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| Public Act 099-0030
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| SB1319 Enrolled | LRB099 06560 NHT 26633 b |  
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 AN ACT concerning education.
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 Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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 Section 5. The School Code is amended by changing Sections  | 
1A-10, 1C-4, 2-3.12, 2-3.25o, 2-3.39, 2-3.62, 2-3.64a-5, 3-1,  | 
3-2.5, 3-11, 3-15.6, 3-15.10, 3-15.17, 10-17a, 14-8.02,  | 
14-9.01, 14C-1, 14C-2, 14C-3, 14C-5, 14C-7, 14C-9, 14C-11,  | 
27A-5, 34-2.4, and 34-8.17 and by renumbering and changing  | 
Section 2-3.160 as follows:
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 (105 ILCS 5/1A-10)
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 Sec. 1A-10. Divisions of Board. The State Board of  | 
Education shall have, without limitation, the following ,  | 
before April 1, 2005, create divisions within the Board,  | 
including without limitation the following: | 
  (1) Educator Effectiveness Teaching and Learning  | 
 Services for All Children. | 
  (2) Improvement and Innovation School Support Services  | 
 for All Schools.
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  (3) Fiscal Support Services. | 
  (4) (Blank). | 
  (5) Internal Auditor. | 
  (6) Human Resources.
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  (7) Legal. | 
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  (8) Specialized Instruction, Nutrition, and Wellness. | 
  (9) Language and Early Childhood Development.  | 
The State Board of Education may, after consultation with the  | 
General Assembly, add any divisions or functions to the Board  | 
that it deems appropriate and consistent with Illinois law.
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(Source: P.A. 95-793, eff. 1-1-09.)
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 (105 ILCS 5/1C-4)
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 Sec. 1C-4. Reports. The State Superintendent of Education,  | 
in cooperation
with the school districts participating under  | 
this Article, shall annually
report to the leadership of the  | 
General Assembly on the progress made in
implementing this  | 
Article. By February 1, 1997, the State Board of Education
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shall submit to the Governor and General Assembly a  | 
comprehensive plan for
Illinois school districts, including  | 
the school district that has been
organized under Article 34  | 
and is under the jurisdiction of the Chicago Board
of  | 
Education, to establish and implement a block grant funding  | 
system for
educational programs that are currently funded  | 
through single-program grants.
Before submitting its plan to  | 
establish and implement a block grant funding
system to the  | 
Governor and General Assembly as required by this Section, the
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State Board of Education shall give appropriate notice of and  | 
hold statewide
public hearings on the subject of funding  | 
educational programs through block
grants. The
plan shall be
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designed to relieve school districts of the administrative  | 
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burdens that impede
efficiency and accompany single-program  | 
funding. A school district that receives an Early Childhood  | 
Education Block Grant shall report to the State Board of  | 
Education on its use of the block
grant in such form and detail  | 
as the State Board of Education
may specify. In addition, the  | 
report must include the following
description for the district,  | 
which must also be reported to
the General Assembly: block  | 
grant allocation and expenditures
by program; population and  | 
service levels by program; and
administrative expenditures by  | 
program. The State Board of Education shall ensure that the  | 
reporting requirements for a district organized under Article  | 
34 of this Code are the same as for all other school districts  | 
in this State.  | 
(Source: P.A. 97-238, eff. 8-2-11.)
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 (105 ILCS 5/2-3.12) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.12)
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 Sec. 2-3.12. School building code.  | 
 (a) To prepare for school boards with the
advice of the  | 
Department of Public Health, the Capital Development Board, and
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the State Fire Marshal a school building code that will  | 
conserve the health and
safety and general welfare of the  | 
pupils and school personnel and others who
use public school  | 
facilities.
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 (b) Within 2 years after September 23, 1983,
and every 10  | 
years thereafter, or at such other times as the State Board of
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Education deems necessary or the regional superintendent so  | 
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orders, each school
board subject to the provisions of this  | 
Section shall again survey its school
buildings and effectuate  | 
any recommendations in accordance with the procedures
set forth  | 
herein. | 
  (1) An architect or engineer licensed in the State of  | 
 Illinois is
required to conduct the surveys under the  | 
 provisions of this Section and shall
make a report of the  | 
 findings of the survey titled "safety survey report" to
the  | 
 school board. | 
  (2) The school board shall approve the safety survey  | 
 report,
including any recommendations to effectuate  | 
 compliance with the code, and
submit it to the Regional  | 
 Superintendent. | 
  (3) The Regional Superintendent shall
render a  | 
 decision regarding approval or denial and submit the safety  | 
 survey
report to the State Superintendent of Education. | 
  (4) The State Superintendent of
Education shall  | 
 approve or deny the report including recommendations to
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 effectuate compliance with the code and, if approved, issue  | 
 a certificate of
approval. | 
  (5) Upon receipt of the certificate of approval, the  | 
 Regional
Superintendent shall issue an order to effect any  | 
 approved recommendations
included in the report. The  | 
 report shall meet all of the following requirements:
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   (A) Items in the report shall be prioritized. | 
   (B) Urgent
items shall be considered as those items  | 
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 related to life safety problems that
present an  | 
 immediate hazard to the safety of students. | 
   (C) Required items shall be
considered as those  | 
 items that are necessary for a safe environment but  | 
 present
less of an immediate hazard to the safety of  | 
 students. | 
   (D) Urgent and required
items shall reference a  | 
 specific rule in the code authorized by this Section
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 that is currently being violated or will be violated  | 
 within the next 12 months
if the violation is not  | 
 remedied. | 
  (6) The school board of each district so
surveyed and  | 
 receiving a report of needed recommendations to be made to
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 maintain standards of safety and health of the pupils  | 
 enrolled shall effectuate
the correction of urgent items as  | 
 soon as achievable to ensure the safety of
the students,  | 
 but in no case more than one year after the date of the  | 
 State
Superintendent of Education's approval of the  | 
 recommendation. | 
  (7)
Required items shall be corrected in a timely  | 
 manner, but in
no case more than 5 years from the date of  | 
 the State Superintendent
of
Education's approval of the  | 
 recommendation. | 
  (8) Once each year the school
board shall submit a  | 
 report of progress on completion of any
recommendations to  | 
 effectuate compliance with the code.
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 (c) As soon as practicable, but not later than 2 years  | 
after January 1, 1993, the State Board of Education shall  | 
combine
the document known as "Efficient and Adequate Standards  | 
for the Construction of
Schools" with the document known as  | 
"Building Specifications for Health and
Safety in Public  | 
Schools" together with any modifications or additions that may
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be deemed necessary. The combined document shall be known as  | 
the "Health/Life
Safety Code for Public Schools" and shall be  | 
the governing code for all
facilities that house public school  | 
students or are otherwise used for public
school purposes,  | 
whether such facilities are permanent or temporary and
whether  | 
they are owned, leased, rented, or otherwise used by the  | 
district.
Facilities owned by a school district but that are  | 
not used to house public
school students or are not used for  | 
public school purposes shall be
governed by separate provisions  | 
within the code authorized by this Section.
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 (d) The 10 year survey cycle specified in this Section  | 
shall continue to
apply based upon the standards contained in  | 
the "Health/Life Safety Code
for Public Schools", which shall  | 
specify building standards for buildings that
are constructed  | 
prior to January 1, 1993 and
for buildings that are constructed  | 
after that date.
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 (e) The "Health/Life Safety Code for Public Schools" shall  | 
be the governing code
for public schools; however, the  | 
provisions of this Section shall not preclude
inspection of  | 
school premises and buildings pursuant to Section 9 of the Fire
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Investigation Act, provided that the provisions of the  | 
"Health/Life Safety Code
for Public Schools", or such  | 
predecessor document authorized by this Section as
may be  | 
applicable are used, and provided that those inspections are  | 
coordinated
with the Regional Superintendent having  | 
jurisdiction over the public school
facility.
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 (e-5) After the effective date of this amendatory Act of  | 
the 98th General Assembly, all new school building construction  | 
governed by the "Health/Life Safety Code for Public Schools"  | 
must include in its design and construction a storm shelter  | 
that meets the minimum requirements of the ICC/NSSA Standard  | 
for the Design and Construction of Storm Shelters (ICC-500),  | 
published jointly by the International Code Council and the  | 
National Storm Shelter Association. Nothing in this subsection  | 
(e-5) precludes the design engineers, architects, or school  | 
district from applying a higher life safety standard than the  | 
ICC-500 for storm shelters.  | 
 (f) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to prohibit  | 
the State Fire Marshal or a qualified fire official to whom the  | 
State Fire Marshal has delegated his or her authority
from
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conducting a fire safety check in a public school. | 
 (g) The Regional Superintendent shall address any  | 
violations that are not corrected in a timely manner pursuant  | 
to subsection (b) of Section 3-14.21 of this Code.
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 (h) Any agency having jurisdiction beyond the scope of the  | 
applicable
document authorized by this Section may issue a  | 
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lawful order to a school board
to effectuate recommendations,  | 
and the school board receiving the order shall
certify to the  | 
Regional Superintendent and the State Superintendent of
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Education when it has complied with the order.
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 (i) The State Board of Education is authorized to adopt any  | 
rules that are
necessary relating to the administration and  | 
enforcement of the provisions of
this Section. | 
 (j) The code authorized by this Section shall apply only to  | 
those
school districts having a population of less than 500,000  | 
inhabitants.
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 (k) In this Section, a "qualified fire official" means an  | 
individual that meets the requirements of rules adopted by the  | 
State Fire Marshal in cooperation with the State Board of  | 
Education to administer this Section. These rules shall be  | 
based on recommendations made by the task force established  | 
under Section 2-3.137 (now repealed) of this Code.
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(Source: P.A. 98-883, eff. 1-1-15.)
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 (105 ILCS 5/2-3.25o)
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 Sec. 2-3.25o. Registration and recognition of non-public  | 
elementary and
secondary schools.
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 (a) Findings. The General Assembly finds and declares (i)  | 
that the
Constitution
of the State of Illinois provides that a  | 
"fundamental goal of the People of the
State is the
educational  | 
development of all persons to the limits of their capacities"  | 
and
(ii) that the
educational development of every school  | 
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student serves the public purposes of
the State.
In order to  | 
ensure that all Illinois students and teachers have the  | 
opportunity
to enroll and
work in State-approved educational  | 
institutions and programs, the State Board
of
Education shall  | 
provide for the voluntary registration and recognition of
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non-public
elementary and secondary schools.
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 (b) Registration. All non-public elementary and secondary  | 
schools in the
State
of
Illinois may voluntarily register with  | 
the State Board of Education on an
annual basis. Registration  | 
shall
be completed
in conformance with procedures prescribed by  | 
the State Board of Education.
Information
required for  | 
registration shall include assurances of compliance (i) with
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federal
and State
laws regarding health examination and  | 
immunization, attendance, length of term,
and
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nondiscrimination and (ii) with applicable fire and health  | 
safety requirements.
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 (c) Recognition. All non-public elementary and secondary  | 
schools in the
State of
Illinois may voluntarily seek the  | 
status of "Non-public School Recognition"
from
the State
Board  | 
of Education. This status may be obtained by compliance with
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administrative
guidelines and review procedures as prescribed  | 
by the State Board of Education.
The
guidelines and procedures  | 
must recognize that some of the aims and the
financial bases of
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non-public schools are different from public schools and will  | 
not be identical
to those for
public schools, nor will they be  | 
more burdensome. The guidelines and procedures
must
also  | 
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recognize the diversity of non-public schools and shall not  | 
impinge upon
the
noneducational relationships between those  | 
schools and their clientele.
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 (c-5) Prohibition against recognition. A non-public  | 
elementary or secondary school may not obtain "Non-public  | 
School Recognition" status unless the school requires all  | 
certified and non-certified applicants for employment with the  | 
school, after July 1, 2007, to authorize a fingerprint-based  | 
criminal history records check as a condition of employment to  | 
determine if such applicants have been convicted of any of the  | 
enumerated criminal or drug offenses set forth in Section  | 
21B-80 21-23a of this Code or have been convicted, within 7  | 
years of the application for employment, of any other felony  | 
under the laws of this State or of any offense committed or  | 
attempted in any other state or against the laws of the United  | 
States that, if committed or attempted in this State, would  | 
have been punishable as a felony under the laws of this State. | 
 Authorization for the check shall be furnished by the  | 
applicant to the school, except that if the applicant is a  | 
substitute teacher seeking employment in more than one  | 
non-public school, a teacher seeking concurrent part-time  | 
employment positions with more than one non-public school (as a  | 
reading specialist, special education teacher, or otherwise),  | 
or an educational support personnel employee seeking  | 
employment positions with more than one non-public school, then  | 
only one of the non-public schools employing the individual  | 
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shall request the authorization. Upon receipt of this  | 
authorization, the non-public school shall submit the  | 
applicant's name, sex, race, date of birth, social security  | 
number, fingerprint images, and other identifiers, as  | 
prescribed by the Department of State Police, to the Department  | 
of State Police. | 
 The Department of State Police and Federal Bureau of  | 
Investigation shall furnish, pursuant to a fingerprint-based  | 
criminal history records check, records of convictions,  | 
forever and hereafter, until expunged, to the president or  | 
principal of the non-public school that requested the check.  | 
The Department of State Police shall charge that school a fee  | 
for conducting such check, which fee must be deposited into the  | 
State Police Services Fund and must not exceed the cost of the  | 
inquiry. Subject to appropriations for these purposes, the  | 
State Superintendent of Education shall reimburse non-public  | 
schools for fees paid to obtain criminal history records checks  | 
under this Section. | 
 A non-public school may not obtain recognition status  | 
unless the school also performs a check of the Statewide Sex  | 
Offender Database, as authorized by the Sex Offender Community  | 
Notification Law, for each applicant for employment, after July  | 
1, 2007, to determine whether the applicant has been  | 
adjudicated a sex offender. | 
 Any information concerning the record of convictions  | 
obtained by a non-public school's president or principal under  | 
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this Section is confidential and may be disseminated only to  | 
the governing body of the non-public school or any other person  | 
necessary to the decision of hiring the applicant for  | 
employment. A copy of the record of convictions obtained from  | 
the Department of State Police shall be provided to the  | 
applicant for employment. Upon a check of the Statewide Sex  | 
Offender Database, the non-public school shall notify the  | 
applicant as to whether or not the applicant has been  | 
identified in the Sex Offender Database as a sex offender. Any  | 
information concerning the records of conviction obtained by  | 
the non-public school's president or principal under this  | 
Section for a substitute teacher seeking employment in more  | 
than one non-public school, a teacher seeking concurrent  | 
part-time employment positions with more than one non-public  | 
school (as a reading specialist, special education teacher, or  | 
otherwise), or an educational support personnel employee  | 
seeking employment positions with more than one non-public  | 
school may be shared with another non-public school's principal  | 
or president to which the applicant seeks employment. Any  | 
person who releases any criminal history record information  | 
concerning an applicant for employment is guilty of a Class A  | 
misdemeanor and may be subject to prosecution under federal  | 
law, unless the release of such information is authorized by  | 
this Section. | 
 No non-public school may obtain recognition status that  | 
knowingly employs a person, hired after July 1, 2007, for whom  | 
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a Department of State Police and Federal Bureau of  | 
Investigation fingerprint-based criminal history records check  | 
and a Statewide Sex Offender Database check has not been  | 
initiated or who has been convicted of any offense enumerated  | 
in Section 21B-80 of this Code or any offense committed or  | 
attempted in any other state or against the laws of the United  | 
States that, if committed or attempted in this State, would  | 
have been punishable as one or more of those offenses. No  | 
non-public school may obtain recognition status under this  | 
Section that knowingly employs a person who has been found to  | 
be the perpetrator of sexual or physical abuse of a minor under  | 
18 years of age pursuant to proceedings under Article II of the  | 
Juvenile Court Act of 1987. | 
 In order to obtain recognition status under this Section, a  | 
non-public school must require compliance with the provisions  | 
of this subsection (c-5) from all employees of persons or firms  | 
holding contracts with the school, including, but not limited  | 
to, food service workers, school bus drivers, and other  | 
transportation employees, who have direct, daily contact with  | 
pupils. Any information concerning the records of conviction or  | 
identification as a sex offender of any such employee obtained  | 
by the non-public school principal or president must be  | 
promptly reported to the school's governing body.
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 (d) Public purposes. The provisions of this Section are in  | 
the public
interest, for
the public benefit, and serve secular  | 
public purposes.
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 (e) Definition. For purposes of this Section, a non-public  | 
school means any
non-profit, non-home-based, and non-public  | 
elementary or secondary school that
is
in
compliance with Title  | 
VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and attendance at
which
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satisfies the requirements of Section 26-1 of this Code.
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(Source: P.A. 96-431, eff. 8-13-09; 97-607, eff. 8-26-11.)
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 (105 ILCS 5/2-3.39) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.39)
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 Sec. 2-3.39. Department of Transitional Bilingual  | 
Education. To establish a Department of Transitional Bilingual  | 
Education. In selecting
staff for the Department of  | 
Transitional
Bilingual Education the State Board of Education
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shall give preference to persons
who are natives of foreign  | 
countries where languages to be used in
transitional bilingual  | 
education programs are the predominant languages.
The  | 
Department of Transitional Bilingual Education has the power  | 
and
duty to:
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 (1) Administer and enforce the provisions of Article 14C of  | 
this
Code including the power to promulgate any necessary rules  | 
and
regulations.
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 (2) Study, review, and evaluate all available resources and  | 
programs
that, in whole or in part, are or could be directed  | 
towards meeting the
language capability needs of child English  | 
learners and adult English learners children and adults of  | 
limited
English-speaking ability residing in the State.
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 (3) Gather information about the theory and practice of  | 
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bilingual
education in this State and elsewhere, and encourage  | 
experimentation and
innovation in the field of bilingual  | 
education.
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 (4) Provide for the maximum practical involvement of  | 
parents of
bilingual children, transitional bilingual  | 
education teachers,
representatives of community groups,  | 
educators, and laymen knowledgeable
in the field of bilingual  | 
education in the formulation of policy and
procedures relating  | 
to the administration of Article 14C of this Code.
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 (5) Consult with other public departments and agencies,  | 
including
but not limited to the Department of Community  | 
Affairs, the Department
of Public Welfare, the Division of  | 
Employment Security, the Commission
Against Discrimination,  | 
and the United States Department of Health,
Education, and  | 
Welfare in connection with the administration of Article
14C of  | 
this Code.
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 (6) Make recommendations in the areas of preservice and  | 
in-service
training for transitional bilingual education  | 
teachers, curriculum
development, testing and testing  | 
mechanisms, and the development of
materials for transitional  | 
bilingual education programs.
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 (7) Undertake any further activities which may assist in  | 
the full
implementation of Article 14C of this Code and to make  | 
an annual report
to the General Assembly to include an  | 
evaluation of the program, the
need for continuing such a  | 
program, and recommendations for improvement.
 | 
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 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 "An Act to revise the law in  | 
relation to the General Assembly",
approved February 25, 1874,  | 
as amended, 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.
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(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
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 (105 ILCS 5/2-3.62) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.62)
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 Sec. 2-3.62. Educational service centers. 
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 (a) A regional network of educational service centers shall  | 
be established
by the State Board of Education to coordinate  | 
and combine existing services in
a manner which is practical  | 
and efficient and to provide new services to
schools as  | 
provided in this Section. Services to be made available by such
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centers shall include the planning, implementation and  | 
evaluation of:
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  (1) (blank);
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  (2) computer technology education;
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  (3) mathematics, science and reading resources for  | 
 teachers including
continuing education, inservice  | 
 | 
 training and staff development.
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 The centers may provide training, technical assistance,  | 
coordination and
planning in other program areas such as school  | 
improvement, school
accountability, financial planning,  | 
consultation, and services, career guidance, early childhood  | 
education, alcohol/drug
education and prevention, family life - | 
 sex education, electronic transmission
of data from school  | 
districts to the State, alternative education and regional
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special education, and telecommunications systems that provide  | 
distance
learning. Such telecommunications systems may be  | 
obtained through the
Department of Central Management Services  | 
pursuant to Section 405-270 of the
Department of Central  | 
Management Services Law (20 ILCS 405/405-270). The programs and  | 
services of educational
service centers may be offered to  | 
private school teachers and private school
students within each  | 
service center area provided public schools have already
been  | 
afforded adequate access to such programs and services.
 | 
 Upon the abolition of the office, removal from office,  | 
disqualification for office, resignation from office, or  | 
expiration of the current term of office of the regional  | 
superintendent of schools, whichever is earlier, the chief  | 
administrative officer of the centers serving that portion of a  | 
Class II county school unit outside of a city of 500,000 or  | 
more inhabitants shall have and exercise, in and with respect  | 
to each educational service region having a population of  | 
2,000,000 or more inhabitants and in and with respect to each  | 
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school district located in any such educational service region,  | 
all of the rights, powers, duties, and responsibilities  | 
theretofore vested by law in and exercised and performed by the  | 
regional superintendent of schools for that area under the  | 
provisions of this Code or any other laws of this State.  | 
 The State Board of Education shall promulgate rules and  | 
regulations necessary
to implement this Section. The rules  | 
shall include detailed standards which
delineate the scope and  | 
specific content of programs to be provided by each
Educational  | 
Service Center, as well as the specific planning,  | 
implementation
and evaluation services to be provided by each  | 
Center relative to its programs.
The Board shall also provide  | 
the standards by which it will evaluate the
programs provided  | 
by each Center.
 | 
 (b) Centers serving Class 1 county school units shall be  | 
governed by an
11-member board, 3 members of which shall be  | 
public school teachers
nominated by the local bargaining  | 
representatives to the appropriate regional
superintendent for  | 
appointment and no more than 3 members of which shall be
from  | 
each of the following categories, including but not limited to
 | 
superintendents, regional superintendents, school board  | 
members
and a representative of an institution of higher  | 
education. The members of
the board shall be appointed by the  | 
regional superintendents whose school
districts are served by  | 
the educational service center.
The composition of the board  | 
will reflect the revisions of this
amendatory Act of 1989 as  | 
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the terms of office of current members expire.
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 (c) The centers shall be of sufficient size and number to  | 
assure delivery
of services to all local school districts in  | 
the State.
 | 
 (d) From monies appropriated for this program the State  | 
Board of
Education shall provide grants paid from the Personal  | 
Property Tax Replacement Fund to qualifying Educational  | 
Service Centers
applying for such grants in accordance with  | 
rules and regulations
promulgated by the State Board of  | 
Education to implement this Section. 
 | 
 (e) The governing authority of each of the 18 regional  | 
educational service
centers shall appoint a family life - sex  | 
education advisory board
consisting of 2 parents, 2 teachers, 2  | 
school administrators, 2 school
board members, 2 health care  | 
professionals, one library system
representative, and the  | 
director of the regional educational service center
who shall  | 
serve as chairperson of the advisory board so appointed.  | 
Members
of the family life - sex education advisory boards  | 
shall serve without
compensation. Each of the advisory boards  | 
appointed pursuant to this
subsection shall develop a plan for  | 
regional teacher-parent family life - sex
education training  | 
sessions and shall file a written report of such plan
with the  | 
governing board of their regional educational service center.  | 
The
directors of each of the regional educational service
 | 
centers shall thereupon meet, review each of the reports  | 
submitted by the
advisory boards and combine those reports into  | 
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a single written report which
they shall file with the Citizens  | 
Council on School Problems prior to the
end of the regular  | 
school term of the 1987-1988 school year.
 | 
 (f) The 14 educational service centers serving Class I  | 
county school units
shall be disbanded on the first Monday of  | 
August, 1995, and their statutory
responsibilities and  | 
programs shall be assumed by the regional offices of
education,  | 
subject to rules and regulations developed by
the
State Board  | 
of Education. The regional superintendents of schools elected  | 
by
the voters residing in all Class I counties shall serve as  | 
the chief
administrators for these programs and services. By  | 
rule of the State Board of
Education, the 10 educational  | 
service regions of
lowest
population shall provide such  | 
services under cooperative agreements with larger
regions.
 | 
(Source: P.A. 97-619, eff. 11-14-11; 98-24, eff. 6-19-13;  | 
98-647, eff. 6-13-14.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/2-3.64a-5) | 
 Sec. 2-3.64a-5. State goals and assessment. | 
 (a) For the assessment and accountability purposes of this  | 
Section, "students" includes those students enrolled in a  | 
public or State-operated elementary school, secondary school,  | 
or cooperative or joint agreement with a governing body or  | 
board of control, a charter school operating in compliance with  | 
the Charter Schools Law, a school operated by a regional office  | 
of education under Section 13A-3 of this Code, or a public  | 
 | 
school administered by a local public agency or the Department  | 
of Human Services. | 
 (b) The State Board of Education shall establish the  | 
academic standards that are to be applicable to students who  | 
are subject to State assessments under this Section. The State  | 
Board of Education shall not establish any such standards in  | 
final form without first providing opportunities for public  | 
participation and local input in the development of the final  | 
academic standards. Those opportunities shall include a  | 
well-publicized period of public comment and opportunities to  | 
file written comments. | 
 (c) Beginning no later than the 2014-2015 school year, the  | 
State Board of Education shall annually assess all students  | 
enrolled in grades 3 through 8 in English language arts and  | 
mathematics. | 
 Beginning no later than the 2017-2018 school year, the  | 
State Board of Education shall annually assess all students in  | 
science at one grade in grades 3 through 5, at one grade in  | 
grades 6 through 8, and at one grade in grades 9 through 12. | 
 The State Board of Education shall annually assess schools  | 
that operate a secondary education program, as defined in  | 
Section 22-22 of this Code, in English language arts and  | 
mathematics. The State Board of Education shall administer no  | 
more than 3 assessments, per student, of English language arts  | 
and mathematics for students in a secondary education program.  | 
One of these assessments shall include a college and career  | 
 | 
ready determination. | 
 Students who are not assessed for college and career ready  | 
determinations may not receive a regular high school diploma  | 
unless the student is exempted from taking State assessments  | 
under subsection (d) of this Section because (i) the student's  | 
individualized educational program developed under Article 14  | 
of this Code identifies the State assessment as inappropriate  | 
for the student, (ii) the student is enrolled in a program of  | 
adult and continuing education, as defined in the Adult  | 
Education Act, (iii) the school district is not required to  | 
assess the individual student for purposes of accountability  | 
under federal No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 requirements,  | 
(iv) the student has been determined to be an English language  | 
learner, referred to in this Code as a student with limited  | 
English proficiency, and has been enrolled in schools in the  | 
United States for less than 12 months, or (v) the student is  | 
otherwise identified by the State Board of Education, through  | 
rules, as being exempt from the assessment. | 
 The State Board of Education shall not assess students  | 
under this Section in subjects not required by this Section. | 
 Districts shall inform their students of the timelines and  | 
procedures applicable to their participation in every yearly  | 
administration of the State assessments.
The State Board of  | 
Education shall establish periods of time in each school year  | 
during which State assessments shall occur to meet the  | 
objectives of this Section. | 
 | 
 (d) Every individualized educational program as described  | 
in Article 14 shall identify if the State assessment or  | 
components thereof are appropriate for the student. The State  | 
Board of Education shall develop rules governing the  | 
administration of an alternate assessment that may be available  | 
to students for whom participation in this State's regular  | 
assessments is not appropriate, even with accommodations as  | 
allowed under this Section. | 
 Students receiving special education services whose  | 
individualized educational programs identify them as eligible  | 
for the alternative State assessments nevertheless shall have  | 
the option of taking this State's regular assessment that  | 
includes a college and career ready determination, which shall  | 
be administered in accordance with the eligible accommodations  | 
appropriate for meeting these students' respective needs. | 
 All students determined to be an English learners language  | 
learner, referred to in this Code as a student with limited  | 
English proficiency, shall participate in the State  | 
assessments, excepting those students who have been enrolled in  | 
schools in the United States for less than 12 months. Such  | 
students may be exempted from participation in one annual  | 
administration of the English language arts assessment. Any  | 
student determined to be an English language learner, referred  | 
to in this Code as a student with limited English proficiency,  | 
shall receive appropriate assessment accommodations, including  | 
language supports, which shall be established by rule. Approved  | 
 | 
assessment accommodations must be provided until the student's  | 
English language skills develop to the extent that the student  | 
is no longer considered to be an English language learner,  | 
referred to in this Code as a student with limited English  | 
proficiency, as demonstrated through a State-identified  | 
English language proficiency assessment. | 
 (e) The results or scores of each assessment taken under  | 
this Section shall be made available to the parents of each  | 
student. | 
 In each school year, the scores attained by a student on  | 
the State assessment that includes a college and career ready  | 
determination must be placed in the student's permanent record  | 
and must be entered on the student's transcript pursuant to  | 
rules that the State Board of Education shall adopt for that  | 
purpose in accordance with Section 3 of the Illinois School  | 
Student Records Act. In each school year, the scores attained  | 
by a student on the State assessments administered in grades 3  | 
through 8 must be placed in the student's temporary record. | 
 (f) All schools shall administer an academic assessment of  | 
English language proficiency in oral language (listening and  | 
speaking) and reading and writing skills to all children  | 
determined to be English language learners, referred to in  | 
Section 14C-3 of this Code as children with limited  | 
English-speaking ability. | 
 (g) All schools in this State that are part of the sample  | 
drawn by the National Center for Education Statistics, in  | 
 | 
collaboration with their school districts and the State Board  | 
of Education, shall administer the biennial academic  | 
assessments under the National Assessment of Educational  | 
Progress carried out under Section 411(b)(2) of the federal  | 
National Education Statistics Act of 1994 (20 U.S.C. 9010) if  | 
the U.S. Secretary of Education pays the costs of administering  | 
the assessments. | 
 (h) Subject to available funds to this State for the  | 
purpose of student assessment, the State Board of Education  | 
shall provide additional assessments and assessment resources  | 
that may be used by school districts for local assessment  | 
purposes. The State Board of Education shall annually  | 
distribute a listing of these additional resources. | 
 (i) For the purposes of this subsection (i), "academically  | 
based assessments" means assessments consisting of questions  | 
and answers that are measurable and quantifiable to measure the  | 
knowledge, skills, and ability of students in the subject  | 
matters covered by the assessments. All assessments  | 
administered pursuant to this Section must be academically  | 
based assessments. The scoring of academically based  | 
assessments shall be reliable, valid, and fair and shall meet  | 
the guidelines for assessment development and use prescribed by  | 
the American Psychological Association, the National Council  | 
on Measurement in Education, and the American Educational  | 
Research Association. | 
 The State Board of Education shall review the use of all  | 
 | 
assessment item types in order to ensure that they are valid  | 
and reliable indicators of student performance aligned to the  | 
learning standards being assessed and that the development,  | 
administration, and scoring of these item types are justifiable  | 
in terms of cost. | 
 (j) The State Superintendent of Education shall appoint a  | 
committee of no more than 21 members, consisting of parents,  | 
teachers, school administrators, school board members,  | 
assessment experts, regional superintendents of schools, and  | 
citizens, to review the State assessments administered by the  | 
State Board of Education. The Committee shall select one of its  | 
members as its chairperson. The Committee shall meet on an  | 
ongoing basis to review the content and design of the  | 
assessments (including whether the requirements of subsection  | 
(i) of this Section have been met), the time and money expended  | 
at the local and State levels to prepare for and administer the  | 
assessments, the collective results of the assessments as  | 
measured against the stated purpose of assessing student  | 
performance, and other issues involving the assessments  | 
identified by the Committee. The Committee shall make periodic  | 
recommendations to the State Superintendent of Education and  | 
the General Assembly concerning the assessments.  | 
 (k) The State Board of Education may adopt rules to  | 
implement this Section.
 | 
(Source: P.A. 98-972, eff. 8-15-14.)
 | 
 | 
 (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, whether a student is an English  | 
learner 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 5/3-1) (from Ch. 122, par. 3-1)
 | 
 Sec. 3-1. Election; eligibility. Quadrennially there shall  | 
be
elected in every county, except those which have been  | 
consolidated into
a multicounty educational service region  | 
under Article 3A and except
those having a population of  | 
2,000,000 or more inhabitants, a regional
superintendent of  | 
schools, who shall enter
upon the discharge of his duties on  | 
 | 
the first Monday of August next after
his election; provided,  | 
however, that the term of office of each regional
 | 
superintendent of schools in office on June 30, 2003
is  | 
terminated on
July 1, 2003, except that an incumbent regional
 | 
superintendent of schools
shall continue to serve until his  | 
successor is elected and qualified, and each
regional  | 
superintendent of schools elected at the general election in  | 
2002 and
every four years thereafter shall assume office on the  | 
first day of July
next after his election. No one is eligible  | 
to file his petition at any
primary election for the nomination
 | 
as candidate for the office of regional superintendent of  | 
schools nor to
enter upon the duties of such office either by  | 
election or appointment
unless he possesses the following  | 
qualifications: (1) he is of good
character, (2) he has a  | 
master's degree, (3) he has earned at least 20
semester hours  | 
of credit in professional education at the graduate
level, (4)  | 
he holds a valid all grade supervisory license, certificate or  | 
a valid
State state limited supervisory license certificate, or  | 
a valid state life supervisory
license certificate, or a valid  | 
administrative license certificate, (5) he has had at least
4  | 
years experience in teaching, and (6) he was engaged for at  | 
least 2 years
of the 4 previous years in full time teaching or  | 
supervising in the common
public schools or serving as a county  | 
superintendent of schools or regional
superintendent of  | 
schools for an educational service region in the State of
 | 
Illinois.
 | 
 | 
 No petition of any candidate for nomination for the office  | 
of regional
superintendent of schools may be filed and no such  | 
candidate's name may be
placed on a primary or general election  | 
ballot, unless such candidate files
as part of his petition a  | 
certificate from the State Board of Education
certifying that  | 
from the records of its office such candidate has the
 | 
qualifications required by this Section; however, any  | 
incumbent filing his
petition for nomination for a succeeding  | 
term of office shall not be
required to attach such certificate  | 
to his petition of candidacy.
 | 
 Nomination papers filed under this Section are not valid  | 
unless the
candidate named therein files with the county clerk  | 
or State Board of
Elections a statement of economic interests  | 
as required by the Illinois
Governmental Ethics Act. Such  | 
receipt shall be so filed either previously
during the calendar  | 
year in which his nomination papers were filed or
within the  | 
period for the filing of nomination papers in accordance with
 | 
the general election law.
 | 
 The changes in qualifications made by Public Act 76-1563 do  | 
not affect
the right of an incumbent to seek reelection.
 | 
 On and after July 1, 1994, the provisions of this Section  | 
shall have
no application in any educational service region  | 
having a population of
2,000,000 or more inhabitants; provided  | 
further that no election shall be
held in November of 1994 or  | 
at any other time after July 1, 1992 for the office
of regional  | 
superintendent of schools in any county or educational service
 | 
 | 
region having a population of 2,000,000 or more inhabitants.
 | 
(Source: P.A. 96-893, eff. 7-1-10.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/3-2.5)
 | 
 Sec. 3-2.5. Salaries. 
 | 
 (a) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, the
 | 
regional superintendents of schools shall receive for their  | 
services an annual
salary according to the population, as  | 
determined by the last preceding federal
census, of the region  | 
they serve, as set out in the following schedule:
 | 
|
 SALARIES OF REGIONAL SUPERINTENDENTS OF
 |  SCHOOLS | 
 |  
|
  POPULATION OF REGION   | 
ANNUAL SALARY | 
 
|
  Less than 48,000  | 
$73,500 | 
 
|
  61,000 48,000 to 99,999  | 
$78,000 | 
 
|
  100,000 to 999,999  | 
$81,500 | 
 
|
  1,000,000 and over  | 
$83,500 | 
 
  | 
 The changes made by Public Act 86-98 in the annual salary  | 
that the
regional superintendents of schools shall receive for  | 
their services shall
apply to the annual salary received by the  | 
regional superintendents of
schools during each of their  | 
elected terms of office that
commence after
July 26, 1989 and  | 
before the first Monday of August, 1995.
 | 
 The changes made by Public Act 89-225 in the annual salary  | 
that
regional superintendents of schools shall receive for  | 
their services shall
apply to the annual salary received by the  | 
 | 
regional superintendents of schools
during their elected terms  | 
of office that
commence after August 4,
1995 and end on August  | 
1, 1999.
 | 
 The changes made by this amendatory Act of the 91st General  | 
Assembly in the
annual salary that the regional superintendents  | 
of schools shall receive for
their services shall apply to the  | 
annual salary received by the regional
superintendents of  | 
schools during each of their elected terms of office that
 | 
commence on or after August 2, 1999.
 | 
 Beginning July 1, 2000, the salary that the regional  | 
superintendent
of schools receives for his or her services  | 
shall be adjusted annually to
reflect the percentage increase,  | 
if any, in the most recent Consumer Price
Index, as defined and  | 
officially reported by the United States Department of
Labor,  | 
Bureau of Labor Statistics, except that no annual increment may  | 
exceed
2.9%. If the percentage of change in the
Consumer Price  | 
Index is a percentage decrease, the salary that the regional
 | 
superintendent of schools receives shall not be adjusted for  | 
that year.
 | 
 When regional superintendents are authorized by the School  | 
Code to
appoint assistant regional superintendents, the  | 
assistant regional
superintendent shall receive an annual  | 
salary based on his or her
qualifications and computed as a  | 
percentage of the salary of the
regional superintendent to whom  | 
he or she is assistant, as set out in the
following schedule:
 | 
 | 
 | 
SALARIES OF ASSISTANT REGIONAL  |  SUPERINTENDENTS | 
 |  
|
  QUALIFICATIONS OF  | 
PERCENTAGE OF SALARY | 
 
|
  ASSISTANT REGIONAL  | 
OF REGIONAL | 
 
|
  SUPERINTENDENT  | 
SUPERINTENDENT | 
 
|
  No Bachelor's degree, but State | 
 |  |
  certificate valid for teaching |  |  
|
  and supervising.  | 
70%     | 
 
|
  Bachelor's degree plus | 
 |  |
  State license certificate valid |  |  
|
  for supervising.  | 
75%     | 
 
|
  Master's degree plus | 
 |  |
  State license certificate valid |  |  
|
  for supervising.  | 
90%     | 
 
  | 
 However, in any region in which the appointment of more  | 
than one
assistant regional superintendent is authorized,  | 
whether by Section
3-15.10 of this Code or otherwise, not more  | 
than one assistant may
be compensated at the 90% rate and any  | 
other assistant shall be paid at
not exceeding the 75% rate, in  | 
each case depending on the qualifications
of the assistant.
 | 
 The salaries provided in this Section plus an amount for  | 
other employment-related compensation or benefits for regional  | 
superintendents
and assistant regional superintendents are  | 
payable monthly by the State Board of Education out of the  | 
Personal Property Tax Replacement Fund through a specific  | 
appropriation to that effect in the State Board of Education  | 
 | 
budget. The State Comptroller in making his or her warrant to
 | 
any county for the amount due it from the Personal Property Tax  | 
Replacement Fund shall deduct
from it the several amounts for  | 
which warrants have been issued to the
regional superintendent,  | 
and any assistant regional superintendent, of
the educational  | 
service region encompassing the county since the
preceding  | 
apportionment from the Personal Property Tax Replacement Fund.
 | 
 County boards may provide for additional compensation for  | 
the
regional superintendent or the assistant regional  | 
superintendents, or
for each of them, to be paid quarterly from  | 
the county treasury.
 | 
 (b) Upon abolition of the office of regional
superintendent  | 
of schools in educational service regions containing
2,000,000  | 
or more inhabitants as provided in Section 3-0.01
of this Code,  | 
the funds provided under subsection (a) of this Section shall  | 
continue to be appropriated and reallocated, as provided for  | 
pursuant to subsection (b) of Section 3-0.01 of this Code, to  | 
the educational service centers established pursuant to  | 
Section 2-3.62 of this Code for an educational service region  | 
containing 2,000,000 or more inhabitants.
 | 
 (c) If the State pays all or any portion of the employee  | 
contributions
required under Section 16-152 of the Illinois  | 
Pension Code for employees of the
State Board of Education, it  | 
shall also, subject to appropriation in the State Board of  | 
Education budget for such payments to Regional Superintendents  | 
and Assistant Regional Superintendents, pay the employee  | 
 | 
contributions required
of regional superintendents of schools  | 
and assistant regional superintendents
of schools on the same  | 
basis, but excluding any contributions based on
compensation  | 
that is paid by the county rather than the State.
 | 
 This subsection (c) applies to contributions based on  | 
payments of salary
earned after the effective date of this  | 
amendatory Act of the 91st General
Assembly, except that in the  | 
case of an elected regional superintendent of
schools, this  | 
subsection does not apply to contributions based on payments of
 | 
salary earned during a term of office that commenced before the  | 
effective date
of this amendatory Act.
 | 
(Source: P.A. 97-333, eff. 8-12-11; 97-619, eff. 11-14-11;  | 
97-732, eff. 6-30-12; 98-24, eff. 6-19-13.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/3-11) (from Ch. 122, par. 3-11)
 | 
 Sec. 3-11. Institutes or inservice training workshops. In  | 
counties
of less than 2,000,000 inhabitants, the regional  | 
superintendent may
arrange for or conduct district, regional,  | 
or county institutes, or
equivalent professional educational  | 
experiences, not more than 4 days
annually. Of those 4 days, 2  | 
days may be used as a teacher's and educational support  | 
personnel workshop,
when approved by the regional  | 
superintendent, up to 2 days may be used
for conducting  | 
parent-teacher conferences, or up to 2 days may be utilized
as  | 
parental institute days as provided in Section 10-22.18d.  | 
Educational support personnel may be exempt from a workshop if  | 
 | 
the workshop is not relevant to the work they do. A school
 | 
district may use one of its 4 institute days on the last day of  | 
the school
term. "Institute" or "Professional educational  | 
experiences" means any
educational gathering, demonstration of  | 
methods of instruction,
visitation of schools or other  | 
institutions or facilities, sexual
abuse and sexual assault  | 
awareness seminar, or training in First Aid (which may include  | 
cardiopulmonary resuscitation or defibrillator training) held  | 
or approved
by the regional superintendent and declared by him  | 
to be an institute day,
or parent-teacher conferences. With the  | 
concurrence of the State
Superintendent of Education, he or she  | 
may employ such assistance as is
necessary
to conduct the  | 
institute. Two or more adjoining counties may jointly hold
an  | 
institute. Institute instruction shall be free to holders of
 | 
licenses certificates good in the county or counties holding  | 
the institute, and to
those who have paid an examination fee  | 
and failed to receive a license certificate.
 | 
 In counties of 2,000,000 or more inhabitants, the regional
 | 
superintendent may arrange for or conduct district, regional,  | 
or county
inservice training workshops, or equivalent  | 
professional educational
experiences, not more than 4 days  | 
annually. Of those 4 days, 2
days may be used as a teacher's  | 
and educational support
personnel workshop, when approved by  | 
the regional
superintendent, up to 2 days may
be used for  | 
conducting parent-teacher conferences, or up to 2 days may be
 | 
utilized as parental institute days as provided in Section  | 
 | 
10-22.18d. Educational support personnel may be exempt from a  | 
workshop if
the workshop is not relevant to the work they do. A
 | 
school district may use one of those 4 days on the last day of  | 
the school
term. "Inservice Training Workshops" or  | 
"Professional educational
experiences" means any educational  | 
gathering, demonstration of methods of
instruction, visitation  | 
of schools or other institutions or
facilities, sexual abuse  | 
and sexual assault awareness seminar, or training in First Aid  | 
(which may include cardiopulmonary resuscitation or  | 
defibrillator training) held
or approved by the regional  | 
superintendent and declared by him to be
an inservice training  | 
workshop, or parent-teacher conferences. With the
concurrence  | 
of the State Superintendent of Education, he may employ such
 | 
assistance as is necessary to conduct the inservice training  | 
workshop.
With the approval of the regional superintendent, 2  | 
or more adjoining
districts may jointly hold an inservice  | 
training workshop. In addition,
with the approval of the  | 
regional superintendent, one district may conduct
its own  | 
inservice training workshop with subject matter consultants
 | 
requested from the county, State or any State institution of  | 
higher learning.
 | 
 Such teachers institutes as referred to in this Section may  | 
be held
on consecutive or separate days at the option of the  | 
regional
superintendent having jurisdiction thereof.
 | 
 Whenever reference is made in this Act to "teachers  | 
institute", it
shall be construed to include the inservice  | 
 | 
training workshops or
equivalent professional educational  | 
experiences provided for in this Section.
 | 
 Any institute advisory committee existing on April 1, 1995,  | 
is dissolved
and the duties and responsibilities of the  | 
institute advisory committee are
assumed by the regional office  | 
of education advisory board.
 | 
 Districts providing inservice training programs shall  | 
constitute inservice
committees, 1/2 of which shall be  | 
teachers, 1/4 school service personnel
and 1/4 administrators  | 
to establish program content and schedules.
 | 
 The teachers institutes shall include teacher training  | 
committed to (i)
peer counseling programs and other  | 
anti-violence and conflict
resolution programs, including  | 
without limitation programs for preventing at
risk students  | 
from committing violent acts, and (ii) educator ethics and  | 
teacher-student conduct. Beginning with the 2009-2010 school  | 
year, the teachers institutes shall include instruction on  | 
prevalent student chronic health conditions. 
 | 
(Source: P.A. 96-431, eff. 8-13-09; 97-525, eff. 1-1-12.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/3-15.6) (from Ch. 122, par. 3-15.6)
 | 
 Sec. 3-15.6. Additional employees. To employ, with the  | 
approval of the
county board, such additional employees as are  | 
needed for the discharge of
the duties of the office. The  | 
non-clerical employees shall be persons
versed in the  | 
principles and methods of education, familiar with public
 | 
 | 
school work, competent to visit schools, and licensed  | 
certificated pursuant to this
Code if their duties are  | 
comparable to those for which licensure certification is
 | 
required by this Code.
 | 
 On and after July 1, 1994, the provisions of this Section  | 
shall have
no application in any educational service region  | 
having a population of
2,000,000 or more inhabitants.
 | 
(Source: P.A. 86-361; 87-654; 87-1251.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/3-15.10) (from Ch. 122, par. 3-15.10)
 | 
 Sec. 3-15.10. Assistant Regional Superintendent. To  | 
employ, in counties or
regions of 2,000,000 inhabitants or  | 
less, in addition to any assistants
authorized to be employed  | 
with the approval of the county board, an assistant
regional  | 
superintendent of schools, who shall be a person of good  | 
attainment,
versed in the principles and methods of education,  | 
and qualified to teach and
supervise schools under Article 21B  | 
of this Code 21 of this Act; to fix the term of such
assistant;  | 
and to direct his work and define his duties. On the effective  | 
date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, in  | 
regions established
within that portion of a Class II county  | 
school unit outside of a city of 500,000 or more
inhabitants,  | 
the employment of all persons serving as assistant county or  | 
regional superintendents of schools is terminated, the  | 
position of assistant regional superintendent of schools in  | 
each such region is abolished, and this Section shall,  | 
 | 
beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the  | 
96th General Assembly, have no further application in the  | 
educational service region. Assistant regional superintendents  | 
shall each be a
person of good attainment, versed in the  | 
principles and methods of education,
and qualified to teach and  | 
supervise schools under Article 21B of this Code 21 of this  | 
Act. The
work of such assistant regional superintendent shall  | 
be so arranged and
directed that the county or regional  | 
superintendent and assistant
superintendent, together, shall  | 
devote an amount of time during the school
year, equal to at  | 
least the full time of one individual, to the supervision of
 | 
schools and of teaching in the schools of the county.
 | 
 A regional superintendent of schools shall not employ his  | 
or her spouse,
child, stepchild, or
relative as an assistant  | 
regional superintendent of schools.
By September 1 each year, a  | 
regional superintendent shall certify to the State
Board of  | 
Education
that he or she
has complied with this paragraph.
If  | 
the State Board of Education becomes aware of the fact that a  | 
regional
superintendent is employing his or her spouse, child,  | 
stepchild, or relative as
an assistant regional  | 
superintendent, the State Board of Education shall report this  | 
information to the Governor and the Comptroller, and the State  | 
Board of Education shall not
request for payment from the State  | 
Comptroller any warrants for the payment of
the assistant  | 
regional superintendent's salary or other employment-related  | 
compensation or benefits. In this paragraph, "relative"
means a  | 
 | 
grandparent, parent, aunt, uncle, sibling, first cousin,  | 
nephew, niece,
grandchild, or spouse of one of these persons.  | 
This paragraph applies only to
contracts for employment entered  | 
into on or after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of  | 
the 91st General Assembly.
 | 
(Source: P.A. 96-893, eff. 7-1-10; 97-619, eff. 11-14-11.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/3-15.17) | 
 Sec. 3-15.17. Civic education advancement. | 
 (a) The General Assembly finds that civic education and  | 
participation are fundamental elements of a healthy democracy,  | 
and schools are in need of support to identify civic learning  | 
opportunities and to implement new strategies to prepare and  | 
sustain high quality citizenship among their student body. | 
 (b) Subject to appropriation, funding for civic education  | 
professional development for high school teachers must be  | 
provided by line item appropriation made to the State Board of  | 
Education for that purpose. When appropriated, the State Board  | 
of Education must provide this funding to each regional  | 
superintendent of schools based on high school enrollment as  | 
reported on the State Board of Education's most recent fall  | 
enrollment and housing report, except that 20% of each annual  | 
appropriation must be reserved for a school district organized  | 
under Article 34 of this Code. | 
 (c) In order to establish eligibility for one or more of  | 
its schools to receive funding under this Section, a school  | 
 | 
district shall submit to its regional superintendent of schools  | 
an application, accompanied by a completed civic audit, for  | 
each school. A regional superintendent shall award funds to a  | 
district based on the number of teachers identified by the  | 
district to receive professional development multiplied by  | 
$250. A district must not be awarded more than $3,000 in any  | 
year, unless additional funds remain available after all  | 
eligible applicants have received funding. A district may not  | 
use funds authorized under this Section in any school more than  | 
once every 2 years. Funds provided under this Section must be  | 
used exclusively for professional development provided by  | 
entities that are approved providers for purposes of license  | 
certificate renewal under Section 21B-45 21-14 of this Code. | 
 (d) The civic audit form and its content must be designed  | 
and updated as deemed necessary by the Illinois Civic Mission  | 
Coalition. Data from completed civic audits must be processed  | 
by the Illinois Civic Mission Coalition. The civic audit must  | 
be made available by the Illinois Civic Mission Coalition and  | 
must be designed to provide teachers and principals with a  | 
blueprint to better understand how current curriculum, service  | 
learning, and extracurricular activities are providing civic  | 
learning experiences for their students.
 | 
(Source: P.A. 95-225, eff. 8-16-07.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/10-17a) (from Ch. 122, par. 10-17a)
 | 
 Sec. 10-17a. State, school district, and school report  | 
 | 
cards. 
 | 
 (1) By October 31, 2013 and October 31 of each subsequent  | 
school year, the State Board of Education, through the State  | 
Superintendent of Education, shall prepare a State report card,  | 
school district report cards, and school report cards, and  | 
shall by the most economic means provide to each school
 | 
district in this State, including special charter districts and  | 
districts
subject to the provisions of Article 34, the report  | 
cards for the school district and each of its schools.  | 
 (2) In addition to any information required by federal law,  | 
the State Superintendent shall determine the indicators and  | 
presentation of the school report card, which must include, at  | 
a minimum, the most current data possessed by the State Board  | 
of Education related to the following: | 
  (A) school characteristics and student demographics,  | 
 including average class size, average teaching experience,  | 
 student racial/ethnic breakdown, and the percentage of  | 
 students classified as low-income; the percentage of  | 
 students classified as limited English learners  | 
 proficiency; the percentage of students who have  | 
 individualized education plans or 504 plans that provide  | 
 for special education services; the percentage of students  | 
 who annually transferred in or out of the school district;  | 
 the per-pupil operating expenditure of the school  | 
 district; and the per-pupil State average operating  | 
 expenditure for the district type (elementary, high  | 
 | 
 school, or unit); | 
  (B) curriculum information, including, where  | 
 applicable, Advanced Placement, International  | 
 Baccalaureate or equivalent courses, dual enrollment  | 
 courses, foreign language classes, school personnel  | 
 resources (including Career Technical Education teachers),  | 
 before and after school programs, extracurricular  | 
 activities, subjects in which elective classes are  | 
 offered, health and wellness initiatives (including the  | 
 average number of days of Physical Education per week per  | 
 student), approved programs of study, awards received,  | 
 community partnerships, and special programs such as  | 
 programming for the gifted and talented, students with  | 
 disabilities, and work-study students; | 
  (C) student outcomes, including, where applicable, the  | 
 percentage of students meeting as well as exceeding State  | 
 standards on assessments, the percentage of students in the  | 
 eighth grade who pass Algebra, the percentage of students  | 
 enrolled in post-secondary institutions (including  | 
 colleges, universities, community colleges,  | 
 trade/vocational schools, and training programs leading to  | 
 career certification within 2 semesters of high school  | 
 graduation), the percentage of students graduating from  | 
 high school who are college ready, the percentage of  | 
 students graduating from high school who are career ready,  | 
 and the percentage of graduates enrolled in community  | 
 | 
 colleges, colleges, and universities who are in one or more  | 
 courses that the community college, college, or university  | 
 identifies as a remedial course;  | 
  (D) student progress, including, where applicable, the  | 
 percentage of students in the ninth grade who have earned 5  | 
 credits or more without failing more than one core class, a  | 
 measure of students entering kindergarten ready to learn, a  | 
 measure of growth, and the percentage of students who enter  | 
 high school on track for college and career readiness; and | 
  (E) the school environment, including, where  | 
 applicable, the percentage of students with less than 10  | 
 absences in a school year, the percentage of teachers with  | 
 less than 10 absences in a school year for reasons other  | 
 than professional development, leaves taken pursuant to  | 
 the federal Family Medical Leave Act of 1993, long-term  | 
 disability, or parental leaves, the 3-year average of the  | 
 percentage of teachers returning to the school from the  | 
 previous year, the number of different principals at the  | 
 school in the last 6 years, 2 or more indicators from any  | 
 school climate survey selected or approved by the State and  | 
 administered pursuant to Section 2-3.153 of this Code, with  | 
 the same or similar indicators included on school report  | 
 cards for all surveys selected or approved by the State  | 
 pursuant to Section 2-3.153 of this Code, and the combined  | 
 percentage of teachers rated as proficient or excellent in  | 
 their most recent evaluation.  | 
 | 
 The school report card shall also provide
information that  | 
allows for comparing the current outcome, progress, and  | 
environment data to the State average, to the school data from  | 
the past 5 years, and to the outcomes, progress, and  | 
environment of similar schools based on the type of school and  | 
enrollment of low-income students, special education students,  | 
and limited English learners proficiency students.
 | 
 (3) At the discretion of the State Superintendent, the  | 
school district report card shall include a subset of the  | 
information identified in paragraphs (A) through (E) of  | 
subsection (2) of this Section, as well as information relating  | 
to the operating expense per pupil and other finances of the  | 
school district, and the State report card shall include a  | 
subset of the information identified in paragraphs (A) through  | 
(E) of subsection (2) of this Section.  | 
 (4) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this  | 
Section, in consultation with key education stakeholders, the  | 
State Superintendent shall at any time have the discretion to  | 
amend or update any and all metrics on the school, district, or  | 
State report card.  | 
 (5) Annually, no more than 30 calendar days after receipt  | 
of the school district and school report cards from the State  | 
Superintendent of Education, each school district, including  | 
special charter districts and districts subject to the  | 
provisions of Article 34, shall present such report
cards at a  | 
regular school board meeting subject to
applicable notice  | 
 | 
requirements, post the report cards
on the
school district's  | 
Internet web site, if the district maintains an Internet web
 | 
site, make the report cards
available
to a newspaper of general  | 
circulation serving the district, and, upon
request, send the  | 
report cards
home to a parent (unless the district does not  | 
maintain an Internet web site,
in which case
the report card  | 
shall be sent home to parents without request). If the
district  | 
posts the report card on its Internet web
site, the district
 | 
shall send a
written notice home to parents stating (i) that  | 
the report card is available on
the web site,
(ii) the address  | 
of the web site, (iii) that a printed copy of the report card
 | 
will be sent to
parents upon request, and (iv) the telephone  | 
number that parents may
call to
request a printed copy of the  | 
report card.
 | 
 (6) 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. 97-671, eff. 1-24-12; 98-463, eff. 8-16-13;  | 
98-648, eff. 7-1-14.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/14-8.02) (from Ch. 122, par. 14-8.02)
 | 
 Sec. 14-8.02. Identification, Evaluation and Placement of  | 
Children. 
 | 
 | 
 (a) The State Board of Education shall make rules under  | 
which local school
boards shall determine the eligibility of  | 
children to receive special
education. Such rules shall ensure  | 
that a free appropriate public
education be available to all  | 
children with disabilities as
defined in
Section 14-1.02. The  | 
State Board of Education shall require local school
districts  | 
to administer non-discriminatory procedures or tests to
 | 
limited English learners proficiency students coming from  | 
homes in which a language
other than English is used to  | 
determine their eligibility to receive special
education. The  | 
placement of low English proficiency students in special
 | 
education programs and facilities shall be made in accordance  | 
with the test
results reflecting the student's linguistic,  | 
cultural and special education
needs. For purposes of  | 
determining the eligibility of children the State
Board of  | 
Education shall include in the rules definitions of "case  | 
study",
"staff conference", "individualized educational  | 
program", and "qualified
specialist" appropriate to each  | 
category of children with
disabilities as defined in
this  | 
Article. For purposes of determining the eligibility of  | 
children from
homes in which a language other than English is  | 
used, the State Board of
Education shall include in the rules
 | 
definitions for "qualified bilingual specialists" and  | 
"linguistically and
culturally appropriate individualized  | 
educational programs". For purposes of this
Section, as well as  | 
Sections 14-8.02a, 14-8.02b, and 14-8.02c of this Code,
 | 
 | 
"parent" means a parent as defined in the federal Individuals  | 
with Disabilities Education Act (20 U.S.C. 1401(23)).
 | 
 (b) No child shall be eligible for special education  | 
facilities except
with a carefully completed case study fully  | 
reviewed by professional
personnel in a multidisciplinary  | 
staff conference and only upon the
recommendation of qualified  | 
specialists or a qualified bilingual specialist, if
available.  | 
At the conclusion of the multidisciplinary staff conference,  | 
the
parent of the child shall be given a copy of the  | 
multidisciplinary
conference summary report and  | 
recommendations, which includes options
considered, and be  | 
informed of their right to obtain an independent educational
 | 
evaluation if they disagree with the evaluation findings  | 
conducted or obtained
by the school district. If the school  | 
district's evaluation is shown to be
inappropriate, the school  | 
district shall reimburse the parent for the cost of
the  | 
independent evaluation. The State Board of Education shall,  | 
with advice
from the State Advisory Council on Education of  | 
Children with
Disabilities on the
inclusion of specific  | 
independent educational evaluators, prepare a list of
 | 
suggested independent educational evaluators. The State Board  | 
of Education
shall include on the list clinical psychologists  | 
licensed pursuant to the
Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act.  | 
Such psychologists shall not be paid fees
in excess of the  | 
amount that would be received by a school psychologist for
 | 
performing the same services. The State Board of Education  | 
 | 
shall supply school
districts with such list and make the list  | 
available to parents at their
request. School districts shall  | 
make the list available to parents at the time
they are  | 
informed of their right to obtain an independent educational
 | 
evaluation. However, the school district may initiate an  | 
impartial
due process hearing under this Section within 5 days  | 
of any written parent
request for an independent educational  | 
evaluation to show that
its evaluation is appropriate. If the  | 
final decision is that the evaluation
is appropriate, the  | 
parent still has a right to an independent educational
 | 
evaluation, but not at public expense. An independent  | 
educational
evaluation at public expense must be completed  | 
within 30 days of a parent
written request unless the school  | 
district initiates an
impartial due process hearing or the  | 
parent or school district
offers reasonable grounds to show  | 
that such 30 day time period should be
extended. If the due  | 
process hearing decision indicates that the parent is entitled  | 
to an independent educational evaluation, it must be
completed  | 
within 30 days of the decision unless the parent or
the school  | 
district offers reasonable grounds to show that such 30 day
 | 
period should be extended. If a parent disagrees with the  | 
summary report or
recommendations of the multidisciplinary  | 
conference or the findings of any
educational evaluation which  | 
results therefrom, the school
district shall not proceed with a  | 
placement based upon such evaluation and
the child shall remain  | 
in his or her regular classroom setting.
No child shall be  | 
 | 
eligible for admission to a
special class for the educable  | 
mentally disabled or for the
trainable
mentally disabled except  | 
with a psychological evaluation
and
recommendation by a school  | 
psychologist. Consent shall be obtained from
the parent of a  | 
child before any evaluation is conducted.
If consent is not  | 
given by the parent or if the parent disagrees with the  | 
findings of the evaluation, then the school
district may  | 
initiate an impartial due process hearing under this Section.
 | 
The school district may evaluate the child if that is the  | 
decision
resulting from the impartial due process hearing and  | 
the decision is not
appealed or if the decision is affirmed on  | 
appeal.
The determination of eligibility shall be made and the  | 
IEP meeting shall be completed within 60 school days
from the  | 
date of written parental consent. In those instances when  | 
written parental consent is obtained with fewer than 60 pupil  | 
attendance days left in the school year,
the eligibility  | 
determination shall be made and the IEP meeting shall be  | 
completed prior to the first day of the
following school year.  | 
Special education and related services must be provided in  | 
accordance with the student's IEP no later than 10 school  | 
attendance days after notice is provided to the parents  | 
pursuant to Section 300.503 of Title 34 of the Code of Federal  | 
Regulations and implementing rules adopted by the State Board  | 
of Education. The appropriate
program pursuant to the  | 
individualized educational program of students
whose native  | 
tongue is a language other than English shall reflect the
 | 
 | 
special education, cultural and linguistic needs. No later than  | 
September
1, 1993, the State Board of Education shall establish  | 
standards for the
development, implementation and monitoring  | 
of appropriate bilingual special
individualized educational  | 
programs. The State Board of Education shall
further  | 
incorporate appropriate monitoring procedures to verify  | 
implementation
of these standards. The district shall indicate  | 
to the parent and
the State Board of Education the nature of  | 
the services the child will receive
for the regular school term  | 
while waiting placement in the appropriate special
education  | 
class.
 | 
 If the child is deaf, hard of hearing, blind, or visually  | 
impaired and
he or she might be eligible to receive services  | 
from the Illinois School for
the Deaf or the Illinois School  | 
for the Visually Impaired, the school
district shall notify the  | 
parents, in writing, of the existence of
these schools
and the  | 
services
they provide and shall make a reasonable effort to  | 
inform the parents of the existence of other, local schools  | 
that provide similar services and the services that these other  | 
schools provide. This notification
shall
include without  | 
limitation information on school services, school
admissions  | 
criteria, and school contact information.
 | 
 In the development of the individualized education program  | 
for a student who has a disability on the autism spectrum  | 
(which includes autistic disorder, Asperger's disorder,  | 
pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified,  | 
 | 
childhood disintegrative disorder, and Rett Syndrome, as  | 
defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental  | 
Disorders, fourth edition (DSM-IV, 2000)), the IEP team shall  | 
consider all of the following factors: | 
  (1) The verbal and nonverbal communication needs of the  | 
 child. | 
  (2) The need to develop social interaction skills and  | 
 proficiencies. | 
  (3) The needs resulting from the child's unusual  | 
 responses to sensory experiences. | 
  (4) The needs resulting from resistance to  | 
 environmental change or change in daily routines. | 
  (5) The needs resulting from engagement in repetitive  | 
 activities and stereotyped movements. | 
  (6) The need for any positive behavioral  | 
 interventions, strategies, and supports to address any  | 
 behavioral difficulties resulting from autism spectrum  | 
 disorder. | 
  (7) Other needs resulting from the child's disability  | 
 that impact progress in the general curriculum, including  | 
 social and emotional development. | 
Public Act 95-257
does not create any new entitlement to a  | 
service, program, or benefit, but must not affect any  | 
entitlement to a service, program, or benefit created by any  | 
other law.
 | 
 If the student may be eligible to participate in the  | 
 | 
Home-Based Support
Services Program for Mentally Disabled  | 
Adults authorized under the
Developmental Disability and  | 
Mental Disability Services Act upon becoming an
adult, the  | 
student's individualized education program shall include plans  | 
for
(i) determining the student's eligibility for those  | 
home-based services, (ii)
enrolling the student in the program  | 
of home-based services, and (iii)
developing a plan for the  | 
student's most effective use of the home-based
services after  | 
the student becomes an adult and no longer receives special
 | 
educational services under this Article. The plans developed  | 
under this
paragraph shall include specific actions to be taken  | 
by specified individuals,
agencies, or officials.
 | 
 (c) In the development of the individualized education  | 
program for a
student who is functionally blind, it shall be  | 
presumed that proficiency in
Braille reading and writing is  | 
essential for the student's satisfactory
educational progress.  | 
For purposes of this subsection, the State Board of
Education  | 
shall determine the criteria for a student to be classified as
 | 
functionally blind. Students who are not currently identified  | 
as
functionally blind who are also entitled to Braille  | 
instruction include:
(i) those whose vision loss is so severe  | 
that they are unable to read and
write at a level comparable to  | 
their peers solely through the use of
vision, and (ii) those  | 
who show evidence of progressive vision loss that
may result in  | 
functional blindness. Each student who is functionally blind
 | 
shall be entitled to Braille reading and writing instruction  | 
 | 
that is
sufficient to enable the student to communicate with  | 
the same level of
proficiency as other students of comparable  | 
ability. Instruction should be
provided to the extent that the  | 
student is physically and cognitively able
to use Braille.  | 
Braille instruction may be used in combination with other
 | 
special education services appropriate to the student's  | 
educational needs.
The assessment of each student who is  | 
functionally blind for the purpose of
developing the student's  | 
individualized education program shall include
documentation  | 
of the student's strengths and weaknesses in Braille skills.
 | 
Each person assisting in the development of the individualized  | 
education
program for a student who is functionally blind shall  | 
receive information
describing the benefits of Braille  | 
instruction. The individualized
education program for each  | 
student who is functionally blind shall
specify the appropriate  | 
learning medium or media based on the assessment
report.
 | 
 (d) To the maximum extent appropriate, the placement shall  | 
provide the
child with the opportunity to be educated with  | 
children who are not
disabled; provided that children with
 | 
disabilities who are recommended to be
placed into regular  | 
education classrooms are provided with supplementary
services  | 
to assist the children with disabilities to benefit
from the  | 
regular
classroom instruction and are included on the teacher's  | 
regular education class
register. Subject to the limitation of  | 
the preceding sentence, placement in
special classes, separate  | 
schools or other removal of the disabled child
from the regular  | 
 | 
educational environment shall occur only when the nature of
the  | 
severity of the disability is such that education in the
 | 
regular classes with
the use of supplementary aids and services  | 
cannot be achieved satisfactorily.
The placement of limited  | 
English learners proficiency students with disabilities shall
 | 
be in non-restrictive environments which provide for  | 
integration with
non-disabled peers in bilingual classrooms.  | 
Annually, each January, school districts shall report data on  | 
students from non-English
speaking backgrounds receiving  | 
special education and related services in
public and private  | 
facilities as prescribed in Section 2-3.30. If there
is a  | 
disagreement between parties involved regarding the special  | 
education
placement of any child, either in-state or  | 
out-of-state, the placement is
subject to impartial due process  | 
procedures described in Article 10 of the
Rules and Regulations  | 
to Govern the Administration and Operation of Special
 | 
Education.
 | 
 (e) No child who comes from a home in which a language  | 
other than English
is the principal language used may be  | 
assigned to any class or program
under this Article until he  | 
has been given, in the principal language
used by the child and  | 
used in his home, tests reasonably related to his
cultural  | 
environment. All testing and evaluation materials and  | 
procedures
utilized for evaluation and placement shall not be  | 
linguistically, racially or
culturally discriminatory.
 | 
 (f) Nothing in this Article shall be construed to require  | 
 | 
any child to
undergo any physical examination or medical  | 
treatment whose parents object thereto on the grounds that such  | 
examination or
treatment conflicts with his religious beliefs.
 | 
 (g) School boards or their designee shall provide to the  | 
parents of a child prior written notice of any decision (a)  | 
proposing
to initiate or change, or (b) refusing to initiate or  | 
change, the
identification, evaluation, or educational  | 
placement of the child or the
provision of a free appropriate  | 
public education to their child, and the
reasons therefor. Such  | 
written notification shall also inform the
parent of the  | 
opportunity to present complaints with respect
to any matter  | 
relating to the educational placement of the student, or
the  | 
provision of a free appropriate public education and to have an
 | 
impartial due process hearing on the complaint. The notice  | 
shall inform
the parents in the parents' native language,
 | 
unless it is clearly not feasible to do so, of their rights and  | 
all
procedures available pursuant to this Act and the federal  | 
Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act of  | 
2004 (Public Law 108-446); it
shall be the responsibility of  | 
the State Superintendent to develop
uniform notices setting  | 
forth the procedures available under this Act
and the federal  | 
Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act of  | 
2004 (Public Law 108-446) to be used by all school boards. The  | 
notice
shall also inform the parents of the availability upon
 | 
request of a list of free or low-cost legal and other relevant  | 
services
available locally to assist parents in initiating an
 | 
 | 
impartial due process hearing. Any parent who is deaf, or
does  | 
not normally communicate using spoken English, who  | 
participates in
a meeting with a representative of a local  | 
educational agency for the
purposes of developing an  | 
individualized educational program shall be
entitled to the  | 
services of an interpreter.
 | 
 (g-5) For purposes of this subsection (g-5), "qualified  | 
professional" means an individual who holds credentials to  | 
evaluate the child in the domain or domains for which an  | 
evaluation is sought or an intern working under the direct  | 
supervision of a qualified professional, including a master's  | 
or doctoral degree candidate. | 
 To ensure that a parent can participate fully and  | 
effectively with school personnel in the development of  | 
appropriate educational and related services for his or her  | 
child, the parent, an independent educational evaluator, or a  | 
qualified professional retained by or on behalf of a parent or  | 
child must be afforded reasonable access to educational  | 
facilities, personnel, classrooms, and buildings and to the  | 
child as provided in this subsection (g-5). The requirements of  | 
this subsection (g-5) apply to any public school facility,  | 
building, or program and to any facility, building, or program  | 
supported in whole or in part by public funds. Prior to  | 
visiting a school, school building, or school facility, the  | 
parent, independent educational evaluator, or qualified  | 
professional may be required by the school district to inform  | 
 | 
the building principal or supervisor in writing of the proposed  | 
visit, the purpose of the visit, and the approximate duration  | 
of the visit. The visitor and the school district shall arrange  | 
the visit or visits at times that are mutually agreeable.  | 
Visitors shall comply with school safety, security, and  | 
visitation policies at all times. School district visitation  | 
policies must not conflict with this subsection (g-5). Visitors  | 
shall be required to comply with the requirements of applicable  | 
privacy laws, including those laws protecting the  | 
confidentiality of education records such as the federal Family  | 
Educational Rights and Privacy Act and the Illinois School  | 
Student Records Act. The visitor shall not disrupt the  | 
educational process. | 
  (1) A parent must be afforded reasonable access of  | 
 sufficient duration and scope for the purpose of observing  | 
 his or her child in the child's current educational  | 
 placement, services, or program or for the purpose of  | 
 visiting an educational placement or program proposed for  | 
 the child. | 
  (2) An independent educational evaluator or a  | 
 qualified professional retained by or on behalf of a parent  | 
 or child must be afforded reasonable access of sufficient  | 
 duration and scope for the purpose of conducting an  | 
 evaluation of the child, the child's performance, the  | 
 child's current educational program, placement, services,  | 
 or environment, or any educational program, placement,  | 
 | 
 services, or environment proposed for the child, including  | 
 interviews of educational personnel, child observations,  | 
 assessments, tests or assessments of the child's  | 
 educational program, services, or placement or of any  | 
 proposed educational program, services, or placement. If  | 
 one or more interviews of school personnel are part of the  | 
 evaluation, the interviews must be conducted at a mutually  | 
 agreed upon time, date, and place that do not interfere  | 
 with the school employee's school duties. The school  | 
 district may limit interviews to personnel having  | 
 information relevant to the child's current educational  | 
 services, program, or placement or to a proposed  | 
 educational service, program, or placement. | 
 (h) (Blank).
 | 
 (i) (Blank).
 | 
 (j) (Blank).
 | 
 (k) (Blank).
 | 
 (l) (Blank).
 | 
 (m) (Blank).
 | 
 (n) (Blank).
 | 
 (o) (Blank).
 | 
(Source: P.A. 98-219, eff. 8-9-13.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/14-9.01) (from Ch. 122, par. 14-9.01)
 | 
 Sec. 14-9.01. 
Qualifications of teachers, other  | 
professional personnel
and necessary workers. No person shall  | 
 | 
be employed to teach any class or
program authorized by this  | 
Article who does not hold a valid teacher's
license certificate  | 
as provided by law and unless he has had such special training
 | 
as the State Board of Education may require. No special license  | 
certificate or
endorsement to a special license certificate  | 
issued under Section 21B-30 of this Code Section 21-4 on
or  | 
after July 1, 1994, shall be valid for teaching students with  | 
visual
disabilities unless the person to whom the license  | 
certificate or endorsement is issued
has attained satisfactory  | 
performance on an examination that is designed to
assess  | 
competency in Braille reading and writing skills according to  | 
standards
that the State Board of Education may adopt. Evidence  | 
of successfully
completing the examination of Braille reading  | 
and writing skills must be
submitted to the State Board of  | 
Education prior to an applicant's taking examination
of the  | 
content area subject matter knowledge test required under  | 
Section 21B-30 of this Code Section 21-1a. In Beginning
July 1,  | 
1995, in addition to other requirements, a candidate for a  | 
teaching
license certification in the area of the deaf and hard  | 
of hearing granted by the
Illinois State Board of Education for  | 
teaching deaf and hard of hearing
students in grades pre-school  | 
through grade 12 must demonstrate a minimum
proficiency in sign  | 
language as determined by the Illinois State Board of
 | 
Education. All other professional personnel employed in any  | 
class, service,
or program authorized by this Article shall  | 
hold such licenses certificates and shall
have had such special  | 
 | 
training as the State Board of Education may require;
provided  | 
that in a school district organized under Article 34, the  | 
school
district may employ speech and language pathologists who  | 
are licensed under the
Illinois Speech-Language Pathology and  | 
Audiology Practice Act but who do not
hold a license  | 
certificate issued under this the School Code if the district  | 
certifies that
a chronic shortage of certified personnel  | 
exists. Nothing contained in this
Act prohibits the school  | 
board from employing necessary workers to assist the
teacher  | 
with the special educational facilities, except that all such  | 
necessary
workers must have had such training as the State  | 
Board of Education may
require.
 | 
 No later than January 1, 1993, the State Board of Education  | 
shall develop,
in consultation with the Advisory Council on the  | 
Education of Children with
Disabilities and the Advisory  | 
Council on Bilingual Education, rules governing
the  | 
qualifications for certification of teachers and school  | 
service personnel
providing services to limited English  | 
learners proficient students receiving special
education and  | 
related services.
 | 
 The employment of any teacher in a special education  | 
program provided
for in Sections 14-1.01 to 14-14.01,  | 
inclusive, shall be subject to
the provisions of Sections 24-11  | 
to 24-16, inclusive. Any teacher
employed in a special  | 
education program, prior to the effective date of
this  | 
amendatory Act of 1987, in which 2 or more districts
 | 
 | 
participate shall enter upon contractual continued service in  | 
each of
the participating districts subject to the provisions  | 
of Sections 24-11
to 24-16, inclusive.
 | 
(Source: P.A. 92-651, eff. 7-11-02.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/14C-1) (from Ch. 122, par. 14C-1) | 
 Sec. 14C-1. The General Assembly finds that there are large  | 
numbers of children in
this State who come from environments  | 
where the primary language is other
than English. Experience  | 
has shown that public school classes in which
instruction is  | 
given only in English are often inadequate for the education
of  | 
children whose native tongue is another language. The General  | 
Assembly
believes that a program of transitional bilingual  | 
education can meet the
needs of these children and facilitate  | 
their integration into the regular
public school curriculum.  | 
Therefore, pursuant to the policy of this State
to ensure  | 
insure equal educational opportunity to every child, and in  | 
recognition
of the educational needs of English learners  | 
children of limited English-speaking ability, it is the purpose  | 
of this Act to provide for the establishment of
transitional  | 
bilingual education programs in the public schools, to
provide  | 
supplemental financial assistance to help local school  | 
districts
meet the extra costs of such programs, and to allow  | 
this State to directly or indirectly provide technical  | 
assistance and professional development to support  | 
transitional bilingual education programs statewide. | 
 | 
(Source: P.A. 96-1423, eff. 8-3-10.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/14C-2) (from Ch. 122, par. 14C-2)
 | 
 Sec. 14C-2. Definitions. Unless the context indicates  | 
otherwise, the terms used in this
Article have the following  | 
meanings:
 | 
 (a) "State Board" means the State Board of Education.
 | 
 (b) "Certification Board" means the State Teacher  | 
Certification
Board.
 | 
 (c) "School District" means any school district  | 
established under
this Code.
 | 
 (d) "English learners" "Children of limited  | 
English-speaking ability" means (1)
all children in grades  | 
pre-K through 12 who were not born in the United States, whose  | 
native tongue is a
language other than English, and who are  | 
incapable of performing ordinary
classwork in English; and (2)  | 
all children in grades pre-K through 12 who were born in the  | 
United
States of parents possessing no or limited  | 
English-speaking ability and
who are incapable of performing  | 
ordinary classwork in English.
 | 
 (e) "Teacher of transitional bilingual education" means a  | 
teacher
with a speaking and reading ability in a language other  | 
than English in
which transitional bilingual education is  | 
offered and with communicative
skills in English.
 | 
 (f) "Program in transitional bilingual education" means a  | 
full-time
program of instruction (1) in all those courses or  | 
 | 
subjects which a
child is required by law to receive and which  | 
are required by the
child's school district, which shall be  | 
given in the native language of
English learners the children  | 
of limited English-speaking ability who are enrolled in the
 | 
program and also in English, (2) in the reading and writing of  | 
the
native language of English learners the children of limited  | 
English-speaking ability who
are enrolled in the program and in  | 
the oral language (listening and speaking),
reading, and  | 
writing of English, and (3) in the history and culture of
the  | 
country, territory, or geographic area which is the native land  | 
of
the parents of English learners children of limited  | 
English-speaking ability who are
enrolled in the program and in  | 
the history and culture of the United
States; or a part-time  | 
program of instruction based on the educational
needs of those  | 
English learners children of limited English-speaking ability  | 
who do not
need a full-time program of instruction.
 | 
(Source: P.A. 98-972, eff. 8-15-14.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/14C-3) (from Ch. 122, par. 14C-3)
 | 
 Sec. 14C-3. Language classification of children;  | 
establishment of
program; period of participation;  | 
examination.
Each school district shall ascertain, not later  | 
than the first day of
March, under regulations prescribed by  | 
the State Board, the
number of English learners children of  | 
limited English-speaking ability within the school
district,  | 
and shall classify them according to the language of which
they  | 
 | 
possess a primary speaking ability, and their grade level, age  | 
or
achievement level.
 | 
 When, at the beginning of any school year, there is within  | 
an
attendance center of a school district, not including  | 
children who are
enrolled in existing private school systems,  | 
20 or more English learners children of
limited  | 
English-speaking ability in any such language classification,
 | 
the school district shall establish, for each classification, a  | 
program
in transitional bilingual education for the children  | 
therein. A school
district may establish a program in  | 
transitional
bilingual education with respect to any  | 
classification with less than 20
children therein, but should a  | 
school district decide not to establish
such a program, the  | 
school district shall provide a locally determined
 | 
transitional program of instruction which, based upon an
 | 
individual student language assessment, provides content area  | 
instruction
in a language other than English to the extent
 | 
necessary to ensure that each student can benefit from  | 
educational
instruction and achieve an early and effective  | 
transition into the regular
school curriculum.
 | 
 Every school-age English learner child of limited  | 
English-speaking ability not
enrolled in existing private  | 
school systems shall be enrolled and
participate in the program  | 
in transitional bilingual education
established for the  | 
classification to which he belongs by the school
district in  | 
which he resides for a period of 3 years or until such time
as  | 
 | 
he achieves a level of English language skills which will  | 
enable him
to perform successfully in classes in which  | 
instruction is given only in
English, whichever shall first  | 
occur.
 | 
 An English learner A child of limited English-speaking  | 
ability enrolled in a program in
transitional bilingual  | 
education may, in the discretion of the school
district and  | 
subject to the approval of the child's parent or legal
 | 
guardian, continue in that program for a period longer than 3  | 
years.
 | 
 An examination in the oral language (listening and  | 
speaking), reading, and
writing of English, as prescribed by  | 
the State Board, shall
be administered annually to all English  | 
learners children of limited English-speaking
ability enrolled  | 
and participating in a program in transitional
bilingual  | 
education. No school district shall transfer an English learner  | 
a child of
limited English-speaking ability out of a program in  | 
transitional
bilingual education prior to his third year of  | 
enrollment therein unless
the parents of the child approve the  | 
transfer in writing, and unless the
child has received a score  | 
on said examination which, in the
determination of the State  | 
Board, reflects a level of
English language skills appropriate  | 
to his or her grade level.
 | 
 If later evidence suggests that a child so transferred is  | 
still
disabled by an inadequate command of English, he may be
 | 
re-enrolled
in the program for a length of time equal to that  | 
 | 
which remained at the
time he was transferred.
 | 
(Source: P.A. 98-972, eff. 8-15-14.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/14C-5) (from Ch. 122, par. 14C-5)
 | 
 Sec. 14C-5. Nonresident children; enrollment and tuition;  | 
joint programs. A school district may allow a nonresident  | 
English learner child of limited
English-speaking ability to  | 
enroll in or attend its program in transitional
bilingual  | 
education, and the tuition for such a child shall be paid by  | 
the
district in which he resides.
 | 
 Any school district may join with any other school district  | 
or districts
to provide the programs in transitional bilingual  | 
education required or
permitted by this Article.
 | 
(Source: P.A. 78-727.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/14C-7) (from Ch. 122, par. 14C-7)
 | 
 Sec. 14C-7. Participation in extracurricular activities of  | 
public schools. Instruction in courses of subjects included in  | 
a program of transitional
bilingual education which are not  | 
mandatory may be given in a language
other than English. In  | 
those courses or subjects in which verbalization is
not  | 
essential to an understanding of the subject matter, including  | 
but not
necessarily limited to art, music and physical  | 
education, English learners children of
limited  | 
English-speaking ability shall participate fully with their
 | 
English-speaking contemporaries in the regular public school  | 
 | 
classes
provided for said subjects. Each school district shall  | 
ensure to children
enrolled in a program in transitional  | 
bilingual education practical and
meaningful opportunity to  | 
participate fully in the extracurricular
activities of the  | 
regular public schools in the district.
 | 
(Source: P.A. 78-727.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/14C-9) (from Ch. 122, par. 14C-9)
 | 
 Sec. 14C-9. Tenure; minimum salaries. Any person employed  | 
as a teacher of transitional bilingual education
whose teaching  | 
certificate was issued pursuant to Section
14C-8 (now repealed)  | 
of this Code Article shall have such employment credited to him  | 
or her for the
purposes of determining under the provisions of  | 
this Code eligibility to
enter upon contractual continued  | 
service; provided that such employment
immediately precedes  | 
and is consecutive with the year in which such person
becomes  | 
certified under Article 21 of this Code or licensed under  | 
Article 21B of this Code.
 | 
 For the purposes of determining the minimum salaries  | 
payable to persons
certified under Section 14C-8 (now repealed)  | 
of this Code Article, such
persons shall be deemed to have been  | 
trained at a recognized institution of
higher learning.
 | 
(Source: P.A. 82-597.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/14C-11) (from Ch. 122, par. 14C-11)
 | 
 Sec. 14C-11. Preschool or summer school programs. A school  | 
 | 
district may establish, on a full or part-time basis, preschool
 | 
or summer school programs in transitional bilingual education  | 
for English learners children
of limited English-speaking  | 
ability or join with the other school districts
in establishing  | 
such preschool or summer programs. Preschool or summer
programs  | 
in transitional bilingual education shall not substitute for
 | 
programs in transitional bilingual education required to be  | 
provided during
the regular school year.
 | 
(Source: P.A. 78-727.)
 | 
 (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 5/34-2.4) (from Ch. 122, par. 34-2.4)
 | 
 Sec. 34-2.4. School improvement plan. A 3 year local school
 | 
improvement plan shall be developed and implemented at each  | 
 | 
attendance center.
This plan shall reflect the overriding  | 
purpose of the attendance center to
improve educational  | 
quality. The local school principal shall develop a
school  | 
improvement plan in consultation with the local school council,  | 
all
categories of school staff, parents and community  | 
residents. Once the plan
is developed, reviewed by the  | 
professional personnel leadership committee,
and approved by  | 
the local school council, the
principal shall be responsible  | 
for directing implementation of the plan,
and the local school  | 
council shall monitor its implementation. After the
 | 
termination of the initial 3 year plan, a new 3 year plan shall  | 
be
developed and modified as appropriate on an annual basis.
 | 
 The school improvement plan shall be designed to achieve  | 
priority goals
including but not limited to:
 | 
  (a) assuring that students show significant progress  | 
 toward meeting and
exceeding State performance standards  | 
 in State mandated learning areas,
including the mastery of  | 
 higher order thinking skills in
these areas;
 | 
  (b) assuring that students attend school regularly and  | 
 graduate from
school at such rates that the district  | 
 average equals or surpasses national
norms;
 | 
  (c) assuring that students are adequately prepared for  | 
 and aided in
making a successful transition to further  | 
 education and life experience;
 | 
  (d) assuring that students are adequately prepared for
 | 
 and aided in making a successful transition to employment;  | 
 | 
 and
 | 
  (e) assuring that students are, to the maximum extent  | 
 possible, provided
with a common learning experience that  | 
 is of high academic quality and that
reflects high  | 
 expectations for all students' capacities to learn.
 | 
 With respect to these priority goals, the school  | 
improvement plan shall
include but not be limited to the  | 
following:
 | 
  (a) an analysis of data collected in the attendance  | 
 center and community
indicating the specific strengths and  | 
 weaknesses of the attendance center
in light of the goals  | 
 specified above, including data and analysis specified
by  | 
 the State Board of Education pertaining to specific  | 
 measurable outcomes for
student performance, the  | 
 attendance centers, and their instructional
programs;
 | 
  (b) a description of specific annual objectives the  | 
 attendance center
will pursue in achieving the goals  | 
 specified above;
 | 
  (c) a description of the specific activities the  | 
 attendance center will
undertake to achieve its  | 
 objectives;
 | 
  (d) an analysis of the attendance center's staffing  | 
 pattern and material
resources, and an explanation of how  | 
 the attendance center's planned
staffing pattern, the  | 
 deployment of staff, and the use of material
resources  | 
 furthers the objectives of the plan;
 | 
 | 
  (e) a description of the key assumptions and directions  | 
 of the school's
curriculum and the academic and  | 
 non-academic programs of the attendance
center, and an  | 
 explanation of how this curriculum and these programs
 | 
 further the goals and objectives of the plan;
 | 
  (f) a description of the steps that will be taken to  | 
 enhance educational
opportunities for all students,  | 
 regardless of gender, including limited
English learners  | 
 proficient students, disabled students, low-income  | 
 students and
minority students;
 | 
  (g) a description of any steps which may be taken by  | 
 the attendance
center to educate parents as to how they can  | 
 assist children at home in
preparing their children to  | 
 learn effectively;
 | 
  (h) a description of the steps the attendance center  | 
 will take to
coordinate its efforts with, and to gain the  | 
 participation and support of,
community residents,  | 
 business organizations, and other local institutions
and  | 
 individuals;
 | 
  (i) a description of any staff development program for  | 
 all school staff
and volunteers tied to the priority goals,  | 
 objectives, and activities
specified in the plan;
 | 
  (j) a description of the steps the local school council  | 
 will undertake
to monitor implementation of the plan on an  | 
 ongoing basis;
 | 
  (k) a description of the steps the attendance center  | 
 | 
 will take to ensure
that teachers have working conditions  | 
 that provide a professional
environment conducive to  | 
 fulfilling their responsibilities;
 | 
  (l) a description of the steps the attendance center  | 
 will take to ensure
teachers the time and opportunity to  | 
 incorporate new ideas and techniques,
both in subject  | 
 matter and teaching skills, into their own work;
 | 
  (m) a description of the steps the attendance center  | 
 will take to
encourage pride and positive identification  | 
 with the attendance center
through various athletic  | 
 activities; and
 | 
  (n) a description of the student need for and provision  | 
 of services
to special populations, beyond the standard  | 
 school programs provided for
students in grades K through  | 
 12 and those enumerated in the categorical
programs cited  | 
 in item d of part 4 of Section 34-2.3, including financial
 | 
 costs of providing same and a timeline for implementing the  | 
 necessary
services, including but not limited, when  | 
 applicable, to ensuring the
provisions of educational  | 
 services to all eligible children aged 4 years
for the  | 
 1990-91 school year and thereafter, reducing class size to  | 
 State
averages in grades K-3 for the 1991-92 school year  | 
 and thereafter and in
all grades for the 1993-94 school  | 
 year and thereafter, and providing
sufficient staff and  | 
 facility resources for students not served in the
regular  | 
 classroom setting.
 | 
 | 
 Based on the analysis of data collected indicating specific  | 
strengths and
weaknesses of the attendance center, the school  | 
improvement plan may place
greater emphasis from year to year  | 
on particular priority goals, objectives,
and activities.
 | 
(Source: P.A. 93-48, eff. 7-1-03.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/34-8.17)
 | 
 Sec. 34-8.17. Lump-sum allocation; key centralized  | 
functions. Final
designation as a Learning Zone under this Law  | 
shall entitle the participating
attendance centers to receive  | 
funds in lump-sum allocations, to budget and
spend those funds,  | 
and to operate in accordance with the designation and this
Law.  | 
Lump-sum allocations shall be based on the number of enrolled  | 
regular
and special needs students and shall include all  | 
operating funds for
compensation, supplies, equipment,  | 
repairs, energy, maintenance,
transportation,
and
professional  | 
services, and all special funds that follow special  | 
populations,
including desegregation, special education,  | 
bilingual, federal, and State
Chapter 1 funds. A sum equal to  | 
3.2% of operating funds shall be deducted by
the board to  | 
provide key centralized functions,
unless a
designated  | 
Learning Zone obtains one or more of those functions elsewhere,  | 
in
which case the sum shall be appropriately adjusted. As used
 | 
in this Law, key centralized functions shall mean:
 | 
  (1) Equity assurance staff to ensure that services are  | 
 maintained for
students with disabilities, limited English  | 
 | 
 learners proficient students, low-income
students, and any  | 
 other special need students as required by federal law;
 | 
  (2) Payroll services and background and credential  | 
 checks;
 | 
  (3) Budget and treasury services to levy and collect  | 
 taxes and distribute
lump-sum funding;
 | 
  (4) Central computer systems providing information  | 
 distribution and
networking;
 | 
  (5) On-line data collection and analysis centers for  | 
 student and school
data;
 | 
  (6) Emergency pool funding; and
 | 
  (7) Legal and labor departmental services for  | 
 system-wide litigation and
collective bargaining  | 
 negotiations.
 | 
(Source: P.A. 89-3, eff. 2-27-95; 89-15, eff. 5-30-95.)
 | 
 Section 10. The Critical Health Problems and Comprehensive  | 
Health
Education Act is amended by changing Section 5 as  | 
follows:
 | 
 (105 ILCS 110/5) (from Ch. 122, par. 865)
 | 
 Sec. 5. Advisory Committee. 
An advisory committee  | 
consisting of 11 members is hereby established
as follows:
the
 | 
Director of Public Health or his or her designee, the Secretary  | 
of
Human Services or his or her designee,
and an additional  | 
person representing the Department of Human
Services  | 
 | 
designated by the Secretary,
the Director of Children and  | 
Family Services or his or her designee,
the Chairman of the  | 
Illinois Joint Committee on School Health or his or her
 | 
designee,
and 7 6
members to be appointed by the State Board of  | 
Education to
be chosen, insofar as is possible, from the  | 
following groups: colleges
and universities, voluntary health  | 
agencies, medicine, dentistry,
professional health  | 
associations, teachers, administrators, members of
local  | 
boards of education, and lay citizens. The original public  | 
members
shall, upon their
appointment, serve until July 1,  | 
1973, and, thereafter, new appointments
of public members shall  | 
be made in like manner and such members shall
serve for 4 year  | 
terms commencing on July 1, 1973, and until their
successors  | 
are appointed and qualified. Vacancies in the terms of public
 | 
members shall be filled in like manner as original appointments  | 
for the
balance of the unexpired terms. The members of the  | 
advisory committee
shall receive no compensation but shall be  | 
reimbursed for actual and
necessary expenses incurred in the  | 
performance of their duties. Such
committee shall select a  | 
chairman and establish rules and procedures for
its proceedings  | 
not inconsistent with the provisions of this Act. Such
 | 
committee shall advise the State Board of Education on all  | 
matters relating
to the implementation of the
provisions of  | 
this Act. They shall assist in presenting advice and
 | 
interpretation concerning a comprehensive health education  | 
program to
the Illinois public, especially as related to  | 
 | 
critical health problems.
They shall also assist in  | 
establishing a sound understanding and
sympathetic  | 
relationship between such comprehensive health education
 | 
program and the public health, welfare and educational programs  | 
of other
agencies in the community.
 | 
(Source: P.A. 90-372, eff. 7-1-98; 91-61, eff. 6-30-99.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/2-3.60 rep.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/2-3.64b rep.) | 
 (105 ILCS 5/2-3.120 rep.) | 
 (105 ILCS 5/2-3.137 rep.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/2-3.147 rep.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/3-11.5 rep.)
 | 
 (105 ILCS 5/22-65 rep.) | 
 (105 ILCS 5/22-75 rep.) | 
 Section 15. The School Code is amended by repealing  | 
Sections 2-3.60, 2-3.64b, 2-3.120, 2-3.137, 2-3.147, 3-11.5,  | 
22-65, and 22-75.
 | 
 Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect July 1,  | 
2015. 
 | 
 |  | 
INDEX
 |  | 
Statutes amended in order of appearance
 |  
  |