Section 336.20 Definitions
"Abused child" means
a child whose parent or immediate family member, or any person responsible for
the child's welfare, or any individual residing in the same home as the child,
or a paramour of the child's parent:
inflicts, causes to be
inflicted, or allows to be inflicted upon such child physical or mental injury,
by other than accidental means, which causes death, disfigurement, impairment
of physical or emotional health, or loss or impairment of any bodily function;
creates a substantial risk of
physical or mental injury to such child by other than accidental means
which would be likely to cause death, disfigurement, impairment of physical or
emotional health, or loss or impairment of any bodily function;
commits or allows to be
committed any sex offense against such child, as such sex offenses are defined
in the Criminal Code of 2012 [720 ILCS 5] or in the Wrongs to Children
Act [720 ILCS 150], and extending those definitions of sex offenses to
include children under 18 years of age;
commits or allows to be
committed an act or acts of torture upon such child;
inflicts excessive corporal
punishment or, in the case of a person working for an agency who is prohibited
from using corporal punishment, inflicts corporal punishment upon a child or
adult resident with whom the person is working in his or her professional
capacity;
commits or allows to be
committed the offense of female genital mutilation, as defined in Section 12-34
of the Criminal Code of 2012, against the child.
causes to be sold, transferred,
distributed or given to such child under 18 years of age a controlled substance
as defined in Section 102 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act [720
ILCS 570] or in violation of the Methamphetamine Control and Community
Protection Act [720 ILCS 646], except for controlled substances that are
prescribed in accordance with Article III of the Illinois Controlled Substances
Act and are dispensed to such child in a manner that substantially complies
with the prescription; or
commits or allows to be
committed the offense of involuntary servitude, involuntary sexual servitude of
a minor, or trafficking in persons as defined in Section 10-9 of the Criminal
Code of 2012 against the child.
A child shall not be
considered abused for the sole reason that the child has been relinquished in
accordance with the Abandoned Newborn Infant Protection Act. [325 ILCS
5/3]
"Administrative hearing",
in the context of this Part, means a formal review of a final finding
determination made by the Division of Child Protection at the conclusion of a
child abuse and neglect investigation.
"Administrative Law
Judge" or "ALJ" means a licensed attorney who is appointed by
the Director of the Department and is responsible for conducting administrative
hearings, including pre-hearings, and issuing a recommended decision.
"Adult resident" means
any person between 18 and 22 years of age who resides in any facility licensed
by the Department under the Child Care Act of 1969 [225 ILCS 10]. For the
purpose of this Part, the definitions of "abused child" and
"neglected child" include adult residents who meet the criteria set
forth in those definitions.
"Agency" means a
child care facility licensed under Section 2.05 or Section 2.06 of the Child
Care Act of 1969 and includes a transitional living program that accepts
children and adult residents for placement who are in the guardianship of the
Department. [325 ILCS 5/3]
"Amend", as used in this
Part, means changing the final finding determination of an allegation in an indicated
report of child abuse or neglect or changing identifying information of the
subjects of an indicated report of child abuse or neglect.
"Administrative appeal"
or "appeal"" means the pre-hearing conference and formal
administrative hearing.
"Appellant" means the
person who requests a review or administrative hearing or in whose behalf a
review and administrative hearing is requested.
"Authorized representative"
means a person, including an attorney, authorized in writing by a party to
assist in an administrative appeal. If the party is unable to reduce the
authorization to writing, the Department, on request, shall assist the party in
doing so.
"Blatant disregard"
means an incident where the real, significant and imminent risk of harm
would be so obvious to a reasonable parent or caretaker that it is unlikely
that a reasonable parent or caretaker would have exposed the child to the danger
without exercising precautionary measures to protect the child from harm. With
respect to a person working at an agency in his or her professional capacity
with a child or adult resident, "blatant disregard" includes a
failure by the person to perform job responsibilities intended to protect the
child's or adult resident's health, physical well-being, or welfare, and, when
viewed in light of the surrounding circumstances, evidence exists that would
cause a reasonable person to believe that the child was neglected. With
respect to an agency, "blatant disregard" includes a failure to
implement practices that ensure the health, physical well-being, or welfare of
the children and adult residents residing in the facility. [325 ILCS 5/3]
"Chief Administrative Law
Judge" or "Chief ALJ" means the person who is responsible for
the supervision of the Administrative Law Judges and the coordination of the
administrative hearing appeal process.
"Child care worker"
means any person who is employed to work directly with children and any person
who is an owner/operator of a child care facility, regardless of whether the
facility is licensed by the Department. "Child care worker" also
means persons employed as full-time nannies. "Child care worker"
also includes a person currently enrolled in an academic program that leads to
a position as a child care worker; or who has applied for a license required
for a child care worker position. A person will be considered to be a child
care worker under this Part if, at the time of the notice of the investigation,
he or she:
has applied for, or will apply
within 180 days for, a position as a child care worker;
is enrolled in, or will commence
within 180 days, an academic program that leads to a position as a child care
worker; or
has applied for a license as a
child care worker.
A child care worker may be
subject to this Part if alleged to be responsible for child abuse or neglect
outside of his or her employment.
For the purposes of this
definition, any person who is employed full- or part-time at or is the owner of
any of the following shall be considered a child care worker:
child care
institutions;
child welfare
agencies;
day care/night
care centers;
day care/night
care homes;
day care/night
care group day care homes;
group homes;
hospitals or
health care facilities;
schools, including school aides,
bus drivers, school teachers and administrators, but not tenured school
teachers or administrators who have other disciplinary processes available to
them; and
before and after school programs,
recreational programs and summer camps.
"Child" means any
person under the age of 18 years, unless legally emancipated by reason of
marriage or entry into a branch of the United States armed services. [325
ILCS 5/31]
"Credible evidence of child
abuse or neglect" means that the available facts, when viewed in light of
surrounding circumstances, would cause a reasonable person to believe that a
child was abused or neglected.
"Date of action" means
the date on which any Department action becomes effective.
"Day", for purposes of
computation of time, means business day, unless otherwise specified.
"Department"
means the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services.
"Department's legal representative"
means an attorney who is licensed to practice law in the State of Illinois and
who is responsible for presenting the Department's case.
"Discovery", for
purposes of this Part, means the rights of any party to request and have access
to, in advance of the hearing, any materials relevant to the investigation and
indicated finding and a list of witnesses in the possession of any other party.
"Expedited appeal" means
an appeal that may be requested only by a child care worker who is the subject
of a Department determination of indicated child abuse and/or neglect.
Expedited appeals require that the Director issue a final administrative
decision within 35 calendar days after the date of receipt by the Department's
Administrative Hearings Unit of a written request for an expedited appeal,
excluding any continuances at the request of, or with the agreement of, the
appellant.
"Expunge", as used in
this Part, means removing identifying information regarding the subjects of an
indicated child abuse or neglect report from the State Central Register.
"Final administrative
decision" means the Department's final decision, order or determination on
an appealed issue rendered by the Director in a particular case that affects
the legal rights, duties or privileges of participants, that terminates the
proceedings on the specific appeal before the Department's Administrative
Hearings Unit, and that may be further appealed to the circuit court under the
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
"Indicated report"
means any report made under the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act
[325 ILCS 5] (ANCRA) for which it is determined, after an investigation,
that credible evidence of the alleged abuse or neglect exists [325 ILCS
5/3].
"Member of the clergy"
means a clergyman or practitioner of any religious denomination accredited by
the religious body to which he or she belongs.
"Neglected child"
means any child:
who is not receiving:
the proper or necessary
nourishment or medically indicated treatment, including food or care not
provided solely on the basis of the present or anticipated mental or physical
impairment as determined by a physician acting alone or in consultation with
other physicians; or
the proper or necessary support
or medical or other remedial care recognized under State law as
necessary for a child's well-being; or
other care necessary for his or
her well-being, including adequate food, clothing and shelter;
who is subjected to an
environment which is injurious insofar as:
the child's environment creates
a likelihood of harm to the child's health, physical well-being, or welfare;
and
the likely harm to the child is
the result of a blatant disregard of parent, caretaker, or agency
responsibilities;
who is abandoned by his or her
parents or other person responsible for the child's welfare without a proper
plan of care;
who has been provided with
interim crisis intervention services under Section 3-5 of the Juvenile Court
Act of 1987 [705 ILCS 405] and whose parent, guardian or custodian
refuses to permit the child to return home and no other living arrangement
agreeable to the parent, guardian or custodian can be made, and the parent,
guardian or custodian has not made any other appropriate living arrangement for
the child; or
who is a newborn infant whose
blood, urine or meconium contains any amount of a controlled substance as
defined in Section 102(f) of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act or a
metabolite thereof, with the exception of a controlled substance or metabolite
thereof whose presence in the newborn infant is the result of medical treatment
administered to the mother or the newborn infant.
A child shall not be
considered neglected for the sole reason that:
the child's parent or other
person responsible for his or her welfare has left the child in the care of an
adult relative for any period of time;
the child has been relinquished
in accordance with the Abandoned Newborn Infant Protection Act [325 ILCS
2].
A child shall not be
considered neglected or abused for the sole reason that:
the child's parent or other
person responsible for his or her welfare depends upon spiritual means through
prayer alone for the treatment or cure of disease or remedial care as provided under
Section 4 of ANCRA; or
the child is not attending
school in accordance with the requirements of Article 26 of the School Code [105
ILCS 5]. [325 ILCS 5/3]
"Parents"
means the child’s legal parents whose rights have not been terminated.
"Parties" means the
Department and those persons who have appealed the final finding determination
made by the Department. No person may join in an appeal unless that person
would have standing to appeal the determination himself or herself.
"Perpetrator" means a
person who, as a result of investigation, has been determined by the Department
to have caused child abuse or neglect. [325 ILCS 5/3]
"Person responsible for
the child's welfare" means:
the child's parent, guardian,
foster parent or relative caregiver;
any person responsible for the
child's welfare in a public or private residential agency or institution;
any person responsible for the
child's welfare within a public or private profit or not-for-profit child care facility;
or
any other person responsible for
the child's welfare at the time of the alleged abuse or neglect, including:
any person that is the
custodian of a child under 18 years of age who commits or allows to be
committed, against the child, the offense of involuntary servitude, involuntary
sexual servitude of a minor, or trafficking in persons for forced labor or
services (see Section 10-9(b), (c) and (d) of the Criminal Code
of 2012); or
any person who came to know the
child through an official capacity or position of trust, including but not
limited to health care professionals, educational personnel, recreational
supervisors, members of the clergy, and volunteers or support personnel in any
setting where children may be subject to abuse or neglect. [325 ILCS 5/3]
"Preponderance of the
evidence" means the greater weight of the evidence which renders a fact
more likely than not.
"Regular appeal" means an
appeal that may be requested by a perpetrator, including child care workers, in
which the final administrative decision by the Director is issued within 90 calendar
days after the date of receipt by the Department's Administrative Hearings Unit
of a written request for an appeal, excluding any requests for a continuance by
the perpetrator or any continuances by the agreement of the parties.
"Request for an appeal"
means the written request by an appellant for an administrative hearing to
determine whether the record of the report should be amended, expunged, or
removed on the grounds that it is inaccurate or being maintained in a manner
inconsistent with the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act. If the
appellant is unable to request an appeal in writing, the Department or purchase
of service agency shall help the appellant put the request in writing.
"State Central Register"
or "SCR" is the record of child abuse and/or neglect reports
maintained by the Department pursuant to ANCRA. The State Central Register is
also referred to as the Department's statewide toll-free child abuse and
neglect hotline.
"Stipulation" means an
agreement by the parties that certain facts are true or can be introduced into
evidence without further proof.
"Subject of report"
means any child or adult resident reported to the central register of child
abuse and neglect established under Section 7.7 of ANCRA as an
alleged victim of child abuse or neglect and the parent or guardian of the
alleged victim or other person responsible for the alleged victim's welfare
who is named in the report or added to the report as an alleged perpetrator
of child abuse or neglect. [325 ILCS 5/3]
"Unfounded report"
means any report made under ANCRA for which it is determined, after an
investigation, that no credible evidence of the alleged abuse or neglect
exists. [325 ILCS 5/3]
"Unknown perpetrator"
means a person who caused or is alleged to have caused child abuse or neglect and
whose identity or identifying information has not been determined by the
Department.
(Source: Amended at 41 Ill.
Reg. 15260, effective December 6, 2017)