Public Act 0723 103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 103-0723 |
SB3762 Enrolled | LRB103 38804 JRC 68941 b |
|
|
AN ACT concerning government. |
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, |
represented in the General Assembly: |
Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
Language Equity and Access Act. |
Section 5. Legislative purpose. The purpose of this Act is |
to ensure that all residents of the State have equal access to |
State services and, in particular, to remove language as a |
barrier for persons who have limited English proficiency and |
who may, therefore, be excluded from equitable access to State |
information, programs, services, and activities. It is the |
intent of the General Assembly that the State adopt a language |
equity and access policy that incorporates federal guidance |
for ensuring meaningful access for persons with limited |
English proficiency as provided by the Illinois Human Rights |
Act, the Illinois Civil Rights Act of 2003, Title VI of the |
Civil Rights Act of 1964, U.S. Presidential Executive Order |
No. 13166 (Improving Access to Services for Persons with |
Limited English Proficiency), U.S. Presidential Executive |
Order 13985 (Advancing Racial Equity and Support for |
Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government), U.S. |
Presidential Executive Order 14091 (Further Advancing Racial |
Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the |
|
Federal Government), other non-discrimination provisions in |
federal or State statutes, and any succeeding provisions of |
federal or State law, regulation, or guidance. |
Section 10. Definitions. In this Act: |
"Interpretation" means listening to a communication in one |
language and orally converting it to another language in a |
manner that preserves the intent and meaning of the original |
message. |
"Language assistance services" means oral and written |
language services needed to assist LEP individuals to |
communicate effectively with staff, and to provide LEP |
individuals with meaningful access to, and equal opportunity |
to participate fully in, the services, activities, or other |
programs administered by the State. |
"Limited English proficient (LEP) person" means an |
individual who does not speak English as his or her primary |
language and who has a limited ability to read, speak, write, |
or understand English. |
"Meaningful access" means language assistance that results |
in accurate, timely, and effective communication at no cost to |
limited English proficient persons. For LEP persons, |
meaningful access denotes access that is not unreasonably |
restricted, delayed, or inferior as compared to access to |
programs or activities provided to English proficient |
individuals. |
|
"State agency" means an executive agency, department, |
board, commission, or authority directly responsible to the |
Governor. |
"Translation" means the conversion of text from one |
language to another in a written form to convey the intent and |
essential meaning of the original text. |
"Vital documents" means paper or electronic written |
material that contains information that affects a person's |
access to, retention of, termination of, or exclusion from |
program services or benefits or is required by law. |
Section 15. Statewide Language Equity and Access. |
(a) This Act is created to ensure meaningful access to |
State programs and resources for limited proficient (LEP) |
persons. This Act requires the Governor's Office of New |
Americans, with the support of the Department of Human |
Services and any other relevant agencies to, at a minimum: |
(1) prepare, based on available U.S. Census data, a |
Language Needs Assessment Report that identifies the |
languages spoken throughout the State as described in |
Section 25 of this Act; |
(2) assist State agencies in the creation of language |
access plans as detailed in Section 30 of this Act; |
(3) develop standards and a compliance framework to |
assess progress by State agencies, including both key |
performance indicators and mechanisms to track them; |
|
(4) provide annual reporting on State agency |
compliance and progress to the Governor and the General |
Assembly by December 31 of every year starting in 2026; |
(5) establish requirements for the availability of |
interpretation and translation services; |
(6) set standards for adequate staffing of bilingual |
employees at State agencies, including a methodology for |
monitoring implementation and updating the State Services |
Assurance Act and the Bilingual Employment Plan, based on |
the Language Needs Assessment Report; |
(7) incorporate language equity compliance provisions |
in State contracts with vendors, grantees and purchase of |
care entities; and |
(8) ensure that whenever an emergency, weather, |
health, or other crisis situation has been declared, the |
State's limited English person population is adequately |
notified of the emergency, information, any actions |
required, and has equitable access to emergency resources. |
(b) The Governor's Office of New Americans, with the |
support of the Department of Human Services and any other |
relevant agencies, shall lead statewide efforts in the |
implementation of the State's language equity and access |
policy for LEP persons and to ensure meaningful access to |
information, services, programs, and activities offered by |
State agencies for LEP persons. The role of the Governor's |
Office of New Americans in this work is to advance and monitor |
|
implementation of and compliance with this Act by: |
(1) providing oversight, central coordination, and |
technical assistance to State agencies in the |
implementation of language access requirements under this |
Act or under any other law, rule, or guidance related to |
language access; |
(2) reviewing and monitoring each State agency's |
language access plan for compliance with this Act; |
(3) consulting with Language Access Coordinators and |
State agency directors or their equivalent; |
(4) creating, distributing, and making available to |
State agencies multilingual signage in the more frequently |
encountered languages in the State and other languages as |
needed, informing individuals of the individual's right to |
free interpretation services and how to request language |
services; |
(5) ensuring that each State agency develops an |
internal complaint and review process specific to the |
provision of language assistance services and supporting |
agencies in addressing complaints in a timely manner; |
(6) developing recommendations for the use of |
interpreters and translators, including standards for |
certification and qualifications; |
(7) assisting State agencies in developing |
multilingual websites with information about relevant |
policies, standards, plans, and complaint processes; |
|
(8) assisting State agencies in preparing public |
notices of the availability of translation or |
interpretation services upon request; |
(9) preparing an annual compliance report to be |
submitted to the Governor and the General Assembly; and |
(10) addressing other issues as necessary to ensure |
equity and meaningful participation for persons with |
limited English proficiency. |
Section 20. Statewide Language Needs Assessment. The |
Governor's Office of New Americans, with the support of the |
Department of Human Services and any other relevant State |
agencies, shall compile available United States Census data on |
languages used across the State, including the identification |
of geographic patterns and trend data, to inform the Language |
Needs Assessment Report. The report shall be updated at least |
every 10 years in conjunction with the decennial federal |
Census but may be updated more frequently using other Census |
data reports. |
The Language Needs Assessment report shall be made |
available to State agencies for the development of their |
language access plans and overall improvement in service |
provision to LEP persons. |
Section 25. Language access plans. |
(a) Each State agency shall take reasonable steps to |
|
ensure meaningful access to services, programs, and activities |
by LEP persons. Therefore, each State agency shall prepare and |
submit a language access plan to the Governor's Office of New |
Americans. Each language access plan should describe the |
population of LEP persons the agency serves, the policy and |
programmatic actions the agency will implement to ensure |
meaningful access, and the metrics the agency will use to |
measure compliance with this Act. |
(b) Each State agency shall designate a Language Access |
Coordinator who is responsible for overseeing the development |
and implementation of the agency's language access plan. |
(c) The adequacy of a State agency's language access plan |
shall be determined by the totality of the circumstances, |
including an individualized assessment that balances the |
following factors: |
(1) the number or proportion of LEP persons who are |
served or encountered in the eligible service population |
of the State agency; |
(2) the frequency with which LEP persons come in |
contact with the services, programs, or activities |
provided by the State agency; |
(3) the nature and importance of the services, |
programs, or activities provided by the State agency; and |
(4) the resources available to the State agency and |
the costs. |
(d) Each State agency shall describe in its plans how it |
|
will provide all of the following: |
(1) competent, timely translation and interpretation |
services to LEP persons who are seeking access to |
information, services, programs, or activities provided by |
the State agency; and |
(2) vital document translation services for LEP |
persons who are seeking access to information, services, |
programs, or activities provided by the State agency, as |
follows: |
(A) if there are more than 1,000 LEP persons in the |
population of persons served by the State agency or if |
LEP persons comprise more than 5% of the population of |
persons served by the State agency; or |
(B) if there are fewer than 50 persons served by |
the State agency that reach the 5% threshold in |
subparagraph (A), the State agency shall provide |
written notice in the primary language to the LEP |
persons of the right to receive competent oral |
interpretation of those written materials free of |
cost. |
(3) Following the first submitted plan, language |
access plans shall include an assessment of performance |
metrics for the previous State fiscal year. |
(e) The Governor's Office of New Americans, with the |
support of the Department of Human Services and any other |
relevant State agencies, shall develop a template and |
|
mechanism for collecting and analyzing State agency language |
access plans. |
(f) Following completion of the assessment, the Governor's |
Office of New Americans, with the support of the Department of |
Human Services and any other relevant State agencies, shall |
provide guidance and feedback to each State agency, including |
any recommendations to ensure compliance with this Act. |
(g) Language access plans shall be made publicly |
accessible by each State agency. |
Section 30. Compliance and accountability. |
(a) No later than July 1, 2025, the Governor's Office of |
New Americans shall prepare and submit to the General Assembly |
a Language Equity and Access Status Report detailing the |
progress made by State agencies in the implementation of this |
Act, including the development of Language Access Plans. |
(b) By December 31, 2026, and every December 31 |
thereafter, the Governor's Office of New Americans shall |
submit a Language Equity and Access Compliance Report to the |
General Assembly. The Compliance Report shall be based on |
information collected during the preceding fiscal year and |
shall, at a minimum, include: |
(1) key performance metrics for the previous year; |
(2) the following information for each State agency: |
(A) a high-level summary of the language access |
plan, including language access services offered; |
|
(B) as applicable, the number and percentage of |
LEP persons who use the services of the State agency, |
listed by language other than English; |
(C) aggregate data on the number of bilingual |
employees, by title, who are in roles designated as |
requiring a person employed in that position to speak |
or write in a language other than English, including |
the languages that the persons are required to speak |
in that role, and whether the employees are certified |
as bilingual in those languages; |
(D) the name and contact information of the |
Language Access Coordinator for each State agency; |
(E) an ongoing employee development and training |
strategy to maintain well-trained bilingual employees |
and general staff; |
(F) data on the use of any interpretation or |
translation vendor services such as number and type of |
language services requested, languages requested, and |
any other relevant data; and |
(G) aggregate data on the number of complaints |
filed and the status or resolution of the complaints. |
(c) The Governor's Office of New Americans shall attempt |
to resolve a language access complaint received by a State |
agency if the agency does not resolve the complaint in a timely |
manner or the resolution is inadequate. Upon referral of a |
complaint, the Governor's Office of New Americans may engage |
|
in informal processes, including mediation, conference, and |
conciliation, to resolve the complaint. |
Section 35. Implementation. The Governor's Office of New |
Americans may work in collaboration with the Department of |
Human Services and any other relevant State agency to |
implement this Act. |
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law. |