facility has or will  | ||
implement prior to or concurrent with occupancy of the facility  | ||
to evacuate persons who need assistance evacuating the facility  | ||
and the flooded area.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 96-1395, eff. 7-29-10; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 460. The Public-Private Agreements for the South  | ||
Suburban Airport Act is amended by changing Section 2-15 as  | ||
follows:
 | ||
 (620 ILCS 75/2-15)
 | ||
 Sec. 2-15. General airport powers.
 | ||
 (a) The Department has the power to plan, develop, secure  | ||
permits, licenses, and approvals for, acquire, develop,  | ||
construct, equip, own, and operate the South Suburban Airport.  | ||
The Department also has the power to own, operate, acquire  | ||
facilities for, construct, improve, repair, maintain,  | ||
renovate, and expand the South Suburban Airport, including any  | ||
facilities located on the site of the South Suburban Airport  | ||
for use by any individual or entity other than the Department.  | ||
The development of the South Suburban Airport shall also  | ||
include all land, highways, waterways, mass transit  | ||
facilities, and other infrastructure that, in the  | ||
determination of the Department, are necessary or appropriate  | ||
in connection with the development or operation of the South  | ||
Suburban Airport. The development of the South Suburban Airport  | ||
also includes acquisition and development of any land or  | ||
facilities for (i) relocation of persons, including providing  | ||
replacement housing or facilities for persons and entities  | ||
displaced by that development, (ii) protecting or reclaiming  | ||
the environment with respect to the South Suburban Airport,  | ||
(iii) providing substitute or replacement property or  | ||
facilities, including, without limitation, for areas of  | ||
recreation, conservation, open space, and wetlands, (iv)  | ||
providing navigational aids, or (v) utilities to serve the  | ||
airport, whether or not located on the site of the South  | ||
Suburban Airport. | ||
 (b) The Department shall have the authority to undertake  | ||
and complete all ongoing projects related to the South Suburban  | ||
Airport, including the South Suburban Airport Master Plan, and  | ||
assisting the Federal Aviation Administration in preparing and  | ||
approving the Environmental Impact Statement and Record of  | ||
Decision.  | ||
 (c) The Department has the power to enter into all  | ||
contracts useful for carrying out its purposes and powers,  | ||
including, without limitation, public-private agreements  | ||
pursuant to the provisions of this Act, ; leases of any of its  | ||
property or facilities, use agreements with airlines or other  | ||
airport users relating to the South Suburban Airport,  | ||
agreements with South Suburban Airport concessionaires, and  | ||
franchise agreements for use of or access to South Suburban  | ||
Airport facilities. | ||
 (d) The Department has the power to apply to the proper  | ||
authorities of the United States, the State of Illinois, and  | ||
other governmental entities, as permitted or authorized by  | ||
applicable law, to obtain any licenses, approvals, or permits  | ||
reasonably necessary to achieve the purposes of this Act. All  | ||
applications to the Federal Aviation Administration, or any  | ||
successor agency, shall be made by the Department. | ||
 (e) The Department may take all steps consistent with  | ||
applicable laws to maximize funding for the costs of the South  | ||
Suburban Airport from grants by the Federal Aviation  | ||
Administration or any successor agency, or any other federal  | ||
governmental agency. | ||
 (f) The Department has the power to apply to the proper  | ||
authorities of the United States pursuant to appropriate law  | ||
for permission to establish, operate, maintain, and lease  | ||
foreign trade zones and sub-zones within the areas of the South  | ||
Suburban Airport and to establish, operate, maintain, and lease  | ||
foreign trade zones and sub-zones. | ||
 (g) The Department may publicize, advertise, and promote  | ||
the activities of the South Suburban Airport, including, to  | ||
make known the advantages, facilities, resources, products,  | ||
attractions, and attributes of the South Suburban Airport. | ||
 (h) The Department may, at any time, acquire any land, any  | ||
interests in land, other property, and interests in property  | ||
needed for the South Suburban Airport or necessary to carry out  | ||
the Department's powers and functions under this Act, including  | ||
by exercise of the power of eminent domain pursuant to Section  | ||
2-100 of this Act. The Department shall also have the power to  | ||
dispose of any such lands, interests, and property upon terms  | ||
it deems appropriate. | ||
 (i) The Department may adopt any reasonable rules for the
 | ||
administration of this Act in accordance with the
Illinois  | ||
Administrative Procedure Act.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-109, eff. 7-25-13; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 465. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by  | ||
changing Sections 3-102, 3-109, 3-400, 3-413, 3-701, 5-101,  | ||
5-102, 6-113, 7-311, 11-601, 11-709.2, 12-215, and 15-111 and  | ||
the heading of Chapter 11 of Article V as follows:
 | ||
 (625 ILCS 5/3-102) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 3-102)
 | ||
 Sec. 3-102. Exclusions. No certificate of title need be  | ||
obtained for:
 | ||
  1. a A vehicle owned by the State of Illinois; or a  | ||
 vehicle owned by the
United States unless it is registered  | ||
 in this State;
 | ||
  2. a A vehicle owned by a manufacturer or dealer and  | ||
 held for sale, even
though incidentally moved on the  | ||
 highway or used for purposes of testing or
demonstration,  | ||
 provided a dealer reassignment area is still available on  | ||
 the
manufacturer's certificate of origin or the Illinois  | ||
 title; or a vehicle used
by a manufacturer solely for  | ||
 testing;
 | ||
  3. a A vehicle owned by a non-resident of this State  | ||
 and not required by
law to be registered in this State;
 | ||
  4. a A motor vehicle regularly engaged in the  | ||
 interstate transportation of
persons or property for which  | ||
 a currently effective certificate of title
has been issued  | ||
 in another State;
 | ||
  5. a A vehicle moved solely by animal power;
 | ||
  6. an An implement of husbandry;
 | ||
  7. special Special mobile equipment;
 | ||
  8. an An apportionable trailer or an apportionable  | ||
 semitrailer registered in
the State prior to April 1,  | ||
 1998; .
 | ||
  9. a A manufactured home for which an affidavit of  | ||
 affixation has been recorded pursuant to the Conveyance and  | ||
 Encumbrance of Manufactured Homes as Real Property and  | ||
 Severance Act unless with respect to the same manufactured  | ||
 home there has been recorded an affidavit of severance  | ||
 pursuant to that Act.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-749, eff. 7-16-14; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (625 ILCS 5/3-109) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 3-109)
 | ||
 Sec. 3-109. Registration without certificate of title;  | ||
bond. If the Secretary of State is not satisfied as to the  | ||
ownership of the
vehicle, including, but not limited to, in the  | ||
case of a manufactured home, a circumstance in which the  | ||
manufactured home is covered by a Manufacturer's Statement of  | ||
Origin that the owner of the manufactured home, after diligent  | ||
search and inquiry, is unable to produce, or that there are no  | ||
undisclosed security interests in it, the
Secretary of State  | ||
may register the vehicle but shall:
 | ||
  (a) Withhold issuance of a certificate of title until  | ||
 the applicant
presents documents reasonably sufficient to  | ||
 satisfy the Secretary of
State as to the applicant's  | ||
 ownership of the vehicle and that there are
no undisclosed  | ||
 security interests in it;
 | ||
  (b) As a condition of issuing a certificate of title,  | ||
 require the
applicant to file with the Secretary of State a  | ||
 bond in the form
prescribed by the Secretary of State and  | ||
 executed by the applicant, and
either accompanied by the  | ||
 deposit of cash with the Secretary of State or
also  | ||
 executed by a person authorized to conduct a surety  | ||
 business in
this State. The bond shall be in an amount  | ||
 equal to one and one-half
times the value of the vehicle as  | ||
 determined by the Secretary of State
and conditioned to  | ||
 indemnify any prior owner and lienholder and any
subsequent  | ||
 purchaser of the vehicle or person acquiring any security
 | ||
 interest in it, and their respective successors in  | ||
 interest, against any
expense, loss or damage, including  | ||
 reasonable attorney's fees, by reason
of the issuance of  | ||
 the certificate of title of the vehicle or on account
of  | ||
 any defect in or undisclosed security interest upon the  | ||
 right, title
and interest of the applicant in and to the  | ||
 vehicle. Any such interested
person has a right of action  | ||
 to recover on the bond for any breach of
its conditions,  | ||
 but the aggregate liability of the surety to all persons
 | ||
 shall not exceed the amount of the bond. The bond, and any  | ||
 deposit
accompanying it, shall be returned at the end of 3  | ||
 three (3) years or
prior thereto if (i) the vehicle is no  | ||
 longer registered in this State and
the currently valid  | ||
 certificate of title is surrendered to the Secretary
of  | ||
 State or (ii), in the case of a certificate of title to a  | ||
 manufactured home, the currently valid certificate of  | ||
 title is surrendered to the Secretary of State in  | ||
 accordance with Section 3-116.2; , unless the Secretary of  | ||
 State has been notified of the
pendency of an action to  | ||
 recover on the bond; or
 | ||
  (b-5) Require
the applicant to file with the Secretary  | ||
 of State an application for a provisional title in
the form  | ||
 prescribed by the Secretary and executed
by the applicant,  | ||
 and accompanied by a $50 fee to be deposited in the  | ||
 CDLIS/AAMVAnet/NMVTIS Trust Fund. The Secretary shall  | ||
 designate by rule the documentation acceptable for an  | ||
 individual to apply for a provisional title. A provisional  | ||
 title shall be valid for 3 years and is nontransferable for  | ||
 the 3-year period. A provisional title shall be clearly  | ||
 marked and otherwise distinguished from a certificate of  | ||
 title. Three years after the issuance of a provisional  | ||
 title, the provisional title holder shall apply for the  | ||
 appropriate transferrable title in the applicant's name.  | ||
 If a claim of ownership for the vehicle is brought against  | ||
 a holder of a provisional title, then the provisional title  | ||
 holder shall apply for a bond under subsection (b) of this  | ||
 Section for the amount of time remaining on the provisional  | ||
 title. A provisional title holder or an individual who  | ||
 asserts a claim to the motor vehicle may petition a circuit  | ||
 court of competent jurisdiction for an order to determine  | ||
 the ownership of the vehicle. A provisional title shall not  | ||
 be available to individuals or entities that rebuild,  | ||
 repair, store, or tow vehicles or have a claim against the  | ||
 vehicle under the Labor and Storage Lien Act or the Labor  | ||
 and Storage Lien (Small Amount) Act.  | ||
  Security deposited as a bond hereunder shall be placed  | ||
 by the
Secretary of State in the custody of the State  | ||
 Treasurer.
 | ||
 (c) During July, annually, the Secretary shall compile a  | ||
list of all bonds
on deposit, pursuant to this Section, for  | ||
more than 3 years and concerning
which he has received no  | ||
notice as to the pendency of any judicial proceeding
that could  | ||
affect the disposition thereof. Thereupon, he shall promptly
 | ||
send a notice by certified mail to the last known address of  | ||
each depositor
advising him that his bond will be subject to  | ||
escheat to the State of Illinois
if not claimed within 30 days  | ||
after the mailing date of such notice. At
the expiration of  | ||
such time, the Secretary of State shall file with the
State  | ||
Treasurer an order directing the transfer of such deposit to  | ||
the Road
Fund in the State Treasury. Upon receipt of such  | ||
order, the State Treasurer
shall make such transfer, after  | ||
converting to cash any other type of security.
Thereafter any  | ||
person having a legal claim against such deposit may enforce
it  | ||
by appropriate proceedings in the Court of Claims subject to  | ||
the limitations
prescribed for such Court. At the expiration of  | ||
such limitation period
such deposit shall escheat to the State  | ||
of Illinois.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-749, eff. 7-16-14; 98-777, eff. 1-1-15;  | ||
revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 (625 ILCS 5/3-400) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 3-400)
 | ||
 Sec. 3-400. Definitions. Notwithstanding the definitions  | ||
definition set forth in
Chapter 1 of this Act, for the purposes  | ||
of this Article, the following
words shall have the meaning  | ||
ascribed to them as follows:
 | ||
 "Apportionable Fee" means any periodic recurring fee  | ||
required for
licensing or registering vehicles, such as, but  | ||
not limited to,
registration fees, license or weight fees.
 | ||
 "Apportionable Vehicle" means any vehicle, except  | ||
recreational
vehicles, vehicles displaying restricted plates,  | ||
city pickup and delivery
vehicles, buses used in transportation  | ||
of chartered parties, and government
owned vehicles that are  | ||
used or intended for use in 2 or more member
jurisdictions that  | ||
allocate or proportionally register vehicles, in a
fleet which  | ||
is used for the transportation of persons for hire or the
 | ||
transportation of property and which has a gross vehicle weight  | ||
in excess of
26,000 pounds; or has three or more axles  | ||
regardless of weight; or is used in
combination when the weight  | ||
of such combination exceeds 26,000 pounds gross
vehicle weight.  | ||
Vehicles, or combinations having a gross vehicle weight of
 | ||
26,000 pounds or less and two-axle vehicles may be  | ||
proportionally registered at
the option of such owner.
 | ||
 "Base Jurisdiction" means, for purposes of fleet  | ||
registration, the
jurisdiction where the registrant has an  | ||
established place of business,
where operational records of the  | ||
fleet are maintained and where mileage
is accrued by the fleet.  | ||
In case a registrant operates more than one
fleet, and  | ||
maintains records for each fleet in different places, the
"base  | ||
jurisdiction" for a fleet shall be the jurisdiction where an
 | ||
established place of business is maintained, where records of  | ||
the
operation of that fleet are maintained and where mileage is  | ||
accrued by
that fleet.
 | ||
 "Operational Records" means documents supporting miles  | ||
traveled in
each jurisdiction and total miles traveled, such as  | ||
fuel reports, trip
leases, and logs.
 | ||
 "Owner" means a Owner. A person who holds legal title of a  | ||
motor vehicle, or in the
event a motor vehicle is the subject  | ||
of an agreement for the conditional
sale or lease thereof with  | ||
the right of purchase upon performance of the
conditions stated  | ||
in the agreement and with an immediate right of
possession  | ||
vested in the conditional vendee or lessee with right of
 | ||
purchase, or in the event a mortgagor of such motor vehicle is  | ||
entitled
to possession, or in the event a lessee of such motor  | ||
vehicle is
entitled to possession or control, then such  | ||
conditional vendee or
lessee with right of purchase or  | ||
mortgagor or lessee is considered to be
the owner for the  | ||
purpose of this Act.
 | ||
 "Registration plate cover" means any tinted, colored,  | ||
painted, marked, clear, or illuminated object that is designed  | ||
to (i) cover any of the characters of a motor vehicle's
 | ||
registration plate; or (ii) distort a recorded image of any of  | ||
the characters
of a motor vehicle's registration plate recorded  | ||
by an automated enforcement system as defined in Section  | ||
11-208.6, 11-208.8, or 11-1201.1 of this Code or recorded by an  | ||
automated traffic control system as defined in Section 15 of  | ||
the Automated Traffic Control Systems in Highway Construction  | ||
or Maintenance Zones Act.  | ||
 "Rental Owner" means an owner principally engaged, with  | ||
respect to
one or more rental fleets, in renting to others or  | ||
offering for rental
the vehicles of such fleets, without  | ||
drivers.
 | ||
 "Restricted Plates" shall include, but is are not limited  | ||
to, dealer,
manufacturer, transporter, farm, repossessor, and  | ||
permanently mounted type
plates. Vehicles displaying any of  | ||
these type plates from a foreign
jurisdiction that is a member  | ||
of the International Registration Plan shall be
granted  | ||
reciprocity but shall be subject to the same limitations as  | ||
similar
plated Illinois registered vehicles.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-743, eff. 1-1-13; 98-463, eff. 8-16-13;  | ||
revised 2-7-15.)
 | ||
 (625 ILCS 5/3-413) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 3-413)
 | ||
 Sec. 3-413. Display of registration plates, registration  | ||
stickers,
and drive-away permits; registration plate covers. | ||
 (a) Registration plates issued for a
motor vehicle other  | ||
than a motorcycle, autocycle, trailer, semitrailer,
 | ||
truck-tractor, apportioned bus, or apportioned truck shall be  | ||
attached
thereto, one in the front and one in the
rear. The  | ||
registration plate issued for a motorcycle, autocycle, trailer  | ||
or
semitrailer required to be registered hereunder and any  | ||
apportionment
plate issued to a bus under the provisions of  | ||
this Code shall be attached
to the rear thereof. The  | ||
registration plate issued for a truck-tractor or
an apportioned  | ||
truck required to be registered hereunder shall be
attached to  | ||
the front thereof.
 | ||
 (b) Every registration plate shall at all times be securely  | ||
fastened
in a horizontal position to the vehicle for which it  | ||
is issued so as to
prevent the plate from swinging and at a  | ||
height of not less than 5
inches from the ground, measuring  | ||
from the bottom of such plate, in a
place and position to be  | ||
clearly visible and shall be maintained in a
condition to be  | ||
clearly legible, free
from any materials that would obstruct  | ||
the visibility of the plate. A registration plate on a  | ||
motorcycle may be mounted vertically as long as it is otherwise  | ||
clearly visible. Registration stickers issued as
evidence of  | ||
renewed annual registration shall be attached to registration
 | ||
plates as required by the Secretary of State, and be clearly  | ||
visible at
all times.
 | ||
 (c) Every drive-away permit issued pursuant to this
Code  | ||
shall
be firmly attached to the motor vehicle in the manner  | ||
prescribed by the Secretary of State. If a drive-away permit is  | ||
affixed to a motor vehicle in any other manner the
permit shall  | ||
be void and of no effect.
 | ||
 (d) The Illinois prorate decal issued to a foreign  | ||
registered
vehicle part of a fleet prorated or apportioned with  | ||
Illinois, shall be
displayed on a registration plate and  | ||
displayed on the front of such
vehicle in the same manner as an  | ||
Illinois registration plate.
 | ||
 (e) The registration plate issued for a camper body mounted  | ||
on a
truck displaying registration plates shall be attached to  | ||
the rear of
the camper body.
 | ||
 (f) No person shall operate a vehicle, nor permit the  | ||
operation of a
vehicle, upon which is displayed an Illinois  | ||
registration plate, plates
or registration stickers, except as  | ||
provided for in subsection (b) of Section 3-701 of this Code,  | ||
after the termination of the registration
period for which  | ||
issued or after the expiration date set pursuant to
Sections  | ||
3-414 and 3-414.1 of this Code.
 | ||
 (g) A person may not operate any motor vehicle that is  | ||
equipped with registration plate covers. A violation of this  | ||
subsection (g) or a similar provision of a local ordinance is  | ||
an offense against laws and ordinances regulating the movement  | ||
of traffic. | ||
 (h) A person may not sell or offer for sale a registration  | ||
plate cover. A violation of this subsection (h) is a business  | ||
offense. | ||
 (i) A person may not advertise for the purpose of promoting  | ||
the sale of registration plate covers. A violation of this  | ||
subsection (i) is a business offense. | ||
 (j) A person may not modify the original manufacturer's  | ||
mounting location of the rear registration plate on any vehicle  | ||
so as to conceal the registration or to knowingly cause it to  | ||
be obstructed in an effort to hinder a peace officer from  | ||
obtaining the registration for the enforcement of a violation  | ||
of this Code, Section 27.1 of the Toll Highway Act concerning  | ||
toll evasion, or any municipal ordinance. Modifications  | ||
prohibited by this subsection (j) include but are not limited  | ||
to the use of an electronic device. A violation of this  | ||
subsection (j) is a Class A misdemeanor. | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-743, eff. 1-1-13; 98-777, eff. 1-1-15;  | ||
98-1103, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 (625 ILCS 5/3-701) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 3-701)
 | ||
 Sec. 3-701. Operation of vehicles without evidence of
 | ||
registration - Operation under mileage plates when odometer  | ||
broken or
disconnected.  | ||
 (a) No person shall operate, nor shall an owner knowingly  | ||
permit to
be
operated, except as provided in subsection (b) of  | ||
this Section, a vehicle upon any highway unless there shall be  | ||
attached thereto and
displayed thereon when and as required by  | ||
law, proper evidence of
registration in Illinois, as follows:
 | ||
  (1) A vehicle required to be registered in Illinois. A  | ||
 current and
valid Illinois registration sticker or  | ||
 stickers and plate or plates, or
an Illinois temporary  | ||
 registration permit, or a drive-away or
in-transit permit,  | ||
 issued therefor by the Secretary of State. ; or
 | ||
  (2) A vehicle eligible for Reciprocity. A current and  | ||
 valid
reciprocal foreign registration plate or plates  | ||
 properly issued to such
vehicle or a temporary registration  | ||
 issued therefor, by the reciprocal
State, and, in addition,  | ||
 when required by the Secretary, a current and
valid  | ||
 Illinois Reciprocity Permit or Prorate Decal issued
 | ||
 therefor by the Secretary of State; or except as otherwise  | ||
 expressly
provided for in this Chapter.
 | ||
  (3) A vehicle commuting for repairs in Illinois. A  | ||
 dealer plate issued by a foreign state shall exempt a  | ||
 vehicle from the requirements of this Section if the  | ||
 vehicle is being operated for the purpose of transport to a  | ||
 repair facility in Illinois to have repairs performed on  | ||
 the vehicle displaying foreign dealer plates. The driver of  | ||
 the motor vehicle bearing dealer plates shall provide a  | ||
 work order or contract with the repair facility to a law  | ||
 enforcement officer upon request.  | ||
 (b) A person may operate or permit operation of a vehicle  | ||
upon any highway a vehicle that has been properly registered  | ||
but does not display a current and valid Illinois registration  | ||
sticker if he or she has proof, in the form of a printed  | ||
receipt from the Secretary, that he or she registered the  | ||
vehicle before the previous registration's expiration but has  | ||
not received a new registration sticker from the Secretary.  | ||
This printed proof of registration is valid for 30 days from  | ||
the expiration of the previous registration sticker's date.  | ||
 (c) No person shall operate, nor shall any owner knowingly  | ||
permit to be
operated, any vehicle of the second division for  | ||
which the owner has
made an election to pay the mileage tax in  | ||
lieu of the annual flat
weight tax, at any time when the  | ||
odometer of such vehicle is broken or
disconnected, or is  | ||
inoperable or not operating.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-971, eff. 1-1-15; 98-1103, eff. 1-1-15;  | ||
revised 10-3-14.)
 | ||
 (625 ILCS 5/5-101) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 5-101)
 | ||
 Sec. 5-101. New vehicle dealers must be licensed. 
 | ||
 (a) No person shall engage in this State in the business of  | ||
selling
or dealing in, on consignment or otherwise, new  | ||
vehicles of any make, or
act as an intermediary or agent or  | ||
broker for any licensed dealer or
vehicle purchaser other than  | ||
as a salesperson, or represent or advertise
that he is so  | ||
engaged or intends to so engage in such business unless
 | ||
licensed to do so in writing by the Secretary of State under  | ||
the
provisions of this Section.
 | ||
 (b) An application for a new vehicle dealer's license shall  | ||
be filed
with the Secretary of State, duly verified by oath, on  | ||
such form as the
Secretary of State may by rule or regulation  | ||
prescribe and shall contain:
 | ||
  1. The name and type of business organization of the  | ||
 applicant and
his established and additional places of  | ||
 business, if any, in this State.
 | ||
  2. If the applicant is a corporation, a list of its  | ||
 officers,
directors, and shareholders having a ten percent  | ||
 or greater ownership
interest in the corporation, setting  | ||
 forth the residence address of
each; if the applicant is a  | ||
 sole proprietorship, a partnership, an
unincorporated  | ||
 association, a trust, or any similar form of business
 | ||
 organization, the name and residence address of the  | ||
 proprietor or of
each partner, member, officer, director,  | ||
 trustee, or manager.
 | ||
  3. The make or makes of new vehicles which the  | ||
 applicant will offer
for sale at retail in this State.
 | ||
  4. The name of each manufacturer or franchised  | ||
 distributor, if any,
of new vehicles with whom the  | ||
 applicant has contracted for the sale of
such new vehicles.  | ||
 As evidence of this fact, the application shall be
 | ||
 accompanied by a signed statement from each such  | ||
 manufacturer or
franchised distributor. If the applicant  | ||
 is in the business of
offering for sale new conversion  | ||
 vehicles, trucks or vans, except for
trucks modified to  | ||
 serve a special purpose which includes but is not
limited  | ||
 to the following vehicles: street sweepers, fertilizer  | ||
 spreaders,
emergency vehicles, implements of husbandry or  | ||
 maintenance type vehicles,
he must furnish evidence of a  | ||
 sales and service agreement from both the
chassis  | ||
 manufacturer and second stage manufacturer.
 | ||
  5. A statement that the applicant has been approved for  | ||
 registration
under the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act by the  | ||
 Department of Revenue:
Provided that this requirement does  | ||
 not apply to a dealer who is already
licensed hereunder  | ||
 with the Secretary of State, and who is merely applying
for  | ||
 a renewal of his license. As evidence of this fact, the  | ||
 application
shall be accompanied by a certification from  | ||
 the Department of Revenue
showing that that Department has  | ||
 approved the applicant for registration
under the  | ||
 Retailers' Occupation Tax Act.
 | ||
  6. A statement that the applicant has complied with the  | ||
 appropriate
liability insurance requirement. A Certificate  | ||
 of Insurance in a solvent
company authorized to do business  | ||
 in the State of Illinois shall be included
with each  | ||
 application covering each location at which he proposes to  | ||
 act
as a new vehicle dealer. The policy must provide  | ||
 liability coverage in
the minimum amounts of $100,000 for  | ||
 bodily injury to, or death of, any person,
$300,000 for  | ||
 bodily injury to, or death of, two or more persons in any  | ||
 one
accident, and $50,000 for damage to property. Such  | ||
 policy shall expire
not sooner than December 31 of the year  | ||
 for which the license was issued
or renewed. The expiration  | ||
 of the insurance policy shall not terminate
the liability  | ||
 under the policy arising during the period for which the
 | ||
 policy was filed. Trailer and mobile home dealers are  | ||
 exempt from this
requirement.
 | ||
  If the permitted user has a liability insurance policy  | ||
 that provides
automobile
liability insurance coverage of  | ||
 at least $100,000 for bodily injury to or the
death of any
 | ||
 person, $300,000 for bodily injury to or the death of any 2  | ||
 or more persons in
any one
accident, and $50,000 for damage  | ||
 to property,
then the permitted user's insurer shall be the  | ||
 primary
insurer and the
dealer's insurer shall be the  | ||
 secondary insurer. If the permitted user does not
have a  | ||
 liability
insurance policy that provides automobile  | ||
 liability insurance coverage of at
least
$100,000 for  | ||
 bodily injury to or the death of any person, $300,000 for  | ||
 bodily
injury to or the death of any 2 or more persons in  | ||
 any one accident, and
$50,000 for damage to property, or  | ||
 does not have any insurance at all,
then the dealer's  | ||
 insurer shall be the primary insurer and the permitted  | ||
 user's
insurer shall be the secondary
insurer.
 | ||
  When a permitted user is "test driving" a new vehicle  | ||
 dealer's automobile,
the new vehicle dealer's insurance  | ||
 shall be primary and the permitted user's
insurance shall  | ||
 be secondary.
 | ||
  As used in this paragraph 6, a "permitted user" is a  | ||
 person who, with the
permission of the new vehicle dealer  | ||
 or an employee of the new vehicle dealer,
drives a vehicle  | ||
 owned and held for sale or lease by the new vehicle dealer
 | ||
 which the person is considering
to purchase or lease, in  | ||
 order to evaluate the performance, reliability, or
 | ||
 condition of the vehicle.
The term "permitted user" also  | ||
 includes a person who, with the permission of
the new
 | ||
 vehicle dealer, drives a vehicle owned or held for sale or  | ||
 lease by the new
vehicle dealer
for loaner purposes while  | ||
 the user's vehicle is being repaired or evaluated.
 | ||
  As used in this paragraph 6, "test driving" occurs when  | ||
 a permitted user
who,
with the permission of the new  | ||
 vehicle dealer or an employee of the new vehicle
dealer,  | ||
 drives a vehicle owned and held for sale or lease by a new  | ||
 vehicle
dealer that the person is considering to purchase  | ||
 or lease, in order to
evaluate the performance,  | ||
 reliability, or condition of the
vehicle.
 | ||
  As used in this paragraph 6, "loaner purposes" means  | ||
 when a person who,
with the permission of the new vehicle  | ||
 dealer, drives a vehicle owned or held
for sale or lease by  | ||
 the new vehicle dealer while the
user's vehicle is being  | ||
 repaired or evaluated.
 | ||
  7. (A) An application for a new motor vehicle dealer's  | ||
 license shall be
accompanied by the following license fees:
 | ||
   (i) $1,000 for applicant's established place of  | ||
 business, and
$100 for each
additional place of  | ||
 business, if any, to which the application
pertains;  | ||
 but if the application is made after June 15 of any  | ||
 year, the license
fee shall be $500 for applicant's  | ||
 established place of business
plus
$50 for each  | ||
 additional place of business, if any, to which the
 | ||
 application pertains. License fees shall be returnable  | ||
 only in the event that
the application is denied by the  | ||
 Secretary of State.
All moneys received by the  | ||
 Secretary of State as license fees under this  | ||
 subparagraph (i) prior to applications for the 2004
 | ||
 licensing year
shall be
deposited into the Motor  | ||
 Vehicle Review Board Fund and shall
be used to  | ||
 administer the Motor Vehicle Review Board under the  | ||
 Motor Vehicle
Franchise Act. Of the money received by  | ||
 the Secretary of State as license
fees under this  | ||
 subparagraph (i) for the 2004
licensing year and
 | ||
 thereafter, 10% shall
be deposited into the Motor  | ||
 Vehicle Review Board Fund and shall be used to
 | ||
 administer the Motor Vehicle Review Board under the  | ||
 Motor Vehicle Franchise Act
and 90% shall be deposited  | ||
 into the General Revenue Fund.
 | ||
   (ii) Except for dealers selling 25 or fewer  | ||
 automobiles or as provided in subsection (h) of Section  | ||
 5-102.7 of this Code, an Annual Dealer Recovery Fund  | ||
 Fee in the amount of $500 for the applicant's  | ||
 established place of business, and $50 for each  | ||
 additional place of business, if any, to which the  | ||
 application pertains; but if the application is made  | ||
 after June 15 of any year, the fee shall be $250 for  | ||
 the applicant's established place of business plus $25  | ||
 for each additional place of business, if any, to which  | ||
 the application pertains. For a license renewal  | ||
 application, the fee shall be based on the amount of  | ||
 automobiles sold in the past year according to the  | ||
 following formula: | ||
    (1) $0 for dealers selling 25 or less  | ||
 automobiles;  | ||
    (2) $150 for dealers selling more than 25 but  | ||
 less than 200 automobiles;  | ||
    (3) $300 for dealers selling 200 or more  | ||
 automobiles but less than 300 automobiles; and  | ||
    (4) $500 for dealers selling 300 or more  | ||
 automobiles.  | ||
   License fees shall be returnable only in the event  | ||
 that the application is denied by the Secretary of  | ||
 State. Moneys received under this subparagraph (ii)  | ||
 shall be deposited into the Dealer Recovery Trust Fund.  | ||
  (B) An application for a new vehicle dealer's license,  | ||
 other than for
a new motor vehicle dealer's license, shall  | ||
 be accompanied by the following
license fees:
 | ||
   (i) $1,000 for applicant's established place of  | ||
 business, and
$50 for each
additional place of  | ||
 business, if any, to which the application pertains;  | ||
 but if
the application is made after June 15 of any  | ||
 year, the license fee shall be
$500
for applicant's  | ||
 established place of business plus $25 for each
 | ||
 additional
place of business, if any, to which the  | ||
 application pertains. License fees
shall be returnable  | ||
 only in the event that the application is denied by the
 | ||
 Secretary of State. Of the money received by the  | ||
 Secretary of State as
license fees under this  | ||
 subparagraph (i) for the 2004 licensing year and  | ||
 thereafter,
95% shall be deposited into the General  | ||
 Revenue Fund.
 | ||
   (ii) Except as provided in subsection (h) of  | ||
 Section 5-102.7 of this Code, an Annual Dealer Recovery  | ||
 Fund Fee in the amount of $500 for the applicant's  | ||
 established place of business, and $50 for each  | ||
 additional place of business, if any, to which the  | ||
 application pertains; but if the application is made  | ||
 after June 15 of any year, the fee shall be $250 for  | ||
 the applicant's established place of business plus $25  | ||
 for each additional place of business, if any, to which  | ||
 the application pertains. License fees shall be  | ||
 returnable only in the event that the application is  | ||
 denied by the Secretary of State. Moneys received under  | ||
 this subparagraph (ii) shall be deposited into the  | ||
 Dealer Recovery Trust Fund.  | ||
  8. A statement that the applicant's officers,  | ||
 directors,
shareholders having a 10% or greater ownership  | ||
 interest
therein, proprietor, a partner, member, officer,  | ||
 director, trustee, manager
or other principals in the  | ||
 business have not committed in the past 3
years any one  | ||
 violation as determined in any civil, criminal or
 | ||
 administrative proceedings of any one of the following  | ||
 Acts:
 | ||
   (A) The Anti-Theft Anti Theft Laws of the Illinois  | ||
 Vehicle Code;
 | ||
   (B) The Certificate of Title Laws of the Illinois  | ||
 Vehicle Code;
 | ||
   (C) The Offenses against Registration and  | ||
 Certificates of Title
Laws of the Illinois Vehicle  | ||
 Code;
 | ||
   (D) The Dealers, Transporters, Wreckers and  | ||
 Rebuilders
Laws of the Illinois Vehicle Code;
 | ||
   (E) Section 21-2 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or  | ||
 the Criminal Code of 2012, Criminal Trespass to
 | ||
 Vehicles; or
 | ||
   (F) The Retailers' Occupation Tax Act.
 | ||
  9. A statement that the applicant's officers,  | ||
 directors,
shareholders having a 10% or greater ownership  | ||
 interest
therein, proprietor, partner, member, officer,  | ||
 director, trustee, manager
or other principals in the  | ||
 business have not committed in any calendar year
3 or more  | ||
 violations, as determined in any civil, criminal or
 | ||
 administrative proceedings, of any one or more of the  | ||
 following Acts:
 | ||
   (A) The Consumer Finance Act;
 | ||
   (B) The Consumer Installment Loan Act;
 | ||
   (C) The Retail Installment Sales Act;
 | ||
   (D) The Motor Vehicle Retail Installment Sales  | ||
 Act;
 | ||
   (E) The Interest Act;
 | ||
   (F) The Illinois Wage Assignment Act;
 | ||
   (G) Part 8 of Article XII of the Code of Civil  | ||
 Procedure; or
 | ||
   (H) The Consumer Fraud Act.
 | ||
  10. A bond or certificate of deposit in the amount of  | ||
 $20,000 for
each location at which the applicant intends to  | ||
 act as a new vehicle
dealer. The bond shall be for the term  | ||
 of the license, or its renewal, for
which application is  | ||
 made, and shall expire not sooner than
December 31 of the  | ||
 year for which the license was issued or renewed. The bond
 | ||
 shall run to the People of the State of Illinois, with  | ||
 surety by a bonding or
insurance company authorized to do  | ||
 business in this State. It shall be
conditioned upon the  | ||
 proper transmittal of all title and registration fees and
 | ||
 taxes (excluding taxes under the Retailers' Occupation Tax  | ||
 Act) accepted by the
applicant as a new vehicle dealer.
 | ||
  11. Such other information concerning the business of  | ||
 the applicant as
the Secretary of State may by rule or  | ||
 regulation prescribe.
 | ||
  12. A statement that the applicant understands Chapter  | ||
 1 One through
Chapter 5 Five of this Code.
 | ||
 (c) Any change which renders no longer accurate any  | ||
information
contained in any application for a new vehicle  | ||
dealer's license shall be
amended within 30 days after the  | ||
occurrence of such change on such form
as the Secretary of  | ||
State may prescribe by rule or regulation,
accompanied by an  | ||
amendatory fee of $2.
 | ||
 (d) Anything in this Chapter 5 to the contrary  | ||
notwithstanding no
person shall be licensed as a new vehicle  | ||
dealer unless:
 | ||
  1. He is authorized by contract in writing between  | ||
 himself and the
manufacturer or franchised distributor of  | ||
 such make of vehicle to so
sell the same in this State, and
 | ||
  2. Such person shall maintain an established place of  | ||
 business as
defined in this Act.
 | ||
 (e) The Secretary of State shall, within a reasonable time  | ||
after
receipt, examine an application submitted to him under  | ||
this Section and
unless he makes a determination that the  | ||
application submitted to him
does not conform with the  | ||
requirements of this Section or that grounds
exist for a denial  | ||
of the application, under Section 5-501 of this
Chapter, grant  | ||
the applicant an original new vehicle dealer's license in
 | ||
writing for his established place of business and a  | ||
supplemental license
in writing for each additional place of  | ||
business in such form as he may
prescribe by rule or regulation  | ||
which shall include the following:
 | ||
  1. The name of the person licensed;
 | ||
  2. If a corporation, the name and address of its  | ||
 officers or if a
sole proprietorship, a partnership, an  | ||
 unincorporated association or any
similar form of business  | ||
 organization, the name and address of the
proprietor or of  | ||
 each partner, member, officer, director, trustee or
 | ||
 manager;
 | ||
  3. In the case of an original license, the established  | ||
 place of
business of the licensee;
 | ||
  4. In the case of a supplemental license, the  | ||
 established place of
business of the licensee and the  | ||
 additional place of business to which such
supplemental  | ||
 license pertains;
 | ||
  5. The make or makes of new vehicles which the licensee  | ||
 is licensed
to sell.
 | ||
 (f) The appropriate instrument evidencing the license or a  | ||
certified
copy thereof, provided by the Secretary of State,  | ||
shall be kept posted
conspicuously in the established place of  | ||
business of the licensee and
in each additional place of  | ||
business, if any, maintained by such
licensee.
 | ||
 (g) Except as provided in subsection (h) hereof, all new  | ||
vehicle
dealer's licenses granted under this Section shall  | ||
expire by operation
of law on December 31 of the calendar year  | ||
for which they are granted
unless sooner revoked or cancelled  | ||
under the provisions of Section 5-501
of this Chapter.
 | ||
 (h) A new vehicle dealer's license may be renewed upon  | ||
application
and payment of the fee required herein, and  | ||
submission of proof of
coverage under an approved bond under  | ||
the "Retailers' Occupation Tax
Act" or proof that applicant is  | ||
not subject to such bonding
requirements, as in the case of an  | ||
original license, but in case an
application for the renewal of  | ||
an effective license is made during the
month of December, the  | ||
effective license shall remain in force until the
application  | ||
is granted or denied by the Secretary of State.
 | ||
 (i) All persons licensed as a new vehicle dealer are  | ||
required to
furnish each purchaser of a motor vehicle:
 | ||
  1. In the case of a new vehicle a manufacturer's  | ||
 statement of origin
and in the case of a used motor vehicle  | ||
 a certificate of title, in
either case properly assigned to  | ||
 the purchaser;
 | ||
  2. A statement verified under oath that all identifying  | ||
 numbers on
the vehicle agree with those on the certificate  | ||
 of title or
manufacturer's statement of origin;
 | ||
  3. A bill of sale properly executed on behalf of such  | ||
 person;
 | ||
  4. A copy of the Uniform Invoice-transaction reporting  | ||
 return
referred to in Section 5-402 hereof;
 | ||
  5. In the case of a rebuilt vehicle, a copy of the  | ||
 Disclosure of Rebuilt
Vehicle Status; and
 | ||
  6. In the case of a vehicle for which the warranty has  | ||
 been reinstated, a
copy of the warranty.
 | ||
 (j) Except at the time of sale or repossession of the  | ||
vehicle, no person
licensed as a new vehicle dealer may issue  | ||
any other person a newly created
key to a vehicle unless the  | ||
new vehicle dealer makes a copy of the driver's
license or  | ||
State identification card of the person requesting or obtaining  | ||
the
newly created key. The new vehicle dealer must retain the  | ||
copy for 30 days.
 | ||
 A new vehicle dealer who violates this subsection (j) is  | ||
guilty of a
petty offense. Violation of this subsection (j) is  | ||
not cause to suspend,
revoke,
cancel, or deny renewal of the  | ||
new vehicle dealer's license.
 | ||
 This amendatory Act of 1983 shall be applicable to the 1984  | ||
registration
year and thereafter.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-480, eff. 10-1-11; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13;  | ||
98-450, eff. 1-1-14; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (625 ILCS 5/5-102) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 5-102)
 | ||
 Sec. 5-102. Used vehicle dealers must be licensed. 
 | ||
 (a) No person, other than a licensed new vehicle dealer,  | ||
shall engage in
the business of selling or dealing in, on  | ||
consignment or otherwise, 5 or
more used vehicles of any make  | ||
during the year (except house trailers as
authorized by  | ||
paragraph (j) of this Section and rebuilt salvage vehicles
sold  | ||
by their rebuilders to persons licensed under this Chapter), or  | ||
act as
an intermediary, agent or broker for any licensed dealer  | ||
or vehicle
purchaser (other than as a salesperson) or represent  | ||
or advertise that he
is so engaged or intends to so engage in  | ||
such business unless licensed to
do so by the Secretary of  | ||
State under the provisions of this Section.
 | ||
 (b) An application for a used vehicle dealer's license  | ||
shall be
filed with the Secretary of State, duly verified by  | ||
oath, in such form
as the Secretary of State may by rule or  | ||
regulation prescribe and shall
contain:
 | ||
  1. The name and type of business organization  | ||
 established and additional
places of business, if any, in  | ||
 this State.
 | ||
  2. If the applicant is a corporation, a list of its  | ||
 officers,
directors, and shareholders having a ten percent  | ||
 or greater ownership
interest in the corporation, setting  | ||
 forth the residence address of
each; if the applicant is a  | ||
 sole proprietorship, a partnership, an
unincorporated  | ||
 association, a trust, or any similar form of business
 | ||
 organization, the names and residence address of the  | ||
 proprietor or of
each partner, member, officer, director,  | ||
 trustee or manager.
 | ||
  3. A statement that the applicant has been approved for  | ||
 registration
under the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act by the  | ||
 Department of Revenue. However,
this requirement does not  | ||
 apply to a dealer who is already licensed
hereunder with  | ||
 the Secretary of State, and who is merely applying for a
 | ||
 renewal of his license. As evidence of this fact, the  | ||
 application shall be
accompanied by a certification from  | ||
 the Department of Revenue showing that
the Department has  | ||
 approved the applicant for registration under the
 | ||
 Retailers' Occupation Tax Act.
 | ||
  4. A statement that the applicant has complied with the  | ||
 appropriate
liability insurance requirement. A Certificate  | ||
 of Insurance in a solvent
company authorized to do business  | ||
 in the State of Illinois shall be included
with each  | ||
 application covering each location at which he proposes to  | ||
 act
as a used vehicle dealer. The policy must provide  | ||
 liability coverage in
the minimum amounts of $100,000 for  | ||
 bodily injury to, or death of, any person,
$300,000 for  | ||
 bodily injury to, or death of, two or more persons in any  | ||
 one
accident, and $50,000 for damage to property. Such  | ||
 policy shall expire
not sooner than December 31 of the year  | ||
 for which the license was issued
or renewed. The expiration  | ||
 of the insurance policy shall not terminate
the liability  | ||
 under the policy arising during the period for which the  | ||
 policy
was filed. Trailer and mobile home dealers are  | ||
 exempt from this requirement.
 | ||
  If the permitted user has a liability insurance policy  | ||
 that provides
automobile
liability insurance coverage of  | ||
 at least $100,000 for bodily injury to or the
death of any
 | ||
 person, $300,000 for bodily injury to or the death of any 2  | ||
 or more persons in
any one
accident, and $50,000 for damage  | ||
 to property,
then the permitted user's insurer shall be the  | ||
 primary
insurer and the
dealer's insurer shall be the  | ||
 secondary insurer. If the permitted user does not
have a  | ||
 liability
insurance policy that provides automobile  | ||
 liability insurance coverage of at
least
$100,000 for  | ||
 bodily injury to or the death of any person, $300,000 for  | ||
 bodily
injury to or
the death of any 2 or more persons in  | ||
 any one accident, and $50,000 for damage
to
property, or  | ||
 does not have any insurance at all,
then the
dealer's
 | ||
 insurer shall be the primary insurer and the permitted  | ||
 user's insurer shall be
the secondary
insurer.
 | ||
  When a permitted user is "test driving" a used vehicle  | ||
 dealer's automobile,
the used vehicle dealer's insurance  | ||
 shall be primary and the permitted user's
insurance shall  | ||
 be secondary.
 | ||
  As used in this paragraph 4, a "permitted user" is a  | ||
 person who, with the
permission of the used vehicle dealer  | ||
 or an employee of the used vehicle
dealer, drives a vehicle  | ||
 owned and held for sale or lease by the used vehicle
dealer  | ||
 which the person is considering to purchase or lease, in  | ||
 order to
evaluate the performance, reliability, or  | ||
 condition of the vehicle.
The term "permitted user" also  | ||
 includes a person who, with the permission of
the used
 | ||
 vehicle dealer, drives a vehicle owned or held for sale or  | ||
 lease by the used
vehicle dealer
for loaner purposes while  | ||
 the user's vehicle is being repaired or evaluated.
 | ||
  As used in this paragraph 4, "test driving" occurs when  | ||
 a permitted user
who,
with the permission of the used  | ||
 vehicle dealer or an employee of the used
vehicle
dealer,  | ||
 drives a vehicle owned and held for sale or lease by a used  | ||
 vehicle
dealer that the person is considering to purchase  | ||
 or lease, in order to
evaluate the performance,  | ||
 reliability, or condition of the
vehicle.
 | ||
  As used in this paragraph 4, "loaner purposes" means  | ||
 when a person who,
with the permission of the used vehicle  | ||
 dealer, drives a vehicle owned or held
for sale or lease by  | ||
 the used vehicle dealer while the
user's vehicle is being  | ||
 repaired or evaluated.
 | ||
  5. An application for a used vehicle dealer's license  | ||
 shall be
accompanied by the following license fees:
 | ||
   (A) $1,000 for applicant's established place of  | ||
 business, and
$50 for
each additional place of  | ||
 business, if any, to which the application
pertains;  | ||
 however, if the application is made after June 15 of  | ||
 any
year, the license fee shall be $500 for applicant's  | ||
 established
place of
business plus $25 for each  | ||
 additional place of business, if any,
to
which the  | ||
 application pertains. License fees shall be returnable  | ||
 only in
the event that the application is denied by
the  | ||
 Secretary of State. Of the money received by the  | ||
 Secretary of State as
license fees under this  | ||
 subparagraph (A) for the 2004 licensing year and  | ||
 thereafter, 95%
shall be deposited into the General  | ||
 Revenue Fund.
 | ||
   (B) Except for dealers selling 25 or fewer  | ||
 automobiles or as provided in subsection (h) of Section  | ||
 5-102.7 of this Code, an Annual Dealer Recovery Fund  | ||
 Fee in the amount of $500 for the applicant's  | ||
 established place of business, and $50 for each  | ||
 additional place of business, if any, to which the  | ||
 application pertains; but if the application is made  | ||
 after June 15 of any year, the fee shall be $250 for  | ||
 the applicant's established place of business plus $25  | ||
 for each additional place of business, if any, to which  | ||
 the application pertains. For a license renewal  | ||
 application, the fee shall be based on the amount of  | ||
 automobiles sold in the past year according to the  | ||
 following formula:  | ||
    (1) $0 for dealers selling 25 or less  | ||
 automobiles;  | ||
    (2) $150 for dealers selling more than 25 but  | ||
 less than 200 automobiles;  | ||
    (3) $300 for dealers selling 200 or more  | ||
 automobiles but less than 300 automobiles; and  | ||
    (4) $500 for dealers selling 300 or more  | ||
 automobiles.  | ||
   License fees shall be returnable only in the event  | ||
 that the application is denied by the Secretary of  | ||
 State. Moneys received under this subparagraph (B)  | ||
 shall be deposited into the Dealer Recovery Trust Fund. 
 | ||
  6. A statement that the applicant's officers,  | ||
 directors, shareholders
having a 10% or greater ownership  | ||
 interest therein, proprietor, partner,
member, officer,  | ||
 director, trustee, manager or other principals in the
 | ||
 business have not committed in the past 3 years any one  | ||
 violation as
determined in any civil, criminal or  | ||
 administrative proceedings of any one
of the following  | ||
 Acts:
 | ||
   (A) The Anti-Theft Anti Theft Laws of the Illinois  | ||
 Vehicle Code;
 | ||
   (B) The Certificate of Title Laws of the Illinois  | ||
 Vehicle Code;
 | ||
   (C) The Offenses against Registration and  | ||
 Certificates of Title
Laws of the Illinois Vehicle  | ||
 Code;
 | ||
   (D) The Dealers, Transporters, Wreckers and  | ||
 Rebuilders Laws of the
Illinois Vehicle Code;
 | ||
   (E) Section 21-2 of the Illinois Criminal Code of  | ||
 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, Criminal
Trespass to  | ||
 Vehicles; or
 | ||
   (F) The Retailers' Occupation Tax Act.
 | ||
  7. A statement that the applicant's officers,  | ||
 directors,
shareholders having a 10% or greater ownership  | ||
 interest therein,
proprietor, partner, member, officer,  | ||
 director, trustee, manager or
other principals in the  | ||
 business have not committed in any calendar year
3 or more  | ||
 violations, as determined in any civil or criminal or
 | ||
 administrative proceedings, of any one or more of the  | ||
 following Acts:
 | ||
   (A) The Consumer Finance Act;
 | ||
   (B) The Consumer Installment Loan Act;
 | ||
   (C) The Retail Installment Sales Act;
 | ||
   (D) The Motor Vehicle Retail Installment Sales  | ||
 Act;
 | ||
   (E) The Interest Act;
 | ||
   (F) The Illinois Wage Assignment Act;
 | ||
   (G) Part 8 of Article XII of the Code of Civil  | ||
 Procedure; or
 | ||
   (H) The Consumer Fraud Act.
 | ||
  8. A bond or Certificate of Deposit in the amount of  | ||
 $20,000 for
each location at which the applicant intends to  | ||
 act as a used vehicle
dealer. The bond shall be for the  | ||
 term of the license, or its renewal, for
which application  | ||
 is made, and shall expire not sooner than December 31 of
 | ||
 the year for which the license was issued or renewed. The  | ||
 bond shall run
to the People of the State of Illinois, with  | ||
 surety by a bonding or
insurance company authorized to do  | ||
 business in this State. It shall be
conditioned upon the  | ||
 proper transmittal of all title and registration fees
and  | ||
 taxes (excluding taxes under the Retailers' Occupation Tax  | ||
 Act) accepted
by the applicant as a used vehicle dealer.
 | ||
  9. Such other information concerning the business of  | ||
 the applicant as
the Secretary of State may by rule or  | ||
 regulation prescribe.
 | ||
  10. A statement that the applicant understands Chapter  | ||
 1 through
Chapter 5 of this Code.
 | ||
  11. A copy of the certification from the prelicensing  | ||
 education
program.  | ||
 (c) Any change which renders no longer accurate any  | ||
information
contained in any application for a used vehicle  | ||
dealer's license shall
be amended within 30 days after the  | ||
occurrence of each change on such
form as the Secretary of  | ||
State may prescribe by rule or regulation,
accompanied by an  | ||
amendatory fee of $2.
 | ||
 (d) Anything in this Chapter to the contrary  | ||
notwithstanding, no
person shall be licensed as a used vehicle  | ||
dealer unless such person
maintains an established place of  | ||
business as
defined in this Chapter.
 | ||
 (e) The Secretary of State shall, within a reasonable time  | ||
after
receipt, examine an application submitted to him under  | ||
this Section.
Unless the Secretary makes a determination that  | ||
the application
submitted to him does not conform to this  | ||
Section or that grounds exist
for a denial of the application  | ||
under Section 5-501 of this Chapter, he
must grant the  | ||
applicant an original used vehicle dealer's license in
writing  | ||
for his established place of business and a supplemental  | ||
license
in writing for each additional place of business in  | ||
such form as he may
prescribe by rule or regulation which shall  | ||
include the following:
 | ||
  1. The name of the person licensed;
 | ||
  2. If a corporation, the name and address of its  | ||
 officers or if a
sole proprietorship, a partnership, an  | ||
 unincorporated association or any
similar form of business  | ||
 organization, the name and address of the
proprietor or of  | ||
 each partner, member, officer, director, trustee or
 | ||
 manager;
 | ||
  3. In case of an original license, the established  | ||
 place of business
of the licensee;
 | ||
  4. In the case of a supplemental license, the  | ||
 established place of
business of the licensee and the  | ||
 additional place of business to which such
supplemental  | ||
 license pertains.
 | ||
 (f) The appropriate instrument evidencing the license or a  | ||
certified
copy thereof, provided by the Secretary of State  | ||
shall be kept posted,
conspicuously, in the established place  | ||
of business of the licensee and
in each additional place of  | ||
business, if any, maintained by such
licensee.
 | ||
 (g) Except as provided in subsection (h) of this Section,  | ||
all used
vehicle dealer's licenses granted under this Section  | ||
expire by operation
of law on December 31 of the calendar year  | ||
for which they are granted
unless sooner revoked or cancelled  | ||
under Section 5-501 of this Chapter.
 | ||
 (h) A used vehicle dealer's license may be renewed upon  | ||
application
and payment of the fee required herein, and  | ||
submission of proof of
coverage by an approved bond under the  | ||
"Retailers' Occupation Tax Act"
or proof that applicant is not  | ||
subject to such bonding requirements, as
in the case of an  | ||
original license, but in case an application for the
renewal of  | ||
an effective license is made during the month of December,
the  | ||
effective license shall remain in force until the application  | ||
for
renewal is granted or denied by the Secretary of State.
 | ||
 (i) All persons licensed as a used vehicle dealer are  | ||
required to
furnish each purchaser of a motor vehicle:
 | ||
  1. A certificate of title properly assigned to the  | ||
 purchaser;
 | ||
  2. A statement verified under oath that all identifying  | ||
 numbers on
the vehicle agree with those on the certificate  | ||
 of title;
 | ||
  3. A bill of sale properly executed on behalf of such  | ||
 person;
 | ||
  4. A copy of the Uniform Invoice-transaction reporting  | ||
 return
referred to in Section 5-402 of this Chapter;
 | ||
  5. In the case of a rebuilt vehicle, a copy of the  | ||
 Disclosure of Rebuilt
Vehicle Status; and
 | ||
  6. In the case of a vehicle for which the warranty has  | ||
 been reinstated, a
copy of the warranty.
 | ||
 (j) A real estate broker holding a valid certificate of  | ||
registration issued
pursuant to "The Real Estate Brokers and  | ||
Salesmen License Act" may engage
in the business of selling or  | ||
dealing in house trailers not his own without
being licensed as  | ||
a used vehicle dealer under this Section; however such
broker  | ||
shall maintain a record of the transaction including the  | ||
following:
 | ||
  (1) the name and address of the buyer and seller,
 | ||
  (2) the date of sale,
 | ||
  (3) a description of the mobile home, including the  | ||
 vehicle identification
number, make, model, and year, and
 | ||
  (4) the Illinois certificate of title number.
 | ||
 The foregoing records shall be available for inspection by  | ||
any officer
of the Secretary of State's Office at any  | ||
reasonable hour.
 | ||
 (k) Except at the time of sale or repossession of the  | ||
vehicle, no
person licensed as a used vehicle dealer may issue  | ||
any other person a newly
created key to a vehicle unless the  | ||
used vehicle dealer makes a copy of the
driver's license or  | ||
State identification card of the person requesting or
obtaining  | ||
the newly created key. The used vehicle dealer must retain the
 | ||
copy for 30 days.
 | ||
 A used vehicle dealer who violates this subsection (k) is  | ||
guilty of a
petty offense. Violation of this subsection (k) is  | ||
not cause to suspend,
revoke, cancel, or deny renewal of the  | ||
used vehicle dealer's license. | ||
 (l) Used vehicle dealers licensed under this Section shall  | ||
provide the Secretary of State a register for the sale at  | ||
auction of each salvage or junk certificate vehicle. Each  | ||
register shall include the following information: | ||
  1. The year, make, model, style and color of the  | ||
 vehicle; | ||
  2. The vehicle's manufacturer's identification number  | ||
 or, if applicable, the Secretary of State or Illinois  | ||
 Department of State Police identification number; | ||
  3. The date of acquisition of the vehicle; | ||
  4. The name and address of the person from whom the  | ||
 vehicle was acquired; | ||
  5. The name and address of the person to whom any  | ||
 vehicle was disposed, the person's Illinois license number  | ||
 or if the person is an out-of-state salvage vehicle buyer,  | ||
 the license number from the state or jurisdiction where the  | ||
 buyer is licensed; and | ||
  6. The purchase price of the vehicle. | ||
 The register shall be submitted to the Secretary of State  | ||
via written or electronic means within 10 calendar days from  | ||
the date of the auction. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-480, eff. 10-1-11; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13;  | ||
98-450, eff. 1-1-14; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (625 ILCS 5/6-113) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 6-113)
 | ||
 Sec. 6-113. Restricted licenses and permits. 
 | ||
 (a) The Secretary of
State upon issuing a drivers license  | ||
or permit shall have the authority
whenever good cause appears  | ||
to impose restrictions suitable to the
licensee's driving  | ||
ability with respect to the type of, or special
mechanical  | ||
control devices required on, a motor vehicle which the
licensee  | ||
may operate or such other restrictions applicable to the
 | ||
licensee as the Secretary of State may determine to be  | ||
appropriate to
assure the safe operation of a motor vehicle by  | ||
the licensee.
 | ||
 (b) The Secretary of State may either issue a special  | ||
restricted
license or permit or may set forth such restrictions  | ||
upon the usual
license or permit form.
 | ||
 (c) The Secretary of State may issue a probationary license  | ||
to a person
whose driving privileges have been suspended  | ||
pursuant to subsection (d) of this
Section or subsection (a)(2)  | ||
of Section 6-206 of this
Code. This subsection (c) does not  | ||
apply to any driver required to possess a CDL for the purpose  | ||
of operating a commercial motor vehicle. The Secretary of State  | ||
shall promulgate rules pursuant to the
Illinois Administrative  | ||
Procedure Act, setting forth the conditions and
criteria for  | ||
the issuance and cancellation of probationary licenses.
 | ||
 (d) The Secretary of State may upon receiving satisfactory  | ||
evidence
of any violation of the restrictions of such license  | ||
or permit suspend,
revoke or cancel the same without  | ||
preliminary hearing, but the licensee or
permittee shall be  | ||
entitled to a hearing as in the case of a suspension
or  | ||
revocation.
 | ||
 (e) It is unlawful for any person to operate a motor  | ||
vehicle in any
manner in violation of the restrictions imposed  | ||
on a restricted license
or permit issued to him.
 | ||
 (f) Whenever the holder of a restricted driving permit is  | ||
issued a citation
for any of the following offenses including  | ||
similar local ordinances, the
restricted driving permit is  | ||
immediately invalidated:
 | ||
  1. Reckless homicide resulting from the operation of a  | ||
 motor vehicle;
 | ||
  2. Violation of Section 11-501 of this Act relating to  | ||
 the operation of
a motor vehicle while under the influence  | ||
 of intoxicating liquor or narcotic
drugs;
 | ||
  3. Violation of Section 11-401 of this Act relating to  | ||
 the offense of
leaving the scene of a traffic accident  | ||
 involving death or injury;
 | ||
  4. Violation of Section 11-504 of this Act relating to  | ||
 the offense of drag
racing; or
 | ||
  5. Violation of Section 11-506 of this Act relating to  | ||
 the offense of street racing.
 | ||
 The police officer issuing the citation shall confiscate  | ||
the restricted
driving permit and forward it, along with the  | ||
citation, to the Clerk of
the Circuit Court of the county in  | ||
which the citation was issued.
 | ||
 (g) The Secretary of State may issue a special restricted
 | ||
license for a period of 48 months to individuals using vision  | ||
aid
arrangements other than standard eyeglasses or contact  | ||
lenses,
allowing the operation of a motor vehicle during  | ||
nighttime hours.
The Secretary of State shall adopt rules  | ||
defining the terms and
conditions by which the individual may  | ||
obtain and renew this
special restricted license. At a minimum,  | ||
all drivers must meet
the following requirements:
 | ||
  1. Possess a valid driver's license and have operated a
 | ||
 motor vehicle during daylight hours for a period of 12  | ||
 months
using vision aid arrangements other than standard  | ||
 eyeglasses
or contact lenses.
 | ||
  2. Have a driving record that does not include any
 | ||
 traffic accidents that occurred during nighttime hours,  | ||
 for which the
driver has been found to be at fault, during  | ||
 the 12 months before he or she
applied for the special  | ||
 restricted license.
 | ||
  3. Successfully complete a road test administered  | ||
 during
nighttime hours.
 | ||
 The special restricted license holder must submit to the  | ||
Secretary annually a vision specialist report from his or her  | ||
ophthalmologist or optometrist that the special restricted  | ||
license holder's vision has not changed. If the special  | ||
restricted license holder fails to submit this vision  | ||
specialist report, the special restricted license shall be  | ||
cancelled under Section 6-201 of this Code.  | ||
 At a minimum, all drivers renewing this license must meet  | ||
the
following requirements:
 | ||
  1. Successfully complete a road test administered  | ||
 during
nighttime hours.
 | ||
  2. Have a driving record that does not include any
 | ||
 traffic accidents that occurred during nighttime hours,  | ||
 for which the
driver has been found to be at fault, during  | ||
 the 12 months before he or she
applied for
the special  | ||
 restricted license.
 | ||
 (h) Any driver issued a special restricted license as  | ||
defined in
subsection (g) whose privilege to drive during  | ||
nighttime hours has been
suspended due to an accident occurring  | ||
during nighttime hours may request
a hearing as provided in  | ||
Section 2-118 of this Code to contest that suspension.
If it is
 | ||
determined that the accident for which the driver was at fault  | ||
was not
influenced by the driver's use of vision aid  | ||
arrangements other than standard
eyeglasses or contact lenses,  | ||
the Secretary may reinstate that driver's
privilege to drive  | ||
during nighttime hours.
 | ||
 (i) The Secretary of State may issue a special restricted  | ||
training permit for a period of 6 months to individuals using  | ||
vision aid arrangements other than standard eyeglasses or  | ||
contact lenses, allowing the operation of a motor vehicle  | ||
between sunset and 10:00 p.m. provided the driver is  | ||
accompanied by a person holding a valid driver's license  | ||
without nighttime operation restrictions. The Secretary may  | ||
adopt rules defining the terms and conditions by which the  | ||
individual may obtain and renew this special restricted  | ||
training permit. At a minimum, all persons applying for a  | ||
special restricted training permit must meet the following  | ||
requirements: | ||
  1. Possess a valid driver's license and have operated a  | ||
 motor vehicle during daylight hours for a period of 6  | ||
 months using vision aid arrangements other than standard  | ||
 eyeglasses or contact lenses. | ||
  2. Have a driving record that does not include any  | ||
 traffic accidents, for which the person has been found to  | ||
 be at fault, during the 6 months before he or she applied  | ||
 for the special restricted training permit. | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-229, eff. 7-28-11; 98-746, eff. 1-1-15;  | ||
98-747, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 (625 ILCS 5/7-311) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 7-311)
 | ||
 Sec. 7-311. Payments sufficient to satisfy requirements.  | ||
 (a) Judgments herein referred to arising out of motor  | ||
vehicle accidents
occurring on or after January 1, 2015 (the  | ||
effective date of Public 98-519) this amendatory Act of the  | ||
98th General Assembly, shall for the purpose of this
Chapter be  | ||
deemed satisfied:
 | ||
  1. When $25,000 has been credited upon any judgment or  | ||
 judgments
rendered in excess of that amount for bodily  | ||
 injury to or the death of
one person as the result of any  | ||
 one motor vehicle accident; or
 | ||
  2. When, subject to said limit of $25,000 as to any one  | ||
 person, the sum
of $50,000 has been credited upon any  | ||
 judgment or judgments rendered
in excess of that amount for  | ||
 bodily injury to or the death of more than
one person as  | ||
 the result of any one motor vehicle accident; or
 | ||
  3. When $20,000 has been credited upon any judgment or  | ||
 judgments,
rendered in excess of that amount for damages to  | ||
 property of others as a
result of any one motor vehicle  | ||
 accident.
 | ||
 The changes to this subsection made by Public Act 98-519  | ||
this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly apply only to  | ||
policies issued or renewed on or after January 1, 2015.  | ||
 (b) Credit for such amounts shall be deemed a satisfaction  | ||
of any such
judgment or judgments in excess of said amounts  | ||
only for the purposes of
this Chapter.
 | ||
 (c) Whenever payment has been made in settlement of any  | ||
claim for bodily
injury, death or property damage arising from  | ||
a motor vehicle accident
resulting in injury, death or property  | ||
damage to two or more persons in
such accident, any such  | ||
payment shall be credited in reduction of the
amounts provided  | ||
for in this Section.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-519, eff. 1-1-15; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (625 ILCS 5/Ch. 11 Art. V heading) | ||
ARTICLE V.  DRIVING WHILE  UNDER THE INFLUENCE   INTOXICATED,
 | ||
TRANSPORTING ALCOHOLIC LIQUOR,
 | ||
AND RECKLESS DRIVING
 | ||
 (625 ILCS 5/11-601) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 11-601)
 | ||
 Sec. 11-601. General speed restrictions. 
 | ||
 (a) No vehicle may be driven upon any highway of this State  | ||
at a speed
which is greater than is reasonable and proper with  | ||
regard to traffic
conditions and the use of the highway, or  | ||
endangers the safety of any
person or property. The fact that  | ||
the speed of a vehicle does not exceed
the applicable maximum  | ||
speed limit does not relieve the driver from the
duty to  | ||
decrease speed when approaching and crossing an intersection,
 | ||
approaching and going around a curve, when approaching a hill  | ||
crest, when
traveling upon any narrow or winding roadway, or  | ||
when special hazard exists
with respect to pedestrians or other  | ||
traffic or by reason of weather or
highway conditions. Speed  | ||
must be decreased as may be necessary to avoid
colliding with  | ||
any person or vehicle on or entering the highway in
compliance  | ||
with legal requirements and the duty of all persons to use due
 | ||
care.
 | ||
 (a-5) For purposes of this Section, "urban district" does  | ||
not include any interstate highway as defined by Section  | ||
1-133.1 of this Code which includes all highways under the  | ||
jurisdiction of the Illinois State Toll Highway Authority.  | ||
 (b) No person may drive a vehicle upon any highway of this  | ||
State at a
speed which is greater than the applicable statutory  | ||
maximum speed limit
established by paragraphs (c), (d), (e),  | ||
(f) or (g) of this Section, by
Section 11-605 or by a  | ||
regulation or ordinance made under this Chapter.
 | ||
 (c) Unless some other speed restriction is established  | ||
under this
Chapter, the maximum speed limit in an urban  | ||
district for all vehicles is:
 | ||
  1. 30 miles per hour; and
 | ||
  2. 15 miles per hour in an alley.
 | ||
 (d) Unless some other speed restriction is established  | ||
under this Chapter,
the maximum speed limit outside an urban  | ||
district for any vehicle is (1) 65 miles per hour for all or  | ||
part of highways that are designated by
the Department, have at  | ||
least 4 lanes of traffic, and have a separation between
the  | ||
roadways moving in opposite directions and (2) 55 miles per  | ||
hour for all
other highways, roads, and streets.
 | ||
 (d-1) Unless some other speed restriction is established  | ||
under this Chapter,
the maximum speed limit outside an urban  | ||
district for any vehicle is (1) 70 miles per hour on any  | ||
interstate highway as defined by Section 1-133.1 of this Code  | ||
which includes all highways under the jurisdiction of the  | ||
Illinois State Toll Highway Authority; (2) 65 miles per hour  | ||
for all or part of highways that are designated by the  | ||
Department, have at least 4 lanes of traffic, and have a  | ||
separation between the roadways moving in opposite directions;  | ||
and (3) 55 miles per hour for all other highways, roads, and  | ||
streets. The counties of Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake, Madison,  | ||
McHenry, St. Clair, and Will may adopt ordinances setting a  | ||
maximum speed limit on highways, roads, and streets that is  | ||
lower than the limits established by this Section.  | ||
 (e) In the counties of Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry,  | ||
and Will, unless some lesser speed restriction is established  | ||
under
this
Chapter, the maximum speed limit outside an urban  | ||
district for a second
division vehicle designed or used for the  | ||
carrying of a gross weight of
8,001 pounds or more (including  | ||
the weight of the vehicle and
maximum load) is 60 miles per  | ||
hour on any interstate highway as defined by Section 1-133.1 of  | ||
this Code and
55 miles per hour on all other highways, roads,  | ||
and streets.
 | ||
 (e-1) (Blank).  | ||
 (f) Unless some other speed restriction is established  | ||
under this Chapter,
the maximum speed limit outside an urban  | ||
district for a bus is:
 | ||
  1. 65 miles per hour upon any highway which has at  | ||
 least 4 lanes of
traffic
and of which the roadways for  | ||
 traffic moving in opposite directions are
separated by a  | ||
 strip of ground which is not surfaced or suitable for  | ||
 vehicular
traffic, except that the maximum speed limit for  | ||
 a bus on all highways,
roads, or streets not under the  | ||
 jurisdiction of the Department or the Illinois
State Toll  | ||
 Highway Authority
is 55 miles per hour;
 | ||
  1.5. 70 miles per hour upon any interstate highway as  | ||
 defined by Section 1-133.1 of this Code outside the  | ||
 counties of Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Will;  | ||
 and | ||
  2. 55 miles per hour on any other highway.
 | ||
 (g) (Blank). 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-202, eff. 1-1-12; 98-511, eff. 1-1-14;  | ||
98-1126, eff. 1-1-15; 98-1128, eff. 1-1-15; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (625 ILCS 5/11-709.2) | ||
 Sec. 11-709.2. Bus on shoulder program. | ||
 (a) The use of specifically designated shoulders of  | ||
roadways by transit buses may be authorized by the Department  | ||
in cooperation with the Regional Transportation Authority and  | ||
the Suburban Bus Division of the Regional Transportation  | ||
Authority. The Department shall prescribe by rule which transit  | ||
buses are authorized to operate on shoulders, as well as times  | ||
and locations. The Department may erect signage to indicate  | ||
times and locations of designated shoulder usage.  | ||
 (b) (Blank). | ||
 (c) (Blank) Transportation.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-292, eff. 8-11-11; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14;  | ||
98-871, eff. 8-11-14; revised 10-1-147.)
 | ||
 (625 ILCS 5/12-215) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 12-215)
 | ||
 Sec. 12-215. Oscillating, rotating or flashing lights on  | ||
motor vehicles. Except as otherwise provided in this Code:
 | ||
 (a) The use of red or white oscillating, rotating or  | ||
flashing lights,
whether lighted or unlighted, is prohibited  | ||
except on:
 | ||
  1. Law enforcement vehicles of State, Federal or
local  | ||
 authorities;
 | ||
  2. A vehicle operated by a police officer or county  | ||
 coroner
and designated or authorized by local authorities,  | ||
 in writing, as a law
enforcement vehicle; however, such  | ||
 designation or authorization must
be carried in the  | ||
 vehicle;
 | ||
  2.1. A vehicle operated by a fire chief who has  | ||
 completed an emergency vehicle operation training course  | ||
 approved by the Office of the State Fire Marshal and  | ||
 designated or authorized by local authorities, in writing,  | ||
 as a fire department, fire protection district, or township  | ||
 fire department vehicle; however, the designation or  | ||
 authorization must
be carried in the vehicle, and the  | ||
 lights may be visible or activated only when responding to  | ||
 a bona fide emergency;
 | ||
  3. Vehicles of local fire departments and State or  | ||
 federal
firefighting vehicles;
 | ||
  4. Vehicles which are designed and used exclusively as  | ||
 ambulances
or rescue vehicles; furthermore, such lights  | ||
 shall not be lighted except
when responding to an emergency  | ||
 call for and while actually conveying the
sick or injured;
 | ||
  5. Tow trucks licensed in a state that requires such  | ||
 lights;
furthermore, such lights shall not be lighted on  | ||
 any such tow truck while the
tow truck is
operating in the  | ||
 State of Illinois;
 | ||
  6. Vehicles of the Illinois Emergency Management  | ||
 Agency, vehicles of the Office of the Illinois State Fire  | ||
 Marshal, vehicles of the Illinois Department of Public  | ||
 Health, vehicles of
the
Illinois Department of  | ||
 Corrections, and vehicles of the Illinois Department of  | ||
 Juvenile Justice;
 | ||
  7. Vehicles operated by a local or county emergency  | ||
 management
services agency as defined in the Illinois  | ||
 Emergency
Management Agency Act;
 | ||
  8. School buses operating alternately flashing head  | ||
 lamps as permitted
under Section 12-805 of this Code;
 | ||
  9. Vehicles that are equipped and used exclusively as  | ||
 organ transplant
vehicles when used in combination with  | ||
 blue oscillating, rotating, or flashing
lights;  | ||
 furthermore, these lights shall be lighted only when the  | ||
 transportation
is declared an emergency by a member of the  | ||
 transplant team or a representative
of the organ  | ||
 procurement organization;  | ||
  10. Vehicles of the Illinois Department of Natural  | ||
 Resources that are used for mine rescue and explosives  | ||
 emergency response; and | ||
  11. Vehicles of the Illinois Department of  | ||
 Transportation identified as Emergency Traffic Patrol; the  | ||
 lights shall not be lighted except when responding to an  | ||
 emergency call or when parked or stationary while engaged  | ||
 in motor vehicle assistance or at the scene of the  | ||
 emergency; and | ||
  12. Vehicles of the Illinois State Toll Highway
 | ||
 Authority identified as Highway Emergency Lane Patrol; the  | ||
 lights shall not be lighted except when responding to an  | ||
 emergency call or when parked or stationary while engaged  | ||
 in motor vehicle assistance or at the scene of the  | ||
 emergency.  | ||
 (b) The use of amber oscillating, rotating or flashing  | ||
lights, whether
lighted or unlighted, is prohibited except on:
 | ||
  1. Second division vehicles designed and used for  | ||
 towing or hoisting
vehicles; furthermore, such lights  | ||
 shall not be lighted except as
required in
this paragraph  | ||
 1; such lights shall be lighted
when such vehicles are  | ||
 actually being
used at the scene of an accident or
 | ||
 disablement; if the towing vehicle is equipped with a flat  | ||
 bed that
supports all wheels of the vehicle being  | ||
 transported, the lights shall not be
lighted while the  | ||
 vehicle is engaged in towing on a highway; if the towing
 | ||
 vehicle is not equipped with a flat bed that supports all  | ||
 wheels of a vehicle
being transported, the lights shall be  | ||
 lighted while the
towing
vehicle is engaged in towing on a  | ||
 highway during all
times when the use
of headlights is  | ||
 required under Section 12-201 of this Code; in addition,  | ||
 these vehicles may use white oscillating, rotating, or  | ||
 flashing lights in combination with amber oscillating,  | ||
 rotating, or flashing lights as provided in this paragraph;
 | ||
  2. Motor vehicles or equipment of the State of  | ||
 Illinois, the Illinois State Toll Highway Authority, local  | ||
 authorities
and contractors; furthermore, such lights  | ||
 shall not be lighted except while
such vehicles are engaged  | ||
 in maintenance or construction operations within
the  | ||
 limits of construction projects;
 | ||
  3. Vehicles or equipment used by engineering or survey  | ||
 crews;
furthermore, such lights shall not be lighted except  | ||
 while such vehicles
are actually engaged in work on a  | ||
 highway;
 | ||
  4. Vehicles of public utilities, municipalities, or  | ||
 other
construction, maintenance or automotive service  | ||
 vehicles except that such
lights shall be lighted only as a  | ||
 means for indicating the presence of a
vehicular traffic  | ||
 hazard requiring unusual care in approaching, overtaking
 | ||
 or passing while such vehicles are engaged in maintenance,  | ||
 service or
construction on a highway;
 | ||
  5. Oversized vehicle or load; however, such lights  | ||
 shall only be lighted
when moving under permit issued by  | ||
 the Department under Section 15-301
of this Code;
 | ||
  6. The front and rear of motorized equipment owned and  | ||
 operated by the
State of Illinois or any political  | ||
 subdivision thereof, which is designed
and used for removal  | ||
 of snow and ice from highways;
 | ||
  6.1. The front and rear of motorized equipment or  | ||
 vehicles that (i) are not owned by the State of Illinois or  | ||
 any political subdivision of the State, (ii) are designed  | ||
 and used for removal of snow and ice from highways and  | ||
 parking lots, and (iii) are equipped with a snow plow that  | ||
 is 12 feet in width; these lights may not be lighted except  | ||
 when the motorized equipment or vehicle is actually being  | ||
 used for those purposes on behalf of a unit of government;
 | ||
  7. Fleet safety vehicles registered in another state,  | ||
 furthermore, such
lights shall not be lighted except as  | ||
 provided for in Section 12-212 of
this Code;
 | ||
  8. Such other vehicles as may be authorized by local  | ||
 authorities;
 | ||
  9. Law enforcement vehicles of State or local  | ||
 authorities when used in
combination with red oscillating,  | ||
 rotating or flashing lights;
 | ||
  9.5. Propane delivery trucks;
 | ||
  10. Vehicles used for collecting or delivering mail for  | ||
 the
United States Postal Service provided that such lights  | ||
 shall not be lighted
except when such vehicles are actually  | ||
 being used for such purposes;
 | ||
  10.5. Vehicles of the Office of the Illinois State Fire  | ||
 Marshal, provided that such lights shall not be lighted  | ||
 except for when such vehicles are engaged in work for the  | ||
 Office of the Illinois State Fire Marshal;  | ||
  11. Any vehicle displaying a slow-moving vehicle  | ||
 emblem as
provided in Section 12-205.1;
 | ||
  12. All trucks equipped with self-compactors or  | ||
 roll-off hoists and
roll-on containers for garbage or  | ||
 refuse hauling. Such lights shall not be
lighted except  | ||
 when such vehicles are actually being used for such  | ||
 purposes;
 | ||
  13. Vehicles used by a security company, alarm  | ||
 responder, control
agency, or the Illinois Department of  | ||
 Corrections;
 | ||
  14. Security vehicles of the Department of Human  | ||
 Services; however, the
lights shall not be lighted except  | ||
 when being used for security related
purposes under the  | ||
 direction of the superintendent of the facility where the
 | ||
 vehicle is located; and
 | ||
  15. Vehicles of union representatives, except that the  | ||
 lights shall be
lighted only while the vehicle is within  | ||
 the limits of a construction
project.
 | ||
 (c) The use of blue oscillating, rotating or flashing  | ||
lights, whether
lighted or unlighted, is prohibited except on:
 | ||
  1. Rescue squad vehicles not owned by a fire department  | ||
 and
vehicles owned or operated by a:
 | ||
   voluntary firefighter;
 | ||
   paid firefighter;
 | ||
   part-paid firefighter;
 | ||
   call firefighter;
 | ||
   member of the board of trustees of a fire  | ||
 protection district;
 | ||
   paid or unpaid member of a rescue squad;
 | ||
   paid or unpaid member of a voluntary ambulance  | ||
 unit; or
 | ||
   paid or unpaid members of a local or county  | ||
 emergency management
services agency as defined in the  | ||
 Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act,
designated  | ||
 or authorized by local authorities, in writing, and  | ||
 carrying that
designation or authorization in the  | ||
 vehicle.
 | ||
  However, such lights are not to be lighted except when  | ||
 responding to a
bona fide emergency or when parked or  | ||
 stationary at the scene of a fire, rescue call, ambulance  | ||
 call, or motor vehicle accident.
 | ||
  Any person using these lights in accordance with this  | ||
 subdivision (c)1 must carry on his or her person an  | ||
 identification card or letter identifying the bona fide  | ||
 member of a fire department, fire protection district,  | ||
 rescue squad, ambulance unit, or emergency management  | ||
 services agency that owns or operates that vehicle. The  | ||
 card or letter must include: | ||
   (A) the name of the fire department, fire  | ||
 protection district, rescue squad, ambulance unit, or  | ||
 emergency management services agency; | ||
   (B) the member's position within the fire  | ||
 department, fire protection district, rescue squad,  | ||
 ambulance unit, or emergency management services  | ||
 agency; | ||
   (C) the member's term of service; and | ||
   (D) the name of a person within the fire  | ||
 department, fire protection district, rescue squad,  | ||
 ambulance unit, or emergency management services  | ||
 agency to contact to verify the information provided.
 | ||
  2. Police department vehicles in cities having a  | ||
 population of 500,000
or more inhabitants.
 | ||
  3. Law enforcement vehicles of State or local  | ||
 authorities when used in
combination with red oscillating,  | ||
 rotating or flashing lights.
 | ||
  4. Vehicles of local fire departments and State or  | ||
 federal
firefighting vehicles when used in combination  | ||
 with red oscillating,
rotating or flashing lights.
 | ||
  5. Vehicles which are designed and used exclusively as  | ||
 ambulances or
rescue vehicles when used in combination with  | ||
 red oscillating, rotating or
flashing lights; furthermore,  | ||
 such lights shall not be lighted except when
responding to  | ||
 an emergency call.
 | ||
  6. Vehicles that are equipped and used exclusively as  | ||
 organ transport
vehicles when used in combination with red  | ||
 oscillating, rotating, or flashing
lights; furthermore,  | ||
 these lights shall only be lighted when the transportation
 | ||
 is declared an emergency by a member of the transplant team  | ||
 or a
representative of the organ procurement organization.
 | ||
  7. Vehicles of the Illinois Emergency Management  | ||
 Agency, vehicles of the Office of the Illinois State Fire  | ||
 Marshal, vehicles of the Illinois Department of Public  | ||
 Health, vehicles of
the
Illinois Department of  | ||
 Corrections, and vehicles of the Illinois Department of  | ||
 Juvenile Justice, when used in combination with red  | ||
 oscillating,
rotating, or flashing lights.
 | ||
  8. Vehicles operated by a local or county emergency  | ||
 management
services agency as defined in the Illinois  | ||
 Emergency Management Agency
Act, when used in combination  | ||
 with red oscillating, rotating, or
flashing lights.
 | ||
  9. Vehicles of the Illinois Department of Natural  | ||
 Resources that are used for mine rescue and explosives  | ||
 emergency response, when used in combination with red  | ||
 oscillating,
rotating, or flashing lights.  | ||
 (c-1) In addition to the blue oscillating, rotating, or  | ||
flashing
lights permitted under subsection (c), and  | ||
notwithstanding subsection
(a), a vehicle operated by a  | ||
voluntary firefighter, a voluntary member
of a rescue squad, or  | ||
a member of a voluntary ambulance unit may be
equipped with  | ||
flashing white headlights and blue grill lights, which may
be  | ||
used only in responding to an emergency call or when parked or  | ||
stationary at the scene of a fire, rescue call, ambulance call,  | ||
or motor vehicle accident.
 | ||
 (c-2) In addition to the blue oscillating, rotating, or  | ||
flashing
lights permitted under subsection (c), and  | ||
notwithstanding subsection (a),
a vehicle operated by a paid or  | ||
unpaid member of a local or county
emergency management  | ||
services agency as defined in the Illinois Emergency
Management  | ||
Agency Act, may be equipped with white oscillating, rotating,
 | ||
or flashing lights to be used in combination with blue  | ||
oscillating, rotating,
or flashing lights, if authorization by  | ||
local authorities is in
writing and carried in the vehicle.
 | ||
 (d) The use of a combination of amber and white  | ||
oscillating, rotating or
flashing lights, whether lighted or  | ||
unlighted, is prohibited except on second division vehicles  | ||
designed and used for towing or hoisting
vehicles or motor
 | ||
vehicles or equipment of the State of Illinois, local  | ||
authorities, contractors,
and union representatives;  | ||
furthermore, such lights shall
not be lighted on second  | ||
division vehicles designed and used for towing or hoisting
 | ||
vehicles or vehicles of the State of Illinois, local  | ||
authorities, and
contractors except while such vehicles are  | ||
engaged in a tow operation, highway maintenance, or
 | ||
construction operations within the limits of highway  | ||
construction projects, and
shall not be lighted on the vehicles  | ||
of union representatives except when those
vehicles are within  | ||
the limits of a construction project.
 | ||
 (e) All oscillating, rotating or flashing lights referred  | ||
to in this Section
shall be of sufficient intensity, when  | ||
illuminated, to be visible at 500
feet in normal sunlight.
 | ||
 (f) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit a manufacturer  | ||
of oscillating,
rotating or flashing lights or his  | ||
representative or authorized vendor from temporarily mounting
 | ||
such lights on a vehicle for demonstration purposes only. If  | ||
the lights are not covered while the vehicle is operated upon a  | ||
highway, the vehicle shall display signage indicating that the  | ||
vehicle is out of service or not an emergency vehicle. The  | ||
signage shall be displayed on all sides of the vehicle in  | ||
letters at least 2 inches tall and one-half inch wide. A  | ||
vehicle authorized to have oscillating,
rotating, or flashing  | ||
lights mounted for demonstration purposes may not activate the  | ||
lights while the vehicle is operated upon a highway. 
 | ||
 (g) Any person violating the provisions of subsections (a),  | ||
(b), (c) or (d)
of this Section who without lawful authority  | ||
stops or detains or attempts
to stop or detain another person  | ||
shall be guilty of a Class 2 felony.
 | ||
 (h) Except as provided in subsection (g) above, any person  | ||
violating the
provisions of subsections (a) or (c) of this  | ||
Section shall be guilty of a
Class A misdemeanor.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-39, eff. 1-1-12; 97-149, eff. 7-14-11; 97-813,  | ||
eff. 7-13-12; 97-1173, eff. 1-1-14; 98-80, eff. 7-15-13;  | ||
98-123, eff. 1-1-14; 98-468, eff. 8-16-13; 98-756, eff.  | ||
7-16-14; 98-873, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-6-14.)
 | ||
 (625 ILCS 5/15-111) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 15-111)
 | ||
 Sec. 15-111. Wheel and axle loads and gross weights. 
 | ||
 (a) No vehicle or combination of vehicles
with pneumatic  | ||
tires may be operated, unladen or with load,
when the total  | ||
weight on the road surface
exceeds the following: 20,000 pounds  | ||
on a single axle; 34,000 pounds on a tandem axle with
no axle  | ||
within the tandem exceeding 20,000 pounds; 80,000
pounds gross  | ||
weight for vehicle combinations of 5 or more axles;
or a total  | ||
weight on a group of 2 or more consecutive axles in excess of  | ||
that
weight produced by the application of the following  | ||
formula: W = 500 times the
sum of (LN divided by N-1) + 12N +  | ||
36, where "W" equals overall total weight on
any group of 2 or  | ||
more consecutive axles to the nearest 500 pounds, "L" equals
 | ||
the
distance measured to the nearest foot between extremes of  | ||
any group of 2 or
more consecutive axles, and "N" equals the  | ||
number of axles in the group under
consideration.
 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
 The above formula when expressed in tabular form results in  | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
allowable loads
as follows:
 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distance measured
 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
to the nearest
 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
foot between the
 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
extremes of any Maximum weight in pounds
 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
group of 2 or of any group of
 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
more consecutive 2 or more consecutive axles
 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
axles
 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
  | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
  | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
  | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
*If the distance between 2 axles is 96 inches or less, the 2  | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
axles are
tandem axles and the maximum total weight may not  | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
exceed 34,000 pounds,
notwithstanding the higher limit  | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
resulting from the application of the formula.
 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
 Vehicles not in a combination having more than 4 axles may  | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
not exceed the
weight in the table in this subsection (a) for 4  | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
axles measured between the
extreme axles of the
vehicle.
 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
 Vehicles in a combination having more than 6 axles may not  | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
exceed the weight
in the table in this subsection (a) for 6  | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
axles measured between the extreme
axles of the
combination.
 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
 Local authorities, with respect
to streets and highways  | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
under their jurisdiction, without additional
fees, may also by  | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
ordinance or resolution allow the weight limitations of this
 | ||
subsection, provided the maximum gross weight on any one axle  | ||
shall not exceed
20,000 pounds and the maximum total weight on  | ||
any tandem axle
shall not exceed
34,000 pounds, on designated  | ||
highways when appropriate regulatory signs giving
notice are  | ||
erected upon the street or highway or portion of any street or
 | ||
highway affected by the ordinance or resolution.
 | ||
 The following are exceptions to the above formula:
 | ||
  (1) Vehicles for which a different limit is established  | ||
 and posted in
accordance with Section 15-316 of this Code.
 | ||
  (2) Vehicles for which the Department of  | ||
 Transportation and local
authorities issue overweight
 | ||
 permits under authority of Section 15-301 of this Code.  | ||
 These vehicles are
not subject
to the bridge formula.
 | ||
  (3) Cities having a population of more than 50,000 may  | ||
 permit by
ordinance axle loads on 2-axle 2 axle motor  | ||
 vehicles 33 1/2% above those
provided for herein, but the  | ||
 increase shall not become effective until the
city has  | ||
 officially notified the Department of the passage of the
 | ||
 ordinance and shall not apply to those vehicles when  | ||
 outside of the limits
of the city, nor shall the gross  | ||
 weight of any 2-axle 2 axle motor vehicle
operating over  | ||
 any street of the city exceed 40,000 pounds.
 | ||
  (4) Weight limitations shall not apply to vehicles  | ||
 (including loads)
operated by a public utility when  | ||
 transporting equipment required for
emergency repair of  | ||
 public utility facilities or properties or water wells.
 | ||
  (4.5) A 3-axle or 4-axle 3 or 4 axle vehicle (including  | ||
 when laden) operated or hired by a municipality within  | ||
 Cook, Lake, McHenry, Kane, DuPage, or Will county being  | ||
 operated for the purpose of performing emergency sewer  | ||
 repair that would be subject to a weight limitation less  | ||
 than 66,000 pounds under the formula in this subsection (a)  | ||
 shall have a weight limitation of 66,000 pounds or the  | ||
 vehicle's gross vehicle weight rating, whichever is less.  | ||
 This paragraph (4.5) does not apply to vehicles being  | ||
 operated on the National System of Interstate and Defense  | ||
 Highways, or to vehicles being operated on bridges or other  | ||
 elevated structures constituting a part of a highway. 
 | ||
  (5) Two consecutive sets of tandem axles may carry a  | ||
 total weight of
34,000
pounds each if the overall distance  | ||
 between the first and last axles of the
consecutive sets of  | ||
 tandem axles is 36 feet or more, notwithstanding the lower  | ||
 limit resulting from the application of the above formula.
 | ||
  (6) A truck, not in combination and used exclusively  | ||
 for the collection of
rendering materials,
may, when laden,  | ||
 transmit upon the road surface,
except when on part of the  | ||
 National System of Interstate and Defense
Highways, the
 | ||
 following maximum weights:
22,000 pounds on a single axle;  | ||
 40,000 pounds on a tandem axle.
 | ||
  (7) A truck not in combination, equipped with a self  | ||
 compactor or an
industrial roll-off hoist and roll-off  | ||
 container, used exclusively for garbage,
refuse, or  | ||
 recycling operations, may, when laden, transmit upon the  | ||
 road surface,
except when on part of the National System of  | ||
 Interstate and Defense
Highways, the following maximum  | ||
 weights: 22,000 pounds on a
single axle; 40,000 pounds on a  | ||
 tandem axle; 40,000 pounds gross weight on a
2-axle  | ||
 vehicle; 54,000 pounds gross weight on a 3-axle vehicle.
 | ||
 This vehicle is not subject to the bridge formula.
 | ||
  (7.5) A 3-axle rear discharge truck mixer registered as  | ||
 a Special Hauling Vehicle, used exclusively for the mixing  | ||
 and transportation of concrete in the plastic state, may,  | ||
 when laden, transmit upon the road surface, except when on  | ||
 part of the National System of Interstate and Defense  | ||
 Highways, the following maximum weights: 22,000 pounds on  | ||
 single axle; 40,000 pounds on a tandem axle; 54,000 pounds  | ||
 gross weight on a 3-axle vehicle. This vehicle is not  | ||
 subject to the bridge formula.  | ||
  (8) Except as provided in paragraph (7.5) of this  | ||
 subsection (a), tandem axles on a 3-axle truck registered  | ||
 as a Special Hauling
Vehicle, manufactured prior to or in  | ||
 the model year of 2024 and
first
registered in Illinois  | ||
 prior to January 1, 2025, with a distance
greater than
72  | ||
 inches but not more than 96 inches between any series of 2  | ||
 axles, is
allowed a combined weight on the series not to  | ||
 exceed 36,000 pounds and neither
axle of the series may  | ||
 exceed 20,000 pounds. Any vehicle of this type
manufactured
 | ||
 after the model year of 2024 or first registered in  | ||
 Illinois after
December 31,
2024 may not exceed a combined  | ||
 weight of 34,000 pounds through the
series of
2 axles and  | ||
 neither axle of the series may exceed 20,000 pounds. | ||
  A 3-axle combination sewer cleaning jetting vacuum  | ||
 truck registered as a Special Hauling
Vehicle, used  | ||
 exclusively for the transportation of
non-hazardous solid  | ||
 waste, manufactured before or in the
model year of 2014,  | ||
 first registered in Illinois before
January 1, 2015, may,  | ||
 when laden, transmit upon the road
surface, except when on  | ||
 part of the National System of
Interstate and Defense  | ||
 Highways, the following maximum
weights: 22,000 pounds on a  | ||
 single axle; 40,000 pounds on a
tandem axle; 54,000 pounds  | ||
 gross weight on a 3-axle
vehicle. This vehicle is not  | ||
 subject to the bridge formula.  | ||
  (9) A 4-axle truck mixer registered as a Special  | ||
 Hauling Vehicle, used exclusively for the mixing and  | ||
 transportation of concrete in the plastic state, and not  | ||
 operated on a highway that is part of the National System  | ||
 of Interstate Highways, is allowed the following maximum  | ||
 weights: 20,000 pounds on any single axle; 36,000 pounds on  | ||
 a series of axles greater than 72 inches but not more than  | ||
 96 inches; and 34,000 pounds on any series of 2 axles  | ||
 greater than 40 inches but not more than 72 inches. The  | ||
 gross weight of this vehicle may not exceed the weights  | ||
 allowed by the bridge formula for 4 axles. The bridge  | ||
 formula does not apply to any series of 3 axles while the  | ||
 vehicle is transporting concrete in the plastic state, but  | ||
 no axle or tandem axle of the series may exceed the maximum  | ||
 weight permitted under this paragraph (9) of subsection  | ||
 (a). | ||
  (10) Combinations of vehicles, registered as Special  | ||
 Hauling Vehicles that
include a semitrailer manufactured  | ||
 prior to or in the model year of 2024, and
registered in  | ||
 Illinois prior to January 1, 2025, having 5 axles
with a
 | ||
 distance of 42 feet or less between extreme axles, may not  | ||
 exceed the
following maximum weights: 20,000 pounds on a  | ||
 single axle; 34,000 pounds on a
tandem axle; and 72,000  | ||
 pounds gross weight. This combination of vehicles is
not  | ||
 subject
to the bridge formula. For all those combinations  | ||
 of vehicles that include a
semitrailer manufactured after  | ||
 the effective date of P.A. 92-0417, the overall distance  | ||
 between the first and last
axles of the 2 sets of
tandems  | ||
 must be 18 feet 6 inches or
more. Any combination of  | ||
 vehicles that has had its cargo
container replaced in its  | ||
 entirety after December 31, 2024 may not
exceed
the weights  | ||
 allowed by the bridge formula. | ||
  (11) The maximum weight allowed on a vehicle with  | ||
 crawler type tracks is 40,000 pounds. | ||
  (12) A combination of vehicles, including a tow truck  | ||
 and a disabled vehicle
or disabled combination of vehicles,  | ||
 that exceeds the weight restriction
imposed by this Code,  | ||
 may be operated on a public highway in this State
provided  | ||
 that neither the disabled vehicle nor any vehicle being  | ||
 towed nor
the tow truck itself shall exceed the weight  | ||
 limitations permitted
under this Chapter. During the  | ||
 towing operation, neither the tow truck nor
the vehicle  | ||
 combination shall exceed
24,000 pounds on a single
rear  | ||
 axle and
44,000 pounds on a tandem rear axle, provided the  | ||
 towing vehicle: | ||
   (i) is specifically designed as a tow truck having  | ||
 a gross vehicle
weight
rating of at least 18,000 pounds  | ||
 and is equipped with air brakes, provided that
air
 | ||
 brakes are required only if the towing vehicle is  | ||
 towing a vehicle,
semitrailer, or tractor-trailer  | ||
 combination that is equipped with air brakes; | ||
   (ii) is equipped with flashing, rotating, or  | ||
 oscillating amber lights,
visible for at least 500 feet  | ||
 in all directions; | ||
   (iii) is capable of utilizing the lighting and  | ||
 braking systems of the
disabled vehicle or combination  | ||
 of vehicles; and | ||
   (iv) does not engage in a tow exceeding 20 miles  | ||
 from the initial point of
wreck or disablement. Any  | ||
 additional movement of the vehicles may occur only
upon  | ||
 issuance of authorization for that movement under the  | ||
 provisions of
Sections 15-301 through 15-319 of this  | ||
 Code. The towing vehicle, however,
may tow any disabled  | ||
 vehicle to a point where repairs are actually to
occur.  | ||
 This movement shall be valid only on State routes.
The  | ||
 tower must abide by posted bridge weight
limits. | ||
  (13) Upon and during a declaration of an emergency  | ||
 propane supply disaster by the Governor under Section 7 of  | ||
 the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act: | ||
   (i) a truck not in combination, equipped with a  | ||
 cargo tank, used exclusively for the transportation of  | ||
 propane or liquefied petroleum gas may, when laden,  | ||
 transmit upon the road surface, except when on part of  | ||
 the National System of Interstate and Defense  | ||
 Highways, the following maximum weights: 22,000 pounds  | ||
 on a single axle; 40,000 pounds on a tandem axle;  | ||
 40,000 pounds gross weight on a 2-axle vehicle; 54,000  | ||
 pounds gross weight on a 3-axle vehicle; and | ||
   (ii) a truck when in combination with a trailer  | ||
 equipped with a cargo tank used exclusively for the  | ||
 transportation of propane or liquefied petroleum gas  | ||
 may, when laden, transmit upon the road surface, except  | ||
 when on part of the National System of Interstate and  | ||
 Defense Highways, the following maximum weights:  | ||
 22,000 pounds on a single axle; 40,000 pounds on a  | ||
 tandem axle; 90,000 pounds gross weight on a 5-axle 5  | ||
 or 6-axle vehicle. | ||
  Vehicles operating under this paragraph (13) are not  | ||
 subject to the bridge formula.  | ||
  (14) (13) A vehicle or combination of vehicles that  | ||
 uses natural gas or propane gas as a motor fuel may exceed  | ||
 the above weight limitations by 2,000 pounds, except on  | ||
 interstate highways as defined by Section 1-133.1 of this  | ||
 Code. This paragraph (14) (13) shall not allow a vehicle to  | ||
 exceed any posted weight limit on a highway or structure.  | ||
 Gross weight limits shall not apply to the combination of  | ||
the tow truck
and vehicles being towed. The tow truck license  | ||
plate must cover the
operating empty weight of the tow truck  | ||
only. The weight
of each vehicle being towed shall be covered  | ||
by a valid license plate issued to
the owner or operator of the  | ||
vehicle being towed and displayed on that vehicle.
If no valid  | ||
plate issued to the owner or operator of that vehicle is  | ||
displayed
on that vehicle, or the plate displayed on that  | ||
vehicle does not cover the
weight of the vehicle, the weight of  | ||
the vehicle shall be covered by
the third tow truck plate  | ||
issued to the owner or operator of the tow truck and
 | ||
temporarily affixed to the vehicle being towed. If a roll-back  | ||
carrier is registered and being used as a tow truck, however,  | ||
the license plate or plates for the tow truck must cover the  | ||
gross vehicle weight, including any load carried on the bed of  | ||
the roll-back carrier. | ||
 The Department may by rule or regulation prescribe  | ||
additional requirements.
However, nothing in this Code shall  | ||
prohibit a tow truck under
instructions of a police officer  | ||
from legally clearing a disabled vehicle,
that may be in  | ||
violation of weight limitations of this Chapter, from the
 | ||
roadway to the berm or shoulder of the highway.
If in the  | ||
opinion of the police officer that location is unsafe, the  | ||
officer
is authorized to have the disabled vehicle towed to the  | ||
nearest place of
safety. | ||
 For the purpose of this subsection, gross vehicle weight  | ||
rating, or
GVWR, means the value specified by the manufacturer  | ||
as the loaded
weight of the tow truck. | ||
 (b) As used in this Section, "recycling haul" or "recycling  | ||
operation" means the hauling of non-hazardous, non-special,  | ||
non-putrescible materials, such as paper, glass, cans, or  | ||
plastic, for subsequent use in the secondary materials market. | ||
 (c) No vehicle or combination of vehicles equipped with  | ||
pneumatic tires
shall be operated, unladen or with load, upon  | ||
the highways of this State in
violation of the provisions of  | ||
any permit issued under the provisions of
Sections 15-301  | ||
through 15-319 of this Chapter. | ||
 (d) No vehicle or combination of vehicles equipped with  | ||
other than pneumatic
tires may be operated, unladen or with  | ||
load, upon the highways of this State
when the gross weight on  | ||
the road surface through any wheel exceeds 800
pounds per inch  | ||
width of tire tread or when the gross weight on the road
 | ||
surface through any axle exceeds 16,000 pounds.
 | ||
 (e) No person shall operate a vehicle or combination of  | ||
vehicles over
a bridge or other elevated structure constituting  | ||
part of a highway with a
gross weight that is greater than the  | ||
maximum weight permitted by the
Department, when the structure  | ||
is sign posted as provided in this Section. | ||
 (f) The Department upon request from any local authority  | ||
shall, or upon
its own initiative may, conduct an investigation  | ||
of any bridge or other
elevated structure constituting a part  | ||
of a highway, and if it finds that
the structure cannot with  | ||
safety to itself withstand the weight of vehicles
otherwise  | ||
permissible under this Code the Department shall determine and
 | ||
declare the maximum weight of vehicles that the structures can  | ||
withstand,
and shall cause or permit suitable signs stating  | ||
maximum weight to be
erected and maintained before each end of  | ||
the structure. No person shall
operate a vehicle or combination  | ||
of vehicles over any structure with a
gross weight that is  | ||
greater than the posted maximum weight.
 | ||
 (g) Upon the trial of any person charged with a violation  | ||
of subsection
(e) or (f) of this Section, proof of the  | ||
determination of the maximum
allowable weight by the Department  | ||
and the existence of the signs,
constitutes conclusive evidence  | ||
of the maximum weight that can be
maintained with safety to the  | ||
bridge or structure.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-201, eff. 1-1-12; 98-409, eff. 1-1-14; 98-410,  | ||
eff. 8-16-13; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14; 98-942, eff. 1-1-15;  | ||
98-956, eff. 1-1-15; 98-1029, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 Section 470. The Boat Registration and Safety Act is  | ||
amended by changing Section 5-18 as follows:
 | ||
 (625 ILCS 45/5-18) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 315-13)
 | ||
 Sec. 5-18. 
(a) Beginning on January 1, 2016, no person born  | ||
on or after January 1, 1998, unless exempted by subsection (i),  | ||
shall operate a motorboat with over 10 horse power unless that  | ||
person has a valid Boating Safety Certificate issued by the  | ||
Department of Natural Resources or an entity or organization  | ||
recognized and approved by the Department.  | ||
 (b) No person under 10 years of age may operate a
 | ||
motorboat.  | ||
 (c) Prior to January 1, 2016, persons at least 10 years of  | ||
age and less than 12 years of age
may operate a motorboat with  | ||
over 10 horse power only if they are accompanied on the  | ||
motorboat and
under the direct control of a parent or guardian  | ||
or a person at least 18
years of age designated by a parent or  | ||
guardian. Beginning on January 1, 2016, persons at least 10  | ||
years of age and less than 12 years of age may operate a  | ||
motorboat with over 10 horse power only if the person is under  | ||
the direct on-board supervision of a parent or guardian who  | ||
meets the requirements of subsection (a) or a person at least  | ||
18 years of age who meets the requirements of subsection (a)  | ||
and is designated by a parent or guardian.  | ||
 (d) Prior to January 1, 2016, persons at least 12 years
of  | ||
age and less than 18 years of age may operate a motorboat with  | ||
over 10 horse power only if they
are accompanied on the  | ||
motorboat and under the direct control of a parent
or guardian  | ||
or a person at least 18 years of age designated by a parent or
 | ||
guardian, or the motorboat operator is in possession of a  | ||
Boating Safety
Certificate issued by the Department of Natural  | ||
Resources,
Division of Law Enforcement, authorizing the holder  | ||
to operate motorboats. Beginning on January 1, 2016, persons at  | ||
least 12 years and less than 18 years of age may operate a  | ||
motorboat with over 10 horse power only if the person meets the  | ||
requirements of subsection (a) or is under the direct on-board  | ||
supervision of a parent or guardian who meets the requirements  | ||
of subsection (a) or a person at least 18 years of age who  | ||
meets the requirements of subsection (a) and is designated by a  | ||
parent or guardian. 
 | ||
 (e) Beginning January 1, 2016, the owner of a motorboat or  | ||
a person given supervisory authority over a motorboat shall not  | ||
permit a motorboat with over 10 horse power to be operated by a  | ||
person who does not meet the Boating Safety Certificate  | ||
requirements of this Section.  | ||
 (f) Licensed boat liveries shall offer abbreviated  | ||
operating and safety instruction covering core boat safety  | ||
rules to all renters, unless the renter can demonstrate  | ||
compliance with the Illinois Boating Safety Certificate  | ||
requirements of this Section, or is exempt under subsection (i)  | ||
of this Section. A person who completes abbreviated operating  | ||
and safety instruction may operate a motorboat rented from the  | ||
livery providing the abbreviated operating and safety  | ||
instruction without having a Boating Safety Certificate for up  | ||
to one year from the date of instruction. The Department shall  | ||
adopt rules to implement this subsection.  | ||
 (g) Violations.  | ||
  (1) A person who is operating a motorboat with over 10  | ||
 horse power and is required to have a valid Boating Safety  | ||
 Certificate under the provisions of this Section shall  | ||
 present the certificate to a law enforcement officer upon  | ||
 request. Failure of the person to present the certificate  | ||
 upon request is a petty offense.  | ||
  (2) A person who provides false or fictitious  | ||
 information in an application for a Boating Safety  | ||
 Certificate; or who alters, forges, counterfeits, or  | ||
 falsifies a Boating Safety Certificate; or who possesses a  | ||
 Boating Safety Certificate that has been altered, forged,  | ||
 counterfeited, or falsified is guilty of a Class A  | ||
 misdemeanor.  | ||
  (3) A person who loans or permits his or her their  | ||
 Boating Safety Certificate to be used by another person; or  | ||
 who operates a motorboat with over 10 horse power using a  | ||
 Boating Safety Certificate that has not been issued to that  | ||
 person is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.  | ||
  (4) A violation Violations of this Section done with  | ||
 the knowledge of a parent or guardian
shall be deemed a  | ||
 violation by the parent or guardian and punishable
under  | ||
 Section 11A-1.
 | ||
 (h) The Department of Natural Resources shall
establish a  | ||
program of instruction on boating safety, laws, regulations and
 | ||
administrative laws, and any other subject matter which might  | ||
be related to
the subject of general boat safety. The program  | ||
shall be conducted by
instructors certified by the Department  | ||
of Natural Resources. The course of instruction for persons  | ||
certified to teach
boating safety shall be not less than 8  | ||
hours in length, and the Department
shall have the authority to  | ||
revoke the certification of any instructor who
has demonstrated  | ||
his inability to conduct courses on the subject matter.
The  | ||
Department of Natural Resources shall develop and provide a  | ||
method for students to complete the program online. Students  | ||
satisfactorily completing a program of not less than 8 hours in
 | ||
length shall receive a certificate of safety from the  | ||
Department of
Natural Resources. The
Department may cooperate
 | ||
with schools, online vendors, private clubs and other  | ||
organizations in offering boating
safety courses throughout  | ||
the State of Illinois.
 | ||
 The Department shall issue certificates of boating safety  | ||
to persons 10
years of age or older successfully completing the  | ||
prescribed course
of instruction and passing such tests as may  | ||
be prescribed by the Department.
The Department may charge each  | ||
person who enrolls in a course of instruction
a fee not to  | ||
exceed $5. If a fee is authorized by the Department, the
 | ||
Department shall authorize instructors conducting such courses  | ||
meeting
standards established by it to charge for the rental of  | ||
facilities or for
the cost of materials utilized in the course.  | ||
Fees retained by the
Department shall be utilized to defray a  | ||
part of its expenses to operate
the safety and accident  | ||
reporting programs of the Department.
 | ||
 (i) A Boating Safety Certificate is not required by:  | ||
  (1) a person who possesses a valid United States Coast  | ||
 Guard commercial vessel operator's license or a marine  | ||
 certificate issued by the Canadian government;  | ||
  (2) a person employed by the United States, this State,  | ||
 another state, or a subdivision thereof while in  | ||
 performance of his or her official duties;  | ||
  (3) a person who is not a resident, is temporarily  | ||
 using the waters of this State for a period not to exceed  | ||
 90 days, and meets any applicable boating safety education  | ||
 requirements of his or her state of residency or possesses  | ||
 a Canadian Pleasure Craft Operator's Card;  | ||
  (4) a person who is a resident of this State who has  | ||
 met the applicable boating safety education requirements  | ||
 of another state or possesses a Canadian Pleasure Craft  | ||
 Operator's Card;  | ||
  (5) a person who has assumed operation of the motorboat  | ||
 due to the illness or physical impairment of the operator,  | ||
 and is returning the motorboat or personal watercraft to  | ||
 shore in order to provide assistance or care for that  | ||
 operator;  | ||
  (6) a person who is registered as a commercial  | ||
 fisherman or a person who is under the onboard direct  | ||
 supervision of the commercial fisherman while operating  | ||
 the commercial fisherman's vessel;  | ||
  (7) a person who is serving or has qualified as a  | ||
 surface warfare officer or enlisted surface warfare  | ||
 specialist in the United States Navy;  | ||
  (8) a person who has assumed operation of the motorboat  | ||
 for the purpose of completing a watercraft safety course  | ||
 approved by the Department, the U.S. Coast Guard, or the  | ||
 National Association of State Boating Law Administrators;  | ||
  (9) a person using only an electric motor to propel the  | ||
 motorboat; | ||
  (10) a person operating a motorboat on private  | ||
 property; or  | ||
  (11) a person over the age of 12 years who holds a  | ||
 valid certificate issued by
another state, a province of  | ||
 the Dominion of
Canada, the United States Coast Guard  | ||
 Auxiliary or the United States
Power Squadron need not  | ||
 obtain a certificate from the Department if the
course  | ||
 content of the program in such other state, province or  | ||
 organization
substantially meets that established by the  | ||
 Department under this Section.
A certificate issued by the  | ||
 Department or by another state, province of the
Dominion of  | ||
 Canada or approved organization shall not constitute an
 | ||
 operator's license, but shall certify only that the student  | ||
 has
successfully passed a course in boating safety  | ||
 instruction.
 | ||
 (j) The Department of Natural Resources shall adopt rules  | ||
necessary to implement this Section. The Department of Natural  | ||
Resources shall consult and coordinate with the boating public,  | ||
professional organizations for recreational boating safety,  | ||
and the boating retail, leasing, and dealer business community  | ||
in the adoption of these rules. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-698, eff. 1-1-15; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 475. The Clerks of Courts Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 27.6 as follows:
 | ||
 (705 ILCS 105/27.6)
 | ||
 (Section as amended by P.A. 96-286, 96-576, 96-578, 96-625,  | ||
96-667, 96-1175, 96-1342, 97-434, 97-1051, 97-1108, 97-1150,  | ||
98-658, and 98-1013) | ||
 Sec. 27.6. (a) All fees, fines, costs, additional  | ||
penalties, bail balances
assessed or forfeited, and any other  | ||
amount paid by a person to the circuit
clerk equalling an  | ||
amount of $55 or more, except the fine imposed by Section  | ||
5-9-1.15
of the Unified Code of Corrections, the additional fee  | ||
required
by subsections (b) and (c), restitution under Section  | ||
5-5-6 of the
Unified Code of Corrections, contributions to a  | ||
local anti-crime program ordered pursuant to Section  | ||
5-6-3(b)(13) or Section 5-6-3.1(c)(13) of the Unified Code of  | ||
Corrections, reimbursement for the costs of an emergency
 | ||
response as provided under Section 11-501 of the Illinois  | ||
Vehicle Code,
any fees collected for attending a traffic safety  | ||
program under paragraph (c)
of Supreme Court Rule 529, any fee  | ||
collected on behalf of a State's Attorney
under Section 4-2002  | ||
of the Counties Code or a sheriff under Section 4-5001
of the  | ||
Counties Code, or any cost imposed under Section 124A-5 of the  | ||
Code of
Criminal Procedure of 1963, for convictions, orders of  | ||
supervision, or any
other disposition for a violation of  | ||
Chapters 3, 4, 6, 11, and 12 of the
Illinois Vehicle Code, or a  | ||
similar provision of a local ordinance, and any
violation of  | ||
the Child Passenger Protection Act, or a similar provision of a
 | ||
local ordinance, and except as otherwise provided in this  | ||
Section
shall be disbursed
within 60 days after receipt by the  | ||
circuit
clerk as follows: 44.5% shall be disbursed to the  | ||
entity authorized by law to
receive the fine imposed in the  | ||
case; 16.825% shall be disbursed to the State
Treasurer; and  | ||
38.675% shall be disbursed to the county's general corporate
 | ||
fund. Of the 16.825% disbursed to the State Treasurer, 2/17  | ||
shall be deposited
by the State Treasurer into the Violent  | ||
Crime Victims Assistance Fund, 5.052/17
shall be deposited into  | ||
the Traffic and Criminal Conviction Surcharge Fund,
3/17 shall  | ||
be deposited into the Drivers Education Fund, and 6.948/17  | ||
shall be
deposited into the Trauma Center Fund. Of the 6.948/17  | ||
deposited into the
Trauma Center Fund from the 16.825%  | ||
disbursed to the State Treasurer, 50% shall
be disbursed to the  | ||
Department of Public Health and 50% shall be disbursed to
the  | ||
Department of Healthcare and Family Services. For fiscal year  | ||
1993, amounts deposited into
the Violent Crime Victims  | ||
Assistance Fund, the Traffic and Criminal
Conviction Surcharge  | ||
Fund, or the Drivers Education Fund shall not exceed 110%
of  | ||
the amounts deposited into those funds in fiscal year 1991. Any
 | ||
amount that exceeds the 110% limit shall be distributed as  | ||
follows: 50%
shall be disbursed to the county's general  | ||
corporate fund and 50% shall be
disbursed to the entity  | ||
authorized by law to receive the fine imposed in
the case. Not  | ||
later than March 1 of each year the circuit clerk
shall submit  | ||
a report of the amount of funds remitted to the State
Treasurer  | ||
under this Section during the preceding year based upon
 | ||
independent verification of fines and fees. All counties shall  | ||
be subject
to this Section, except that counties with a  | ||
population under 2,000,000
may, by ordinance, elect not to be  | ||
subject to this Section. For offenses
subject to this Section,  | ||
judges shall impose one total sum of money payable
for  | ||
violations. The circuit clerk may add on no additional amounts  | ||
except
for amounts that are required by Sections 27.3a and  | ||
27.3c of
this Act, unless those amounts are specifically waived  | ||
by the judge. With
respect to money collected by the circuit  | ||
clerk as a result of
forfeiture of bail, ex parte judgment or  | ||
guilty plea pursuant to Supreme
Court Rule 529, the circuit  | ||
clerk shall first deduct and pay amounts
required by Sections  | ||
27.3a and 27.3c of this Act. This Section is a denial
and  | ||
limitation of home rule powers and functions under subsection  | ||
(h) of
Section 6 of Article VII of the Illinois Constitution.
 | ||
 (b) In addition to any other fines and court costs assessed  | ||
by the courts,
any person convicted or receiving an order of  | ||
supervision for driving under
the influence of alcohol or drugs  | ||
shall pay an additional fee of $100 to the
clerk of the circuit  | ||
court. This amount, less 2 1/2% that shall be used to
defray  | ||
administrative costs incurred by the clerk, shall be remitted  | ||
by the
clerk to the Treasurer within 60 days after receipt for  | ||
deposit into the Trauma
Center Fund. This additional fee of  | ||
$100 shall not be considered a part of the
fine for purposes of  | ||
any reduction in the fine for time served either before or
 | ||
after sentencing. Not later than March 1 of each year the  | ||
Circuit Clerk shall
submit a report of the amount of funds  | ||
remitted to the State Treasurer under
this subsection during  | ||
the preceding calendar year.
 | ||
 (b-1) In addition to any other fines and court costs  | ||
assessed by the courts,
any person convicted or receiving an  | ||
order of supervision for driving under the
influence of alcohol  | ||
or drugs shall pay an additional fee of $5 to the clerk
of the  | ||
circuit court. This amount, less
2 1/2% that shall be used to  | ||
defray administrative costs incurred by the clerk,
shall be  | ||
remitted by the clerk to the Treasurer within 60 days after  | ||
receipt
for deposit into the Spinal Cord Injury Paralysis Cure  | ||
Research Trust Fund.
This additional fee of $5 shall not
be  | ||
considered a part of the fine for purposes of any reduction in  | ||
the fine for
time served either before or after sentencing. Not  | ||
later than March 1 of each
year the Circuit Clerk shall submit  | ||
a report of the amount of funds remitted to
the State Treasurer  | ||
under this subsection during the preceding calendar
year.
 | ||
 (c) In addition to any other fines and court costs assessed  | ||
by the courts,
any person convicted for a violation of Sections  | ||
24-1.1, 24-1.2, or 24-1.5 of
the Criminal Code of 1961 or the  | ||
Criminal Code of 2012 or a person sentenced for a violation of  | ||
the Cannabis
Control Act, the Illinois Controlled Substances  | ||
Act, or the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection  | ||
Act
shall pay an additional fee of $100 to the clerk
of the  | ||
circuit court. This amount, less
2 1/2% that shall be used to  | ||
defray administrative costs incurred by the clerk,
shall be  | ||
remitted by the clerk to the Treasurer within 60 days after  | ||
receipt
for deposit into the Trauma Center Fund. This  | ||
additional fee of $100 shall not
be considered a part of the  | ||
fine for purposes of any reduction in the fine for
time served  | ||
either before or after sentencing. Not later than March 1 of  | ||
each
year the Circuit Clerk shall submit a report of the amount  | ||
of funds remitted to
the State Treasurer under this subsection  | ||
during the preceding calendar year.
 | ||
 (c-1) In addition to any other fines and court costs  | ||
assessed by the
courts, any person sentenced for a violation of  | ||
the Cannabis Control Act,
the Illinois Controlled Substances  | ||
Act, or the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection  | ||
Act shall pay an additional fee of $5 to the
clerk of the  | ||
circuit court. This amount, less 2 1/2% that shall be used to
 | ||
defray administrative costs incurred by the clerk, shall be  | ||
remitted by the
clerk to the Treasurer within 60 days after  | ||
receipt for deposit into the Spinal
Cord Injury Paralysis Cure  | ||
Research Trust Fund. This additional fee of $5
shall not be  | ||
considered a part of the fine for purposes of any reduction in  | ||
the
fine for time served either before or after sentencing. Not  | ||
later than March 1
of each year the Circuit Clerk shall submit  | ||
a report of the amount of funds
remitted to the State Treasurer  | ||
under this subsection during the preceding
calendar year.
 | ||
 (d) The following amounts must be remitted to the State  | ||
Treasurer for
deposit into the Illinois Animal Abuse Fund:
 | ||
  (1) 50% of the amounts collected for felony offenses  | ||
 under Sections
3, 3.01, 3.02, 3.03, 4, 4.01, 4.03, 4.04, 5,  | ||
 5.01, 6, 7, 7.5, 7.15, and 16
of the Humane Care for  | ||
 Animals Act and Section 26-5 or 48-1 of the Criminal Code  | ||
 of
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012;
 | ||
  (2) 20% of the amounts collected for Class A and Class  | ||
 B misdemeanors
under Sections 3, 3.01, 4, 4.01, 4.03, 4.04,  | ||
 5, 5.01, 6, 7, 7.1, 7.5, 7.15,
and 16 of the Humane Care  | ||
 for Animals Act and Section 26-5 or 48-1 of the Criminal
 | ||
 Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012; and
 | ||
  (3) 50% of the amounts collected for Class C  | ||
 misdemeanors under Sections
4.01 and 7.1 of the Humane Care  | ||
 for Animals Act and Section 26-5 or 48-1 of the
Criminal  | ||
 Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.
 | ||
 (e) Any person who receives a disposition of court  | ||
supervision for a violation of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a  | ||
similar provision of a local ordinance shall, in addition to  | ||
any other fines, fees, and court costs, pay an additional fee  | ||
of $29, to be disbursed as provided in Section 16-104c of the  | ||
Illinois Vehicle Code. In addition to the fee of $29, the  | ||
person shall also pay a fee of $6, if not waived by the court.  | ||
If this $6 fee is collected, $5.50 of the fee shall be  | ||
deposited into the Circuit Court Clerk Operation and  | ||
Administrative Fund created by the Clerk of the Circuit Court  | ||
and 50 cents of the fee shall be deposited into the Prisoner  | ||
Review Board Vehicle and Equipment Fund in the State treasury.
 | ||
 (f) This Section does not apply to the additional child  | ||
pornography fines assessed and collected under Section  | ||
5-9-1.14 of the Unified Code of Corrections.
 | ||
 (g) (Blank).  | ||
 (h) (Blank).  | ||
 (i)
Of the amounts collected as fines under subsection (b)  | ||
of Section 3-712 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, 99% shall be  | ||
deposited into the Illinois Military Family Relief Fund and 1%  | ||
shall be deposited into the Circuit Court Clerk Operation and  | ||
Administrative Fund created by the Clerk of the Circuit Court  | ||
to be used to offset the costs incurred by the Circuit Court  | ||
Clerk in performing the additional duties required to collect  | ||
and disburse funds to entities of State and local government as  | ||
provided by law.
 | ||
 (j) Any person convicted of, pleading guilty to, or placed  | ||
on supervision for a serious traffic violation, as defined in  | ||
Section 1-187.001 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, a violation of  | ||
Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, or a violation of  | ||
a similar provision of a local ordinance shall pay an  | ||
additional fee of $35, to be disbursed as provided in Section  | ||
16-104d of that Code.  | ||
 This subsection (j) becomes inoperative on January 1, 2020.  | ||
 (k) For any conviction or disposition of court supervision  | ||
for a violation of Section 11-1429 of the Illinois Vehicle  | ||
Code, the circuit clerk shall distribute the fines paid by the  | ||
person as specified by subsection (h) of Section 11-1429 of the  | ||
Illinois Vehicle Code.  | ||
 (l) Any person who receives a disposition of court  | ||
supervision for a violation of Section 11-501 of the Illinois  | ||
Vehicle Code or a similar provision of a local ordinance shall,  | ||
in addition to any other fines, fees, and court costs, pay an  | ||
additional fee of $50, which shall
be collected by the circuit  | ||
clerk and then remitted to the State Treasurer for deposit into  | ||
the Roadside Memorial Fund, a special fund in the State  | ||
treasury. However, the court may waive the fee if full  | ||
restitution is complied with. Subject to appropriation, all  | ||
moneys in the Roadside Memorial Fund shall be used by the  | ||
Department of Transportation to pay fees imposed under  | ||
subsection (f) of Section 20 of the Roadside Memorial Act. The  | ||
fee shall be remitted by the circuit clerk within one month  | ||
after receipt to the State Treasurer for deposit into the  | ||
Roadside Memorial Fund.  | ||
 (m) Of the amounts collected as fines under subsection (c)  | ||
of Section 411.4 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act or  | ||
subsection (c) of Section 90 of the Methamphetamine Control and  | ||
Community Protection Act, 99% shall be deposited to the law  | ||
enforcement agency or fund specified and 1% shall be deposited  | ||
into the Circuit Court Clerk Operation and Administrative Fund  | ||
to be used to offset the costs incurred by the Circuit Court  | ||
Clerk in performing the additional duties required to collect  | ||
and disburse funds to entities of State and local government as  | ||
provided by law.  | ||
 (n) In addition to any other fines and court costs assessed  | ||
by the courts, any person who is convicted of or pleads guilty  | ||
to a violation of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal  | ||
Code of 2012, or a similar provision of a local ordinance, or  | ||
who is convicted of, pleads guilty to, or receives a  | ||
disposition of court supervision for a violation of the  | ||
Illinois Vehicle Code, or a similar provision of a local  | ||
ordinance, shall pay an additional fee of $15 to the clerk of  | ||
the circuit court. This additional fee of $15 shall not be  | ||
considered a part of the fine for purposes of any reduction in  | ||
the fine for time served either before or after sentencing.  | ||
This amount, less 2.5% that shall be used to defray  | ||
administrative costs incurred by the clerk, shall be remitted  | ||
by the clerk to the State Treasurer within 60 days after  | ||
receipt for deposit into the State Police Merit Board Public  | ||
Safety Fund.  | ||
 (o) The amounts collected as fines under Sections 10-9,  | ||
11-14.1, 11-14.3, and 11-18 of the Criminal Code of 2012 shall  | ||
be collected by the circuit clerk and distributed as provided  | ||
under Section 5-9-1.21 of the Unified Code of Corrections in  | ||
lieu of any disbursement under subsection (a) of this Section. | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-434, eff. 1-1-12; 97-1051, eff. 1-1-13;  | ||
97-1108, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; 98-658, eff.  | ||
6-23-14; 98-1013, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 (Section as amended by P.A. 96-576, 96-578, 96-625, 96-667,  | ||
96-735, 96-1175, 96-1342, 97-434, 97-1051, 97-1108, 97-1150,  | ||
98-658, and 98-1013) | ||
 Sec. 27.6. (a) All fees, fines, costs, additional  | ||
penalties, bail balances
assessed or forfeited, and any other  | ||
amount paid by a person to the circuit
clerk equalling an  | ||
amount of $55 or more, except the fine imposed by Section  | ||
5-9-1.15
of the Unified Code of Corrections, the additional fee  | ||
required
by subsections (b) and (c), restitution under Section  | ||
5-5-6 of the
Unified Code of Corrections, contributions to a  | ||
local anti-crime program ordered pursuant to Section  | ||
5-6-3(b)(13) or Section 5-6-3.1(c)(13) of the Unified Code of  | ||
Corrections, reimbursement for the costs of an emergency
 | ||
response as provided under Section 11-501 of the Illinois  | ||
Vehicle Code,
any fees collected for attending a traffic safety  | ||
program under paragraph (c)
of Supreme Court Rule 529, any fee  | ||
collected on behalf of a State's Attorney
under Section 4-2002  | ||
of the Counties Code or a sheriff under Section 4-5001
of the  | ||
Counties Code, or any cost imposed under Section 124A-5 of the  | ||
Code of
Criminal Procedure of 1963, for convictions, orders of  | ||
supervision, or any
other disposition for a violation of  | ||
Chapters 3, 4, 6, 11, and 12 of the
Illinois Vehicle Code, or a  | ||
similar provision of a local ordinance, and any
violation of  | ||
the Child Passenger Protection Act, or a similar provision of a
 | ||
local ordinance, and except as otherwise provided in this  | ||
Section
shall be disbursed
within 60 days after receipt by the  | ||
circuit
clerk as follows: 44.5% shall be disbursed to the  | ||
entity authorized by law to
receive the fine imposed in the  | ||
case; 16.825% shall be disbursed to the State
Treasurer; and  | ||
38.675% shall be disbursed to the county's general corporate
 | ||
fund. Of the 16.825% disbursed to the State Treasurer, 2/17  | ||
shall be deposited
by the State Treasurer into the Violent  | ||
Crime Victims Assistance Fund, 5.052/17
shall be deposited into  | ||
the Traffic and Criminal Conviction Surcharge Fund,
3/17 shall  | ||
be deposited into the Drivers Education Fund, and 6.948/17  | ||
shall be
deposited into the Trauma Center Fund. Of the 6.948/17  | ||
deposited into the
Trauma Center Fund from the 16.825%  | ||
disbursed to the State Treasurer, 50% shall
be disbursed to the  | ||
Department of Public Health and 50% shall be disbursed to
the  | ||
Department of Healthcare and Family Services. For fiscal year  | ||
1993, amounts deposited into
the Violent Crime Victims  | ||
Assistance Fund, the Traffic and Criminal
Conviction Surcharge  | ||
Fund, or the Drivers Education Fund shall not exceed 110%
of  | ||
the amounts deposited into those funds in fiscal year 1991. Any
 | ||
amount that exceeds the 110% limit shall be distributed as  | ||
follows: 50%
shall be disbursed to the county's general  | ||
corporate fund and 50% shall be
disbursed to the entity  | ||
authorized by law to receive the fine imposed in
the case. Not  | ||
later than March 1 of each year the circuit clerk
shall submit  | ||
a report of the amount of funds remitted to the State
Treasurer  | ||
under this Section during the preceding year based upon
 | ||
independent verification of fines and fees. All counties shall  | ||
be subject
to this Section, except that counties with a  | ||
population under 2,000,000
may, by ordinance, elect not to be  | ||
subject to this Section. For offenses
subject to this Section,  | ||
judges shall impose one total sum of money payable
for  | ||
violations. The circuit clerk may add on no additional amounts  | ||
except
for amounts that are required by Sections 27.3a and  | ||
27.3c of
this Act, Section 16-104c of the Illinois Vehicle  | ||
Code, and subsection (a) of Section 5-1101 of the Counties  | ||
Code, unless those amounts are specifically waived by the  | ||
judge. With
respect to money collected by the circuit clerk as  | ||
a result of
forfeiture of bail, ex parte judgment or guilty  | ||
plea pursuant to Supreme
Court Rule 529, the circuit clerk  | ||
shall first deduct and pay amounts
required by Sections 27.3a  | ||
and 27.3c of this Act. Unless a court ordered payment schedule  | ||
is implemented or fee requirements are waived pursuant to court  | ||
order, the clerk of the court may add to any unpaid fees and  | ||
costs a delinquency amount equal to 5% of the unpaid fees that  | ||
remain unpaid after 30 days, 10% of the unpaid fees that remain  | ||
unpaid after 60 days, and 15% of the unpaid fees that remain  | ||
unpaid after 90 days. Notice to those parties may be made by  | ||
signage posting or publication. The additional delinquency  | ||
amounts collected under this Section shall be deposited in the  | ||
Circuit Court Clerk Operation and Administrative Fund to be  | ||
used to defray administrative costs incurred by the circuit  | ||
clerk in performing the duties required to collect and disburse  | ||
funds. This Section is a denial
and limitation of home rule  | ||
powers and functions under subsection (h) of
Section 6 of  | ||
Article VII of the Illinois Constitution.
 | ||
 (b) In addition to any other fines and court costs assessed  | ||
by the courts,
any person convicted or receiving an order of  | ||
supervision for driving under
the influence of alcohol or drugs  | ||
shall pay an additional fee of $100 to the
clerk of the circuit  | ||
court. This amount, less 2 1/2% that shall be used to
defray  | ||
administrative costs incurred by the clerk, shall be remitted  | ||
by the
clerk to the Treasurer within 60 days after receipt for  | ||
deposit into the Trauma
Center Fund. This additional fee of  | ||
$100 shall not be considered a part of the
fine for purposes of  | ||
any reduction in the fine for time served either before or
 | ||
after sentencing. Not later than March 1 of each year the  | ||
Circuit Clerk shall
submit a report of the amount of funds  | ||
remitted to the State Treasurer under
this subsection during  | ||
the preceding calendar year.
 | ||
 (b-1) In addition to any other fines and court costs  | ||
assessed by the courts,
any person convicted or receiving an  | ||
order of supervision for driving under the
influence of alcohol  | ||
or drugs shall pay an additional fee of $5 to the clerk
of the  | ||
circuit court. This amount, less
2 1/2% that shall be used to  | ||
defray administrative costs incurred by the clerk,
shall be  | ||
remitted by the clerk to the Treasurer within 60 days after  | ||
receipt
for deposit into the Spinal Cord Injury Paralysis Cure  | ||
Research Trust Fund.
This additional fee of $5 shall not
be  | ||
considered a part of the fine for purposes of any reduction in  | ||
the fine for
time served either before or after sentencing. Not  | ||
later than March 1 of each
year the Circuit Clerk shall submit  | ||
a report of the amount of funds remitted to
the State Treasurer  | ||
under this subsection during the preceding calendar
year.
 | ||
 (c) In addition to any other fines and court costs assessed  | ||
by the courts,
any person convicted for a violation of Sections  | ||
24-1.1, 24-1.2, or 24-1.5 of
the Criminal Code of 1961 or the  | ||
Criminal Code of 2012 or a person sentenced for a violation of  | ||
the Cannabis
Control Act, the Illinois Controlled Substances  | ||
Act, or the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection  | ||
Act
shall pay an additional fee of $100 to the clerk
of the  | ||
circuit court. This amount, less
2 1/2% that shall be used to  | ||
defray administrative costs incurred by the clerk,
shall be  | ||
remitted by the clerk to the Treasurer within 60 days after  | ||
receipt
for deposit into the Trauma Center Fund. This  | ||
additional fee of $100 shall not
be considered a part of the  | ||
fine for purposes of any reduction in the fine for
time served  | ||
either before or after sentencing. Not later than March 1 of  | ||
each
year the Circuit Clerk shall submit a report of the amount  | ||
of funds remitted to
the State Treasurer under this subsection  | ||
during the preceding calendar year.
 | ||
 (c-1) In addition to any other fines and court costs  | ||
assessed by the
courts, any person sentenced for a violation of  | ||
the Cannabis Control Act,
the Illinois Controlled Substances  | ||
Act, or the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection  | ||
Act shall pay an additional fee of $5 to the
clerk of the  | ||
circuit court. This amount, less 2 1/2% that shall be used to
 | ||
defray administrative costs incurred by the clerk, shall be  | ||
remitted by the
clerk to the Treasurer within 60 days after  | ||
receipt for deposit into the Spinal
Cord Injury Paralysis Cure  | ||
Research Trust Fund. This additional fee of $5
shall not be  | ||
considered a part of the fine for purposes of any reduction in  | ||
the
fine for time served either before or after sentencing. Not  | ||
later than March 1
of each year the Circuit Clerk shall submit  | ||
a report of the amount of funds
remitted to the State Treasurer  | ||
under this subsection during the preceding
calendar year.
 | ||
 (d) The following amounts must be remitted to the State  | ||
Treasurer for
deposit into the Illinois Animal Abuse Fund:
 | ||
  (1) 50% of the amounts collected for felony offenses  | ||
 under Sections
3, 3.01, 3.02, 3.03, 4, 4.01, 4.03, 4.04, 5,  | ||
 5.01, 6, 7, 7.5, 7.15, and 16
of the Humane Care for  | ||
 Animals Act and Section 26-5 or 48-1 of the Criminal Code  | ||
 of
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012;
 | ||
  (2) 20% of the amounts collected for Class A and Class  | ||
 B misdemeanors
under Sections 3, 3.01, 4, 4.01, 4.03, 4.04,  | ||
 5, 5.01, 6, 7, 7.1, 7.5, 7.15,
and 16 of the Humane Care  | ||
 for Animals Act and Section 26-5 or 48-1 of the Criminal
 | ||
 Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012; and
 | ||
  (3) 50% of the amounts collected for Class C  | ||
 misdemeanors under Sections
4.01 and 7.1 of the Humane Care  | ||
 for Animals Act and Section 26-5 or 48-1 of the
Criminal  | ||
 Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.
 | ||
 (e) Any person who receives a disposition of court  | ||
supervision for a violation of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a  | ||
similar provision of a local ordinance shall, in addition to  | ||
any other fines, fees, and court costs, pay an additional fee  | ||
of $29, to be disbursed as provided in Section 16-104c of the  | ||
Illinois Vehicle Code. In addition to the fee of $29, the  | ||
person shall also pay a fee of $6, if not waived by the court.  | ||
If this $6 fee is collected, $5.50 of the fee shall be  | ||
deposited into the Circuit Court Clerk Operation and  | ||
Administrative Fund created by the Clerk of the Circuit Court  | ||
and 50 cents of the fee shall be deposited into the Prisoner  | ||
Review Board Vehicle and Equipment Fund in the State treasury.
 | ||
 (f) This Section does not apply to the additional child  | ||
pornography fines assessed and collected under Section  | ||
5-9-1.14 of the Unified Code of Corrections.
 | ||
 (g) Any person convicted of or pleading guilty to a serious  | ||
traffic violation, as defined in Section 1-187.001 of the  | ||
Illinois Vehicle Code, shall pay an additional fee of $35, to  | ||
be disbursed as provided in Section 16-104d of that Code. This  | ||
subsection (g) becomes inoperative on January 1, 2020.  | ||
 (h) In all counties having a population of 3,000,000 or  | ||
more inhabitants,  | ||
  (1) A person who is found guilty of or pleads guilty to  | ||
 violating subsection (a) of Section 11-501 of the Illinois  | ||
 Vehicle Code, including any person placed on court  | ||
 supervision for violating subsection (a), shall be fined  | ||
 $750 as provided for by subsection (f) of Section 11-501.01  | ||
 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, payable to the circuit clerk,  | ||
 who shall distribute the money pursuant to subsection (f)  | ||
 of Section 11-501.01 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.  | ||
  (2) When a crime laboratory DUI analysis fee of $150,  | ||
 provided for by Section 5-9-1.9 of the Unified Code of  | ||
 Corrections is assessed, it shall be disbursed by the  | ||
 circuit clerk as provided by subsection (f) of Section  | ||
 5-9-1.9 of the Unified Code of Corrections. | ||
  (3) When a fine for a violation of Section 11-605.1 of  | ||
 the Illinois Vehicle Code is $250 or greater, the person  | ||
 who violated that Section shall be charged an additional  | ||
 $125 as provided for by subsection (e) of Section 11-605.1  | ||
 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, which shall be disbursed by  | ||
 the circuit clerk to a State or county Transportation  | ||
 Safety Highway Hire-back Fund as provided by subsection (e)  | ||
 of Section 11-605.1 of the Illinois Vehicle Code. | ||
  (4) When a fine for a violation of subsection (a) of  | ||
 Section 11-605 of the Illinois Vehicle Code is $150 or  | ||
 greater, the additional $50 which is charged as provided  | ||
 for by subsection (f) of Section 11-605 of the Illinois  | ||
 Vehicle Code shall be disbursed by the circuit clerk to a  | ||
 school district or districts for school safety purposes as  | ||
 provided by subsection (f) of Section 11-605. | ||
  (5) When a fine for a violation of subsection (a) of  | ||
 Section 11-1002.5 of the Illinois Vehicle Code is $150 or  | ||
 greater, the additional $50 which is charged as provided  | ||
 for by subsection (c) of Section 11-1002.5 of the Illinois  | ||
 Vehicle Code shall be disbursed by the circuit clerk to a  | ||
 school district or districts for school safety purposes as  | ||
 provided by subsection (c) of Section 11-1002.5 of the  | ||
 Illinois Vehicle Code.  | ||
  (6) When a mandatory drug court fee of up to $5 is  | ||
 assessed as provided in subsection (f) of Section 5-1101 of  | ||
 the Counties Code, it shall be disbursed by the circuit  | ||
 clerk as provided in subsection (f) of Section 5-1101 of  | ||
 the Counties Code. | ||
  (7) When a mandatory teen court, peer jury, youth  | ||
 court, or other youth diversion program fee is assessed as  | ||
 provided in subsection (e) of Section 5-1101 of the  | ||
 Counties Code, it shall be disbursed by the circuit clerk  | ||
 as provided in subsection (e) of Section 5-1101 of the  | ||
 Counties Code. | ||
  (8) When a Children's Advocacy Center fee is assessed  | ||
 pursuant to subsection (f-5) of Section 5-1101 of the  | ||
 Counties Code, it shall be disbursed by the circuit clerk  | ||
 as provided in subsection (f-5) of Section 5-1101 of the  | ||
 Counties Code. | ||
  (9) When a victim impact panel fee is assessed pursuant  | ||
 to subsection (b) of Section 11-501.01 of the Vehicle Code,  | ||
 it shall be disbursed by the circuit clerk to the victim  | ||
 impact panel to be attended by the defendant. | ||
  (10) When a new fee collected in traffic cases is  | ||
 enacted after the effective date of this subsection (h), it  | ||
 shall be excluded from the percentage disbursement  | ||
 provisions of this Section unless otherwise indicated by  | ||
 law.  | ||
 (i)
Of the amounts collected as fines under subsection (b)  | ||
of Section 3-712 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, 99% shall be  | ||
deposited into the Illinois Military Family Relief Fund and 1%  | ||
shall be deposited into the Circuit Court Clerk Operation and  | ||
Administrative Fund created by the Clerk of the Circuit Court  | ||
to be used to offset the costs incurred by the Circuit Court  | ||
Clerk in performing the additional duties required to collect  | ||
and disburse funds to entities of State and local government as  | ||
provided by law.
 | ||
 (j) (Blank).  | ||
 (k) For any conviction or disposition of court supervision  | ||
for a violation of Section 11-1429 of the Illinois Vehicle  | ||
Code, the circuit clerk shall distribute the fines paid by the  | ||
person as specified by subsection (h) of Section 11-1429 of the  | ||
Illinois Vehicle Code.  | ||
 (l) Any person who receives a disposition of court  | ||
supervision for a violation of Section 11-501 of the Illinois  | ||
Vehicle Code or a similar provision of a local ordinance shall,  | ||
in addition to any other fines, fees, and court costs, pay an  | ||
additional fee of $50, which shall
be collected by the circuit  | ||
clerk and then remitted to the State Treasurer for deposit into  | ||
the Roadside Memorial Fund, a special fund in the State  | ||
treasury. However, the court may waive the fee if full  | ||
restitution is complied with. Subject to appropriation, all  | ||
moneys in the Roadside Memorial Fund shall be used by the  | ||
Department of Transportation to pay fees imposed under  | ||
subsection (f) of Section 20 of the Roadside Memorial Act. The  | ||
fee shall be remitted by the circuit clerk within one month  | ||
after receipt to the State Treasurer for deposit into the  | ||
Roadside Memorial Fund.  | ||
 (m) Of the amounts collected as fines under subsection (c)  | ||
of Section 411.4 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act or  | ||
subsection (c) of Section 90 of the Methamphetamine Control and  | ||
Community Protection Act, 99% shall be deposited to the law  | ||
enforcement agency or fund specified and 1% shall be deposited  | ||
into the Circuit Court Clerk Operation and Administrative Fund  | ||
to be used to offset the costs incurred by the Circuit Court  | ||
Clerk in performing the additional duties required to collect  | ||
and disburse funds to entities of State and local government as  | ||
provided by law.  | ||
 (n) In addition to any other fines and court costs assessed  | ||
by the courts, any person who is convicted of or pleads guilty  | ||
to a violation of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal  | ||
Code of 2012, or a similar provision of a local ordinance, or  | ||
who is convicted of, pleads guilty to, or receives a  | ||
disposition of court supervision for a violation of the  | ||
Illinois Vehicle Code, or a similar provision of a local  | ||
ordinance, shall pay an additional fee of $15 to the clerk of  | ||
the circuit court. This additional fee of $15 shall not be  | ||
considered a part of the fine for purposes of any reduction in  | ||
the fine for time served either before or after sentencing.  | ||
This amount, less 2.5% that shall be used to defray  | ||
administrative costs incurred by the clerk, shall be remitted  | ||
by the clerk to the State Treasurer within 60 days after  | ||
receipt for deposit into the State Police Merit Board Public  | ||
Safety Fund.  | ||
 (o) The amounts collected as fines under Sections 10-9,  | ||
11-14.1, 11-14.3, and 11-18 of the Criminal Code of 2012 shall  | ||
be collected by the circuit clerk and distributed as provided  | ||
under Section 5-9-1.21 of the Unified Code of Corrections in  | ||
lieu of any disbursement under subsection (a) of this Section. | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-434, eff. 1-1-12; 97-1051, eff. 1-1-13;  | ||
97-1108, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; 98-658, eff.  | ||
6-23-14; 98-1013, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 Section 480. The Juvenile Court Act of 1987 is amended by  | ||
changing Sections 3-40, 5-105, and 5-301 as follows:
 | ||
 (705 ILCS 405/3-40) | ||
 Sec. 3-40. Minors involved in electronic dissemination of  | ||
indecent visual depictions in need of supervision. | ||
 (a) For the purposes of this Section: | ||
 "Computer" has the meaning ascribed to it in Section 17-0.5  | ||
of the Criminal Code of 2012. | ||
 "Electronic communication device" means an electronic  | ||
device, including but not limited to a wireless telephone,  | ||
personal digital assistant, or a portable or mobile computer,  | ||
that is capable of transmitting images or pictures. | ||
 "Indecent visual depiction" means a depiction or portrayal  | ||
in any pose, posture, or setting involving a lewd exhibition of  | ||
the unclothed or transparently clothed genitals, pubic area,  | ||
buttocks, or, if such person is female, a fully or partially  | ||
developed breast of the person. | ||
 "Minor" means a person under 18 years of age. | ||
 (b) A minor shall not distribute or disseminate an indecent  | ||
visual depiction of another minor through the use of a computer  | ||
or electronic communication device. | ||
 (c) Adjudication. A minor who violates subsection (b) of  | ||
this Section may be subject to a petition for adjudication and  | ||
adjudged a minor in need of supervision. | ||
 (d) Kinds of dispositional orders. A minor found to be in  | ||
need of supervision under this Section may be: | ||
  (1) ordered to obtain counseling or other supportive  | ||
 services to address the acts that led to the need for  | ||
 supervision; or | ||
  (2) ordered to perform community service. | ||
 (e) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to prohibit  | ||
a prosecution for disorderly conduct, public indecency, child  | ||
pornography, a violation of Article 26.5 (Harassing and Obscene  | ||
Communications) of the Criminal Code of 2012, or any other  | ||
applicable provision of law.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 96-1087, eff. 1-1-11; 97-1108, eff. 1-1-13;  | ||
97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (705 ILCS 405/5-105)
 | ||
 Sec. 5-105. Definitions. As used in this Article:
 | ||
  (1) "Aftercare release" means the conditional and  | ||
 revocable release of an adjudicated delinquent juvenile  | ||
 committed to the Department of Juvenile Justice under the  | ||
 supervision of the Department of Juvenile Justice.  | ||
  (1.5) "Court" means the circuit court in a session or  | ||
 division
assigned to hear proceedings under this Act, and  | ||
 includes the term Juvenile
Court.
 | ||
  (2) "Community service" means uncompensated labor for  | ||
 a community service
agency as hereinafter defined.
 | ||
  (2.5) "Community service agency" means a  | ||
 not-for-profit organization,
community
organization,  | ||
 church, charitable organization, individual, public  | ||
 office,
or other public body whose purpose is to enhance
 | ||
 the physical or mental health of a delinquent minor or to  | ||
 rehabilitate the
minor, or to improve the environmental  | ||
 quality or social welfare of the
community which agrees to  | ||
 accept community service from juvenile delinquents
and to  | ||
 report on the progress of the community service to the  | ||
 State's
Attorney pursuant to an agreement or to the court  | ||
 or to any agency designated
by the court or to the  | ||
 authorized diversion program that has referred the
 | ||
 delinquent minor for community service. 
 | ||
  (3) "Delinquent minor" means any minor who prior to his  | ||
 or her 18th birthday has violated or attempted to violate,  | ||
 regardless of where the act occurred, any federal, State,  | ||
 county or municipal law or ordinance.
 | ||
  (4) "Department" means the Department of Human  | ||
 Services unless specifically
referenced as another  | ||
 department.
 | ||
  (5) "Detention" means the temporary care of a minor who  | ||
 is alleged to be or
has been adjudicated
delinquent and who  | ||
 requires secure custody for the minor's own
protection or  | ||
 the community's protection in a facility designed to  | ||
 physically
restrict the minor's movements, pending  | ||
 disposition by the court or
execution of an order of the  | ||
 court for placement or commitment. Design
features that  | ||
 physically restrict movement include, but are not limited  | ||
 to,
locked rooms and the secure handcuffing of a minor to a  | ||
 rail or other
stationary object. In addition, "detention"  | ||
 includes the court ordered
care of an alleged or  | ||
 adjudicated delinquent minor who requires secure
custody  | ||
 pursuant to Section 5-125 of this Act.
 | ||
  (6) "Diversion" means the referral of a juvenile,  | ||
 without court
intervention,
into a program that provides  | ||
 services designed to educate the juvenile and
develop a  | ||
 productive and responsible approach to living in the  | ||
 community.
 | ||
  (7) "Juvenile detention home" means a public facility  | ||
 with specially trained
staff that conforms to the county  | ||
 juvenile detention standards adopted by
the Department of  | ||
 Juvenile Justice.
 | ||
  (8) "Juvenile justice continuum" means a set of  | ||
 delinquency prevention
programs and services designed for  | ||
 the purpose of preventing or reducing
delinquent acts,  | ||
 including criminal activity by youth gangs, as well as
 | ||
 intervention, rehabilitation, and prevention services  | ||
 targeted at minors who
have committed delinquent acts,
and  | ||
 minors who have previously been committed to residential  | ||
 treatment programs
for delinquents. The term includes  | ||
 children-in-need-of-services and
 | ||
 families-in-need-of-services programs; aftercare and  | ||
 reentry services;
substance abuse and mental health  | ||
 programs;
community service programs; community service
 | ||
 work programs; and alternative-dispute resolution programs  | ||
 serving
youth-at-risk of delinquency and their families,  | ||
 whether offered or delivered
by State or
local governmental  | ||
 entities, public or private for-profit or not-for-profit
 | ||
 organizations, or religious or charitable organizations.  | ||
 This term would also
encompass any program or service  | ||
 consistent with the purpose of those programs
and services  | ||
 enumerated in this subsection.
 | ||
  (9) "Juvenile police officer" means a sworn police  | ||
 officer who has completed
a Basic Recruit Training Course,  | ||
 has been assigned to the position of juvenile
police  | ||
 officer by his or her chief law enforcement officer and has  | ||
 completed
the necessary juvenile officers training as  | ||
 prescribed by the Illinois Law
Enforcement Training  | ||
 Standards Board, or in the case of a State police officer,
 | ||
 juvenile officer training approved by the Director of State
 | ||
 Police.
 | ||
  (10) "Minor" means a person under the age of 21 years  | ||
 subject to this Act.
 | ||
  (11) "Non-secure custody" means confinement where the  | ||
 minor is not
physically
restricted by being placed in a  | ||
 locked cell or room, by being handcuffed to a
rail or other  | ||
 stationary object, or by other means. Non-secure custody  | ||
 may
include, but is not limited to, electronic monitoring,  | ||
 foster home placement,
home confinement, group home  | ||
 placement, or physical restriction of movement or
activity  | ||
 solely through facility staff.
 | ||
  (12) "Public or community service" means uncompensated  | ||
 labor for a
not-for-profit organization
or public body  | ||
 whose purpose is to enhance physical or mental stability of  | ||
 the
offender, environmental quality or the social welfare  | ||
 and which agrees to
accept public or community service from  | ||
 offenders and to report on the progress
of the offender and  | ||
 the public or community service to the court or to the
 | ||
 authorized diversion program that has referred the  | ||
 offender for public or
community
service. "Public or  | ||
 community service" does not include blood donation or  | ||
 assignment to labor at a blood bank. For the purposes of  | ||
 this Act, "blood bank" has the meaning ascribed to the term  | ||
 in Section 2-124 of the Illinois Clinical Laboratory and  | ||
 Blood Bank Act.
 | ||
  (13) "Sentencing hearing" means a hearing to determine  | ||
 whether a minor
should
be adjudged a ward of the court, and  | ||
 to determine what sentence should be
imposed on the minor.  | ||
 It is the intent of the General Assembly that the term
 | ||
 "sentencing hearing" replace the term "dispositional  | ||
 hearing" and be synonymous
with that definition as it was  | ||
 used in the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
 | ||
  (14) "Shelter" means the temporary care of a minor in  | ||
 physically
unrestricting facilities pending court  | ||
 disposition or execution of court order
for placement.
 | ||
  (15) "Site" means a not-for-profit organization,  | ||
 public
body, church, charitable organization, or  | ||
 individual agreeing to
accept
community service from  | ||
 offenders and to report on the progress of ordered or
 | ||
 required public or community service to the court or to the  | ||
 authorized
diversion program that has referred the  | ||
 offender for public or community
service.
 | ||
  (16) "Station adjustment" means the informal or formal  | ||
 handling of an
alleged
offender by a juvenile police  | ||
 officer.
 | ||
  (17) "Trial" means a hearing to determine whether the  | ||
 allegations of a
petition under Section 5-520 that a minor  | ||
 is delinquent are proved beyond a
reasonable doubt. It is  | ||
 the intent of the General Assembly that the term
"trial"  | ||
 replace the term "adjudicatory hearing" and be synonymous  | ||
 with that
definition as it was used in the Juvenile Court  | ||
 Act of 1987.
 | ||
 The changes made to this Section by Public Act 98-61 apply  | ||
to violations or attempted violations committed on or after  | ||
January 1, 2014 (the effective date of Public Act 98-61).  | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-61, eff. 1-1-14; 98-558, eff. 1-1-14; 98-685,  | ||
eff. 1-1-15; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14; 98-824, eff. 1-1-15; revised  | ||
10-2-14.)
 | ||
 (705 ILCS 405/5-301)
 | ||
 Sec. 5-301. Station adjustments. A minor arrested for any  | ||
offense or a violation of a condition of previous
station  | ||
adjustment may receive a station adjustment for that arrest as
 | ||
provided herein. In deciding whether to impose a station  | ||
adjustment, either
informal
or formal, a juvenile police  | ||
officer shall consider the following factors:
 | ||
  (A) The seriousness of the alleged offense.
 | ||
  (B) The prior history of delinquency of the minor.
 | ||
  (C) The age of the minor.
 | ||
  (D) The culpability of the minor in committing the  | ||
 alleged offense.
 | ||
  (E) Whether the offense was committed in an aggressive  | ||
 or premeditated
manner.
 | ||
  (F) Whether the minor used or possessed a deadly weapon  | ||
 when committing
the alleged offenses.
 | ||
 (1) Informal station adjustment.
 | ||
  (a) An informal station adjustment is defined as a  | ||
 procedure when a
juvenile police officer determines that  | ||
 there is probable
cause to
believe that the minor has  | ||
 committed an offense.
 | ||
  (b) A minor shall receive no more than 3 informal  | ||
 station adjustments
statewide for a misdemeanor offense  | ||
 within 3 years without prior approval from
the
State's  | ||
 Attorney's Office.
 | ||
  (c) A minor shall receive no more than 3 informal  | ||
 station adjustments
statewide for a felony offense within 3  | ||
 years without prior approval from the
State's
Attorney's  | ||
 Office.
 | ||
  (d) A minor shall receive a combined total of no more  | ||
 than 5 informal
station adjustments statewide during his or  | ||
 her minority.
 | ||
  (e) The juvenile police officer may make reasonable  | ||
 conditions of an
informal station adjustment which may  | ||
 include but are not limited to:
 | ||
   (i) Curfew.
 | ||
   (ii) Conditions restricting entry into designated  | ||
 geographical areas.
 | ||
   (iii) No contact with specified persons.
 | ||
   (iv) School attendance.
 | ||
   (v) Performing up to 25 hours of community service  | ||
 work.
 | ||
   (vi) Community mediation.
 | ||
   (vii) Teen court or a peer court.
 | ||
   (viii) Restitution limited to 90 days.
 | ||
  (f) If the minor refuses or fails to abide by the  | ||
 conditions of an
informal station adjustment, the juvenile  | ||
 police officer may impose a formal
station adjustment or  | ||
 refer the matter to the State's Attorney's Office.
 | ||
  (g) An informal station adjustment does not constitute  | ||
 an adjudication
of delinquency or a criminal conviction.
 | ||
 Beginning January 1, 2000, a record shall be maintained  | ||
 with the
Department of State Police for informal station  | ||
 adjustments for offenses that
would be a felony if  | ||
 committed by an adult, and may be maintained if the
offense  | ||
 would be a misdemeanor.
 | ||
 (2) Formal station adjustment.
 | ||
  (a) A formal station adjustment is defined as a  | ||
 procedure when a juvenile
police officer determines that  | ||
 there is probable cause to
believe the minor has committed  | ||
 an offense and an admission by the minor of
involvement in  | ||
 the offense.
 | ||
  (b) The minor and parent, guardian, or legal custodian  | ||
 must agree in
writing to the formal station adjustment and  | ||
 must be advised of the
consequences of violation of any  | ||
 term of the agreement.
 | ||
  (c) The minor and parent, guardian or legal custodian  | ||
 shall be provided a
copy of the signed agreement of the  | ||
 formal station adjustment. The agreement
shall include:
 | ||
   (i) The offense which formed the basis of the  | ||
 formal station
adjustment.
 | ||
   (ii) An acknowledgment that the terms of the formal  | ||
 station adjustment
and
the consequences for violation  | ||
 have been explained.
 | ||
   (iii) An acknowledgment that the formal station  | ||
 adjustments record may
be
expunged under Section 5-915  | ||
 of this Act.
 | ||
   (iv) An acknowledgement that the minor understands  | ||
 that his or her
admission of involvement in the offense  | ||
 may be admitted into evidence in future
court hearings.
 | ||
   (v) A statement that all parties understand the  | ||
 terms and conditions of
formal station adjustment and  | ||
 agree to the formal station adjustment process.
 | ||
  (d) Conditions of the formal station adjustment may  | ||
 include, but are not
be limited to:
 | ||
   (i) The time shall not exceed 120 days.
 | ||
   (ii) The minor shall not violate any laws.
 | ||
   (iii) The juvenile police officer may require the  | ||
 minor to comply with
additional conditions for the  | ||
 formal station adjustment which may include but
are not  | ||
 limited to:
 | ||
    (a) Attending school.
 | ||
    (b) Abiding by a set curfew.
 | ||
    (c) Payment of restitution.
 | ||
    (d) Refraining from possessing a firearm or  | ||
 other weapon.
 | ||
    (e) Reporting to a police officer at  | ||
 designated times and places,
including reporting  | ||
 and verification that the minor is at home at
 | ||
 designated hours.
 | ||
    (f) Performing up to 25 hours of community  | ||
 service work.
 | ||
    (g) Refraining from entering designated  | ||
 geographical areas.
 | ||
    (h) Participating in community mediation.
 | ||
    (i) Participating in teen court or peer court.
 | ||
    (j) Refraining from contact with specified  | ||
 persons.
 | ||
  (e) A
formal station adjustment does not constitute an  | ||
 adjudication of
delinquency or a criminal conviction.  | ||
 Beginning January 1, 2000,
a record shall be maintained  | ||
 with the
Department of State Police for formal station  | ||
 adjustments.
 | ||
  (f) A minor or the minor's parent, guardian, or legal  | ||
 custodian, or both
the minor and the minor's parent,  | ||
 guardian, or legal custodian, may refuse
a formal station  | ||
 adjustment and have the matter referred
for court action or
 | ||
 other appropriate action.
 | ||
  (g) A minor or the minor's parent, guardian, or legal  | ||
 custodian, or both
the minor and the minor's parent,  | ||
 guardian, or legal custodian, may
within 30 days of the  | ||
 commencement of the formal station adjustment revoke
their  | ||
 consent and
have the matter referred for court action or  | ||
 other appropriate action. This
revocation must be in  | ||
 writing and personally served upon the police officer or
 | ||
 his or her supervisor.
 | ||
  (h) The admission of the minor as to involvement in the  | ||
 offense shall be
admissible at further court hearings as  | ||
 long as the statement would be
admissible under the rules  | ||
 of evidence.
 | ||
  (i) If the minor violates any term or condition of the  | ||
 formal station
adjustment the juvenile police officer  | ||
 shall provide written notice of
violation to the
minor and  | ||
 the minor's parent, guardian, or legal custodian. After  | ||
 consultation
with the
minor and the minor's parent,  | ||
 guardian, or legal custodian, the juvenile police
officer
 | ||
 may take any of the following steps upon violation:
 | ||
   (i) Warn the minor of consequences of continued  | ||
 violations and continue
the formal station adjustment.
 | ||
   (ii) Extend the period of the formal station  | ||
 adjustment up to a total
of 180 days.
 | ||
   (iii) Extend the hours of community service work up  | ||
 to a total of 40
hours.
 | ||
   (iv) Terminate the formal station adjustment  | ||
 unsatisfactorily and take
no other action.
 | ||
   (v) Terminate the formal station adjustment  | ||
 unsatisfactorily and refer
the matter to the juvenile  | ||
 court.
 | ||
  (j) A minor shall receive no more than 2 formal station
 | ||
 adjustments statewide for a felony offense without the  | ||
 State's Attorney's
approval within
a 3 year period.
 | ||
  (k) A minor shall receive no more than 3 formal station
 | ||
 adjustments statewide for a misdemeanor offense without  | ||
 the State's Attorney's
approval
within a 3 year period.
 | ||
  (l) The total for formal station adjustments statewide  | ||
 within the period
of
minority may not exceed 4 without the  | ||
 State's Attorney's approval.
 | ||
  (m) If the minor is arrested in a jurisdiction where  | ||
 the minor does not
reside, the
formal station adjustment  | ||
 may be transferred to the jurisdiction where the
minor does  | ||
 reside upon written agreement of that jurisdiction to  | ||
 monitor the
formal station adjustment.
 | ||
 (3) Beginning January 1, 2000, the
juvenile police officer  | ||
making a station adjustment shall assure
that information about  | ||
any offense which would constitute a felony if committed
by an  | ||
adult and may assure that information about a misdemeanor is  | ||
transmitted
to the Department of State Police.
 | ||
 (4) The total number of station adjustments, both formal  | ||
and informal, shall
not exceed 9 without the State's Attorney's  | ||
approval for any minor arrested
anywhere in the State.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 90-590, eff. 1-1-99; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 485. The Criminal Code of 2012 is amended by  | ||
changing Sections 12-2, 33E-14, 36-1, and 36-2 as follows:
 | ||
 (720 ILCS 5/12-2) (from Ch. 38, par. 12-2)
 | ||
 Sec. 12-2. Aggravated assault. 
 | ||
 (a) Offense based on location of conduct. A person commits  | ||
aggravated assault when he or she commits an assault against an  | ||
individual who is on or about a public way, public property, a  | ||
public place of accommodation or amusement, or a sports venue. | ||
 (b) Offense based on status of victim. A person commits  | ||
aggravated assault when, in committing an assault, he or she  | ||
knows the individual assaulted to be any of the following: | ||
  (1) A physically handicapped person or a person 60  | ||
 years of age or older and the assault is without legal  | ||
 justification. | ||
  (2) A teacher or school employee upon school grounds or  | ||
 grounds adjacent to a school or in any part of a building  | ||
 used for school purposes. | ||
  (3) A park district employee upon park grounds or  | ||
 grounds adjacent to a park or in any part of a building  | ||
 used for park purposes. | ||
  (4) A peace officer, community policing volunteer,  | ||
 fireman, private security officer, emergency management  | ||
 worker, emergency medical technician, or utility worker: | ||
   (i) performing his or her official duties; | ||
   (ii) assaulted to prevent performance of his or her  | ||
 official duties; or | ||
   (iii) assaulted in retaliation for performing his  | ||
 or her official duties. | ||
  (5) A correctional officer or probation officer: | ||
   (i) performing his or her official duties; | ||
   (ii) assaulted to prevent performance of his or her  | ||
 official duties; or | ||
   (iii) assaulted in retaliation for performing his  | ||
 or her official duties. | ||
  (6) A correctional institution employee, a county  | ||
 juvenile detention center employee who provides direct and  | ||
 continuous supervision of residents of a juvenile  | ||
 detention center, including a county juvenile detention  | ||
 center employee who supervises recreational activity for  | ||
 residents of a juvenile detention center, or a Department  | ||
 of Human Services employee, Department of Human Services  | ||
 officer, or employee of a subcontractor of the Department  | ||
 of Human Services supervising or controlling sexually  | ||
 dangerous persons or sexually violent persons: | ||
   (i) performing his or her official duties; | ||
   (ii) assaulted to prevent performance of his or her  | ||
 official duties; or | ||
   (iii) assaulted in retaliation for performing his  | ||
 or her official duties. | ||
  (7) An employee of the State of Illinois, a municipal  | ||
 corporation therein, or a political subdivision thereof,  | ||
 performing his or her official duties. | ||
  (8) A transit employee performing his or her official  | ||
 duties, or a transit passenger. | ||
  (9) A sports official or coach actively participating  | ||
 in any level of athletic competition within a sports venue,  | ||
 on an indoor playing field or outdoor playing field, or  | ||
 within the immediate vicinity of such a facility or field. | ||
  (10) A person authorized to serve process under Section  | ||
 2-202 of the Code of Civil Procedure or a special process  | ||
 server appointed by the circuit court, while that  | ||
 individual is in the performance of his or her duties as a  | ||
 process server.  | ||
 (c) Offense based on use of firearm, device, or motor  | ||
vehicle. A person commits aggravated assault when, in  | ||
committing an assault, he or she does any of the following: | ||
  (1) Uses a deadly weapon, an air rifle as defined in  | ||
 Section 24.8-0.1 of this Act the Air Rifle Act, or any  | ||
 device manufactured and designed to be substantially  | ||
 similar in appearance to a firearm, other than by  | ||
 discharging a firearm. | ||
  (2) Discharges a firearm, other than from a motor  | ||
 vehicle. | ||
  (3) Discharges a firearm from a motor vehicle. | ||
  (4) Wears a hood, robe, or mask to conceal his or her  | ||
 identity. | ||
  (5) Knowingly and without lawful justification shines  | ||
 or flashes a laser gun sight or other laser device attached  | ||
 to a firearm, or used in concert with a firearm, so that  | ||
 the laser beam strikes near or in the immediate vicinity of  | ||
 any person. | ||
  (6) Uses a firearm, other than by discharging the  | ||
 firearm, against a peace officer, community policing  | ||
 volunteer, fireman, private security officer, emergency  | ||
 management worker, emergency medical technician, employee  | ||
 of a police department, employee of a sheriff's department,  | ||
 or traffic control municipal employee: | ||
   (i) performing his or her official duties; | ||
   (ii) assaulted to prevent performance of his or her  | ||
 official duties; or | ||
   (iii) assaulted in retaliation for performing his  | ||
 or her official duties.  | ||
  (7) Without justification operates a motor vehicle in a  | ||
 manner which places a person, other than a person listed in  | ||
 subdivision (b)(4), in reasonable apprehension of being  | ||
 struck by the moving motor vehicle. | ||
  (8) Without justification operates a motor vehicle in a  | ||
 manner which places a person listed in subdivision (b)(4),  | ||
 in reasonable apprehension of being struck by the moving  | ||
 motor vehicle.  | ||
  (9) Knowingly video or audio records the offense with  | ||
 the intent to disseminate the recording.  | ||
 (d) Sentence. Aggravated assault as defined in subdivision  | ||
(a), (b)(1), (b)(2), (b)(3), (b)(4), (b)(7), (b)(8), (b)(9),  | ||
(c)(1), (c)(4), or (c)(9) is a Class A misdemeanor, except that  | ||
aggravated assault as defined in subdivision (b)(4) and (b)(7)  | ||
is a Class 4 felony if a Category I, Category II, or Category  | ||
III weapon is used in the commission of the assault. Aggravated  | ||
assault as defined in subdivision (b)(5), (b)(6), (b)(10),  | ||
(c)(2), (c)(5), (c)(6), or (c)(7) is a Class 4 felony.  | ||
Aggravated assault as defined in subdivision (c)(3) or (c)(8)  | ||
is a Class 3 felony. | ||
 (e) For the purposes of this Section, "Category I weapon",  | ||
"Category II weapon, and "Category III weapon" have the  | ||
meanings ascribed to those terms in Section 33A-1 of this Code. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-225, eff. 7-28-11; 97-313, eff. 1-1-12;  | ||
97-333, eff. 8-12-11; 97-1109, eff. 1-1-13; 98-385, eff.  | ||
1-1-14; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (720 ILCS 5/33E-14)
 | ||
 Sec. 33E-14. False statements on vendor applications.  | ||
 (a) A person commits false statements on vendor  | ||
applications when he or she knowingly
makes any false statement  | ||
or report, with the intent to influence in any way
the action  | ||
of any unit of local government or school district in  | ||
considering a
vendor
application.
 | ||
 (b) Sentence. False statements on vendor applications is a  | ||
Class 3 felony.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-1108, eff. 1-1-13; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (720 ILCS 5/36-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 36-1)
 | ||
 Sec. 36-1. Seizure.  | ||
 (a) Any vessel or watercraft, vehicle, or aircraft may be  | ||
seized and impounded by the law enforcement agency if the  | ||
vessel or watercraft, vehicle, or aircraft is used with the  | ||
knowledge
and consent of the owner in the commission of, or in  | ||
the attempt to commit as
defined in Section 8-4 of this Code,  | ||
an offense prohibited by:  | ||
  (1) an offense prohibited by Section 9-1 (first degree  | ||
 murder), Section
9-3 (involuntary manslaughter and  | ||
 reckless homicide), Section
10-2 (aggravated kidnaping),  | ||
 Section 11-1.20 (criminal sexual assault), Section 11-1.30  | ||
 (aggravated criminal sexual assault), Section 11-1.40  | ||
 (predatory criminal sexual assault of a child), subsection  | ||
 (a) of Section 11-1.50 (criminal sexual abuse), subsection  | ||
 (a), (c), or (d) of Section 11-1.60 (aggravated criminal  | ||
 sexual abuse), Section 11-6 (indecent solicitation of a  | ||
 child), Section 11-14.4 (promoting juvenile prostitution  | ||
 except for keeping a place of juvenile prostitution),  | ||
 Section 11-20.1 (child pornography), paragraph (a)(1),  | ||
 (a)(2), (a)(4), (b)(1), (b)(2), (e)(1), (e)(2), (e)(3),  | ||
 (e)(4), (e)(5), (e)(6), or (e)(7) of Section 12-3.05  | ||
 (aggravated battery), Section
12-7.3 (stalking), Section  | ||
 12-7.4 (aggravated stalking), Section
16-1 (theft if the  | ||
 theft is of precious metal or of scrap metal), subdivision  | ||
 (f)(2) or (f)(3) of Section 16-25 (retail theft), Section  | ||
 18-2 (armed robbery), Section 19-1 (burglary), Section  | ||
 19-2 (possession of burglary tools), Section 19-3  | ||
 (residential burglary), Section 20-1 (arson; residential  | ||
 arson; place of worship arson), Section 20-2 (possession of  | ||
 explosives or explosive or incendiary devices),  | ||
 subdivision (a)(6) or (a)(7) of Section 24-1 (unlawful use  | ||
 of weapons), Section
24-1.2 (aggravated discharge of a  | ||
 firearm), Section
24-1.2-5 (aggravated discharge of a  | ||
 machine gun or a firearm equipped with a device designed or  | ||
 used for silencing the report of a firearm), Section
24-1.5  | ||
 (reckless discharge of a firearm), Section 28-1  | ||
 (gambling), or Section 29D-15.2 (possession of a deadly  | ||
 substance) of this Code; | ||
  (2) an offense prohibited by Section 21, 22, 23, 24 or  | ||
 26 of the Cigarette Tax
Act if the vessel or watercraft,  | ||
 vehicle, or aircraft contains more than 10 cartons of
such  | ||
 cigarettes; | ||
  (3) an offense prohibited by Section 28, 29, or 30 of  | ||
 the Cigarette Use Tax Act if
the vessel or watercraft,  | ||
 vehicle, or aircraft contains more than 10 cartons of such
 | ||
 cigarettes; | ||
  (4) an offense prohibited by Section 44 of the  | ||
 Environmental Protection Act; | ||
  (5) an offense prohibited by
Section 11-204.1
of the  | ||
 Illinois Vehicle Code (aggravated fleeing or attempting to  | ||
 elude a peace officer); | ||
  (6) an offense prohibited by Section 11-501 of the  | ||
 Illinois Vehicle Code (driving while under the influence of  | ||
 alcohol or other drug or drugs, intoxicating compound or  | ||
 compounds or any combination thereof) or a similar  | ||
 provision of a local ordinance, and: | ||
   (A) during a period in which his
or her driving  | ||
 privileges are revoked or suspended if
the revocation  | ||
 or suspension was for: | ||
    (i) Section 11-501 (driving under the  | ||
 influence of alcohol or other drug or drugs,  | ||
 intoxicating compound or compounds or any
 | ||
 combination thereof),  | ||
    (ii) Section 11-501.1 (statutory summary  | ||
 suspension or revocation), | ||
    (iii) paragraph (b) of Section
11-401 (motor  | ||
 vehicle accidents involving death or personal  | ||
 injuries), or | ||
    (iv) reckless homicide as defined in Section  | ||
 9-3
of this Code; | ||
   (B) has been previously convicted of reckless  | ||
 homicide or a similar provision of a law of another  | ||
 state relating to reckless homicide in which the person  | ||
 was determined to have been under the influence of  | ||
 alcohol, other drug or drugs, or intoxicating compound  | ||
 or compounds as an element of the offense or the person  | ||
 has previously been convicted of committing a  | ||
 violation of
driving under the influence of alcohol or  | ||
 other drug or drugs, intoxicating compound or  | ||
 compounds or any
combination thereof and was involved  | ||
 in a motor vehicle accident that resulted in death,  | ||
 great bodily harm, or permanent disability or  | ||
 disfigurement to another, when the violation was a  | ||
 proximate cause of the death or injuries; | ||
   (C) the person committed a violation of driving  | ||
 under the influence of alcohol or other drug or drugs,  | ||
 intoxicating compound or compounds or any
combination  | ||
 thereof under Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle  | ||
 Code or a similar provision for the third or subsequent
 | ||
 time; | ||
   (D) he
or she did not possess a valid driver's  | ||
 license or permit or a valid restricted driving permit  | ||
 or a valid judicial driving permit or a valid  | ||
 monitoring device driving permit; or | ||
   (E) he or she knew or should have known that the  | ||
 vehicle he or she was driving was not covered by a  | ||
 liability insurance policy; | ||
  (7) an offense described in subsection (g) of Section  | ||
 6-303 of the
Illinois Vehicle Code; | ||
  (8) an offense described in subsection (e) of
Section  | ||
 6-101 of the Illinois Vehicle Code; or | ||
  (9)(A) (i) (1) operating a watercraft under the  | ||
 influence of alcohol, other drug or drugs, intoxicating  | ||
 compound or compounds, or combination thereof under  | ||
 Section 5-16 of the Boat Registration and Safety Act during  | ||
 a period in which his or her privileges to operate a  | ||
 watercraft are revoked or suspended and the revocation or  | ||
 suspension was for operating a watercraft under the  | ||
 influence of alcohol, other drug or drugs, intoxicating  | ||
 compound or compounds, or combination thereof; (B) (2)  | ||
 operating a watercraft under the influence of alcohol,  | ||
 other drug or drugs, intoxicating compound or compounds, or  | ||
 combination thereof and has been previously convicted of  | ||
 reckless homicide or a similar provision of a law in  | ||
 another state relating to reckless homicide in which the  | ||
 person was determined to have been under the influence of  | ||
 alcohol, other drug or drugs, intoxicating compound or  | ||
 compounds, or combination thereof as an element of the  | ||
 offense or the person has previously been convicted of  | ||
 committing a violation of operating a watercraft under the  | ||
 influence of alcohol, other drug or drugs, intoxicating  | ||
 compound or compounds, or combination thereof and was  | ||
 involved in an accident that resulted in death, great  | ||
 bodily harm, or permanent disability or disfigurement to  | ||
 another, when the violation was a proximate cause of the  | ||
 death or injuries; or (C) (3) the person committed a  | ||
 violation of operating a watercraft under the influence of  | ||
 alcohol, other drug or drugs, intoxicating compound or  | ||
 compounds, or combination thereof under Section 5-16 of the  | ||
 Boat Registration and Safety Act or a similar provision for  | ||
 the third or subsequent time;. or watercraft or watercraft
 | ||
 (b) In addition, any mobile or portable equipment used in  | ||
the commission of an
act which is in violation of Section 7g of  | ||
the Metropolitan Water Reclamation
District Act shall be  | ||
subject to seizure and forfeiture under the same
procedures  | ||
provided in this Article for the seizure and forfeiture of  | ||
vessels or watercraft,
vehicles, and aircraft, and any such  | ||
equipment shall be deemed a vessel or watercraft, vehicle,
or  | ||
aircraft for purposes of this Article.
 | ||
 (c) In addition, when a person discharges a firearm at  | ||
another individual from a vehicle with
the knowledge and  | ||
consent of the owner of the vehicle and with the intent to
 | ||
cause death or great bodily harm to that individual and as a  | ||
result causes
death or great bodily harm to that individual,  | ||
the vehicle shall be subject to
seizure and forfeiture under  | ||
the same procedures provided in this Article for
the seizure  | ||
and forfeiture of vehicles used in violations of clauses (1),  | ||
(2), (3), or (4) of subsection (a) of this Section.
 | ||
 (d) If the spouse of the owner of a vehicle seized for
an  | ||
offense described in subsection (g) of Section 6-303 of the
 | ||
Illinois Vehicle Code,
a violation of
subdivision (d)(1)(A),  | ||
(d)(1)(D), (d)(1)(G), (d)(1)(H), or (d)(1)(I)
of Section  | ||
11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle
Code, or Section 9-3 of this
 | ||
Code makes a showing
that the seized vehicle is the only source  | ||
of transportation and it is
determined that the financial  | ||
hardship to the family as a result of the seizure
outweighs the  | ||
benefit to the State from the seizure, the vehicle may be
 | ||
forfeited to the spouse or family member and the title to the  | ||
vehicle shall be
transferred to the spouse or family member who  | ||
is properly licensed and who
requires the use of the vehicle  | ||
for employment or family transportation
purposes. A written  | ||
declaration of forfeiture of a vehicle under this
Section shall  | ||
be sufficient cause for the title to be transferred to the  | ||
spouse
or family member. The provisions of this paragraph shall  | ||
apply only to one
forfeiture per vehicle. If the vehicle is the  | ||
subject of a subsequent
forfeiture proceeding by virtue of a  | ||
subsequent conviction of either spouse or
the family member,  | ||
the spouse or family member to whom the vehicle was
forfeited  | ||
under the first forfeiture proceeding may not utilize the
 | ||
provisions of this paragraph in another forfeiture proceeding.  | ||
If the owner of
the vehicle seized owns more than one vehicle,
 | ||
the procedure set out in this paragraph may be used for only  | ||
one vehicle.
 | ||
 (e) In addition, property declared contraband under  | ||
Section 40 of the Illinois Streetgang
Terrorism Omnibus  | ||
Prevention Act may be seized and forfeited under this
Article.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-333, eff. 8-12-11; 97-1109, eff. 1-1-13;  | ||
97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; 98-699, eff. 1-1-15; 98-1020, eff.  | ||
8-22-14; revised 9-30-14.)
 | ||
 (720 ILCS 5/36-2) (from Ch. 38, par. 36-2)
 | ||
 Sec. 36-2. Action for forfeiture.  | ||
 (a) The State's Attorney in the county in which such  | ||
seizure occurs
if he or she finds that the forfeiture was  | ||
incurred without willful negligence
or without any intention on  | ||
the part of the owner of the vessel or watercraft, vehicle
or  | ||
aircraft or any person whose right, title or interest is of  | ||
record as
described in Section 36-1, to violate the law, or  | ||
finds the existence of
such mitigating circumstances as to  | ||
justify remission of the forfeiture,
may cause the law  | ||
enforcement agency to remit the same upon such terms and  | ||
conditions
as the State's Attorney deems reasonable and just.  | ||
The State's Attorney
shall exercise his or her discretion under  | ||
the foregoing provision of this
Section 36-2(a) prior to or  | ||
promptly after the preliminary review under Section 36-1.5. | ||
 (b) If the State's Attorney does not cause the forfeiture  | ||
to
be remitted he or she shall forthwith bring an action for  | ||
forfeiture in the
Circuit Court within whose jurisdiction the  | ||
seizure and confiscation has
taken place. The State's Attorney  | ||
shall give notice of seizure and the forfeiture proceeding to  | ||
each person according to the following method: upon each person  | ||
whose right, title, or interest is of record in the office of  | ||
the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Transportation, the  | ||
Administrator of the Federal Aviation Agency, or any other  | ||
department of this State, or any other state of the United  | ||
States if the vessel or watercraft, vehicle, or aircraft is  | ||
required to be so registered, as the case may be, by delivering  | ||
the notice and complaint in open court or by certified mail to  | ||
the address as given upon the records of the Secretary of  | ||
State, the Division of Aeronautics of the Department of  | ||
Transportation, the Capital Development Board, or any other  | ||
department of this State or the United States if the vessel or  | ||
watercraft, vehicle, or aircraft is required to be so  | ||
registered.  | ||
 (c) The owner of the seized vessel or watercraft, vehicle,  | ||
or aircraft or any person
whose right, title, or interest is of  | ||
record as described in Section
36-1, may within 20 days after  | ||
delivery in open court or the mailing of such notice file a
 | ||
verified answer to the Complaint and may appear at the hearing  | ||
on the
action for forfeiture. | ||
 (d) The State shall show at such hearing by a
preponderance  | ||
of the evidence, that such vessel or watercraft, vehicle, or  | ||
aircraft was
used in the commission of an offense described in  | ||
Section 36-1. | ||
 (e) The
owner of such vessel or watercraft, vehicle, or  | ||
aircraft or any person whose right,
title, or interest is of  | ||
record as described in Section 36-1, may show
by a  | ||
preponderance of the evidence that he did not know, and did not
 | ||
have reason to know, that the vessel or watercraft, vehicle, or  | ||
aircraft was to be used
in the commission of such an offense or  | ||
that any of the exceptions set
forth in Section 36-3 are  | ||
applicable.  | ||
 (f) Unless the State shall make such
showing, the Court  | ||
shall order such vessel or watercraft, vehicle, or aircraft  | ||
released
to the owner. Where the State has made such showing,  | ||
the Court may order
the vessel or watercraft, vehicle, or  | ||
aircraft destroyed or may order it forfeited to
any local,  | ||
municipal or county law enforcement agency, or the Department
 | ||
of State Police or the Department of Revenue of
the State of  | ||
Illinois.
 | ||
 (g) A copy of the order shall be filed with the law  | ||
enforcement agency, and with each Federal or State office
or  | ||
agency with which such vessel or watercraft, vehicle, or  | ||
aircraft is required to be
registered. Such order, when filed,  | ||
constitutes authority for the
issuance of clear title to such  | ||
vessel or watercraft, vehicle, or aircraft, to the
department  | ||
or agency to whom it is delivered or any purchaser thereof.
The  | ||
law enforcement agency shall comply promptly with instructions  | ||
to remit received
from the State's Attorney or Attorney General  | ||
in accordance with
Sections 36-2(a) or 36-3.
 | ||
 (h) The proceeds of any sale at public auction pursuant to  | ||
Section
36-2 of this Act, after payment of all liens and  | ||
deduction of the
reasonable charges and expenses incurred by  | ||
the State's Attorney's Office shall be paid to the law  | ||
enforcement agency having seized the vehicle for forfeiture.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-699, eff. 1-1-15; 98-1020, eff. 8-22-14;  | ||
revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 Section 490. The Cannabis Control Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 15.2 as follows:
 | ||
 (720 ILCS 550/15.2) | ||
 Sec. 15.2. Industrial hemp pilot program. | ||
 (a) Pursuant to Section 7606 of the federal Agricultural  | ||
Act of 2014, an institution of higher education or the  | ||
Department of Agriculture may grow or cultivate industrial hemp  | ||
if: | ||
  (1) the industrial hemp is grown or cultivated for  | ||
 purposes of research conducted under an agricultural pilot  | ||
 program or other agricultural or academic research; | ||
  (2) the pilot program studies the growth, cultivation,  | ||
 or marketing of industrial hemp; and | ||
  (3) any site used for the growing or cultivating of  | ||
 industrial hemp is certified by, and registered with, the  | ||
 Department of Agriculture. | ||
 (b) Before conducting industrial hemp research, an  | ||
institution of higher education shall notify the Department of  | ||
Agriculture and any local law enforcement agency in writing. | ||
 (c) The institution of higher education shall provide  | ||
quarterly reports and an annual report to the
Department of  | ||
Agriculture on the research and the research program shall be  | ||
subject to random inspection by the Department of Agriculture,  | ||
the Department of State Police, or local law enforcement  | ||
agencies. The institution of higher education shall submit the  | ||
annual report to the Department of Agriculture on or before  | ||
October 1. | ||
 (d) The Department of Agriculture may adopt rules to  | ||
implement this Section. In order to provide for the expeditious  | ||
and timely implementation of this Section, upon notification by  | ||
an institution of higher education that the institution wishes  | ||
to engage in the growth or cultivation of industrial hemp for  | ||
agricultural research purposes, the Department of Agriculture  | ||
may adopt emergency rules under Section 5-45 of the Illinois  | ||
Administrative Procedure Act to implement the provisions of  | ||
this Section. If changes to the rules are required to comply  | ||
with federal rules, the Department of Agriculture may adopt  | ||
peremptory rules as necessary to comply with changes to  | ||
corresponding federal rules. All other rules that the  | ||
Department of Agriculture deems necessary to adopt in  | ||
connection with this Section must proceed through the ordinary  | ||
rule-making process. The adoption of emergency rules  | ||
authorized by this Section shall be deemed to be necessary for  | ||
the public interest, safety, and welfare.  | ||
 The Department of Agriculture may determine, by rule, the  | ||
duration of an institution of higher education's pilot program  | ||
or industrial hemp research. If the institution of higher  | ||
education has not completed its program within the timeframe  | ||
established by rule, then the Department of Agriculture may  | ||
grant an extension to the pilot program if unanticipated  | ||
circumstances arose that impacted the program.  | ||
 (e) As used in this Section: | ||
 "Industrial hemp" means cannabis sativa L. having no more  | ||
than 0.3% total THC available, upon heating, or maximum delta-9  | ||
tetrahydrocannabinol content possible.  | ||
 "Institution of higher education" means a State  | ||
institution of higher education that offers a 4-year degree in  | ||
agricultural science.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1072, eff. 1-1-15; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 495. The Illinois Controlled Substances Act is  | ||
amended by changing Sections 102 and 312 as follows:
 | ||
 (720 ILCS 570/102) (from Ch. 56 1/2, par. 1102) | ||
 Sec. 102. Definitions.  As used in this Act, unless the  | ||
context
otherwise requires:
 | ||
 (a) "Addict" means any person who habitually uses any drug,  | ||
chemical,
substance or dangerous drug other than alcohol so as  | ||
to endanger the public
morals, health, safety or welfare or who  | ||
is so far addicted to the use of a
dangerous drug or controlled  | ||
substance other than alcohol as to have lost
the power of self  | ||
control with reference to his or her addiction.
 | ||
 (b) "Administer" means the direct application of a  | ||
controlled
substance, whether by injection, inhalation,  | ||
ingestion, or any other
means, to the body of a patient,  | ||
research subject, or animal (as
defined by the Humane  | ||
Euthanasia in Animal Shelters Act) by:
 | ||
  (1) a practitioner (or, in his or her presence, by his  | ||
 or her authorized agent),
 | ||
  (2) the patient or research subject pursuant to an  | ||
 order, or
 | ||
  (3) a euthanasia technician as defined by the Humane  | ||
 Euthanasia in
Animal Shelters Act.
 | ||
 (c) "Agent" means an authorized person who acts on behalf  | ||
of or at
the direction of a manufacturer, distributor,  | ||
dispenser, prescriber, or practitioner. It does not
include a  | ||
common or contract carrier, public warehouseman or employee of
 | ||
the carrier or warehouseman.
 | ||
 (c-1) "Anabolic Steroids" means any drug or hormonal  | ||
substance,
chemically and pharmacologically related to  | ||
testosterone (other than
estrogens, progestins,  | ||
corticosteroids, and dehydroepiandrosterone),
and includes:
 | ||
 (i) 3[beta],17-dihydroxy-5a-androstane,  | ||
 (ii) 3[alpha],17[beta]-dihydroxy-5a-androstane,  | ||
 (iii) 5[alpha]-androstan-3,17-dione,  | ||
 (iv) 1-androstenediol (3[beta],  | ||
  17[beta]-dihydroxy-5[alpha]-androst-1-ene),  | ||
 (v) 1-androstenediol (3[alpha],  | ||
  17[beta]-dihydroxy-5[alpha]-androst-1-ene),  | ||
 (vi) 4-androstenediol  | ||
  (3[beta],17[beta]-dihydroxy-androst-4-ene),  | ||
 (vii) 5-androstenediol  | ||
  (3[beta],17[beta]-dihydroxy-androst-5-ene),  | ||
 (viii) 1-androstenedione  | ||
  ([5alpha]-androst-1-en-3,17-dione),  | ||
 (ix) 4-androstenedione  | ||
  (androst-4-en-3,17-dione),  | ||
 (x) 5-androstenedione  | ||
  (androst-5-en-3,17-dione),  | ||
 (xi) bolasterone (7[alpha],17a-dimethyl-17[beta]-  | ||
  hydroxyandrost-4-en-3-one),  | ||
 (xii) boldenone (17[beta]-hydroxyandrost-  | ||
  1,4,-diene-3-one),  | ||
 (xiii) boldione (androsta-1,4-  | ||
  diene-3,17-dione),  | ||
 (xiv) calusterone (7[beta],17[alpha]-dimethyl-17  | ||
  [beta]-hydroxyandrost-4-en-3-one),  | ||
 (xv) clostebol (4-chloro-17[beta]-  | ||
  hydroxyandrost-4-en-3-one),  | ||
 (xvi) dehydrochloromethyltestosterone (4-chloro-  | ||
  17[beta]-hydroxy-17[alpha]-methyl-  | ||
  androst-1,4-dien-3-one),  | ||
 (xvii) desoxymethyltestosterone  | ||
 (17[alpha]-methyl-5[alpha]  | ||
  -androst-2-en-17[beta]-ol)(a.k.a., madol),  | ||
 (xviii) [delta]1-dihydrotestosterone (a.k.a.  | ||
  '1-testosterone') (17[beta]-hydroxy-  | ||
  5[alpha]-androst-1-en-3-one),  | ||
 (xix) 4-dihydrotestosterone (17[beta]-hydroxy-  | ||
  androstan-3-one),  | ||
 (xx) drostanolone (17[beta]-hydroxy-2[alpha]-methyl-  | ||
  5[alpha]-androstan-3-one),  | ||
 (xxi) ethylestrenol (17[alpha]-ethyl-17[beta]-  | ||
  hydroxyestr-4-ene),  | ||
 (xxii) fluoxymesterone (9-fluoro-17[alpha]-methyl-  | ||
  1[beta],17[beta]-dihydroxyandrost-4-en-3-one),  | ||
 (xxiii) formebolone (2-formyl-17[alpha]-methyl-11[alpha],  | ||
  17[beta]-dihydroxyandrost-1,4-dien-3-one),  | ||
 (xxiv) furazabol (17[alpha]-methyl-17[beta]-  | ||
  hydroxyandrostano[2,3-c]-furazan),  | ||
 (xxv) 13[beta]-ethyl-17[beta]-hydroxygon-4-en-3-one)  | ||
 (xxvi) 4-hydroxytestosterone (4,17[beta]-dihydroxy-  | ||
  androst-4-en-3-one),  | ||
 (xxvii) 4-hydroxy-19-nortestosterone (4,17[beta]-  | ||
  dihydroxy-estr-4-en-3-one),  | ||
 (xxviii) mestanolone (17[alpha]-methyl-17[beta]-  | ||
  hydroxy-5-androstan-3-one),  | ||
 (xxix) mesterolone (1amethyl-17[beta]-hydroxy-  | ||
  [5a]-androstan-3-one),  | ||
 (xxx) methandienone (17[alpha]-methyl-17[beta]-  | ||
  hydroxyandrost-1,4-dien-3-one),  | ||
 (xxxi) methandriol (17[alpha]-methyl-3[beta],17[beta]-  | ||
  dihydroxyandrost-5-ene),  | ||
 (xxxii) methenolone (1-methyl-17[beta]-hydroxy-  | ||
  5[alpha]-androst-1-en-3-one),  | ||
 (xxxiii) 17[alpha]-methyl-3[beta], 17[beta]-  | ||
  dihydroxy-5a-androstane),  | ||
 (xxxiv) 17[alpha]-methyl-3[alpha],17[beta]-dihydroxy  | ||
  -5a-androstane),  | ||
 (xxxv) 17[alpha]-methyl-3[beta],17[beta]-  | ||
  dihydroxyandrost-4-ene),  | ||
 (xxxvi) 17[alpha]-methyl-4-hydroxynandrolone (17[alpha]-  | ||
  methyl-4-hydroxy-17[beta]-hydroxyestr-4-en-3-one),  | ||
 (xxxvii) methyldienolone (17[alpha]-methyl-17[beta]-  | ||
  hydroxyestra-4,9(10)-dien-3-one),  | ||
 (xxxviii) methyltrienolone (17[alpha]-methyl-17[beta]-  | ||
  hydroxyestra-4,9-11-trien-3-one),  | ||
 (xxxix) methyltestosterone (17[alpha]-methyl-17[beta]-  | ||
  hydroxyandrost-4-en-3-one),  | ||
 (xl) mibolerone (7[alpha],17a-dimethyl-17[beta]-  | ||
  hydroxyestr-4-en-3-one),  | ||
 (xli) 17[alpha]-methyl-[delta]1-dihydrotestosterone  | ||
  (17b[beta]-hydroxy-17[alpha]-methyl-5[alpha]-  | ||
  androst-1-en-3-one)(a.k.a. '17-[alpha]-methyl-  | ||
  1-testosterone'),  | ||
 (xlii) nandrolone (17[beta]-hydroxyestr-4-en-3-one),  | ||
 (xliii) 19-nor-4-androstenediol (3[beta], 17[beta]-  | ||
  dihydroxyestr-4-ene),  | ||
 (xliv) 19-nor-4-androstenediol (3[alpha], 17[beta]-  | ||
  dihydroxyestr-4-ene),  | ||
 (xlv) 19-nor-5-androstenediol (3[beta], 17[beta]-  | ||
  dihydroxyestr-5-ene),  | ||
 (xlvi) 19-nor-5-androstenediol (3[alpha], 17[beta]-  | ||
  dihydroxyestr-5-ene),  | ||
 (xlvii) 19-nor-4,9(10)-androstadienedione  | ||
  (estra-4,9(10)-diene-3,17-dione),  | ||
 (xlviii) 19-nor-4-androstenedione (estr-4-  | ||
  en-3,17-dione),  | ||
 (xlix) 19-nor-5-androstenedione (estr-5-  | ||
  en-3,17-dione),  | ||
 (l) norbolethone (13[beta], 17a-diethyl-17[beta]-  | ||
  hydroxygon-4-en-3-one),  | ||
 (li) norclostebol (4-chloro-17[beta]-  | ||
  hydroxyestr-4-en-3-one),  | ||
 (lii) norethandrolone (17[alpha]-ethyl-17[beta]-  | ||
  hydroxyestr-4-en-3-one),  | ||
 (liii) normethandrolone (17[alpha]-methyl-17[beta]-  | ||
  hydroxyestr-4-en-3-one),  | ||
 (liv) oxandrolone (17[alpha]-methyl-17[beta]-hydroxy-  | ||
  2-oxa-5[alpha]-androstan-3-one),  | ||
 (lv) oxymesterone (17[alpha]-methyl-4,17[beta]-  | ||
  dihydroxyandrost-4-en-3-one),  | ||
 (lvi) oxymetholone (17[alpha]-methyl-2-hydroxymethylene-  | ||
  17[beta]-hydroxy-(5[alpha]-androstan-3-one),  | ||
 (lvii) stanozolol (17[alpha]-methyl-17[beta]-hydroxy-  | ||
  (5[alpha]-androst-2-eno[3,2-c]-pyrazole),  | ||
 (lviii) stenbolone (17[beta]-hydroxy-2-methyl-  | ||
  (5[alpha]-androst-1-en-3-one),  | ||
 (lix) testolactone (13-hydroxy-3-oxo-13,17-  | ||
  secoandrosta-1,4-dien-17-oic  | ||
  acid lactone),  | ||
 (lx) testosterone (17[beta]-hydroxyandrost-  | ||
  4-en-3-one),  | ||
 (lxi) tetrahydrogestrinone (13[beta], 17[alpha]-  | ||
  diethyl-17[beta]-hydroxygon-  | ||
  4,9,11-trien-3-one),  | ||
 (lxii) trenbolone (17[beta]-hydroxyestr-4,9,  | ||
  11-trien-3-one). 
 | ||
 Any person who is otherwise lawfully in possession of an  | ||
anabolic
steroid, or who otherwise lawfully manufactures,  | ||
distributes, dispenses,
delivers, or possesses with intent to  | ||
deliver an anabolic steroid, which
anabolic steroid is  | ||
expressly intended for and lawfully allowed to be
administered  | ||
through implants to livestock or other nonhuman species, and
 | ||
which is approved by the Secretary of Health and Human Services  | ||
for such
administration, and which the person intends to  | ||
administer or have
administered through such implants, shall  | ||
not be considered to be in
unauthorized possession or to  | ||
unlawfully manufacture, distribute, dispense,
deliver, or  | ||
possess with intent to deliver such anabolic steroid for
 | ||
purposes of this Act.
 | ||
 (d) "Administration" means the Drug Enforcement  | ||
Administration,
United States Department of Justice, or its  | ||
successor agency.
 | ||
 (d-5) "Clinical Director, Prescription Monitoring Program"  | ||
means a Department of Human Services administrative employee  | ||
licensed to either prescribe or dispense controlled substances  | ||
who shall run the clinical aspects of the Department of Human  | ||
Services Prescription Monitoring Program and its Prescription  | ||
Information Library. | ||
 (d-10) "Compounding" means the preparation and mixing of  | ||
components, excluding flavorings, (1) as the result of a  | ||
prescriber's prescription drug order or initiative based on the  | ||
prescriber-patient-pharmacist relationship in the course of  | ||
professional practice or (2) for the purpose of, or incident  | ||
to, research, teaching, or chemical analysis and not for sale  | ||
or dispensing. "Compounding" includes the preparation of drugs  | ||
or devices in anticipation of receiving prescription drug  | ||
orders based on routine, regularly observed dispensing  | ||
patterns. Commercially available products may be compounded  | ||
for dispensing to individual patients only if both of the  | ||
following conditions are met: (i) the commercial product is not  | ||
reasonably available from normal distribution channels in a  | ||
timely manner to meet the patient's needs and (ii) the  | ||
prescribing practitioner has requested that the drug be  | ||
compounded.  | ||
 (e) "Control" means to add a drug or other substance, or  | ||
immediate
precursor, to a Schedule whether by
transfer from  | ||
another Schedule or otherwise.
 | ||
 (f) "Controlled Substance" means (i) a drug, substance, or  | ||
immediate
precursor in the Schedules of Article II of this Act  | ||
or (ii) a drug or other substance, or immediate precursor,  | ||
designated as a controlled substance by the Department through  | ||
administrative rule. The term does not include distilled  | ||
spirits, wine, malt beverages, or tobacco, as those terms are
 | ||
defined or used in the Liquor Control Act of 1934 and the  | ||
Tobacco Products Tax
Act of 1995.
 | ||
 (f-5) "Controlled substance analog" means a substance: | ||
  (1) the chemical structure of which is substantially  | ||
 similar to the chemical structure of a controlled substance  | ||
 in Schedule I or II; | ||
  (2) which has a stimulant, depressant, or  | ||
 hallucinogenic effect on the central nervous system that is  | ||
 substantially similar to or greater than the stimulant,  | ||
 depressant, or hallucinogenic effect on the central  | ||
 nervous system of a controlled substance in Schedule I or  | ||
 II; or | ||
  (3) with respect to a particular person, which such  | ||
 person represents or intends to have a stimulant,  | ||
 depressant, or hallucinogenic effect on the central  | ||
 nervous system that is substantially similar to or greater  | ||
 than the stimulant, depressant, or hallucinogenic effect  | ||
 on the central nervous system of a controlled substance in  | ||
 Schedule I or II.  | ||
 (g) "Counterfeit substance" means a controlled substance,  | ||
which, or
the container or labeling of which, without  | ||
authorization bears the
trademark, trade name, or other  | ||
identifying mark, imprint, number or
device, or any likeness  | ||
thereof, of a manufacturer, distributor, or
dispenser other  | ||
than the person who in fact manufactured, distributed,
or  | ||
dispensed the substance.
 | ||
 (h) "Deliver" or "delivery" means the actual, constructive  | ||
or
attempted transfer of possession of a controlled substance,  | ||
with or
without consideration, whether or not there is an  | ||
agency relationship.
 | ||
 (i) "Department" means the Illinois Department of Human  | ||
Services (as
successor to the Department of Alcoholism and  | ||
Substance Abuse) or its successor agency.
 | ||
 (j) (Blank).
 | ||
 (k) "Department of Corrections" means the Department of  | ||
Corrections
of the State of Illinois or its successor agency.
 | ||
 (l) "Department of Financial and Professional Regulation"  | ||
means the Department
of Financial and Professional Regulation  | ||
of the State of Illinois or its successor agency.
 | ||
 (m) "Depressant" means any drug that (i) causes an overall  | ||
depression of central nervous system functions, (ii) causes  | ||
impaired consciousness and awareness, and (iii) can be  | ||
habit-forming or lead to a substance abuse problem, including  | ||
but not limited to alcohol, cannabis and its active principles  | ||
and their analogs, benzodiazepines and their analogs,  | ||
barbiturates and their analogs, opioids (natural and  | ||
synthetic) and their analogs, and chloral hydrate and similar  | ||
sedative hypnotics.
 | ||
 (n) (Blank).
 | ||
 (o) "Director" means the Director of the Illinois State  | ||
Police or his or her designated agents.
 | ||
 (p) "Dispense" means to deliver a controlled substance to  | ||
an
ultimate user or research subject by or pursuant to the  | ||
lawful order of
a prescriber, including the prescribing,  | ||
administering, packaging,
labeling, or compounding necessary  | ||
to prepare the substance for that
delivery.
 | ||
 (q) "Dispenser" means a practitioner who dispenses.
 | ||
 (r) "Distribute" means to deliver, other than by  | ||
administering or
dispensing, a controlled substance.
 | ||
 (s) "Distributor" means a person who distributes.
 | ||
 (t) "Drug" means (1) substances recognized as drugs in the  | ||
official
United States Pharmacopoeia, Official Homeopathic  | ||
Pharmacopoeia of the
United States, or official National  | ||
Formulary, or any supplement to any
of them; (2) substances  | ||
intended for use in diagnosis, cure, mitigation,
treatment, or  | ||
prevention of disease in man or animals; (3) substances
(other  | ||
than food) intended to affect the structure of any function of
 | ||
the body of man or animals and (4) substances intended for use  | ||
as a
component of any article specified in clause (1), (2), or  | ||
(3) of this
subsection. It does not include devices or their  | ||
components, parts, or
accessories.
 | ||
 (t-5) "Euthanasia agency" means
an entity certified by the  | ||
Department of Financial and Professional Regulation for the
 | ||
purpose of animal euthanasia that holds an animal control  | ||
facility license or
animal
shelter license under the Animal  | ||
Welfare Act. A euthanasia agency is
authorized to purchase,  | ||
store, possess, and utilize Schedule II nonnarcotic and
 | ||
Schedule III nonnarcotic drugs for the sole purpose of animal  | ||
euthanasia.
 | ||
 (t-10) "Euthanasia drugs" means Schedule II or Schedule III  | ||
substances
(nonnarcotic controlled substances) that are used  | ||
by a euthanasia agency for
the purpose of animal euthanasia.
 | ||
 (u) "Good faith" means the prescribing or dispensing of a  | ||
controlled
substance by a practitioner in the regular course of  | ||
professional
treatment to or for any person who is under his or  | ||
her treatment for a
pathology or condition other than that  | ||
individual's physical or
psychological dependence upon or  | ||
addiction to a controlled substance,
except as provided herein:  | ||
and application of the term to a pharmacist
shall mean the  | ||
dispensing of a controlled substance pursuant to the
 | ||
prescriber's order which in the professional judgment of the  | ||
pharmacist
is lawful. The pharmacist shall be guided by  | ||
accepted professional
standards including, but not limited to  | ||
the following, in making the
judgment:
 | ||
  (1) lack of consistency of prescriber-patient  | ||
 relationship,
 | ||
  (2) frequency of prescriptions for same drug by one  | ||
 prescriber for
large numbers of patients,
 | ||
  (3) quantities beyond those normally prescribed,
 | ||
  (4) unusual dosages (recognizing that there may be  | ||
 clinical circumstances where more or less than the usual  | ||
 dose may be used legitimately),
 | ||
  (5) unusual geographic distances between patient,  | ||
 pharmacist and
prescriber,
 | ||
  (6) consistent prescribing of habit-forming drugs.
 | ||
 (u-0.5) "Hallucinogen" means a drug that causes markedly  | ||
altered sensory perception leading to hallucinations of any  | ||
type.  | ||
 (u-1) "Home infusion services" means services provided by a  | ||
pharmacy in
compounding solutions for direct administration to  | ||
a patient in a private
residence, long-term care facility, or  | ||
hospice setting by means of parenteral,
intravenous,  | ||
intramuscular, subcutaneous, or intraspinal infusion.
 | ||
 (u-5) "Illinois State Police" means the State
Police of the  | ||
State of Illinois, or its successor agency.  | ||
 (v) "Immediate precursor" means a substance:
 | ||
  (1) which the Department has found to be and by rule  | ||
 designated as
being a principal compound used, or produced  | ||
 primarily for use, in the
manufacture of a controlled  | ||
 substance;
 | ||
  (2) which is an immediate chemical intermediary used or  | ||
 likely to
be used in the manufacture of such controlled  | ||
 substance; and
 | ||
  (3) the control of which is necessary to prevent,  | ||
 curtail or limit
the manufacture of such controlled  | ||
 substance.
 | ||
 (w) "Instructional activities" means the acts of teaching,  | ||
educating
or instructing by practitioners using controlled  | ||
substances within
educational facilities approved by the State  | ||
Board of Education or
its successor agency.
 | ||
 (x) "Local authorities" means a duly organized State,  | ||
County or
Municipal peace unit or police force.
 | ||
 (y) "Look-alike substance" means a substance, other than a  | ||
controlled
substance which (1) by overall dosage unit  | ||
appearance, including shape,
color, size, markings or lack  | ||
thereof, taste, consistency, or any other
identifying physical  | ||
characteristic of the substance, would lead a reasonable
person  | ||
to believe that the substance is a controlled substance, or (2)  | ||
is
expressly or impliedly represented to be a controlled  | ||
substance or is
distributed under circumstances which would  | ||
lead a reasonable person to
believe that the substance is a  | ||
controlled substance. For the purpose of
determining whether  | ||
the representations made or the circumstances of the
 | ||
distribution would lead a reasonable person to believe the  | ||
substance to be
a controlled substance under this clause (2) of  | ||
subsection (y), the court or
other authority may consider the  | ||
following factors in addition to any other
factor that may be  | ||
relevant:
 | ||
  (a) statements made by the owner or person in control  | ||
 of the substance
concerning its nature, use or effect;
 | ||
  (b) statements made to the buyer or recipient that the  | ||
 substance may
be resold for profit;
 | ||
  (c) whether the substance is packaged in a manner  | ||
 normally used for the
illegal distribution of controlled  | ||
 substances;
 | ||
  (d) whether the distribution or attempted distribution  | ||
 included an
exchange of or demand for money or other  | ||
 property as consideration, and
whether the amount of the  | ||
 consideration was substantially greater than the
 | ||
 reasonable retail market value of the substance.
 | ||
 Clause (1) of this subsection (y) shall not apply to a  | ||
noncontrolled
substance in its finished dosage form that was  | ||
initially introduced into
commerce prior to the initial  | ||
introduction into commerce of a controlled
substance in its  | ||
finished dosage form which it may substantially resemble.
 | ||
 Nothing in this subsection (y) prohibits the dispensing or  | ||
distributing
of noncontrolled substances by persons authorized  | ||
to dispense and
distribute controlled substances under this  | ||
Act, provided that such action
would be deemed to be carried  | ||
out in good faith under subsection (u) if the
substances  | ||
involved were controlled substances.
 | ||
 Nothing in this subsection (y) or in this Act prohibits the  | ||
manufacture,
preparation, propagation, compounding,  | ||
processing, packaging, advertising
or distribution of a drug or  | ||
drugs by any person registered pursuant to
Section 510 of the  | ||
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 360).
 | ||
 (y-1) "Mail-order pharmacy" means a pharmacy that is  | ||
located in a state
of the United States that delivers,  | ||
dispenses or
distributes, through the United States Postal  | ||
Service or other common
carrier, to Illinois residents, any  | ||
substance which requires a prescription.
 | ||
 (z) "Manufacture" means the production, preparation,  | ||
propagation,
compounding, conversion or processing of a  | ||
controlled substance other than methamphetamine, either
 | ||
directly or indirectly, by extraction from substances of  | ||
natural origin,
or independently by means of chemical  | ||
synthesis, or by a combination of
extraction and chemical  | ||
synthesis, and includes any packaging or
repackaging of the  | ||
substance or labeling of its container, except that
this term  | ||
does not include:
 | ||
  (1) by an ultimate user, the preparation or compounding  | ||
 of a
controlled substance for his or her own use; or
 | ||
  (2) by a practitioner, or his or her authorized agent  | ||
 under his or her
supervision, the preparation,  | ||
 compounding, packaging, or labeling of a
controlled  | ||
 substance:
 | ||
   (a) as an incident to his or her administering or  | ||
 dispensing of a
controlled substance in the course of  | ||
 his or her professional practice; or
 | ||
   (b) as an incident to lawful research, teaching or  | ||
 chemical
analysis and not for sale.
 | ||
 (z-1) (Blank).
 | ||
 (z-5) "Medication shopping" means the conduct prohibited  | ||
under subsection (a) of Section 314.5 of this Act. | ||
 (z-10) "Mid-level practitioner" means (i) a physician  | ||
assistant who has been delegated authority to prescribe through  | ||
a written delegation of authority by a physician licensed to  | ||
practice medicine in all of its branches, in accordance with  | ||
Section 7.5 of the Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987,  | ||
(ii) an advanced practice nurse who has been delegated  | ||
authority to prescribe through a written delegation of  | ||
authority by a physician licensed to practice medicine in all  | ||
of its branches or by a podiatric physician, in accordance with  | ||
Section 65-40 of the Nurse Practice Act, (iii) an animal  | ||
euthanasia agency, or (iv) a prescribing psychologist.  | ||
 (aa) "Narcotic drug" means any of the following, whether  | ||
produced
directly or indirectly by extraction from substances  | ||
of vegetable origin,
or independently by means of chemical  | ||
synthesis, or by a combination of
extraction and chemical  | ||
synthesis:
 | ||
  (1) opium, opiates, derivatives of opium and opiates,  | ||
 including their isomers, esters, ethers, salts, and salts  | ||
 of isomers, esters, and ethers, whenever the existence of  | ||
 such isomers, esters, ethers, and salts is possible within  | ||
 the specific chemical designation; however the term  | ||
 "narcotic drug" does not include the isoquinoline  | ||
 alkaloids of opium;
 | ||
  (2) (blank);
 | ||
  (3) opium poppy and poppy straw;
 | ||
  (4) coca leaves, except coca leaves and extracts of  | ||
 coca leaves from which substantially all of the cocaine and  | ||
 ecgonine, and their isomers, derivatives and salts, have  | ||
 been removed;
 | ||
  (5) cocaine, its salts, optical and geometric isomers,  | ||
 and salts of isomers; | ||
  (6) ecgonine, its derivatives, their salts, isomers,  | ||
 and salts of isomers; | ||
  (7) any compound, mixture, or preparation which  | ||
 contains any quantity of any of the substances referred to  | ||
 in subparagraphs (1) through (6).  | ||
 (bb) "Nurse" means a registered nurse licensed under the
 | ||
Nurse Practice Act.
 | ||
 (cc) (Blank).
 | ||
 (dd) "Opiate" means any substance having an addiction  | ||
forming or
addiction sustaining liability similar to morphine  | ||
or being capable of
conversion into a drug having addiction  | ||
forming or addiction sustaining
liability.
 | ||
 (ee) "Opium poppy" means the plant of the species Papaver
 | ||
somniferum L., except its seeds.
 | ||
 (ee-5) "Oral dosage" means a tablet, capsule, elixir, or  | ||
solution or other liquid form of medication intended for  | ||
administration by mouth, but the term does not include a form  | ||
of medication intended for buccal, sublingual, or transmucosal  | ||
administration.  | ||
 (ff) "Parole and Pardon Board" means the Parole and Pardon  | ||
Board of
the State of Illinois or its successor agency.
 | ||
 (gg) "Person" means any individual, corporation,  | ||
mail-order pharmacy,
government or governmental subdivision or  | ||
agency, business trust, estate,
trust, partnership or  | ||
association, or any other entity.
 | ||
 (hh) "Pharmacist" means any person who holds a license or  | ||
certificate of
registration as a registered pharmacist, a local  | ||
registered pharmacist
or a registered assistant pharmacist  | ||
under the Pharmacy Practice Act.
 | ||
 (ii) "Pharmacy" means any store, ship or other place in  | ||
which
pharmacy is authorized to be practiced under the Pharmacy  | ||
Practice Act.
 | ||
 (ii-5) "Pharmacy shopping" means the conduct prohibited  | ||
under subsection (b) of Section 314.5 of this Act. | ||
 (ii-10) "Physician" (except when the context otherwise  | ||
requires) means a person licensed to practice medicine in all  | ||
of its branches.  | ||
 (jj) "Poppy straw" means all parts, except the seeds, of  | ||
the opium
poppy, after mowing.
 | ||
 (kk) "Practitioner" means a physician licensed to practice  | ||
medicine in all
its branches, dentist, optometrist, podiatric  | ||
physician,
veterinarian, scientific investigator, pharmacist,  | ||
physician assistant,
advanced practice nurse,
licensed  | ||
practical
nurse, registered nurse, hospital, laboratory, or  | ||
pharmacy, or other
person licensed, registered, or otherwise  | ||
lawfully permitted by the
United States or this State to  | ||
distribute, dispense, conduct research
with respect to,  | ||
administer or use in teaching or chemical analysis, a
 | ||
controlled substance in the course of professional practice or  | ||
research.
 | ||
 (ll) "Pre-printed prescription" means a written  | ||
prescription upon which
the designated drug has been indicated  | ||
prior to the time of issuance; the term does not mean a written  | ||
prescription that is individually generated by machine or  | ||
computer in the prescriber's office.
 | ||
 (mm) "Prescriber" means a physician licensed to practice  | ||
medicine in all
its branches, dentist, optometrist,  | ||
prescribing psychologist licensed under Section 4.2 of the  | ||
Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act with prescriptive  | ||
authority delegated under Section 4.3 of the Clinical  | ||
Psychologist Licensing Act, podiatric physician, or
 | ||
veterinarian who issues a prescription, a physician assistant  | ||
who
issues a
prescription for a controlled substance
in  | ||
accordance
with Section 303.05, a written delegation, and a  | ||
written supervision agreement required under Section 7.5
of the
 | ||
Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987, or an advanced  | ||
practice
nurse with prescriptive authority delegated under  | ||
Section 65-40 of the Nurse Practice Act and in accordance with  | ||
Section 303.05, a written delegation,
and a written
 | ||
collaborative agreement under Section 65-35 of the Nurse  | ||
Practice Act.
 | ||
 (nn) "Prescription" means a written, facsimile, or oral  | ||
order, or an electronic order that complies with applicable  | ||
federal requirements,
of
a physician licensed to practice  | ||
medicine in all its branches,
dentist, podiatric physician or  | ||
veterinarian for any controlled
substance, of an optometrist  | ||
for a Schedule II, III, IV, or V controlled substance in  | ||
accordance with Section 15.1 of the Illinois Optometric  | ||
Practice Act of 1987, of a prescribing psychologist licensed  | ||
under Section 4.2 of the Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act  | ||
with prescriptive authority delegated under Section 4.3 of the  | ||
Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act, of a physician assistant  | ||
for a
controlled substance
in accordance with Section 303.05, a  | ||
written delegation, and a written supervision agreement  | ||
required under
Section 7.5 of the
Physician Assistant Practice  | ||
Act of 1987, or of an advanced practice
nurse with prescriptive  | ||
authority delegated under Section 65-40 of the Nurse Practice  | ||
Act who issues a prescription for a
controlled substance in  | ||
accordance
with
Section 303.05, a written delegation, and a  | ||
written collaborative agreement under Section 65-35 of the  | ||
Nurse Practice Act when required by law.
 | ||
 (nn-5) "Prescription Information Library" (PIL) means an  | ||
electronic library that contains reported controlled substance  | ||
data. | ||
 (nn-10) "Prescription Monitoring Program" (PMP) means the  | ||
entity that collects, tracks, and stores reported data on  | ||
controlled substances and select drugs pursuant to Section 316.  | ||
 (oo) "Production" or "produce" means manufacture,  | ||
planting,
cultivating, growing, or harvesting of a controlled  | ||
substance other than methamphetamine.
 | ||
 (pp) "Registrant" means every person who is required to  | ||
register
under Section 302 of this Act.
 | ||
 (qq) "Registry number" means the number assigned to each  | ||
person
authorized to handle controlled substances under the  | ||
laws of the United
States and of this State.
 | ||
 (qq-5) "Secretary" means, as the context requires, either  | ||
the Secretary of the Department or the Secretary of the  | ||
Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, and the  | ||
Secretary's designated agents.  | ||
 (rr) "State" includes the State of Illinois and any state,  | ||
district,
commonwealth, territory, insular possession thereof,  | ||
and any area
subject to the legal authority of the United  | ||
States of America.
 | ||
 (rr-5) "Stimulant" means any drug that (i) causes an  | ||
overall excitation of central nervous system functions, (ii)  | ||
causes impaired consciousness and awareness, and (iii) can be  | ||
habit-forming or lead to a substance abuse problem, including  | ||
but not limited to amphetamines and their analogs,  | ||
methylphenidate and its analogs, cocaine, and phencyclidine  | ||
and its analogs.  | ||
 (ss) "Ultimate user" means a person who lawfully possesses  | ||
a
controlled substance for his or her own use or for the use of  | ||
a member of his or her
household or for administering to an  | ||
animal owned by him or her or by a member
of his or her  | ||
household.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-334, eff. 1-1-12; 98-214, eff. 8-9-13; 98-668,  | ||
eff. 6-25-14; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14; 98-1111, eff. 8-26-14;  | ||
revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 (720 ILCS 570/312) (from Ch. 56 1/2, par. 1312)
 | ||
 Sec. 312. Requirements for dispensing controlled  | ||
substances. 
 | ||
 (a) A practitioner, in good faith, may dispense a Schedule
 | ||
II controlled substance, which is a narcotic drug listed in  | ||
Section 206
of this Act; or which contains any quantity of  | ||
amphetamine or
methamphetamine, their salts, optical isomers  | ||
or salts of optical
isomers; phenmetrazine and its salts; or  | ||
pentazocine; and Schedule III, IV, or V controlled substances
 | ||
to any person upon
a written or electronic prescription of any  | ||
prescriber, dated and signed
by the
person prescribing (or  | ||
electronically validated in compliance with Section 311.5) on  | ||
the day when issued and bearing the name and
address of the  | ||
patient for whom, or the owner of the animal for which
the  | ||
controlled substance is dispensed, and the full name, address  | ||
and
registry number under the laws of the United States  | ||
relating to
controlled substances of the prescriber, if he or  | ||
she is
required by
those laws to be registered. If the  | ||
prescription is for an animal it
shall state the species of  | ||
animal for which it is ordered. The
practitioner filling the  | ||
prescription shall, unless otherwise permitted, write the date  | ||
of filling
and his or her own signature on the face of the  | ||
written prescription or, alternatively, shall indicate such  | ||
filling using a unique identifier as defined in paragraph (v)  | ||
of Section 3 of the Pharmacy Practice Act.
The written  | ||
prescription shall be
retained on file by the practitioner who  | ||
filled it or pharmacy in which
the prescription was filled for  | ||
a period of 2 years, so as to be readily
accessible for  | ||
inspection or removal by any officer or employee engaged
in the  | ||
enforcement of this Act. Whenever the practitioner's or
 | ||
pharmacy's copy of any prescription is removed by an officer or
 | ||
employee engaged in the enforcement of this Act, for the  | ||
purpose of
investigation or as evidence, such officer or  | ||
employee shall give to the
practitioner or pharmacy a receipt  | ||
in lieu thereof. If the specific prescription is machine or  | ||
computer generated and printed at the prescriber's office, the  | ||
date does not need to be handwritten. A prescription
for a  | ||
Schedule II controlled substance shall not be issued for more  | ||
than a 30 day supply, except as provided in subsection (a-5),  | ||
and shall be valid for up to 90 days
after the date of  | ||
issuance. A written prescription for Schedule III, IV or
V  | ||
controlled substances shall not be filled or refilled more than  | ||
6 months
after the date thereof or refilled more than 5 times  | ||
unless renewed, in
writing, by the prescriber.
 | ||
 (a-5) Physicians may issue multiple prescriptions (3  | ||
sequential 30-day supplies) for the same Schedule II controlled  | ||
substance, authorizing up to a 90-day supply. Before  | ||
authorizing a 90-day supply of a Schedule II controlled  | ||
substance, the physician must meet both of the following  | ||
conditions: | ||
  (1) Each separate prescription must be issued for a  | ||
 legitimate medical purpose by an individual physician  | ||
 acting in the usual course of professional practice. | ||
  (2) The individual physician must provide written  | ||
 instructions on each prescription (other than the first  | ||
 prescription, if the prescribing physician intends for the  | ||
 prescription to be filled immediately) indicating the  | ||
 earliest date on which a pharmacy may fill that  | ||
 prescription.  | ||
 (b) In lieu of a written prescription required by this  | ||
Section, a
pharmacist, in good faith, may dispense Schedule  | ||
III, IV, or V
substances to any person either upon receiving a  | ||
facsimile of a written,
signed prescription transmitted by the  | ||
prescriber or the prescriber's agent
or upon a lawful oral  | ||
prescription of a
prescriber which oral prescription shall be  | ||
reduced
promptly to
writing by the pharmacist and such written  | ||
memorandum thereof shall be
dated on the day when such oral  | ||
prescription is received by the
pharmacist and shall bear the  | ||
full name and address of the ultimate user
for whom, or of the  | ||
owner of the animal for which the controlled
substance is  | ||
dispensed, and the full name, address, and registry number
 | ||
under the law of the United States relating to controlled  | ||
substances of
the prescriber prescribing if he or she is  | ||
required by those laws
to be so
registered, and the pharmacist  | ||
filling such oral prescription shall
write the date of filling  | ||
and his or her own signature on the face of such
written  | ||
memorandum thereof. The facsimile copy of the prescription or
 | ||
written memorandum of the oral
prescription shall be retained  | ||
on file by the proprietor of the pharmacy
in which it is filled  | ||
for a period of not less than two years, so as to
be readily  | ||
accessible for inspection by any officer or employee engaged
in  | ||
the enforcement of this Act in the same manner as a written
 | ||
prescription. The facsimile copy of the prescription or oral  | ||
prescription
and the written memorandum thereof
shall not be  | ||
filled or refilled more than 6 months after the date
thereof or  | ||
be refilled more than 5 times, unless renewed, in writing, by
 | ||
the prescriber.
 | ||
 (c) Except for any non-prescription targeted  | ||
methamphetamine precursor regulated by the Methamphetamine  | ||
Precursor Control Act, a
controlled substance included in  | ||
Schedule V shall not be
distributed or dispensed other than for  | ||
a medical purpose and not for
the purpose of evading this Act,  | ||
and then:
 | ||
  (1) only personally by a person registered to dispense  | ||
 a Schedule V
controlled substance and then only to his or  | ||
 her patients, or
 | ||
  (2) only personally by a pharmacist, and then only to a  | ||
 person over
21 years of age who has identified himself or  | ||
 herself to the pharmacist by means of
2 positive documents  | ||
 of identification.
 | ||
  (3) the dispenser shall record the name and address of  | ||
 the
purchaser, the name and quantity of the product, the  | ||
 date and time of
the sale, and the dispenser's signature.
 | ||
  (4) no person shall purchase or be dispensed more than  | ||
 120
milliliters or more than 120 grams of any Schedule V  | ||
 substance which
contains codeine, dihydrocodeine, or any  | ||
 salts thereof, or
ethylmorphine, or any salts thereof, in  | ||
 any 96 hour period. The
purchaser shall sign a form,  | ||
 approved by the Department of Financial and Professional
 | ||
 Regulation, attesting that he or she has not purchased any  | ||
 Schedule V
controlled substances within the immediately  | ||
 preceding 96 hours.
 | ||
  (5) (Blank).
 | ||
  (6) all records of purchases and sales shall be  | ||
 maintained for not
less than 2 years.
 | ||
  (7) no person shall obtain or attempt to obtain within  | ||
 any
consecutive 96 hour period any Schedule V substances of  | ||
 more than 120
milliliters or more than 120 grams containing  | ||
 codeine, dihydrocodeine or
any of its salts, or  | ||
 ethylmorphine or any of its salts. Any person
obtaining any  | ||
 such preparations or combination of preparations in excess
 | ||
 of this limitation shall be in unlawful possession of such  | ||
 controlled
substance.
 | ||
  (8) a person qualified to dispense controlled  | ||
 substances under this
Act and registered thereunder shall  | ||
 at no time maintain or keep in stock
a quantity of Schedule  | ||
 V controlled substances in excess of 4.5 liters for each
 | ||
 substance; a pharmacy shall at no time maintain or keep in  | ||
 stock a
quantity of Schedule V controlled substances as  | ||
 defined in excess of 4.5
liters for each substance, plus  | ||
 the additional quantity of controlled
substances necessary  | ||
 to fill the largest number of prescription orders
filled by  | ||
 that pharmacy for such controlled substances in any one  | ||
 week
in the previous year. These limitations shall not  | ||
 apply to Schedule V
controlled substances which Federal law  | ||
 prohibits from being dispensed
without a prescription.
 | ||
  (9) no person shall distribute or dispense butyl  | ||
 nitrite for
inhalation or other introduction into the human  | ||
 body for euphoric or
physical effect.
 | ||
 (d) Every practitioner shall keep a record or log of  | ||
controlled substances
received by him or her and a record of  | ||
all such controlled substances
administered, dispensed or  | ||
professionally used by him or her otherwise than by
 | ||
prescription. It shall, however, be sufficient compliance with  | ||
this
paragraph if any practitioner utilizing controlled  | ||
substances listed in
Schedules III, IV and V shall keep a  | ||
record of all those substances
dispensed and distributed by him  | ||
or her other than those controlled substances
which are  | ||
administered by the direct application of a controlled
 | ||
substance, whether by injection, inhalation, ingestion, or any  | ||
other
means to the body of a patient or research subject. A  | ||
practitioner who
dispenses, other than by administering, a  | ||
controlled substance in
Schedule II, which is a narcotic drug  | ||
listed in Section 206 of this Act,
or which contains any  | ||
quantity of amphetamine or methamphetamine, their
salts,  | ||
optical isomers or salts of optical isomers, pentazocine, or
 | ||
methaqualone shall do so only upon
the issuance of a written  | ||
prescription blank or electronic prescription issued by a
 | ||
prescriber.
 | ||
 (e) Whenever a manufacturer distributes a controlled  | ||
substance in a
package prepared by him or her, and whenever a  | ||
wholesale distributor
distributes a controlled substance in a  | ||
package prepared by him or her or the
manufacturer, he or she  | ||
shall securely affix to each package in which that
substance is  | ||
contained a label showing in legible English the name and
 | ||
address of the manufacturer, the distributor and the quantity,  | ||
kind and
form of controlled substance contained therein. No  | ||
person except a
pharmacist and only for the purposes of filling  | ||
a prescription under
this Act, shall alter, deface or remove  | ||
any label so affixed.
 | ||
 (f) Whenever a practitioner dispenses any controlled  | ||
substance except a non-prescription Schedule V product or a  | ||
non-prescription targeted methamphetamine precursor regulated  | ||
by the Methamphetamine Precursor Control Act, he or she
shall  | ||
affix to the container in which such substance is sold or
 | ||
dispensed, a label indicating the date of initial filling, the  | ||
practitioner's
name and address, the name
of the patient, the  | ||
name of the prescriber,
the directions
for use and cautionary  | ||
statements, if any, contained in any prescription
or required  | ||
by law, the proprietary name or names or the established name
 | ||
of the controlled substance, and the dosage and quantity,  | ||
except as otherwise
authorized by regulation by the Department  | ||
of Financial and Professional Regulation. No
person shall  | ||
alter, deface or remove any label so affixed as long as the  | ||
specific medication remains in the container.
 | ||
 (g) A person to whom or for whose use any controlled  | ||
substance has
been prescribed or dispensed by a practitioner,  | ||
or other persons
authorized under this Act, and the owner of  | ||
any animal for which such
substance has been prescribed or  | ||
dispensed by a veterinarian, may
lawfully possess such  | ||
substance only in the container in which it was
delivered to  | ||
him or her by the person dispensing such substance.
 | ||
 (h) The responsibility for the proper prescribing or  | ||
dispensing of
controlled substances that are under the  | ||
prescriber's direct control is upon the prescriber. The  | ||
responsibility for
the proper filling of a prescription for  | ||
controlled substance drugs
rests with the pharmacist. An order  | ||
purporting to be a prescription
issued to any individual, which  | ||
is not in the regular course of
professional treatment nor part  | ||
of an authorized methadone maintenance
program, nor in  | ||
legitimate and authorized research instituted by any
 | ||
accredited hospital, educational institution, charitable  | ||
foundation, or
federal, state or local governmental agency, and  | ||
which is intended to
provide that individual with controlled  | ||
substances sufficient to
maintain that individual's or any  | ||
other individual's physical or
psychological addiction,  | ||
habitual or customary use, dependence, or
diversion of that  | ||
controlled substance is not a prescription within the
meaning  | ||
and intent of this Act; and the person issuing it, shall be
 | ||
subject to the penalties provided for violations of the law  | ||
relating to
controlled substances.
 | ||
 (i) A prescriber shall not pre-print preprint or cause to  | ||
be
pre-printed preprinted a
prescription for any controlled  | ||
substance; nor shall any practitioner
issue, fill or cause to  | ||
be issued or filled, a pre-printed preprinted prescription
for  | ||
any controlled substance.
 | ||
 (i-5) A prescriber may use a machine or electronic device  | ||
to individually generate a printed prescription, but the  | ||
prescriber is still required to affix his or her manual  | ||
signature.  | ||
 (j) No person shall manufacture, dispense, deliver,  | ||
possess with
intent to deliver, prescribe, or administer or  | ||
cause to be administered
under his or her direction any  | ||
anabolic steroid, for any use in humans other than
the  | ||
treatment of disease in accordance with the order of a  | ||
physician licensed
to practice medicine in all its branches for  | ||
a
valid medical purpose in the course of professional practice.  | ||
The use of
anabolic steroids for the purpose of hormonal  | ||
manipulation that is intended
to increase muscle mass, strength  | ||
or weight without a medical necessity to
do so, or for the  | ||
intended purpose of improving physical appearance or
 | ||
performance in any form of exercise, sport, or game, is not a  | ||
valid medical
purpose or in the course of professional  | ||
practice.
 | ||
 (k) Controlled substances may be mailed if all of the  | ||
following conditions are met: | ||
  (1) The controlled substances are not outwardly  | ||
 dangerous and are not likely, of their own force, to cause  | ||
 injury to a person's life or health. | ||
  (2) The inner container of a parcel containing  | ||
 controlled substances must be marked and sealed as required  | ||
 under this Act and its rules, and be placed in a plain  | ||
 outer container or securely wrapped in plain paper. | ||
  (3) If the controlled substances consist of  | ||
 prescription medicines, the inner container must be  | ||
 labeled to show the name and address of the pharmacy or  | ||
 practitioner dispensing the prescription. | ||
  (4) The outside wrapper or container must be free of  | ||
 markings that would indicate the nature of the contents.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 96-166, eff. 1-1-10; 97-334, eff. 1-1-12; revised  | ||
12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 500. The Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 is  | ||
amended by changing Sections 104-18, 108-4, 109-1, 109-1.1, and  | ||
122-2.2 as follows:
 | ||
 (725 ILCS 5/104-18) (from Ch. 38, par. 104-18)
 | ||
 Sec. 104-18. Progress Reports.  | ||
 (a) The treatment supervisor shall submit
a written  | ||
progress report to the court, the State, and the defense:
 | ||
  (1) At least 7 days prior to the date for any hearing  | ||
 on the issue of
the defendant's fitness;
 | ||
  (2) Whenever he believes that the defendant has  | ||
 attained fitness;
 | ||
  (3) Whenever he believes that there is not a  | ||
 substantial probability that
the defendant will attain  | ||
 fitness, with treatment, within the time period set in  | ||
 subsection (e) of Section 104-17 of this Code from
the date  | ||
 of the original finding of unfitness.
 | ||
 (b) The progress report shall contain:
 | ||
  (1) The clinical findings of the treatment supervisor  | ||
 and the facts upon
which the findings are based;
 | ||
  (2) The opinion of the treatment supervisor as to  | ||
 whether the defendant
has attained fitness or as to whether  | ||
 the defendant is making progress,
under treatment, toward  | ||
 attaining fitness within the time period set in subsection  | ||
 (e) of Section 104-17 of this Code from the date
of the  | ||
 original finding of unfitness;
 | ||
  (3) If the defendant is receiving medication,  | ||
 information from the prescribing
physician indicating the  | ||
 type, the dosage and the effect of the medication
on the  | ||
 defendant's appearance, actions and demeanor.
 | ||
 (c) Whenever the court is sent a report from the supervisor  | ||
of the defendant's treatment under paragraph (2) of subsection  | ||
(a) of this Section, the treatment provider shall arrange with  | ||
the court for the return of the defendant to the county jail  | ||
before the time frame specified in subsection (a) of Section  | ||
104-20 of this Code. | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-1020, eff. 8-17-12; 98-944, eff. 8-15-14;  | ||
98-1025, eff. 8-22-14; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 (725 ILCS 5/108-4) (from Ch. 38, par. 108-4)
 | ||
 Sec. 108-4. Issuance of search warrant. 
 | ||
 (a) All warrants upon written complaint shall state the  | ||
time
and date of issuance and be the warrants of the judge  | ||
issuing the same and
not the warrants of the court in which he  | ||
or she is then sitting and these warrants
need not bear the  | ||
seal of the court or clerk thereof. The complaint on
which the  | ||
warrant is issued need not be filed with the clerk of the court
 | ||
nor with the court if there is no clerk until the warrant has  | ||
been executed
or has been returned "not executed".
 | ||
 The search warrant upon written complaint may be issued  | ||
electronically or
electromagnetically
by use of electronic  | ||
mail or a facsimile transmission machine and this warrant shall  | ||
have
the same validity as a written search warrant.
 | ||
 (b) Warrant upon oral testimony.
 | ||
  (1) General rule. When the offense in connection with
 | ||
 which a search warrant is sought constitutes terrorism or  | ||
 any related offense
as defined in Article 29D of the  | ||
 Criminal Code of 2012, and if the
circumstances make it  | ||
 reasonable to dispense, in whole or in part, with a
written  | ||
 affidavit, a judge may issue a warrant based upon sworn  | ||
 testimony
communicated by telephone or other appropriate  | ||
 means, including facsimile
transmission.
 | ||
  (2) Application. The person who is requesting the  | ||
 warrant shall prepare a
document to be known as a duplicate  | ||
 original warrant and shall read such
duplicate original  | ||
 warrant, verbatim, to the judge. The judge shall enter,
 | ||
 verbatim, what is so read to the judge on a document to be  | ||
 known
as the original warrant. The judge may direct that  | ||
 the warrant be modified.
 | ||
  (3) Issuance. If the judge is satisfied that the
 | ||
 offense in connection with which the search warrant is  | ||
 sought constitutes
terrorism or any related offense as  | ||
 defined in Article 29D of the Criminal Code
of 2012, that  | ||
 the circumstances are such as to make it reasonable to  | ||
 dispense
with a written affidavit, and that grounds for the  | ||
 application exist or that
there is probable cause to  | ||
 believe that they exist, the judge shall order the
issuance  | ||
 of a warrant by directing the person requesting the warrant  | ||
 to sign
the judge's name on the duplicate original warrant.  | ||
 The judge shall immediately
sign the original warrant and  | ||
 enter on the face of the original warrant the
exact time  | ||
 when the warrant was ordered to be issued. The finding of  | ||
 probable
cause for a warrant upon oral testimony may be  | ||
 based on the same kind of
evidence as is sufficient for a  | ||
 warrant upon affidavit.
 | ||
  (4) Recording and certification of testimony. When a
 | ||
 caller informs the judge that the purpose of the call is to  | ||
 request a warrant,
the judge shall immediately place under  | ||
 oath each person whose testimony forms
a basis of the  | ||
 application and each person applying for that warrant. If a
 | ||
 voice recording device is available, the judge shall record  | ||
 by means of the
device all of the call after the caller  | ||
 informs the judge that the purpose of
the call is to  | ||
 request a warrant, otherwise a stenographic or longhand  | ||
 verbatim
record shall be made. If a voice recording device  | ||
 is used or a stenographic
record made, the judge shall have  | ||
 the record transcribed, shall certify the
accuracy of the  | ||
 transcription, and shall file a copy of the original record  | ||
 and
the transcription with the court. If a longhand  | ||
 verbatim record is made, the
judge shall file a signed copy  | ||
 with the court.
 | ||
  (5) Contents. The contents of a warrant upon oral
 | ||
 testimony shall be the same as the contents of a warrant  | ||
 upon affidavit.
 | ||
  (6) Additional rule for execution. The person who
 | ||
 executes the warrant shall enter the exact time of  | ||
 execution on the face of the
duplicate original warrant.
 | ||
  (7) Motion to suppress based on failure to obtain a  | ||
 written affidavit.
Evidence obtained pursuant to a warrant  | ||
 issued under this subsection (b) is not
subject to a motion  | ||
 to suppress on the ground that the circumstances were not
 | ||
 such as to make it reasonable to dispense with a written  | ||
 affidavit, absent a
finding of bad faith. All other grounds  | ||
 to move to suppress are preserved.
 | ||
  (8) This subsection (b) is inoperative on and after  | ||
 January 1, 2005.
 | ||
  (9) No evidence obtained pursuant to this subsection  | ||
 (b) shall be
inadmissible in a court of law by virtue of  | ||
 subdivision (8).
 | ||
 (c) Warrant upon testimony by simultaneous video and audio  | ||
transmission. | ||
  (1) General rule. When a search warrant is sought and  | ||
 the request is made by electronic means that has a  | ||
 simultaneous video and audio transmission between the  | ||
 requestor and a judge, the judge may issue a search warrant  | ||
 based upon sworn testimony communicated in the  | ||
 transmission. | ||
  (2) Application. The requestor shall prepare a  | ||
 document to be known as a duplicate original warrant, and | ||
   (A) if circumstances allow, the requestor shall  | ||
 transmit a copy of the warrant together with a  | ||
 complaint for search warrant to the judge by facsimile,  | ||
 email, or other reliable electronic means; or | ||
   (B) if circumstances make transmission under  | ||
 subparagraph (A) of this paragraph (2) impracticable,  | ||
 the requestor shall read the duplicate original  | ||
 warrant, verbatim, to the judge after being
placed  | ||
 under oath as provided in paragraph (4) of this  | ||
 subsection (c). The judge shall enter, verbatim, what  | ||
 is so read to the judge on a document in the judge's  | ||
 possession. | ||
 Under both subparagraphs (A) and (B), the document in  | ||
 possession of the judge shall be known as the original  | ||
 warrant. The judge may direct that the warrant be modified. | ||
  (3) Issuance. If the judge is satisfied that grounds  | ||
 for the application exist or that there is probable cause  | ||
 to believe that grounds exist, the judge shall order the  | ||
 issuance of a warrant by directing the requestor to sign  | ||
 the judge's name on the duplicate original warrant, place  | ||
 the requestor's initials below the judge's name, and enter  | ||
 on the face of the duplicate original warrant the exact  | ||
 date and time when the warrant was ordered to be issued.  | ||
 The judge shall immediately sign the original warrant and  | ||
 enter on the face of the original warrant the exact date  | ||
 and time when the warrant was ordered to be issued. The  | ||
 finding of probable cause for a warrant under this  | ||
 subsection (c) may be based on the same kind of evidence as  | ||
 is sufficient for a warrant under subsection (a). | ||
  (4) Recording and certification of testimony. When a  | ||
 requestor initiates a request for search warrant under this  | ||
 subsection (c), and after the requestor informs the judge  | ||
 that the purpose of the communication is to request a  | ||
 warrant, the judge shall place under oath each person whose  | ||
 testimony forms a basis of the application and each person  | ||
 applying for that warrant. A record of the facts upon which  | ||
 the judge based his or her decision to issue a warrant must  | ||
 be made and filed with the court, together with the  | ||
 original warrant. | ||
   (A) When the requestor has provided the judge with  | ||
 a written complaint for search warrant under  | ||
 subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of this subsection  | ||
 (c) and the judge has sworn the complainant to the  | ||
 facts contained in the complaint for search warrant but  | ||
 has taken no other oral testimony from any person that  | ||
 is essential to establishing probable cause, the judge  | ||
 must acknowledge the attestation in writing on the  | ||
 complaint and file this acknowledged complaint with  | ||
 the court. | ||
   (B) When the requestor has not provided the judge  | ||
 with a written complaint for search warrant, or when  | ||
 the judge has taken oral testimony essential to  | ||
 establishing probable cause not contained in the  | ||
 written complaint for search warrant, the essential  | ||
 facts in the oral testimony that form the basis of the  | ||
 judge's decision to issue the warrant shall be included  | ||
 in the record together with the written complaint, if  | ||
 any. If a recording device is used or a stenographic  | ||
 record is made, the judge shall have the record  | ||
 transcribed, shall certify the accuracy of the  | ||
 transcription, and shall file a copy of the original  | ||
 record and the transcription with the court. If a  | ||
 longhand record is made, the judge shall file a signed  | ||
 copy with the court. | ||
 The material to be filed need not be filed until the  | ||
 warrant has been executed or has been returned "not  | ||
 executed". | ||
  (5) Contents. The contents of a warrant under this  | ||
 subsection (c) shall be the same as the contents of a  | ||
 warrant upon affidavit. A warrant under this subsection is  | ||
 a warrant of the judge issuing the same and not the warrant  | ||
 of the court in which he or she is then sitting and these  | ||
 warrants need not bear the seal of the court or the clerk  | ||
 of the court. | ||
  (6) Additional rule for execution. The person who  | ||
 executes the warrant shall enter the exact time of  | ||
 execution on the face of the duplicate original warrant. | ||
  (7) Motion to suppress based on failure to obtain a  | ||
 written affidavit. Evidence obtained under a warrant  | ||
 issued under this subsection (c) is not subject to a motion  | ||
 to suppress on the ground that the circumstances were not  | ||
 such as to make it reasonable to dispense with a written  | ||
 affidavit, absent a finding of bad faith. All other grounds  | ||
 to move to suppress are preserved. | ||
 (d) The Chief Judge of the circuit court or presiding judge  | ||
in the issuing jurisdiction shall, by local rule, create a  | ||
standard practice for the filing or other retention of  | ||
documents or recordings produced under this Section.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; 98-829, eff. 8-1-14;  | ||
98-905, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 (725 ILCS 5/109-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 109-1)
 | ||
 Sec. 109-1. Person arrested. 
 | ||
 (a) A person arrested with or without a warrant shall be  | ||
taken without
unnecessary delay before the nearest and most  | ||
accessible judge
in that county, except when such county is a  | ||
participant in a
regional jail authority, in which event such  | ||
person may be taken to the
nearest and most accessible judge,  | ||
irrespective of the county where such
judge presides,
and a  | ||
charge shall be filed.
Whenever a person arrested either with  | ||
or without a warrant is required
to be taken
before a judge, a  | ||
charge
may be filed against such person by way of a two-way  | ||
closed circuit
television system, except that a hearing to deny  | ||
bail to the defendant may
not be conducted by way of closed  | ||
circuit television.
 | ||
 (b) The judge shall:
 | ||
  (1) Inform the defendant of the charge against him and  | ||
 shall provide him
with a copy of the charge;
 | ||
  (2) Advise the defendant of his right to counsel and if  | ||
 indigent shall
appoint a public defender or licensed  | ||
 attorney at law of this State to
represent him in  | ||
 accordance with the provisions of Section 113-3 of this
 | ||
 Code;
 | ||
  (3) Schedule a preliminary hearing in appropriate  | ||
 cases;
 | ||
  (4) Admit the defendant to bail in accordance with the  | ||
 provisions of
Article 110 of this Code; and
 | ||
  (5) Order the confiscation of the person's passport or  | ||
 impose travel restrictions on a defendant arrested for  | ||
 first degree murder or other violent crime as defined in  | ||
 Section 3 of the Rights of Crime Victims and Witnesses Act,  | ||
 if the judge determines, based on the factors in Section  | ||
 110-5 of this Code, that this will reasonably ensure assure  | ||
 the appearance of the defendant and compliance by the  | ||
 defendant with all conditions of release.  | ||
 (c) The court may issue an order of protection in  | ||
accordance with
the provisions of Article 112A of this Code.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 98-143, eff. 1-1-14;  | ||
revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (725 ILCS 5/109-1.1) (from Ch. 38, par. 109-1.1)
 | ||
 Sec. 109-1.1. 
(1) Whenever a person arrested either with or  | ||
without a
warrant is taken before a judge as provided for in  | ||
Sections 107-9(d)(6)
and 109-1(a), the judge shall ask the  | ||
arrestee whether he or she has any
children under 18 years old  | ||
living with him or her
who may be neglected as a result of the  | ||
arrest, incarceration or otherwise.
If the judge has reasonable  | ||
cause to believe that a child may be a neglected
child as  | ||
defined in the Abused and Neglected Child Care Reporting Act,  | ||
he
shall instruct a probation officer to report it immediately  | ||
to the Department
of Children and Family Services as provided  | ||
in that Act.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 82-228; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (725 ILCS 5/122-2.2)
 | ||
 Sec. 122-2.2. Intellectual disability and post-conviction  | ||
relief.
 | ||
 (a) In cases where no determination of an intellectual  | ||
disability was made and a
defendant has been convicted of  | ||
first-degree
murder, sentenced to death, and is in custody  | ||
pending execution of the
sentence of death, the following  | ||
procedures shall apply:
 | ||
  (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of law or rule  | ||
 of court, a
defendant may seek relief from the death  | ||
 sentence through a petition for
post-conviction relief  | ||
 under this Article alleging that the defendant was  | ||
 intellectually disabled
as defined in Section 114-15 at the  | ||
 time the offense was
alleged to have been
committed.
 | ||
  (2) The petition must be filed within 180 days of the  | ||
 effective date of
this
amendatory Act of the 93rd General  | ||
 Assembly or within 180 days of the
issuance of the mandate  | ||
 by the Illinois Supreme Court setting the date of
 | ||
 execution, whichever is later.
 | ||
 (b) (3) All other provisions of this Article governing  | ||
petitions for
post-conviction relief shall apply to a petition  | ||
for post-conviction relief
alleging an intellectual  | ||
disability.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-227, eff. 1-1-12; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 505. The State Appellate Defender Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 10 as follows:
 | ||
 (725 ILCS 105/10) (from Ch. 38, par. 208-10)
 | ||
 Sec. 10. Powers and duties of State Appellate Defender. 
 | ||
 (a) The State Appellate Defender shall represent indigent  | ||
persons on
appeal in criminal and delinquent minor proceedings,  | ||
when appointed to do so by
a court under a Supreme Court Rule  | ||
or law of this State. 
 | ||
 (b) The State Appellate Defender shall submit a budget for  | ||
the
approval of the State Appellate Defender Commission.
 | ||
 (c) The State Appellate Defender may:
 | ||
  (1) maintain a panel of private attorneys available to  | ||
 serve as
counsel on a case basis;
 | ||
  (2) establish programs, alone or in conjunction with  | ||
 law schools,
for the purpose of utilizing volunteer law  | ||
 students as legal assistants;
 | ||
  (3) cooperate and consult with state agencies,  | ||
 professional
associations, and other groups concerning the  | ||
 causes of criminal
conduct, the rehabilitation and  | ||
 correction of persons charged with and
convicted of crime,  | ||
 the administration of criminal justice, and, in
counties of  | ||
 less than 1,000,000 population, study, design, develop and
 | ||
 implement model systems for the delivery of trial level  | ||
 defender
services, and make an annual report to the General  | ||
 Assembly;
 | ||
  (4) hire investigators to provide investigative  | ||
 services to appointed counsel and county
public defenders;
 | ||
  (5) (blank); (Blank.)
 | ||
  (5.5) provide training to county public defenders; | ||
  (5.7) provide county public defenders with the  | ||
 assistance of expert witnesses and investigators from  | ||
 funds appropriated to the State Appellate Defender  | ||
 specifically for that purpose by the General Assembly. The  | ||
 Office of the State Appellate Defender shall not be  | ||
 appointed to act as trial counsel; | ||
  (6) develop a Juvenile Defender Resource Center to:
(i)  | ||
 study, design, develop, and implement model systems for the  | ||
 delivery of trial level defender services for juveniles in  | ||
 the justice system; (ii) in cases in which a sentence of  | ||
 incarceration or an adult sentence, or both, is an  | ||
 authorized disposition, provide trial counsel with legal  | ||
 advice and the assistance of expert witnesses and  | ||
 investigators from funds appropriated to the Office of the  | ||
 State Appellate Defender by the General Assembly  | ||
 specifically for that purpose; (iii) develop and provide  | ||
 training to public defenders on juvenile justice issues,  | ||
 utilizing resources including the State and local bar  | ||
 associations, the Illinois Public Defender Association,  | ||
 law schools, the Midwest Juvenile Defender Center, and pro  | ||
 bono efforts by law firms; and
(iv) make an annual report  | ||
 to the General Assembly. | ||
 (d) (Blank.).
 | ||
 (e) The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly  | ||
shall be
satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the  | ||
Speaker, the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of  | ||
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the  | ||
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as  | ||
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization
 | ||
Act and filing such additional copies with the State Government  | ||
Report
Distribution Center for
the General Assembly as is  | ||
required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the
State Library  | ||
Act.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 96-1148, eff. 7-21-10; 97-1003, eff. 8-17-12;  | ||
revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 510. The Gang Crime
Witness
Protection Act of 2013  | ||
is amended by changing Section 15 as follows:
 | ||
 (725 ILCS 173/15)
 | ||
 Sec. 15. Funding.  The Illinois Criminal Justice  | ||
Information Authority, in consultation with
the Attorney  | ||
General, shall adopt rules for the implementation of the Gang
 | ||
Crime Witness Protection Program. Assistance shall be subject  | ||
to the following
limitations:
 | ||
  (a) Funds shall be limited to payment of the following:
 | ||
   (1) temporary living costs;
 | ||
   (2) moving expenses;
 | ||
   (3) rent;
 | ||
   (4) security deposits; and
 | ||
   (5) other appropriate expenses of relocation or  | ||
 transition;
 | ||
  (b) Approval of applications made by State's Attorneys  | ||
 shall be
conditioned upon county funding for costs at a  | ||
 level of at least 25%, unless
this requirement is waived by  | ||
 the administrator, in accordance with adopted
rules, for  | ||
 good cause shown;
 | ||
  (c) Counties providing assistance consistent with the  | ||
 limitations in this
Act may apply for reimbursement of up  | ||
 to 75% of their costs; and
 | ||
  (d) No more than 50% of funding available in any given  | ||
 fiscal year may be
used for costs associated with any  | ||
 single county; and .
 | ||
  (e) Before the Illinois Criminal Justice Information  | ||
 Authority distributes moneys from the Gang Crime Witness  | ||
 Protection Program Fund as provided in this Section, it  | ||
 shall retain 2% of those moneys for administrative  | ||
 purposes.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-58, eff. 7-8-13; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 515. The Unified Code of Corrections is amended by  | ||
changing Sections 3-2.7-25, 3-2.7-50, 3-10-2, 5-6-1, 5-6-2,  | ||
and 5-6-3.1 as follows:
 | ||
 (730 ILCS 5/3-2.7-25) | ||
 Sec. 3-2.7-25. Duties and powers. | ||
 (a) The Independent Juvenile Ombudsman shall function  | ||
independently within the Department of Juvenile Justice with  | ||
respect to the operations of the Office in performance of his  | ||
or her duties under this Article and shall report to the  | ||
Governor. The Ombudsman shall adopt rules and standards as may  | ||
be
necessary or desirable to carry out his or her duties.  | ||
Funding
for the Office shall be designated separately within
 | ||
Department funds. The Department shall provide necessary  | ||
administrative services and facilities to the Office of the  | ||
Independent Juvenile Ombudsman. | ||
 (b) The Office of Independent Juvenile Ombudsman shall have
 | ||
the following duties: | ||
  (1) review and monitor the implementation of the rules
 | ||
 and standards established by the Department of Juvenile
 | ||
 Justice and evaluate the delivery of services to youth to
 | ||
 ensure that the rights of youth are fully observed; | ||
  (2) provide assistance to a youth or family whom who  | ||
 the
Ombudsman determines is in need of assistance,  | ||
 including
advocating with an agency, provider, or other  | ||
 person in the
best interests of the youth; | ||
  (3) investigate and attempt to resolve complaints made  | ||
 by or on behalf of youth, other than
complaints alleging  | ||
 criminal behavior or violations of the State Officials and  | ||
 Employees Employee Ethics Act, if the Office
determines  | ||
 that the investigation and resolution would further the  | ||
 purpose of the Office, and: | ||
   (A) a youth committed to the Department of Juvenile
 | ||
 Justice or the youth's family is in need of
assistance  | ||
 from the Office; or | ||
   (B) a systemic issue in the Department of Juvenile
 | ||
 Justice's provision of services is raised by a
 | ||
 complaint; | ||
  (4) review or inspect periodically the facilities and
 | ||
 procedures of any facility in which a youth has been placed
 | ||
 by the Department of Juvenile Justice to ensure that the
 | ||
 rights of youth are fully observed; and | ||
  (5) be accessible to and meet confidentially and
 | ||
 regularly with youth committed to the Department and serve
 | ||
 as a resource by informing them of pertinent laws,
rules,  | ||
 and policies, and their rights thereunder. | ||
 (c) The following cases shall be reported immediately to
 | ||
the Director of Juvenile Justice and the Governor: | ||
  (1) cases of severe abuse or injury of a youth; | ||
  (2) serious misconduct, misfeasance, malfeasance, or
 | ||
 serious violations of policies and procedures concerning
 | ||
 the administration of a Department of Juvenile Justice
 | ||
 program or operation; | ||
  (3) serious problems concerning the delivery of  | ||
 services in a facility operated by or under contract with
 | ||
 the Department of Juvenile Justice; | ||
  (4) interference by the Department of Juvenile Justice
 | ||
 with an investigation conducted by the Office; and | ||
  (5) other cases as deemed necessary by the Ombudsman.  | ||
 (d) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the
 | ||
Ombudsman may not investigate alleged criminal behavior or  | ||
violations of the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act. If  | ||
the
Ombudsman determines that a possible criminal act has been
 | ||
committed, or that special expertise is required in the
 | ||
investigation, he or she shall immediately notify the
 | ||
Department of State Police. If the Ombudsman determines that a  | ||
possible violation of the State Officials and Employees Ethics  | ||
Act has occurred, he or she shall immediately refer the  | ||
incident to the Office of the Governor's Executive Inspector  | ||
General for investigation. If the Ombudsman receives a  | ||
complaint from a youth or third party regarding suspected abuse  | ||
or neglect of a child, the Ombudsman shall refer the incident  | ||
to the Child Abuse and Neglect Hotline or to the State Police  | ||
as mandated by the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.  | ||
Any investigation conducted by the
Ombudsman shall not be  | ||
duplicative and shall be separate from
any investigation  | ||
mandated by the Abused and Neglected Child
Reporting Act.
All  | ||
investigations conducted by the Ombudsman shall be
conducted in  | ||
a manner designed to ensure the preservation of
evidence for  | ||
possible use in a criminal prosecution. | ||
 (e) In performance of his or her duties, the
Ombudsman may: | ||
  (1) review court files of youth; | ||
  (2) recommend policies, rules, and legislation
 | ||
 designed to protect youth; | ||
  (3) make appropriate referrals under any of the duties
 | ||
 and powers listed in this Section; | ||
  (4) attend internal administrative and disciplinary  | ||
 hearings to ensure the rights of youth are fully observed
 | ||
 and advocate for the best interest of youth when deemed
 | ||
 necessary; and | ||
  (5) perform other acts, otherwise permitted or  | ||
 required by law, in furtherance of the purpose of the  | ||
 Office. | ||
 (f) To assess if a youth's rights have been violated, the
 | ||
Ombudsman may, in any matter that does not involve alleged
 | ||
criminal behavior, contact or consult with an administrator,
 | ||
employee, youth, parent, expert, or any other individual in the
 | ||
course of his or her investigation or to secure information as
 | ||
necessary to fulfill his or her duties.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1032, eff. 8-25-14; revised 11-26-14.)
 | ||
 (730 ILCS 5/3-2.7-50) | ||
 Sec. 3-2.7-50. Promotion and awareness of Office.  The  | ||
Independent Juvenile Ombudsman shall promote awareness among  | ||
the public and youth of: | ||
  (1) the rights of youth committed to the Department; | ||
  (2) the purpose of the Office;  | ||
  (3) how the Office may be contacted; | ||
  (4) the confidential nature of communications; and | ||
  (5) the services the Office provides. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1032, eff. 8-25-14; revised 11-26-14.)
 | ||
 (730 ILCS 5/3-10-2) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-10-2)
 | ||
 Sec. 3-10-2. Examination of Persons Committed to the  | ||
Department of Juvenile Justice. 
 | ||
 (a) A person committed to the Department of Juvenile  | ||
Justice shall be examined in
regard to his medical,  | ||
psychological, social, educational and vocational
condition  | ||
and history, including the use of alcohol and other drugs,
the  | ||
circumstances of his offense and any other
information as the  | ||
Department of Juvenile Justice may determine.
 | ||
 (a-5) Upon admission of a person committed to the  | ||
Department of Juvenile Justice, the Department of Juvenile  | ||
Justice must provide the person with appropriate information  | ||
concerning HIV and AIDS in writing, verbally, or by video or  | ||
other electronic means. The Department of Juvenile Justice  | ||
shall develop the informational materials in consultation with  | ||
the Department of Public Health. At the same time, the  | ||
Department of Juvenile Justice also must offer the person the  | ||
option of being tested, at no charge to the person, for  | ||
infection with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Pre-test  | ||
information shall be provided to the committed person and  | ||
informed consent obtained as required in subsection (q) of  | ||
Section 3 and Section 5 of the AIDS Confidentiality Act. The  | ||
Department of Juvenile Justice may conduct opt-out HIV testing  | ||
as defined in Section 4 of the AIDS Confidentiality Act. If the  | ||
Department conducts opt-out HIV testing, the Department shall  | ||
place signs in English, Spanish and other languages as needed  | ||
in multiple, highly visible locations in the area where HIV  | ||
testing is conducted informing inmates that they will be tested  | ||
for HIV unless they refuse, and refusal or acceptance of  | ||
testing shall be documented in the inmate's medical record. The  | ||
Department shall follow procedures established by the  | ||
Department of Public Health to conduct HIV testing and testing  | ||
to confirm positive HIV test results. All testing must be  | ||
conducted by medical personnel, but pre-test and other  | ||
information may be provided by committed persons who have  | ||
received appropriate training. The Department, in conjunction  | ||
with the Department of Public Health, shall develop a plan that  | ||
complies with the AIDS Confidentiality Act to deliver  | ||
confidentially all positive or negative HIV test results to  | ||
inmates or former inmates. Nothing in this Section shall  | ||
require the Department to offer HIV testing to an inmate who is  | ||
known to be infected with HIV, or who has been tested for HIV  | ||
within the previous 180 days and whose documented HIV test  | ||
result is available to the Department electronically. The
 | ||
testing provided under this subsection (a-5) shall consist of a  | ||
test approved by the Illinois Department of Public Health to  | ||
determine the presence of HIV infection, based upon  | ||
recommendations of the United States Centers for Disease  | ||
Control and Prevention. If the test result is positive, a  | ||
reliable supplemental test based upon recommendations of the  | ||
United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shall  | ||
be
administered. | ||
 Also upon admission of a person committed to the Department  | ||
of Juvenile Justice, the Department of Juvenile Justice must  | ||
inform the person of the Department's obligation to provide the  | ||
person with medical care.
 | ||
 (b) Based on its examination, the Department of Juvenile  | ||
Justice may exercise the following
powers in developing a  | ||
treatment program of any person committed to the Department of  | ||
Juvenile Justice:
 | ||
  (1) Require participation by him in vocational,  | ||
 physical, educational
and corrective training and  | ||
 activities to return him to the community.
 | ||
  (2) Place him in any institution or facility of the  | ||
 Department of Juvenile Justice.
 | ||
  (3) Order replacement or referral to the Parole and  | ||
 Pardon Board as
often as it deems desirable. The Department  | ||
 of Juvenile Justice shall refer the person to the
Parole  | ||
 and Pardon Board as required under Section 3-3-4.
 | ||
  (4) Enter into agreements with the Secretary of Human  | ||
 Services and
the Director of Children and Family
Services,  | ||
 with courts having probation officers, and with private  | ||
 agencies
or institutions for separate care or special  | ||
 treatment of persons subject
to the control of the  | ||
 Department of Juvenile Justice.
 | ||
 (c) The Department of Juvenile Justice shall make periodic  | ||
reexamination of all persons
under the control of the  | ||
Department of Juvenile Justice to determine whether existing
 | ||
orders in individual cases should be modified or continued.  | ||
This
examination shall be made with respect to every person at  | ||
least once
annually.
 | ||
 (d) A record of the treatment decision including any  | ||
modification
thereof and the reason therefor, shall be part of  | ||
the committed person's
master record file.
 | ||
 (e) The Department of Juvenile Justice shall by certified  | ||
mail and telephone or electronic message
notify the parent,  | ||
guardian or nearest relative of any person committed to
the  | ||
Department of Juvenile Justice of his or her physical location  | ||
and any change thereof.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-244, eff. 8-4-11; 97-323, eff. 8-12-11;  | ||
97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 98-689, eff. 1-1-15; 98-1046, eff.  | ||
1-1-15; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 (730 ILCS 5/5-6-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-6-1)
 | ||
 Sec. 5-6-1. Sentences of Probation and of Conditional
 | ||
Discharge and Disposition of Supervision. 
The General Assembly  | ||
finds that in order to protect the public, the
criminal justice  | ||
system must compel compliance with the conditions of probation
 | ||
by responding to violations with swift, certain and fair  | ||
punishments and
intermediate sanctions. The Chief Judge of each  | ||
circuit shall adopt a system of
structured, intermediate  | ||
sanctions for violations of the terms and conditions
of a  | ||
sentence of probation, conditional discharge or disposition of
 | ||
supervision.
 | ||
 (a) Except where specifically prohibited by other
 | ||
provisions of this Code, the court shall impose a sentence
of  | ||
probation or conditional discharge upon an offender
unless,  | ||
having regard to the nature and circumstance of
the offense,  | ||
and to the history, character and condition
of the offender,  | ||
the court is of the opinion that:
 | ||
  (1) his imprisonment or periodic imprisonment is  | ||
 necessary
for the protection of the public; or
 | ||
  (2) probation or conditional discharge would deprecate
 | ||
 the seriousness of the offender's conduct and would be
 | ||
 inconsistent with the ends of justice; or
 | ||
  (3) a combination of imprisonment with concurrent or  | ||
 consecutive probation when an offender has been admitted  | ||
 into a drug court program under Section 20 of the Drug  | ||
 Court Treatment Act is necessary for the protection of the  | ||
 public and for the rehabilitation of the offender.
 | ||
 The court shall impose as a condition of a sentence of  | ||
probation,
conditional discharge, or supervision, that the  | ||
probation agency may invoke any
sanction from the list of  | ||
intermediate sanctions adopted by the chief judge of
the  | ||
circuit court for violations of the terms and conditions of the  | ||
sentence of
probation, conditional discharge, or supervision,  | ||
subject to the provisions of
Section 5-6-4 of this Act.
 | ||
 (b) The court may impose a sentence of conditional
 | ||
discharge for an offense if the court is of the opinion
that  | ||
neither a sentence of imprisonment nor of periodic
imprisonment  | ||
nor of probation supervision is appropriate.
 | ||
 (b-1) Subsections (a) and (b) of this Section do not apply  | ||
to a defendant charged with a misdemeanor or felony under the  | ||
Illinois Vehicle Code or reckless homicide under Section 9-3 of  | ||
the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 if the  | ||
defendant within the past 12 months has been convicted of or  | ||
pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor or felony under the Illinois  | ||
Vehicle Code or reckless homicide under Section 9-3 of the  | ||
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012. | ||
 (c) The court may, upon a plea of guilty or a stipulation
 | ||
by the defendant of the facts supporting the charge or a
 | ||
finding of guilt, defer further proceedings and the
imposition  | ||
of a sentence, and enter an order for supervision of the  | ||
defendant,
if the defendant is not charged with: (i) a Class A  | ||
misdemeanor, as
defined by the following provisions of the  | ||
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012: Sections
 | ||
11-9.1; 12-3.2; 11-1.50 or 12-15; 26-5 or 48-1; 31-1; 31-6;  | ||
31-7; paragraphs (2) and (3) of subsection (a) of Section
21-1;
 | ||
paragraph (1) through (5), (8), (10), and (11) of subsection  | ||
(a) of Section
24-1; (ii) a Class A misdemeanor violation of  | ||
Section
3.01,
3.03-1, or 4.01 of the Humane Care
for Animals  | ||
Act; or (iii)
a felony.
If the defendant
is not barred from  | ||
receiving an order for supervision as provided in this
 | ||
subsection, the court may enter an order for supervision after  | ||
considering the
circumstances of the offense, and the history,
 | ||
character and condition of the offender, if the court is of the  | ||
opinion
that:
 | ||
  (1) the offender is not likely to commit further  | ||
 crimes;
 | ||
  (2) the defendant and the public would be best served  | ||
 if the
defendant were not to receive a criminal record; and
 | ||
  (3) in the best interests of justice an order of  | ||
 supervision
is more appropriate than a sentence otherwise  | ||
 permitted under this Code.
 | ||
 (c-5) Subsections (a), (b), and (c) of this Section do not  | ||
apply to a defendant charged with a second or subsequent  | ||
violation of Section 6-303 of the Illinois Vehicle Code  | ||
committed while his or her driver's license, permit or  | ||
privileges were revoked because of a violation of Section 9-3  | ||
of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012,  | ||
relating to the offense of reckless homicide, or a similar  | ||
provision of a law of another state.
 | ||
 (d) The provisions of paragraph (c) shall not apply to a  | ||
defendant charged
with violating Section 11-501 of the Illinois  | ||
Vehicle Code or a similar
provision of a local
ordinance when  | ||
the defendant has previously been:
 | ||
  (1) convicted for a violation of Section 11-501 of
the  | ||
 Illinois Vehicle
Code or a similar provision of a
local  | ||
 ordinance or any similar law or ordinance of another state;  | ||
 or
 | ||
  (2) assigned supervision for a violation of Section  | ||
 11-501 of the Illinois
Vehicle Code or a similar provision  | ||
 of a local ordinance or any similar law
or ordinance of  | ||
 another state; or
 | ||
  (3) pleaded guilty to or stipulated to the facts  | ||
 supporting
a charge or a finding of guilty to a violation  | ||
 of Section 11-503 of the
Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar  | ||
 provision of a local ordinance or any
similar law or  | ||
 ordinance of another state, and the
plea or stipulation was  | ||
 the result of a plea agreement.
 | ||
 The court shall consider the statement of the prosecuting
 | ||
authority with regard to the standards set forth in this  | ||
Section.
 | ||
 (e) The provisions of paragraph (c) shall not apply to a  | ||
defendant
charged with violating Section 16-25 or 16A-3 of the  | ||
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 if said
 | ||
defendant has within the last 5 years been:
 | ||
  (1) convicted for a violation of Section 16-25 or 16A-3  | ||
 of the Criminal Code of
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012;  | ||
 or
 | ||
  (2) assigned supervision for a violation of Section  | ||
 16-25 or 16A-3 of the Criminal
Code of 1961 or the Criminal  | ||
 Code of 2012.
 | ||
 The court shall consider the statement of the prosecuting  | ||
authority with
regard to the standards set forth in this  | ||
Section.
 | ||
 (f) The provisions of paragraph (c) shall not apply to a  | ||
defendant
charged with violating Sections 15-111, 15-112,  | ||
15-301, paragraph (b)
of Section 6-104, Section 11-605, Section  | ||
11-1002.5, or Section 11-1414
of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a  | ||
similar provision of a local ordinance.
 | ||
 (g) Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (i) of this  | ||
Section, the
provisions of paragraph (c) shall not apply to a
 | ||
defendant charged with violating Section
3-707, 3-708, 3-710,  | ||
or 5-401.3
of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar provision  | ||
of a local ordinance if the
defendant has within the last 5  | ||
years been:
 | ||
  (1) convicted for a violation of Section 3-707, 3-708,  | ||
 3-710, or 5-401.3
of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar  | ||
 provision of a local
ordinance; or
 | ||
  (2) assigned supervision for a violation of Section  | ||
 3-707, 3-708, 3-710,
or 5-401.3 of the Illinois Vehicle  | ||
 Code or a similar provision of a local
ordinance.
 | ||
 The court shall consider the statement of the prosecuting  | ||
authority with
regard to the standards set forth in this  | ||
Section.
 | ||
 (h) The provisions of paragraph (c) shall not apply to a  | ||
defendant under
the age of 21 years charged with violating a  | ||
serious traffic offense as defined
in Section 1-187.001 of the  | ||
Illinois Vehicle Code:
 | ||
  (1) unless the defendant, upon payment of the fines,  | ||
 penalties, and costs
provided by law, agrees to attend and  | ||
 successfully complete a traffic safety
program approved by  | ||
 the court under standards set by the Conference of Chief
 | ||
 Circuit Judges. The accused shall be responsible for  | ||
 payment of any traffic
safety program fees. If the accused  | ||
 fails to file a certificate of
successful completion on or  | ||
 before the termination date of the supervision
order, the  | ||
 supervision shall be summarily revoked and conviction  | ||
 entered. The
provisions of Supreme Court Rule 402 relating  | ||
 to pleas of guilty do not apply
in cases when a defendant  | ||
 enters a guilty plea under this provision; or
 | ||
  (2) if the defendant has previously been sentenced  | ||
 under the provisions of
paragraph (c) on or after January  | ||
 1, 1998 for any serious traffic offense as
defined in  | ||
 Section 1-187.001 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
 | ||
 (h-1) The provisions of paragraph (c) shall not apply to a  | ||
defendant under the age of 21 years charged with an offense  | ||
against traffic regulations governing the movement of vehicles  | ||
or any violation of Section 6-107 or Section 12-603.1 of the  | ||
Illinois Vehicle Code, unless the defendant, upon payment of  | ||
the fines, penalties, and costs provided by law, agrees to  | ||
attend and successfully complete a traffic safety program  | ||
approved by the court under standards set by the Conference of  | ||
Chief Circuit Judges. The accused shall be responsible for  | ||
payment of any traffic safety program fees. If the accused  | ||
fails to file a certificate of successful completion on or  | ||
before the termination date of the supervision order, the  | ||
supervision shall be summarily revoked and conviction entered.  | ||
The provisions of Supreme Court Rule 402 relating to pleas of  | ||
guilty do not apply in cases when a defendant enters a guilty  | ||
plea under this provision.
 | ||
 (i) The provisions of paragraph (c) shall not apply to a  | ||
defendant charged
with violating Section 3-707 of the Illinois  | ||
Vehicle Code or a similar
provision of a local ordinance if the  | ||
defendant has been assigned supervision
for a violation of  | ||
Section 3-707 of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar
 | ||
provision of a local ordinance.
 | ||
 (j) The provisions of paragraph (c) shall not apply to a
 | ||
defendant charged with violating
Section 6-303 of the Illinois  | ||
Vehicle Code or a similar provision of
a local ordinance when  | ||
the revocation or suspension was for a violation of
Section  | ||
11-501 or a similar provision of a local ordinance or a  | ||
violation of
Section 11-501.1 or paragraph (b) of Section  | ||
11-401 of the Illinois Vehicle
Code if the
defendant has within  | ||
the last 10 years been:
 | ||
  (1) convicted for a violation of Section 6-303 of the  | ||
 Illinois Vehicle
Code or a similar provision of a local  | ||
 ordinance; or
 | ||
  (2) assigned supervision for a violation of Section  | ||
 6-303 of the Illinois
Vehicle Code or a similar provision  | ||
 of a local ordinance. | ||
 (k) The provisions of paragraph (c) shall not apply to a
 | ||
defendant charged with violating
any provision of the Illinois  | ||
Vehicle Code or a similar provision of a local ordinance that  | ||
governs the movement of vehicles if, within the 12 months  | ||
preceding the date of the defendant's arrest, the defendant has  | ||
been assigned court supervision on 2 occasions for a violation  | ||
that governs the movement of vehicles under the Illinois  | ||
Vehicle Code or a similar provision of a local ordinance.
The  | ||
provisions of this paragraph (k) do not apply to a defendant  | ||
charged with violating Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle  | ||
Code or a similar provision of a local ordinance.
 | ||
 (l) A defendant charged with violating any provision of the  | ||
Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar provision of a local  | ||
ordinance who receives a disposition of supervision under  | ||
subsection (c) shall pay an additional fee of $29, to be  | ||
collected as provided in Sections 27.5 and 27.6 of the Clerks  | ||
of Courts Act. In addition to the $29 fee, the person shall  | ||
also pay a fee of $6, which, if not waived by the court, shall  | ||
be collected as provided in Sections 27.5 and 27.6 of the  | ||
Clerks of Courts Act. The $29 fee shall be disbursed as  | ||
provided in Section 16-104c of the Illinois Vehicle Code. If  | ||
the $6 fee is collected, $5.50 of the fee shall be deposited  | ||
into the Circuit Court Clerk Operation and Administrative Fund  | ||
created by the Clerk of the Circuit Court and 50 cents of the  | ||
fee shall be deposited into the Prisoner Review Board Vehicle  | ||
and Equipment Fund in the State treasury.
 | ||
 (m) Any person convicted of, pleading guilty to, or placed  | ||
on supervision for a serious traffic violation, as defined in  | ||
Section 1-187.001 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, a violation of  | ||
Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, or a violation of  | ||
a similar provision of a local ordinance shall pay an  | ||
additional fee of $35, to be disbursed as provided in Section  | ||
16-104d of that Code. | ||
 This subsection (m) becomes inoperative on January 1, 2020.
 | ||
 (n)
The provisions of paragraph (c) shall not apply to any  | ||
person under the age of 18 who commits an offense against  | ||
traffic regulations governing the movement of vehicles or any  | ||
violation of Section 6-107 or Section 12-603.1 of the Illinois  | ||
Vehicle Code, except upon personal appearance of the defendant  | ||
in court and upon the written consent of the defendant's parent  | ||
or legal guardian, executed before the presiding judge. The  | ||
presiding judge shall have the authority to waive this  | ||
requirement upon the showing of good cause by the defendant.
 | ||
 (o)
The provisions of paragraph (c) shall not apply to a  | ||
defendant charged with violating Section 6-303 of the Illinois  | ||
Vehicle Code or a similar provision of a local ordinance when  | ||
the suspension was for a violation of Section 11-501.1 of the  | ||
Illinois Vehicle Code and when: | ||
  (1) at the time of the violation of Section 11-501.1 of  | ||
 the Illinois Vehicle Code, the defendant was a first  | ||
 offender pursuant to Section 11-500 of the Illinois Vehicle  | ||
 Code and the defendant failed to obtain a monitoring device  | ||
 driving permit; or | ||
  (2) at the time of the violation of Section 11-501.1 of  | ||
 the Illinois Vehicle Code, the defendant was a first  | ||
 offender pursuant to Section 11-500 of the Illinois Vehicle  | ||
 Code, had subsequently obtained a monitoring device  | ||
 driving permit, but was driving a vehicle not equipped with  | ||
 a breath alcohol ignition interlock device as defined in  | ||
 Section 1-129.1 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
 | ||
 (p) The provisions of paragraph (c) shall not apply to a  | ||
defendant charged with violating Section 11-601.5 of the  | ||
Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar provision of a local  | ||
ordinance.  | ||
 (q) The provisions of paragraph (c) shall not apply to a  | ||
defendant charged with violating subsection (b) of Section  | ||
11-601 of the Illinois Vehicle Code when the defendant was  | ||
operating a vehicle, in an urban district, at a speed in excess  | ||
of 25 miles per hour over the posted speed limit.  | ||
 (r) The provisions of paragraph (c) shall not apply to a  | ||
defendant charged with violating any provision of the Illinois  | ||
Vehicle Code or a similar provision of a local ordinance if the  | ||
violation was the proximate cause of the death of another and  | ||
the defendant's driving abstract contains a prior conviction or  | ||
disposition of court supervision for any violation of the  | ||
Illinois Vehicle Code, other than an equipment violation, or a  | ||
suspension, revocation, or cancellation of the driver's  | ||
license.  | ||
 (s) The provisions of paragraph (c) shall not apply to a  | ||
defendant charged
with violating subsection (i) of Section 70  | ||
of the Firearm Concealed Carry Act.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-333, eff. 8-12-11; 97-597, eff. 1-1-12;  | ||
97-831, eff. 7-1-13; 97-1108, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff.  | ||
1-25-13; 98-169, eff. 1-1-14; 98-658, eff. 6-23-14; 98-899,  | ||
eff. 8-15-14; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 (730 ILCS 5/5-6-2) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-6-2)
 | ||
 Sec. 5-6-2. Incidents of Probation and of Conditional  | ||
Discharge. 
 | ||
 (a) When an offender is sentenced to probation or  | ||
conditional discharge,
the court shall impose a period as  | ||
provided in Article 4.5 of Chapter V, and
shall specify the  | ||
conditions under Section 5-6-3.
 | ||
 (b) Multiple terms of probation imposed at the same time  | ||
shall run
concurrently.
 | ||
 (c) The court may at any time terminate probation or  | ||
conditional
discharge if warranted by the conduct of the  | ||
offender and the ends of
justice, as provided in Section 5-6-4.
 | ||
 (c-1) For purposes of this subsection (c-1), a "violent  | ||
offense" means an offense in which bodily harm is inflicted or  | ||
force is used against any person or threatened against any  | ||
person; an offense involving sexual conduct, sexual  | ||
penetration, or sexual exploitation; an offense involving  | ||
domestic violence; an offense of domestic battery, violation of  | ||
an order of protection, stalking, or hate crime; an offense of  | ||
driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol; or an offense  | ||
involving the possession of a firearm or dangerous weapon. An  | ||
offender, other than an offender sentenced on a violent  | ||
offense, shall be entitled to a time credit toward the  | ||
completion of the offender's probation or conditional  | ||
discharge as follows:  | ||
  (1) For obtaining a high school diploma or GED: 90  | ||
 days.  | ||
  (2) For obtaining an associate's degree, career  | ||
 certificate, or vocational technical certification: 120  | ||
 days.  | ||
  (3) For obtaining a bachelor's degree: 180 days.  | ||
 An offender's supervising officer shall promptly and as  | ||
soon as practicable notify the court of the offender's right to  | ||
time credits under this subsection (c-1). Upon receipt of this  | ||
notification, the court shall enter an order modifying the  | ||
offender's remaining period of probation or conditional  | ||
discharge to reflect the time credit earned. If, before the  | ||
expiration of the original period or a reduced period of  | ||
probation or conditional discharge, the court, after a hearing  | ||
under Section 5-6-4 of this Code, finds that an offender  | ||
violated one or more conditions of probation or conditional  | ||
discharge, the court may order that some or all of the time  | ||
credit to which the offender is entitled under this Section be  | ||
forfeited.  | ||
 (d) Upon the expiration or termination of the period of  | ||
probation or
of conditional discharge, the court shall enter an  | ||
order discharging the
offender.
 | ||
 (e) The court may extend any period of probation or  | ||
conditional
discharge beyond the limits set forth in Article  | ||
4.5 of Chapter V
upon
a violation of a condition of the  | ||
probation or conditional discharge, for the
payment of an  | ||
assessment required by Section 10.3 of the
Cannabis Control  | ||
Act, Section 411.2 of the Illinois Controlled
Substances Act,  | ||
or Section 80 of the Methamphetamine Control and Community  | ||
Protection Act, or for the payment of restitution as
provided  | ||
by an order of restitution under Section 5-5-6 of this Code. | ||
 (e-5) If payment of restitution as ordered has not been  | ||
made, the victim shall file a
petition notifying the sentencing  | ||
court, any other person to whom restitution is owed, and
the  | ||
State's Attorney of the status of the ordered restitution  | ||
payments unpaid at least 90
days before the probation or  | ||
conditional discharge expiration date. If payment as ordered  | ||
has not been made, the
court shall hold a review hearing prior  | ||
to the expiration date, unless the hearing
is voluntarily  | ||
waived by the defendant with the knowledge that waiver may  | ||
result in an
extension of the probation or conditional  | ||
discharge period or in a revocation of probation or conditional  | ||
discharge. If the court does not
extend probation or  | ||
conditional discharge, it shall issue a judgment for the unpaid  | ||
restitution and direct the clerk
of the circuit court to file  | ||
and enter the judgment in the judgment and lien docket, without
 | ||
fee, unless it finds that the victim has recovered a judgment  | ||
against the
defendant for the amount covered by the restitution  | ||
order. If the court issues a
judgment for the unpaid  | ||
restitution, the court shall send to the defendant at his or  | ||
her last known
address written notification that a civil  | ||
judgment has been issued for the unpaid
restitution.  | ||
 (f) The court may impose a term of probation that is  | ||
concurrent or consecutive to a term of imprisonment so long as  | ||
the maximum term imposed does not exceed the maximum term  | ||
provided under Article 4.5 of Chapter V or Article 8 of this  | ||
Chapter. The court may provide that probation may commence  | ||
while an offender is on mandatory supervised release,  | ||
participating in a day release program, or being monitored by  | ||
an electronic monitoring device.
 | ||
 (g) The court may extend a term of probation or conditional  | ||
discharge that was concurrent to, consecutive to, or otherwise  | ||
interrupted by a term of imprisonment for the purpose of  | ||
providing additional time to complete an order of restitution.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-940, eff. 1-1-15; 98-953, eff. 1-1-15;  | ||
98-1114, eff. 8-26-14; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 (730 ILCS 5/5-6-3.1) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-6-3.1)
 | ||
 Sec. 5-6-3.1. Incidents and Conditions of Supervision. 
 | ||
 (a) When a defendant is placed on supervision, the court  | ||
shall enter
an order for supervision specifying the period of  | ||
such supervision, and
shall defer further proceedings in the  | ||
case until the conclusion of the
period.
 | ||
 (b) The period of supervision shall be reasonable under all  | ||
of the
circumstances of the case, but may not be longer than 2  | ||
years, unless the
defendant has failed to pay the assessment  | ||
required by Section 10.3 of the
Cannabis Control Act,
Section  | ||
411.2 of the Illinois Controlled
Substances Act, or Section 80  | ||
of the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, in  | ||
which case the court may extend supervision beyond 2 years.
 | ||
Additionally, the court shall order the defendant to perform no  | ||
less than 30
hours of community service and not more than 120  | ||
hours of community service, if
community service is available  | ||
in the
jurisdiction and is funded and approved by the county  | ||
board where the offense
was committed,
when the offense (1) was
 | ||
related to or in furtherance of the criminal activities of an  | ||
organized gang or
was motivated by the defendant's membership  | ||
in or allegiance to an organized
gang; or (2) is a violation of  | ||
any Section of Article 24 of the Criminal
Code of 1961 or the  | ||
Criminal Code of 2012 where a disposition of supervision is not  | ||
prohibited by Section
5-6-1 of this Code.
The
community service  | ||
shall include, but not be limited to, the cleanup and repair
of  | ||
any damage caused by violation of Section 21-1.3 of the  | ||
Criminal Code of
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 and similar  | ||
damages to property located within the municipality or county
 | ||
in which the violation occurred. Where possible and reasonable,  | ||
the community
service should be performed in the offender's  | ||
neighborhood.
 | ||
 For the purposes of this
Section, "organized gang" has the  | ||
meaning ascribed to it in Section 10 of the
Illinois Streetgang  | ||
Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act.
 | ||
 (c) The court may in addition to other reasonable  | ||
conditions
relating to the nature of the offense or the  | ||
rehabilitation of the
defendant as determined for each  | ||
defendant in the proper discretion of
the court require that  | ||
the person:
 | ||
  (1) make a report to and appear in person before or  | ||
 participate with
the court or such courts, person, or  | ||
 social service agency as directed
by the court in the order  | ||
 of supervision;
 | ||
  (2) pay a fine and costs;
 | ||
  (3) work or pursue a course of study or vocational  | ||
 training;
 | ||
  (4) undergo medical, psychological or psychiatric  | ||
 treatment; or
treatment for drug addiction or alcoholism;
 | ||
  (5) attend or reside in a facility established for the  | ||
 instruction
or residence of defendants on probation;
 | ||
  (6) support his dependents;
 | ||
  (7) refrain from possessing a firearm or other  | ||
 dangerous weapon;
 | ||
  (8) and in addition, if a minor:
 | ||
   (i) reside with his parents or in a foster home;
 | ||
   (ii) attend school;
 | ||
   (iii) attend a non-residential program for youth;
 | ||
   (iv) contribute to his own support at home or in a  | ||
 foster home; or
 | ||
   (v) with the consent of the superintendent of the
 | ||
 facility, attend an educational program at a facility  | ||
 other than the school
in which the
offense was  | ||
 committed if he
or she is placed on supervision for a  | ||
 crime of violence as
defined in
Section 2 of the Crime  | ||
 Victims Compensation Act committed in a school, on the
 | ||
 real
property
comprising a school, or within 1,000 feet  | ||
 of the real property comprising a
school;
 | ||
  (9) make restitution or reparation in an amount not to  | ||
 exceed actual
loss or damage to property and pecuniary loss  | ||
 or make restitution under Section
5-5-6 to a domestic  | ||
 violence shelter. The court shall
determine the amount and  | ||
 conditions of payment;
 | ||
  (10) perform some reasonable public or community  | ||
 service;
 | ||
  (11) comply with the terms and conditions of an order  | ||
 of protection
issued by the court pursuant to the Illinois  | ||
 Domestic Violence Act of 1986 or
an order of protection  | ||
 issued by the court of another state, tribe, or United
 | ||
 States territory.
If the court has ordered the defendant to  | ||
 make a report and appear in
person under paragraph (1) of  | ||
 this subsection, a copy of the order of
protection shall be  | ||
 transmitted to the person or agency so designated
by the  | ||
 court;
 | ||
  (12) reimburse any "local anti-crime program" as  | ||
 defined in Section 7 of
the Anti-Crime Advisory Council Act  | ||
 for any reasonable expenses incurred by the
program on the  | ||
 offender's case, not to exceed the maximum amount of the
 | ||
 fine authorized for the offense for which the defendant was  | ||
 sentenced;
 | ||
  (13) contribute a reasonable sum of money, not to
 | ||
 exceed the maximum amount of the fine authorized for the  | ||
 offense for which
the defendant was sentenced, (i) to a  | ||
 "local anti-crime program", as defined
in Section 7 of the  | ||
 Anti-Crime Advisory Council Act, or (ii) for offenses under  | ||
 the jurisdiction of the Department of Natural Resources, to  | ||
 the fund established by the Department of Natural Resources  | ||
 for the purchase of evidence for investigation purposes and  | ||
 to conduct investigations as outlined in Section 805-105 of  | ||
 the Department of Natural Resources (Conservation) Law;
 | ||
  (14) refrain from entering into a designated  | ||
 geographic area except
upon such terms as the court finds  | ||
 appropriate. Such terms may include
consideration of the  | ||
 purpose of the entry, the time of day, other persons
 | ||
 accompanying the defendant, and advance approval by a  | ||
 probation officer;
 | ||
  (15) refrain from having any contact, directly or  | ||
 indirectly, with
certain specified persons or particular  | ||
 types of person, including but not
limited to members of  | ||
 street gangs and drug users or dealers;
 | ||
  (16) refrain from having in his or her body the  | ||
 presence of any illicit
drug prohibited by the Cannabis  | ||
 Control Act, the Illinois Controlled
Substances Act, or the  | ||
 Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act,  | ||
 unless prescribed by a physician, and submit samples of
his  | ||
 or her blood or urine or both for tests to determine the  | ||
 presence of any
illicit drug;
 | ||
  (17) refrain from operating any motor vehicle not  | ||
 equipped with an
ignition interlock device as defined in  | ||
 Section 1-129.1 of the Illinois
Vehicle Code; under this  | ||
 condition the court may allow a defendant who is not
 | ||
 self-employed to operate a vehicle owned by the defendant's  | ||
 employer that is
not equipped with an ignition interlock  | ||
 device in the course and scope of the
defendant's  | ||
 employment; and
 | ||
  (18) if placed on supervision for a sex offense as  | ||
 defined in subsection (a-5) of Section 3-1-2 of this Code,  | ||
 unless the offender is a parent or guardian of the person  | ||
 under 18 years of age present in the home and no  | ||
 non-familial minors are present, not participate in a  | ||
 holiday event involving
children
under 18 years of age,  | ||
 such as distributing candy or other items to children on
 | ||
 Halloween,
wearing a Santa Claus costume on or preceding  | ||
 Christmas, being employed as a
department store Santa  | ||
 Claus, or wearing an Easter Bunny costume on or
preceding
 | ||
 Easter. | ||
 (c-5) If payment of restitution as ordered has not been  | ||
made, the victim shall file a
petition notifying the sentencing  | ||
court, any other person to whom restitution is owed, and
the  | ||
State's Attorney of the status of the ordered restitution  | ||
payments unpaid at least 90
days before the supervision  | ||
expiration date. If payment as ordered has not been made, the
 | ||
court shall hold a review hearing prior to the expiration date,  | ||
unless the hearing
is voluntarily waived by the defendant with  | ||
the knowledge that waiver may result in an
extension of the  | ||
supervision period or in a revocation of supervision. If the  | ||
court does not
extend supervision, it shall issue a judgment  | ||
for the unpaid restitution and direct the clerk
of the circuit  | ||
court to file and enter the judgment in the judgment and lien  | ||
docket, without
fee, unless it finds that the victim has  | ||
recovered a judgment against the
defendant for the amount  | ||
covered by the restitution order. If the court issues a
 | ||
judgment for the unpaid restitution, the court shall send to  | ||
the defendant at his or her last known
address written  | ||
notification that a civil judgment has been issued for the  | ||
unpaid
restitution.  | ||
 (d) The court shall defer entering any judgment on the  | ||
charges
until the conclusion of the supervision.
 | ||
 (e) At the conclusion of the period of supervision, if the  | ||
court
determines that the defendant has successfully complied  | ||
with all of the
conditions of supervision, the court shall  | ||
discharge the defendant and
enter a judgment dismissing the  | ||
charges.
 | ||
 (f) Discharge and dismissal upon a successful conclusion of  | ||
a
disposition of supervision shall be deemed without  | ||
adjudication of guilt
and shall not be termed a conviction for  | ||
purposes of disqualification or
disabilities imposed by law  | ||
upon conviction of a crime. Two years after the
discharge and  | ||
dismissal under this Section, unless the disposition of
 | ||
supervision was for a violation of Sections 3-707, 3-708,  | ||
3-710, 5-401.3, or 11-503 of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a  | ||
similar
provision of a local ordinance, or for a violation of  | ||
Sections 12-3.2, 16-25,
or 16A-3 of the Criminal Code of 1961  | ||
or the Criminal Code of 2012, in which case it shall be 5
years  | ||
after discharge and dismissal, a person may have his record
of  | ||
arrest sealed or expunged as may be provided by law. However,  | ||
any
defendant placed on supervision before January 1, 1980, may  | ||
move for
sealing or expungement of his arrest record, as  | ||
provided by law, at any
time after discharge and dismissal  | ||
under this Section.
A person placed on supervision for a sexual  | ||
offense committed against a minor
as defined in clause  | ||
(a)(1)(L) of Section 5.2 of the Criminal Identification Act
or  | ||
for a violation of Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code  | ||
or a
similar provision of a local ordinance
shall not have his  | ||
or her record of arrest sealed or expunged.
 | ||
 (g) A defendant placed on supervision and who during the  | ||
period of
supervision undergoes mandatory drug or alcohol  | ||
testing, or both, or is
assigned to be placed on an approved  | ||
electronic monitoring device, shall be
ordered to pay the costs  | ||
incidental to such mandatory drug or alcohol
testing, or both,  | ||
and costs incidental to such approved electronic
monitoring in  | ||
accordance with the defendant's ability to pay those costs.
The  | ||
county board with the concurrence of the Chief Judge of the  | ||
judicial
circuit in which the county is located shall establish  | ||
reasonable fees for
the cost of maintenance, testing, and  | ||
incidental expenses related to the
mandatory drug or alcohol  | ||
testing, or both, and all costs incidental to
approved  | ||
electronic monitoring, of all defendants placed on  | ||
supervision.
The concurrence of the Chief Judge shall be in the  | ||
form of an
administrative order.
The fees shall be collected by  | ||
the clerk of the circuit court. The clerk of
the circuit court  | ||
shall pay all moneys collected from these fees to the county
 | ||
treasurer who shall use the moneys collected to defray the  | ||
costs of
drug testing, alcohol testing, and electronic  | ||
monitoring.
The county treasurer shall deposit the fees  | ||
collected in the
county working cash fund under Section 6-27001  | ||
or Section 6-29002 of the
Counties Code, as the case may be.
 | ||
 (h) A disposition of supervision is a final order for the  | ||
purposes
of appeal.
 | ||
 (i) The court shall impose upon a defendant placed on  | ||
supervision
after January 1, 1992 or to community service under  | ||
the supervision of a
probation or court services department  | ||
after January 1, 2004, as a condition
of supervision or  | ||
supervised community service, a fee of $50 for
each month of  | ||
supervision or supervised community service ordered by the
 | ||
court, unless after
determining the inability of the person  | ||
placed on supervision or supervised
community service to pay  | ||
the
fee, the court assesses a lesser fee. The court may not  | ||
impose the fee on a
minor who is made a ward of the State under  | ||
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987
while the minor is in placement.
 | ||
The fee shall be imposed only upon a
defendant who is actively  | ||
supervised by the
probation and court services
department. The  | ||
fee shall be collected by the clerk of the circuit court.
The  | ||
clerk of the circuit court shall pay all monies collected from  | ||
this fee
to the county treasurer for deposit in the probation  | ||
and court services
fund pursuant to Section 15.1 of the  | ||
Probation and
Probation Officers Act.
 | ||
 A circuit court may not impose a probation fee in excess of  | ||
$25
per month unless the circuit court has adopted, by  | ||
administrative
order issued by the chief judge, a standard  | ||
probation fee guide
determining an offender's ability to pay.  | ||
Of the
amount collected as a probation fee, not to exceed $5 of  | ||
that fee
collected per month may be used to provide services to  | ||
crime victims
and their families. | ||
 The Court may only waive probation fees based on an  | ||
offender's ability to pay. The probation department may  | ||
re-evaluate an offender's ability to pay every 6 months, and,  | ||
with the approval of the Director of Court Services or the  | ||
Chief Probation Officer, adjust the monthly fee amount. An  | ||
offender may elect to pay probation fees due in a lump sum.
Any  | ||
offender that has been assigned to the supervision of a  | ||
probation department, or has been transferred either under  | ||
subsection (h) of this Section or under any interstate compact,  | ||
shall be required to pay probation fees to the department  | ||
supervising the offender, based on the offender's ability to  | ||
pay.
 | ||
 (j) All fines and costs imposed under this Section for any
 | ||
violation of Chapters 3, 4, 6, and 11 of the Illinois Vehicle  | ||
Code, or a
similar provision of a local ordinance, and any  | ||
violation of the Child
Passenger Protection Act, or a similar  | ||
provision of a local ordinance, shall
be collected and  | ||
disbursed by the circuit clerk as provided under Section
27.5  | ||
of the Clerks of Courts Act.
 | ||
 (k) A defendant at least 17 years of age who is placed on  | ||
supervision
for a misdemeanor in a county of 3,000,000 or more  | ||
inhabitants
and who has not been previously convicted of a  | ||
misdemeanor or felony
may as a condition of his or her  | ||
supervision be required by the court to
attend educational  | ||
courses designed to prepare the defendant for a high school
 | ||
diploma and to work toward a high school diploma or to work  | ||
toward passing high school equivalency testing or to work
 | ||
toward completing a vocational training program approved by the  | ||
court. The
defendant placed on supervision must attend a public  | ||
institution of education
to obtain the educational or  | ||
vocational training required by this subsection
(k). The  | ||
defendant placed on supervision shall be required to pay for  | ||
the cost
of the educational courses or high school equivalency  | ||
testing if a fee is charged for those courses
or testing. The  | ||
court shall revoke the supervision of a person who wilfully  | ||
fails
to comply with this subsection (k). The court shall  | ||
resentence the defendant
upon revocation of supervision as  | ||
provided in Section 5-6-4. This subsection
(k) does not apply  | ||
to a defendant who has a high school diploma or has
 | ||
successfully passed high school equivalency testing. This  | ||
subsection (k) does not apply to a
defendant who is determined  | ||
by the court to be developmentally disabled or
otherwise  | ||
mentally incapable of completing the
educational or vocational  | ||
program.
 | ||
 (l) The court shall require a defendant placed on  | ||
supervision for
possession of a substance
prohibited by the  | ||
Cannabis Control Act, the Illinois Controlled Substances Act,  | ||
or the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act
 | ||
after a previous conviction or disposition of supervision for  | ||
possession of a
substance prohibited by the Cannabis Control  | ||
Act, the Illinois Controlled
Substances Act, or the  | ||
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act or a  | ||
sentence of probation under Section 10 of the Cannabis
Control  | ||
Act or Section 410 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act
 | ||
and after a finding by the court that the person is addicted,  | ||
to undergo
treatment at a substance abuse program approved by  | ||
the court.
 | ||
 (m) The Secretary of State shall require anyone placed on  | ||
court supervision
for a
violation of Section 3-707 of the  | ||
Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar provision
of a local  | ||
ordinance
to give proof of his or her financial
responsibility  | ||
as
defined in Section 7-315 of the Illinois Vehicle Code. The  | ||
proof shall be
maintained by the individual in a manner  | ||
satisfactory to the Secretary of State
for
a
minimum period of  | ||
3 years after the date the proof is first filed.
The proof  | ||
shall be limited to a single action per arrest and may not be
 | ||
affected by any post-sentence disposition. The Secretary of  | ||
State shall
suspend the driver's license of any person
 | ||
determined by the Secretary to be in violation of this  | ||
subsection. | ||
 (n) Any offender placed on supervision for any offense that  | ||
the court or probation department has determined to be sexually  | ||
motivated as defined in the Sex Offender Management Board Act  | ||
shall be required to refrain from any contact, directly or  | ||
indirectly, with any persons specified by the court and shall  | ||
be available for all evaluations and treatment programs  | ||
required by the court or the probation department.
 | ||
 (o) An offender placed on supervision for a sex offense as  | ||
defined in the Sex Offender
Management Board Act shall refrain  | ||
from residing at the same address or in the same condominium  | ||
unit or apartment unit or in the same condominium complex or  | ||
apartment complex with another person he or she knows or  | ||
reasonably should know is a convicted sex offender or has been  | ||
placed on supervision for a sex offense. The provisions of this  | ||
subsection (o) do not apply to a person convicted of a sex  | ||
offense who is placed in a Department of Corrections licensed  | ||
transitional housing facility for sex offenders. | ||
 (p) An offender placed on supervision for an offense  | ||
committed on or after June 1, 2008
(the effective date of  | ||
Public Act 95-464)
that would qualify the accused as a child  | ||
sex offender as defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the  | ||
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 shall  | ||
refrain from communicating with or contacting, by means of the  | ||
Internet, a person who is not related to the accused and whom  | ||
the accused reasonably believes to be under 18 years of age.  | ||
For purposes of this subsection (p), "Internet" has the meaning  | ||
ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012;  | ||
and a person is not related to the accused if the person is  | ||
not: (i) the spouse, brother, or sister of the accused; (ii) a  | ||
descendant of the accused; (iii) a first or second cousin of  | ||
the accused; or (iv) a step-child or adopted child of the  | ||
accused.
 | ||
 (q) An offender placed on supervision for an offense  | ||
committed on or after June 1, 2008
(the effective date of  | ||
Public Act 95-464)
that would qualify the accused as a child  | ||
sex offender as defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the  | ||
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 shall, if so  | ||
ordered by the court, refrain from communicating with or  | ||
contacting, by means of the Internet, a person who is related  | ||
to the accused and whom the accused reasonably believes to be  | ||
under 18 years of age. For purposes of this subsection (q),  | ||
"Internet" has the meaning ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of  | ||
the Criminal Code of 2012; and a person is related to the  | ||
accused if the person is: (i) the spouse, brother, or sister of  | ||
the accused; (ii) a descendant of the accused; (iii) a first or  | ||
second cousin of the accused; or (iv) a step-child or adopted  | ||
child of the accused.
 | ||
 (r) An offender placed on supervision for an offense under  | ||
Section 11-6, 11-9.1, 11-14.4 that involves soliciting for a  | ||
juvenile prostitute, 11-15.1, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or  | ||
11-21 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of  | ||
2012, or any attempt to commit any of these offenses, committed  | ||
on or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the  | ||
95th General Assembly shall: | ||
  (i) not access or use a computer or any other device  | ||
 with Internet capability without the prior written  | ||
 approval of the court, except in connection with the  | ||
 offender's employment or search for employment with the  | ||
 prior approval of the court; | ||
  (ii) submit to periodic unannounced examinations of  | ||
 the offender's computer or any other device with Internet  | ||
 capability by the offender's probation officer, a law  | ||
 enforcement officer, or assigned computer or information  | ||
 technology specialist, including the retrieval and copying  | ||
 of all data from the computer or device and any internal or  | ||
 external peripherals and removal of such information,  | ||
 equipment, or device to conduct a more thorough inspection; | ||
  (iii) submit to the installation on the offender's  | ||
 computer or device with Internet capability, at the  | ||
 offender's expense, of one or more hardware or software  | ||
 systems to monitor the Internet use; and | ||
  (iv) submit to any other appropriate restrictions  | ||
 concerning the offender's use of or access to a computer or  | ||
 any other device with Internet capability imposed by the  | ||
 court.  | ||
 (s) An offender placed on supervision for an offense that  | ||
is a sex offense as defined in Section 2 of the Sex Offender  | ||
Registration Act that is committed on or after January 1, 2010  | ||
(the effective date of Public Act 96-362) that requires the  | ||
person to register as a sex offender under that Act, may not  | ||
knowingly use any computer scrub software on any computer that  | ||
the sex offender uses.  | ||
 (t) An offender placed on supervision for a sex offense as  | ||
defined in the Sex Offender
Registration Act committed on or  | ||
after January 1, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act 96-262)  | ||
shall refrain from accessing or using a social networking  | ||
website as defined in Section 17-0.5 of the Criminal Code of  | ||
2012.  | ||
 (u) Jurisdiction over an offender may be transferred from  | ||
the sentencing court to the court of another circuit with the  | ||
concurrence of both courts. Further transfers or retransfers of  | ||
jurisdiction are also authorized in the same manner. The court  | ||
to which jurisdiction has been transferred shall have the same  | ||
powers as the sentencing court. The probation department within  | ||
the circuit to which jurisdiction has been transferred may  | ||
impose probation fees upon receiving the transferred offender,  | ||
as provided in subsection (i). The probation department from  | ||
the original sentencing court shall retain all probation fees  | ||
collected prior to the transfer.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-454, eff. 1-1-12; 97-597, eff. 1-1-12;  | ||
97-1109, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; 98-718, eff.  | ||
1-1-15; 98-940, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 Section 520. The Arsonist Registration Act is amended by  | ||
changing Sections 5 and 65 as follows:
 | ||
 (730 ILCS 148/5)
 | ||
 Sec. 5. Definitions. In this Act: | ||
 (a) "Arsonist" means any person who is: | ||
  
(1) charged under Illinois law, or any
substantially  | ||
 similar federal, Uniform Code of Military Justice, sister  | ||
 state, or foreign country law, with an arson offense, set  | ||
 forth in subsection (b) of this Section or the attempt to  | ||
 commit an included arson offense, and:
 | ||
   (i) is convicted of such offense or an attempt
to  | ||
 commit such offense; or
 | ||
   (ii) is found not guilty by reason of insanity of
 | ||
 such offense or an attempt to commit such offense; or
 | ||
   (iii) is found not guilty by reason of insanity
 | ||
 under subsection (c) of Section 104-25 of the Code of  | ||
 Criminal Procedure of 1963 of such offense or an  | ||
 attempt to commit such offense; or
 | ||
   (iv) is the subject of a finding not resulting in
 | ||
 an acquittal at a hearing conducted under subsection  | ||
 (a) of Section 104-25 of the Code of Criminal Procedure  | ||
 of 1963 for the alleged commission or attempted  | ||
 commission of such offense; or
 | ||
   (v) is found not guilty by reason of insanity
 | ||
 following a hearing conducted under a federal, Uniform  | ||
 Code of Military Justice, sister state, or foreign  | ||
 country law substantially similar to subsection (c) of  | ||
 Section 104-25 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of  | ||
 1963 of such offense or of the attempted commission of  | ||
 such offense; or
 | ||
   (vi) is the subject of a finding not resulting in
 | ||
 an acquittal at a hearing conducted under a federal,  | ||
 Uniform Code of Military Justice, sister state, or  | ||
 foreign country law substantially similar to  | ||
 subsection (a) of Section 104-25 of the Code of  | ||
 Criminal Procedure of 1963 for the alleged violation or  | ||
 attempted commission of such offense;  | ||
  (2) is a minor who has been tried and convicted in an  | ||
 adult criminal prosecution as the result
of committing or  | ||
 attempting to commit an offense specified in subsection (b)  | ||
 of this Section or a violation of any substantially similar  | ||
 federal, Uniform Code of Military Justice, sister state, or  | ||
 foreign country law.
Convictions that result from or are  | ||
 connected with the same act, or result from offenses  | ||
 committed at the same time, shall be counted for the  | ||
 purpose of this Act as one conviction. Any conviction set  | ||
 aside under law is not a conviction for purposes of this  | ||
 Act.
 | ||
 (b) "Arson offense" means:
 | ||
  (1) A violation of any of the following Sections of
the  | ||
 Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012:
 | ||
   (i) 20-1 (arson; residential arson; place of  | ||
 worship arson),  | ||
   (ii) 20-1.1 (aggravated arson), | ||
   (iii) 20-1(b) or 20-1.2 (residential arson), | ||
   (iv) 20-1(b-5) or 20-1.3 (place of worship arson),
 | ||
   (v) 20-2 (possession of explosives or explosive or  | ||
 incendiary devices), or | ||
   (vi) An attempt to commit any of the offenses  | ||
 listed in clauses (i) through (v).
 | ||
  (2) A violation of any former law of this State
 | ||
 substantially equivalent to any offense listed in  | ||
 subsection (b) of this Section. | ||
 (c) A conviction for an offense of federal law, Uniform  | ||
Code of Military Justice, or the law of another state or a  | ||
foreign country that is substantially equivalent to any offense  | ||
listed in subsection (b) of this Section shall constitute a  | ||
conviction for the purpose of this Act.
 | ||
 (d) "Law enforcement agency having jurisdiction" means the  | ||
Chief of Police in each of the municipalities in which the  | ||
arsonist expects to reside, work, or attend school (1) upon his  | ||
or her discharge, parole or release or (2) during the service  | ||
of his or her sentence of probation or conditional discharge,  | ||
or the Sheriff of the county, in the event no Police Chief  | ||
exists or if the offender intends to reside, work, or attend  | ||
school in an unincorporated area. "Law enforcement agency  | ||
having jurisdiction" includes the location where out-of-state  | ||
students attend school and where out-of-state employees are  | ||
employed or are otherwise required to register.
 | ||
 (e) "Out-of-state student" means any arsonist, as defined  | ||
in this Section, who is enrolled in Illinois, on a full-time or  | ||
part-time basis, in any public or private educational  | ||
institution, including, but not limited to, any secondary  | ||
school, trade or professional institution, or institution of  | ||
higher learning.
 | ||
 (f) "Out-of-state employee" means any arsonist, as defined  | ||
in this Section, who works in Illinois, regardless of whether  | ||
the individual receives payment for services performed, for a  | ||
period of time of 10 or more days or for an aggregate period of  | ||
time of 30 or more days during any calendar year. Persons who  | ||
operate motor vehicles in the State accrue one day of  | ||
employment time for any portion of a day spent in Illinois.
 | ||
 (g) "I-CLEAR" means the Illinois Citizens and Law  | ||
Enforcement Analysis and Reporting System. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-1108, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13;  | ||
revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (730 ILCS 148/65)
 | ||
 Sec. 65. Penalty. Any person who is required to register  | ||
under this Act who violates any of the provisions of this Act  | ||
and any person who is required to register under this Act who  | ||
seeks to change his or her name under Article XXI 21 of the  | ||
Code of Civil Procedure is guilty of a Class 4 felony. Any  | ||
person who is required to register under this Act who knowingly  | ||
or wilfully gives material information required by this Act  | ||
that is false is guilty of a Class 3 felony. Any person  | ||
convicted of a violation of any provision of this Act shall, in  | ||
addition to any other penalty required by law, be required to  | ||
serve a minimum period of 7 days confinement in the local  | ||
county jail. The court shall impose a mandatory minimum fine of  | ||
$500 for failure to comply with any provision of this Act.  | ||
These fines shall be deposited in the Arsonist Registration  | ||
Fund. An arsonist who violates any provision of this Act may be  | ||
tried in any Illinois county where the arsonist can be located.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 93-949, eff. 1-1-05; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 525. The Sex Offender Registration Act is amended  | ||
by changing Section 10 as follows:
 | ||
 (730 ILCS 150/10) (from Ch. 38, par. 230)
 | ||
 Sec. 10. Penalty. 
 | ||
 (a) Any person who is required to register under this
 | ||
Article who violates any of the provisions of this Article and  | ||
any person
who is required to register under this Article who  | ||
seeks to change his or her
name under Article XXI 21 of the  | ||
Code of Civil Procedure is guilty of a Class 3
felony.
Any  | ||
person who is convicted for a violation of this Act for a  | ||
second or subsequent time is guilty of a Class 2 felony. Any  | ||
person who is required to register under this Article who
 | ||
knowingly or wilfully gives material information required by  | ||
this Article that
is false is guilty of a Class 3 felony.
Any  | ||
person convicted of a violation of any provision of this  | ||
Article
shall, in addition to any other penalty required by  | ||
law, be required to serve a
minimum period of 7 days  | ||
confinement in the local county jail. The court shall
impose a  | ||
mandatory minimum fine of $500 for failure to comply with any
 | ||
provision of this Article. These fines shall be deposited in  | ||
the Sex Offender
Registration Fund. Any sex offender, as  | ||
defined in Section 2 of this Act,
or sexual predator who  | ||
violates any
provision of this Article may be arrested and
 | ||
tried in any Illinois county where the sex
offender can be  | ||
located. The local police department or sheriff's office is not  | ||
required to determine whether the person is living within its  | ||
jurisdiction.
 | ||
 (b) Any person, not covered by privilege under Part 8 of  | ||
Article VIII of the Code of Civil Procedure or the Illinois  | ||
Supreme Court's Rules of Professional Conduct, who has reason  | ||
to believe that a sexual predator is not complying, or has not  | ||
complied, with the requirements of this Article and who, with  | ||
the intent to assist the sexual predator in eluding a law  | ||
enforcement agency that is seeking to find the sexual predator  | ||
to question the sexual predator about, or to arrest the sexual  | ||
predator for, his or her noncompliance with the requirements of  | ||
this Article is guilty of a Class 3 felony if he or she: | ||
  (1) provides false information to the law enforcement  | ||
 agency having jurisdiction about the sexual predator's  | ||
 noncompliance with the requirements of this Article, and,  | ||
 if known, the whereabouts of the sexual predator; | ||
  (2) harbors, or attempts to harbor, or assists another  | ||
 person in harboring or attempting to harbor, the sexual  | ||
 predator; or | ||
  (3) conceals or attempts to conceal, or assists another  | ||
 person in concealing or attempting to conceal, the sexual  | ||
 predator. | ||
 (c) Subsection (b) does not apply if the sexual predator is  | ||
incarcerated in or is in the custody of a State correctional  | ||
facility, a private correctional facility, a county or  | ||
municipal jail, a State mental health facility or a State  | ||
treatment and detention facility, or a federal correctional  | ||
facility.
 | ||
 (d) Subsections (a) and (b) do not apply if the sex  | ||
offender accurately registered his or her Internet protocol  | ||
address under this Act, and the address subsequently changed  | ||
without his or her knowledge or intent.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 94-168, eff. 1-1-06; 94-988, eff. 1-1-07; 95-579,  | ||
eff. 6-1-08; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 530. The Murderer and Violent Offender Against  | ||
Youth Registration Act is amended by changing Section 60 as  | ||
follows:
 | ||
 (730 ILCS 154/60)
 | ||
 Sec. 60. Penalty. Any person who is required to register  | ||
under this
Act who violates any of the provisions of this Act  | ||
and any person
who is required to register under this Act who  | ||
seeks to change his or her
name under Article XXI 21 of the  | ||
Code of Civil Procedure is guilty of a Class 3
felony.
Any  | ||
person who is convicted for a violation of this Act for a  | ||
second or subsequent time is guilty of a Class 2 felony. Any  | ||
person who is required to register under this Act who
knowingly  | ||
or wilfully gives material information required by this Act  | ||
that
is false is guilty of a Class 3 felony.
Any person  | ||
convicted of a violation of any provision of this Act
shall, in  | ||
addition to any other penalty required by law, be required to  | ||
serve a
minimum period of 7 days confinement in the local  | ||
county jail. The court shall
impose a mandatory minimum fine of  | ||
$500 for failure to comply with any
provision of this Act.  | ||
These fines shall be deposited into the Murderer and Violent  | ||
Offender Against Youth Registration Fund. Any violent offender  | ||
against youth who violates any
provision of this Act may be  | ||
arrested and
tried in any Illinois county where the violent  | ||
offender against youth can be located. The local police  | ||
department or sheriff's office is not required to determine  | ||
whether the person is living within its jurisdiction.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-154, eff. 1-1-12; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 535. The Code of Civil Procedure is amended by  | ||
changing Sections 8-802 and 12-705 as follows:
 | ||
 (735 ILCS 5/8-802) (from Ch. 110, par. 8-802)
 | ||
 Sec. 8-802. Physician and patient. No physician or surgeon  | ||
shall be
permitted to disclose any information he or she may  | ||
have acquired in
attending any patient in a professional  | ||
character, necessary to enable him
or her professionally to  | ||
serve the patient, except only (1) in trials for
homicide when  | ||
the disclosure relates directly to the fact or immediate
 | ||
circumstances of the homicide, (2) in actions, civil or  | ||
criminal, against
the physician for malpractice, (3) with the  | ||
expressed consent of the
patient, or in case of his or her  | ||
death or disability, of his or her
personal representative or  | ||
other person authorized to sue for personal
injury or of the  | ||
beneficiary of an insurance policy on his or her life,
health,  | ||
or physical condition, or as authorized by Section 8-2001.5,  | ||
(4) in all actions brought by or against the
patient, his or  | ||
her personal representative, a beneficiary under a policy
of  | ||
insurance, or the executor or administrator of his or her  | ||
estate wherein
the patient's physical or mental condition is an  | ||
issue, (5) upon an issue
as to the validity of a document as a  | ||
will of the patient, (6) in any
criminal action where the  | ||
charge is either first degree murder by abortion,
attempted  | ||
abortion or abortion, (7) in actions, civil or criminal,  | ||
arising
from the filing of a report in compliance with the  | ||
Abused and Neglected
Child Reporting Act, (8) to any  | ||
department, agency, institution
or facility which has custody  | ||
of the patient pursuant to State statute
or any court order of  | ||
commitment, (9) in prosecutions where written
results of blood  | ||
alcohol tests are admissible pursuant to Section 11-501.4
of  | ||
the Illinois Vehicle Code, (10) in prosecutions where written
 | ||
results of blood alcohol tests are admissible under Section  | ||
5-11a of the
Boat Registration and Safety Act,
(11) in criminal  | ||
actions arising from the filing of a report of suspected
 | ||
terrorist offense in compliance with Section 29D-10(p)(7) of  | ||
the Criminal Code
of 2012, (12) upon the issuance of a subpoena  | ||
pursuant to Section 38 of the Medical Practice Act of 1987; the  | ||
issuance of a subpoena pursuant to Section 25.1 of the Illinois  | ||
Dental Practice Act; the issuance of a subpoena pursuant to  | ||
Section 22 of the Nursing Home Administrators Licensing and  | ||
Disciplinary Act; or the issuance of a subpoena pursuant to  | ||
Section 25.5 of the Workers' Compensation Act, ; or (13) upon  | ||
the issuance of a grand jury subpoena pursuant to Article 112  | ||
of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963., or (14) (13) to or  | ||
through a health information exchange, as that term is defined  | ||
in Section 2 of the Mental Health and Developmental  | ||
Disabilities Confidentiality Act, in accordance with State or  | ||
federal law.  | ||
 Upon disclosure under item (13) of this Section, in any  | ||
criminal action where the charge is domestic battery,  | ||
aggravated domestic battery, or an offense under Article 11 of  | ||
the Criminal Code of 2012 or where the patient is under the age  | ||
of 18 years or upon the request of the patient, the State's  | ||
Attorney shall petition the court for a protective order  | ||
pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 415.
 | ||
 In the event of a conflict between the application of this  | ||
Section
and the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities  | ||
Confidentiality
Act to a specific situation, the provisions of  | ||
the Mental Health and
Developmental Disabilities  | ||
Confidentiality Act shall control.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-18, eff. 6-28-11; 97-623, eff. 11-23-11;  | ||
97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; 98-954, eff.  | ||
1-1-15; 98-1046, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 (735 ILCS 5/12-705) (from Ch. 110, par. 12-705)
 | ||
 Sec. 12-705. Summons. 
 | ||
 (a) Summons shall be returnable not less than 21 nor more  | ||
than 30 days after
the date of issuance. Summons with 4 copies  | ||
of the interrogatories shall be
served and returned as in other  | ||
civil cases. If the garnishee is served with
summons less than  | ||
10 days prior to the return date, the court shall continue
the  | ||
case to a new return date 14 days after the return date stated  | ||
on the
summons. The summons shall be in a form consistent with  | ||
local court rules. The
summons shall be accompanied by a copy  | ||
of the underlying judgment or a
certification by the clerk of  | ||
the court that entered the judgment, or by the
attorney for the  | ||
judgment creditor, setting forth the amount of the judgment,
 | ||
the name of the court and the number of the case and one copy of  | ||
a garnishment
notice in substantially the following form:
 | ||
 "GARNISHMENT NOTICE
 | ||
 (Name and address of Court)
 | ||
 Name of Case: (Name of Judgment Creditor),
 | ||
  Judgment Creditor v.
 | ||
  (Name of Judgment Judgement Debtor),
 | ||
  Judgment Debtor.
 | ||
 Address of Judgment Debtor: (Insert last known address)
 | ||
 Name and address of Attorney for Judgment
 | ||
 Creditor or of Judgment Creditor (If no
 | ||
 attorney is listed): (Insert name and address)
 | ||
 Amount of Judgment: $(Insert amount)
 | ||
 Name of Garnishee: (Insert name)
 | ||
 Return Date: (Insert return date specified in summons)
 | ||
 NOTICE: The court has issued a garnishment summons against  | ||
the garnishee
named above for money or property (other than  | ||
wages) belonging to the
judgment debtor or in which the  | ||
judgment debtor has an interest. The
garnishment summons was  | ||
issued on the basis of a judgment against the
judgment debtor  | ||
in favor of the judgment creditor in the amount stated above.
 | ||
 The amount of money or property (other than wages) that may  | ||
be garnished
is limited by federal and Illinois law. The  | ||
judgment debtor has the right
to assert statutory exemptions  | ||
against certain money or property of the
judgment debtor which  | ||
may not be used to satisfy the judgment in the amount
stated  | ||
above.
 | ||
 Under Illinois or federal law, the exemptions of personal  | ||
property owned
by the debtor include the debtor's equity  | ||
interest, not to exceed $4,000
in
value, in any personal  | ||
property as chosen by the debtor; Social Security
and SSI  | ||
benefits; public assistance benefits; unemployment  | ||
compensation
benefits; workers' compensation benefits;  | ||
veterans' benefits; circuit
breaker property tax relief  | ||
benefits; the debtor's equity interest, not to
exceed $2,400
in  | ||
value, in any one motor vehicle, and the debtor's equity
 | ||
interest, not to exceed $1,500
in value, in any implements,  | ||
professional
books or tools of the trade of the debtor.
 | ||
 The judgment debtor may have other possible exemptions from  | ||
garnishment
under the law.
 | ||
 The judgment debtor has the right to request a hearing  | ||
before the court
to dispute the garnishment or to declare  | ||
exempt from garnishment certain
money or property or both. To  | ||
obtain a hearing in counties with a
population of 1,000,000 or  | ||
more, the judgment debtor must
notify the Clerk of the Court in  | ||
person and in writing at (insert address
of Clerk) before the  | ||
return date specified above or appear in court on the
date and  | ||
time on that return date. To obtain a hearing in counties with  | ||
a
population of less than 1,000,000, the judgment debtor must  | ||
notify the
Clerk of the Court in writing at (insert address of  | ||
Clerk) on or before the
return date specified above. The Clerk  | ||
of the Court will provide a hearing
date and the necessary  | ||
forms that must be prepared by the judgment debtor or
the  | ||
attorney for the judgment debtor and sent to the judgment  | ||
creditor and the
garnishee regarding the time and location of  | ||
the hearing. This notice may be
sent by regular first class  | ||
mail."
 | ||
 (b) An officer or other person authorized by law to serve  | ||
process shall
serve the summons, interrogatories and the  | ||
garnishment notice required by
subsection (a) of this Section  | ||
upon the garnishee and shall, (1) within 2
business days of the  | ||
service upon the garnishee, mail a copy of the
garnishment  | ||
notice and the summons to the judgment debtor by first class
 | ||
mail at the judgment debtor's address indicated in the  | ||
garnishment notice
and (2) within 4 business days of the  | ||
service upon the garnishee file with
the clerk of the court a  | ||
certificate of mailing in substantially the following
form:
 | ||
"CERTIFICATE OF MAILING
 | ||
 I hereby certify that, within 2 business days of service  | ||
upon the
garnishee of the garnishment summons, interrogatories  | ||
and garnishment
notice, I served upon the judgment debtor in  | ||
this cause a copy of the
garnishment summons and garnishment  | ||
notice by first class mail to the
judgment debtor's address as  | ||
indicated in the garnishment notice.
 | ||
Date:............ .........................
  | ||
                           Signature"
 | ||
 In the case of service of the summons for garnishment upon  | ||
the garnishee
by certified or registered mail, as provided in  | ||
subsection (c) of this Section,
no sooner than 2 business days  | ||
nor later than 4 business days after the date of
mailing, the  | ||
clerk shall mail a copy of the garnishment notice and the  | ||
summons
to the judgment debtor by first class mail at the  | ||
judgment debtor's address
indicated in the garnishment notice,  | ||
shall prepare the Certificate of Mailing
described by this  | ||
subsection, and shall include the Certificate of Mailing in a
 | ||
permanent record.
 | ||
 (c) In a county with a population of less than 1,000,000,  | ||
unless otherwise
provided by circuit court rule, at the request  | ||
of the judgment creditor or his
or her attorney and instead of  | ||
personal service, service of a summons for
garnishment may be  | ||
made as follows:
 | ||
  (1) For each garnishee to be served, the judgment  | ||
 creditor or his or her
attorney shall pay to the clerk of  | ||
 the court a fee of $2, plus the cost of
mailing, and  | ||
 furnish to the clerk an original and 2 copies of a summons,  | ||
 an
original and one copy of the interrogatories, an  | ||
 affidavit setting forth the
garnishee's mailing address,  | ||
 an original and 2 copies of the garnishment
notice required  | ||
 by subsection (a) of this Section, and a copy of the  | ||
 judgment
or certification described in subsection (a) of  | ||
 this Section. The original
judgment shall be retained by  | ||
 the clerk.
 | ||
  (2) The clerk shall mail to the garnishee, at the  | ||
 address appearing in the
affidavit, the copy of the  | ||
 judgment or certification described in subsection
(a) of  | ||
 this Section, the summons, the interrogatories, and the  | ||
 garnishment
notice required by subsection (a) of this  | ||
 Section, by certified or registered
mail, return receipt  | ||
 requested, showing to whom delivered and the date and
 | ||
 address of delivery. This Mailing shall be mailed on a  | ||
 "restricted delivery"
basis when service is directed to a  | ||
 natural person. The envelope and return
receipt shall bear  | ||
 the return address of the clerk, and the return receipt
 | ||
 shall be stamped with the docket number of the case. The  | ||
 receipt for certified
or registered mail shall state the  | ||
 name and address of the addressee, the date
of the mailing,  | ||
 shall identify the documents mailed, and shall be attached  | ||
 to
the original summons.
 | ||
  (3) The return receipt must be attached to the original  | ||
 summons and, if it
shows delivery at least 10 days before  | ||
 the day for the return date, shall
constitute proof of  | ||
 service of any documents identified on the return receipt
 | ||
 as having been mailed.
 | ||
  (4) The clerk shall note the fact of service in a  | ||
 permanent record.
 | ||
 (d) The garnishment summons may be served and returned in  | ||
the manner provided by Supreme Court Rule for service,  | ||
otherwise than by publication, of a notice for additional  | ||
relief upon a party in default.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-557, eff. 1-1-14; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 540. The Eminent Domain Act is amended by changing,  | ||
setting forth and renumbering multiple versions of Section  | ||
25-5-55 as follows:
 | ||
 (735 ILCS 30/25-5-55) | ||
 Sec. 25-5-55. Quick-take; McHenry County. Quick-take  | ||
proceedings under Article 20 may be used for a period of no  | ||
longer than one year from the effective date of this amendatory  | ||
Act of the 98th General Assembly by McHenry County for the  | ||
acquisition of the following described property for the purpose  | ||
of reconstruction of the intersection of Miller Road and  | ||
Illinois Route 31:
 | ||
Route: Illinois State Route 31 | ||
Section: Section 09-00372-00-PW | ||
County: McHenry County | ||
Job No.: R-91-020-06 | ||
Parcel: 0003 | ||
Sta. 119+70.41 To Sta. 136+74.99 | ||
Owner: Parkway Bank and Trust | ||
Company as Trustee under Trust | ||
Agreement dated October 25, 1988 | ||
known as trust No. 9052 | ||
Index No. 14-02-100-002, 14-02-
100-051 
 | ||
A part of the Northwest Quarter of Section 2, Township 44  | ||
North, Range 8 East of the
Third Principal Meridian, in McHenry  | ||
County, Illinois, described as follows: 
 | ||
Commencing at the southwest corner of said Northwest Quarter;  | ||
thence North 0 degrees
40 minutes 30 seconds East, (bearings  | ||
based on Illinois State Plane Coordinates East Zone 1983 Datum)  | ||
along the west line of said Northwest Quarter, 33.01 feet;  | ||
thence North 89 degrees 27 minutes 02 seconds East along a line  | ||
parallel with and 33.00 feet north of the south line of said  | ||
Northwest Quarter, 633.53 feet to the Point of Beginning;  | ||
thence North 47 degrees 43 minutes 11 seconds East, 76.04 feet;  | ||
thence Northeasterly
892.04 feet along a curve to the left  | ||
having a radius of 5900.00 feet, the chord of said curve bears  | ||
North 03 degrees 13 minutes 38 seconds East, a chord distance  | ||
of 891.20 feet; thence North 01 degrees 06 minutes 15 seconds  | ||
West, 737.81 feet; thence North 88 degrees 52 minutes 57  | ||
seconds East, 60.00 feet to a point on the westerly line of  | ||
Illinois State Route 31 as dedicated per Book 12 of  | ||
Miscellaneous Records, pages 200, 201 and
203; thence South 01  | ||
degrees 06 minutes 15 seconds East along said westerly line,
 | ||
405.84 feet; thence South 01 degrees 00 minutes 45 seconds West  | ||
along said westerly line, 135.20 feet; thence South 02 degrees  | ||
50 minutes 15 seconds East along said westerly line, 165.10  | ||
feet; thence South 01 degrees 06 minutes 15 seconds East along
 | ||
said westerly line, 407.00 feet; thence Southwesterly 567.07  | ||
feet along said westerly line, said line being a curve to the  | ||
right having a radius of 3779.83 feet, the chord of said curve  | ||
bears South 03 degrees 11 minutes 37 seconds West, a chord  | ||
distance of 566.54 feet to point on a line parallel with and  | ||
33.00 feet north of the south line of said Northwest Quarter;  | ||
thence South 89 degrees 27 minutes 02 seconds West along a line  | ||
parallel with and 33.00 feet north of the south line of said  | ||
Northwest Quarter, 142.09 feet to the Point of Beginning in  | ||
McHenry County, Illinois. 
 | ||
Said parcel containing 116,716 square feet (2.679 acres) more  | ||
or less. 
 | ||
Route: Bull Valley Road  | ||
Section: Section 09-00372-00-PW  | ||
County: McHenry County  | ||
Job No.: R-91-020-06  | ||
Parcel: 0003TE  | ||
Sta. 531+73.39 To Sta. 532+82.90  | ||
Owner: Parkway Bank and Trust  | ||
Company as Trustee under Trust  | ||
Agreement dated October 25, 1988  | ||
known as trust No. 9052  | ||
Index No. 14-02-100-002 
 | ||
A part of the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of  | ||
Section 2, Township 44
North, Range 8 East of the Third  | ||
Principal Meridian, in McHenry County, Illinois, described as  | ||
follows: 
 | ||
Commencing at the southwest corner of said Southwest Quarter;  | ||
thence North 00 degrees
40 minutes 30 seconds East, (bearings  | ||
based on Illinois State Plane Coordinates East Zone 1983 Datum)  | ||
along the west line of said Southwest Quarter, 33.01 feet;  | ||
thence North 89 degrees 27 minutes 02 seconds East along a line  | ||
parallel with and 33.00 feet north of the south line of said  | ||
Southwest Quarter, 540.42 feet to the Point of Beginning;  | ||
thence North 00 degrees 33 minutes 06 seconds West, 14.95 feet;  | ||
thence North 89 degrees 26 minutes 54 seconds East, 109.87  | ||
feet; thence South 47 degrees 43 minutes 11 seconds West, 22.47  | ||
feet to a point on a line parallel with and 33.00 feet north of  | ||
the south line of said Southwest Quarter; thence South 89  | ||
degrees 27 minutes 02 seconds West along said line parallel  | ||
with and 33.00 feet north of the south line of said Southwest  | ||
Quarter, 93.10 feet to the Point of Beginning in McHenry  | ||
County, Illinois. 
 | ||
Said parcel containing 1,518 square feet (0.035 acres) more or  | ||
less. 
 | ||
Route: Illinois State Route 31  | ||
Section: Section 09-00372-00-PW  | ||
County: McHenry County  | ||
Job No.: R-91-020-06  | ||
Parcel: 0011  | ||
Sta. 124+14.14 To Sta. 124+35.35  | ||
Owner: Trapani, LLC, an Illinois  | ||
limited liability company  | ||
Index No. 14-02-100-050 
 | ||
A part of the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of  | ||
Section 2, Township 44
North, Range 8 East of the Third  | ||
Principal Meridian, in McHenry County, Illinois, described as  | ||
follows: 
 | ||
Commencing at the northwest corner of Lot 1 in McDonalds  | ||
Subdivision, being a subdivision of part of the Northwest  | ||
Quarter of Section 2, Township 44 North, Range 8 East of the  | ||
Third Principal Meridian, according to the plat thereof  | ||
recorded December 22, 1993 as Document No. 93R80090, in McHenry  | ||
County, Illinois; thence Northeasterly along the easterly line  | ||
of Illinois State Route 31 as dedicated per Book 12 of  | ||
Miscellaneous Records, pages 200, 201 and 203, 206.43 feet  | ||
along a curve to the left having a radius of 3859.83 feet, the  | ||
chord of said curve bears North 2 degrees 41 minutes 29 seconds  | ||
East, (bearings based on Illinois State Plane Coordinates East  | ||
Zone 1983 Datum) a chord distance of 206.41 feet to the Point  | ||
of Beginning; thence continuing Northeasterly along said  | ||
easterly line, 21.36 feet, said line being a curve to the left  | ||
having a radius of 3859.83 feet, the chord of said curve bears  | ||
North 1 degrees 00 minutes 02 seconds East, a chord distance of  | ||
21.36 feet to a point the south line of a parcel of land per  | ||
deed recorded February 10, 2003 as Document No. 2003R0017053;  | ||
thence North 89 degrees 22 minutes 29 seconds East along said  | ||
south line, 1.04 feet; thence Southwesterly 21.41 feet along a  | ||
curve to the right having a radius of 6060.00 feet, the chord  | ||
of said curve bears South 03 degrees 47 minutes 21 seconds  | ||
West, a chord distance of 21.41 feet to the Point of Beginning  | ||
in McHenry County, Illinois. 
 | ||
Said parcel containing 11 square feet (0.000 acres) more or  | ||
less. 
 | ||
Route: Illinois State Route 31  | ||
Section: Section 09-00372-00-PW  | ||
County: McHenry County  | ||
Job No.: R-91-020-06  | ||
Parcel: 0011TE-1  | ||
Sta. 123+50.48 To Sta. 124+26.94  | ||
Owner: Trapani, LLC, an Illinois  | ||
limited liability company  | ||
Index No. 14-02-100-050 
 | ||
A part of the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of  | ||
Section 2, Township 44
North, Range 8 East of the Third  | ||
Principal Meridian, in McHenry County, Illinois, described as  | ||
follows: 
 | ||
Commencing at the northwest corner of Lot 1 in McDonalds  | ||
Subdivision, being a subdivision of part of the Northwest  | ||
Quarter of Section 2, Township 44 North, Range 8 East of the  | ||
Third Principal Meridian, according to the plat thereof  | ||
recorded December 22, 1993 as Document No. 93R80090, in McHenry  | ||
County, Illinois; thence Northeasterly along the easterly line  | ||
of Illinois State Route 31 as dedicated per Book 12 of  | ||
Miscellaneous Records, pages 200, 201 and 203, 142.05 feet  | ||
along a curve to the left having a radius of 3859.83 feet, the  | ||
chord of said curve bears North 3 degrees 10 minutes 09 seconds  | ||
East, (bearings based on Illinois State Plane Coordinates East  | ||
Zone 1983 Datum) a chord distance of 142.05 feet to the Point  | ||
of Beginning; thence continuing Northeasterly along said  | ||
easterly line, 64.39 feet, said line being a curve to the left  | ||
having a radius of 3859.83 feet, the chord of said curve bears  | ||
North 1 degrees 38 minutes 13 seconds East, a chord distance of  | ||
64.38 feet; thence Northeasterly 12.69 feet along a curve to  | ||
the left having a radius of 6060.00 feet, the chord of said  | ||
curve bears North 03 degrees 49 minutes 49 seconds East, a  | ||
chord distance of 12.69 feet; thence South 89 degrees 01  | ||
minutes 32 seconds East, 4.46 feet; thence Southwesterly 77.18  | ||
feet along a curve to the right having a radius of 3864.83  | ||
feet, the chord of said curve bears South 01 degrees 32 minutes  | ||
47 seconds West, a chord distance of 77.17 feet; thence North  | ||
87 degrees 52 minutes 53 seconds West, 5.07 feet to the Point  | ||
of Beginning in McHenry County, Illinois. 
 | ||
Said parcel containing 387 square feet (0.009 acres) more or  | ||
less. 
 | ||
Route: Charles J. Miller Road  | ||
Section: Section 09-00372-00-PW  | ||
County: McHenry County  | ||
Job No.: R-91-020-06  | ||
Parcel: 0011TE-2  | ||
Sta. 537+44.77 To Sta. 538+37.59  | ||
Owner: Trapani, LLC, an Illinois  | ||
limited liability company  | ||
Index No. 14-02-100-050 
 | ||
A part of Lot 2, in McDonald's Subdivision, being a subdivision  | ||
of part of the Northwest Quarter of Section 2, Township 44  | ||
North, Range 8 East of the Third Principal Meridian, according  | ||
to the plat thereof recorded December 22, 1993 as Document No.  | ||
93R80090, in McHenry County, Illinois, described as follows: 
 | ||
Beginning at the southeast corner of said Lot 2; thence South  | ||
89 degrees 27 minutes 02 seconds West (bearings based on  | ||
Illinois State Plane Coordinates East Zone 1983 Datum) along  | ||
the south line of said Lot 2, 92.83 feet; thence North 00  | ||
degrees 33 minutes 02 seconds West, 33.91 feet; thence North 89  | ||
degrees 36 minutes 46 seconds East, 93.43 feet to a point on  | ||
the east line of said Lot 2; thence South 00 degrees 28 minutes  | ||
57 seconds West along said east line, 33.66 feet to the Point  | ||
of Beginning in McHenry County, Illinois. 
 | ||
Said parcel containing 3,146 square feet (0.072 acres) more or  | ||
less. 
 | ||
Route: Charles J. Miller Road  | ||
Section: Section 09-00372-00-PW  | ||
County: McHenry County  | ||
Job No.: R-91-020-06  | ||
Parcel: 0016  | ||
Sta. 538+37.74 To Sta. 539+63.26  | ||
Owner: Marion R. Reinwall Hoak  | ||
as Trustee of the Marion R.  | ||
Reinwall Hoak Living trust dated  | ||
September 15, 1998  | ||
Index No. 14-02-100-022 
 | ||
A part of the West Half of Government Lot 1 in the Northwest  | ||
Quarter of Section 2, Township 44 North, Range 8 East of the  | ||
Third Principal Meridian in McHenry County, Illinois,  | ||
described as follows: 
 | ||
Beginning at the southeast corner of said West Half of  | ||
Government Lot 1; thence South 89 degrees 27 minutes 02 seconds  | ||
West (bearings based on Illinois State Plane Coordinates East  | ||
Zone 1983 Datum) along the south line of said West Half of  | ||
Government Lot 1, 115.35 feet to the point of intersection with  | ||
the east line of Lot 2 in McDonald's Subdivision, being a  | ||
subdivision of part of the Northwest Quarter of Section 2,  | ||
Township 44 North, Range 8 East of the Third Principal  | ||
Meridian, according to the plat thereof recorded December 22,  | ||
1993 as Document No. 93R80090, in McHenry County, Illinois  | ||
extended southerly; thence North 00 degrees 28 minutes 57  | ||
seconds East along said east line extended southerly and along  | ||
said east line, 48.01 feet; thence North 89 degrees 27 minutes  | ||
02 seconds East, 115.36 feet to a point on the east line of  | ||
said West Half of Government Lot 1; thence South 00 degrees 29  | ||
minutes 41 seconds West along said east line, 48.01 feet to the  | ||
Point of Beginning in McHenry County, Illinois. 
 | ||
Said parcel containing 5,537 square feet (0.127 acres) more or  | ||
less, of which 0.087 acres more or less, has been previously  | ||
used or dedicated. 
 | ||
Route: Illinois State Route 31  | ||
Section: Section 09-00372-00-PW  | ||
County: McHenry County  | ||
Job No.: R-91-020-06  | ||
Parcel: 0017  | ||
Sta. 536+90.86 To Sta. 539+43.61  | ||
Owner: Alliance Bible Church of  | ||
the Christian and Missionary  | ||
Alliance, an Illinois not for profit  | ||
corporation  | ||
Index No. 14-02-302-005; 14-02-  | ||
302-004; 14-02-302-002 
 | ||
A part of Lots 4 and 5, in Smith First Addition being a  | ||
subdivision of the North 473.90 feet of the Northwest Quarter  | ||
of the Southwest Quarter of Section 2, Township 44 North, Range  | ||
8 East of the Third Principal Meridian, lying easterly of the  | ||
easterly right-of-way of State Route 31, according to the plat  | ||
thereof recorded in the recorder's office of McHenry County,  | ||
Illinois on February 16, 1973, as Document No. 586905 in  | ||
McHenry County, Illinois, described as follows: 
 | ||
Beginning at the northeast corner of said Lot 5; thence South  | ||
00 degrees 08 minutes 56 seconds West (bearings based on  | ||
Illinois State Plane Coordinates East Zone 1983 Datum) along  | ||
the east line of said Lot 5, 33.94 feet; thence Southwesterly  | ||
106.41 feet along a curve to the right having a radius of  | ||
795.00 feet, the chord of said curve bears South 85 degrees 36  | ||
minutes 55 seconds West, a chord distance of 106.34 feet;  | ||
thence South 89 degrees 26 minutes 58 seconds West, 154.36 feet  | ||
to a point on the west line of said Lot 4; thence North 00  | ||
degrees 10 minutes 27 seconds East along said west line, 41.06  | ||
feet to the northwest corner of said Lot 4; thence North 89  | ||
degrees 27 minutes 02 seconds East along the north line of said  | ||
Lots 4 and 5, 260.35 feet to the Point of Beginning in McHenry  | ||
County, Illinois. 
 | ||
Said parcel containing 10,438 square feet (0.240 acres) more or  | ||
less. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-852, eff. 8-1-14.)
 | ||
 (735 ILCS 30/25-5-60) | ||
 Sec. 25-5-60 25-5-55. Quick-take; Village of Mundelein.  | ||
Quick-take proceedings under Article 20 may be used for a  | ||
period of no longer than one year after the effective date of  | ||
this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly by the Village  | ||
of Mundelein in Lake County for the acquisition of property and  | ||
easements, legally described below, for the purpose of widening  | ||
and reconstructing Hawley Street from Midlothian Road to  | ||
Seymour Avenue, and making other public utility improvements  | ||
including the construction of a bike path:
 | ||
PIN: 10-24-423-010 
 | ||
That part of Lot 11 (as originally platted), in Western Slope  | ||
Subdivision of Mundelein, being a Subdivision of part of the  | ||
Southeast Quarter of Section 24, and of the Northeast Quarter  | ||
of Section 25, Township 44 North, Range 10, East of the Third  | ||
Principal Meridian, according to the plat thereof recorded May  | ||
9, 1925 as Document 257151, in Book "N" of Plats, Page 98,  | ||
described as follows: beginning at the Southeast corner of Lot  | ||
11; thence West along the South line of said Lot, 99.95 (meas.)  | ||
100.00 feet (rec.) to the Southwest corner of said Lot; thence  | ||
North along the West line of said Lot, 10.00 feet; thence  | ||
Southeasterly 8.51 feet to a point 6.00 feet East of and 4.00  | ||
feet North of the Southwest corner of said Lot; thence East  | ||
parallel with the South line of said Lot, 93.97 feet to the  | ||
East line of said Lot; thence South along said last described  | ||
line, 4.00 feet to the point of beginning, Lake County,  | ||
Illinois. 417.50 sq. ft. 
 | ||
Temporary easement:  | ||
That part of Lot 11 (as originally platted), in Western Slope  | ||
Subdivision of Mundelein, being a Subdivision of part of the  | ||
Southeast Quarter of Section 24, and of the Northeast Quarter  | ||
of Section 25, Township 44 North, Range 10, East of the Third  | ||
Principal Meridian, according to the plot thereof recorded May  | ||
9, 1925 as Document 257151, in Book "N" of Plats, Page 98,  | ||
described as follows: commencing at the Southwest corner of  | ||
said Lot 11; thence North along the West line of said Lot,  | ||
10.00 feet to the point of beginning; thence continuing North  | ||
along said last described line, 35.00 feet; thence East  | ||
parallel with the South line of said Lot, 10.00 feet; thence  | ||
South parallel with the West line of said Lot, 25.00 feet to a  | ||
line 20.00 feet North of and parallel with the South line of  | ||
said Lot; thence East along said last described line, 20.00  | ||
feet; thence South parallel with the West line of said Lot,  | ||
16.00 feet to a line 4.00 feet North of and parallel with the  | ||
South line of said Lot; thence West along said last described  | ||
line, 24.00 feet to a point 6.00 feet East of the West line of  | ||
said Lot; thence Northwesterly, 8.51 feet to the point of  | ||
beginning, in Lake County, Illinois. Containing 712.00 sq. ft. 
 | ||
PIN: 10-24-423-011 
 | ||
The South 4.00 feet of Lot 10 (as originally platted), in  | ||
Western Slope Subdivision of Mundelein, being a Subdivision of  | ||
part of the Southeast Quarter of Section 24, and of the  | ||
Northeast Quarter of Section 25, Township 44 North, Range 10,  | ||
East of the Third Principal Meridian, according to the plat  | ||
thereof recorded May 9, 1925 as Document 257151, in Book "N" of  | ||
Plats, Page 98, Lake County, Illinois. 400.00 sq. ft. 
 | ||
PIN: 10-24-423-013 
 | ||
The South 4.00 feet of Lot 8 (as originally platted), in  | ||
Western Slope Subdivision of Mundelein, being a Subdivision of  | ||
part of the Southeast Quarter of Section 24, and of the  | ||
Northeast Quarter of Section 25, Township 44 North, Range 10,  | ||
East of the Third Principal Meridian, according to the plat  | ||
thereof recorded May 9, 1925 as Document 257151, in Book "N" of  | ||
Plats, Page 98, Lake County, Illinois. 400.00 sq. ft. 
 | ||
PIN: 10-24-423-016 
 | ||
The South 7.00 feet of Lot 5 (as originally platted), in  | ||
Western Slope Subdivision of Mundelein, being a Subdivision of  | ||
part of the Southeast Quarter of Section 24, and of the  | ||
Northeast Quarter of Section 25, Township 44 North, Range 10,  | ||
East of the Third Principal Meridian, according to the plat  | ||
thereof recorded May 9, 1925 as Document 257151, in Book "N" of  | ||
Plats, Page 98, Lake County, Illinois. 700.00 sq. ft. 
 | ||
Temporary Easement:  | ||
That part of Lot 5 (as originally platted), in Western Slope  | ||
Subdivision of Mundelein, being a Subdivision of part of the  | ||
Southeast Quarter of Section 24, and of the Northeast Quarter  | ||
of Section 25, Township 44 North, Range 10, East of the Third  | ||
Principal Meridian, according to the plat thereof recorded May  | ||
9, 1925 as Document 257151, in Book "N" of Plats, Page 98,  | ||
described as follows: commencing at the Southeast corner of  | ||
said Lot 5; thence North along the East line of said Lot, 7.00  | ||
feet to the point of beginning; thence West parallel with the  | ||
South line of said Lot, 100.00 feet to the West line of said  | ||
Lot; thence North along said last described line, 5.00 feet;  | ||
thence East parallel with the South line of said Lot, 52.00  | ||
feet; thence North parallel with the West line of said Lot,  | ||
22.50 feet; thence East parallel with the South line of said  | ||
Lot, 14.50 feet; thence North parallel with the West line of  | ||
said Lot, 5.20 feet; thence East parallel with the South line  | ||
of said Lot, 33.50 feet to the East line of said Lot; thence  | ||
South along the last described line, 32.70 feet to the point of  | ||
beginning, in Lake County, Illinois. 1754.20 sq. ft. 
 | ||
PIN: 10-24-423-018 
 | ||
The South 13.50 feet of Lot 3 (as originally platted), in  | ||
Western Slope Subdivision of Mundelein, being a Subdivision of  | ||
part of the Southeast Quarter of Section 24, and of the  | ||
Northeast Quarter of Section 25, Township 44 North, Range 10,  | ||
East of the Third Principal Meridian, according to the plat  | ||
thereof recorded May 9, 1925 as Document 257151, in Book "N" of  | ||
Plats, Page 98, Lake County, Illinois. 1350.00 sq. ft. 
 | ||
Temporary Easement:  | ||
That part of Lot 3 (as originally platted), in Western Slope  | ||
Subdivision of Mundelein, being a Subdivision of part of the  | ||
Southeast Quarter of Section 24, and of the Northeast Quarter  | ||
of Section 25, Township 44 North, Range 10, East of the Third  | ||
Principal Meridian, according to the plat thereof recorded May  | ||
9, 1925 as Document 257151, in Book "N" of Plats, Page 98,  | ||
described as follows: commencing at the Southeast corner of  | ||
said Lot 3; thence North along the East line of said Lot, 13.50  | ||
feet to the point of beginning; thence West parallel with the  | ||
South line of said Lot, 100.00 feet to the West line of said  | ||
Lot; thence North along said last described line, 10.00 feet;  | ||
thence East parallel with the South line of said Lot, 45.00  | ||
feet; thence North parallel with the West line of said Lot,  | ||
30.00 feet; thence East parallel with the South line of said  | ||
Lot, 34.00 feet; thence South parallel with the West line of  | ||
said Lot, 30.00 feet; thence East parallel with the South line  | ||
of said Lot, 21.00 feet to the East line of said Lot; thence  | ||
South along the last described line, 10.00 feet to the point of  | ||
beginning, in Lake County, Illinois. 2020.00 sq. ft. 
 | ||
PIN: 10-24-423-019 
 | ||
The South 13.50 feet of Lot 2 (as originally platted), in  | ||
Western Slope Subdivision of Mundelein, being a Subdivision of  | ||
part of the Southeast Quarter of Section 24, and of the  | ||
Northeast Quarter of Section 25, Township 44 North, Range 10,  | ||
East of the Third Principal Meridian, according to the plat  | ||
thereof recorded May 9, 1925 as Document 257151, in Book "N" of  | ||
Plats, Page 98, Lake County, Illinois. 1350.00 sq. ft. 
 | ||
PIN: 10-24-423-021 
 | ||
The South 13.50 feet of a tract of land described as Lot 1 (as  | ||
originally platted), (except that part taken for highway per  | ||
Document No. 2242325 and 2242326), in Western Slope Subdivision  | ||
of Mundelein, being a Subdivision of part of the Southeast  | ||
Quarter of Section 24, and of the Northeast Quarter of Section  | ||
25, Township 44 North, Range 10, East of the Third Principal  | ||
Meridian, according to the plat thereof recorded May 9, 1925 as  | ||
Document 257151, in Book "N" of Plats, Page 98, Lake County,  | ||
Illinois. 1040.30 sq. ft. 
 | ||
PIN: 10-25-205-003 
 | ||
Temporary Easement:  | ||
That part of Lot 44 (as originally platted), in Western Slope  | ||
Subdivision of Mundelein, being a Subdivision of part of the  | ||
Southeast Quarter of Section 24, and of the Northeast Quarter  | ||
of Section 25, Township 44 North, Range 10, East of the Third  | ||
Principal Meridian, according to the plat thereof recorded May  | ||
9, 1925 as Document 257151 in Book "N" of Plats, Page 98,  | ||
described as follows: commencing at the Northeast corner of  | ||
said Lot 44; thence South along the East line of said Lot, 5.00  | ||
feet; thence West parallel with the North line of said Lot,  | ||
34.00 feet; thence South parallel with the East line of said  | ||
Lot, 5.00 feet; thence West parallel with the North line of  | ||
said Lot, 16.00 feet to the West line of said Lot; thence North  | ||
along said last described Lot, 10.00 feet to the Northwest  | ||
corner of said lot; thence East along the North line of said  | ||
lot, 50.00 feet to the point of beginning, in Lake County,  | ||
Illinois. Containing 331.00 sq. ft. 
 | ||
PIN: 10-25-205-004 
 | ||
Temporary Easement:  | ||
The North 10.00 feet (except the South 5.00 feet of the West  | ||
24.00 feet and the South 5.00 feet of the East 3.00 feet  | ||
thereof) of Lot 45 (as originally platted), in Western Slope  | ||
Subdivision of Mundelein, being a Subdivision of part of the  | ||
Southeast Quarter of Section 24, and of the Northeast Quarter  | ||
of Section 25, Township 44 North, Range 10, East of the Third  | ||
Principal Meridian, according to the plat thereof recorded May  | ||
9, 1925 as Document 257151, in Book "N" of Plats, Page 98, Lake  | ||
County, Illinois. Containing 365.40 sq. ft. 
 | ||
PIN: 10-25-205-005 
 | ||
Temporary Easement:  | ||
The North 5.00 feet of Lot 46 (as originally platted), in  | ||
Western Slope Subdivision of Mundelein, being a Subdivision of  | ||
part of the Southeast Quarter of Section 24, and of the  | ||
Northeast Quarter of Section 25, Township 44 North, Range 10,  | ||
East of the Third Principal Meridian, according to the plat  | ||
thereof recorded May 9, 1925 as Document 257151, in Book "N" of  | ||
Plats, Page 98, Lake County, Illinois. 250.00 sq. ft. 
 | ||
PIN: 10-25-206-003 
 | ||
Temporary Easement: | ||
The North 5.00 feet of Lot 60 (as originally platted), in  | ||
Western Slope Subdivision of Mundelein, being a Subdivision of  | ||
part of the Southeast Quarter of Section 24, and of the  | ||
Northeast Quarter of Section 25, Township 44 North, Range 10,  | ||
East of the Third Principal Meridian, according to the plat  | ||
thereof recorded May 9, 1925 as Document 257151, in Book "N" of  | ||
Plats, Page 98, in Lake County, Illinois. 250.00 sq. ft. 
 | ||
PIN: 11-30-101-004 
 | ||
Temporary Easement:
 | ||
The North 5.00 feet of the East 30.00 feet of a tract of land  | ||
described as the West 75.00 feet of Lots 1 and 2, in Block 1 of  | ||
Hammond's Addition to Rockefeller, being a Subdivision of part  | ||
of Lot 2 of the Northwest Quarter of Section 30, Township 44  | ||
North, Range 11 East of the Third Principal Meridian, according  | ||
to the plat thereof recorded April 2, 1895 as Document No.  | ||
61511, in Book "D" of Plats, Page 24,in Lake County, Illinois.  | ||
150.00 sq. ft. 
 | ||
PIN: 11-30-120-001 
 | ||
That part of Lot 1 in Hawley Commons, being a subdivision of  | ||
part of the Northwest Quarter of Section 30, Township 44 North,  | ||
Range 11 East, of the Third Principal Meridian according to the  | ||
plat thereof recorded October 8, 1999 as Document No. 4432301,  | ||
and described as follows: Beginning at the Northwest corner of  | ||
Lot 1; thence South along the West line of said Lot 1, 17.00  | ||
feet; thence Northeasterly 23.91 feet to a point 17.00 feet  | ||
East of the point of beginning and on the North line of said  | ||
Lot 1; thence West along the North line of Lot 1, 17.00 feet to  | ||
the point of beginning, in Lake County, Illinois. Containing  | ||
144.50 sq. ft. 
 | ||
PIN: 10-24-314-036 
 | ||
That part of Lot 14 in Block 2 in Mundelein Home Crest  | ||
Subdivision of the Northeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter  | ||
of Section 25 and part of the East Half of the Southwest  | ||
Quarter of Section 24, all in Township 44 North, Range 10 East  | ||
of the Third Principal Meridian, according to the plat thereof  | ||
recorded June 4, 1926 as Document No. 280148 in Book "P" of  | ||
Plats, Pages 62 and 63, described as lying Southeasterly of a  | ||
curve concave Northwesterly having a radius of 45.00 feet and  | ||
being tangent to the East and South lines of said Lot 14, in  | ||
Lake County, Illinois. 445.10 sq. ft. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1070, eff. 8-26-14; revised 10-20-14.)
 | ||
 Section 545. The Controlled Substance and Cannabis  | ||
Nuisance Act is amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
 | ||
 (740 ILCS 40/3) (from Ch. 100 1/2, par. 16)
 | ||
 Sec. 3. (a) The Department or the State's Attorney or any  | ||
citizen of the
county in which a nuisance exists may file a  | ||
complaint in the name of the
People of the State of Illinois,  | ||
to enjoin all persons from maintaining or
permitting such  | ||
nuisance, to abate the same and to enjoin the use of any
such  | ||
place for the period of one year.
 | ||
 (b) Upon the filing of a complaint by the State's Attorney  | ||
or the Department
in which the complaint states that  | ||
irreparable injury, loss or damage will
result to the People of  | ||
the State of Illinois, the court shall enter a
temporary  | ||
restraining order without notice enjoining the maintenance of
 | ||
such nuisance, upon testimony under oath, affidavit, or  | ||
verified complaint
containing facts sufficient, if sustained,  | ||
to justify the court in entering
a preliminary injunction upon  | ||
a hearing after notice. Every such temporary
restraining order  | ||
entered without notice shall be endorsed with the date
and hour  | ||
of entry of the order, shall be filed of record, and shall
 | ||
expire by its terms within such time after entry, not to exceed  | ||
10 days as
fixed by the court, unless the temporary restraining  | ||
order, for good cause, is
extended for a like period or unless  | ||
the party against whom the order is
directed consents that it  | ||
may be extended for a longer period. The reason
for extension  | ||
shall be shown in the order. In case a temporary restraining
 | ||
order is entered without notice, the motion for a permanent  | ||
injunction
shall be set down for hearing at the earliest  | ||
possible time and takes
precedence over all matters except  | ||
older matters of the same character, and
when the motion comes  | ||
on for hearing, the Department or State's Attorney,
as the case  | ||
may be, shall proceed with the application for a permanent
 | ||
injunction, and, if he does not do so, the court shall dissolve  | ||
the
temporary restraining order. On 2 days' days notice to the  | ||
Department or State's
Attorney, as the case may be, the  | ||
defendant may appear and move the
dissolution or modification  | ||
of such temporary restraining order and in that
event the court  | ||
shall proceed to hear and determine such motion as
 | ||
expeditiously as the ends of justice require.
 | ||
 (c) Upon the filing of the complaint by a citizen or the  | ||
Department or the
State's Attorney (in cases in which the  | ||
Department or State's Attorney does do
not request injunctive  | ||
relief without notice) in the circuit court,
the court, if  | ||
satisfied that the nuisance complained of
exists, shall allow a  | ||
temporary restraining order, with bond unless the
application  | ||
is filed by the Department or State's Attorney, in such amount
 | ||
as the court may determine, enjoining the defendant from  | ||
maintaining any
such nuisance within the jurisdiction of the  | ||
court granting the injunctive
relief. However, no such  | ||
injunctive relief shall be granted, except on
behalf of an  | ||
owner or agent, unless it be made to appear to the
satisfaction  | ||
of the court that the owner or agent of such place, knew or
had  | ||
been personally served with a notice signed by the plaintiff  | ||
and, that
such notice has been served upon such owner or such  | ||
agent of such place at
least 5 days prior thereto, that such  | ||
place, specifically describing the
same, was being so used,  | ||
naming the date or dates of its being so used, and
that such  | ||
owner or agent had failed to abate such nuisance, or that upon
 | ||
diligent inquiry such owner or agent could not be found for
the  | ||
service of such preliminary notice. The lessee, if any, of such  | ||
place
shall be made a party defendant to such petition. If the  | ||
property owner is a corporation and the Department or the  | ||
State's Attorney sends the preliminary notice to the corporate  | ||
address registered with the Secretary of State, such action  | ||
shall create a rebuttable presumption that the parties have  | ||
acted with due diligence and the court may grant injunctive  | ||
relief.
 | ||
 (d) In all cases in which the complaint is filed by a  | ||
citizen, such
complaint shall be verified.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 95-503, eff. 1-1-08; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 550. The Mental Health and Developmental  | ||
Disabilities Confidentiality Act is amended by changing  | ||
Sections 9.2 and 10 as follows:
 | ||
 (740 ILCS 110/9.2)
 | ||
 Sec. 9.2. Interagency disclosure of recipient information.  | ||
For the
purposes of continuity of care, the Department of Human  | ||
Services (as
successor to the Department of Mental Health and  | ||
Developmental
Disabilities), community agencies funded by the
 | ||
Department of Human Services in that capacity, licensed private  | ||
hospitals, integrated health systems, members of an  | ||
interdisciplinary team, federally qualified health centers, or  | ||
physicians or therapists or other healthcare providers  | ||
licensed or certified by or receiving payments from the  | ||
Department of Human Services or the Department of Healthcare  | ||
and Family Services, State correctional facilities, juvenile  | ||
justice facilities, mental health facilities operated by a  | ||
county, mental health court
professionals as defined in Section  | ||
10 of the Mental Health Court Treatment Act, Veterans and
 | ||
Servicemembers Court professionals as defined in Section 10 of  | ||
the Veterans and
Servicemembers Court Treatment Act and jails  | ||
and juvenile detention facilities operated by any
county of  | ||
this State may disclose a
recipient's record or communications,  | ||
without consent, to each other, but only
for the purpose of  | ||
admission, treatment, planning, coordinating care, discharge,  | ||
or governmentally mandated public health reporting. Entities
 | ||
shall not redisclose any personally identifiable information,  | ||
unless necessary
for admission, treatment, planning,  | ||
coordinating care, discharge, or governmentally mandated  | ||
public health reporting
another setting.
No records or  | ||
communications may be disclosed to a county jail or State  | ||
correctional facility pursuant to
this Section unless the  | ||
Department has entered into a written agreement with
the county  | ||
jail or State correctional facility requiring that the county  | ||
jail or State correctional facility adopt written policies and
 | ||
procedures designed to ensure that the records and  | ||
communications are disclosed
only to those persons employed by  | ||
or under contract to the county jail or State correctional  | ||
facility who are
involved in the provision of mental health  | ||
services to inmates and that the
records and communications are  | ||
protected from further disclosure.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-946, eff. 8-13-12; 98-378, eff. 8-16-13;  | ||
revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (740 ILCS 110/10) (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 810)
 | ||
 Sec. 10. (a) Except as provided herein, in any civil,  | ||
criminal,
administrative, or legislative proceeding, or in any  | ||
proceeding preliminary
thereto, a recipient, and a therapist on  | ||
behalf and in the interest of a
recipient, has the privilege to  | ||
refuse to disclose and to prevent the
disclosure of the  | ||
recipient's record or communications.
 | ||
  (1) Records and communications may be disclosed in a  | ||
 civil, criminal
or administrative proceeding in which the  | ||
 recipient introduces his mental
condition or any aspect of  | ||
 his services received for such condition as an
element of  | ||
 his claim or defense, if and only to the extent the court  | ||
 in
which the proceedings have been brought, or, in the case  | ||
 of an administrative
proceeding, the court to which an  | ||
 appeal or other action for review of an
administrative  | ||
 determination may be taken, finds, after in camera
 | ||
 examination of testimony or other evidence, that it is  | ||
 relevant, probative,
not unduly prejudicial or  | ||
 inflammatory, and otherwise clearly
admissible; that other  | ||
 satisfactory evidence is demonstrably unsatisfactory
as  | ||
 evidence of the facts sought to be established by such  | ||
 evidence; and
that disclosure is more important to the  | ||
 interests of substantial justice
than protection from  | ||
 injury to the therapist-recipient relationship or to
the  | ||
 recipient or other whom disclosure is likely to harm.  | ||
 Except in a criminal
proceeding in which the recipient, who  | ||
 is accused in that proceeding, raises
the defense of  | ||
 insanity, no record or communication between a therapist
 | ||
 and a recipient shall be deemed relevant for purposes of  | ||
 this subsection,
except the fact of treatment, the cost of  | ||
 services and the ultimate
diagnosis unless the party  | ||
 seeking disclosure of the communication clearly
 | ||
 establishes in the trial court a compelling need for its  | ||
 production.
However, for purposes of this Act, in any  | ||
 action brought or defended under
the Illinois Marriage and  | ||
 Dissolution of Marriage Act, or in any action in
which pain  | ||
 and suffering is an element of the claim, mental condition  | ||
 shall
not be deemed to be introduced merely by making such  | ||
 claim and shall be
deemed to be introduced only if the  | ||
 recipient or a witness on his behalf
first testifies  | ||
 concerning the record or communication.
 | ||
  (2) Records or communications may be disclosed in a  | ||
 civil proceeding after
the recipient's death when the  | ||
 recipient's physical or mental condition
has been  | ||
 introduced as an element of a claim or defense by any party  | ||
 claiming
or defending through or as a beneficiary of the  | ||
 recipient, provided the
court finds, after in camera  | ||
 examination of the evidence, that it is relevant,
 | ||
 probative, and otherwise clearly admissible; that other  | ||
 satisfactory evidence
is not available regarding the facts  | ||
 sought to be established by such evidence;
and that  | ||
 disclosure is more important to the interests of  | ||
 substantial justice
than protection from any injury which  | ||
 disclosure is likely to cause.
 | ||
  (3) In the event of a claim made or an action filed by  | ||
 a recipient, or,
following the recipient's death, by any  | ||
 party claiming as a beneficiary
of the recipient for injury  | ||
 caused in the course of providing services to such  | ||
 recipient, the therapist and other persons whose actions
 | ||
 are alleged
to have been the cause of injury may disclose  | ||
 pertinent records and
communications to an attorney or  | ||
 attorneys engaged to render advice about
and to provide  | ||
 representation in connection with such matter and to  | ||
 persons
working under the supervision of such attorney or  | ||
 attorneys, and may
testify as to such records or
 | ||
 communication in any administrative, judicial
or discovery  | ||
 proceeding for the purpose of preparing and presenting a
 | ||
 defense against such claim or action.
 | ||
  (4) Records and communications made to or by a  | ||
 therapist in the course
of examination ordered by a court  | ||
 for good cause shown may, if otherwise
relevant and  | ||
 admissible, be disclosed in a civil, criminal,
or  | ||
 administrative proceeding in which the recipient is a party  | ||
 or in
appropriate pretrial proceedings, provided such  | ||
 court has found that the
recipient has been as adequately  | ||
 and as effectively as possible informed
before submitting  | ||
 to such examination that such records and communications
 | ||
 would not be considered confidential or privileged. Such  | ||
 records and
communications shall be admissible only as to  | ||
 issues involving the
recipient's physical or mental  | ||
 condition and only to the extent that these
are germane to  | ||
 such proceedings.
 | ||
  (5) Records and communications may be disclosed in a  | ||
 proceeding under
the Probate Act of 1975, to determine a  | ||
 recipient's competency or need for
guardianship, provided  | ||
 that the disclosure is made only with respect to that  | ||
 issue.
 | ||
  (6) Records and communications may be disclosed to a  | ||
 court-appointed therapist, psychologist, or psychiatrist  | ||
 for use in determining a person's fitness to stand trial if  | ||
 the records were made within the 180-day period immediately  | ||
 preceding the date of the therapist's, psychologist's or  | ||
 psychiatrist's court appointment. These records and  | ||
 communications shall be admissible only as to the issue of  | ||
 the person's fitness to stand trial. Records and  | ||
 communications may be disclosed when such are made during
 | ||
 treatment which the recipient is ordered to undergo to  | ||
 render him fit to
stand trial on a criminal charge,  | ||
 provided that the disclosure is made only
with respect to  | ||
 the issue of fitness to stand trial.
 | ||
  (7) Records and communications of the recipient may be  | ||
 disclosed in any
civil or administrative proceeding  | ||
 involving the validity of or benefits
under a life,  | ||
 accident, health or disability insurance policy or  | ||
 certificate,
or Health Care Service Plan Contract,  | ||
 insuring the recipient, but only if
and to the extent that  | ||
 the recipient's mental condition, or treatment or
services  | ||
 in connection therewith, is a material element of any claim  | ||
 or
defense of any party, provided that information sought  | ||
 or disclosed shall
not be redisclosed except in connection  | ||
 with the proceeding in which
disclosure is made.
 | ||
  (8) Records or communications may be disclosed when  | ||
 such are relevant
to a matter in issue in any action  | ||
 brought under this Act and proceedings
preliminary  | ||
 thereto, provided that any information so disclosed shall  | ||
 not
be utilized for any other purpose nor be redisclosed  | ||
 except in connection
with such action or preliminary  | ||
 proceedings.
 | ||
  (9) Records and communications of the recipient may be  | ||
 disclosed in
investigations of and trials for homicide when  | ||
 the disclosure relates directly
to the fact or immediate  | ||
 circumstances of the homicide.
 | ||
  (10) Records and communications of a deceased  | ||
 recipient shall be
disclosed to a coroner conducting a  | ||
 preliminary investigation into the
recipient's death under  | ||
 Section 3-3013 of the Counties Code.
 | ||
  (11) Records and communications of a recipient shall be  | ||
 disclosed in a
proceeding
where a petition or motion is  | ||
 filed under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and
the  | ||
 recipient is
named as a parent, guardian, or legal  | ||
 custodian of a minor who is the subject
of a petition for  | ||
 wardship as
described in Section
2-3 of that Act or a minor  | ||
 who is the subject of a petition for wardship as
described  | ||
 in Section 2-4 of that
Act alleging the
minor is abused,  | ||
 neglected, or dependent or the recipient is named as a  | ||
 parent
of a child
who is the subject of
a petition,  | ||
 supplemental petition, or motion to appoint a guardian with  | ||
 the
power to consent to
adoption under Section 2-29 of the  | ||
 Juvenile Court Act
of 1987.
 | ||
  (12) Records and communications of a recipient may be
 | ||
 disclosed when disclosure is necessary to collect sums or  | ||
 receive
third party payment representing charges for  | ||
 mental health or
developmental disabilities services  | ||
 provided by a therapist or
agency to a recipient; however,  | ||
 disclosure shall be limited to
information needed to pursue  | ||
 collection, and the information so
disclosed may not be  | ||
 used for any other purposes nor may it be
redisclosed  | ||
 except in connection with collection activities.
Whenever  | ||
 records are disclosed pursuant to this subdivision (12),  | ||
 the
recipient of the records shall be advised in writing  | ||
 that any person who
discloses mental health records and  | ||
 communications in violation of this Act may
be subject to  | ||
 civil liability pursuant to Section 15 of this Act or to  | ||
 criminal
penalties pursuant to Section 16 of this Act or  | ||
 both.
 | ||
 (b) Before a disclosure is made under subsection (a), any  | ||
party to the
proceeding or any other interested person may  | ||
request an in camera review
of the record or communications to  | ||
be disclosed. The court or agency
conducting the proceeding may  | ||
hold an in camera review on its own motion.
When, contrary to  | ||
the express wish of the recipient, the therapist asserts
a  | ||
privilege on behalf and in the interest of a recipient, the  | ||
court may
require that the therapist, in an in camera hearing,  | ||
establish that
disclosure is not in the best interest of the  | ||
recipient. The court or
agency may prevent disclosure or limit  | ||
disclosure to the extent that other
admissible evidence is  | ||
sufficient to establish the facts in issue. The
court or agency  | ||
may enter such orders as may be necessary in order to
protect  | ||
the confidentiality, privacy, and safety of the recipient or of
 | ||
other persons. Any order to disclose or to not disclose shall  | ||
be
considered a final order for purposes of appeal and shall be  | ||
subject to
interlocutory appeal.
 | ||
 (c) A recipient's records and communications may be  | ||
disclosed to a
duly authorized committee, commission or  | ||
subcommittee of the General
Assembly which possesses subpoena  | ||
and hearing powers, upon a written
request approved by a  | ||
majority vote of the committee, commission or
subcommittee  | ||
members. The committee, commission or subcommittee may
request  | ||
records only for the purposes of investigating or studying
 | ||
possible violations of recipient rights. The request shall  | ||
state the
purpose for which disclosure is sought.
 | ||
 The facility shall notify the recipient, or his guardian,  | ||
and therapist in
writing of any disclosure request under this  | ||
subsection within 5 business
days after such request. Such  | ||
notification shall also inform the
recipient, or guardian, and  | ||
therapist of their right to object to the
disclosure within 10  | ||
business days after receipt of the notification and
shall  | ||
include the name, address and telephone number of the
 | ||
committee, commission or subcommittee member or staff person  | ||
with whom an
objection shall be filed. If no objection has been  | ||
filed within 15
business days after the request for disclosure,  | ||
the facility shall disclose
the records and communications to  | ||
the committee, commission or
subcommittee. If an objection has  | ||
been filed within 15 business days after
the request for  | ||
disclosure, the facility shall disclose the records and
 | ||
communications only after the committee, commission or  | ||
subcommittee has
permitted the recipient, guardian or  | ||
therapist to present his objection in
person before it and has  | ||
renewed its request for disclosure by a majority
vote of its  | ||
members.
 | ||
 Disclosure under this subsection shall not occur until all  | ||
personally
identifiable data of the recipient and provider are  | ||
removed from the
records and communications. Disclosure under  | ||
this subsection shall not
occur in any public proceeding.
 | ||
 (d) No party to any proceeding described under paragraphs  | ||
(1), (2),
(3), (4), (7), or (8) of subsection (a) of this  | ||
Section, nor his or
her attorney, shall serve a subpoena  | ||
seeking to obtain access to records or
communications under  | ||
this Act unless the subpoena is accompanied by a
written order  | ||
issued by a judge or by the written consent under Section 5 of  | ||
this Act of the person whose records are being sought,  | ||
authorizing the disclosure of the records
or the issuance of  | ||
the subpoena. No such written order shall be issued without  | ||
written notice of the motion to the recipient and the treatment  | ||
provider. Prior to issuance of the order, each party or other  | ||
person entitled to notice shall be permitted an opportunity to  | ||
be heard pursuant to subsection (b) of this Section. In the  | ||
absence of the written consent under Section 5 of this Act of  | ||
the person whose records are being sought, no person shall  | ||
comply with a subpoena for
records or communications under this  | ||
Act, unless the subpoena is
accompanied by a written order  | ||
authorizing the issuance of the subpoena or
the disclosure of  | ||
the records. Each subpoena issued by a court or administrative  | ||
agency or served on any person pursuant to this subsection (d)  | ||
shall include the following language: "No person shall comply  | ||
with a subpoena for mental health records or communications  | ||
pursuant to Section 10 of the Mental Health and Developmental  | ||
Disabilities Confidentiality Act, 740 ILCS 110/10, unless the  | ||
subpoena is accompanied by a written order that authorizes the  | ||
issuance of the subpoena and the disclosure of records or  | ||
communications or by the written consent under Section 5 of  | ||
that Act of the person whose records are being sought."
 | ||
 (e) When a person has been transported by a peace officer  | ||
to a mental
health facility, then upon the request of a peace  | ||
officer, if the person is
allowed to leave the mental health  | ||
facility within 48 hours of arrival,
excluding Saturdays,  | ||
Sundays, and holidays, the facility director shall notify
the  | ||
local law enforcement authority prior to the release of the  | ||
person. The
local law enforcement authority may re-disclose the  | ||
information as necessary to
alert the appropriate enforcement  | ||
or prosecuting authority.
 | ||
 (f) A recipient's records and communications shall be  | ||
disclosed to the
Inspector General of the Department of Human  | ||
Services within 10 business days
of a request by the Inspector  | ||
General
(i) in the course of an investigation authorized by the  | ||
Department of Human Services Act and applicable rule or (ii)  | ||
during the course of an assessment authorized by the Abuse of  | ||
Adults with Disabilities Intervention Act and applicable rule.  | ||
The request
shall be
in writing and signed by the Inspector  | ||
General or his or her designee. The
request shall state the  | ||
purpose for which disclosure is sought. Any person who
 | ||
knowingly and willfully refuses to comply with such a request  | ||
is guilty of a
Class A misdemeanor. A recipient's records and  | ||
communications shall also be disclosed pursuant to subsection  | ||
(s) (g-5) of Section 1-17 of the Department of Human Services  | ||
Act in testimony at health care worker registry hearings or  | ||
preliminary proceedings when such are relevant to the matter in  | ||
issue, provided that any information so disclosed shall not be  | ||
utilized for any other purpose nor be redisclosed except in  | ||
connection with such action or preliminary proceedings. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-566, eff. 1-1-12; 98-221, eff. 1-1-14; 98-908,  | ||
eff. 1-1-15; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 555. The Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of  | ||
Marriage Act is amended by changing Sections 220, 503, and 601  | ||
as follows:
 | ||
 (750 ILCS 5/220) | ||
 Sec. 220. Consent to jurisdiction. Members of a same-sex  | ||
couple who enter into a marriage in this State consent to the  | ||
jurisdiction of the courts of this State for the
purpose of any  | ||
action relating to the marriage, even if one or both
parties  | ||
cease to reside in this State. A court shall enter a
judgment  | ||
of dissolution of marriage if, at the time the action is
 | ||
commenced, it meets the grounds for dissolution of marriage set  | ||
forth in this Act.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-597, eff. 6-1-14; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (750 ILCS 5/503) (from Ch. 40, par. 503)
 | ||
 Sec. 503. Disposition of property. 
 | ||
 (a) For purposes of this Act, "marital property" means all  | ||
property acquired
by either spouse subsequent to the marriage,  | ||
except the following, which is
known as "non-marital property":
 | ||
  (1) property acquired by gift, legacy or descent;
 | ||
  (2) property acquired in exchange for property  | ||
 acquired before the
marriage or in exchange for property  | ||
 acquired by gift, legacy or descent;
 | ||
  (3) property acquired by a spouse after a judgment of  | ||
 legal separation;
 | ||
  (4) property excluded by valid agreement of the  | ||
 parties;
 | ||
  (5) any judgment or property obtained by judgment  | ||
 awarded to a spouse
from the other spouse;
 | ||
  (6) property acquired before the marriage;
 | ||
  (7) the increase in value of property acquired by a  | ||
 method listed in
paragraphs (1) through (6) of this  | ||
 subsection, irrespective of whether the
increase results  | ||
 from a contribution of marital property, non-marital  | ||
 property,
the personal effort of a spouse, or otherwise,  | ||
 subject to the right of
reimbursement provided in  | ||
 subsection (c) of this Section; and
 | ||
  (8) income from property acquired by a method listed in  | ||
 paragraphs (1)
through (7) of this subsection if the income  | ||
 is not attributable to the
personal effort of a spouse.
 | ||
 (b)(1) For purposes of distribution of property pursuant to  | ||
this
Section, all property acquired by either spouse after the  | ||
marriage and before a
judgment of dissolution of marriage or  | ||
declaration of invalidity of marriage,
including non-marital  | ||
property transferred into some form of co-ownership
between the  | ||
spouses, is presumed to be marital property, regardless of  | ||
whether
title is held individually or by the spouses in some  | ||
form of co-ownership such
as joint tenancy, tenancy in common,  | ||
tenancy by the entirety, or community
property. The presumption  | ||
of marital property is overcome by a showing that
the property  | ||
was acquired by a method listed in subsection (a) of this  | ||
Section.
 | ||
 (2) For purposes of distribution of property pursuant to  | ||
this Section,
all pension benefits (including pension benefits  | ||
under the Illinois Pension
Code) acquired by either spouse  | ||
after the marriage and before a judgment of
dissolution of  | ||
marriage or declaration of invalidity of the marriage are
 | ||
presumed to be marital property, regardless of which spouse  | ||
participates in the
pension plan. The presumption that these  | ||
pension benefits are marital property
is overcome by a showing  | ||
that the pension benefits were acquired by a method
listed in  | ||
subsection (a) of this Section. The right to a division of  | ||
pension
benefits in just proportions under this Section is  | ||
enforceable under Section
1-119 of the Illinois Pension Code.
 | ||
 The value of pension benefits in a retirement system  | ||
subject to the Illinois
Pension Code shall be determined in  | ||
accordance with the valuation procedures
established by the  | ||
retirement system.
 | ||
 The recognition of pension benefits as marital property and  | ||
the division of
those benefits pursuant to a Qualified Illinois  | ||
Domestic Relations Order shall
not be deemed to be a  | ||
diminishment, alienation, or impairment of those
benefits. The  | ||
division of pension benefits is an allocation of property in
 | ||
which each spouse has a species of common ownership.
 | ||
 (3) For purposes of distribution of property under this  | ||
Section, all stock
options granted to either spouse after the  | ||
marriage and before a judgment of
dissolution of marriage or  | ||
declaration of invalidity of marriage, whether
vested or  | ||
non-vested or whether their value is ascertainable, are  | ||
presumed to
be marital property. This presumption of marital  | ||
property is overcome by a
showing that the stock options were  | ||
acquired by a method listed in subsection
(a) of this Section.  | ||
The court shall allocate stock options between the
parties at  | ||
the time of the judgment of dissolution of marriage or  | ||
declaration
of invalidity of marriage recognizing that the  | ||
value of the stock options may
not be then determinable and  | ||
that the actual division of the options may not
occur until a  | ||
future date. In making the allocation between the parties, the
 | ||
court shall consider, in addition to the factors set forth in  | ||
subsection (d) of
this Section, the following:
 | ||
  (i) All circumstances underlying the grant of the stock  | ||
 option including
but not limited to whether the grant was  | ||
 for past, present, or future efforts,
or any combination  | ||
 thereof.
 | ||
  (ii) The length of time from the grant of the option to  | ||
 the time the
option is exercisable.
 | ||
 (b-5) As to any policy of life insurance insuring the life  | ||
of either spouse, or any interest in such policy, that  | ||
constitutes marital property, whether whole life, term life,  | ||
group term life, universal life, or other form of life
 | ||
insurance policy, and whether or not the value is  | ||
ascertainable, the court shall allocate ownership, death  | ||
benefits or the
right to assign death benefits, and the  | ||
obligation for premium payments, if any, equitably between the  | ||
parties at the
time of the judgment for dissolution or  | ||
declaration of invalidity of marriage.  | ||
 (c) Commingled marital and non-marital property shall be  | ||
treated in
the following manner, unless otherwise agreed by the  | ||
spouses:
 | ||
  (1) When marital and non-marital property are  | ||
 commingled by contributing
one estate of property into  | ||
 another resulting in a loss of identity of the
contributed  | ||
 property, the classification of the contributed property  | ||
 is
transmuted to the estate receiving the contribution,  | ||
 subject to the provisions
of paragraph (2) of this  | ||
 subsection; provided that if marital and non-marital
 | ||
 property are commingled into newly acquired property  | ||
 resulting in a loss
of identity of the contributing  | ||
 estates, the commingled property shall be
deemed  | ||
 transmuted to marital property, subject to the provisions  | ||
 of paragraph
(2) of this subsection.
 | ||
  (2) When one estate of property makes a contribution to  | ||
 another estate
of property, or when a spouse contributes  | ||
 personal effort to non-marital
property, the contributing  | ||
 estate shall be reimbursed from the estate receiving
the  | ||
 contribution notwithstanding any transmutation; provided,  | ||
 that no such
reimbursement shall be made with respect to a  | ||
 contribution which is not
retraceable by clear and  | ||
 convincing evidence, or was a gift, or, in the
case of a  | ||
 contribution of personal effort of a spouse to non-marital  | ||
 property,
unless the effort is significant and results in  | ||
 substantial appreciation
of the non-marital property.  | ||
 Personal effort of a spouse shall be deemed
a contribution  | ||
 by the marital estate. The court may provide for  | ||
 reimbursement
out of the marital property to be divided or  | ||
 by imposing a lien against the
non-marital property which  | ||
 received the contribution.
 | ||
 (d) In a proceeding for dissolution of marriage or  | ||
declaration of invalidity
of marriage, or in a proceeding for  | ||
disposition of property following
dissolution of marriage by a  | ||
court which lacked personal jurisdiction over the
absent spouse  | ||
or lacked jurisdiction to dispose of the property, the court
 | ||
shall assign each spouse's non-marital property to that spouse.  | ||
It also shall
divide the marital property without regard to  | ||
marital misconduct in just
proportions considering all  | ||
relevant factors, including:
 | ||
  (1) the contribution of each party to the acquisition,  | ||
 preservation, or
increase or decrease in value of the  | ||
 marital or non-marital property, including
(i) any such  | ||
 decrease attributable to a payment deemed to have been an  | ||
 advance from the parties' marital estate under subsection  | ||
 (c-1)(2) of Section 501 and (ii) the contribution of a  | ||
 spouse as a homemaker or to the family unit;
 | ||
  (2) the dissipation by each party of the marital or  | ||
 non-marital property, provided that a party's claim of  | ||
 dissipation is subject to the following conditions:
 | ||
   (i) a notice of intent to claim dissipation shall  | ||
 be given no later than 60 days
before trial or 30 days  | ||
 after discovery closes, whichever is later; | ||
   (ii) the notice of intent to claim dissipation  | ||
 shall contain, at a minimum, a date or period of time  | ||
 during which the marriage began undergoing an  | ||
 irretrievable breakdown, an identification of the  | ||
 property dissipated, and a date or period of time  | ||
 during which the dissipation occurred; | ||
   (iii) the notice of intent to claim dissipation  | ||
 shall be filed with the clerk of the court and be  | ||
 served pursuant to applicable rules; | ||
   (iv) no dissipation shall be deemed to have  | ||
 occurred prior to 5 years before the filing of the  | ||
 petition for dissolution of marriage, or 3 years after  | ||
 the party
claiming dissipation knew or should have  | ||
 known of the dissipation;
 | ||
  (3) the value of the property assigned to each spouse;
 | ||
  (4) the duration of the marriage;
 | ||
  (5) the relevant economic circumstances of each spouse  | ||
 when the division
of property is to become effective,  | ||
 including the desirability of awarding
the family home, or  | ||
 the right to live therein for reasonable periods, to the
 | ||
 spouse having custody of the children;
 | ||
  (6) any obligations and rights arising from a prior  | ||
 marriage
of either party;
 | ||
  (7) any antenuptial agreement of the parties;
 | ||
  (8) the age, health, station, occupation, amount and  | ||
 sources of income,
vocational skills, employability,  | ||
 estate, liabilities, and needs of each of the
parties;
 | ||
  (9) the custodial provisions for any children;
 | ||
  (10) whether the apportionment is in lieu of or in  | ||
 addition to
maintenance;
 | ||
  (11) the reasonable opportunity of each spouse for  | ||
 future acquisition
of capital assets and income; and
 | ||
  (12) the tax consequences of the property division upon  | ||
 the
respective economic circumstances of the parties.
 | ||
 (e) Each spouse has a species of common ownership in the  | ||
marital property
which vests at the time dissolution  | ||
proceedings are commenced and continues
only during the  | ||
pendency of the action. Any such interest in marital property
 | ||
shall not encumber that property so as to restrict its  | ||
transfer, assignment
or conveyance by the title holder unless  | ||
such title holder is specifically
enjoined from making such  | ||
transfer, assignment or conveyance.
 | ||
 (f) In a proceeding for dissolution of marriage or  | ||
declaration of
invalidity of marriage or in a proceeding for  | ||
disposition of property
following dissolution of marriage by a  | ||
court that lacked personal
jurisdiction over the absent spouse  | ||
or lacked jurisdiction to dispose of
the property, the court,  | ||
in determining the value of the marital and
non-marital  | ||
property for purposes of dividing the property, shall value the
 | ||
property as of the date of trial or some other date as close to  | ||
the date
of trial as is practicable.
 | ||
 (g) The court if necessary to protect and promote the best  | ||
interests of the
children may set aside a portion of the  | ||
jointly or separately held
estates of the parties in a separate  | ||
fund or trust for the support,
maintenance, education, physical  | ||
and mental health, and general welfare of any minor, dependent,
 | ||
or incompetent child of the parties. In making a determination  | ||
under this
subsection, the court may consider, among other  | ||
things, the conviction of a
party of any of the offenses set  | ||
forth in Section 11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40, 11-1.50, 11-1.60,  | ||
12-3.3, 12-4, 12-4.1,
12-4.2, 12-4.3,
12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1,  | ||
12-15, or 12-16, or Section 12-3.05 except for subdivision  | ||
(a)(4) or (g)(1), of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal  | ||
Code of 2012 if the
victim is a
child of one or both of the  | ||
parties, and there is a need for, and cost of,
care, healing  | ||
and counseling for the child who is the victim of the crime.
 | ||
 (h) Unless specifically directed by a reviewing court, or  | ||
upon good
cause shown, the court shall not on remand consider  | ||
any increase or
decrease in the value of any "marital" or  | ||
"non-marital" property occurring
since the assessment of such  | ||
property at the original trial or hearing, but
shall use only  | ||
that assessment made at the original trial or hearing.
 | ||
 (i) The court may make such judgments affecting the marital  | ||
property
as may be just and may enforce such judgments by  | ||
ordering a sale of marital
property, with proceeds therefrom to  | ||
be applied as determined by the court.
 | ||
 (j) After proofs have closed in the final hearing on all  | ||
other issues
between the parties (or in conjunction with the  | ||
final hearing, if all parties
so stipulate) and before judgment  | ||
is entered, a party's petition for
contribution to fees and  | ||
costs incurred in the proceeding shall be heard and
decided, in  | ||
accordance with the following provisions:
 | ||
  (1) A petition for contribution, if not filed before  | ||
 the final hearing
on other issues between the parties,  | ||
 shall be filed no later than 30 days after
the closing of  | ||
 proofs in the final hearing or within such other period as  | ||
 the
court orders.
 | ||
  (2) Any award of contribution to one party from the  | ||
 other party shall be
based on the criteria for division of  | ||
 marital property under this Section 503
and, if maintenance  | ||
 has been awarded, on the criteria for an award of
 | ||
 maintenance under Section 504.
 | ||
  (3) The filing of a petition for contribution shall not  | ||
 be deemed to
constitute a waiver of the attorney-client  | ||
 privilege between the petitioning
party and current or  | ||
 former counsel; and such a waiver shall not constitute a
 | ||
 prerequisite to a hearing for contribution. If either  | ||
 party's presentation on
contribution, however, includes  | ||
 evidence within the scope of the
attorney-client  | ||
 privilege, the disclosure or disclosures shall be narrowly
 | ||
 construed and shall not be deemed by the court to  | ||
 constitute a general waiver
of the privilege as to matters  | ||
 beyond the scope of the presentation.
 | ||
  (4) No finding on which a contribution award is based  | ||
 or denied shall be
asserted against counsel or former  | ||
 counsel for purposes of any hearing under
subsection (c) or  | ||
 (e) of Section 508.
 | ||
  (5) A contribution award (payable to either the  | ||
 petitioning
party or the party's counsel, or jointly, as  | ||
 the court determines) may be in
the form of either a set  | ||
 dollar amount or a percentage of fees and costs (or a
 | ||
 portion of fees and costs) to be subsequently agreed upon  | ||
 by the petitioning
party and counsel or, alternatively,  | ||
 thereafter determined in a hearing
pursuant to subsection  | ||
 (c) of Section 508 or previously or thereafter
determined  | ||
 in an independent proceeding under subsection (e) of  | ||
 Section
508.
 | ||
  (6) The changes to this Section 503 made by this  | ||
 amendatory Act of 1996
apply to cases pending on or after  | ||
 June 1, 1997, except as otherwise provided
in Section 508.
 | ||
 (k) The changes made to this Section by Public Act 97-941  | ||
this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly apply only to  | ||
petitions for dissolution of marriage filed on or after January  | ||
1, 2013 (the effective date of Public Act 97-941) this  | ||
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 96-583, eff. 1-1-10; 96-1551, Article 1, Section  | ||
985, eff. 7-1-11; 96-1551, Article 2, Section 1100, eff.  | ||
7-1-11; 97-608, eff. 1-1-12; 97-941, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1109, eff.  | ||
1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 (750 ILCS 5/601) (from Ch. 40, par. 601)
 | ||
 Sec. 601. Jurisdiction; Commencement of Proceeding. 
 | ||
 (a) A court of this State competent to decide child custody  | ||
matters has
jurisdiction to make a child custody determination  | ||
in original or modification
proceedings as provided in Section  | ||
201 of the Uniform
Child-Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement  | ||
Act as
adopted by this State.
 | ||
 (b) A child custody proceeding is commenced in the court:
 | ||
  (1) by a parent, by filing a petition:
 | ||
   (i) for dissolution of marriage or legal  | ||
 separation or declaration
of invalidity of marriage;  | ||
 or
 | ||
   (ii) for custody of the child, in the county in  | ||
 which he is
permanently resident or found;
 | ||
  (2) by a person other than a parent, by filing a  | ||
 petition for
custody of the child in the county in which he  | ||
 is permanently resident
or found, but only if he is not in  | ||
 the physical custody of one of his
parents; or
 | ||
  (3) by a stepparent, by filing a petition, if all of  | ||
 the following
circumstances are met:
 | ||
   (A) the child is at least 12 years old;
 | ||
   (B) the custodial parent and stepparent were  | ||
 married for at least 5
years during which the child  | ||
 resided with the parent and stepparent;
 | ||
   (C) the custodial parent is deceased or is disabled  | ||
 and cannot perform
the duties of a parent to the child;
 | ||
   (D) the stepparent provided for the care, control,  | ||
 and welfare to the
child prior to the initiation of  | ||
 custody proceedings;
 | ||
   (E) the child wishes to live with the stepparent;  | ||
 and
 | ||
   (F) it is alleged to be in the best interests and  | ||
 welfare of the
child to live with the stepparent as  | ||
 provided in Section 602 of this Act; or . | ||
  (4) when When one of the parents is deceased, by a  | ||
 grandparent who is a parent or stepparent of a deceased  | ||
 parent, by filing a petition, if one or more of the  | ||
 following existed at the time of the parent's death: | ||
   (A) the surviving parent had been absent from the  | ||
 marital abode for more than one month without the  | ||
 deceased spouse knowing his or her whereabouts; | ||
   (B) the surviving parent was in State or federal  | ||
 custody; or | ||
   (C) the surviving parent had: (i) received  | ||
 supervision for or been convicted of any violation of  | ||
 Section 11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40, 11-1.50, 11-1.60,  | ||
 11-1.70, 12C-5, 12C-10, 12C-35, 12C-40, 12C-45, 18-6,  | ||
 19-6, or Article 12 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the  | ||
 Criminal Code of 2012 directed towards the deceased  | ||
 parent or the child; or (ii) received supervision or  | ||
 been convicted of violating an order of protection  | ||
 entered under Section 217, 218, or 219 of the Illinois  | ||
 Domestic Violence Act of 1986 for the protection of the  | ||
 deceased parent or the child.
 | ||
 (c) Notice of a child custody proceeding, including an  | ||
action
for modification of a previous custody order, shall be  | ||
given to the
child's parents, guardian and custodian, who may  | ||
appear, be heard, and
file a responsive pleading. The court,  | ||
upon showing of good cause, may
permit intervention of other  | ||
interested parties.
 | ||
 (d) Proceedings for modification of a previous custody  | ||
order
commenced more than 30 days following the entry of a  | ||
previous custody order
must be initiated by serving a written  | ||
notice and a copy of the petition
for modification upon the  | ||
child's parent, guardian and custodian at least
30 days prior  | ||
to hearing on the petition. Nothing in this Section shall
 | ||
preclude a party in custody modification proceedings from  | ||
moving for a
temporary order under Section 603 of this Act.
 | ||
 (e) (Blank). | ||
 (f) The court shall, at the court's discretion or upon the  | ||
request of any party entitled to petition for custody of the  | ||
child, appoint a guardian ad litem to represent the best  | ||
interest of the child for the duration of the custody  | ||
proceeding or for any modifications of any custody orders  | ||
entered. Nothing in this Section shall be construed to prevent  | ||
the court from appointing the same guardian ad litem for 2 or  | ||
more children that are siblings or half-siblings.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 560. The Uniform Interstate Family Support Act is  | ||
amended by changing Section 102 as follows:
 | ||
 (750 ILCS 22/102) (was 750 ILCS 22/101)
 | ||
 Sec. 102. Definitions. In this Act:
 | ||
 "Child" means an individual, whether over or under the
age  | ||
of 18, who is or is alleged to be owed a duty of support by the
 | ||
individual's parent or who is or is alleged to be the  | ||
beneficiary of a
support order directed to the parent.
 | ||
 "Child-support order" means a support order for a child,
 | ||
including a child who has attained the age of 18.
 | ||
 "Duty of support" means an obligation imposed or imposable
 | ||
by law to provide support for a child, spouse, or former
spouse  | ||
including an unsatisfied obligation to provide support.
 | ||
 "Home state" means the state in which a child lived with a
 | ||
parent or a person acting as parent for at least 6 consecutive  | ||
months
immediately preceding the time of filing of a petition  | ||
or comparable
pleading for support, and if a child is less than  | ||
6 months old, the state
in which the child lived from birth  | ||
with any of them. A period of
temporary absence of any of them  | ||
is counted as part of the 6-month or
other period.
 | ||
 "Income" includes earnings or other periodic entitlements  | ||
to
money from any source and any other property subject to  | ||
withholding for
support under the law of this State.
 | ||
 "Income-withholding order" means an order or other legal
 | ||
process directed to an obligor's employer or other debtor, as
 | ||
defined by the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage  | ||
Act, the
Non-Support of Spouse and Children Act, the  | ||
Non-Support Punishment Act,
the Illinois Public Aid Code, and  | ||
the Illinois Parentage Act of 1984, to
withhold support from  | ||
the income of the obligor.
 | ||
 "Initiating state" means a state from which a proceeding is
 | ||
forwarded or in which a proceeding is filed for forwarding to a  | ||
responding
state under this Act or a law or procedure  | ||
substantially similar to this Act.
 | ||
 "Initiating tribunal" means the authorized tribunal in an
 | ||
initiating state.
 | ||
 "Issuing state" means the state in which a tribunal issues  | ||
a
support order or renders a judgment determining parentage.
 | ||
 "Issuing tribunal" means the tribunal that issues a support
 | ||
order or renders a judgment determining parentage.
 | ||
 "Obligee" means:
 | ||
  (A) an individual to whom a duty of support is or is  | ||
 alleged to
be owed or in whose favor a support order has  | ||
 been issued or a judgment
determining parentage has been  | ||
 rendered;
 | ||
  (B) a state or political subdivision to which the  | ||
 rights under a
duty of support or support order have been  | ||
 assigned or which has
independent claims based on financial  | ||
 assistance provided to an
individual obligee; or
 | ||
  (C) an individual seeking a judgment determining  | ||
 parentage of
the individual's child.
 | ||
 "Obligor" means an individual, or the estate of a decedent:
 | ||
   (i) who owes or is alleged to owe a duty of  | ||
 support;
 | ||
   (ii) who is alleged but has not been adjudicated to  | ||
 be
a parent of a child; or
 | ||
   (iii) who is liable under a support order.
 | ||
 "Person means an individual, corporation, business trust,  | ||
estate, trust,
partnership, limited liability company,  | ||
association, joint venture, government,
governmental  | ||
subdivision, agency, instrumentality, public corporation, or  | ||
any
other legal or commercial entity.
 | ||
 "Record" means information that is inscribed on a tangible  | ||
medium or that
is stored in an electronic or other medium and  | ||
is retrievable in perceivable
form.
 | ||
 "Register" means to record a support order or judgment  | ||
determining parentage
in the appropriate Registry of Foreign  | ||
Support Orders.
 | ||
 "Registering tribunal" means a tribunal in which a support
 | ||
order is registered.
 | ||
 "Responding state" means a state in which a proceeding is  | ||
filed or to
which a proceeding is forwarded for filing from an  | ||
initiating state under
this Act or a law or procedure  | ||
substantially similar to this Act.
 | ||
 "Responding tribunal" means the authorized tribunal in a  | ||
responding state.
 | ||
 "Spousal-support order" means a support order for a spouse
 | ||
or former spouse of the obligor.
 | ||
 "State" means a state of the United States, the District of  | ||
Columbia, Puerto
Rico, the United States Virgin Islands, or any  | ||
territory or insular possession
subject to the jurisdiction of  | ||
the United States. The term includes:
 | ||
  (A) an Indian tribe; and
 | ||
  (B) a foreign country or political subdivision that:
 | ||
   (i) has been declared to be a foreign reciprocating  | ||
 country or
political subdivision under federal law;
 | ||
   (ii) has established a reciprocal arrangement for  | ||
 child support with
this State as provided in Section  | ||
 308; or
 | ||
   (iii) has enacted a law or established procedures  | ||
 for issuance
and enforcement of support orders which  | ||
 are substantially similar to the
procedures under this  | ||
 Act.
 | ||
 "Support enforcement agency" means a public official or
 | ||
agency authorized to seek:
 | ||
  (A) enforcement of support orders or laws relating to  | ||
 the duty
of support;
 | ||
  (B) establishment or modification of child support;
 | ||
  (C) determination of parentage;
 | ||
  (D) to locate obligors or their assets; or
 | ||
  (E) determination of the controlling child support  | ||
 order.
 | ||
 "Support order" means a judgment, decree, order, or  | ||
directive, whether
temporary, final, or subject to  | ||
modification, issued by a tribunal for the
benefit of a child,  | ||
a spouse, or a former spouse, which provides for monetary
 | ||
support, health care, arrearages, or reimbursement, and may  | ||
include related
costs and fees, interest, income withholding,  | ||
attorney's fees, and other
relief.
 | ||
 "Tribunal" means a court, administrative agency, or
 | ||
quasi-judicial entity authorized to establish, enforce, or
 | ||
modify support orders or to determine parentage.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 93-479, eff. 1-1-04, operative 7-1-04; revised  | ||
11-26-14.)
 | ||
 Section 565. The Adoption Act is amended by changing  | ||
Section 18.2 as follows:
 | ||
 (750 ILCS 50/18.2) (from Ch. 40, par. 1522.2)
 | ||
 Sec. 18.2. Forms. 
 | ||
 (a) The Department shall develop the Illinois Adoption  | ||
Registry forms as provided in this Section. The General  | ||
Assembly shall reexamine the content of the form as requested  | ||
by the Department, in consultation with the Registry Advisory  | ||
Council. The form of the Birth Parent Registration
 | ||
Identification Form shall be substantially as follows:
 | ||
BIRTH PARENT REGISTRATION IDENTIFICATION
 | ||
(Insert all known information)
 | ||
I, ....., state that I am the ...... (mother or father) of the
 | ||
following child:
 | ||
 Child's original name: ..... (first) ..... (middle) .....  | ||
 (last),
..... (hour of birth), ..... (date of birth),  | ||
 ..... (city and state of
birth), ..... (name of  | ||
 hospital).
 | ||
 Father's full name: ...... (first) ...... (middle) .....  | ||
 (last),
..... (date of birth), ..... (city and state of  | ||
 birth).
 | ||
 Name of mother inserted on birth certificate: ..... (first)  | ||
 .....
(middle) ..... (last), ..... (race), ..... (date  | ||
 of birth), ......
(city and state of birth).
 | ||
That I surrendered my child to: ............. (name of agency),  | ||
 .....
(city and state of agency), ..... (approximate date  | ||
 child surrendered).
 | ||
That I placed my child by private adoption: ..... (date),
 | ||
 ...... (city
and state).
 | ||
Name of adoptive parents, if known: ......
 | ||
Other identifying information: .....
 | ||
........................
 | ||
(Signature of parent)
 | ||
............ ........................
 | ||
(date)  (printed name of parent)
 | ||
 (b) The form of the Adopted Person
Registration  | ||
Identification shall be substantially
as follows:
 | ||
ADOPTED PERSON
 | ||
REGISTRATION IDENTIFICATION
 | ||
(Insert all known information)
 | ||
I, ....., state the following:
 | ||
 Adopted Person's present name: ..... (first) .....  | ||
 (middle)
..... (last).
 | ||
 Adopted Person's name at birth (if known): ..... (first)
 | ||
 ..... (middle) .....
(last), ..... (birth date), .....  | ||
 (city and state of birth), ......
(sex), ..... (race).
 | ||
 Name of adoptive father: ..... (first) ..... (middle) .....  | ||
 (last), .....
(race).
 | ||
 Maiden name of adoptive mother: ..... (first) .....  | ||
 (middle) .....
(last), ..... (race).
 | ||
 Name of birth mother (if known): ..... (first) .....
 | ||
 (middle)
..... (last), ..... (race).
 | ||
 Name of birth father (if known): ..... (first) .....
 | ||
 (middle)
..... (last), ..... (race).
 | ||
 Name(s) at birth of sibling(s) having a common birth
parent  | ||
 with adoptee
(if known): ..... (first) ..... (middle)  | ||
 ..... (last), ..... (race), and name
of common birth  | ||
 parent: ..... (first) ..... (middle) .....
(last),
 | ||
 ..... (race).
 | ||
I was adopted through: ..... (name of agency).
 | ||
I was adopted privately: ..... (state "yes" if known).
 | ||
I was adopted in ..... (city and state), ..... (approximate  | ||
 date).
 | ||
Other identifying information: .............
 | ||
......................
 | ||
(signature of adoptee)
 | ||
........... .........................
 | ||
(date)  (printed name of adoptee)
 | ||
 (c) The form of the Surrendered Person Registration  | ||
Identification shall be
substantially as follows:
 | ||
SURRENDERED PERSON REGISTRATION
 | ||
IDENTIFICATION
 | ||
(Insert all known information)
 | ||
I, ....., state the following:
 | ||
 Surrendered Person's present name: ..... (first) .....
 | ||
 (middle) ..... (last).
 | ||
 Surrendered Person's name at birth (if known): .....  | ||
 (first)
.....
(middle) ..... (last), .....(birth  | ||
 date), ..... (city and state of
birth), ...... (sex),  | ||
 ..... (race).
 | ||
 Name of guardian father: ..... (first) ..... (middle) .....  | ||
 (last), .....
(race).
 | ||
 Maiden name of guardian mother: ..... (first) .....  | ||
 (middle) .....
(last), ..... (race).
 | ||
 Name of birth mother (if known): ..... (first) .....
 | ||
 (middle) .....
(last) ..... (race).
 | ||
 Name of birth father (if known): ..... (first) .....
 | ||
 (middle) .....
(last), .....(race).
 | ||
 Name(s) at birth of sibling(s) having a common birth
parent  | ||
 with surrendered person
(if known): ..... (first)  | ||
 ..... (middle) ..... (last), ..... (race), and name
of  | ||
 common birth parent: ..... (first) ..... (middle)  | ||
 .....
(last),
..... (race).
 | ||
I was surrendered for adoption to: ..... (name of agency).
 | ||
I was surrendered for adoption in ..... (city and state), .....  | ||
 (approximate
date).
 | ||
Other identifying information: ............
 | ||
................................
 | ||
(signature of surrendered person)
 | ||
............ ......................
 | ||
(date) (printed name of person
 | ||
 surrendered for adoption)
 | ||
 (c-3) The form of the Registration Identification Form for  | ||
Surviving Relatives of Deceased Birth Parents shall be  | ||
substantially as follows:
 | ||
REGISTRATION IDENTIFICATION FORM
 | ||
FOR SURVIVING RELATIVES OF DECEASED BIRTH PARENTS
 | ||
(Insert all known information)
 | ||
I, ....., state the following:
 | ||
 Name of deceased birth parent at time of surrender:
 | ||
 Deceased birth parent's date of birth:
 | ||
 Deceased birth parent's date of death:
 | ||
 Adopted or surrendered person's name at birth (if known):  | ||
 .....(first) ..... (middle) ..... (last), .....(birth  | ||
 date), ..... (city and state of birth), ...... (sex),  | ||
 ..... (race).
 | ||
My relationship to the adopted or surrendered person (check  | ||
one): (birth parent's non-surrendered child) (birth parent's  | ||
sister) (birth parent's brother).
 | ||
If you are a non-surrendered child of the birth parent, provide  | ||
name(s) at birth and age(s) of non-surrendered siblings having  | ||
a common parent with the birth parent. If more than one  | ||
sibling, please give information requested below on reverse  | ||
side of this form. If you are a sibling or parent of the birth  | ||
parent, provide name(s) at birth and age(s) of the sibling(s)  | ||
of the birth parent. If more than one sibling, please give  | ||
information requested below on reverse side of this form.
 | ||
 Name (First) ..... (middle) ..... (last), .....(birth  | ||
 date), ..... (city and state of birth), ...... (sex),  | ||
 ..... (race).
 | ||
 Name(s) of common parent(s) (first) ..... (middle) .....  | ||
 (last), .....(race), (first) ..... (middle) .....  | ||
 (last), .....(race).
 | ||
My birth sibling/child of my brother/child of my sister/ was  | ||
surrendered for adoption to ..... (name of agency) City and  | ||
state of agency ..... Date .....(approximate) Other  | ||
identifying information ..... (Please note that you must: (i)  | ||
be at least 21 years of age to register; (ii) submit with your  | ||
registration a certified copy of the birth parent's birth  | ||
certificate; (iii) submit a certified copy of the birth  | ||
parent's death certificate; and (iv) if you are a  | ||
non-surrendered birth sibling or a sibling of the deceased  | ||
birth parent, also submit a certified copy of your birth  | ||
certificate with this registration. No application from a  | ||
surviving relative of a deceased birth parent can be accepted  | ||
if the birth parent filed a Denial of Information Exchange  | ||
prior to his or her death.)
 | ||
................................
 | ||
(signature of birth parent's surviving relative)
 | ||
............ ............ | ||
(date) (printed name of birth  | ||
 parent's surviving relative)
 | ||
 (c-5) The form of the Registration Identification Form for  | ||
Surviving Relatives of Deceased Adopted or Surrendered Persons  | ||
shall be substantially as follows:
 | ||
REGISTRATION IDENTIFICATION FORM FOR
 | ||
SURVIVING RELATIVES OF DECEASED ADOPTED OR SURRENDERED PERSONS
 | ||
(Insert all known information)
 | ||
I, ....., state the following:
 | ||
 Adopted or surrendered person's name at birth (if known):  | ||
 (first) ..... (middle) ..... (last), .....(birth  | ||
 date), ..... (city and state of birth), ...... (sex),  | ||
 ..... (race). | ||
 Adopted or surrendered person's date of death:
 | ||
My relationship to the deceased adopted or surrendered  | ||
person(check one): (adoptive mother) (adoptive father) (adult  | ||
child) (surviving spouse).
 | ||
If you are an adult child or surviving spouse of the adopted or  | ||
surrendered person, provide name(s) at birth and age(s) of the  | ||
children of the adopted or surrendered person. If the adopted  | ||
or surrendered person had more than one child, please give  | ||
information requested below on reverse side of this form. | ||
 Name (first) ..... (middle) ..... (last), .....(birth  | ||
 date), ..... (city and state of birth), ...... (sex),  | ||
 ..... (race). | ||
 Name(s) of common parent(s) (first) ..... (middle) .....  | ||
 (last), .....(race), (first) ..... (middle) .....  | ||
 (last), .....(race).
 | ||
 My child/parent/deceased spouse was surrendered for  | ||
 adoption to .....(name of agency) City and state of agency  | ||
 ..... Date ..... (approximate) Other identifying  | ||
 information ..... (Please note that you must: (i) be at  | ||
 least 21 years of age to register; (ii) submit with your  | ||
 registration a certified copy of the adopted or surrendered  | ||
 person's death certificate; (iii) if you are the child of a  | ||
 deceased adopted or surrendered person, also submit a  | ||
 certified copy of your birth certificate with this  | ||
 registration; and (iv) if you are the surviving wife or  | ||
 husband of a deceased adopted or surrendered person, also  | ||
 submit a copy of your marriage certificate with this  | ||
 registration. No application from a surviving relative of a  | ||
 deceased adopted or surrendered person can be accepted if  | ||
 the adopted or surrendered person filed a Denial of  | ||
 Information Exchange prior to his or her death.)
 | ||
................................
 | ||
(signature of adopted or surrendered person's surviving
 | ||
  relative)
 | ||
............ ............ | ||
(date) (printed name of adopted
 | ||
 person's surviving relative)
 | ||
 (d) The form of the Information Exchange Authorization  | ||
shall be
substantially
as follows:
 | ||
INFORMATION EXCHANGE AUTHORIZATION
 | ||
 I, ....., state that I am the person who completed the  | ||
Registration
Identification; that I am of the age of .....  | ||
years; that I hereby
authorize the Department of Public Health  | ||
to give to the following person(s)
(birth mother
)
(birth  | ||
father) (birth sibling) (adopted or surrendered person
)  | ||
(adoptive mother) (adoptive father) (legal guardian of an  | ||
adopted or surrendered person) (birth aunt) (birth uncle)  | ||
(adult child of a deceased adopted or surrendered person)  | ||
(surviving spouse of a deceased adopted or surrendered person)  | ||
(all eligible relatives) the following
(please check the
 | ||
information
authorized for exchange):
 | ||
  [  ]  1. Only my name and last known address.
 | ||
  [  ]  2. A copy of my Illinois Adoption Registry  | ||
 Application.
 | ||
  [  ]  3. A non-certified copy of the adopted or  | ||
 surrendered person's original certificate of live birth  | ||
 (check only if you are an adopted or surrendered person or  | ||
 the surviving adult child or surviving spouse of a deceased  | ||
 adopted or surrendered person).
 | ||
  [  ]  4. A copy of my completed medical questionnaire.
 | ||
 I am fully aware that I can only be supplied with
 | ||
information about an individual or individuals who have
duly
 | ||
executed an Information Exchange Authorization that
has
not  | ||
been revoked or, if I am an adopted or surrendered person, from  | ||
a birth parent who completed a Birth Parent Preference Form and  | ||
did not prohibit the release of his or her identity to me; that  | ||
I can be contacted by writing to: ..... (own name or
name of  | ||
person to contact) (address) (phone number).
 | ||
NOTE: New IARMIE registrants who do not complete a Medical  | ||
Information Exchange Questionnaire and release a copy of their  | ||
questionnaire to at least one Registry applicant must pay a $15  | ||
registration fee.  | ||
 Dated (insert date).
 | ||
 .............. | ||
 (signature)
 | ||
 (e) The form of the Denial of Information Exchange shall be
 | ||
substantially as follows:
 | ||
DENIAL OF INFORMATION EXCHANGE
 | ||
 I, ....., state that I am the person who completed the  | ||
Registration
Identification; that I am of the age of .....  | ||
years; that I hereby
instruct the Department of Public Health  | ||
not to give any identifying
information about me to the  | ||
following person(s)
(birth mother) (birth father) (birth  | ||
sibling)(adopted or surrendered person)(adoptive mother)  | ||
(adoptive father)(legal guardian of an adopted or surrendered  | ||
person)(birth aunt)(birth uncle)(adult child of a deceased  | ||
adopted or surrendered person) (surviving spouse of a deceased  | ||
adopted or surrendered person) (all eligible relatives).
 | ||
 I do/do not (circle appropriate response) authorize the  | ||
Registry to release a copy of my completed Medical Information  | ||
Exchange Questionnaire to qualified Registry applicants.
NOTE:  | ||
New IARMIE registrants who do not complete a Medical  | ||
Information Exchange Questionnaire and release a copy of their  | ||
questionnaire to at least one Registry applicant must pay a $15  | ||
registration fee.
Birth parents filing a Denial of Information  | ||
Exchange are advised that, under Illinois law, an adult adopted  | ||
person may initiate a search for a birth parent who has filed a  | ||
Denial of Information Exchange or Birth Parent Preference Form  | ||
on which Option E was selected through the State confidential  | ||
intermediary program once 5 years have elapsed since the filing  | ||
of the Denial of Information Exchange or Birth Parent  | ||
Preference Form.
 | ||
 Dated (insert date).
 | ||
 ...............  | ||
 (signature)
 | ||
 (f) The form of the Birth Parent Preference Form shall be  | ||
substantially as follows: | ||
 In recognition of the basic right of all persons to access  | ||
their birth records, Illinois law now provides for the release  | ||
of original birth certificates to adopted and surrendered  | ||
persons 21 years of age or older upon request. While many birth  | ||
parents are comfortable sharing their identities or initiating  | ||
contact with their birth sons and daughters once they have  | ||
reached adulthood, Illinois law also recognizes that there may  | ||
be unique situations where a birth parent might have a  | ||
compelling reason for not wishing to establish contact with a  | ||
birth son or birth daughter or for not wishing to release  | ||
identifying information that appears on the original birth  | ||
certificate of a birth son or birth daughter who has reached  | ||
adulthood. The Illinois Adoption Registry and Medical  | ||
Information Exchange (IARMIE) has therefore established the  | ||
attached form to allow birth parents to express their  | ||
preferences regarding contact; and, if their birth child was  | ||
born on or after January 1, 1946, to express their wishes  | ||
regarding the sharing of identifying information listed on the  | ||
original birth certificate with an adult adopted or surrendered  | ||
person who has reached the age of 21 or his or her surviving  | ||
relatives. | ||
 In selecting one of the 5 options below, birth parents  | ||
should keep in mind that the decision to deny an adult adopted  | ||
or surrendered person access to identifying information on his  | ||
or her original birth record and/or information about  | ||
genetically-transmitted diseases is an important decision that  | ||
may impact the adopted or surrendered person's life in many  | ||
ways. A request for anonymity on this form only pertains to  | ||
information that is provided to an adult adopted or surrendered  | ||
person or his or her surviving relatives through the Registry.  | ||
This will not prevent the disclosure of identifying information  | ||
that may be available to the adoptee through his or her  | ||
adoptive parents and/or other means available to him or her.  | ||
Birth parents who would prefer not to be contacted by their  | ||
surrendered son or daughter are strongly urged to complete both  | ||
the Non-Identifying Information Section included on the final  | ||
page of the attached form and the Medical Questionnaire in  | ||
order to provide their surrendered son or daughter with the  | ||
background information he or she may need to better understand  | ||
his or her origins. Birth parents whose birth son or birth  | ||
daughter is under 21 years of age at the time of the completion  | ||
of this form are reminded that no original birth certificate  | ||
will be released by the IARMIE before an adoptee has reached  | ||
the age of 21. Should you need additional assistance in  | ||
completing this form, please contact the agency that handled  | ||
the adoption, if applicable, or the Illinois Adoption Registry  | ||
and Medical Information Exchange at 877-323-5299. | ||
 After careful consideration, I have made the following  | ||
decision regarding contact with my birth son/birth daughter,  | ||
(insert birth son's/birth daughter's name at birth, if  | ||
applicable) ......, who was born in (insert city/town of birth)  | ||
...... on (insert date of birth)...... and the release of my  | ||
identifying information as it appears on his/her original birth  | ||
certificate when he/she reaches the age of 21, and I have  | ||
chosen Option ...... (insert A, B, C, D, or E, as applicable).  | ||
I realize that this form must be accompanied by a completed  | ||
IARMIE application form as well as a Medical Information  | ||
Exchange Questionnaire or the $15 registration fee. I am also  | ||
aware that I may revoke this decision at any time by completing  | ||
a new Birth Parent Preference Form and filing it with the  | ||
IARMIE. I understand that it is my responsibility to update the  | ||
IARMIE with any changes to contact information provided below.  | ||
I also understand that, while preferences regarding the release  | ||
of identifying information through the Registry are binding  | ||
unless the law should change in the future, any selection I  | ||
have made regarding my preferred method of contact is not. | ||
...  | ||
(Signature/Date) 
 | ||
(Please insert your signature and today's date above, as well  | ||
as under your chosen option, A, B, C, D, or E below.) 
 | ||
Option A. My birth son or birth daughter was born on or after  | ||
January 1, 1946, and I agree to the release of my identifying  | ||
information as it appears on my birth son's/birth daughter's  | ||
original birth certificate, OR my birth son or birth daughter  | ||
was born prior to January 1, 1946. I would welcome direct  | ||
contact with my birth son/birth daughter when he or she has  | ||
reached the age of 21. In addition, before my birth son or  | ||
birth daughter has reached the age of 21 or in the event of his  | ||
or her death, I would welcome contact with the following  | ||
relatives of my birth child (circle all that apply): adoptive  | ||
mother, adoptive father, surviving spouse, surviving adult  | ||
child. I wish to be contacted at the following mailing address,  | ||
email address or phone number:  | ||
..............................  | ||
.............................................................  | ||
.............................................................  | ||
.............................................................  | ||
(Signature/Date) 
 | ||
Option B. My birth son or birth daughter was born on or after  | ||
January 1, 1946, and I agree to the release of my identifying  | ||
information as it appears on my birth son's/birth daughter's  | ||
original birth certificate, OR my birth son or birth daughter  | ||
was born prior to January 1, 1946. I would welcome contact with  | ||
my birth son/birth daughter when he or she has reached the age  | ||
of 21. In addition, before my birth son or birth daughter has  | ||
reached the age of 21 or in the event of his or her death, I  | ||
would welcome contact with the following relatives of my birth  | ||
child (circle all that apply): adoptive mother, adoptive  | ||
father, surviving spouse, surviving adult child. I would prefer  | ||
to be contacted through the following person. (Insert name and  | ||
mailing address, email address or phone number of chosen  | ||
contact person.)  | ||
............................................  | ||
.............................................................  | ||
(Signature/Date) 
 | ||
Option C. My birth son or birth daughter was born on or after  | ||
January 1, 1946, and I agree to the release of my identifying  | ||
information as it appears on my birth son's/birth daughter's  | ||
original birth certificate, OR my birth son or birth daughter  | ||
was born prior to January 1, 1946. I would welcome contact with  | ||
my birth son/birth daughter when he or she has reached the age  | ||
of 21. In addition, before my birth son or birth daughter has  | ||
reached the age of 21 or in the event of his or her death, I  | ||
would welcome contact with the following relatives of my birth  | ||
child (circle all that apply): adoptive mother, adoptive  | ||
father, surviving spouse, surviving adult child. I would prefer  | ||
to be contacted through the Illinois Confidential Intermediary  | ||
Program (please call 800-526-9022 for additional information)  | ||
or through the agency that handled the adoption. (Insert agency  | ||
name, address and phone number, if applicable.)  | ||
.............  | ||
.............................................................  | ||
(Signature/Date) 
 | ||
Option D. My birth son or birth daughter was born on or after  | ||
January 1, 1946, and I agree to the release of my identifying  | ||
information as it appears on my birth son's/birth daughter's  | ||
original birth certificate when he or she has reached the age  | ||
of 21, OR my birth son or birth daughter was born prior to  | ||
January 1, 1946. I would prefer not to be contacted by my birth  | ||
son/birth daughter or his or her adoptive parents or surviving  | ||
relatives. | ||
...................................................  | ||
(Signature/Date) 
 | ||
Option E. My birth son or birth daughter was born on or after  | ||
January 1, 1946, and I wish to prohibit the release of my  | ||
(circle ALL applicable options) first name, last name, last  | ||
known address, birth son/birth daughter's last name (if last  | ||
name listed is same as mine), as they appear on my birth  | ||
son's/birth daughter's original birth certificate and do not  | ||
wish to be contacted by my birth son/birth daughter when he or  | ||
she has reached the age of 21. If there were any special  | ||
circumstances that played a role in your decision to remain  | ||
anonymous which you would like to share with your birth  | ||
son/birth daughter, please list them in the space provided  | ||
below (optional).  | ||
...........................................  | ||
.............................................................  | ||
I understand that, although I have chosen to prohibit the  | ||
release of my identity on the non-certified copy of the  | ||
original birth certificate released to my birth son/birth  | ||
daughter, he or she may request that a court-appointed  | ||
confidential intermediary contact me to request updated  | ||
medical information and/or confirm my desire to remain  | ||
anonymous once 5 years have elapsed since the signing of this  | ||
form; at the time of this subsequent search, I wish to be  | ||
contacted through the person named below. (Insert in blank area  | ||
below the name and phone number of the contact person, or leave  | ||
it blank if you wish to be contacted directly.) I also  | ||
understand that this request for anonymity shall expire upon my  | ||
death.  | ||
......................................................  | ||
.............................................................  | ||
(Signature/Date) 
 | ||
NOTE: A copy of this form will be forwarded to your birth son  | ||
or birth daughter should he or she file a request for his or  | ||
her original birth certificate with the IARMIE. However, if you  | ||
have selected Option E, identifying information, per your  | ||
specifications above, will be deleted from the copy of this  | ||
form forwarded to your birth son or daughter during your  | ||
lifetime. In the event that an adopted or surrendered person is  | ||
deceased, his or her surviving adult children may request a  | ||
copy of the adopted or surrendered person's original birth  | ||
certificate providing they have registered with the IARMIE; the  | ||
copy of this form and the non-certified copy of the original  | ||
birth certificate forwarded to the surviving child of the  | ||
adopted or surrendered person shall be redacted per your  | ||
specifications on this form during your lifetime.  | ||
Non-Identifying Information Section 
 | ||
I wish to voluntarily provide the following non-identifying  | ||
information to my birth son or birth daughter:
 | ||
My age at the time of my child's birth was .........
 | ||
My race is best described as: .......................... | ||
My height is: ......... | ||
My body type is best described as (circle one): slim, average,  | ||
muscular, a few extra pounds, or more than a few extra pounds.
 | ||
My natural hair color is/was: .................. | ||
My eye color is: .................. | ||
My religion is best described as: ..................
 | ||
My ethnic background is best described as: ..................
 | ||
My educational level is closest to (circle applicable  | ||
response): completed elementary school, graduated from  | ||
high school, attended college, earned bachelor's degree,  | ||
earned master's degree, earned doctoral degree.
 | ||
My occupation is best described as .................. | ||
My hobbies include .................. | ||
My interests include .................. | ||
My talents include .................. | ||
In addition to my surrendered son or daughter, I also  | ||
am the biological parent of (insert number) ....... boys and  | ||
(insert number) ....... girls, of whom (insert number) .......  | ||
are still living.
 | ||
The relationship between me and my child's birth mother/birth  | ||
father would best be described as (circle appropriate  | ||
response): husband and wife, ex-spouses, boyfriend and  | ||
girlfriend, casual acquaintances, other (please specify)  | ||
.............. | ||
 (g) The form of the Request for a Non-Certified Copy of an  | ||
Original Birth Certificate shall be substantially as follows:  | ||
REQUEST FOR A NON-CERTIFIED COPY OF AN ORIGINAL BIRTH  | ||
CERTIFICATE  | ||
 I, (requesting party's full name) ....., hereby request a  | ||
non-certified copy of (check appropriate option) ..... my  | ||
original birth certificate ..... the original birth  | ||
certificate of my deceased adopted or surrendered parent .....  | ||
the original birth certificate of my deceased adopted or  | ||
surrendered spouse (insert deceased parent's/deceased spouse's  | ||
name at adoption) ...... I/my deceased parent/my deceased  | ||
spouse was born in (insert city and county of adopted or  | ||
surrendered person's birth) ..... on ..... (insert adopted or  | ||
surrendered person's date of birth). In the event that one or  | ||
both of my/my deceased parent's/my deceased spouse's birth  | ||
parents has requested that their identity not be released to  | ||
me/to my deceased parent/to my deceased spouse, I wish to  | ||
(check appropriate option) ..... a. receive a non-certified  | ||
copy of the original birth certificate from which identifying  | ||
information pertaining to the birth parent who requested  | ||
anonymity has been deleted; or ..... b. I do not wish to  | ||
receive received an altered copy of the original birth  | ||
certificate.  | ||
 Dated (insert date).  | ||
  ...................  | ||
(signature)      
 | ||
 (h) Any Information Exchange Authorization, Denial of  | ||
Information
Exchange, or Birth Parent Preference Form filed  | ||
with the Registry, or Request for a Non-Certified Copy of an  | ||
Original Birth Certificate filed with the Registry by a  | ||
surviving adult child or surviving spouse of a deceased adopted  | ||
or surrendered person, shall be acknowledged by the person who  | ||
filed it before a notary
public, in form
substantially as  | ||
follows:
 | ||
State of ..............
 | ||
County of .............
 | ||
 I, a Notary Public, in and for the said County, in the  | ||
State aforesaid,
do hereby certify that ...............  | ||
personally known to me to be the
same person whose name is  | ||
subscribed to the foregoing certificate of
acknowledgement,  | ||
appeared before me in person and acknowledged that (he or
she)  | ||
signed such certificate as (his or her) free and voluntary act  | ||
and
that the statements in such certificate are true.
 | ||
 Given under my hand and notarial seal on (insert date).
 | ||
.........................
 | ||
(signature)     
 | ||
 (i) When the execution of an Information Exchange
 | ||
Authorization, Denial of Information Exchange, or Birth Parent  | ||
Preference Form or Request for a Non-Certified Copy of an  | ||
Original Birth Certificate completed by a surviving adult child  | ||
or surviving spouse of a deceased adopted or surrendered person  | ||
is acknowledged before a
representative of an agency, such  | ||
representative shall have his signature
on said Certificate  | ||
acknowledged before a notary public, in form substantially
as  | ||
follows:
 | ||
State of..........
 | ||
County of.........
 | ||
 I, a Notary Public, in and for the said County, in the  | ||
State aforesaid,
do hereby certify that ..... personally known  | ||
to me to be the same person
whose name is subscribed to the  | ||
foregoing certificate of acknowledgement,
appeared before me  | ||
in person and acknowledged that (he or she) signed such
 | ||
certificate as (his or her) free and voluntary act and that the  | ||
statements
in such certificate are true.
 | ||
 Given under my hand and notarial seal on (insert date).
 | ||
.......................
 | ||
(signature)   
 | ||
 (j) When an Illinois Adoption Registry Application,
 | ||
Information
Exchange Authorization, Denial of
Information  | ||
Exchange, Birth Parent Preference Form, or Request for a  | ||
Non-Certified Copy of an Original Birth Certificate completed  | ||
by a surviving adult child or surviving spouse of a deceased  | ||
adopted or surrendered person is executed in a foreign country,  | ||
the
execution of such
document shall be acknowledged or  | ||
affirmed before an officer of the United
States consular  | ||
services.
 | ||
 (k) If the person signing an Information Exchange
 | ||
Authorization, Denial of Information, Birth Parent Preference  | ||
Form, or Request for a Non-Certified Copy of an Original Birth  | ||
Certificate completed by a surviving adult child or surviving  | ||
spouse of a deceased adopted or surrendered person is in the  | ||
military service of the
United States, the execution of such  | ||
document may be acknowledged before a
commissioned officer and  | ||
the signature of such officer on such certificate
shall be  | ||
verified or acknowledged before a notary public or by such  | ||
other
procedure as is then in effect for such division or  | ||
branch of the armed forces.
 | ||
 (l) An adopted or surrendered person, surviving adult  | ||
child, adult grandchild, surviving spouse, or birth parent of  | ||
an adult adopted person who completes a Request For a  | ||
Non-Certified Copy of the Original Birth Certificate shall meet  | ||
the same filing requirements and pay the same filing fees as a  | ||
non-adopted person seeking to obtain a copy of his or her  | ||
original birth certificate. 
 | ||
 (m) Beginning on January 1, 2015, any birth parent of an  | ||
adult adopted person named on the original birth certificate  | ||
may request a non-certified copy of the original birth  | ||
certificate reflecting the birth of the adult adopted person,  | ||
provided that:  | ||
  (1) any non-certified copy of the original birth  | ||
 certificate released under this subsection (m) shall not  | ||
 reflect the State file number on the original birth  | ||
 certificate; and | ||
  (2) if the Department of Public Health does not locate  | ||
 the original birth certificate, it shall issue a  | ||
 certification of no record found.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-110, eff. 7-14-11; 98-704, eff. 1-1-15;  | ||
revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 570. The Trusts and Dissolutions of Marriage Act is  | ||
amended by changing Section 1 as follows:
 | ||
 (760 ILCS 35/1) (from Ch. 148, par. 301)
 | ||
 Sec. 1. 
(a) Unless the governing instrument or the judgment  | ||
of judicial
termination of marriage expressly provides  | ||
otherwise, judicial termination
of the marriage of the settlor  | ||
of a trust revokes every provision which
is revocable by the  | ||
settlor pertaining to the settlor's former spouse in
a trust  | ||
instrument or amendment thereto executed by the settlor before  | ||
the
entry of the judgment of judicial termination of the  | ||
settlor's marriage,
and any such trust shall be administered  | ||
and construed as if the settlor's
former spouse had died upon  | ||
entry of the judgment of judicial termination
of the settlor's  | ||
marriage.
 | ||
 (b) A trustee who has no actual knowledge of a judgment of  | ||
judicial
termination
of the settlor's marriage, shall have no  | ||
liability for any action taken
or omitted in good faith on the  | ||
assumption that the settlor is married.
The preceding sentence  | ||
is intended to affect only the liability of the trustee
and  | ||
shall not affect the disposition of beneficial interests in any  | ||
trust.
 | ||
 (c) "Trust" means a trust created by a nontestamentary  | ||
instrument executed
after the effective date of this Act,  | ||
except that, unless in the governing
instrument the provisions  | ||
of this Act are made applicable by specific reference,
the  | ||
provisions of this Act do not apply to any (a) land trust; (b)  | ||
voting
trust; (c) security instrument such as a trust deed or  | ||
mortgage; (d) liquidation
trust; (e) escrow; (f) instrument  | ||
under which a nominee, custodian for property
or paying or  | ||
receiving agent is appointed; or (g) a trust created by a  | ||
deposit
arrangement in a bank or savings institution, commonly  | ||
known as "Totten Trust".
 | ||
 (d) The phrase "provisions pertaining to the settlor's  | ||
former spouse"
includes, but is not limited to, every present  | ||
or future gift or interest
or power of appointment given to the  | ||
settlor's former spouse or right of
the settlor's former spouse  | ||
to serve in a fiduciary capacity.
 | ||
 (e) A provision is revocable by the settlor if the settlor  | ||
has the power
at the time of the entry of the judgment of  | ||
judicial termination of the
settlor's marriage to revoke,  | ||
modify or amend said provision, either alone
or in conjunction  | ||
with any other person or persons.
 | ||
 (f) "Judicial termination of marriage" includes, but is not  | ||
limited to,
divorce, dissolution, annulment or declaration of  | ||
invalidity of marriage.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 90-655, eff. 7-30-98; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 575. The Residential Real Property Disclosure Act  | ||
is amended by changing Section 5 as follows:
 | ||
 (765 ILCS 77/5)
 | ||
 Sec. 5. Definitions. As used in this Act, unless the  | ||
context otherwise
requires, the
following terms have the  | ||
meaning given in this Section.
 | ||
 "Residential real property" means real property improved  | ||
with not less
than one nor more than 4 residential dwelling  | ||
units; units in residential
cooperatives; or, condominium  | ||
units, including the limited common elements
allocated to the  | ||
exclusive use thereof that form an integral part of the
 | ||
condominium unit. The term includes a manufactured home as  | ||
defined in subdivision (53) of Section 9-102 of the Uniform  | ||
Commercial Code that is real property as defined in the  | ||
Conveyance and Encumbrance of Manufactured Homes as Real  | ||
Property and Severance Act. 
 | ||
 "Seller" means every person or entity who is an owner,  | ||
beneficiary of a
trust, contract purchaser or lessee of a  | ||
ground lease,
who has an interest (legal or equitable) in  | ||
residential real property.
However, "seller" shall not include
 | ||
any person who has both (i) never occupied the residential real  | ||
property and
(ii) never had the management responsibility for  | ||
the residential real property
nor delegated such  | ||
responsibility for the residential real property to another
 | ||
person or entity.
 | ||
 "Prospective buyer" means any person or entity negotiating  | ||
or offering
to become an owner or lessee of residential real  | ||
property by means of a
transfer for value to which this Act  | ||
applies.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-749, eff. 7-16-14; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 580. The Conveyance and Encumbrance of  | ||
Manufactured Homes as Real Property and Severance Act is  | ||
amended by changing Section 5-10 as follows:
 | ||
 (765 ILCS 170/5-10)
 | ||
 Sec. 5-10. Act not mandatory; record notice. The owner of a  | ||
manufactured home that is personal property or a fixture may,  | ||
but need not, cause that manufactured home to be deemed to be  | ||
real property by satisfying the requirements of Section 5-30 of  | ||
this Act and the requirements of Section 3-116.1 or 3-116.2 of  | ||
the Illinois Vehicle Code, as applicable. | ||
 To convey or voluntarily encumber a manufactured home as  | ||
real property, the following conditions must be met: | ||
  (1) the manufactured home must be affixed to a  | ||
 permanent foundation on real property; | ||
  (2) the ownership interests in the manufactured home  | ||
 and the real property to which the manufactured home is  | ||
 affixed must be identical, or, if the manufactured home is  | ||
 not located in a mobile home park as defined in Section 2.5  | ||
 of the Mobile Home Park Act, and if the owner of the  | ||
 manufactured home, if not the owner of the real property,  | ||
 is in possession of the real property pursuant to the terms  | ||
 of a lease in recordable form that has a term that  | ||
 continues for at least 20 years after the date of  | ||
 execution, then the consent of the lessor of the real  | ||
 property must be given;  | ||
  (3) the person (all, if more than one) having an  | ||
 ownership interest in such manufactured home shall execute  | ||
 and record with the recording officer of the county in  | ||
 which the real property is located an affidavit of  | ||
 affixation as provided in Section 5-15 of this Act and  | ||
 satisfy the other applicable requirements of this Act; and | ||
  (4) upon receipt of a certified copy of the recorded  | ||
 affidavit of affixation pursuant to Section 5-25 of this  | ||
 Act, any person designated therein for filing with the  | ||
 Secretary of State shall file the certified copy of  | ||
 affidavit of affixation with the Secretary of State; except  | ||
 that:  | ||
   (A) in a case described in subsection (a)(4)(A) of  | ||
 Section 5-15 of this Act, a certified copy of the  | ||
 affidavit of affixation and the original  | ||
 Manufacturer's Statement of Origin, each as recorded  | ||
 in the county in which the real property is located,  | ||
 must be filed with the Secretary of State pursuant to  | ||
 Section 3-116.1 of the Illinois Vehicle Code; and | ||
   (B) in a case described in subsection (a)(4)(B) of  | ||
 Section 5-15 of this Act, a certified copy of the  | ||
 recorded affidavit of affixation as recorded in the  | ||
 county in which the real property is located, and the  | ||
 original certificate of title, including, if  | ||
 applicable, a certificate of title issued in  | ||
 accordance with subsection (b) of Section 3-109 of the  | ||
 Illinois Vehicle Code, must be filed with the Secretary  | ||
 of State pursuant to Section 3-116.2 of the Illinois  | ||
 Vehicle Code.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-749, eff. 7-16-14; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 585. The Plat Act is amended by changing Section 1  | ||
as follows:
 | ||
 (765 ILCS 205/1) (from Ch. 109, par. 1)
 | ||
 Sec. 1. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subparagraph  | ||
(b) of this
Section whenever the owner of land subdivides it  | ||
into 2 or more parts, any
of which is less than 5 acres, he must  | ||
have it surveyed and a subdivision
plat thereof made by an  | ||
Illinois Registered Land Surveyor, which plat must
 | ||
particularly describe and set
forth all public streets, alleys,  | ||
ways for public service facilities, ways
for utility services  | ||
and community antenna television systems, parks,
playgrounds,  | ||
school grounds or other public grounds, and all the tracts,
 | ||
parcels, lots or blocks, and numbering all such lots, blocks or  | ||
parcels
by progressive numbers, giving their precise  | ||
dimensions. There shall be
submitted simultaneously with the  | ||
subdivision plat, a study or studies which
shall show  | ||
topographically and by profile the elevation of the land prior
 | ||
to the commencement of any change in elevations as a part of  | ||
any phase of
subdividing, and additionally, if it is  | ||
contemplated that such elevations,
or the flow of surface water  | ||
from such land, will be changed as a result
of any portion of  | ||
such subdivision development, then such study or studies
shall  | ||
also show such proposed changes in the elevations and the flow  | ||
of surface
water from such land. The topographical and profile  | ||
studies required hereunder
may be prepared as a subsidiary  | ||
study or studies separate from, but of the
same scale and size  | ||
as the subdivision plat, and shall be prepared in such
a manner  | ||
as will permit the topographical study or studies to be used as
 | ||
overlays to the subdivision plat. The plat must show all  | ||
angular and linear
data along the exterior boundaries of the  | ||
tract of land divided or subdivided,
the names of all public  | ||
streets and the width, course and extent of
all public streets,  | ||
alleys and ways for public service facilities. References
must  | ||
also be made upon the plat to known and permanent monuments  | ||
from which
future survey may be made and the surveyor must, at  | ||
the time of making his
survey, set in such manner that they  | ||
will not be moved by frost, good and
sufficient monuments  | ||
marking the external boundaries of the tract to be
divided or  | ||
subdivided and must designate upon the plat the points where
 | ||
they may be found. These monuments must be placed at all  | ||
corners, at each
end of all curves, at the point where a curve  | ||
changes its radius, at all
angle points in any line and at all  | ||
angle points along a meander line, the
points to be not less  | ||
than 20 feet back from the normal water elevation
of a lake or  | ||
from the bank of a stream, except that when such corners or
 | ||
points fall within a street, or proposed future street, the  | ||
monuments must
be placed in the right of way line of the  | ||
street. All internal boundaries,
corners and points must be  | ||
monumented in the field by like monuments as
defined above.  | ||
These monuments 2 of which must be of stone or reinforced
 | ||
concrete and must be set at the opposite extremities of the  | ||
property platted,
placed at all block corners, at each end of  | ||
all curves, at the points where
a curve changes its radius, and  | ||
at all angle points in any line. All lots
must be monumented in  | ||
the field with 2 or more monuments.
 | ||
 The monuments must be furnished by the person for whom the  | ||
survey is made
and must be such that they will not be moved by  | ||
frost. If any city, village
or town has adopted an official  | ||
plan, or part thereof, in the manner prescribed
by law, the  | ||
plat of land situated within the area affected thereby must
 | ||
conform to the official plan, or part thereof.
 | ||
 (b) Except as provided in subsection (c) of this Section,  | ||
the
provisions of this Act do not apply and no subdivision plat
 | ||
is required in any of the following instances:
 | ||
  1. the The division or subdivision of land into parcels  | ||
 or tracts of 5 acres
or more in size which does not involve  | ||
 any new streets or easements of access;
 | ||
  2. the The division of lots or blocks of less than 1  | ||
 acre in any recorded
subdivision which does not involve any  | ||
 new streets or easements of access;
 | ||
  3. the The sale or exchange of parcels of land between  | ||
 owners of adjoining
and contiguous land;
 | ||
  4. the The conveyance of parcels of land or interests  | ||
 therein for use as a
right of way for railroads or other  | ||
 public utility facilities and other
pipe lines which does  | ||
 not involve any new streets or easements of access;
 | ||
  5. the The conveyance of land owned by a railroad or  | ||
 other public utility
which does not involve any new streets  | ||
 or easements of access;
 | ||
  6. the The conveyance of land for highway or other  | ||
 public purposes or grants
or conveyances relating to the  | ||
 dedication of land for public use or instruments
relating  | ||
 to the vacation of land impressed with a public use;
 | ||
  7. conveyances Conveyances made to correct  | ||
 descriptions in prior conveyances; .
 | ||
  8. the The sale or exchange of parcels or tracts of  | ||
 land following the division
into no more than 2 parts of a  | ||
 particular parcel or tract of land existing
on July 17,  | ||
 1959 and not involving any new streets or easements of  | ||
 access; .
 | ||
  9. the The sale of a single lot of less than 5 acres  | ||
 from a larger tract when
a survey is made by an Illinois  | ||
 Registered Land Surveyor; provided, that
this exemption  | ||
 shall not apply to the sale of
any subsequent lots from the  | ||
 same larger tract of land, as determined by
the dimensions  | ||
 and configuration of the larger tract on October 1, 1973,
 | ||
 and provided also that this exemption does not invalidate  | ||
 any local
requirements applicable to the subdivision of  | ||
 land; . | ||
  10. the The preparation of a plat for wind energy  | ||
 devices under Section 10-620 of the Property Tax Code.
 | ||
 Nothing contained within the provisions of this Act shall  | ||
prevent or
preclude individual counties from establishing  | ||
standards, ordinances, or
specifications which reduce the  | ||
acreage minimum to less than 5 acres, but
not less than 2  | ||
acres, or supplementing the requirements contained herein
when  | ||
a survey is made by an Illinois Registered Land Surveyor and a  | ||
plat
thereof is recorded, under powers granted to them.
 | ||
 (c) However, if a plat is made by an Illinois Registered  | ||
Surveyor of
any parcel or tract of land otherwise exempt from  | ||
the plat provisions of
this Act pursuant to subsection (b) of  | ||
this Section, such plat shall be
recorded. It shall not be the  | ||
responsibility of a recorder of deeds to
determine whether the  | ||
plat has been made or recorded under this subsection (c)
prior  | ||
to accepting a deed for recording.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 95-644, eff. 10-12-07; revised 12-10-14.)
 | ||
 Section 590. The Condominium Property Act is amended by  | ||
setting forth and renumbering multiple versions of Section 18.8  | ||
as follows:
 | ||
 (765 ILCS 605/18.8) | ||
 Sec. 18.8. Use of technology. | ||
 (a) Any notice required to be sent or received or  | ||
signature, vote, consent, or approval required to be obtained  | ||
under any condominium instrument or any provision of this Act  | ||
may be accomplished using the technology generally available at  | ||
that time. This Section shall govern the use of technology in  | ||
implementing the provisions of any condominium instrument or  | ||
any provision of this Act concerning notices, signatures,  | ||
votes, consents, or approvals. | ||
 (b) The association, unit owners, and other persons  | ||
entitled to occupy a unit may perform any obligation or  | ||
exercise any right under any condominium instrument or any  | ||
provision of this Act by use of any technological means that  | ||
provides sufficient security, reliability, identification, and  | ||
verifiability. | ||
 (c) A verifiable electronic signature satisfies any  | ||
requirement for a signature under any condominium instrument or  | ||
any provision of this Act. | ||
 (d) Voting on, consent to, and approval of any matter under  | ||
any condominium instrument or any provision of this Act may be  | ||
accomplished by electronic transmission or other equivalent  | ||
technological means, provided that a record is created as  | ||
evidence thereof and maintained as long as the record would be  | ||
required to be maintained in nonelectronic form. | ||
 (e) Subject to other provisions of law, no action required  | ||
or permitted by any condominium instrument or any provision of  | ||
this Act need be acknowledged before a notary public if the  | ||
identity and signature of the person can otherwise be  | ||
authenticated to the satisfaction of the board of directors or  | ||
board of managers. | ||
 (f) If any person does not provide written authorization to  | ||
conduct business using electronic transmission or other  | ||
equivalent technological means, the association shall, at its  | ||
expense, conduct business with the person without the use of  | ||
electronic transmission or other equivalent technological  | ||
means. | ||
 (g) This Section does not apply to any notices required  | ||
under Article IX of the Code of Civil Procedure related to: (i)  | ||
an action by the association to collect a common expense; or  | ||
(ii) foreclosure proceedings in enforcement of any lien rights  | ||
under this Act.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1042, eff. 1-1-15.)
 | ||
 (765 ILCS 605/18.9) | ||
 Sec. 18.9 18.8. Common elements; rights of board. | ||
 (a) Any provision in a condominium instrument is void as  | ||
against public policy and ineffective if it limits or restricts  | ||
the rights of the board of managers by: | ||
  (1) requiring the prior consent of the unit owners in  | ||
 order for the board of managers to take any action,  | ||
 including the institution of any action in court or a  | ||
 demand for a trial by jury; or | ||
  (2) notwithstanding Section 32 of this Act, requiring  | ||
 the board of managers to arbitrate or mediate a dispute  | ||
 with any one or more of all of the declarants under the  | ||
 condominium instruments or the developer or any person not  | ||
 then a unit owner prior to the institution of any action by  | ||
 the board of managers or a demand for a trial by jury. | ||
 (b) A provision in a declaration which would otherwise be  | ||
void and ineffective under this Section may be enforced if it  | ||
is approved by a vote of not less than 75% of the unit owners at  | ||
any time after the election of the first unit owner board of  | ||
managers.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1068, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-20-14.)
 | ||
 Section 595. The Mobile Home Landlord and Tenant Rights Act  | ||
is amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
 | ||
 (765 ILCS 745/3) (from Ch. 80, par. 203)
 | ||
 Sec. 3. Definitions. Unless otherwise expressly defined,  | ||
all terms in
this Act shall be construed to have their  | ||
ordinarily accepted meanings or
such meaning as the context  | ||
therein requires. 
 | ||
 (a) "Person" means any legal entity, including but not  | ||
limited to, an
individual, firm, partnership, association,  | ||
trust, joint stock company,
corporation or successor of any of  | ||
the foregoing.
 | ||
 (b) "Manufactured home" means a factory-assembled,  | ||
completely integrated structure designed for permanent  | ||
habitation, with a permanent chassis, and so constructed as to  | ||
permit its transport, on wheels temporarily or permanently  | ||
attached to its frame, and is a movable or portable unit that  | ||
is (i) 8 body feet or more in width, (ii) 40 body feet or more  | ||
in length, and (iii) 320 or more square feet, constructed to be  | ||
towed on its own chassis (comprised of frame and wheels) from  | ||
the place of its construction to the location, or subsequent  | ||
locations, at which it is connected to utilities for year-round  | ||
occupancy for use as a permanent habitation, and designed and  | ||
situated so as to permit its occupancy as a dwelling place for  | ||
one or more persons, and specifically includes a "manufactured  | ||
home" as defined in subdivision (53) of Section 9-102 of the  | ||
Uniform Commercial Code. The term shall include units  | ||
containing parts that may be folded, collapsed, or telescoped  | ||
when being towed and that may be expected to provide additional  | ||
cubic capacity, and that are designed to be joined into one  | ||
integral unit capable of being separated again into the  | ||
components for repeated towing. The term excludes campers and  | ||
recreational vehicles. The words "mobile home" and  | ||
"manufactured home" are synonymous for the purposes of this  | ||
Act. 
 | ||
 (c) "Mobile Home Park" or "Park" means a tract of land or 2  | ||
contiguous tracts of land that contain sites with the necessary  | ||
utilities for 5 or more mobile homes or manufactured homes. A  | ||
mobile home park may be operated either free of charge or for  | ||
revenue purposes.
 | ||
 (d) "Park Owner" means the owner of a mobile home park and  | ||
any person
authorized to exercise any aspect of the management  | ||
of the premises, including
any person who directly or  | ||
indirectly receives rents and has no obligation
to deliver the  | ||
whole of such receipts to another person.
 | ||
 (e) "Tenant" means any person who occupies a mobile home  | ||
rental unit for
dwelling purposes or a lot on which he parks a  | ||
mobile home for an agreed
upon consideration.
 | ||
 (f) "Rent" means any money or other consideration given for  | ||
the right
of use, possession and occupancy of property, be it a  | ||
lot, a mobile home, or both.
 | ||
 (g) "Master antenna television service" means any and all  | ||
services
provided by or through the facilities of any closed  | ||
circuit coaxial cable
communication system, or any microwave or  | ||
similar transmission services
other than a community antenna  | ||
television system as defined in Section
11-42-11 of the  | ||
Illinois Municipal Code.
 | ||
 (h) "Authority having jurisdiction" means the Illinois  | ||
Department of Public Health or a unit of local government  | ||
specifically authorized by statute, rule, or ordinance to  | ||
enforce this Act or any other statute, rule, or ordinance  | ||
applicable to the mobile home park or manufactured home  | ||
community. | ||
 (i) "Managing agent" means any person or entity responsible  | ||
for the operation, management, or maintenance of a mobile home  | ||
park or manufactured home community.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-749, eff. 7-16-14; 98-1062, eff. 1-1-15;  | ||
revised 10-2-14.)
 | ||
 Section 600. The Mechanics Lien Act is amended by changing  | ||
Section 35 as follows:
 | ||
 (770 ILCS 60/35) (from Ch. 82, par. 35)
 | ||
 Sec. 35. Satisfaction or release; recording; neglect;  | ||
penalty.
 | ||
 (a) Whenever a claim for lien has been filed with the  | ||
recorder of deeds, either by the contractor or sub-contractor,
 | ||
and is paid with cost of filing same, or where there
is a  | ||
failure to institute suit to enforce the same after demand as  | ||
provided
in the preceding Section within the time by this Act  | ||
limited the person
filing the same or some one by him duly  | ||
authorized in writing so to do,
shall acknowledge satisfaction  | ||
or release thereof, in writing, on written
demand of the owner,  | ||
lienor, or any person interested in the real estate, or his or  | ||
her agent or attorney, and on neglect to do so for 10 days  | ||
after such written
demand he or she shall be
liable to the  | ||
owner for the sum of $2,500, which may be recovered in a civil  | ||
action together with the costs and the reasonable attorney's  | ||
fees of the owner, lienor, or other person interested in the  | ||
real estate, or his or her agent or attorney incurred in  | ||
bringing such action.
 | ||
 (b) Such a satisfaction or release of lien may be filed  | ||
with the recorder
of deeds in whose office the claim for lien  | ||
had been filed
and when so filed shall forever thereafter  | ||
discharge and release the claim
for lien and shall bar all  | ||
actions brought or to be brought thereupon.
 | ||
 (c) The release of lien shall have the following
imprinted  | ||
thereon in bold letters at least 1/4 inch in height: "FOR THE
 | ||
PROTECTION OF THE OWNER, THIS RELEASE
SHOULD BE FILED WITH THE  | ||
RECORDER
IN WHOSE OFFICE THE CLAIM FOR LIEN WAS FILED." The  | ||
Recorder
in whose office the claim for lien had been filed,
 | ||
upon receipt of a release and the payment of the recording
fee,  | ||
shall record the release.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 94-627, eff. 1-1-06; revised 12-11-14.)
 | ||
 Section 605. The Illinois Human Rights Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 2-101 as follows:
 | ||
 (775 ILCS 5/2-101) (from Ch. 68, par. 2-101)
 | ||
 Sec. 2-101. Definitions. The following definitions are  | ||
applicable
strictly in the context of this Article.
 | ||
 (A) Employee.
 | ||
  (1) "Employee" includes:
 | ||
   (a) Any individual performing services for  | ||
 remuneration within this
State for an employer;
 | ||
   (b) An apprentice;
 | ||
   (c) An applicant for any apprenticeship.
 | ||
  For purposes of subsection (D) of Section 2-102 of this  | ||
 Act, "employee" also includes an unpaid intern. An unpaid  | ||
 intern is a person who performs work for an employer under  | ||
 the following circumstances: | ||
   (i) the employer is not committed to hiring the  | ||
 person performing the work at the conclusion of the  | ||
 intern's tenure; | ||
   (ii) the employer and the person performing the  | ||
 work agree that the person is not entitled to wages for  | ||
 the work performed; and | ||
   (iii) the work performed: | ||
    (I) supplements training given in an  | ||
 educational environment that may enhance the  | ||
 employability of the intern; | ||
    (II) provides experience for the benefit of  | ||
 the person performing the work; | ||
    (III) does not displace regular employees;  | ||
    (IV) is performed under the close supervision  | ||
 of existing staff; and  | ||
    (V) provides no immediate advantage to the  | ||
 employer providing the training and may
 | ||
 occasionally impede the operations of the  | ||
 employer.  | ||
  (2) "Employee" does not include:
 | ||
   (a) Domestic servants in private homes;
 | ||
   (b) Individuals employed by persons who are not  | ||
 "employers" as
defined by this Act;
 | ||
   (c) Elected public officials or the members of  | ||
 their immediate
personal staffs;
 | ||
   (d) Principal administrative officers of the State  | ||
 or of any
political subdivision, municipal corporation  | ||
 or other governmental unit
or agency;
 | ||
   (e) A person in a vocational rehabilitation  | ||
 facility certified under
federal law who has been  | ||
 designated an evaluee, trainee, or work
activity  | ||
 client.
 | ||
 (B) Employer.
 | ||
  (1) "Employer" includes:
 | ||
   (a) Any person employing 15 or more employees  | ||
 within Illinois during
20 or more calendar weeks within  | ||
 the calendar year of or preceding the alleged
 | ||
 violation;
 | ||
   (b) Any person employing one or more employees when  | ||
 a complainant
alleges civil rights violation due to  | ||
 unlawful discrimination based
upon his or her physical  | ||
 or mental disability unrelated to ability, pregnancy,  | ||
 or
sexual harassment;
 | ||
   (c) The State and any political subdivision,  | ||
 municipal corporation
or other governmental unit or  | ||
 agency, without regard to the number of
employees;
 | ||
   (d) Any party to a public contract without regard  | ||
 to the number of
employees;
 | ||
   (e) A joint apprenticeship or training committee  | ||
 without regard to the
number of employees.
 | ||
  (2) "Employer" does not include any religious  | ||
 corporation,
association, educational institution,  | ||
 society, or non-profit nursing
institution conducted by  | ||
 and for those who rely upon treatment by prayer
through  | ||
 spiritual means in accordance with the tenets of a  | ||
 recognized
church or religious denomination with respect  | ||
 to the employment of
individuals of a particular religion  | ||
 to perform work connected with the
carrying on by such  | ||
 corporation, association, educational institution,
society  | ||
 or non-profit nursing institution of its activities.
 | ||
 (C) Employment Agency. "Employment Agency" includes both  | ||
public and
private employment agencies and any person, labor  | ||
organization, or labor
union having a hiring hall or hiring  | ||
office regularly undertaking, with
or without compensation, to  | ||
procure opportunities to work, or to
procure, recruit, refer or  | ||
place employees.
 | ||
 (D) Labor Organization. "Labor Organization" includes any
 | ||
organization, labor union, craft union, or any voluntary  | ||
unincorporated
association designed to further the cause of the  | ||
rights of union labor
which is constituted for the purpose, in  | ||
whole or in part, of collective
bargaining or of dealing with  | ||
employers concerning grievances, terms or
conditions of  | ||
employment, or apprenticeships or applications for
 | ||
apprenticeships, or of other mutual aid or protection in  | ||
connection with
employment, including apprenticeships or  | ||
applications for apprenticeships.
 | ||
 (E) Sexual Harassment. "Sexual harassment" means any  | ||
unwelcome sexual
advances or requests for sexual favors or any  | ||
conduct of a sexual nature
when (1) submission to such conduct  | ||
is made either explicitly or implicitly
a term or condition of  | ||
an individual's employment, (2) submission to or
rejection of  | ||
such conduct by an individual is used as the basis for
 | ||
employment decisions affecting such individual, or (3) such  | ||
conduct has the
purpose or effect of substantially interfering  | ||
with an individual's work
performance or creating an  | ||
intimidating, hostile or offensive working
environment.
 | ||
 (F) Religion. "Religion" with respect to employers  | ||
includes all
aspects of religious observance and practice, as  | ||
well as belief, unless an
employer demonstrates that he is  | ||
unable to reasonably accommodate an
employee's or prospective  | ||
employee's religious observance or practice
without undue  | ||
hardship on the conduct of the employer's business.
 | ||
 (G) Public Employer. "Public employer" means the State, an  | ||
agency or
department thereof, unit of local government, school  | ||
district,
instrumentality or political subdivision.
 | ||
 (H) Public Employee. "Public employee" means an employee of  | ||
the State,
agency or department thereof, unit of local  | ||
government, school district,
instrumentality or political  | ||
subdivision. "Public employee" does not include
public  | ||
officers or employees of the General Assembly or agencies  | ||
thereof.
 | ||
 (I) Public Officer. "Public officer" means a person who is  | ||
elected to
office pursuant to the Constitution or a statute or  | ||
ordinance, or who is
appointed to an office which is  | ||
established, and the qualifications and
duties of which are  | ||
prescribed, by the Constitution or a statute or
ordinance, to  | ||
discharge a public duty for the State, agency or department
 | ||
thereof, unit of local government, school district,  | ||
instrumentality or
political subdivision.
 | ||
 (J) Eligible Bidder. "Eligible bidder" means a person who,  | ||
prior to a
bid opening, has filed with the Department a  | ||
properly completed, sworn and
currently valid employer report  | ||
form, pursuant to the Department's regulations.
The provisions  | ||
of this Article relating to eligible bidders apply only
to bids  | ||
on contracts with the State and its departments, agencies,  | ||
boards,
and commissions, and the provisions do not apply to  | ||
bids on contracts with
units of local government or school  | ||
districts.
 | ||
 (K) Citizenship Status. "Citizenship status" means the  | ||
status of being:
 | ||
  (1) a born U.S. citizen;
 | ||
  (2) a naturalized U.S. citizen;
 | ||
  (3) a U.S. national; or
 | ||
  (4) a person born outside the United States and not a  | ||
 U.S. citizen who
is not an unauthorized alien and who is  | ||
 protected from discrimination under
the provisions of  | ||
 Section 1324b of Title 8 of the United States Code, as
now  | ||
 or hereafter amended.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-877, eff. 8-2-12; 98-1037, eff. 1-1-15;  | ||
98-1050, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-3-14.)
 | ||
 Section 610. The General Not For Profit Corporation Act of  | ||
1986 is amended by changing Section 112.10 as follows:
 | ||
 (805 ILCS 105/112.10) (from Ch. 32, par. 112.10)
 | ||
 Sec. 112.10. Voluntary dissolution by written consent of
 | ||
members entitled to vote. Except for the dissolution of a  | ||
not-for-profit corporation organized for the purpose of  | ||
ownership or administration of residential property on a  | ||
cooperative basis, when . When a corporation has members
 | ||
entitled to vote on dissolution, the dissolution of a
 | ||
corporation may be authorized pursuant to Section 107.10 of
 | ||
this Act. Dissolution pursuant to this the Section does not
 | ||
require any vote of the directors of the corporation.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-302, eff. 1-1-14; revised 12-11-14.)
 | ||
 Section 615. The Limited Liability Company Act is amended  | ||
by changing Section 35-40 as follows:
 | ||
 (805 ILCS 180/35-40)
 | ||
 Sec. 35-40. Reinstatement following administrative
 | ||
dissolution. | ||
 (a) A limited liability company administratively
dissolved  | ||
under Section 35-25 may be reinstated by the
Secretary of State  | ||
following the date of
issuance of the notice of dissolution  | ||
upon:
 | ||
  (1) The filing of an application for
reinstatement.
 | ||
  (2) The filing with the Secretary of State by the
 | ||
 limited liability company of all reports then due and
 | ||
 theretofore becoming due.
 | ||
  (3) The payment to the Secretary of State by the
 | ||
 limited liability company of all fees and penalties then
 | ||
 due and theretofore becoming due.
 | ||
 (b) The application for reinstatement shall be executed
and  | ||
filed in duplicate in accordance with Section 5-45 of
this Act  | ||
and shall set forth all of the following:
 | ||
  (1) The name of the limited liability company at
the  | ||
 time of the issuance of the notice of dissolution.
 | ||
  (2) If the name is not available for use as
determined  | ||
 by the Secretary of State at the time of
filing the  | ||
 application for reinstatement, the name of
the limited  | ||
 liability company as changed, provided
that any change of  | ||
 name is properly effected under
Section 1-10 and Section  | ||
 5-25 5.25 of this Act.
 | ||
  (3) The date of issuance of the notice of
dissolution.
 | ||
  (4) The address, including street and number
or
rural  | ||
 route number of the registered office of the
limited  | ||
 liability company upon reinstatement thereof
and the name  | ||
 of its registered agent at that address
upon the  | ||
 reinstatement of the limited liability
company,
provided  | ||
 that any change from either the
registered office or the  | ||
 registered agent at the
time of
dissolution is properly  | ||
 reported under Section
1-35 of this Act.
 | ||
 (c) When a dissolved limited liability company has
complied  | ||
with the provisions of the Section, the Secretary of
State  | ||
shall file the application for
reinstatement.
 | ||
 (d) Upon the filing of the application for
reinstatement,  | ||
the limited liability company existence shall
be deemed to have  | ||
continued without interruption from the
date of the issuance of  | ||
the notice of dissolution, and the
limited liability company  | ||
shall stand revived with the
powers, duties, and obligations as  | ||
if it had not been
dissolved; and all acts and proceedings of  | ||
its members,
managers, officers, employees, and agents, acting  | ||
or purporting to act in that capacity, and which
would have  | ||
been legal and valid but for the dissolution,
shall stand  | ||
ratified and confirmed.
 | ||
 (e) Without limiting the generality of subsection (d), upon  | ||
the filing of the application for reinstatement, no member,  | ||
manager, or officer shall be personally liable for the debts  | ||
and liabilities of the limited liability company incurred  | ||
during the period of administrative dissolution by reason of  | ||
the fact that the limited liability company was  | ||
administratively dissolved at the time the debts or liabilities  | ||
were incurred.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-776, eff. 1-1-15; revised 12-11-14.)
 | ||
 Section 620. The Illinois Securities Law of 1953 is amended  | ||
by changing Section 11a as follows:
 | ||
 (815 ILCS 5/11a) (from Ch. 121 1/2, par. 137.11a)
 | ||
 Sec. 11a. Fees. 
 | ||
 (1) The Secretary of State shall by rule or
regulation  | ||
impose and shall collect reasonable fees necessary for
the  | ||
administration of this Act including, but not limited to, fees  | ||
for
the following purposes:
 | ||
  (a) filing an application pursuant to paragraph (2) of  | ||
 subsection F of
Section 4 of this Act;
 | ||
  (b) examining an application and report pursuant to  | ||
 paragraph (2) of
subsection F of Section 4 of this Act;
 | ||
  (c) filing a report pursuant to subsection G of Section  | ||
 4 of this Act,
determined
in accordance with paragraph (4)  | ||
 of subsection G of Section 4 of this Act;
 | ||
  (d) examining an offering sheet pursuant to subsection  | ||
 P of Section 4 of
this Act;
 | ||
  (e) filing a report pursuant to subsection P of Section  | ||
 4, determined
in accordance with subsection P of Section 4  | ||
 of this Act;
 | ||
  (f) examining an application to register securities  | ||
 under
subsection B of Section 5 of this Act;
 | ||
  (g) examining an amended or supplemental prospectus  | ||
 filed
pursuant to the undertaking required by  | ||
 sub-paragraph (i) of paragraph (2)
of subsection B of  | ||
 Section 5 of this Act;
 | ||
  (h) registering or renewing registration of securities  | ||
 under Section 5,
determined in accordance with subsection C  | ||
 of Section 5 of this Act;
 | ||
  (i) registering securities in excess of the amount  | ||
 initially registered,
determined in accordance with  | ||
 paragraph (2) of subsection C of Section 5 of
this Act;
 | ||
  (j) failure to file timely an application for renewal  | ||
 under subsection E
of Section 5 of this Act;
 | ||
  (k) failure to file timely any document or information  | ||
 required
under Section 5 of this Act;
 | ||
  (l) examining an application to register face amount
 | ||
 certificate contracts under subsection B of Section 6 of  | ||
 this Act;
 | ||
  (m) examining an amended or supplemental prospectus  | ||
 filed
pursuant to the undertaking required by  | ||
 sub-paragraph (f) of paragraph (2)
of subsection B of  | ||
 Section 6 of this Act;
 | ||
  (n) registering or renewing registration
of face  | ||
 amount certificate contracts under Section 6 of this Act;
 | ||
  (o) amending a registration of face amount certificate
 | ||
 contracts pursuant to subsection E of Section 6 of this Act  | ||
 to add any
additional
series, type or class of contract;
 | ||
  (p) failure to file timely an application for renewal  | ||
 under subsection
F of Section 6 of this Act;
 | ||
  (q) adding to or withdrawing from deposits with respect  | ||
 to
face amount certificate contracts pursuant to  | ||
 subsection H of Section 6, a
transaction charge payable at  | ||
 the times and in the manner specified in
subsection H of  | ||
 Section 6 (which transaction charge shall be in addition to
 | ||
 the annual fee called for by subsection H of Section 6 of  | ||
 this Act);
 | ||
  (r) failure to file timely any document or information  | ||
 required
under Section 6 of this Act;
 | ||
  (s) examining an application to register investment  | ||
 fund
shares under subsection B of Section 7 of this Act;
 | ||
  (t) examining an amended or supplemental prospectus  | ||
 filed
pursuant to the undertaking required by  | ||
 sub-paragraph (f) of paragraph (2)
of subsection B of  | ||
 Section 7 of this Act;
 | ||
  (u) registering or renewing registration of investment  | ||
 fund shares
under Section 7 of this Act;
 | ||
  (v) amending a registration of investment fund shares
 | ||
 pursuant to subsection D of Section 7 of this Act to  | ||
 register an additional
class or
classes of investment fund  | ||
 shares;
 | ||
  (w) failure to file timely an application for renewal  | ||
 under paragraph
(l) of subsection G of Section 7 of this  | ||
 Act;
 | ||
  (x) examining an application for renewal of  | ||
 registration of
investment fund shares under paragraph (2)  | ||
 of subsection G of Section 7 of
this Act;
 | ||
  (y) failure to file timely any document or information  | ||
 required under
Section 7 of this Act;
 | ||
  (z) filing an application for registration or  | ||
 re-registration of a
dealer or limited Canadian dealer  | ||
 under Section 8 of this Act for each
office in this State;
 | ||
  (aa) in connection with an application for the  | ||
 registration or
re-registration of a salesperson under  | ||
 Section 8 of or this Act, for the
following purposes:
 | ||
   (i) filing an application;
 | ||
   (ii) a Securities Audit and Enforcement Fund fee;  | ||
 and
 | ||
   (iii) a notification filing of federal covered  | ||
 investment
advisers;
 | ||
  (bb) in connection with an application for the  | ||
 registration or
re-registration of an investment adviser  | ||
 under Section 8 of this Act;
 | ||
  (cc) failure to file timely any document or information  | ||
 required
under Section 8 of this Act;
 | ||
  (dd) filing a consent to service of process under  | ||
 Section 10 of this
Act;
 | ||
  (ee) issuing a certificate pursuant to subsection B of  | ||
 Section 15 of
this Act;
 | ||
  (ff) issuing a certified copy pursuant to subsection C  | ||
 of Section 15
of
this Act;
 | ||
  (gg) issuing a non-binding statement pursuant to  | ||
 Section 15a of this
Act;
 | ||
  (hh) filings by Notification under Section 2a;
 | ||
  (ii) notification filing of federal Regulation D,  | ||
 Section 506 offering
under the
Federal 1933 Act;
 | ||
  (jj) notification filing of securities and closed-end  | ||
 investment company
securities;
 | ||
  (kk) notification filing of face amount certificate  | ||
 contracts;
 | ||
  (ll) notification filing of open-end investment  | ||
 company securities;
 | ||
  (mm) filing a report pursuant to subsection D of  | ||
 Section 4 of this Act;
 | ||
  (nn) in connection with the filing of an application  | ||
 for registration or
re-registration of an investment  | ||
 adviser representative under subsection D of
Section 8 of  | ||
 this Act.
 | ||
 (2) The Secretary of State may, by rule or regulation,  | ||
raise or lower
any fee imposed by, and which he or she is  | ||
authorized by law to collect
under, this Act.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 90-70, eff. 7-8-97; 91-357, eff. 7-29-99; revised  | ||
12-11-14.)
 | ||
 Section 625. The Ticket Sale and Resale Act is amended by  | ||
changing Sections 1 and 2 as follows:
 | ||
 (815 ILCS 414/1) (was 720 ILCS 375/1)
 | ||
 Sec. 1. Sale of tickets other than at box office  | ||
prohibited; exceptions.
 | ||
 (a) It is unlawful for any person, firm or corporation,  | ||
owner, lessee,
manager, trustee, or any of their employees or  | ||
agents, owning, conducting,
managing or operating any theater,  | ||
circus, baseball park, or place of public
entertainment or  | ||
amusement where tickets of admission are sold for any such
 | ||
places of amusement or public entertainment to sell or permit  | ||
the sale,
barter or exchange of such admission tickets at any  | ||
other place than in the
box office or on the premises of such  | ||
theater, circus, baseball park, or place
of public  | ||
entertainment or amusement, but nothing herein prevents such
 | ||
theater, circus, baseball park, or place of public  | ||
entertainment or amusement
from placing any of its admission  | ||
tickets for sale at any other place at
the same price such  | ||
admission tickets are sold by such theater, circus,
baseball  | ||
park, or other place of public entertainment or amusement at  | ||
its
box office or on the premises of such places, at the same  | ||
advertised price
or printed rate thereof. | ||
 (b) Any term or condition of the original sale of a ticket  | ||
to any theater, circus, baseball park, or place of public  | ||
entertainment or amusement where tickets of admission are sold  | ||
that purports to limit the terms or conditions of resale of the  | ||
ticket (including but not limited to the resale price of the  | ||
ticket) is unenforceable, null, and void if the resale  | ||
transaction is carried out by any of the means set forth in  | ||
subsections (b), (c), (d), and (e) of Section 1.5 of this Act.  | ||
This subsection shall not apply to a term or condition of the  | ||
original sale of a ticket to any theater, circus, baseball  | ||
park, or place of public entertainment or amusement where  | ||
tickets of admission are sold that purports to limit the terms  | ||
or conditions of resale of a ticket specifically designated as  | ||
seating in a special section for a person with a physical  | ||
disability.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 94-20, eff. 6-14-05; revised 12-11-14.)
 | ||
 (815 ILCS 414/2) (was 720 ILCS 375/2)
 | ||
 Sec. 2. 
(a) Whoever violates any of the provisions of  | ||
Section 1.5 of
this Act shall be guilty of a Class A  | ||
misdemeanor and may be fined up
to $5,000.00 for each offense  | ||
and whoever violates any other provision of
this Act may be  | ||
enjoined and be required to make restitution to all injured
 | ||
consumers upon application for injunctive relief by the State's  | ||
Attorney or
Attorney General and shall also be guilty of a  | ||
Class A misdemeanor, and any
owner, lessee, manager or trustee  | ||
convicted under this Act shall, in
addition to the penalty  | ||
herein provided, forfeit the license of such
theatre, circus,  | ||
baseball park, or place of public entertainment or amusement
so  | ||
granted and the same shall be revoked by the authorities  | ||
granting the same.
 | ||
 (b) Tickets sold or offered for sale by a person, firm or  | ||
corporation
in violation of Section 1.5 of this Act may be  | ||
confiscated by a
court on
motion of the Attorney General, a  | ||
State's Attorney, the sponsor of the
event for which the  | ||
tickets are being sold, or the owner or operator of the
 | ||
facility at which the event is to be held, and may be donated  | ||
by order of
the court to an appropriate organization as defined  | ||
under Section 2 of the
Charitable Games Act.
 | ||
 (c) The Attorney General, a State's Attorney, the sponsor  | ||
of an event
for which tickets are being sold, or the owner or  | ||
operator of the facility
at which an event is to be held may  | ||
seek an injunction restraining any
person, firm or corporation  | ||
from selling or offering for sale tickets in
violation of the  | ||
provisions of this Act. In addition, on motion of the
Attorney  | ||
General, a State's Attorney, the sponsor of an event for which
 | ||
tickets are being sold, or the owner or operator of the  | ||
facility at which
an event is to be held, a court may  | ||
permanently enjoin a person, firm or
corporation found guilty  | ||
of violating Section 1.5 of this Act
from
engaging in the offer  | ||
or sale of tickets.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99; revised 12-11-14.)
 | ||
 Section 630. The Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business  | ||
Practices Act is amended by setting forth and renumbering  | ||
multiple versions of Section 2RRR as follows:
 | ||
 (815 ILCS 505/2RRR) | ||
 Sec. 2RRR. Household goods recycling bins. | ||
 (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a person or  | ||
entity owning, operating, or maintaining a household goods  | ||
recycling bin shall have a permanent, written, printed label  | ||
affixed to the bin that is
prominently displayed and includes  | ||
the following: (1) the name, address, and contact
information  | ||
of the person or entity owning, operating, or maintaining that  | ||
bin; and (2) whether the person or entity owning, operating, or  | ||
maintaining the bin is a not for
profit entity or a for profit  | ||
entity. A person or entity who violates this Section commits an  | ||
unlawful practice within the meaning of this Act. | ||
 (b) As used in this Section: | ||
  "Household goods recycling bin" or "bin" means a  | ||
 container or
receptacle held out to the public as a place  | ||
 for people to discard clothes, shoes,
books, and other  | ||
 recyclable items until they are taken away for resale,  | ||
 re-use, recycling, or
redistribution by the person or  | ||
 entity that owns, operates, or maintains the bin. | ||
  "Not for profit entity" means any entity that is  | ||
 officially recognized by the United States Internal  | ||
 Revenue Service as a tax-exempt entity described in Section  | ||
 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (or any  | ||
 successor provision of federal tax law).
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1116, eff. 1-1-15.)
 | ||
 (815 ILCS 505/2SSS) | ||
 Sec. 2SSS 2RRR. Unfair or deceptive patent infringement  | ||
demand letters. | ||
 (a) As used in this Section: | ||
 "Affiliated person" means a person affiliated with the  | ||
intended recipient of a written or electronic communication.  | ||
 "Intended recipient" means a person who purchases, rents,  | ||
leases, or otherwise obtains a product or service in the  | ||
commercial market that is not for resale in the commercial  | ||
market and that is, or later becomes, the subject of a patent  | ||
infringement allegation.  | ||
 (b) It is an unlawful practice under this Act for a person,  | ||
in connection with the assertion of a United States patent, to  | ||
send or cause any person to send any written, including  | ||
electronic, communication that states that the intended  | ||
recipient or any affiliated person is infringing or has  | ||
infringed a patent and bears liability or owes compensation to  | ||
another person, if: | ||
  (1) the communication falsely threatens that  | ||
 administrative or judicial relief will be sought if  | ||
 compensation is not paid or the infringement issue is not  | ||
 otherwise resolved; | ||
  (2) the communication falsely states that litigation  | ||
 has been filed against the intended recipient or any  | ||
 affiliated person;  | ||
  (3) the assertions contained in the communication lack  | ||
 a reasonable basis in fact or law because: | ||
   (A) the person asserting the patent is not a  | ||
 person, or does not represent a person, with the  | ||
 current right to license the patent to or enforce the  | ||
 patent against the intended recipient or any  | ||
 affiliated person; | ||
   (B) the communication seeks compensation for a  | ||
 patent that has been held to be invalid or  | ||
 unenforceable in a final, unappealable or unappealed,  | ||
 judicial or administrative decision; or | ||
   (C) the communication seeks compensation on  | ||
 account of activities undertaken after the patent has  | ||
 expired; or | ||
  (4) the content of the communication fails to include  | ||
 information necessary to inform an intended recipient or  | ||
 any affiliated person about the patent assertion by failing  | ||
 to include the following: | ||
   (A) the identity of the person asserting a right to  | ||
 license the patent to or enforce the patent against the  | ||
 intended recipient or any affiliated person; | ||
   (B) the patent issued by the United States Patent  | ||
 and Trademark Office alleged to have been infringed;  | ||
 and | ||
   (C) the factual allegations concerning the  | ||
 specific areas in which the intended recipient's or  | ||
 affiliated person's products, services, or technology  | ||
 infringed the patent or are covered by the claims in  | ||
 the patent. | ||
 (c) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to deem it  | ||
an unlawful practice for any
person who owns or has the right  | ||
to license or enforce a patent to: | ||
  (1) advise others of that ownership or right of license  | ||
 or enforcement; | ||
  (2) communicate to others that the patent is available  | ||
 for license or sale; | ||
  (3) notify another of the infringement of the patent;  | ||
 or | ||
  (4) seek compensation on account of past or present  | ||
 infringement or for a license
to the patent. 
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1119, eff. 1-1-15; revised 10-20-14.)
 | ||
 Section 635. The Day and Temporary Labor Services Act is  | ||
amended by changing Section 10 as follows:
 | ||
 (820 ILCS 175/10)
 | ||
 Sec. 10. Employment Notice. 
 | ||
 (a) Whenever a day and temporary labor service agency  | ||
agrees
to send one or more persons to work as day or temporary  | ||
laborers,
the day and temporary labor service
agency shall  | ||
provide to each day or temporary laborer, at the time of  | ||
dispatch, a
statement containing the following items on a form  | ||
approved by the Department: | ||
  (1) the name of the day or temporary laborer; | ||
  (2) the name and nature of the work to be
performed; | ||
  (3) the
wages
offered; | ||
  (4) the name and address of the destination of each day  | ||
 or temporary laborer; | ||
  (5) terms of transportation;
and | ||
  (6) whether a meal or equipment, or both, are provided,  | ||
 either by the
day and temporary labor service
agency or the  | ||
 third party client, and the cost of the meal and equipment,  | ||
 if any.
 | ||
 If a day or temporary laborer is assigned to the same  | ||
assignment for more than one day, the day and temporary labor  | ||
service agency is required to provide the employment notice  | ||
only on the first day of the assignment and on any day that any  | ||
of the terms listed on the employment notice are changed.
 | ||
 If the day or temporary laborer is not placed with a third  | ||
party client or otherwise contracted to work for that day, the  | ||
day and temporary labor service agency shall, upon request,  | ||
provide the day and temporary laborer with a confirmation that  | ||
the day or temporary laborer sought work, signed by an employee  | ||
of the day and temporary labor service agency, which shall  | ||
include the name of the agency, the name and address of the day  | ||
or temporary laborer, and the date and the time that the day or  | ||
temporary laborer receives the confirmation.
 | ||
 (b) No day and temporary labor service agency may send any
 | ||
day or temporary laborer to any place
where a strike, a  | ||
lockout, or other labor trouble exists.
 | ||
 (c) The
Department shall recommend to day and temporary  | ||
labor service
agencies that those agencies
employ personnel who  | ||
can effectively
communicate information required in  | ||
subsections (a) and (b) to day or
temporary laborers in
 | ||
Spanish, Polish, or any other language that is generally  | ||
understood in the locale of
the day and temporary labor service  | ||
agency.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 93-375, eff. 1-1-04; 94-511, eff. 1-1-06; revised  | ||
12-11-14.)
 | ||
 Section 640. The Victims' Economic Security and Safety Act  | ||
is amended by changing Section 30 as follows:
 | ||
 (820 ILCS 180/30)
 | ||
 Sec. 30. Victims' employment sustainability; prohibited
 | ||
discriminatory acts. | ||
 (a) An employer shall not fail to hire, refuse to hire,
 | ||
discharge, constructively discharge, or harass any individual,  | ||
otherwise discriminate against any
individual with respect to  | ||
the compensation, terms, conditions, or
privileges of  | ||
employment of the individual, or retaliate against an
 | ||
individual in any form or manner, and a public agency shall not  | ||
deny,
reduce, or terminate the benefits of, otherwise sanction,  | ||
or harass any
individual, otherwise discriminate against any  | ||
individual with respect
to the amount, terms, or conditions of  | ||
public assistance of the
individual, or retaliate against an  | ||
individual in any form or manner,
because:
 | ||
  (1) the individual involved:
 | ||
   (A) is or is perceived to be a victim of domestic  | ||
 or sexual
violence;
 | ||
   (B) attended, participated in, prepared for, or  | ||
 requested
leave to attend, participate in, or prepare  | ||
 for a criminal
or civil court proceeding relating to an  | ||
 incident of
domestic or sexual violence of which the  | ||
 individual or a
family or household member of the  | ||
 individual was a victim, or requested or took leave for  | ||
 any other reason provided under Section 20;
or
 | ||
   (C) requested an adjustment to a job structure,  | ||
 workplace
facility, or work requirement, including a  | ||
 transfer,
reassignment, or modified schedule, leave, a  | ||
 changed
telephone number or seating assignment,  | ||
 installation of a
lock, or implementation of a safety  | ||
 procedure in response
to actual or threatened domestic  | ||
 or sexual violence,
regardless of whether the request  | ||
 was granted; or | ||
   (D) is an employee whose employer is subject to  | ||
 Section 21 of the Workplace Violence Prevention Act; or 
 | ||
  (2) the workplace is disrupted or threatened by the  | ||
 action of a
person whom the individual states has committed  | ||
 or threatened to
commit domestic or sexual violence against  | ||
 the individual or the
individual's family or household  | ||
 member.
 | ||
 (b) In this Section:
 | ||
  (1) "Discriminate", used with respect to the terms,  | ||
 conditions,
or privileges of employment or with respect to  | ||
 the terms or
conditions of public assistance, includes not  | ||
 making a reasonable
accommodation to the known limitations  | ||
 resulting from
circumstances relating to being a victim of  | ||
 domestic or sexual
violence or a family or household member  | ||
 being a victim of
domestic or sexual violence of an  | ||
 otherwise qualified individual:
 | ||
   (A) who is:
 | ||
    (i) an applicant or employee of the employer  | ||
 (including a
public agency); or
 | ||
    (ii) an applicant for or recipient of public  | ||
 assistance
from a public agency; and
 | ||
   (B) who is:
 | ||
    (i) a victim of domestic or sexual violence; or
 | ||
    (ii) with a family or household member who is a  | ||
 victim of
domestic or sexual violence whose  | ||
 interests are not adverse to
the individual in  | ||
 subparagraph (A) as it relates to the domestic
or  | ||
 sexual violence;
 | ||
 unless the employer or public agency can demonstrate that  | ||
 the
accommodation would impose an undue hardship on the  | ||
 operation of
the employer or public agency.
 | ||
  A reasonable accommodation must be made in a timely  | ||
 fashion. Any exigent circumstances or danger facing the  | ||
 employee or his or her family or household member shall be  | ||
 considered in determining whether the accommodation is  | ||
 reasonable.  | ||
  (2) "Qualified individual" means:
 | ||
   (A) in the case of an applicant or employee  | ||
 described in
paragraph (1)(A)(i), an individual who,  | ||
 but for being a
victim of domestic or sexual violence  | ||
 or with a family or
household member who is a victim of  | ||
 domestic or sexual
violence, can perform the essential  | ||
 functions of the
employment position that such  | ||
 individual holds or desires;
or
 | ||
   (B) in the case of an applicant or recipient  | ||
 described in
paragraph (1)(A)(ii), an individual who,  | ||
 but for being a
victim of domestic or sexual violence  | ||
 or with a family or
household member who is a victim of  | ||
 domestic or sexual
violence, can satisfy the essential  | ||
 requirements of the
program providing the public  | ||
 assistance that the individual
receives or desires.
 | ||
  (3) "Reasonable accommodation" may include an  | ||
 adjustment to a job
structure, workplace facility, or work  | ||
 requirement, including a
transfer, reassignment, or  | ||
 modified schedule, leave, a changed
telephone number or  | ||
 seating assignment, installation of a lock,
or  | ||
 implementation of a safety procedure, or assistance in  | ||
 documenting domestic or sexual violence that occurs at the  | ||
 workplace or in work-related settings, in response to  | ||
 actual or
threatened domestic or sexual violence.
 | ||
  (4) Undue hardship.
 | ||
   (A) In general. "Undue hardship" means an action  | ||
 requiring
significant difficulty or expense, when  | ||
 considered in light
of the factors set forth in  | ||
 subparagraph (B).
 | ||
   (B) Factors to be considered. In determining  | ||
 whether a
reasonable accommodation would impose an  | ||
 undue hardship on
the operation of an employer or  | ||
 public agency, factors to
be considered include:
 | ||
    (i) the nature and cost of the reasonable
 | ||
 accommodation needed under this Section;
 | ||
    (ii) the overall financial resources of the  | ||
 facility
involved in the provision of the  | ||
 reasonable
accommodation, the number of persons  | ||
 employed at such
facility, the effect on expenses  | ||
 and resources, or
the impact otherwise of such  | ||
 accommodation on the
operation of the facility;
 | ||
    (iii) the overall financial resources of the  | ||
 employer
or public agency, the overall size of the  | ||
 business of
an employer or public agency with  | ||
 respect to the
number of employees of the employer  | ||
 or public agency,
and the number, type, and  | ||
 location of the facilities
of an employer or public  | ||
 agency; and
 | ||
    (iv) the type of operation of the employer or  | ||
 public
agency, including the composition,  | ||
 structure, and
functions of the workforce of the  | ||
 employer or public
agency, the geographic  | ||
 separateness of the facility
from the employer or  | ||
 public agency, and the
administrative or fiscal  | ||
 relationship of the facility
to the employer or  | ||
 public agency.
 | ||
 (c) An employer subject to Section 21 of the Workplace  | ||
Violence Prevention Act shall not violate any provisions of the  | ||
Workplace Violence Prevention Act.  | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-766, eff. 7-16-14; revised 12-11-14.)
 | ||
 Section 645. The Workplace Violence Prevention Act is  | ||
amended by changing Section 5 as follows:
 | ||
 (820 ILCS 275/5)
 | ||
 Sec. 5. Purpose. This Act is intended to assist employers  | ||
in protecting their workforces its workforce, customers,  | ||
guests, and property by limiting access to workplace venues by  | ||
potentially violent individuals.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-430, eff. 1-1-14; revised 12-11-14.)
 | ||
 Section 650. The Workers' Compensation Act is amended by  | ||
changing Section 6 as follows:
 | ||
 (820 ILCS 305/6) (from Ch. 48, par. 138.6)
 | ||
 Sec. 6. (a) Every employer within the provisions of this  | ||
Act, shall,
under the rules and regulations prescribed by the  | ||
Commission, post
printed notices in their respective places of  | ||
employment in such number
and at such places as may be  | ||
determined by the Commission, containing
such information  | ||
relative to this Act as in the judgment of the
Commission may  | ||
be necessary to aid employees to safeguard their rights
under  | ||
this Act in event of injury.
 | ||
 In addition thereto, the employer shall post in a  | ||
conspicuous place
on the place of the employment a printed or  | ||
typewritten notice stating
whether he is insured or whether he  | ||
has qualified and is operating as a
self-insured employer. In  | ||
the event the employer is insured, the notice
shall state the  | ||
name and address of his insurance carrier, the number of
the  | ||
insurance policy, its effective date and the date of  | ||
termination. In
the event of the termination of the policy for  | ||
any reason prior to the
termination date stated, the posted  | ||
notice shall promptly be corrected
accordingly. In the event  | ||
the employer is operating as a self-insured
employer the notice  | ||
shall state the name and address of the company, if
any,  | ||
servicing the compensation payments of the employer, and the  | ||
name
and address of the person in charge of making compensation  | ||
payments.
 | ||
 (b) Every employer subject to this Act shall maintain  | ||
accurate
records of work-related deaths, injuries and illness  | ||
other than minor
injuries requiring only first aid treatment  | ||
and which do not involve
medical treatment, loss of  | ||
consciousness, restriction of work or motion,
or transfer to  | ||
another job and file with the Commission, in writing, a
report  | ||
of all accidental deaths, injuries and illnesses arising out of
 | ||
and in the course of the employment resulting in the loss of  | ||
more than
3 scheduled work days. In the case of death such  | ||
report shall be
made no later than 2 working days following the  | ||
accidental death. In
all other cases such report shall be made  | ||
between the 15th and 25th of
each month unless required to be  | ||
made sooner by rule of the Commission.
In case the injury  | ||
results in permanent disability, a further report
shall be made  | ||
as soon as it is determined that such permanent disability
has  | ||
resulted or will result from the injury. All reports shall  | ||
state
the date of the injury, including the time of day or  | ||
night, the nature
of the employer's business, the name,  | ||
address, age, sex, conjugal
condition of the injured person,  | ||
the specific occupation of the injured
person, the direct cause  | ||
of the injury and the nature of the accident,
the character of  | ||
the injury, the length of disability, and in case of
death the  | ||
length of disability before death, the wages of the injured
 | ||
person, whether compensation has been paid to the injured  | ||
person, or to
his or her legal representative or his heirs or  | ||
next of kin, the amount of
compensation paid, the amount paid  | ||
for physicians', surgeons' and
hospital bills, and by whom  | ||
paid, and the amount paid for funeral or
burial expenses if  | ||
known. The reports shall be made on forms and in the
manner as  | ||
prescribed by the Commission and shall contain such further
 | ||
information as the Commission shall deem necessary and require.  | ||
The
making of these reports releases the employer from making  | ||
such reports
to any other officer of the State and shall  | ||
satisfy the reporting
provisions as contained in the Safety  | ||
Inspection and Education Act, the Health and Safety Act, and  | ||
the Occupational Safety and Health Act. The reports filed with  | ||
the
Commission pursuant to this Section shall be made available  | ||
by the
Commission to the Director of Labor or his  | ||
representatives and to all
other departments of the State of  | ||
Illinois which shall require such
information for the proper  | ||
discharge of their official duties. Failure
to file with the  | ||
Commission any of the reports required in this Section
is a  | ||
petty offense.
 | ||
 Except as provided in this paragraph, all reports filed  | ||
hereunder shall
be confidential and any person
having access to  | ||
such records filed with the Illinois Workers' Compensation  | ||
Commission as
herein required, who shall release any  | ||
information therein contained
including the names or otherwise  | ||
identify any persons sustaining
injuries or disabilities, or  | ||
give access to such information to any
unauthorized person,  | ||
shall be subject to discipline or discharge, and in
addition  | ||
shall be guilty of a Class B misdemeanor. The Commission shall
 | ||
compile and distribute to interested persons aggregate  | ||
statistics, taken
from the reports filed hereunder. The  | ||
aggregate statistics shall not give
the names or otherwise  | ||
identify persons sustaining injuries or disabilities
or the  | ||
employer of any injured or disabled person.
 | ||
 (c) Notice of the accident shall be given to the employer  | ||
as soon as
practicable, but not later than 45 days after the  | ||
accident. Provided:
 | ||
  (1) In case of the legal disability of the employee
or  | ||
 any dependent of a
deceased employee who may be entitled to  | ||
 compensation under the
provisions of this Act, the  | ||
 limitations of time by this Act provided do
not begin to  | ||
 run against such person under legal disability
until a
 | ||
 guardian has been appointed.
 | ||
  (2) In cases of injuries sustained by exposure to  | ||
 radiological
materials or equipment, notice shall be given  | ||
 to the employer within 90
days subsequent to the time that  | ||
 the employee knows or suspects that he
has received an  | ||
 excessive dose of radiation.
 | ||
 No defect or inaccuracy of such notice shall be a bar to  | ||
the
maintenance of proceedings on arbitration or otherwise by  | ||
the employee
unless the employer proves that he is unduly  | ||
prejudiced in such
proceedings by such defect or inaccuracy.
 | ||
 Notice of the accident shall give the approximate date and  | ||
place of
the accident, if known, and may be given orally or in  | ||
writing.
 | ||
 (d) Every employer shall notify each injured employee who  | ||
has been
granted compensation under the provisions of Section 8  | ||
of this Act
of his rights to rehabilitation services and advise  | ||
him of the locations
of available public rehabilitation centers  | ||
and any other such services
of which the employer has  | ||
knowledge.
 | ||
 In any case, other than one where the injury was caused by  | ||
exposure
to radiological materials or equipment or asbestos  | ||
unless the application for
compensation is filed with the  | ||
Commission within 3 years after the date
of the accident, where  | ||
no compensation has been paid, or within 2 years
after the date  | ||
of the last payment of compensation, where any has been
paid,  | ||
whichever shall be later, the right to file such application  | ||
shall
be barred.
 | ||
 In any case of injury caused by exposure to radiological  | ||
materials or
equipment or asbestos, unless application for  | ||
compensation is filed with the
Commission within 25 years after  | ||
the last day that the employee was
employed in an environment  | ||
of hazardous radiological activity or asbestos,
the right to  | ||
file such application shall be barred.
 | ||
 If in any case except one where the injury was caused by  | ||
exposure to
radiological materials or equipment or asbestos,  | ||
the accidental injury
results in death application for  | ||
compensation for death may be filed with the
Commission within  | ||
3 years after the date of death where no compensation
has been  | ||
paid or within 2 years after the date of the last payment of
 | ||
compensation where any has been paid, whichever shall be later,  | ||
but not
thereafter.
 | ||
 If an accidental injury caused by exposure to radiological  | ||
material
or equipment or asbestos results in death within 25  | ||
years after the last
day that the employee was so exposed  | ||
application for compensation for death may
be filed with the  | ||
Commission within 3 years after the date of death,
where no  | ||
compensation has been paid, or within 2 years after the date of
 | ||
the last payment of compensation where any has been paid,  | ||
whichever
shall be later, but not thereafter.
 | ||
 (e) Any contract or agreement made by any employer or his  | ||
agent or
attorney with any employee or any other beneficiary of  | ||
any claim under
the provisions of this Act within 7 days after  | ||
the injury shall be
presumed to be fraudulent.
 | ||
 (f) Any condition or impairment of health of an employee  | ||
employed as a
firefighter, emergency medical technician (EMT),  | ||
emergency medical technician-intermediate (EMT-I), advanced  | ||
emergency medical technician (A-EMT), or paramedic which  | ||
results
directly or indirectly from any bloodborne pathogen,  | ||
lung or respiratory
disease
or condition, heart
or vascular  | ||
disease or condition, hypertension, tuberculosis, or cancer
 | ||
resulting in any disability (temporary, permanent, total, or  | ||
partial) to the
employee shall be rebuttably presumed to arise  | ||
out of and in the course of
the employee's firefighting, EMT,  | ||
or paramedic employment and, further, shall
be
rebuttably  | ||
presumed to be causally connected to the hazards or exposures  | ||
of
the employment. This presumption shall also apply to any  | ||
hernia or hearing
loss suffered by an employee employed as a  | ||
firefighter, EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT, or paramedic.
However, this  | ||
presumption shall not apply to any employee who has been  | ||
employed
as a firefighter, EMT, or paramedic for less than 5  | ||
years at the time he or she files an Application for Adjustment  | ||
of Claim concerning this condition or impairment with the  | ||
Illinois Workers' Compensation Commission. The rebuttable  | ||
presumption established under this subsection, however, does  | ||
not apply to an emergency medical technician (EMT), emergency  | ||
medical technician-intermediate (EMT-I), advanced emergency  | ||
medical technician (A-EMT), or paramedic employed by a private  | ||
employer if the employee spends the preponderance of his or her  | ||
work time for that employer engaged in medical transfers  | ||
between medical care facilities or non-emergency medical  | ||
transfers to or from medical care facilities. The changes made  | ||
to this subsection by Public Act 98-291 shall be narrowly  | ||
construed. The Finding and Decision of the Illinois Workers'  | ||
Compensation Commission under only the rebuttable presumption  | ||
provision of this subsection shall not be admissible or be  | ||
deemed res judicata in any disability claim under the Illinois  | ||
Pension Code arising out of the same medical condition;  | ||
however, this sentence makes no change to the law set forth in  | ||
Krohe v. City of Bloomington, 204 Ill.2d 392.
 | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-291, eff. 1-1-14; 98-874, eff. 1-1-15; 98-973,  | ||
eff. 8-15-14; revised 10-1-14.)
 | ||
 Section 995. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes  | ||||||||||||
changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text  | ||||||||||||
that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section  | ||||||||||||
represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does  | ||||||||||||
not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes  | ||||||||||||
made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other  | ||||||||||||
Public Act.
 | ||||||||||||
 Section 996. No revival or extension. This Act does not  | ||||||||||||
revive or extend any Section or Act otherwise repealed.
 | ||||||||||||
 Section 999. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon  | ||||||||||||
becoming law. 
 | ||||||||||||
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