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Public Act 100-0391 |
SB0262 Enrolled | LRB100 05183 HLH 15193 b |
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AN ACT concerning State government.
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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 State Comptroller Act is amended by changing |
Section 23.9 as follows: |
(15 ILCS 405/23.9) |
Sec. 23.9. Minority Contractor Opportunity Initiative. The |
State Comptroller Minority Contractor Opportunity Initiative |
is created to provide greater opportunities for minority-owned |
businesses, women-owned female-owned businesses, businesses |
owned by persons with disabilities, and small businesses with |
20 or fewer employees in this State to participate in the State |
procurement process. The initiative shall be administered by |
the Comptroller. Under this initiative, the Comptroller is |
responsible for the following: (i) outreach to minority-owned |
businesses, women-owned female-owned businesses, businesses |
owned by persons with disabilities, and small businesses |
capable of providing services to the State; (ii) education of |
minority-owned businesses, women-owned female-owned |
businesses, businesses owned by persons with disabilities, and |
small businesses concerning State contracting and procurement; |
(iii) notification of minority-owned businesses, women-owned |
female-owned businesses, businesses owned by persons with |
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disabilities, and small businesses of State contracting |
opportunities; and (iv) maintenance of an online database of |
State contracts that identifies the contracts awarded to |
minority-owned businesses, women-owned female-owned |
businesses, businesses owned by persons with disabilities, and |
small businesses that includes the total amount paid by State |
agencies to contractors and the percentage paid to |
minority-owned businesses, women-owned female-owned |
businesses, businesses owned by persons with disabilities, and |
small businesses. |
The Comptroller shall work with the Business Enterprise |
Council created under Section 5 of the Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act to |
fulfill the Comptroller's responsibilities under this Section. |
The Comptroller may rely on the Business Enterprise Council's |
identification of minority-owned businesses, women-owned |
female-owned businesses, and businesses owned by persons with |
disabilities. |
The Comptroller shall annually prepare and submit a report |
to the Governor and the General Assembly concerning the |
progress of this initiative including the following |
information for the preceding calendar year: (i) a statement of |
the total amounts paid by each executive branch agency to |
contractors since the previous report; (ii) the percentage of |
the amounts that were paid to minority-owned businesses, |
women-owned female-owned businesses, businesses owned by |
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persons with disabilities, and small businesses; (iii) the |
successes achieved and the challenges faced by the Comptroller |
in operating outreach programs for minorities, women, persons |
with disabilities, and small businesses; (iv) the challenges |
each executive branch agency may face in hiring qualified |
minority, woman female , and small business employees and |
employees with disabilities and contracting with qualified |
minority-owned businesses, women-owned female-owned |
businesses, businesses owned by persons with disabilities, and |
small businesses; and (iv) any other information, findings, |
conclusions, and recommendations for legislative or agency |
action, as the Comptroller deems appropriate. |
On and after the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
the 97th General Assembly, any bidder or offeror awarded a |
contract of $1,000 or more under Section 20-10, 20-15, 20-25, |
or 20-30 of the Illinois Procurement Code is required to pay a |
fee of $15 to cover expenses related to the administration of |
this Section. The Comptroller shall deduct the fee from the |
first check issued to the vendor under the contract and deposit |
the fee into the Comptroller's Administrative Fund. Contracts |
administered for statewide orders placed by agencies (commonly |
referred to as "statewide master contracts") are exempt from |
this fee.
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(Source: P.A. 98-797, eff. 7-31-14; 99-143, eff. 7-27-15.) |
(20 ILCS 605/605-525 rep.) |
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Section 10. The Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is |
amended by repealing Section 605-525. |
Section 15. The Illinois Lottery Law is amended by changing |
Section 9.1 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 1605/9.1) |
Sec. 9.1. Private manager and management agreement. |
(a) As used in this Section: |
"Offeror" means a person or group of persons that responds |
to a request for qualifications under this Section. |
"Request for qualifications" means all materials and |
documents prepared by the Department to solicit the following |
from offerors: |
(1) Statements of qualifications. |
(2) Proposals to enter into a management agreement, |
including the identity of any prospective vendor or vendors |
that the offeror intends to initially engage to assist the |
offeror in performing its obligations under the management |
agreement. |
"Final offer" means the last proposal submitted by an |
offeror in response to the request for qualifications, |
including the identity of any prospective vendor or vendors |
that the offeror intends to initially engage to assist the |
offeror in performing its obligations under the management |
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agreement. |
"Final offeror" means the offeror ultimately selected by |
the Governor to be the private manager for the Lottery under |
subsection (h) of this Section. |
(b) By September 15, 2010, the Governor shall select a |
private manager for the total management of the Lottery with |
integrated functions, such as lottery game design, supply of |
goods and services, and advertising and as specified in this |
Section. |
(c) Pursuant to the terms of this subsection, the |
Department shall endeavor to expeditiously terminate the |
existing contracts in support of the Lottery in effect on the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General |
Assembly in connection with the selection of the private |
manager. As part of its obligation to terminate these contracts |
and select the private manager, the Department shall establish |
a mutually agreeable timetable to transfer the functions of |
existing contractors to the private manager so that existing |
Lottery operations are not materially diminished or impaired |
during the transition. To that end, the Department shall do the |
following: |
(1) where such contracts contain a provision |
authorizing termination upon notice, the Department shall |
provide notice of termination to occur upon the mutually |
agreed timetable for transfer of functions; |
(2) upon the expiration of any initial term or renewal |
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term of the current Lottery contracts, the Department shall |
not renew such contract for a term extending beyond the |
mutually agreed timetable for transfer of functions; or |
(3) in the event any current contract provides for |
termination of that contract upon the implementation of a |
contract with the private manager, the Department shall |
perform all necessary actions to terminate the contract on |
the date that coincides with the mutually agreed timetable |
for transfer of functions. |
If the contracts to support the current operation of the |
Lottery in effect on the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 96th General Assembly are not subject to termination as |
provided for in this subsection (c), then the Department may |
include a provision in the contract with the private manager |
specifying a mutually agreeable methodology for incorporation. |
(c-5) The Department shall include provisions in the |
management agreement whereby the private manager shall, for a |
fee, and pursuant to a contract negotiated with the Department |
(the "Employee Use Contract"), utilize the services of current |
Department employees to assist in the administration and |
operation of the Lottery. The Department shall be the employer |
of all such bargaining unit employees assigned to perform such |
work for the private manager, and such employees shall be State |
employees, as defined by the Personnel Code. Department |
employees shall operate under the same employment policies, |
rules, regulations, and procedures, as other employees of the |
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Department. In addition, neither historical representation |
rights under the Illinois Public Labor Relations Act, nor |
existing collective bargaining agreements, shall be disturbed |
by the management agreement with the private manager for the |
management of the Lottery. |
(d) The management agreement with the private manager shall |
include all of the following: |
(1) A term not to exceed 10 years, including any |
renewals. |
(2) A provision specifying that the Department: |
(A) shall exercise actual control over all |
significant business decisions; |
(A-5) has the authority to direct or countermand |
operating decisions by the private manager at any time; |
(B) has ready access at any time to information |
regarding Lottery operations; |
(C) has the right to demand and receive information |
from the private manager concerning any aspect of the |
Lottery operations at any time; and |
(D) retains ownership of all trade names, |
trademarks, and intellectual property associated with |
the Lottery. |
(3) A provision imposing an affirmative duty on the |
private manager to provide the Department with material |
information and with any information the private manager |
reasonably believes the Department would want to know to |
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enable the Department to conduct the Lottery. |
(4) A provision requiring the private manager to |
provide the Department with advance notice of any operating |
decision that bears significantly on the public interest, |
including, but not limited to, decisions on the kinds of |
games to be offered to the public and decisions affecting |
the relative risk and reward of the games being offered, so |
the Department has a reasonable opportunity to evaluate and |
countermand that decision. |
(5) A provision providing for compensation of the |
private manager that may consist of, among other things, a |
fee for services and a performance based bonus as |
consideration for managing the Lottery, including terms |
that may provide the private manager with an increase in |
compensation if Lottery revenues grow by a specified |
percentage in a given year. |
(6) (Blank). |
(7) A provision requiring the deposit of all Lottery |
proceeds to be deposited into the State Lottery Fund except |
as otherwise provided in Section 20 of this Act. |
(8) A provision requiring the private manager to locate |
its principal office within the State. |
(8-5) A provision encouraging that at least 20% of the |
cost of contracts entered into for goods and services by |
the private manager in connection with its management of |
the Lottery, other than contracts with sales agents or |
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technical advisors, be awarded to businesses that are a |
minority-owned minority owned business, a women-owned |
female owned business, or a business owned by a person with |
disability, as those terms are defined in the Business |
Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with |
Disabilities Act. |
(9) A requirement that so long as the private manager |
complies with all the conditions of the agreement under the |
oversight of the Department, the private manager shall have |
the following duties and obligations with respect to the |
management of the Lottery: |
(A) The right to use equipment and other assets |
used in the operation of the Lottery. |
(B) The rights and obligations under contracts |
with retailers and vendors. |
(C) The implementation of a comprehensive security |
program by the private manager. |
(D) The implementation of a comprehensive system |
of internal audits. |
(E) The implementation of a program by the private |
manager to curb compulsive gambling by persons playing |
the Lottery. |
(F) A system for determining (i) the type of |
Lottery games, (ii) the method of selecting winning |
tickets, (iii) the manner of payment of prizes to |
holders of winning tickets, (iv) the frequency of |
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drawings of winning tickets, (v) the method to be used |
in selling tickets, (vi) a system for verifying the |
validity of tickets claimed to be winning tickets, |
(vii) the basis upon which retailer commissions are |
established by the manager, and (viii) minimum |
payouts. |
(10) A requirement that advertising and promotion must |
be consistent with Section 7.8a of this Act. |
(11) A requirement that the private manager market the |
Lottery to those residents who are new, infrequent, or |
lapsed players of the Lottery, especially those who are |
most likely to make regular purchases on the Internet as |
permitted by law. |
(12) A code of ethics for the private manager's |
officers and employees. |
(13) A requirement that the Department monitor and |
oversee the private manager's practices and take action |
that the Department considers appropriate to ensure that |
the private manager is in compliance with the terms of the |
management agreement, while allowing the manager, unless |
specifically prohibited by law or the management |
agreement, to negotiate and sign its own contracts with |
vendors. |
(14) A provision requiring the private manager to |
periodically file, at least on an annual basis, appropriate |
financial statements in a form and manner acceptable to the |
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Department. |
(15) Cash reserves requirements. |
(16) Procedural requirements for obtaining the prior |
approval of the Department when a management agreement or |
an interest in a management agreement is sold, assigned, |
transferred, or pledged as collateral to secure financing. |
(17) Grounds for the termination of the management |
agreement by the Department or the private manager. |
(18) Procedures for amendment of the agreement. |
(19) A provision requiring the private manager to |
engage in an open and competitive bidding process for any |
procurement having a cost in excess of $50,000 that is not |
a part of the private manager's final offer. The process |
shall favor the selection of a vendor deemed to have |
submitted a proposal that provides the Lottery with the |
best overall value. The process shall not be subject to the |
provisions of the Illinois Procurement Code, unless |
specifically required by the management agreement. |
(20) The transition of rights and obligations, |
including any associated equipment or other assets used in |
the operation of the Lottery, from the manager to any |
successor manager of the lottery, including the |
Department, following the termination of or foreclosure |
upon the management agreement. |
(21) Right of use of copyrights, trademarks, and |
service marks held by the Department in the name of the |
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State. The agreement must provide that any use of them by |
the manager shall only be for the purpose of fulfilling its |
obligations under the management agreement during the term |
of the agreement. |
(22) The disclosure of any information requested by the |
Department to enable it to comply with the reporting |
requirements and information requests provided for under |
subsection (p) of this Section. |
(e) Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the |
Department shall select a private manager through a competitive |
request for qualifications process consistent with Section |
20-35 of the Illinois Procurement Code, which shall take into |
account: |
(1) the offeror's ability to market the Lottery to |
those residents who are new, infrequent, or lapsed players |
of the Lottery, especially those who are most likely to |
make regular purchases on the Internet; |
(2) the offeror's ability to address the State's |
concern with the social effects of gambling on those who |
can least afford to do so; |
(3) the offeror's ability to provide the most |
successful management of the Lottery for the benefit of the |
people of the State based on current and past business |
practices or plans of the offeror; and |
(4) the offeror's poor or inadequate past performance |
in servicing, equipping, operating or managing a lottery on |
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behalf of Illinois, another State or foreign government and |
attracting persons who are not currently regular players of |
a lottery. |
(f) The Department may retain the services of an advisor or |
advisors with significant experience in financial services or |
the management, operation, and procurement of goods, services, |
and equipment for a government-run lottery to assist in the |
preparation of the terms of the request for qualifications and |
selection of the private manager. Any prospective advisor |
seeking to provide services under this subsection (f) shall |
disclose any material business or financial relationship |
during the past 3 years with any potential offeror, or with a |
contractor or subcontractor presently providing goods, |
services, or equipment to the Department to support the |
Lottery. The Department shall evaluate the material business or |
financial relationship of each prospective advisor. The |
Department shall not select any prospective advisor with a |
substantial business or financial relationship that the |
Department deems to impair the objectivity of the services to |
be provided by the prospective advisor. During the course of |
the advisor's engagement by the Department, and for a period of |
one year thereafter, the advisor shall not enter into any |
business or financial relationship with any offeror or any |
vendor identified to assist an offeror in performing its |
obligations under the management agreement. Any advisor |
retained by the Department shall be disqualified from being an |
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offeror.
The Department shall not include terms in the request |
for qualifications that provide a material advantage whether |
directly or indirectly to any potential offeror, or any |
contractor or subcontractor presently providing goods, |
services, or equipment to the Department to support the |
Lottery, including terms contained in previous responses to |
requests for proposals or qualifications submitted to |
Illinois, another State or foreign government when those terms |
are uniquely associated with a particular potential offeror, |
contractor, or subcontractor. The request for proposals |
offered by the Department on December 22, 2008 as |
"LOT08GAMESYS" and reference number "22016176" is declared |
void. |
(g) The Department shall select at least 2 offerors as |
finalists to potentially serve as the private manager no later |
than August 9, 2010. Upon making preliminary selections, the |
Department shall schedule a public hearing on the finalists' |
proposals and provide public notice of the hearing at least 7 |
calendar days before the hearing. The notice must include all |
of the following: |
(1) The date, time, and place of the hearing. |
(2) The subject matter of the hearing. |
(3) A brief description of the management agreement to |
be awarded. |
(4) The identity of the offerors that have been |
selected as finalists to serve as the private manager. |
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(5) The address and telephone number of the Department. |
(h) At the public hearing, the Department shall (i) provide |
sufficient time for each finalist to present and explain its |
proposal to the Department and the Governor or the Governor's |
designee, including an opportunity to respond to questions |
posed by the Department, Governor, or designee and (ii) allow |
the public and non-selected offerors to comment on the |
presentations. The Governor or a designee shall attend the |
public hearing. After the public hearing, the Department shall |
have 14 calendar days to recommend to the Governor whether a |
management agreement should be entered into with a particular |
finalist. After reviewing the Department's recommendation, the |
Governor may accept or reject the Department's recommendation, |
and shall select a final offeror as the private manager by |
publication of a notice in the Illinois Procurement Bulletin on |
or before September 15, 2010. The Governor shall include in the |
notice a detailed explanation and the reasons why the final |
offeror is superior to other offerors and will provide |
management services in a manner that best achieves the |
objectives of this Section. The Governor shall also sign the |
management agreement with the private manager. |
(i) Any action to contest the private manager selected by |
the Governor under this Section must be brought within 7 |
calendar days after the publication of the notice of the |
designation of the private manager as provided in subsection |
(h) of this Section. |
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(j) The Lottery shall remain, for so long as a private |
manager manages the Lottery in accordance with provisions of |
this Act, a Lottery conducted by the State, and the State shall |
not be authorized to sell or transfer the Lottery to a third |
party. |
(k) Any tangible personal property used exclusively in |
connection with the lottery that is owned by the Department and |
leased to the private manager shall be owned by the Department |
in the name of the State and shall be considered to be public |
property devoted to an essential public and governmental |
function. |
(l) The Department may exercise any of its powers under |
this Section or any other law as necessary or desirable for the |
execution of the Department's powers under this Section. |
(m) Neither this Section nor any management agreement |
entered into under this Section prohibits the General Assembly |
from authorizing forms of gambling that are not in direct |
competition with the Lottery. |
(n) The private manager shall be subject to a complete |
investigation in the third, seventh, and tenth years of the |
agreement (if the agreement is for a 10-year term) by the |
Department in cooperation with the Auditor General to determine |
whether the private manager has complied with this Section and |
the management agreement. The private manager shall bear the |
cost of an investigation or reinvestigation of the private |
manager under this subsection. |
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(o) The powers conferred by this Section are in addition |
and supplemental to the powers conferred by any other law. If |
any other law or rule is inconsistent with this Section, |
including, but not limited to, provisions of the Illinois |
Procurement Code, then this Section controls as to any |
management agreement entered into under this Section. This |
Section and any rules adopted under this Section contain full |
and complete authority for a management agreement between the |
Department and a private manager. No law, procedure, |
proceeding, publication, notice, consent, approval, order, or |
act by the Department or any other officer, Department, agency, |
or instrumentality of the State or any political subdivision is |
required for the Department to enter into a management |
agreement under this Section. This Section contains full and |
complete authority for the Department to approve any contracts |
entered into by a private manager with a vendor providing |
goods, services, or both goods and services to the private |
manager under the terms of the management agreement, including |
subcontractors of such vendors. |
Upon receipt of a written request from the Chief |
Procurement Officer, the Department shall provide to the Chief |
Procurement Officer a complete and un-redacted copy of the |
management agreement or any contract that is subject to the |
Department's approval authority under this subsection (o). The |
Department shall provide a copy of the agreement or contract to |
the Chief Procurement Officer in the time specified by the |
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Chief Procurement Officer in his or her written request, but no |
later than 5 business days after the request is received by the |
Department. The Chief Procurement Officer must retain any |
portions of the management agreement or of any contract |
designated by the Department as confidential, proprietary, or |
trade secret information in complete confidence pursuant to |
subsection (g) of Section 7 of the Freedom of Information Act. |
The Department shall also provide the Chief Procurement Officer |
with reasonable advance written notice of any contract that is |
pending Department approval. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section to the |
contrary, the Chief Procurement Officer shall adopt |
administrative rules, including emergency rules, to establish |
a procurement process to select a successor private manager if |
a private management agreement has been terminated. The |
selection process shall at a minimum take into account the |
criteria set forth in items (1) through (4) of subsection (e) |
of this Section and may include provisions consistent with |
subsections (f), (g), (h), and (i) of this Section. The Chief |
Procurement Officer shall also implement and administer the |
adopted selection process upon the termination of a private |
management agreement. The Department, after the Chief |
Procurement Officer certifies that the procurement process has |
been followed in accordance with the rules adopted under this |
subsection (o), shall select a final offeror as the private |
manager and sign the management agreement with the private |
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manager. |
Except as provided in Sections 21.5, 21.6, 21.7, 21.8, and |
21.9, the Department shall distribute all proceeds of lottery |
tickets and shares sold in the following priority and manner: |
(1) The payment of prizes and retailer bonuses. |
(2) The payment of costs incurred in the operation and |
administration of the Lottery, including the payment of |
sums due to the private manager under the management |
agreement with the Department. |
(3) On the last day of each month or as soon thereafter |
as possible, the State Comptroller shall direct and the |
State Treasurer shall transfer from the State Lottery Fund |
to the Common School Fund an amount that is equal to the |
proceeds transferred in the corresponding month of fiscal |
year 2009, as adjusted for inflation, to the Common School |
Fund. |
(4) On or before the last day of each fiscal year, |
deposit any remaining proceeds, subject to payments under |
items (1), (2), and (3) into the Capital Projects Fund each |
fiscal year. |
(p) The Department shall be subject to the following |
reporting and information request requirements: |
(1) the Department shall submit written quarterly |
reports to the Governor and the General Assembly on the |
activities and actions of the private manager selected |
under this Section; |
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(2) upon request of the Chief Procurement Officer, the |
Department shall promptly produce information related to |
the procurement activities of the Department and the |
private manager requested by the Chief Procurement |
Officer; the Chief Procurement Officer must retain |
confidential, proprietary, or trade secret information |
designated by the Department in complete confidence |
pursuant to subsection (g) of Section 7 of the Freedom of |
Information Act; and |
(3) at least 30 days prior to the beginning of the |
Department's fiscal year, the Department shall prepare an |
annual written report on the activities of the private |
manager selected under this Section and deliver that report |
to the Governor and General Assembly. |
(Source: P.A. 98-463, eff. 8-16-13; 98-649, eff. 6-16-14; |
99-933, eff. 1-27-17.) |
Section 20. The Department of Transportation Law of the
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Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by changing |
Sections 2705-585 and 2705-600 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 2705/2705-585)
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Sec. 2705-585. Diversity goals. |
(a) To the extent permitted by any applicable federal law |
or regulation, all State construction projects funded from |
amounts (i) made available under the Governor's Fiscal Year |
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2009 supplemental budget or the American Recovery and |
Reinvestment Act of 2009 and (ii) that are appropriated to the |
Illinois Department of Transportation shall comply with the |
Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons |
with Disabilities Act. |
(b) The Illinois Department of Transportation shall |
appoint representatives to professional and artistic services |
selection committees representative of the State's ethnic, |
cultural, and geographic diversity, including, but not limited |
to, at least one person from each of the following: an |
association representing the interests of African American |
business owners, an association representing the interests of |
Latino business owners, and an association representing the |
interests of women business owners. These committees shall |
comply with all requirements of the Open Meetings Act.
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(Source: P.A. 96-8, eff. 4-28-09.) |
(20 ILCS 2705/2705-600) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2017)
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Sec. 2705-600. Target market program. In order to remedy |
particular incidents and patterns of egregious race or gender |
discrimination, the chief procurement officer, in consultation |
with the Department, shall have the power to implement a target |
market program incorporating the following terms: |
(0.5) Each fiscal year, the Department shall review any |
and all evidence of discrimination related to |
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transportation construction projects. Evidence of |
discrimination may include, but is not limited to: (i) the |
determination of the Department's utilization of |
minority-owned and women-owned female-owned firms in its |
prime contracts and associated subcontracts; (ii) the |
availability of minority-owned and women-owned |
female-owned firms in the Department's geographic market |
areas and specific construction industry markets; (iii) |
any disparities between the utilization of minority-owned |
and women-owned female-owned firms in the Department's |
markets and the utilization of those firms on the |
Department's prime contracts and subcontracts in those |
markets; (iv) any disparities between the utilization of |
minority-owned and women-owned female-owned firms in the |
overall construction markets in which the Department |
purchases and the utilization of those firms in the overall |
construction economy in which the Department operates; (v) |
evidence of discrimination in the rates at which |
minority-owned and women-owned female-owned firms in the |
Department's markets form businesses compared to similar |
non-minority-owned and non-women-owned non-female-owned |
firms in the Department's markets and in the dollars earned |
by such businesses; and (vi) quantitative and qualitative |
anecdotal evidence of discrimination. If after reviewing |
such evidence, the Department finds and the chief |
procurement officer concurs in the findings that the |
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Department has a strong basis in evidence that it has a |
compelling interest in remedying the identified |
discrimination against a specific group, race, or gender, |
and that the only remedy for such discrimination is a |
narrowly tailored target market, the chief procurement |
officer, in consultation with the Department, has the power |
to establish and implement a target market program tailored |
to address the specific findings of egregious |
discrimination made by the Department, after a public |
hearing at which minority, women female , and general |
contractor groups, community organizations, and other |
interested parties shall have the opportunity to provide |
comments. |
(1) In January of each year, the Department and the |
chief procurement officer shall report jointly to the |
General Assembly the results of any evidentiary inquiries |
or studies that establish the Department's compelling |
interest in remedying egregious discrimination based upon |
strong evidence of the need for a narrowly tailored target |
market to remedy such discrimination and public hearings |
held pursuant to this Section, and shall report the actions |
to be taken to address the findings, including, if |
warranted, the establishment and implementation of any |
target market initiatives. |
(2) The chief procurement officer shall work with the |
officers and divisions of the Department to determine the |
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appropriate designation of contracts as target market |
contracts. The chief procurement officer, in consultation |
with the Department, shall determine appropriate contract |
formation and bidding procedures for target market |
contracts, including, but not limited to, the dividing of |
procurements so designated into contract award units in |
order to facilitate offers or bids from minority-owned |
businesses and women-owned female-owned businesses and the |
removal of bid bond requirements for minority-owned |
businesses and women-owned female-owned businesses. |
Minority-owned businesses and women-owned female-owned |
businesses shall remain eligible to seek the procurement |
award of contracts that have not been designated as target |
market contracts. |
(3) The chief procurement officer may make |
participation in the target market program dependent upon |
submission to stricter compliance audits than are |
generally applicable. No contract shall be eligible for |
inclusion in the target market program unless the |
Department determines that there are at least 3 |
minority-owned businesses or women-owned female-owned |
businesses interested in participating in that type of |
contract. The Department, with the concurrence of the chief |
procurement officer, may develop guidelines to regulate |
the level of participation of individual minority-owned |
businesses and women-owned female-owned businesses in the |
|
target market program in order to prevent the domination of |
the target market program by a small number of those |
entities. The Department may require minority-owned |
businesses and women-owned female-owned businesses to |
participate in training programs offered by the Department |
or other State agencies as a condition precedent to |
participation in the target market program. |
(4) Participation in the target market program shall be |
limited to minority-owned businesses and women-owned |
female-owned businesses and joint ventures consisting |
exclusively of minority-owned businesses, women-owned |
female-owned businesses, or both, that are certified as |
disadvantaged businesses pursuant to the provisions of |
Section 6(d) of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, |
Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act. A firm |
awarded a target market contract may subcontract up to 50% |
of the dollar value of the target market contract to |
subcontractors who are not minority-owned businesses or |
women-owned female-owned businesses. |
(5) The Department may include in the target market |
program contracts that are funded by the federal government |
to the extent allowed by federal law and may vary the |
standards of eligibility of the target market program to |
the extent necessary to comply with the federal funding |
requirements. |
(6) If no satisfactory bid or response is received with |
|
respect to a contract that has been designated as part of |
the target market program, the chief procurement officer, |
in consultation with the Department, may delete that |
contract from the target market program. In addition, the |
chief procurement officer, in consultation with the |
Department, may thereupon designate and set aside for the |
target market program additional contracts corresponding |
in approximate value to the contract that was deleted from |
the target market program, in keeping with the narrowly |
tailored process used for selecting contracts suitable for |
the program and to the extent feasible. |
(7) The chief procurement officer, in consultation |
with the Department, shall promulgate such rules as he or |
she deems necessary to administer the target market |
program.
|
If any part, sentence, or clause of this Section is for any |
reason held invalid or to be unconstitutional, such decision |
shall not affect the validity of the remaining portions of this |
Section. |
This Section is repealed on June 30, 2017. |
(Source: P.A. 97-228, eff. 7-28-11; 98-670, eff. 6-27-14.) |
Section 25. The Capital Development Board Act is amended by |
changing Section 16 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 3105/16) (from Ch. 127, par. 783b)
|
|
Sec. 16.
(a) In addition to any other power granted in this |
Act to
adopt rules or regulations, the Board may adopt |
regulations or rules
relating to the issuance or renewal of the |
prequalification of an
architect, engineer or contractor or the |
suspension or modification of the
prequalification of any such |
person or entity including, without
limitation, an interim or |
emergency suspension or modification without a
hearing founded |
on any one or more of the bases set forth in this Section.
|
(b) Among the bases for an interim or emergency suspension |
or
modification of prequalification are:
|
(1) A finding by the Board that the public interest, |
safety or welfare
requires a summary suspension or |
modification of a prequalification without
hearings.
|
(2) The occurrence of an event or series of events |
which, in the Board's
opinion, warrants a summary |
suspension or modification of a
prequalification without a |
hearing including, without limitation, (i) the
indictment |
of the holder of the prequalification by a State or federal
|
agency or other branch of government for a crime; (ii) the |
suspension or
modification of a license or |
prequalification by another State agency or
federal agency |
or other branch of government after hearings; (iii) a
|
material breach of a contract made between the Board and an |
architect,
engineer or contractor; and (iv) the failure to |
comply with State law
including, without limitation, the |
Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females ,
and
|
|
Persons with Disabilities Act,
the prevailing wage |
requirements, and the Steel Products Procurement Act.
|
(c) If a prequalification is suspended or modified by the |
Board without
hearings for any reason set forth in this Section |
or in Section 10-65 of the
Illinois Administrative Procedure |
Act, as amended, the Board
shall within 30 days of the issuance |
of an order of suspension or modification
of a prequalification |
initiate proceedings for the suspension or modification
of or |
other action upon the prequalification.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-16, eff. 6-28-01.)
|
Section 30. The Illinois Health Information Exchange and |
Technology Act is amended by changing Section 20 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 3860/20) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2021)
|
Sec. 20. Powers and duties of the Illinois Health |
Information Exchange Authority. The Authority has the |
following powers, together with all powers incidental or |
necessary to accomplish the purposes of this Act: |
(1) The Authority shall create and administer the ILHIE |
using information systems and processes that are secure, |
are cost effective, and meet all other relevant privacy and |
security requirements under State and federal law.
|
(2) The Authority shall establish and adopt standards |
and requirements for the use of health information and the |
|
requirements for participation in the ILHIE by persons or |
entities including, but not limited to, health care |
providers, payors, and local health information exchanges.
|
(3) The Authority shall establish minimum standards |
for accessing the ILHIE to ensure that the appropriate |
security and privacy protections apply to health |
information, consistent with applicable federal and State |
standards and laws. The Authority shall have the power to |
suspend, limit, or terminate the right to participate in |
the ILHIE for non-compliance or failure to act, with |
respect to applicable standards and laws, in the best |
interests of patients, users of the ILHIE, or the public. |
The Authority may seek all remedies allowed by law to |
address any violation of the terms of participation in the |
ILHIE.
|
(4) The Authority shall identify barriers to the |
adoption of electronic health records systems, including |
researching the rates and patterns of dissemination and use |
of electronic health record systems throughout the State. |
The Authority shall make the results of the research |
available on its website.
|
(5) The Authority shall prepare educational materials |
and educate the general public on the benefits of |
electronic health records, the ILHIE, and the safeguards |
available to prevent unauthorized disclosure of health |
information.
|
|
(6) The Authority may appoint or designate an |
institutional review board in accordance with federal and |
State law to review and approve requests for research in |
order to ensure compliance with standards and patient |
privacy and security protections as specified in paragraph |
(3) of this Section.
|
(7) The Authority may enter into all contracts and |
agreements necessary or incidental to the performance of |
its powers under this Act. The Authority's expenditures of |
private funds are exempt from the Illinois Procurement |
Code, pursuant to Section 1-10 of that Act. Notwithstanding |
this exception, the Authority shall comply with the |
Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and |
Persons with Disabilities Act.
|
(8) The Authority may solicit and accept grants, loans, |
contributions, or appropriations from any public or |
private source and may expend those moneys, through |
contracts, grants, loans, or agreements, on activities it |
considers suitable to the performance of its duties under |
this Act.
|
(9) The Authority may determine, charge, and collect |
any fees, charges, costs, and expenses from any healthcare |
provider or entity in connection with its duties under this |
Act. Moneys collected under this paragraph (9) shall be |
deposited into the Health Information Exchange Fund.
|
(10) The Authority may, under the direction of the |
|
Executive Director, employ and discharge staff, including |
administrative, technical, expert, professional, and legal |
staff, as is necessary or convenient to carry out the |
purposes of this Act. The Authority may establish and |
administer standards of classification regarding |
compensation, benefits, duties, performance, and tenure |
for that staff and may enter into contracts of employment |
with members of that staff for such periods and on such |
terms as the Authority deems desirable. All employees of |
the Authority are exempt from the Personnel Code as |
provided by Section 4 of the Personnel Code. |
(11) The Authority shall consult and coordinate with |
the Department of Public Health to further the Authority's |
collection of health information from health care |
providers for public health purposes. The collection of |
public health information shall include identifiable |
information for use by the Authority or other State |
agencies to comply with State and federal laws. Any |
identifiable information so collected shall be privileged |
and confidential in accordance with Sections 8-2101, |
8-2102, 8-2103, 8-2104, and 8-2105 of the Code of Civil |
Procedure.
|
(12) All identified or deidentified health information |
in the form of health data or medical records contained in, |
stored in, submitted to, transferred by, or released from |
the Illinois Health Information Exchange, and identified |
|
or deidentified health information in the form of health |
data and medical records of the Illinois Health Information |
Exchange in the possession of the Illinois Health |
Information Exchange Authority due to its administration |
of the Illinois Health Information Exchange, shall be |
exempt from inspection and copying under the Freedom of |
Information Act. The terms "identified" and "deidentified" |
shall be given the same meaning as in the Health Insurance |
Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, Public Law |
104-191, or any subsequent amendments thereto, and any |
regulations promulgated thereunder.
|
(13) To address gaps in the adoption of, workforce |
preparation for, and exchange of electronic health records |
that result in regional and socioeconomic disparities in |
the delivery of care, the Authority may evaluate such gaps |
and provide resources as available, giving priority to |
healthcare providers serving a significant percentage of |
Medicaid or uninsured patients and in medically |
underserved or rural areas.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-642, eff. 7-28-16.) |
Section 35. The Illinois Global Partnership Act is amended |
by changing Section 20 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 3948/20)
|
Sec. 20. Board of directors. IGP shall be governed by a |
|
board of directors. The IGP board of directors shall consist of |
14 members. Five of the members shall be voting members |
appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent of the |
Senate. The Speaker and Minority Leader of the House of |
Representatives, the President and Minority Leader of the |
Senate, the Lieutenant Governor, the Director of Agriculture, |
the Director of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, the |
Chairperson of the Illinois Arts Council, and the Director of |
the Illinois Finance Authority, or the designee of each, shall |
be non-voting ex officio members. |
Of the members appointed by the Governor, one member must |
have a background in agriculture, one member must have a |
background in manufacturing, and one member must have a |
background in international business relations. |
Of the initial members appointed by the Governor, 3 members |
shall serve 4-year terms and 2 members shall serve 2-year terms |
as designated by the Governor. Thereafter, members appointed by |
the Governor shall serve 4-year terms. A vacancy among members |
appointed by the Governor shall be filled by appointment by the |
Governor for the remainder of the vacated term. |
Members of the board shall receive no compensation but |
shall be reimbursed for expenses incurred in the performance of |
their duties. |
The Governor shall designate the chairman of the board |
until a successor is designated. The board shall meet at the |
call of the chair.
|
|
No less than 90 days after a majority of the members of the |
board of directors of the IGP is appointed by the Governor, the |
board shall develop a policy adopted by resolution of the board |
stating the board's plan for the use of services provided by |
businesses owned by minorities, women females , and persons with |
disabilities, as defined under the Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act. |
The board shall provide a copy of this resolution to the |
Governor and the General Assembly upon its adoption. |
On December 31 of each year, the board shall report to the |
General Assembly and the Governor regarding the use of services |
provided by businesses owned by minorities, women females , and |
persons with disabilities, as defined under the Business |
Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with |
Disabilities Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-388, eff. 7-29-05.) |
Section 40. The State Finance Act is amended by changing |
Sections 8.32 and 45 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 105/8.32) (from Ch. 127, par. 144.32)
|
Sec. 8.32.
All moneys received by the Minority and Women |
Female
Business Enterprise Council, or by the Department of |
Central
Management Services on behalf of the Council or the |
Department's
Minority and Female Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Women, and Persons with Disabilities Division, |
|
from grants,
donations, seminar registration fees, and the sale |
of directories,
lists and other such information, shall be |
deposited into the
Minority and Female Business Enterprise Fund |
in the State treasury.
Expenses of the Council or the |
Department's Minority and Female
Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Women, and Persons with Disabilities Division may |
be paid from this Fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-1482.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/45) |
Sec. 45. Award of capital funds. Each award by grant or |
loan of State funds of $250,000 or more for capital |
construction costs or professional services is conditioned |
upon the recipient's written certification that the recipient |
shall comply with the business enterprise program practices for |
minority-owned businesses, women-owned female-owned |
businesses, and businesses owned by persons with disabilities |
of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and |
Persons with Disabilities Act (30 ILCS 575/) and the equal |
employment practices of Section 2-105 of the Illinois Human |
Rights Act (775 ILCS 5/2-105). This Section, however, does not |
apply to any grant or loan (i) for which a grant or loan |
agreement was executed before the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, (ii) for which |
prior-incurred costs are being reimbursed, or (iii) for a |
federally funded program under which the requirement of this |
|
Section would contravene federal law. Each recipient shall |
submit the written certification and business enterprise |
program plan for minority-owned businesses, women-owned |
female-owned businesses, and businesses owned by persons with |
disabilities before signing the relevant grant or loan |
agreement. Each grant or loan agreement shall include a |
provision that the grant or loan recipient agrees to comply |
with the provisions of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, |
Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act (30 ILCS 575/) |
and the equal employment practices of Section 2-105 of the |
Illinois Human Rights Act (775 ILCS 5/2-105). |
Each business enterprise program plan shall apply only to |
the State-funded portion of the relevant capital project and |
must be in compliance with all certification and other |
requirements of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women |
Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1064, eff. 7-16-10.) |
Section 45. The General Obligation Bond Act is amended by |
changing Sections 8 and 15.5 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 330/8) (from Ch. 127, par. 658)
|
Sec. 8. Bond sale expenses. |
(a)
An amount not to exceed
0.5 percent of the
principal |
amount of the proceeds of sale of each bond sale is authorized
|
to be used to pay the reasonable costs of issuance and sale, |
|
including, without limitation, underwriter's discounts and |
fees, but excluding bond insurance,
of State of
Illinois |
general obligation bonds authorized and sold pursuant to this |
Act, provided that no salaries of State employees or other |
State office operating expenses shall be paid out of |
non-appropriated proceeds, provided further that the percent |
shall be 1.0% for each sale of "Build America Bonds" or |
"Qualified School Construction Bonds" as defined in |
subsections (d) and (e) of Section 9, respectively. The |
Governor's Office of Management and Budget shall compile a |
summary of all costs of issuance on each sale (including both |
costs paid out of proceeds and those paid out of appropriated |
funds) and post that summary on its web site within 20 business |
days after the issuance of
the Bonds. The summary shall |
include, as applicable, the respective percentages of |
participation and compensation of each underwriter that is a |
member of the underwriting syndicate, legal counsel, financial |
advisors, and other professionals for the bond issue and an |
identification of all costs of issuance paid to minority-owned |
minority owned businesses, women-owned female owned |
businesses, and businesses owned by persons with disabilities. |
The terms " minority-owned minority owned businesses", |
" women-owned female owned businesses", and "business owned by a |
person with a disability" have the meanings given to those |
terms in the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , |
and Persons with Disabilities Act. That posting shall be |
|
maintained on the web site for a period of at least 30 days. In |
addition, the Governor's Office of Management and Budget shall |
provide a written copy of each summary of costs to the Speaker |
and Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, the |
President and Minority Leader of the Senate, and the Commission |
on Government Forecasting and Accountability within 20 |
business days after each issuance of the Bonds. In addition, |
the Governor's Office of Management and Budget shall provide |
copies of all contracts under which any costs of issuance are |
paid or to be paid to the Commission on Government Forecasting |
and Accountability within 20 business days after the issuance |
of Bonds for which those costs are paid or to be paid. Instead |
of filing a second or subsequent copy of the same contract, the |
Governor's Office of Management and Budget may file a statement |
that specified costs are paid under specified contracts filed |
earlier with the Commission. |
(b) The Director of the Governor's Office of Management and |
Budget shall not, in connection with the issuance of Bonds, |
contract with any underwriter, financial advisor, or attorney |
unless that underwriter, financial advisor, or attorney |
certifies that the underwriter, financial advisor, or attorney |
has not and will not pay a contingent fee, whether directly or |
indirectly, to a third party for having promoted the selection |
of the underwriter, financial advisor, or attorney for that |
contract. In the event that the Governor's Office of Management |
and Budget determines that an underwriter, financial advisor, |
|
or attorney has filed a false certification with respect to the |
payment of contingent fees, the Governor's Office of Management |
and Budget shall not contract with that underwriter, financial |
advisor, or attorney, or with any firm employing any person who |
signed false certifications, for a period of 2 calendar years, |
beginning with the date the determination is made. The validity |
of Bonds issued under such circumstances of violation pursuant |
to this Section shall not be affected.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-828, eff. 12-2-09.)
|
(30 ILCS 330/15.5)
|
Sec. 15.5. Compliance with the Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Governor's |
Office of Management and Budget shall comply with the Business |
Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with |
Disabilities Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.) |
Section 50. The Build Illinois Bond Act is amended by |
changing Sections 5 and 8.3 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 425/5) (from Ch. 127, par. 2805)
|
Sec. 5. Bond Sale Expenses. |
(a) An amount not to exceed 0.5% of the principal amount of |
the proceeds of the sale of each bond sale is authorized to be |
|
used to pay
reasonable costs of each issuance and sale of Bonds |
authorized and sold
pursuant to this Act, including, without |
limitation, underwriter's discounts and fees, but excluding |
bond insurance, advertising, printing, bond rating, travel of |
outside vendors,
security, delivery, legal and financial |
advisory services, initial fees
of trustees, registrars, |
paying agents and other fiduciaries, initial costs
of credit or |
liquidity enhancement arrangements, initial fees of indexing
|
and remarketing agents, and initial costs of interest rate |
swaps,
guarantees or arrangements to limit interest rate risk, |
as determined in
the related Bond Sale Order,
from
the proceeds |
of each Bond sale, provided that no salaries of State employees |
or other State office operating expenses shall be paid out of |
non-appropriated proceeds, and provided further that the |
percent shall be 1.0% for each sale of "Build America Bonds" as |
defined in subsection (c) of Section 6. The Governor's Office |
of Management and Budget shall compile a summary of all costs |
of issuance on each sale (including both costs paid out of |
proceeds and those paid out of appropriated funds) and post |
that summary on its web site within 20 business days after the |
issuance of the bonds. That posting shall be maintained on the |
web site for a period of at least 30 days. In addition, the |
Governor's Office of Management and Budget shall provide a |
written copy of each summary of costs to the Speaker and |
Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, the President |
and Minority Leader of the Senate, and the Commission on |
|
Government Forecasting and Accountability within 20 business |
days after each issuance of the bonds. This summary shall |
include, as applicable, the respective percentage of |
participation and compensation of each underwriter that is a |
member of the underwriting syndicate, legal counsel, financial |
advisors, and other professionals for the Bond issue, and an |
identification of all costs of issuance paid to minority-owned |
minority owned businesses, women-owned female owned |
businesses, and businesses owned by persons with disabilities. |
The terms " minority-owned minority owned businesses", |
" women-owned female owned businesses", and "business owned by a |
person with a disability" have the meanings given to those |
terms in the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , |
and Persons with Disabilities Act. In addition, the Governor's |
Office of Management and Budget shall provide copies of all |
contracts under which any costs of issuance are paid or to be |
paid to the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability within 20 business days after the issuance of |
Bonds for which those costs are paid or to be paid. Instead of |
filing a second or subsequent copy of the same contract, the |
Governor's Office of Management and Budget may file a statement |
that specified costs are paid under specified contracts filed |
earlier with the Commission.
|
(b) The Director of the Governor's Office of Management and |
Budget shall not, in connection with the issuance of Bonds, |
contract with any underwriter, financial advisor, or attorney |
|
unless that underwriter, financial advisor, or attorney |
certifies that the underwriter, financial advisor, or attorney |
has not and will not pay a contingent fee, whether directly or |
indirectly, to any third party for having promoted the |
selection of the underwriter, financial advisor, or attorney |
for that contract. In the event that the Governor's Office of |
Management and Budget determines that an underwriter, |
financial advisor, or attorney has filed a false certification |
with respect to the payment of contingent fees, the Governor's |
Office of Management and Budget shall not contract with that |
underwriter, financial advisor, or attorney, or with any firm |
employing any person who signed false certifications, for a |
period of 2 calendar years, beginning with the date the |
determination is made. The validity of Bonds issued under such |
circumstances of violation pursuant to this Section shall not |
be affected. |
(Source: P.A. 96-828, eff. 12-2-09.)
|
(30 ILCS 425/8.3)
|
Sec. 8.3. Compliance with the Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Governor's |
Office of Management and Budget shall comply with the Business |
Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with |
Disabilities Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.) |
|
Section 55. The Illinois Procurement Code is amended by |
changing Sections 15-25, 30-30, 45-45, 45-57, and 45-65 as |
follows: |
(30 ILCS 500/15-25) |
Sec. 15-25. Bulletin content. |
(a) Invitations for bids. Notice of each and every contract |
that is
offered, including renegotiated contracts and change |
orders,
shall be published in the Bulletin. All businesses |
listed on the Department of Transportation Disadvantaged |
Business Enterprise Directory, the Department of Central |
Management Services Business Enterprise Program, and the Chief |
Procurement Office's Small Business Vendors Directory shall be |
furnished written instructions and information on how to |
register on each Procurement Bulletin maintained by the State. |
Such information shall be provided to each business within 30 |
calendar days after the business' notice of certification. The |
applicable chief procurement officer
may provide by rule an |
organized format for the publication of this
information, but |
in any case it must include at least the date first offered,
|
the date submission of offers is due, the location that offers |
are to be
submitted to, the purchasing State agency, the |
responsible State purchasing
officer, a brief purchase |
description, the method of source selection,
information of how |
to obtain a comprehensive purchase description and any
|
|
disclosure and contract forms, and encouragement to potential |
contractors to hire qualified veterans, as defined by Section |
45-67 of this Code, and qualified Illinois minorities, women, |
persons with disabilities, and residents discharged from any |
Illinois adult correctional center. |
(b) Contracts let. Notice of each and every contract that |
is let, including renegotiated contracts and change orders, |
shall be issued electronically to those bidders submitting |
responses to the solicitations, inclusive of the unsuccessful |
bidders, immediately upon contract let. Failure of any chief |
procurement officer to give such notice shall result in tolling |
the time for filing a bid protest up to 7 calendar days. |
For purposes of this subsection (b), "contracts let" means |
a construction agency's act of advertising an invitation for |
bids for one or more construction projects. |
(b-5) Contracts awarded. Notice of each and every contract |
that is awarded, including renegotiated contracts and change |
orders, shall be issued electronically to the successful |
responsible bidder, offeror, or contractor and published in the |
next available subsequent Bulletin. The applicable chief |
procurement officer may provide by rule an organized format for |
the publication of this information, but in any case it must |
include at least all of the information specified in subsection |
(a) as well as the name of the successful responsible bidder, |
offeror, the contract price, the number of unsuccessful bidders |
or offerors and any other disclosure specified in any Section |
|
of this Code. This notice must be posted in the online |
electronic Bulletin prior to execution of the contract. |
For purposes of this subsection (b-5), "contract award" |
means the determination that a particular bidder or offeror has |
been selected from among other bidders or offerors to receive a |
contract, subject to the successful completion of final |
negotiations. "Contract award" is evidenced by the posting of a |
Notice of Award or a Notice of Intent to Award to the |
respective volume of the Illinois Procurement Bulletin. |
(c) Emergency purchase disclosure. Any chief procurement |
officer or State
purchasing officer exercising emergency |
purchase authority under
this Code shall publish a written |
description and reasons and the total cost,
if known, or an |
estimate if unknown and the name of the responsible chief
|
procurement officer and State purchasing officer, and the |
business or person
contracted with for all emergency purchases |
in
the next timely, practicable Bulletin. This notice must be |
posted in the online electronic Bulletin no later than 5 |
calendar days after the contract is awarded.
Notice of a |
hearing to extend an emergency contract must be posted in the |
online electronic Procurement Bulletin no later than 14 |
calendar days prior to the hearing. |
(c-5) Business Enterprise Program report. Each purchasing |
agency shall, with the assistance of the applicable chief |
procurement officer, post in the online electronic Bulletin a |
copy of its annual report of utilization of businesses owned by |
|
minorities, women females , and persons with disabilities as |
submitted to the Business Enterprise Council for Minorities, |
Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities pursuant to |
Section 6(c) of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women |
Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act within 10 calendar |
days after its submission of its report to the Council.
|
(c-10) Renewals. Notice of each contract renewal shall be |
posted in the online electronic Bulletin within 14 calendar |
days of the determination to renew the contract and the next |
available subsequent Bulletin. The notice shall include at |
least all of the information required in subsection (b).
|
(c-15) Sole source procurements. Before entering into a |
sole source contract, a chief procurement officer exercising |
sole source procurement authority under this Code shall publish |
a written description of intent to enter into a sole source |
contract along with a description of the item to be procured |
and the intended sole source contractor. This notice must be |
posted in the online electronic Procurement Bulletin before a |
sole source contract is awarded and at least 14 calendar days |
before the hearing required by Section 20-25. |
(d) Other required disclosure. The applicable chief |
procurement officer
shall provide by rule for the organized |
publication of all other disclosure
required in other Sections |
of this Code in a timely manner. |
(e) The changes to subsections (b), (c), (c-5), (c-10), and |
(c-15) of this Section made by this amendatory Act of the 96th |
|
General Assembly apply to reports submitted, offers made, and |
notices on contracts executed on or after its effective date.
|
(f) Each chief procurement officer shall, in consultation |
with the agencies under his or her jurisdiction, provide the |
Procurement Policy Board with the information and resources |
necessary, and in a manner, to effectuate the purpose of this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly. |
(Source: P.A. 97-895, eff. 8-3-12; 98-1038, eff. 8-25-14; |
98-1076, eff. 1-1-15 .)
|
(30 ILCS 500/30-30)
|
Sec. 30-30. Design-bid-build construction. |
(a) The provisions of this subsection are operative through |
December 31, 2019. |
For
building construction contracts in excess of
$250,000, |
separate specifications may be prepared for all
equipment, |
labor, and materials in
connection with the following 5 |
subdivisions of the work to be
performed:
|
(1) plumbing;
|
(2) heating, piping, refrigeration, and automatic
|
temperature control systems,
including the testing and |
balancing of those systems;
|
(3) ventilating and distribution systems for
|
conditioned air, including the testing
and balancing of |
those systems;
|
(4) electric wiring; and
|
|
(5) general contract work.
|
The specifications may be so drawn as to permit separate |
and
independent bidding upon
each of the 5 subdivisions of |
work. All contracts awarded
for any part thereof may
award the |
5 subdivisions of work separately to responsible and
reliable |
persons, firms, or
corporations engaged in these classes of |
work. The contracts, at
the discretion of the
construction |
agency, may be assigned to the successful bidder on
the general |
contract work or
to the successful bidder on the subdivision of |
work designated by
the construction agency before
the bidding |
as the prime subdivision of work, provided that all
payments |
will be made directly
to the contractors for the 5 subdivisions |
of work upon compliance
with the conditions of the
contract.
|
Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
the 99th General Assembly and through December 31, 2019, for |
single prime projects: (i) the bid of the successful low bidder |
shall identify the name of the subcontractor, if any, and the |
bid proposal costs for each of the 5 subdivisions of work set |
forth in this Section; (ii) the contract entered into with the |
successful bidder shall provide that no identified |
subcontractor may be terminated without the written consent of |
the Capital Development Board; (iii) the contract shall comply |
with the disadvantaged business practices of the Business |
Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with |
Disabilities Act and the equal employment practices of Section |
2-105 of the Illinois Human Rights Act; (iv) the Capital |
|
Development Board shall submit a quarterly report to the |
Procurement Policy Board with information on the general scope, |
project budget, and established Business Enterprise Program |
goals for any single prime procurement bid in the previous 3 |
months with a total construction cost valued at $10,000,000 or |
less; and (v) the Capital Development Board shall submit an |
annual report to the General Assembly and Governor on the |
bidding, award, and performance of all single prime projects. |
For building construction projects with a total |
construction cost valued at $5,000,000 or less, the Capital |
Development Board shall not use the single prime procurement |
delivery method for more than 50% of the total number of |
projects bid for each fiscal year. Any project with a total |
construction cost valued greater than $5,000,000 may be bid |
using single prime at the discretion of the Executive Director |
of the Capital Development Board. |
Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
the 99th General Assembly and through December 31, 2017, the |
Capital Development Board shall, on a weekly basis: review the |
projects that have been designed, and approved to bid; and, for |
every fifth determination to use the single prime procurement |
delivery method for a project under $10,000,000, submit to the |
Procurement Policy Board a written notice of its intent to use |
the single prime method on the project. The notice shall |
include the reasons for using the single prime method and an |
explanation of why the use of that method is in the best |
|
interest of the State. The Capital Development Board shall post |
the notice on its online procurement webpage and on the online |
Procurement Bulletin at least 3 business days following |
submission. The Procurement Policy Board shall review and |
provide its decision on the use of the single prime method for |
every fifth use of the single prime procurement delivery method |
for a project under $10,000,000 within 7 business days of |
receipt of the notice from the Capital Development Board. |
Approval by the Procurement Policy Board shall not be |
unreasonably withheld and shall be provided unless the |
Procurement Policy Board finds that the use of the single prime |
method is not in the best interest of the State. Any decision |
by the Procurement Policy Board to disapprove the use of the |
single prime method shall be made in writing to the Capital |
Development Board, posted on the online Procurement Bulletin, |
and shall state the reasons why the single prime method was |
disapproved and why it is not in the best interest of the |
State. |
(b) The provisions of this subsection are operative on and |
after January 1, 2020.
For building construction contracts in |
excess of $250,000, separate specifications shall be prepared |
for all equipment, labor, and materials in connection with the |
following 5 subdivisions of the work to be performed: |
(1) plumbing; |
(2) heating, piping, refrigeration, and automatic |
temperature control systems, including the testing and |
|
balancing of those systems; |
(3) ventilating and distribution systems for |
conditioned air, including the testing and balancing of |
those systems; |
(4) electric wiring; and |
(5) general contract work. |
The specifications must be so drawn as to permit separate |
and independent bidding upon each of the 5 subdivisions of |
work. All contracts awarded for any part thereof shall award |
the 5 subdivisions of work separately to responsible and |
reliable persons, firms, or corporations engaged in these |
classes of work. The contracts, at the discretion of the |
construction agency, may be assigned to the successful bidder |
on the general contract work or to the successful bidder on the |
subdivision of work designated by the construction agency |
before the bidding as the prime subdivision of work, provided |
that all payments will be made directly to the contractors for |
the 5 subdivisions of work upon compliance with the conditions |
of the contract. |
(Source: P.A. 98-431, eff. 8-16-13; 98-1076, eff. 1-1-15; |
99-257, eff. 8-4-15.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/45-45)
|
Sec. 45-45. Small businesses.
|
(a) Set-asides. Each chief procurement officer has |
authority to designate as
small business set-asides a fair
|
|
proportion of construction, supply, and service contracts for |
award
to small businesses in Illinois.
Advertisements for bids |
or offers for those contracts shall
specify designation as |
small business
set-asides. In awarding the contracts, only bids |
or offers from
qualified small businesses shall
be considered.
|
(b) Small business. "Small business" means a business that
|
is independently owned and
operated and that is not dominant in |
its field of operation. The
chief procurement officer shall |
establish a detailed
definition by rule, using in addition to |
the foregoing criteria
other criteria, including the number
of |
employees and the dollar volume of business. When computing
the |
size status of a potential contractor,
annual sales and |
receipts of the potential contractor and all of its affiliates
|
shall be included. The maximum
number of employees and the |
maximum dollar volume that a small
business may have under
the |
rules promulgated by the chief procurement officer may vary |
from industry
to
industry to the extent necessary
to reflect |
differing characteristics of those industries, subject
to the |
following limitations:
|
(1) No wholesale business is a small business if its
|
annual sales for its most
recently completed fiscal year |
exceed $13,000,000.
|
(2) No retail business or business selling services is
|
a small business if its
annual sales and receipts exceed |
$8,000,000.
|
(3) No manufacturing business is a small business if it
|
|
employs more than 250
persons.
|
(4) No construction business is a small business if its
|
annual sales and receipts
exceed $14,000,000.
|
(c) Fair proportion. For the purpose of subsection (a), for |
State agencies
of the executive branch, a
fair proportion of |
construction
contracts shall be no less than 25% nor more than |
40% of the
annual total contracts for
construction.
|
(d) Withdrawal of designation. A small business set-aside
|
designation may be withdrawn
by the purchasing agency when |
deemed in the best interests of the
State. Upon withdrawal, all
|
bids or offers shall be rejected, and the bidders or offerors
|
shall be notified of the reason for
rejection. The contract |
shall then be awarded in accordance with
this Code without the
|
designation of small business set-aside.
|
(e) Small business specialist. The chief procurement |
officer shall
designate a
State purchasing officer
who will be |
responsible for engaging an experienced contract
negotiator to |
serve as its small
business specialist, whose duties shall |
include:
|
(1) Compiling and maintaining a comprehensive
list of |
potential small contractors. In this duty, he or she shall |
cooperate with the
Federal Small Business
Administration |
in locating potential sources for various products
and |
services.
|
(2) Assisting small businesses in complying with the
|
procedures for bidding
on State contracts.
|
|
(3) Examining requests from State agencies for the
|
purchase of property or
services to help determine which |
invitations to bid are to be
designated small business |
set-asides.
|
(4) Making recommendations to the chief procurement |
officer for the
simplification of
specifications and terms |
in order to increase the opportunities
for small business |
participation.
|
(5) Assisting in investigations by purchasing agencies
|
to determine the
responsibility of bidders or offerors on |
small business set-asides.
|
(f) Small business annual report. The State purchasing
|
officer designated under
subsection (e) shall annually before |
December 1 report in writing
to the General Assembly
concerning |
the awarding of contracts to small businesses. The
report shall |
include the total
value of awards made in the preceding fiscal |
year under the
designation of small business set-aside.
The |
report shall also include the total value of awards made to
|
businesses owned by minorities, women females , and persons with |
disabilities, as
defined in the Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with
Disabilities Act, |
in the preceding fiscal year under the designation of small
|
business set-aside.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall
|
be satisfied by filing copies
of the report as required by |
Section 3.1 of the General Assembly
Organization Act.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 98-1076, eff. 1-1-15 .)
|
(30 ILCS 500/45-57) |
Sec. 45-57. Veterans. |
(a) Set-aside goal. It is the goal of the State to promote |
and encourage the continued economic development of small |
businesses owned and controlled by qualified veterans and that |
qualified service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses |
(referred to as SDVOSB) and veteran-owned small businesses |
(referred to as VOSB) participate in the State's procurement |
process as both prime contractors and subcontractors. Not less |
than 3% of the total dollar amount of State contracts, as |
defined by the Director of Central Management Services, shall |
be established as a goal to be awarded to SDVOSB and VOSB. That
|
portion of a contract under which the contractor subcontracts
|
with a SDVOSB or VOSB may be counted toward the
goal of this |
subsection. The Department of Central Management Services |
shall adopt rules to implement compliance with this subsection |
by all State agencies. |
(b) Fiscal year reports. By each September 1, each chief |
procurement officer shall report to the Department of Central |
Management Services on all of the following for the immediately |
preceding fiscal year, and by each March 1 the Department of |
Central Management Services shall compile and report that |
information to the General Assembly: |
(1) The total number of VOSB, and the number of SDVOSB, |
|
who submitted bids for contracts under this Code. |
(2) The total number of VOSB, and the number of SDVOSB, |
who entered into contracts with the State under this Code |
and the total value of those contracts. |
(c) Yearly review and recommendations. Each year, each |
chief procurement officer shall review the progress of all |
State agencies under its jurisdiction in meeting the goal |
described in subsection (a), with input from statewide |
veterans' service organizations and from the business |
community, including businesses owned by qualified veterans, |
and shall make recommendations to be included in the Department |
of Central Management Services' report to the General Assembly |
regarding continuation, increases, or decreases of the |
percentage goal. The recommendations shall be based upon the |
number of businesses that are owned by qualified veterans and |
on the continued need to encourage and promote businesses owned |
by qualified veterans. |
(d) Governor's recommendations. To assist the State in |
reaching the goal described in subsection (a), the Governor |
shall recommend to the General Assembly changes in programs to |
assist businesses owned by qualified veterans. |
(e) Definitions. As used in this Section: |
"Armed forces of the United States" means the United States |
Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, or service in |
active duty as defined under 38 U.S.C. Section 101. Service in |
the Merchant Marine that constitutes active duty under Section |
|
401 of federal Public Act 95-202 shall also be considered |
service in the armed forces for purposes of this Section. |
"Certification" means a determination made by the Illinois |
Department of Veterans' Affairs and the Department of Central |
Management Services that a business entity is a qualified |
service-disabled veteran-owned small business or a qualified |
veteran-owned small business for whatever purpose. A SDVOSB or |
VOSB owned and controlled by women females , minorities, or |
persons with disabilities, as those terms are defined in |
Section 2 of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women |
Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act, may also select and |
designate whether that business is to be certified as a |
" women-owned female-owned business", "minority-owned |
business", or "business owned by a person with a disability", |
as defined in Section 2 of the Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act. |
"Control" means the exclusive, ultimate, majority, or sole |
control of the business, including but not limited to capital |
investment and all other financial matters, property, |
acquisitions, contract negotiations, legal matters, |
officer-director-employee selection and comprehensive hiring, |
operation responsibilities, cost-control matters, income and |
dividend matters, financial transactions, and rights of other |
shareholders or joint partners. Control shall be real, |
substantial, and continuing, not pro forma. Control shall |
include the power to direct or cause the direction of the |
|
management and policies of the business and to make the |
day-to-day as well as major decisions in matters of policy, |
management, and operations. Control shall be exemplified by |
possessing the requisite knowledge and expertise to run the |
particular business, and control shall not include simple |
majority or absentee ownership. |
"Qualified service-disabled veteran" means a
veteran who |
has been found to have 10% or more service-connected disability |
by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs or the |
United States Department of Defense. |
"Qualified service-disabled veteran-owned small business" |
or "SDVOSB" means a small business (i) that is at least 51% |
owned by one or more qualified service-disabled veterans living |
in Illinois or, in the case of a corporation, at least 51% of |
the stock of which is owned by one or more qualified |
service-disabled veterans living in Illinois; (ii) that has its |
home office in Illinois; and (iii) for which items (i) and (ii) |
are factually verified annually by the Department of Central |
Management Services. |
"Qualified veteran-owned small business" or "VOSB" means a |
small business (i) that is at least 51% owned by one or more |
qualified veterans living in Illinois or, in the case of a |
corporation, at least 51% of the stock of which is owned by one |
or more qualified veterans living in Illinois; (ii) that has |
its home office in Illinois; and (iii) for which items (i) and |
(ii) are factually verified annually by the Department of |
|
Central Management Services. |
"Service-connected disability" means a disability incurred |
in the line of duty in the active military, naval, or air |
service as described in 38 U.S.C. 101(16). |
"Small business" means a business that has annual gross |
sales of less than $75,000,000 as evidenced by the federal |
income tax return of the business. A firm with gross sales in |
excess of this cap may apply to the Department of Central |
Management Services for certification for a particular |
contract if the firm can demonstrate that the contract would |
have significant impact on SDVOSB or VOSB as suppliers or |
subcontractors or in employment of veterans or |
service-disabled veterans. |
"State agency" has the same meaning as in Section 2 of the |
Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons |
with Disabilities Act. |
"Time of hostilities with a foreign country" means any |
period of time in the past, present, or future during which a |
declaration of war by the United States Congress has been or is |
in effect or during which an emergency condition has been or is |
in effect that is recognized by the issuance of a Presidential |
proclamation or a Presidential executive order and in which the |
armed forces expeditionary medal or other campaign service |
medals are awarded according to Presidential executive order. |
"Veteran" means a person who (i) has been a member of the |
armed forces of the United States or, while a citizen of the |
|
United States, was a member of the armed forces of allies of |
the United States in time of hostilities with a foreign country |
and (ii) has served under one or more of the following |
conditions: (a) the veteran served a total of at least 6 |
months; (b) the veteran served for the duration of hostilities |
regardless of the length of the engagement; (c) the veteran was |
discharged on the basis of hardship; or (d) the veteran was |
released from active duty because of a service connected |
disability and was discharged under honorable conditions. |
(f) Certification program. The Illinois Department of |
Veterans' Affairs and the Department of Central Management |
Services shall work together to devise a certification |
procedure to assure that businesses taking advantage of this |
Section are legitimately classified as qualified |
service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses or qualified |
veteran-owned small businesses.
|
(g) Penalties. |
(1) Administrative penalties. The chief procurement |
officers appointed pursuant to Section 10-20 shall suspend |
any person who commits a violation of Section 17-10.3 or |
subsection (d) of Section 33E-6 of the Criminal Code of |
2012 relating to this Section from bidding on, or |
participating as a contractor, subcontractor, or supplier |
in, any State contract or project for a period of not less |
than 3 years, and, if the person is certified as a |
service-disabled veteran-owned small business or a |
|
veteran-owned small business, then the Department shall |
revoke the business's certification for a period of not |
less than 3 years. An additional or subsequent violation |
shall extend the periods of suspension and revocation for a |
period of not less than 5 years. The suspension and |
revocation shall apply to the principals of the business |
and any subsequent business formed or financed by, or |
affiliated with, those principals. |
(2) Reports of violations. Each State agency shall |
report any alleged violation of Section 17-10.3 or |
subsection (d) of Section 33E-6 of the Criminal Code of |
2012 relating to this Section to the chief procurement |
officers appointed pursuant to Section 10-20. The chief |
procurement officers appointed pursuant to Section 10-20 |
shall subsequently report all such alleged violations to |
the Attorney General, who shall determine whether to bring |
a civil action against any person for the violation. |
(3) List of suspended persons. The chief procurement |
officers appointed pursuant to Section 10-20 shall monitor |
the status of all reported violations of Section 17-10.3 or |
subsection (d) of Section 33E-6 of the Criminal Code of |
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 relating to this Section |
and shall maintain and make available to all State agencies |
a central listing of all persons that committed violations |
resulting in suspension. |
(4) Use of suspended persons. During the period of a |
|
person's suspension under paragraph (1) of this |
subsection, a State agency shall not enter into any |
contract with that person or with any contractor using the |
services of that person as a subcontractor. |
(5) Duty to check list. Each State agency shall check |
the central listing provided by the chief procurement |
officers appointed pursuant to Section 10-20 under |
paragraph (3) of this subsection to verify that a person |
being awarded a contract by that State agency, or to be |
used as a subcontractor or supplier on a contract being |
awarded by that State agency, is not under suspension |
pursuant to paragraph (1) of this subsection. |
(Source: P.A. 97-260, eff. 8-5-11; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; |
98-307, eff. 8-12-13; 98-1076, eff. 1-1-15 .)
|
(30 ILCS 500/45-65)
|
Sec. 45-65. Additional preferences. This Code is subject
to |
applicable provisions of:
|
(1) the Public Purchases in Other States Act;
|
(2) the Illinois Mined Coal Act;
|
(3) the Steel Products Procurement Act;
|
(4) the Veterans Preference Act;
|
(5) the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women |
Females , and Persons with
Disabilities Act; and |
(6) the Procurement of Domestic Products Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-954, eff. 1-1-05.)
|
|
Section 60. The Design-Build
Procurement Act is amended by |
changing Sections 5, 15, 30, and 46 as follows: |
(30 ILCS 537/5) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2019)
|
Sec. 5. Legislative policy. It is the intent of the |
General Assembly
that
the Capital Development Board be allowed |
to use the design-build delivery method
for public
projects if |
it is shown to be in the State's best interest for that |
particular
project. It shall be the policy of the Capital |
Development Board in the
procurement of
design-build services |
to publicly announce all requirements for design-build
|
services and to procure these services on the basis of |
demonstrated competence
and qualifications and with due regard |
for the principles of competitive
selection.
|
The Capital Development Board shall, prior to issuing |
requests for proposals,
promulgate
and publish procedures for |
the solicitation and award of contracts pursuant to
this Act.
|
The Capital Development Board shall, for each public |
project or projects
permitted under
this Act, make a written |
determination, including a description as to the
particular |
advantages of the design-build procurement method, that it is |
in the
best interests of this State to enter into a |
design-build contract for the
project or projects. In making |
that determination, the following factors shall
be considered:
|
|
(1) The probability that the design-build procurement |
method will be in
the best interests of the State by |
providing a material savings of time or
cost over the |
design-bid-build or other delivery system.
|
(2) The type and size of the project and its |
suitability to the
design-build procurement method.
|
(3) The ability of the State construction agency to |
define and provide
comprehensive
scope and performance |
criteria for the project.
|
No State construction agency may use a design-build |
procurement method unless the agency determines in writing that |
the project will comply with the disadvantaged business and |
equal employment practices of the State as established in the |
Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons |
with Disabilities Act and Section 2-105 of the Illinois Human |
Rights Act.
|
The Capital Development Board shall within 15 days after |
the initial
determination provide an advisory copy to the |
Procurement Policy Board and
maintain the full record of |
determination for 5 years.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-716, eff. 12-13-05 .) |
(30 ILCS 537/15) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2019)
|
Sec. 15. Solicitation of proposals.
|
(a) When the State construction agency elects to use the |
|
design-build delivery
method, it must
issue a notice of intent |
to receive requests for proposals for the project at
least 14 |
days before issuing the request for the proposal. The State
|
construction agency
must publish the advance notice in the |
official procurement bulletin of the
State or the professional |
services bulletin of the State construction agency,
if any. The
|
agency is encouraged to use publication of the notice in |
related construction
industry service publications. A brief |
description of the proposed procurement
must be included in the |
notice. The State construction agency must provide a
copy of |
the
request for proposal to any party requesting a copy.
|
(b) The request for proposal shall be prepared for each |
project and must
contain, without limitation, the following |
information:
|
(1) The name of the State construction agency.
|
(2) A preliminary schedule for the completion of the |
contract.
|
(3) The proposed budget for the project, the source of |
funds, and the
currently available funds at the time the |
request for proposal is submitted.
|
(4) Prequalification criteria for design-build |
entities wishing to submit
proposals.
The State |
construction agency shall include, at a minimum, its normal
|
prequalification, licensing, registration, and other |
requirements, but nothing
contained herein precludes the |
use of additional prequalification criteria
by the State |
|
construction agency.
|
(5) Material requirements of the contract, including |
but not limited to,
the proposed terms and conditions, |
required performance and payment bonds,
insurance, and the |
entity's plan to comply with the utilization goals for |
business enterprises established in the Business |
Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with |
Disabilities Act, and with Section 2-105 of the Illinois |
Human Rights Act.
|
(6) The performance criteria.
|
(7) The evaluation criteria for each phase of the |
solicitation.
|
(8) The number of entities that will be considered for |
the technical and
cost
evaluation phase.
|
(c) The State construction agency may include any other |
relevant information
that it
chooses to supply. The |
design-build entity shall be entitled to rely upon the
accuracy |
of this documentation in the development of its proposal.
|
(d) The date that proposals are due must be at least 21 |
calendar days after
the date of the issuance of the request for |
proposal. In the event the cost of
the project
is estimated to |
exceed $10 million, then the proposal due date must be at least
|
28 calendar days after the date of the issuance of the request |
for proposal.
The State construction agency shall include in |
the request for proposal a
minimum of 30 days
to develop the |
Phase II submissions after the selection of entities
from the |
|
Phase I evaluation is completed.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-716, eff. 12-13-05 .) |
(30 ILCS 537/30) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2019)
|
Sec. 30. Procedures for Selection.
|
(a) The State construction agency must use a two-phase |
procedure for the
selection of the
successful design-build |
entity. Phase I of the procedure will evaluate and
shortlist |
the design-build entities based on qualifications, and Phase II
|
will
evaluate the technical and cost proposals.
|
(b) The State construction agency shall include in the |
request for proposal
the
evaluating factors to be used in Phase |
I. These factors are in addition to any
prequalification |
requirements of design-build entities that the agency has set
|
forth. Each request for proposal shall establish the relative |
importance
assigned to each evaluation factor and subfactor, |
including any weighting of
criteria to be employed by the State |
construction agency. The State
construction agency must |
maintain a
record of the evaluation scoring to be disclosed in |
event of a protest
regarding the solicitation.
|
The State construction agency shall include the following |
criteria in every
Phase I
evaluation of design-build entities: |
(1) experience of personnel; (2)
successful
experience with |
similar project types; (3) financial capability; (4) |
timeliness
of past performance; (5) experience with similarly |
|
sized projects; (6)
successful reference checks of the firm; |
(7) commitment to assign personnel
for the duration of the |
project and qualifications of the entity's consultants; and (8) |
ability or past performance in meeting or exhausting good faith |
efforts to meet the utilization goals for business enterprises |
established in the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women |
Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act and with Section |
2-105 of the Illinois Human Rights Act.
The State construction |
agency may include any additional relevant criteria in
Phase I |
that
it deems necessary for a proper qualification review.
|
The State construction agency may not consider any |
design-build entity for
evaluation or
award if the entity has |
any pecuniary interest in the project or has other
|
relationships or circumstances, including but not limited to, |
long-term
leasehold, mutual performance, or development |
contracts with the State
construction agency,
that may give the |
design-build entity a financial or tangible advantage over
|
other design-build entities in the preparation, evaluation, or |
performance of
the
design-build contract or that create the |
appearance of impropriety.
No proposal shall be considered that |
does not include an entity's plan to comply with the |
requirements established in the Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act, |
for both the design and construction areas of performance, and |
with Section 2-105 of the Illinois Human Rights Act.
|
Upon completion of the qualifications evaluation, the |
|
State construction
agency shall
create a shortlist of the most |
highly qualified design-build entities. The
State
construction |
agency, in its discretion, is not required to shortlist the
|
maximum number of
entities as identified for Phase II |
evaluation, provided however, no less than
2
design-build |
entities nor more than 6 are selected to submit Phase II
|
proposals.
|
The State construction agency shall notify the entities |
selected for the
shortlist in
writing. This notification shall |
commence the period for the preparation of the
Phase II |
technical and cost evaluations. The State construction agency |
must
allow sufficient
time for the shortlist entities to |
prepare their Phase II submittals
considering
the scope and |
detail requested by the State agency.
|
(c) The State construction agency shall include in the |
request for proposal
the
evaluating factors to be used in the |
technical and cost submission components
of Phase II. Each |
request for proposal shall establish, for both the technical
|
and cost submission components of Phase II, the relative |
importance assigned to
each evaluation factor and subfactor, |
including any weighting of criteria to be
employed by the State |
construction agency. The State construction agency must
|
maintain a record of the
evaluation scoring to be disclosed in |
event of a protest regarding the
solicitation.
|
The State construction agency shall include the following |
criteria in every
Phase II
technical evaluation of design-build |
|
entities: (1) compliance with objectives
of
the
project; (2) |
compliance of proposed services to the request for proposal
|
requirements; (3) quality of products or materials proposed; |
(4) quality of
design parameters; (5) design concepts; (6) |
innovation in meeting the scope and
performance criteria; and |
(7) constructability of the
proposed project. The State |
construction agency may include any additional
relevant
|
technical evaluation factors it deems necessary for proper |
selection.
|
The State construction agency shall include the following |
criteria in every
Phase II cost
evaluation: the total project |
cost, the construction costs, and the time of
completion. The |
State construction agency may include any additional relevant
|
technical
evaluation factors it deems necessary for proper |
selection. The total project cost criteria weighing factor |
shall be 25%.
|
The State construction agency shall directly employ or |
retain a licensed
design
professional to evaluate the technical |
and cost submissions to determine if the
technical submissions |
are in accordance with generally
accepted industry standards.
|
Upon completion of the technical submissions and cost |
submissions evaluation,
the State construction agency may |
award the design-build contract to the
highest
overall ranked |
entity.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-21, eff. 6-30-09 .) |
|
(30 ILCS 537/46) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2019)
|
Sec. 46. Reports and evaluation. At the end of every 6 |
month period following the contract award, and again prior to |
final contract payout and closure, a selected design-build |
entity shall detail, in a written report submitted to the State |
agency, its efforts and success in implementing the entity's |
plan to comply with the utilization goals for business |
enterprises established in the Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act |
and the provisions of Section 2-105 of the Illinois Human |
Rights Act. If the entity's performance in implementing the |
plan falls short of the performance measures and outcomes set |
forth in the plans submitted by the entity during the proposal |
process, the entity shall, in a detailed written report, inform |
the General Assembly and the Governor whether and to what |
degree each design-build contract authorized under this Act |
promoted the utilization goals for business enterprises |
established in the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women |
Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act and the provisions |
of Section 2-105 of the Illinois Human Rights Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-716, eff. 12-13-05 .) |
Section 65. The Project Labor Agreements Act is amended by |
changing Sections 25 and 37 as follows: |
|
(30 ILCS 571/25)
|
Sec. 25. Contents of agreement. Pursuant to this Act, any |
project labor agreement shall: |
(a) Set forth effective, immediate, and mutually |
binding procedures for resolving jurisdictional labor |
disputes and grievances arising before the completion of |
work. |
(b) Contain guarantees against strikes, lockouts, or |
similar actions. |
(c) Ensure a reliable source of skilled and experienced |
labor. |
(d) For minorities and women females as defined under |
the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and |
Persons with Disabilities Act, set forth goals for |
apprenticeship hours to be performed by minorities and |
women females and set forth goals for total hours to be |
performed by underrepresented minorities and women |
females . |
(e) Permit the selection of the lowest qualified |
responsible bidder, without regard to union or non-union |
status at other construction sites. |
(f) Bind all contractors and subcontractors on the |
public works project through the inclusion of appropriate |
bid specifications in all relevant bid documents. |
(g) Include such other terms as the parties deem |
appropriate.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 97-199, eff. 7-27-11.) |
(30 ILCS 571/37)
|
Sec. 37. Quarterly report; annual report. A State |
department, agency, authority, board, or instrumentality that |
has a project labor agreement in connection with a public works |
project shall prepare a quarterly report that includes |
workforce participation under the agreement by minorities and |
women females as defined under the Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act. |
These reports shall be submitted to the Illinois Department of |
Labor. The Illinois Department of Labor shall submit to the |
General Assembly and the Governor an annual report that details |
the number of minorities and women females employed under all |
public labor agreements within the State.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-199, eff. 7-27-11.) |
Section 70. The Business Enterprise for Minorities, |
Females, and Persons with
Disabilities Act is amended by |
changing Sections 0.01, 1, 2, 4, 4f, 5, 6, 6a, 7, 8, 8a, 8b, and |
8f and by adding Sections 8g, 8h, and 8i as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 575/0.01) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.600)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2020)
|
Sec. 0.01. Short title. This Act may be
cited as the |
Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons |
|
with Disabilities Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 88-597, eff. 8-28-94 .)
|
(30 ILCS 575/1) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.601)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2020)
|
Sec. 1. Purpose. The State of Illinois declares that it is |
the public
policy of the State to promote and encourage the |
continuing economic
development of minority-owned minority and |
women-owned female owned and operated businesses
and that |
minority-owned
minority and women-owned female owned and |
operated businesses participate in the
State's procurement |
process as both prime and subcontractors.
The State
of Illinois |
has observed that the goals established in this
Act have served |
to increase the
participation of minority and women female |
businesses
in contracts awarded by the
State. The State hereby |
declares that
the adoption of this amendatory Act of 1989 shall |
serve the State's
continuing interest in promoting open access |
in the awarding of State
contracts to disadvantaged small |
business enterprises victimized by
discriminatory
practices. |
Furthermore, after reviewing evidence of the high level of
|
attainment of the 10% minimum goals established under this Act, |
and, after
considering evidence that minority and women female |
businesses, as established in
1982, constituted and continue to |
constitute more than 10% of the
businesses operating in this |
State, the State declares that the
continuation of such 10% |
minimum goals under this amendatory Act of 1989 is
a narrowly |
|
tailored means of promoting open access and thus the further
|
growth and development of minority and women female businesses.
|
The State of Illinois further declares that it is the |
public policy of this
State to promote and encourage the |
continuous economic development of
businesses
owned by persons |
with disabilities and a 2% contracting goal is a narrowly
|
tailored means of promoting open access and thus the further |
growth and
development of those businesses.
|
(Source: P.A. 88-597, eff. 8-28-94 .)
|
(30 ILCS 575/2)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2020) |
Sec. 2. Definitions.
|
(A) For the purpose of this Act, the following
terms shall |
have the following definitions:
|
(1) "Minority person" shall mean a person who is a |
citizen or lawful
permanent resident of the United States |
and who is any of the following:
|
(a) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person |
having origins in any of the original peoples of North |
and South America, including Central America, and who |
maintains tribal affiliation or community attachment). |
(b) Asian (a person having origins in any of the |
original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or |
the Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited |
to, Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, |
|
Pakistan, the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and |
Vietnam). |
(c) Black or African American (a person having |
origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa). |
Terms such as "Haitian" or "Negro" can be used in |
addition to "Black or African American". |
(d) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican, |
Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other |
Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race). |
(e) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a |
person having origins in any of the original peoples of |
Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
|
(2) " Woman Female " shall mean a person who is a citizen |
or lawful permanent
resident of the United States and who |
is of the female gender.
|
(2.05) "Person with a disability" means a person who is |
a citizen or
lawful resident of the United States and is a |
person qualifying as a person with a disability under |
subdivision (2.1) of this subsection (A).
|
(2.1) "Person with a disability" means a person with a |
severe physical or mental disability that:
|
(a) results from:
|
amputation,
|
arthritis,
|
autism,
|
blindness,
|
|
burn injury,
|
cancer,
|
cerebral palsy,
|
Crohn's disease, |
cystic fibrosis,
|
deafness,
|
head injury,
|
heart disease,
|
hemiplegia,
|
hemophilia,
|
respiratory or pulmonary dysfunction,
|
an intellectual disability,
|
mental illness,
|
multiple sclerosis,
|
muscular dystrophy,
|
musculoskeletal disorders,
|
neurological disorders, including stroke and |
epilepsy,
|
paraplegia,
|
quadriplegia and other spinal cord conditions,
|
sickle cell anemia,
|
ulcerative colitis, |
specific learning disabilities, or
|
end stage renal failure disease; and
|
(b) substantially limits one or more of the |
person's major life activities.
|
|
Another disability or combination of disabilities may |
also be considered
as a severe disability for the purposes |
of item (a) of this
subdivision (2.1) if it is determined |
by an evaluation of
rehabilitation potential to
cause a |
comparable degree of substantial functional limitation |
similar to
the specific list of disabilities listed in item |
(a) of this
subdivision (2.1).
|
(3) " Minority-owned Minority owned business" means a |
business which is at least
51% owned by one or more |
minority persons, or in the case of a
corporation, at least |
51% of the stock in which is owned by one or
more minority |
persons; and the management and daily business operations |
of
which are controlled by one or more of the minority |
individuals who own it.
|
(4) " Women-owned Female owned business" means a |
business which is at least
51% owned by one or more women |
females , or, in the case of a corporation, at
least 51% of |
the stock in which is owned by one or more women females ; |
and the
management and daily business operations of which |
are controlled by one or
more of the women females who own |
it.
|
(4.1) "Business owned by a person with a disability" |
means a business
that is at least 51% owned by one or more |
persons with a disability
and the management and daily |
business operations of which
are controlled by one or more |
of the persons with disabilities who own it. A
|
|
not-for-profit agency for persons with disabilities that |
is exempt from
taxation under Section 501 of the Internal |
Revenue Code of 1986 is also
considered a "business owned |
by a person with a disability".
|
(4.2) "Council" means the Business Enterprise Council |
for Minorities, Women
Females , and Persons with |
Disabilities created under Section 5 of this Act.
|
(5) "State contracts" means all contracts entered into |
by the State, any agency or department thereof, or any |
public institution of higher education, including |
community college districts, regardless of the source of |
the funds with which the contracts are paid, which are not |
subject to federal reimbursement. "State contracts" does |
not include contracts awarded by a retirement system, |
pension fund, or investment board subject to Section |
1-109.1 of the Illinois Pension Code. This definition shall |
control over any existing definition under this Act or |
applicable administrative rule.
|
"State construction contracts" means all State |
contracts entered
into by a State agency or public |
institution of higher education for the repair, |
remodeling,
renovation or
construction of a building or |
structure, or for the construction or
maintenance of a |
highway defined in Article 2 of the Illinois Highway
Code.
|
(6) "State agencies" shall mean all departments, |
officers, boards,
commissions, institutions and bodies |
|
politic and corporate of the State,
but does not include |
the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois,
the |
Board of Trustees of Southern Illinois University,
the |
Board of Trustees
of Chicago State University, the Board of |
Trustees of Eastern Illinois
University, the Board of |
Trustees of Governors State University, the Board of
|
Trustees of Illinois State University, the Board of |
Trustees of Northeastern
Illinois
University, the Board of |
Trustees of Northern Illinois University, the Board of
|
Trustees of Western Illinois University,
municipalities or |
other local governmental units, or other State |
constitutional
officers.
|
(7) "Public institutions of higher education" means |
the University of Illinois, Southern Illinois University, |
Chicago State University, Eastern Illinois University, |
Governors State University, Illinois State University, |
Northeastern Illinois University, Northern Illinois |
University, Western Illinois University, the public |
community colleges of the State, and any other public |
universities, colleges, and community colleges now or |
hereafter established or authorized by the General |
Assembly.
|
(8) "Certification" means a determination made by the |
Council
or by one delegated authority from the Council to |
make certifications, or by
a State agency with statutory |
authority to make such a certification, that a
business |
|
entity is a business owned by a
minority, woman female , or |
person with a disability for whatever
purpose. A business |
owned and controlled by women females shall be certified as |
a " woman-owned female owned business". A business owned and |
controlled by women females who are also minorities shall |
be certified as both a " women-owned female owned business" |
and a " minority-owned minority owned business".
|
(9) "Control" means the exclusive or ultimate and sole |
control of the
business including, but not limited to, |
capital investment and all other
financial matters, |
property, acquisitions, contract negotiations, legal
|
matters, officer-director-employee selection and |
comprehensive hiring,
operating responsibilities, |
cost-control matters, income and dividend
matters, |
financial transactions and rights of other shareholders or |
joint
partners. Control shall be real, substantial and |
continuing, not pro forma.
Control shall include the power |
to direct or cause the direction of the
management and |
policies of the business and to make the day-to-day as well
|
as major decisions in matters of policy, management and |
operations.
Control shall be exemplified by possessing the |
requisite knowledge and
expertise to run the particular |
business and control shall not include
simple majority or |
absentee ownership.
|
(10) "Business" means a business that has annual gross |
sales of less than $75,000,000 as evidenced by the federal |
|
income tax return of the business. A firm with gross sales |
in excess of this cap may apply to the Council for |
certification for a particular contract if the firm can |
demonstrate that the contract would have significant |
impact on businesses owned by minorities, women females , or |
persons with disabilities as suppliers or subcontractors |
or in employment of minorities, women females , or persons |
with disabilities.
|
(11) "Utilization plan" means a form and additional |
documentations included in all bids or proposals that |
demonstrates a vendor's proposed utilization of vendors |
certified by the Business Enterprise Program to meet the |
targeted goal. The utilization plan shall demonstrate that |
the Vendor has either: (1) met the entire contract goal or |
(2) requested a full or partial waiver and made good faith |
efforts towards meeting the goal. |
(12) "Business Enterprise Program" means the Business |
Enterprise Program of the Department of Central Management |
Services. |
(B) When a business is owned at least 51% by any |
combination of
minority persons, women females , or persons with |
disabilities,
even though none of the 3 classes alone holds at |
least a 51% interest, the
ownership
requirement for purposes of |
this Act is considered to be met. The
certification category |
for the business is that of the class holding the
largest |
ownership
interest in the business. If 2 or more classes have |
|
equal ownership interests,
the certification category shall be |
determined by
the business.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-95, eff. 7-17-13; 99-143, eff. 7-27-15; |
99-462, eff. 8-25-15; 99-642, eff. 7-28-16.)
|
(30 ILCS 575/4) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.604)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2020)
|
Sec. 4. Award of State contracts.
|
(a) Except as provided in subsections (b) and (c), not less |
than 20% of
the total dollar amount of State contracts, as |
defined by the Secretary of
the Council and approved by the |
Council, shall be established as an aspirational goal to
be |
awarded to businesses owned by minorities,
women females , and |
persons with disabilities; provided, however, that
of the total |
amount of all
State contracts awarded to businesses owned by
|
minorities, women females , and persons with disabilities |
pursuant to
this Section, contracts representing at least 11% |
shall be awarded to businesses owned by minorities, contracts |
representing at least 7% shall be awarded to women-owned |
female-owned businesses, and contracts representing at least |
2% shall be awarded to businesses owned by persons with |
disabilities.
|
The above percentage relates to the total dollar amount of |
State
contracts during each State fiscal year, calculated by |
examining
independently each type of contract for each agency |
or public institutions of higher education which
lets such |
|
contracts. Only that percentage of arrangements which |
represents the participation of businesses owned by
|
minorities, women females , and persons with disabilities on |
such contracts shall
be included.
|
(b) In the case of State construction contracts, the |
provisions of
subsection (a) requiring a portion of State |
contracts to be awarded to
businesses owned and controlled by |
persons with
disabilities do not apply. The following |
aspirational goals are established for State construction |
contracts: not less
than 20% of the total dollar amount of |
State construction contracts is
established as a goal to be |
awarded to minority-owned minority and women-owned female |
owned
businesses , and contracts representing 50% of the amount |
of all State
construction contracts awarded to minority and |
female owned businesses
shall be awarded to female owned |
businesses .
|
(c) In the case of all work undertaken by the University of |
Illinois related to the planning, organization, and staging of |
the games, the University of Illinois shall establish a goal of |
awarding not less than 25% of the annual dollar value of all |
contracts, purchase orders, and other agreements (collectively |
referred to as "the contracts") to minority-owned businesses or |
businesses owned by a person with a disability and 5% of the |
annual dollar value the contracts to women-owned female-owned |
businesses. For purposes of this subsection, the term "games" |
has the meaning set forth in the Olympic Games and Paralympic |
|
Games (2016) Law. |
(d) Within one year after April 28, 2009 (the effective |
date of Public Act 96-8), the Department of Central Management |
Services shall conduct a social scientific study that measures |
the impact of discrimination on minority and women female |
business development in Illinois. Within 18 months after April |
28, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act 96-8), the |
Department shall issue a report of its findings and any |
recommendations on whether to adjust the goals for minority and |
women female participation established in this Act. Copies of |
this report and the social scientific study shall be filed with |
the Governor and the General Assembly. |
(e) Except as permitted under this Act or as otherwise |
mandated by federal law or regulation, those who submit bids or |
proposals for State construction contracts subject to the |
provisions of this Act, whose bids or proposals are successful |
and include a utilization plan but that fail to meet the goals |
set forth in subsection (b) of this Section, shall be notified |
of that deficiency and shall be afforded a period not to exceed |
10 calendar days from the date of notification to cure that |
deficiency in the bid or proposal. The deficiency in the bid or |
proposal may only be cured by contracting with additional |
subcontractors who are owned by minorities or women females , |
but in no case shall an identified subcontractor with a |
certification made pursuant to this Act be terminated from the |
contract without the written consent of the State agency or |
|
public institution of higher education entering into the |
contract. |
(f) Non-construction solicitations that include Business |
Enterprise Program participation goals shall require bidders |
and offerors to include utilization plans. Utilization plans |
are due at the time of bid or offer submission. Failure to |
complete and include a utilization plan, including |
documentation demonstrating good faith effort when requesting |
a waiver, shall render the bid or offer non-responsive. |
(Source: P.A. 99-462, eff. 8-25-15; 99-514, eff. 6-30-16.) |
(30 ILCS 575/4f) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2020) |
Sec. 4f. Award of State contracts. |
(1) It is hereby declared to be the public policy of the |
State of Illinois to promote and encourage each State agency |
and public institution of higher education to use businesses |
owned by minorities, women females , and persons with |
disabilities in the area of goods and services, including, but |
not limited to, insurance services, investment management |
services, information technology services, accounting |
services, architectural and engineering services, and legal |
services. Furthermore, each State agency and public |
institution of higher education shall utilize such firms to the |
greatest extent feasible within the bounds of financial and |
fiduciary prudence, and take affirmative steps to remove any |
|
barriers to the full participation of such firms in the |
procurement and contracting opportunities afforded. |
(a) When a State agency or public institution of higher |
education, other than a community college, awards a |
contract for insurance services, for each State agency or |
public institution of higher education, it shall be the |
aspirational goal to use insurance brokers owned by |
minorities, women females , and persons with disabilities |
as defined by this Act, for not less than 20% of the total |
annual premiums or fees. |
(b) When a State agency or public institution of higher |
education, other than a community college, awards a |
contract for investment services, for each State agency or |
public institution of higher education, it shall be the |
aspirational goal to use emerging investment managers |
owned by minorities, women females , and persons with |
disabilities as defined by this Act, for not less than 20% |
of the total funds under management. Furthermore, it is the |
aspirational goal that not less than 20% of the direct |
asset managers of the State funds be minorities, women |
females , and persons with disabilities. |
(c) When a State agency or public institution of higher |
education, other than a community college, awards |
contracts for information technology services, accounting |
services, architectural and engineering services, and |
legal services, for each State agency and public |
|
institution of higher education, it shall be the |
aspirational goal to use such firms owned by minorities, |
women females , and persons with disabilities as defined by |
this Act and lawyers who are minorities, women females , and |
persons with disabilities as defined by this Act, for not |
less than 20% of the total dollar amount of State |
contracts. |
(d) When a community college awards a contract for |
insurance services, investment services, information |
technology services, accounting services, architectural |
and engineering services, and legal services, it shall be |
the aspirational goal of each community college to use |
businesses owned by minorities, women females , and persons |
with disabilities as defined in this Act for not less than |
20% of the total amount spent on contracts for these |
services collectively. When a community college awards |
contracts for investment services, contracts awarded to |
investment managers who are not emerging investment |
managers as defined in this Act shall not be considered |
businesses owned by minorities, women females , or persons |
with disabilities for the purposes of this Section. |
(2) As used in this Section: |
"Accounting services" means the measurement, |
processing and communication of financial information |
about economic entities including, but is not limited to, |
financial accounting, management accounting, auditing, |
|
cost containment and auditing services, taxation and |
accounting information systems. |
"Architectural and engineering services" means |
professional services of an architectural or engineering |
nature, or incidental services, that members of the |
architectural and engineering professions, and individuals |
in their employ, may logically or justifiably perform, |
including studies, investigations, surveying and mapping, |
tests, evaluations, consultations, comprehensive planning, |
program management, conceptual designs, plans and |
specifications, value engineering, construction phase |
services, soils engineering, drawing reviews, preparation |
of operating and maintenance manuals, and other related |
services. |
"Emerging investment manager" means an investment |
manager or claims consultant having assets under |
management below $10 billion or otherwise adjudicating |
claims. |
"Information technology services" means, but is not |
limited to, specialized technology-oriented solutions by |
combining the processes and functions of software, |
hardware, networks, telecommunications, web designers, |
cloud developing resellers, and electronics. |
"Insurance broker" means an insurance brokerage firm, |
claims administrator, or both, that procures, places all |
lines of insurance, or administers claims with annual |
|
premiums or fees of at least $5,000,000 but not more than |
$10,000,000. |
"Legal services" means work performed by a lawyer |
including, but not limited to, contracts in anticipation of |
litigation, enforcement actions, or investigations. |
(3) Each State agency and public institution of higher |
education shall adopt policies that identify its plan and |
implementation procedures for increasing the use of service |
firms owned by minorities, women females , and persons with |
disabilities. |
(4) Except as provided in subsection (5), the Council shall |
file no later than March 1 of each year an annual report to the |
Governor and the General Assembly. The report filed with the |
General Assembly shall be filed as required in Section 3.1 of |
the General Assembly Organization Act. This report shall: (i) |
identify the service firms used by each State agency and public |
institution of higher education, (ii) identify the actions it |
has undertaken to increase the use of service firms owned by |
minorities, women females , and persons with disabilities, |
including encouraging non-minority-owned non-minority owned |
firms to use other service firms owned by minorities, women |
females , and persons with disabilities as subcontractors when |
the opportunities arise, (iii) state any recommendations made |
by the Council to each State agency and public institution of |
higher education to increase participation by the use of |
service firms owned by minorities, women females , and persons |
|
with disabilities, and (iv) include the following: |
(A) For insurance services: the names of the insurance |
brokers or claims consultants used, the total of risk |
managed by each State agency and public institution of |
higher education by insurance brokers, the total |
commissions, fees paid, or both, the lines or insurance |
policies placed, and the amount of premiums placed; and the |
percentage of the risk managed by insurance brokers, the |
percentage of total commission, fees paid, or both, the |
lines or insurance policies placed, and the amount of |
premiums placed with each by the insurance brokers owned by |
minorities, women females , and persons with disabilities |
by each State agency and public institution of higher |
education. |
(B) For investment management services: the names of |
the investment managers used, the total funds under |
management of investment managers; the total commissions, |
fees paid, or both; the total and percentage of funds under |
management of emerging investment managers owned by |
minorities, women females , and persons with disabilities, |
including the total and percentage of total commissions, |
fees paid, or both by each State agency and public |
institution of higher education. |
(C) The names of service firms, the percentage and |
total dollar amount paid for professional services by |
category by each State agency and public institution of |
|
higher education. |
(D) The names of service firms, the percentage and |
total dollar amount paid for services by category to firms |
owned by minorities, women females , and persons with |
disabilities by each State agency and public institution of |
higher education. |
(E) The total number of contracts awarded for services |
by category and the total number of contracts awarded to |
firms owned by minorities, women females , and persons with |
disabilities by each State agency and public institution of |
higher education. |
(5) For community college districts, the Business |
Enterprise Council shall only report the following information |
for each community college district: (i) the name of the |
community colleges in the district, (ii) the name and contact |
information of a person at each community college appointed to |
be the single point of contact for vendors owned by minorities, |
women females , or persons with disabilities, (iii) the policy |
of the community college district concerning certified |
vendors, (iv) the certifications recognized by the community |
college district for determining whether a business is owned or |
controlled by a minority, woman female , or person with a |
disability, (v) outreach efforts conducted by the community |
college district to increase the use of certified vendors, (vi) |
the total expenditures by the community college district in the |
prior fiscal year in the divisions of work specified in |
|
paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of subsection (1) of this Section |
and the amount paid to certified vendors in those divisions of |
work, and (vii) the total number of contracts entered into for |
the divisions of work specified in paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) |
of subsection (1) of this Section and the total number of |
contracts awarded to certified vendors providing these |
services to the community college district. The Business |
Enterprise Council shall not make any utilization reports under |
this Act for community college districts for Fiscal Year 2015 |
and Fiscal Year 2016, but shall make the report required by |
this subsection for Fiscal Year 2017 and for each fiscal year |
thereafter. The Business Enterprise Council shall report the |
information in items (i), (ii), (iii), and (iv) of this |
subsection beginning in September of 2016. The Business |
Enterprise Council may collect the data needed to make its |
report from the Illinois Community College Board. |
(6) The status of the utilization of services shall be |
discussed at each of the regularly scheduled Business |
Enterprise Council meetings. Time shall be allotted for the |
Council to receive, review, and discuss the progress of the use |
of service firms owned by minorities, women females , and |
persons with disabilities by each State agency and public |
institution of higher education; and any evidence regarding |
past or present racial, ethnic, or gender-based discrimination |
which directly impacts a State agency or public institution of |
higher education contracting with such firms. If after |
|
reviewing such evidence the Council finds that there is or has |
been such discrimination against a specific group, race or sex, |
the Council shall establish sheltered markets or adjust |
existing sheltered markets tailored to address the Council's |
specific findings for the divisions of work specified in |
paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of subsection (1) of this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-462, eff. 8-25-15; 99-642, eff. 7-28-16.)
|
(30 ILCS 575/5) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.605)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2020)
|
Sec. 5. Business Enterprise Council.
|
(1) To help implement, monitor and enforce the goals of |
this Act, there
is created the Business Enterprise Council for
|
Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities, |
hereinafter
referred to as the Council, composed of the |
Secretary of Human Services and
the Directors of the Department |
of
Human Rights, the Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity, the
Department of Central Management Services, |
the Department of Transportation and
the
Capital Development |
Board, or their duly appointed representatives. Ten
|
individuals representing businesses that are minority-owned |
minority or women-owned female owned or
owned by persons with |
disabilities, 2 individuals representing the business
|
community, and a representative of public institutions of |
higher education shall be appointed by the Governor. These |
members shall serve 2
year terms and shall be eligible for |
|
reappointment. Any vacancy occurring on
the Council shall also |
be filled by the Governor. Any member appointed to fill
a |
vacancy occurring prior to the expiration of the term for which |
his
predecessor was appointed shall be appointed for the |
remainder of such term.
Members of the Council shall serve |
without compensation but shall be reimbursed
for any ordinary |
and necessary expenses incurred in the performance of their
|
duties.
|
The Director of the Department of Central Management |
Services shall serve
as the Council chairperson and shall |
select, subject to approval of the
council, a Secretary |
responsible for the operation of the program who shall
serve as |
the Division Manager of the Business
Enterprise for Minorities, |
Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities Division
of the |
Department of Central Management Services.
|
The Director of each State agency and the chief executive |
officer of
each public institutions of higher education shall |
appoint a liaison to the Council. The liaison
shall be |
responsible for submitting to the Council any reports and
|
documents necessary under this Act.
|
(2) The Council's authority and responsibility shall be to:
|
(a) Devise a certification procedure to assure that |
businesses taking
advantage of this Act are legitimately |
classified as businesses owned by minorities, women |
females , or persons with
disabilities.
|
(b) Maintain a list of all
businesses legitimately |
|
classified as businesses owned by minorities, women
|
females , or persons with disabilities to provide to State |
agencies and public institutions of higher education.
|
(c) Review rules and regulations for the |
implementation of the program for businesses owned by |
minorities, women females ,
and persons with disabilities.
|
(d) Review compliance plans submitted by each State |
agency and public institutions of higher education
|
pursuant to this Act.
|
(e) Make annual reports as provided in Section 8f to |
the Governor and
the General Assembly on the
status of the |
program.
|
(f) Serve as a central clearinghouse for information on |
State
contracts, including the maintenance of a list of all |
pending State
contracts upon which businesses owned by |
minorities, women
females , and persons with disabilities |
may bid.
At the Council's discretion, maintenance of the |
list may include 24-hour
electronic access to the list |
along with the bid and application information.
|
(g) Establish a toll free telephone number to |
facilitate information
requests concerning the |
certification process and pending contracts.
|
(3) No premium bond rate of a surety company for a bond |
required of a business owned by a minority, woman female , or |
person
with a disability bidding for a State contract shall be
|
higher than the lowest rate charged by that surety company for |
|
a similar
bond in the same classification of work that would be |
written for a business not owned by a minority, woman
female , |
or person with a disability.
|
(4) Any Council member who has direct financial or personal |
interest in
any measure pending before the Council shall |
disclose this fact to the
Council and refrain from |
participating in the determination upon such measure.
|
(5) The Secretary shall have the following duties and |
responsibilities:
|
(a) To be responsible for the day-to-day operation of |
the Council.
|
(b) To serve as a coordinator for all of the State's |
programs for businesses owned by minorities, women |
females ,
and persons with disabilities and as the |
information and referral center
for all State initiatives |
for businesses
owned by minorities, women females , and |
persons with disabilities.
|
(c) To establish an enforcement procedure whereby the |
Council may
recommend to the appropriate State legal |
officer that the State exercise
its legal remedies which |
shall include (1) termination of the contract
involved, (2) |
prohibition of participation by the respondent in public
|
contracts for a period not to exceed 3 years one year , (3) |
imposition of a penalty
not to exceed any profit acquired |
as a result of violation, or (4) any
combination thereof. |
Such procedures shall require prior approval by Council.
|
|
(d) To devise appropriate policies, regulations and |
procedures for
including participation by businesses owned
|
by minorities, women females , and persons with |
disabilities as prime contractors
including, but not |
limited to, (i) encouraging the inclusions of qualified |
businesses owned by minorities, women females , and
persons |
with disabilities on solicitation lists, (ii)
|
investigating the potential of blanket bonding programs |
for small
construction jobs, (iii) investigating and |
making recommendations
concerning the use of the sheltered |
market process.
|
(e) To devise procedures for the waiver of the |
participation goals in
appropriate circumstances.
|
(f) To accept donations and, with the approval of the |
Council or the
Director of Central Management Services, |
grants related to the purposes of
this Act; to conduct |
seminars related to the purpose of this Act and to
charge |
reasonable registration fees; and to sell directories, |
vendor lists
and other such information to interested |
parties, except that forms
necessary to become eligible for |
the program shall be provided free of
charge to a business |
or individual applying for the program.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-462, eff. 8-25-15 .)
|
(30 ILCS 575/6) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.606)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2020)
|
|
Sec. 6. Agency compliance plans. Each State agency and |
public institutions of higher education
under the
jurisdiction |
of this Act
shall file
with the Council an annual compliance |
plan which shall outline the
goals of the State agency or |
public institutions of higher education for contracting with |
businesses owned by minorities, women females , and
persons with |
disabilities for the then current fiscal
year, the manner in |
which the agency intends to reach these goals and a
timetable |
for reaching these goals. The Council shall review and approve
|
the plan of each State agency and public institutions of higher |
education and may reject any
plan that does
not comply with
|
this Act or any rules or regulations promulgated pursuant to |
this Act.
|
(a) The compliance plan shall also include, but not be |
limited to, (1) a
policy statement, signed by the State agency |
or public institution of higher education head,
expressing a
|
commitment to
encourage the use of
businesses owned by
|
minorities, women females , and persons with disabilities, (2) |
the designation of
the liaison
officer
provided for in Section |
5 of this Act, (3) procedures to distribute to
potential |
contractors and vendors the list of all businesses legitimately |
classified as businesses owned by
minorities, women females , |
and persons with disabilities and so certified under
this Act, |
(4) procedures to set
separate contract goals on specific prime |
contracts and purchase orders
with subcontracting |
possibilities based upon the type of work or services
and |
|
subcontractor availability, (5) procedures to assure that |
contractors
and vendors make good faith efforts to meet |
contract goals, (6) procedures
for contract goal exemption, |
modification and waiver, and (7) the delineation
of separate |
contract goals for businesses owned by minorities, women |
females , and persons with
disabilities.
|
(b) Approval of the compliance plans shall include such |
delegation of
responsibilities to the requesting State agency |
or public institution of higher education as
the Council
deems |
necessary
and appropriate to fulfill the purpose of this Act. |
Such responsibilities
may include, but need not be limited to |
those outlined in subsections (1),
(2) and (3) of Section 7 , |
and paragraph (a) of Section 8 , and Section 8a of this Act .
|
(c) Each State agency and public institution of higher |
education under the jurisdiction of
this Act
shall
file with |
the Council an annual report of its utilization of businesses |
owned
by minorities, women females , and persons with |
disabilities during the preceding fiscal year including lapse |
period spending
and a mid-fiscal year report of its utilization |
to date for the then current
fiscal year. The reports shall |
include a self-evaluation of the efforts of the
State agency or |
public institution of higher education to meet its goals under |
the
Act.
|
(d) Notwithstanding any provisions to the contrary in this |
Act,
any State
agency or public institution of higher education |
which administers a construction program,
for which federal law |
|
or regulations establish standards and procedures for
the |
utilization of minority-owned and women-owned businesses and |
disadvantaged businesses minority, disadvantaged, and |
female-owned business ,
shall implement a disadvantaged |
business enterprise program to include minority-owned and |
women-owned businesses and disadvantaged businesses
minority, |
disadvantaged and female-owned businesses , using
the federal
|
standards and procedures for the establishment of goals and
|
utilization procedures for the State-funded, as well as the |
federally
assisted, portions of the program. In such cases, |
these goals shall not
exceed those established pursuant to the |
relevant federal statutes or
regulations.
Notwithstanding the |
provisions of Section 8b, the Illinois Department of
|
Transportation is authorized to establish sheltered markets |
for the
State-funded portions of the program consistent with |
federal law and
regulations.
Additionally, a compliance plan |
which is filed by such State
agency or public institution of |
higher education pursuant to this Act, which incorporates
|
equivalent terms and
conditions of its federally-approved |
compliance plan, shall be deemed
approved under this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-462, eff. 8-25-15 .)
|
(30 ILCS 575/6a) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.606a)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2020)
|
Sec. 6a. Notice of contracts to Council. Except in case of |
emergency as
defined in the Illinois Procurement Code, or as |
|
authorized by rule promulgated by the Department of
Central |
Management Services, each agency and public institution of |
higher education under the
jurisdiction of
this Act shall |
notify the Secretary of the
Council
of proposed contracts
for |
professional and artistic services and provide the information |
in the
form and detail as required by rule promulgated by the |
Department of Central
Management Services. Notification may be |
made through
direct written communication to the Secretary to |
be received at least 14 days
before execution of the contract |
(or the solicitation response date, if
applicable) or by |
advertising in the
official State newspaper for at least 3 |
days, the last of which must be at
least 10 days after the |
first publication . The agency or public institution of higher |
education must
consider any vendor referred by the Secretary |
before execution of the
contract. The provisions of this |
Section
shall not apply to any State agency or public |
institution of higher education that has awarded
contracts for
|
professional and artistic services to businesses
owned by |
minorities, women females , and persons with disabilities |
totaling
totalling in the aggregate $40,000,000 or more during |
the preceding fiscal year.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-462, eff. 8-25-15 .)
|
(30 ILCS 575/7) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.607) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2020) |
Sec. 7. Exemptions ; and waivers; publication of data. |
|
(1) Individual contract exemptions.
The Council, on its own |
initiative or at the request of the affected agency,
public |
institution of higher education, or recipient of a grant or |
loan of State funds of $250,000 or more complying with Section |
45 of the State Finance Act, may permit an individual contract |
or contract package,
(related contracts being bid or awarded |
simultaneously for the same project
or improvements) be made |
wholly or partially exempt from State contracting
goals for |
businesses owned by
minorities, women females , and persons with |
disabilities prior to the advertisement
for bids or |
solicitation of proposals whenever there has been a
|
determination, reduced to writing and based on the best |
information
available at the time of the determination, that |
there is an insufficient
number of businesses owned by |
minorities, women
females , and persons with disabilities to |
ensure adequate
competition and an expectation of reasonable |
prices on bids or proposals
solicited for the individual |
contract or contract package in question. |
(2) Class exemptions. |
(a) Creation. The Council, on its own initiative
or at |
the request of the affected agency or public institution of |
higher education, may permit an entire
class of
contracts |
be made exempt from State
contracting goals for businesses |
owned by minorities, women females , and persons
with |
disabilities whenever there has been a determination, |
reduced to
writing and based on the best information |
|
available at the time of the
determination, that there is |
an insufficient number of qualified businesses owned by |
minorities, women females , and persons with
disabilities |
to ensure adequate competition and an
expectation of |
reasonable prices on bids or proposals within that class. |
(b) Limitation. Any such class exemption shall not be |
permitted for a
period of more than one year at a time. |
(3) Waivers. Where a particular contract requires a |
contractor to meet
a goal established pursuant to this Act, the |
contractor shall have the right
to request a waiver from such |
requirements. The Council shall grant the
waiver where the |
contractor demonstrates that there has been made a good
faith |
effort to comply with the goals for
participation by businesses |
owned by minorities, women females , and persons with
|
disabilities. |
(4) Conflict with other laws. In the event that any State |
contract, which
otherwise would be subject to the provisions of |
this Act, is or becomes
subject to federal laws or regulations |
which conflict with the provisions
of this Act or actions of |
the State taken pursuant hereto, the provisions
of the federal |
laws or regulations shall apply and the contract shall be
|
interpreted and enforced accordingly. |
(5) Each chief procurement officer, as defined in the |
Illinois Procurement Code, shall maintain on his or her |
official Internet website a database of waivers granted under |
this Section with respect to contracts under his or her |
|
jurisdiction. The database, which shall be updated |
periodically as necessary, shall be searchable by contractor |
name and by contracting State agency. |
(6) Each chief procurement officer, as defined by the |
Illinois Procurement Code, shall maintain on its website a list |
of all firms that have been prohibited from bidding, offering, |
or entering into a contract with the State of Illinois as a |
result of violations of this Act. |
Each public notice required by law of the award of a State |
contract shall include for each bid or offer submitted for that |
contract the following: (i) the bidder's or offeror's name, |
(ii) the bid amount, (iii) the name or names of the certified |
firms identified in the bidder's or offeror's submitted |
utilization plan, and (iv) (iii) the bid's amount and |
percentage of the contract awarded to businesses owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities identified in |
the of disadvantaged business utilization plan , and (iv) the |
bid's percentage of business enterprise program utilization |
plan . |
(Source: P.A. 99-462, eff. 8-25-15 .)
|
(30 ILCS 575/8) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.608)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2020)
|
Sec. 8. Enforcement. |
(1) The Council shall make such findings, recommendations
|
and proposals to the Governor as are necessary and appropriate |
|
to enforce
this Act. If, as a result of its monitoring |
activities, the Council determines
that its goals and policies |
are not being met by any State agency or public institution of |
higher education,
the Council
may recommend any or all of the |
following actions:
|
(a) Establish enforcement procedures whereby the |
Council may recommend
to the appropriate State agency, |
public institutions of higher education, or law |
enforcement
officer that legal or
administrative remedies |
be initiated for violations of contract provisions
or rules |
issued hereunder or by a contracting State agency or public |
institutions of higher education. State agencies and |
public institutions of higher education
shall be |
authorized to adopt remedies for such violations which |
shall include
(1) termination of the contract involved, (2) |
prohibition of participation
of the respondents in public |
contracts for a period not to exceed one year,
(3) |
imposition of a penalty not to exceed any profit acquired |
as a result
of violation, or (4) any combination thereof.
|
(b) If the Council concludes that a compliance plan |
submitted under Section
6 is unlikely to produce the
|
participation
goals for businesses owned by minorities, |
women females , and persons with
disabilities within the |
then current fiscal year, the Council may recommend
that
|
the State agency or public institution of higher education |
revise its plan to provide
additional
opportunities
for |
|
participation by businesses owned by minorities, women
|
females , and persons with disabilities. Such recommended |
revisions may
include, but shall not be limited to, the |
following:
|
(i) assurances of stronger and better focused |
solicitation efforts to
obtain more businesses owned |
by minorities, women
females , and persons with |
disabilities as potential sources of
supply;
|
(ii) division of job or project requirements, when |
economically feasible,
into tasks or quantities to |
permit participation of
businesses owned by |
minorities, women females , and persons with |
disabilities;
|
(iii) elimination of extended experience or |
capitalization requirements,
when programmatically |
feasible, to permit participation of businesses owned |
by minorities, women females , and persons with
|
disabilities;
|
(iv) identification of specific proposed contracts |
as particularly
attractive or appropriate for |
participation by
businesses owned by minorities, women |
females , and persons with disabilities,
such |
identification to result from and be coupled with the
|
efforts of subparagraphs
(i) through (iii);
|
(v) implementation of those regulations |
established for the use of the
sheltered market |
|
process.
|
(2) State agencies and public institutions of higher |
education shall review a vendor's compliance with its |
utilization plan and the terms of its contract. Without |
limitation, a vendor's failure to comply with its contractual |
commitments as contained in the utilization plan; failure to |
cooperate in providing information regarding its compliance |
with its utilization plan; or the provision of false or |
misleading information or statements concerning compliance, |
certification status, or eligibility of the Business |
Enterprise Program-certified vendor, good faith efforts, or |
any other material fact or representation shall constitute a |
material breach of the contract and entitle the State agency or |
public institution of higher education to declare a default, |
terminate the contract, or exercise those remedies provided for |
in the contract, at law, or in equity. |
(3) A vendor shall be in breach of the contract and may be |
subject to penalties for failure to meet contract goals |
established under this Act, unless the vendor can show that it |
made good faith efforts to meet the contract goals. |
(Source: P.A. 99-462, eff. 8-25-15 .)
|
(30 ILCS 575/8a) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.608a)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2020)
|
Sec. 8a. Advance and progress payments. Any contract |
awarded to a business
owned by a minority, woman female , or |
|
person with a disability
pursuant to this Act may contain a |
provision for advance or progress
payments, or both, except |
that a State construction contract awarded to a minority-owned
|
minority or women-owned female owned business pursuant to this |
Act may contain a
provision for progress payments but may not |
contain a provision for
advance payments.
|
(Source: P.A. 88-597, eff. 8-28-94 .)
|
(30 ILCS 575/8b) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.608b)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2020)
|
Sec. 8b. Scheduled council meetings; sheltered market. The |
Council shall
conduct regular meetings to carry out its
|
responsibilities under this Act. At each of the regularly |
scheduled
meetings, time shall be allocated for the Council to |
receive, review and
discuss any evidence regarding past or |
present racial, ethnic or gender
based discrimination which |
directly impacts State contracting with businesses
owned by |
minorities, women females , and persons with
disabilities. If |
after reviewing such evidence the Council
finds that there is |
or has been such discrimination against a specific
group, race |
or sex, the Council shall establish sheltered markets
or adjust |
existing sheltered markets
tailored to address the Council's |
specific findings.
|
"Sheltered market" shall mean a procurement procedure |
whereby certain
contracts are selected and specifically set |
aside for businesses owned by
minorities, women females , and |
|
persons with
disabilities on a competitive bid or negotiated |
basis.
|
As part of the annual report which the Council must file |
pursuant to
paragraph (e) of subsection (2) of Section 5, the |
Council shall report on
any findings made pursuant to this |
Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 88-597, eff. 8-28-94 .)
|
(30 ILCS 575/8f)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2020)
|
Sec. 8f. Annual report. The Council shall file no later |
than March 1
of each year, an annual report that shall detail |
the level of achievement
toward the
goals specified in this Act |
over the 3 most recent fiscal years. The annual
report shall |
include, but need not be limited to the following:
|
(1) a summary detailing expenditures subject to the |
goals, the
actual goals specified, and the goals attained |
by each State agency and public institution of higher |
education;
|
(2) a summary of the number of contracts awarded and |
the average contract
amount by each State agency and public |
institution of higher education;
|
(3) an analysis of the level of overall goal |
achievement concerning
purchases
from minority-owned |
minority businesses, women-owned female-owned businesses, |
and businesses owned by
persons with disabilities;
|
|
(4) an analysis of the number of businesses owned by |
minorities, women females ,
and persons with disabilities |
that are certified under the program as well as
the number |
of those businesses that received State procurement |
contracts; and
|
(5) a summary of the number of contracts awarded to |
businesses with annual
gross sales of less than $1,000,000; |
of $1,000,000 or more, but less than
$5,000,000; of
|
$5,000,000 or more, but less than $10,000,000; and of |
$10,000,000 or more.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-462, eff. 8-25-15 .)
|
(30 ILCS 575/8g new) |
Sec. 8g. Business Enterprise Program Council reports. |
(a) The Department of Central Management Services shall |
provide a report to the Council identifying all State agency |
non-construction solicitations that exceed $20,000,000 and |
that have less than a 20% established goal prior to |
publication. |
(b) The Department of Central Management Services shall |
provide a report to the Council identifying all State agency |
non-construction awards that exceed $20,000,000. The report |
shall contain the following: (i) the name of the awardee; (ii) |
the total bid amount; (iii) the established Business Enterprise |
Program goal; (iv) the dollar amount and percentage of |
participation by businesses owned by minorities, women, and |
|
persons with disabilities; and (v) the names of the certified |
firms identified in the utilization plan. |
(30 ILCS 575/8h new) |
Sec. 8h. Encouragement for telecom and communications |
entities to submit supplier diversity reports. |
(1) The following entities that do business in Illinois or |
serve Illinois customers shall be subject to this Section: |
(i) all local exchange telecommunications carriers |
with at least 35,000 subscriber access lines; |
(ii) cable and video providers, as defined in Section |
21-20l of the Public Utilities Act; |
(iii) interconnected VoIP providers, as defined in |
Section 13-235 of the Public Utilities Act; |
(iv) wireless service providers; |
(v) broadband internet access services providers; and |
(vi) any other entity that provides messaging, voice, |
or video services via the Internet or a social media |
platform. |
(2) Each entity subject to this Section may submit to the |
Illinois Commerce Commission and the Business Enterprise |
Council an annual report by April 15, 20l8, and every April 15 |
thereafter, which provides, for the previous calendar year, |
information and data on diversity goals, and progress toward |
achieving those goals, by certified businesses owned by |
minorities, women, persons with disabilities, and |
|
service-disabled veterans, provided that if the entity does not |
track such information and data for businesses owned by |
service-disabled veterans, the entity may provide information |
and data for businesses owned by veterans. |
The diversity report shall include the following: |
(i) Overall annual spending on all such certified |
businesses. |
(ii) A narrative description of the entity's supplier |
diversity goals and plans for meeting those goals. |
(iii) The entity's best estimate of its annual spending |
in professional services and spending with certified |
businesses owned by minorities, women, persons with |
disabilities, and service-disabled veterans (or veterans, |
if the reporting entity does not track spending with |
service-disabled veterans), including, but not limited to, |
the following professional services categories: |
accounting; architecture and engineering; consulting; |
information technology; insurance; financial, legal, and |
marketing services; and other professional services. The |
diversity report shall also include the entity's overall |
annual spending in the listed professional service |
categories. For the diversity reports due on April 15, 2018 |
and April 15, 2019, the information on annual spending with |
certified businesses for professional services required by |
this Section may be provided for all professional services |
on an aggregated basis. |
|
(iv) Beginning with the diversity report due on April |
15, 2020, the total number and percentage of women and |
minorities that provided services for each construction |
project in the State. |
An entity subject to this Section which is part of an |
affiliated group of entities may provide information for the |
affiliated group as a whole. |
(3) Any entity that is subject to this Section that does |
not submit a report shall be reported by the Business |
Enterprise Council to each chief procurement officer. Upon |
receiving a report from the Business Enterprise Council, the |
chief procurement officer may prohibit any entities that do not |
submit a report from bidding on State contracts for a period of |
one year beginning the first day of the following fiscal year |
and post on its respective bulletin the names of all entities |
that fail to comply with the provisions of this Section. |
(4) A vendor may appeal any of the actions taken pursuant |
to this Section in the same manner as a vendor denied |
certification, by following the appeal procedures in the |
administrative rules created pursuant to this Act. |
(30 ILCS 575/8i new) |
Sec. 8i. Renewals. State agencies and public institutions |
of higher education shall: |
(a) review all existing contracts prior to the time of |
renewal to determine if the contract goal is being met by |
|
the prime vendor; |
(b) review all existing contracts prior to the time of |
renewal to determine if the contract goal should be |
increased based upon market conditions and availability of |
firms certified pursuant to this Act; |
(c) review existing contracts with no contract goal to |
determine if a goal can be established; if it is determined |
that a contract goal can be established, the State agency |
or public institution of higher education shall encourage |
the prime vendor to amend the contract to include the |
contract goal; a prime contractor shall be required to |
complete a utilization plan to demonstrate how it intends |
to meet the contract goal; and |
(d) review renewals at least 6 months prior to renewal |
to allow adequate time to rebid if it is determined that |
the prime contractor has not demonstrated good faith |
efforts towards meeting the contract goal. |
All renewals shall be subject to any amendments made to |
this Act, or amendments made to any administrative rules |
adopted under this Act, that become effective prior to the date |
of renewal. |
The requirements of this Section shall not apply to |
construction and construction-related services procurements. |
This Section is operative on and after January 1, 2018. |
Section 75. The Film
Production Services Tax Credit Act of |
|
2008 is amended by changing Sections 30 and 45 as follows: |
(35 ILCS 16/30)
|
Sec. 30. Review of application for accredited production |
certificate.
|
(a) In
determining whether to issue an accredited |
production certificate,
the Department must determine that a |
preponderance of the following conditions
exist:
|
(1) The applicant's production intends to make the |
expenditure in the
State required for certification.
|
(2) The applicant's production is economically sound |
and will benefit the
people of the State of Illinois by |
increasing opportunities for employment and
strengthen the |
economy of Illinois.
|
(3) The applicant has filed a diversity plan with the |
Department outlining specific goals (i) for hiring |
minority persons and women females , as defined in the |
Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and |
Persons with Disabilities Act, and (ii) for using vendors |
receiving certification under the Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities |
Act; the Department has approved the plan as meeting the |
requirements established by the Department; and the |
Department has verified that the applicant has met or made |
good-faith efforts in achieving those goals. The |
Department must adopt any rules that are necessary to |
|
ensure compliance with the provisions of this item (3) and |
that are necessary to require that the applicant's plan |
reflects the diversity of this State.
|
(4) The applicant's production application
indicates |
whether the applicant intends to participate in training, |
education,
and
recruitment programs that are organized in |
cooperation with Illinois colleges
and
universities,
labor |
organizations, and the motion picture industry and are |
designed to
promote
and
encourage the training and hiring |
of Illinois residents who represent the
diversity of the
|
Illinois population.
|
(5) That, if not for the credit, the applicant's |
production would not
occur in
Illinois, which may be |
demonstrated by any means including, but not limited to,
|
evidence that the applicant has multi-state or |
international location options
and could reasonably and |
efficiently locate outside of the State, or
demonstration |
that at least one other state or nation is being considered |
for
the production, or evidence that the receipt of the |
credit is a major factor in
the
applicant's decision and |
that without the credit the applicant likely would
not |
create or retain jobs in Illinois, or demonstration that |
receiving the
credit is essential to the applicant's |
decision to create or retain new jobs in
the State.
|
(6) Awarding the credit will result in an overall |
positive impact
to the State, as determined by the |
|
Department using the best available
data.
|
(b) If any of the provisions in this Section conflict with |
any existing
collective
bargaining agreements, the terms and |
conditions of those collective bargaining
agreements shall |
control.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-720, eff. 5-27-08 .) |
(35 ILCS 16/45)
|
Sec. 45. Evaluation of tax credit program; reports to the |
General Assembly. |
(a) The Department shall evaluate the tax credit program. |
The evaluation must include an assessment of the effectiveness |
of the program in creating and retaining new jobs in Illinois |
and of the revenue impact of the program, and may include a |
review of the practices and experiences of other states or |
nations with similar programs. Upon completion of this |
evaluation, the Department shall determine the overall success |
of the program, and may make a recommendation to extend, |
modify, or not extend the program based on this evaluation. |
(b) At the end of each fiscal quarter, the Department must |
submit to the General Assembly a report that includes, without |
limitation, the following information: |
(1) the economic impact of the tax credit program,
|
including the number of jobs created and retained, |
including whether the job positions are entry level, |
management, talent-related, vendor-related, or |
|
production-related; |
(2) the amount of film production spending brought to
|
Illinois, including the amount of spending and type of |
Illinois vendors hired in connection with an accredited |
production; and |
(3) an overall picture of whether the human
|
infrastructure of the motion picture industry in Illinois |
reflects the geographical, racial and ethnic, gender, and |
income-level diversity of the State of Illinois.
|
(c) At the end of each fiscal year, the Department must
|
submit to the General Assembly a report that includes, without |
limitation, the following information: |
(1) an identification of each vendor that provided
|
goods or services that were included in an accredited |
production's Illinois production spending; |
(2) the amount paid to each identified vendor by the
|
accredited production; |
(3) for each identified vendor, a statement as to
|
whether the vendor is a minority-owned minority owned |
business or a women-owned female owned business, as defined |
under Section 2 of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, |
Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act; and |
(4) a description of any steps taken by the
Department |
to encourage accredited productions to use vendors who are |
a minority-owned minority owned business or a women-owned |
female owned business.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 95-720, eff. 5-27-08 .) |
Section 80. The Live Theater Production Tax Credit Act is |
amended by changing Sections 10-30 and 10-50 as follows: |
(35 ILCS 17/10-30)
|
Sec. 10-30. Review of application for accredited theater |
production certificate. |
(a) The Department shall issue an accredited theater |
production certificate to an applicant if it finds that by a |
preponderance the following conditions exist: |
(1) the applicant intends to make the expenditure in |
the State required for certification of the accredited |
theater production; |
(2) the applicant's accredited theater production is |
economically sound and will benefit the people of the State |
of Illinois by increasing opportunities for employment and |
will strengthen the economy of Illinois; |
(3) the following requirements related to the |
implementation of a diversity plan have been met: (i) the |
applicant has filed with the Department a diversity plan |
outlining specific goals for hiring Illinois labor |
expenditure eligible minority persons and women females , |
as defined in the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women |
Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act, and for using |
vendors receiving certification under the Business |
|
Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with |
Disabilities Act; (ii) the Department has approved the plan |
as meeting the requirements established by the Department |
and verified that the applicant has met or made good faith |
efforts in achieving those goals; and (iii) the Department |
has adopted any rules that are necessary to ensure |
compliance with the provisions set forth in this paragraph |
and necessary to require that the applicant's plan reflects |
the diversity of the population of this State; |
(4) the applicant's accredited theater production |
application indicates whether the applicant intends to |
participate in training, education, and recruitment |
programs that are organized in cooperation with Illinois |
colleges and universities, labor organizations, and the |
holders of accredited theater production certificates and |
are designed to promote and encourage the training and |
hiring of Illinois residents who represent the diversity of |
Illinois; |
(5) if not for the tax credit award, the applicant's |
accredited theater production would not occur in Illinois, |
which may be demonstrated by any means, including, but not |
limited to, evidence that: (i) the applicant, presenter, |
owner, or licensee of the production rights has other state |
or international location options at which to present the |
production and could reasonably and efficiently locate |
outside of the State, (ii) at least one other state or |
|
nation could be considered for the production, (iii) the |
receipt of the tax award credit is a major factor in the |
decision of the applicant, presenter, production owner or |
licensee as to where the production will be presented and |
that without the tax credit award the applicant likely |
would not create or retain jobs in Illinois, or (iv) |
receipt of the tax credit award is essential to the |
applicant's decision to create or retain new jobs in the |
State; and |
(6) the tax credit award will result in an overall |
positive impact to the State, as determined by the |
Department using the best available data. |
(b) If any of the provisions in this Section conflict with |
any existing collective bargaining agreements, the terms and |
conditions of those collective bargaining agreements shall |
control.
|
(c) The Department shall act expeditiously regarding |
approval of applications for accredited theater production |
certificates so as to accommodate the pre-production work, |
booking, commencement of ticket sales, determination of |
performance dates, load in, and other matters relating to the |
live theater productions for which approval is sought.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-636, eff. 6-1-12 .) |
(35 ILCS 17/10-50)
|
Sec. 10-50. Live theater tax credit award program |
|
evaluation and reports. |
(a) The Department's live theater tax credit award |
evaluation must include: |
(i) an assessment of the effectiveness of the program |
in creating and retaining new jobs in Illinois; |
(ii) an assessment of the revenue impact of the |
program; |
(iii) in the discretion of the Department, a review of |
the practices and experiences of other states or nations |
with similar programs; and |
(iv) an assessment of the overall success of the |
program. The Department may make a recommendation to |
extend, modify, or not extend the program based on the |
evaluation. |
(b) At the end of each fiscal quarter, the Department shall |
submit to the General Assembly a report that includes, without |
limitation: |
(i) an assessment of the economic impact of the |
program, including the number of jobs created and retained, |
and whether the job positions are entry level, management, |
vendor, or production related; |
(ii) the amount of accredited theater production |
spending brought to Illinois, including the amount of |
spending and type of Illinois vendors hired in connection |
with an accredited theater production; and |
(iii) a determination of whether those receiving |
|
qualifying Illinois labor expenditure salaries or wages |
reflect the geographical, racial and ethnic, gender, and |
income level diversity of the State of Illinois. |
(c) At the end of each fiscal year, the Department shall |
submit to the General Assembly a report that includes, without |
limitation: |
(i) the identification of each vendor that provided |
goods or services that were included in an accredited |
theater production's Illinois production spending; |
(ii) a statement of the amount paid to each identified |
vendor by the accredited theater production and whether the |
vendor is a minority-owned minority or women-owned female |
owned business as defined in Section 2 of the Business |
Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with |
Disabilities Act; and |
(iii) a description of the steps taken by the |
Department to encourage accredited theater productions to |
use vendors who are minority-owned minority or women-owned |
female owned businesses.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-636, eff. 6-1-12 .) |
Section 85. The Illinois Pension Code is amended by |
changing Sections 1-109.1 and 1-113.21 as follows:
|
(40 ILCS 5/1-109.1) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 1-109.1)
|
Sec. 1-109.1. Allocation and delegation of fiduciary |
|
duties.
|
(1) Subject to the provisions of Section 22A-113 of this |
Code and
subsections (2) and (3) of this Section, the board of |
trustees of a
retirement system or pension fund established |
under this Code may:
|
(a) Appoint one or more investment managers as |
fiduciaries to manage
(including the power to acquire and |
dispose of) any assets of the
retirement system or pension |
fund; and
|
(b) Allocate duties among themselves and designate |
others as fiduciaries
to carry out specific fiduciary |
activities other than the management of the
assets of the |
retirement system or pension fund.
|
(2) The board of trustees of a pension fund established |
under Article 5, 6,
8, 9, 10, 11, 12 or 17 of this Code may not |
transfer its investment authority,
nor transfer the assets of |
the fund to any other person or entity for the
purpose of |
consolidating or merging its assets and management with any |
other
pension fund or public investment authority, unless the |
board resolution
authorizing such transfer is submitted for |
approval to the contributors and
pensioners of the fund at |
elections held not less than 30 days after the
adoption of such |
resolution by the board, and such resolution is approved by a
|
majority of the votes cast on the question in both the |
contributors election
and the pensioners election. The |
election procedures and qualifications
governing the election |
|
of trustees shall govern the submission of resolutions
for |
approval under this paragraph, insofar as they may be made |
applicable.
|
(3) Pursuant to subsections (h) and (i) of Section 6 of |
Article VII of
the Illinois Constitution, the investment |
authority of boards of trustees
of retirement systems and |
pension funds established under this Code is declared
to be a |
subject of exclusive State jurisdiction, and the concurrent |
exercise
by a home rule unit of any power affecting such |
investment authority is
hereby specifically denied and |
preempted.
|
(4) For the purposes of this Code, "emerging investment |
manager" means a
qualified investment adviser that manages an |
investment portfolio of at
least $10,000,000 but less than |
$10,000,000,000 and is a
" minority-owned minority owned |
business", " women-owned female owned business" or "business |
owned by a person with a disability" as those terms are
defined |
in the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women
Females , and |
Persons with Disabilities Act.
|
It is hereby declared to be the public policy of the State |
of Illinois to
encourage the trustees of public employee |
retirement systems, pension funds, and investment boards
to use |
emerging investment managers in managing their system's |
assets, encompassing all asset classes, and increase the |
racial, ethnic, and gender diversity of its fiduciaries, to the
|
greatest extent feasible within the bounds of financial and |
|
fiduciary
prudence, and to take affirmative steps to remove any |
barriers to the full
participation in investment opportunities
|
afforded by those retirement systems, pension funds, and |
investment boards.
|
On or before January 1, 2010, a retirement system, pension |
fund, or investment board subject to this Code, except those |
whose investments are restricted by Section 1-113.2 of this |
Code, shall adopt a policy that sets forth goals for |
utilization of emerging investment managers. This policy shall |
include quantifiable goals for the management of assets in |
specific asset classes by emerging investment managers. The |
retirement system, pension fund, or investment board shall |
establish 3 separate goals for: (i) emerging investment |
managers that are minority-owned minority owned businesses; |
(ii) emerging investment managers that are women-owned female |
owned businesses; and (iii) emerging investment managers that |
are businesses owned by a person with a disability. The goals |
established shall be based on the percentage of total dollar |
amount of investment service contracts let to minority-owned |
minority owned businesses, women-owned female owned |
businesses, and businesses owned by a person with a disability, |
as those terms are defined in the Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act. |
The retirement system, pension fund, or investment board shall |
annually review the goals established under this subsection. |
If in any case an emerging investment manager meets the |
|
criteria established by a board for a specific search and meets |
the criteria established by a consultant for that search, then |
that emerging investment manager shall receive an invitation by |
the board of trustees, or an investment committee of the board |
of trustees, to present his or her firm for final consideration |
of a contract. In the case where multiple emerging investment |
managers meet the criteria of this Section, the staff may |
choose the most qualified firm or firms to present to the |
board.
|
The use of an emerging investment manager does not |
constitute a transfer
of investment authority for the purposes |
of subsection (2) of this Section.
|
(5) Each retirement system, pension fund, or investment |
board subject to this Code, except those whose investments are |
restricted by Section 1-113.2 of this Code, shall establish a |
policy that sets forth goals for increasing the racial, ethnic, |
and gender diversity of its fiduciaries, including its |
consultants and senior staff. Each system, fund, and investment |
board shall annually review the goals established under this |
subsection. |
(6) On or before January 1, 2010, a retirement system, |
pension fund, or investment board subject to this Code, except |
those whose investments are restricted by Section 1-113.2 of |
this Code, shall adopt a policy that sets forth goals for |
utilization of businesses owned by minorities, women females , |
and persons with disabilities for all contracts and services. |
|
The goals established shall be based on the percentage of total |
dollar amount of all contracts let to minority-owned minority |
owned businesses, women-owned female owned businesses, and |
businesses owned by a person with a disability, as those terms |
are defined in the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women |
Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act. The retirement |
system, pension fund, or investment board shall annually review |
the goals established under this subsection. |
(7) On or before January 1, 2010, a retirement system, |
pension fund, or investment board subject to this Code, except |
those whose investments are restricted by Section 1-113.2 of |
this Code, shall adopt a policy that sets forth goals for |
increasing the utilization of minority broker-dealers. For the |
purposes of this Code, "minority broker-dealer" means a |
qualified broker-dealer who meets the definition of |
" minority-owned minority owned business", " women-owned female |
owned business", or "business owned by a person with a |
disability", as those terms are defined in the Business |
Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with |
Disabilities Act. The retirement system, pension fund, or |
investment board shall annually review the goals established |
under this Section. |
(8) Each retirement system, pension fund, and investment |
board subject to this Code, except those whose investments are |
restricted by Section 1-113.2 of this Code, shall submit a |
report to the Governor and the General Assembly by January 1 of |
|
each year that includes the following: (i) the policy adopted |
under subsection (4) of this Section, including the names and |
addresses of the emerging investment managers used, percentage |
of the assets under the investment control of emerging |
investment managers for the 3 separate goals, and the actions |
it has undertaken to increase the use of emerging investment |
managers, including encouraging other investment managers to |
use emerging investment managers as subcontractors when the |
opportunity arises; (ii) the policy adopted under subsection |
(5) of this Section; (iii) the policy adopted under subsection |
(6) of this Section; (iv) the policy adopted under subsection |
(7) of this Section, including specific actions undertaken to |
increase the use of minority broker-dealers; and (v) the policy |
adopted under subsection (9) of this Section. |
(9) On or before February 1, 2015, a retirement system, |
pension fund, or investment board subject to this Code, except |
those whose investments are restricted by Section 1-113.2 of |
this Code, shall adopt a policy that sets forth goals for |
increasing the utilization of minority investment managers. |
For the purposes of this Code, "minority investment manager" |
means a qualified investment manager that manages an investment |
portfolio and meets the definition of " minority-owned minority |
owned business", " women-owned female owned business", or |
"business owned by a person with a disability", as those terms |
are defined in the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women |
Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act. |
|
It is hereby declared to be the public policy of the State |
of Illinois to
encourage the trustees of public employee |
retirement systems, pension funds, and investment boards
to use |
minority investment managers in managing their systems' |
assets, encompassing all asset classes, and to increase the |
racial, ethnic, and gender diversity of their fiduciaries, to |
the
greatest extent feasible within the bounds of financial and |
fiduciary
prudence, and to take affirmative steps to remove any |
barriers to the full
participation in investment opportunities
|
afforded by those retirement systems, pension funds, and |
investment boards. |
The retirement system, pension fund, or investment board |
shall establish 3 separate goals for: (i) minority investment |
managers that are minority-owned minority owned businesses; |
(ii) minority investment managers that are women-owned female |
owned businesses; and (iii) minority investment managers that |
are businesses owned by a person with a disability. The |
retirement system, pension fund, or investment board shall |
annually review the goals established under this Section. |
If in any case a minority investment manager meets the |
criteria established by a board for a specific search and meets |
the criteria established by a consultant for that search, then |
that minority investment manager shall receive an invitation by |
the board of trustees, or an investment committee of the board |
of trustees, to present his or her firm for final consideration |
of a contract. In the case where multiple minority investment |
|
managers meet the criteria of this Section, the staff may |
choose the most qualified firm or firms to present to the |
board. |
The use of a minority investment manager does not |
constitute a transfer
of investment authority for the purposes |
of subsection (2) of this Section. |
(10) Beginning January 1, 2016, it shall be the |
aspirational goal for a retirement system, pension fund, or |
investment board subject to this Code to use emerging |
investment managers for not less than 20% of the total funds |
under management. Furthermore, it shall be the aspirational |
goal that not less than 20% of investment advisors be |
minorities, women females , and persons with disabilities as |
those terms are defined in the Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act. |
It shall be the aspirational goal to utilize businesses owned |
by minorities, women females , and persons with disabilities for |
not less than 20% of contracts awarded for "information |
technology services", "accounting services", "insurance |
brokers", "architectural and engineering services", and "legal |
services" as those terms are defined in the Act. |
(Source: P.A. 98-1022, eff. 1-1-15; 99-462, eff. 8-25-15.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/1-113.21) |
Sec. 1-113.21. Contracts for services. |
(a) Beginning January 1, 2015, no contract, oral or |
|
written, for investment services, consulting services, or |
commitment to a private market fund shall be awarded by a |
retirement system, pension fund, or investment board |
established under this Code unless the investment advisor, |
consultant, or private market fund first discloses: |
(1) the number of its investment and senior staff and |
the percentage of its investment and senior staff who are |
(i) a minority person, (ii) a woman female , and (iii) a |
person with a disability; and |
(2) the number of contracts, oral or written, for |
investment services, consulting services, and professional |
and artistic services that the investment advisor, |
consultant, or private market fund has with (i) a |
minority-owned minority owned business, (ii) a women-owned |
female owned business, or (iii) a business owned by a |
person with a disability; and |
(3) the number of contracts, oral or written, for |
investment services, consulting services, and professional |
and artistic services the investment advisor, consultant, |
or private market fund has with a business other than (i) a |
minority-owned minority owned business, (ii) a women-owned |
female owned business or (iii) a business owned by a person |
with a disability, if more than 50% of services performed |
pursuant to the contract are performed by (i) a minority |
person, (ii) a woman female , and (iii) a person with a |
disability. |
|
(b) The disclosures required by this Section shall be |
considered, within the bounds of financial and fiduciary |
prudence, prior to the awarding of a contract, oral or written, |
for investment services, consulting services, or commitment to |
a private market fund. |
(c) For the purposes of this Section, the terms "minority |
person", " woman female ", "person
with a disability", |
" minority-owned minority owned business", " women-owned female |
owned business", and
"business owned by a person with a |
disability" have the same meaning as those
terms have in the |
Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons
|
with Disabilities Act. |
(d) For purposes of this Section, the term "private market |
fund" means any private equity fund, private equity fund of |
funds, venture capital fund, hedge fund, hedge fund of funds, |
real estate fund, or other investment vehicle that is not |
publicly traded.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-1022, eff. 1-1-15 .) |
Section 90. The Counties Code is amended by changing |
Section 5-1134 as follows: |
(55 ILCS 5/5-1134) |
Sec. 5-1134. Project labor agreements. |
(a) Any sports, arts, or entertainment facilities that |
receive revenue from a tax imposed under subsection (b) of |
|
Section 5-1030 of this Code shall be considered to be public |
works within the meaning of the Prevailing Wage Act. The county |
authorities responsible for the construction, renovation, |
modification, or alteration of the sports, arts, or |
entertainment facilities shall enter into project labor |
agreements with labor organizations as defined in the National |
Labor Relations Act to assure that no labor dispute interrupts |
or interferes with the construction, renovation, modification, |
or alteration of the projects. |
(b) The project labor agreements must include the |
following: |
(1) provisions establishing the minimum hourly wage |
for each class of labor organization employees; |
(2) provisions establishing the benefits and other |
compensation for such class of labor organization; and |
(3) provisions establishing that no strike or disputes |
will be engaged in by the labor organization employees. |
The county, taxing bodies, municipalities, and the labor |
organizations shall have the authority to include other terms |
and conditions as they deem necessary. |
(c) The project labor agreement shall be filed with the |
Director of the Illinois Department of Labor in accordance with |
procedures established by the Department. At a minimum, the |
project labor agreement must provide the names, addresses, and |
occupations of the owner of the facilities and the individuals |
representing the labor organization employees participating in |
|
the project labor agreement. The agreement must also specify |
the terms and conditions required in subsection (b) of this |
Section. |
(d) In any agreement for the construction or rehabilitation |
of a facility using revenue generated under subsection (b) of |
Section 5-1030 of this Code, in connection with the |
prequalification of general contractors for construction or |
rehabilitation of the facility, it shall be required that a |
commitment will be submitted detailing how the general |
contractor will expend 15% or more of the aggregate dollar |
value of the project as a whole with one or more minority-owned |
businesses, women-owned female-owned businesses, or businesses |
owned by a person with a disability, as these terms are defined |
in Section 2 of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women |
Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-313, eff. 8-12-13; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14.) |
Section 95. The River Edge Redevelopment Zone Act is |
amended by changing Section 10-5.3 as follows: |
(65 ILCS 115/10-5.3)
|
Sec. 10-5.3. Certification of River Edge Redevelopment |
Zones. |
(a) Approval of designated River Edge Redevelopment Zones |
shall be made by the Department by certification of the |
designating ordinance. The Department shall promptly issue a |
|
certificate for each zone upon its approval. The certificate |
shall be signed by the Director of the Department, shall make |
specific reference to the designating ordinance, which shall be |
attached thereto, and shall be filed in the office of the |
Secretary of State. A certified copy of the River Edge |
Redevelopment Zone Certificate, or a duplicate original |
thereof, shall be recorded in the office of the recorder of |
deeds of the county in which the River Edge Redevelopment Zone |
lies. |
(b) A River Edge Redevelopment Zone shall be effective upon |
its certification. The Department shall transmit a copy of the |
certification to the Department of Revenue, and to the |
designating municipality.
Upon certification of a River Edge |
Redevelopment Zone, the terms and provisions of the designating |
ordinance shall be in effect, and may not be amended or |
repealed except in accordance with Section 10-5.4. |
(c) A River Edge Redevelopment Zone shall be in effect for |
the period stated in the certificate, which shall in no event |
exceed 30 calendar years. Zones shall terminate at midnight of |
December 31 of the final calendar year of the certified term, |
except as provided in Section 10-5.4. |
(d) In calendar years 2006 and 2007, the Department may |
certify one pilot River Edge Redevelopment Zone in the City of |
East St. Louis, one pilot River Edge Redevelopment Zone in the |
City of Rockford, and one pilot River Edge Redevelopment Zone |
in the City of Aurora. |
|
In calendar year 2009, the Department may certify one pilot |
River Edge Redevelopment Zone in the City of Elgin. |
On or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
the 97th General Assembly, the Department may certify one |
additional pilot River Edge Redevelopment Zone in the City of |
Peoria. |
Thereafter the Department may not certify any additional |
River Edge Redevelopment Zones, but may amend and rescind |
certifications of existing River Edge Redevelopment Zones in |
accordance with Section 10-5.4, except that no River Edge |
Redevelopment Zone may be extended on or after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly. Each |
River Edge Redevelopment Zone in existence on the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly shall |
continue until its scheduled termination under this Act, unless |
the Zone is decertified sooner. At the time of its term |
expiration each River Edge Redevelopment Zone will become an |
open enterprise zone, available for the previously designated |
area or a different area to compete for designation as an |
enterprise zone. No preference for designation as a Zone will |
be given to the previously designated area. |
(e) A municipality in which a River Edge Redevelopment Zone |
has been certified must submit to the Department, within 60 |
days after the certification, a plan for encouraging the |
participation by minority persons, women females , persons with |
disabilities, and veterans in the zone. The Department may |
|
assist the municipality in developing and implementing the |
plan. The terms "minority person", " woman female ", and "person |
with a disability" have the meanings set forth under Section 2 |
of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and |
Persons with Disabilities Act. "Veteran" means an Illinois |
resident who is a veteran as defined in subsection (h) of |
Section 1491 of Title 10 of the United States Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-37, eff. 7-13-09; 97-203, eff. 7-28-11; |
97-905, eff. 8-7-12.) |
Section 100. The Metropolitan Pier and Exposition |
Authority Act is amended by changing Sections 10.2 and 23.1 as |
follows: |
(70 ILCS 210/10.2) |
Sec. 10.2. Bonding disclosure. |
(a) Truth in borrowing disclosure. Within 60 business days |
after the issuance of any bonds under this Act, the Authority |
shall disclose the total principal and interest payments to be |
paid on the bonds over the full stated term of the bonds. The |
disclosure also shall include principal and interest payments |
to be made by each fiscal year over the full stated term of the |
bonds and total principal and interest payments to be made by |
each fiscal year on all other outstanding bonds issued under |
this Act over the full stated terms of those bonds. These |
disclosures shall be calculated assuming bonds are not redeemed |
|
or refunded prior to their stated maturities. Amounts included |
in these disclosures as payment of interest on variable rate |
bonds shall be computed at an interest rate equal to the rate |
at which the variable rate bonds are first set upon issuance, |
plus 2.5%, after taking into account any credits permitted in |
the related indenture or other instrument against the amount of |
such interest for each fiscal year. |
(b) Bond sale expenses disclosure. Within 60 business days |
after the issuance of any bonds under this Act, the Authority |
shall disclose all costs of issuance on each sale of bonds |
under this Act. The disclosure shall include, as applicable, |
the respective percentages of participation and compensation |
of each underwriter that is a member of the underwriting |
syndicate, legal counsel, financial advisors, and other |
professionals for the bond issue and an identification of all |
costs of issuance paid to minority-owned minority owned |
businesses, women-owned female owned businesses, and |
businesses owned by persons with disabilities. The terms |
" minority-owned minority owned businesses", " women-owned |
female owned businesses", and "business owned by a person with |
a disability" have the meanings given to those terms in the |
Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons |
with Disabilities Act. In addition, the Authority shall provide |
copies of all contracts under which any costs of issuance are |
paid or to be paid to the Commission on Government Forecasting |
and Accountability within 60 business days after the issuance |
|
of bonds for which those costs are paid or to be paid. Instead |
of filing a second or subsequent copy of the same contract, the |
Authority may file a statement that specified costs are paid |
under specified contracts filed earlier with the Commission. |
(c) The disclosures required in this Section shall be |
published by posting the disclosures for no less than 30 days |
on the website of the Authority and shall be available to the |
public upon request. The Authority shall also provide the |
disclosures to the Governor's Office of Management and Budget, |
the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability, |
and the General Assembly.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-898, eff. 5-27-10.)
|
(70 ILCS 210/23.1) (from Ch. 85, par. 1243.1)
|
Sec. 23.1. Affirmative action.
|
(a) The Authority shall, within 90 days after the effective
|
date of this amendatory Act of 1984, establish and maintain an |
affirmative
action program designed to promote equal |
employment opportunity and
eliminate the effects of past |
discrimination. Such program shall include a
plan, including |
timetables where appropriate, which shall specify goals
and |
methods for increasing participation by women and minorities in
|
employment, including employment related to the planning, |
organization, and staging of the games, by the Authority and by |
parties which contract with the Authority.
The Authority shall |
submit a detailed plan with the General Assembly prior
to |
|
September 1 of each year. Such program shall also establish |
procedures and
sanctions (including debarment) , which the |
Authority shall enforce to
ensure compliance with the plan |
established pursuant to this Section and
with State and federal |
laws and regulations relating to the employment of
women and |
minorities. A determination by the Authority as to whether a
|
party to a contract with the Authority has achieved the goals |
or employed
the methods for increasing participation by women |
and minorities shall be
determined in accordance with the terms |
of such contracts or the applicable
provisions of rules and |
regulations of the Authority existing at the time
such contract |
was executed, including any provisions for consideration of
|
good faith efforts at compliance which the Authority may |
reasonably adopt.
|
(b) The Authority shall adopt and maintain minority-owned |
minority and women-owned
female owned business enterprise |
procurement programs under the affirmative
action program |
described in subsection (a) for any and all work, including all |
contracting related to the planning, organization, and staging |
of the games, undertaken
by the Authority. That work shall |
include, but is not limited to, the
purchase of professional |
services, construction services, supplies,
materials, and |
equipment. The programs shall establish goals of awarding
not |
less than 25% of the annual dollar value of all contracts, |
purchase
orders, or other agreements (collectively referred to |
as "contracts") to minority-owned
minority owned businesses |
|
and 5% of the annual dollar value of all
contracts to |
women-owned female owned businesses. Without limiting the |
generality of
the foregoing, the programs shall require in |
connection with the
prequalification or consideration of |
vendors for professional service
contracts, construction |
contracts, and contracts for supplies, materials,
equipment, |
and services that each proposer or bidder submit as part of his
|
or her proposal or bid a commitment detailing how he or she |
will expend 25%
or more of the dollar value of his or her |
contracts with one or more minority-owned
minority owned |
businesses and 5% or more of the dollar value with one or
more |
women-owned female owned businesses. Bids or proposals that do |
not include such
detailed commitments are not responsive and |
shall be rejected unless the
Authority deems it appropriate to |
grant a waiver of these requirements. In
addition the Authority |
may, in connection with the selection of providers
of |
professional services, reserve the right to select a |
minority-owned minority or women-owned female
owned business |
or businesses to fulfill the commitment to minority and woman
|
female business participation. The commitment to minority and |
woman female
business participation may be met by the |
contractor or professional service
provider's status as a |
minority-owned minority or women-owned female owned business, |
by joint venture
or by subcontracting a portion of the work |
with or purchasing materials for
the work from one or more such |
businesses, or by any combination thereof.
Each contract shall |
|
require the contractor or provider to submit a
certified |
monthly report detailing the status of that contractor or
|
provider's compliance with the Authority's minority-owned |
minority and women-owned female owned
business enterprise |
procurement program. The Authority, after reviewing
the |
monthly reports of the contractors and providers, shall
compile |
a comprehensive report regarding compliance with this |
procurement
program and file it quarterly with the General |
Assembly. If, in connection
with a particular contract, the |
Authority determines that it is
impracticable or excessively |
costly to obtain minority-owned minority or women-owned female |
owned
businesses to perform sufficient work to fulfill the |
commitment required by
this subsection, the Authority shall |
reduce or waive the commitment in the
contract, as may be |
appropriate. The Authority shall establish rules and
|
regulations setting forth the standards to be used in |
determining whether
or not a reduction or waiver is |
appropriate. The terms " minority-owned minority owned
|
business" and " women-owned female owned business" have the |
meanings given to those
terms in the Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Women
Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act.
|
(c) The Authority shall adopt and maintain an affirmative
|
action program in connection with the hiring
of minorities and |
women on the Expansion Project and on any and all
construction |
projects, including all contracting related to the planning, |
organization, and staging of the games, undertaken by the |
|
Authority. The program shall be
designed to promote equal |
employment opportunity and shall specify the
goals and methods |
for increasing the participation of minorities and women
in a |
representative mix of job classifications required to perform |
the
respective contracts awarded by the Authority.
|
(d) In connection with the Expansion Project, the Authority |
shall
incorporate the following elements into its |
minority-owned minority and women-owned female owned
business |
procurement programs to the extent feasible: (1) a major
|
contractors program that permits minority-owned minority owned |
businesses and women-owned female owned
businesses to bear |
significant responsibility and risk for a portion of the
|
project; (2) a mentor/protege program that provides financial, |
technical,
managerial, equipment, and personnel support to |
minority-owned minority owned businesses
and women-owned |
female owned businesses; (3) an emerging firms program that |
includes minority-owned
minority owned businesses and |
women-owned female owned businesses that would not
otherwise |
qualify for the project due to inexperience or limited |
resources;
(4) a small projects program that includes |
participation by smaller minority-owned
minority owned |
businesses and women-owned female owned businesses on jobs |
where the
total dollar value is $5,000,000 or less; and (5) a |
set-aside program that
will identify contracts requiring the |
expenditure of funds less than
$50,000 for bids to be submitted |
solely by minority-owned minority owned businesses and |
|
women-owned
female owned businesses.
|
(e) The Authority is authorized to enter into agreements |
with
contractors' associations, labor unions, and the |
contractors working on the
Expansion Project to establish an |
Apprenticeship Preparedness Training
Program to provide for an |
increase in the number of minority and women female
journeymen |
and apprentices in the building trades and to enter into
|
agreements with Community College District 508 to provide |
readiness training.
The Authority is further authorized to |
enter into contracts with public and
private educational |
institutions and persons in the hospitality industry to
provide |
training for employment in the hospitality industry.
|
(f) McCormick Place Advisory Board. There is created a |
McCormick Place
Advisory Board composed as follows:
2 members |
shall be appointed by the Mayor of Chicago;
2 members shall be |
appointed by the Governor;
2 members shall be State Senators |
appointed by the President of the Senate;
2 members shall be |
State Senators appointed by the Minority Leader of the
Senate;
|
2 members shall be State Representatives appointed by the |
Speaker of the House
of Representatives; and
2 members shall be |
State Representatives appointed by the Minority Leader of
the |
House of Representatives.
The terms of all previously appointed |
members of the Advisory Board expire on
the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly. A
State |
Senator or State Representative member may appoint a designee |
to serve
on the McCormick Place Advisory Board in his or her |
|
absence.
|
A "member of a minority group" shall mean a person who is a |
citizen or
lawful permanent resident of the United States and |
who is any of the following:
|
(1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person having |
origins in any of the original peoples of North and South |
America, including Central America, and who maintains |
tribal affiliation or community attachment). |
(2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the |
original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the |
Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to, |
Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan, |
the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam). |
(3) Black or African American (a person having origins |
in any of the black racial groups of Africa). Terms such as |
"Haitian" or "Negro" can be used in addition to "Black or |
African American". |
(4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican, |
Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish |
culture or origin, regardless of race). |
(5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a person |
having origins in any of the original peoples of Hawaii, |
Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
|
Members of the McCormick Place Advisory Board shall serve |
2-year terms
and until their successors are appointed, except |
members who serve as a
result of their elected position whose |
|
terms shall continue as long as
they hold their designated |
elected positions. Vacancies shall be filled by
appointment for |
the unexpired term in the same manner as original
appointments |
are made. The McCormick Place Advisory Board shall elect
its |
own chairperson.
|
Members of the McCormick Place Advisory Board shall serve |
without
compensation but, at the Authority's discretion, shall |
be reimbursed for
necessary expenses in connection with the |
performance of their duties.
|
The McCormick Place Advisory Board shall meet quarterly, or |
as needed,
shall produce any reports it deems necessary, and |
shall:
|
(1) Work with the Authority on ways to improve the area |
physically
and economically;
|
(2) Work with the Authority regarding potential means |
for providing
increased economic opportunities to |
minorities and women produced
indirectly or directly from |
the construction and operation of the
Expansion Project;
|
(3) Work with the Authority to minimize any potential |
impact on the
area surrounding the McCormick Place |
Expansion Project, including any
impact on minority-owned |
minority or women-owned female owned businesses, resulting |
from the
construction and operation of the Expansion |
Project;
|
(4) Work with the Authority to find candidates for |
building trades
apprenticeships, for employment in the |
|
hospitality industry, and to identify
job training |
programs;
|
(5) Work with the Authority to implement the provisions |
of subsections
(a) through (e) of this Section in the |
construction of the Expansion
Project, including the |
Authority's goal of awarding not less than 25% and
5% of |
the annual dollar value of contracts to minority-owned |
minority and women-owned female owned
businesses, the |
outreach program for minorities and women, and the
|
mentor/protege program for providing assistance to |
minority-owned minority and women-owned female
owned |
businesses.
|
(g) The Authority shall comply with subsection (e) of |
Section 5-42 of the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games (2016) |
Law. For purposes of this Section, the term "games" has the |
meaning set forth in the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games |
(2016) Law. |
(Source: P.A. 96-7, eff. 4-3-09; 97-396, eff. 1-1-12.)
|
Section 105. The Illinois Sports Facilities Authority Act |
is amended by changing Section 9 as follows:
|
(70 ILCS 3205/9) (from Ch. 85, par. 6009)
|
Sec. 9. Duties. In addition to the powers set forth |
elsewhere in
this Act, subject to the terms of any agreements |
with the holders of the
Authority's bonds or notes, the |
|
Authority shall:
|
(1) Comply with all zoning, building, and land use |
controls of the
municipality within which is located any |
stadium facility
owned by the Authority or for which the |
Authority provides financial
assistance.
|
(2) With respect to a facility owned or to be owned by |
the Authority,
enter or have entered into a management |
agreement with a tenant of the
Authority to operate the |
facility that requires the tenant to operate the
facility |
for a period at least as long as the term of any bonds |
issued to
finance the development, establishment, |
construction, erection, acquisition,
repair, |
reconstruction, remodeling, adding to, extension, |
improvement,
equipping, operation, and maintenance of the |
facility. Such agreement shall
contain appropriate and |
reasonable provisions with respect to termination,
default |
and legal remedies.
|
(3) With respect to a facility owned or to be owned by |
a governmental
owner other than the Authority, enter into |
an assistance agreement with either
a governmental owner of |
a facility or its tenant, or both,
that requires the |
tenant, or if the tenant is not a party to the assistance
|
agreement requires the governmental owner to enter into an |
agreement with the
tenant that requires the tenant to use |
the facility for a period at least as
long as the term of |
any bonds issued to finance the reconstruction, |
|
renovation,
remodeling, extension or improvement of all or |
substantially all of the
facility.
|
(4) Create and maintain a separate financial reserve |
for repair and
replacement of capital assets of any |
facility owned by the Authority or for
which the Authority |
provides financial assistance and deposit into this |
reserve
not less than $1,000,000 per year for each such |
facility beginning at such time
as the Authority and the |
tenant, or the Authority and a governmental owner of a
|
facility, as applicable, shall agree.
|
(5) In connection with prequalification of general |
contractors for the
construction of a new stadium facility |
or the reconstruction, renovation,
remodeling, extension, |
or improvement of all or substantially all of an
existing |
facility, the Authority shall require submission of a |
commitment
detailing how the general contractor will |
expend 25% or more of the dollar
value of the general |
contract with one or more minority-owned businesses |
minority business enterprises
and 5% or more of the dollar |
value with one or more women-owned businesses female |
business
enterprises . This commitment may be met by |
contractor's status as a minority-owned businesses |
minority
business enterprise or women-owned businesses |
female business enterprise , by a joint venture or by
|
subcontracting a portion of the work with or by purchasing |
materials for the
work from one or more such businesses |
|
enterprises , or by any combination thereof. Any
contract |
with the general contractor for construction of the new |
stadium
facility and any contract for the reconstruction, |
renovation, remodeling,
adding to, extension or |
improvement of all or substantially all of an
existing |
facility shall require the general contractor to meet the |
foregoing
obligations and shall require monthly reporting |
to the Authority with
respect to the status of the |
implementation of the contractor's affirmative
action plan |
and compliance with that plan. This report shall be filed |
with
the General Assembly. The Authority shall establish
|
and maintain an affirmative action program designed to |
promote equal
employment opportunity which specifies the |
goals and methods for increasing
participation by |
minorities and women in a representative mix of job
|
classifications required to perform the respective |
contracts. The
Authority shall file a report before March 1 |
of each year with the General
Assembly detailing its |
implementation of this paragraph. The terms |
"minority-owned businesses", "women-owned businesses", and |
"business owned by a person with a disability" have the |
meanings given to those terms The terms
"minority business |
enterprise" and "female business enterprise" shall have
|
the same meanings as "minority owned business" and "female |
owned
business", respectively, as defined in the Business |
Enterprise for Minorities, Women
Females , and Persons with |
|
Disabilities Act.
|
(6) Provide for the construction of any new facility |
pursuant to one
or more contracts which require delivery of |
a completed facility at a fixed
maximum price to be insured |
or guaranteed by a third party determined by
the Authority |
to be financially capable of causing completion of
such |
construction of the new facility.
|
In connection with any assistance agreement with a |
governmental owner that
provides financial assistance for a |
facility to be used by a National Football
League team, the |
assistance agreement shall provide that the Authority or
its |
agent shall enter into the contract or contracts for the design |
and
construction services or design/build services for such |
facility and thereafter
transfer its rights and obligations |
under the contract or contracts to the
governmental
owner of |
the facility. In seeking parties to provide design and |
construction
services or design/build services with respect to |
such facility, the Authority
may use such procurement |
procedures as it may determine, including, without
limitation, |
the selection of design professionals and construction |
managers or
design/builders as may be required by a team that |
is at risk, in whole or in
part, for the cost of design and |
construction of the facility.
|
An assistance agreement may not provide, directly or |
indirectly, for the
payment to the Chicago Park District of |
more than a total of $10,000,000 on
account of the District's |
|
loss of property or revenue in connection with the
renovation |
of a facility pursuant to the assistance agreement.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-935, eff. 6-1-01; 92-16, eff. 6-28-01.)
|
Section 110. The Downstate Illinois Sports Facilities |
Authority Act is amended by changing Section 40 as follows:
|
(70 ILCS 3210/40)
|
Sec. 40. Duties.
|
(a) In addition to the powers set forth elsewhere in this |
Act, subject to
the terms of any agreements with the holders of |
the Authority's evidences of
indebtedness, the Authority shall |
do the following:
|
(1) Comply with all zoning, building, and land use |
controls of the
municipality within which is located any |
stadium facility owned by the
Authority or for which the |
Authority provides financial assistance.
|
(2) Enter into a loan agreement with an owner of a |
facility to finance the
acquisition, construction, |
maintenance, or rehabilitation of the facility. The
|
agreement shall contain appropriate and reasonable |
provisions with respect to
termination, default, and legal |
remedies. The loan may be at below-market
interest rates.
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(3) Create and maintain a financial reserve for repair |
and replacement of
capital assets.
|
(b) In a loan agreement for the construction of a new |
|
facility, in
connection with prequalification of general |
contractors for construction of the
facility, the Authority |
shall require that the owner of the facility require
submission |
of a commitment detailing how the general contractor will |
expend 25%
or more of the dollar value of the general contract |
with one or more minority-owned businesses minority
business |
enterprises and 5% or more of the dollar value with one or more |
women-owned businesses female
business enterprises . This |
commitment may be met by contractor's status as a |
minority-owned businesses
minority business enterprise or |
women-owned businesses female business enterprise , by a joint |
venture,
or by subcontracting a portion of the work with or by |
purchasing materials for
the work from one or more such |
businesses enterprises , or by any combination thereof. Any
|
contract with the general contractor for construction of the |
new facility shall
require the general contractor to meet the |
foregoing obligations and shall
require monthly reporting to |
the Authority with respect to the status of the
implementation |
of the contractor's affirmative action plan and compliance with
|
that plan. This report shall be filed with the General |
Assembly. The Authority
shall require that the facility owner |
establish and maintain an affirmative
action program designed |
to promote equal employment opportunity and that
specifies the |
goals and methods for increasing participation by minorities |
and
women in a representative mix of job classifications |
required to perform the
respective contracts. The Authority |
|
shall file a report before March 1 of each
year with the |
General Assembly detailing its implementation of this |
subsection.
The terms " minority-owned businesses minority |
business enterprise " and " women-owned businesses female |
business enterprise " have
the meanings provided in the Business |
Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and
Persons with |
Disabilities Act.
|
(c) With respect to a facility owned or to be owned by the |
Authority, enter
or have entered into a management agreement |
with a tenant of the Authority to
operate the facility that |
requires the tenant to operate the facility for a
period at |
least as long as the term of any bonds issued to finance the
|
development, establishment, construction, erection, |
acquisition, repair,
reconstruction, remodeling, adding to, |
extension, improvement, equipping,
operation, and maintenance |
of the facility. Such agreement shall contain
appropriate and |
reasonable provisions with respect to termination, default, |
and
legal remedies.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-227, eff. 1-1-04.)
|
Section 115. The Metropolitan Transit Authority Act is |
amended by changing Section 12c as follows: |
(70 ILCS 3605/12c)
|
Sec. 12c. Retiree Benefits Bonds and Notes. |
(a) In addition to all other bonds or notes that it is |
|
authorized to issue, the Authority is authorized to issue its |
bonds or notes for the purposes of providing funds for the |
Authority to make the deposits described in Section 12c(b)(1) |
and (2), for refunding any bonds authorized to be issued under |
this Section, as well as for the purposes of paying costs of |
issuance, obtaining bond insurance or other credit enhancement |
or liquidity facilities, paying costs of obtaining related |
swaps as authorized in the Bond Authorization Act ("Swaps"), |
providing a debt service reserve fund, paying Debt Service (as |
defined in paragraph (i) of this Section 12c), and paying all |
other costs related to any such bonds or notes. |
(b)(1) After its receipt of a certified copy of a report of |
the Auditor General of the State of Illinois meeting the |
requirements of Section 3-2.3 of the Illinois State Auditing |
Act, the Authority may issue $1,348,550,000 aggregate original |
principal amount of bonds and notes. After payment of the costs |
of issuance and necessary deposits to funds and accounts |
established with respect to debt service, the net proceeds of |
such bonds or notes shall be deposited only in the Retirement |
Plan for Chicago Transit Authority Employees and used only for |
the purposes required by Section 22-101 of the Illinois Pension |
Code. Provided that no less than $1,110,500,000 has been |
deposited in the Retirement Plan, remaining proceeds of bonds |
issued under this subparagraph (b)(1) may be used to pay costs |
of issuance and make necessary deposits to funds and accounts |
with respect to debt service for bonds and notes issued under |
|
this subparagraph or subparagraph (b)(2). |
(2) After its receipt of a certified copy of a report of |
the Auditor General of the State of Illinois meeting the |
requirements of Section 3-2.3 of the Illinois State Auditing |
Act, the Authority may issue $639,680,000 aggregate original |
principal amount of bonds and notes. After payment of the costs |
of issuance and necessary deposits to funds and accounts |
established with respect to debt service, the net proceeds of |
such bonds or notes shall be deposited only in the Retiree |
Health Care Trust and used only for the purposes required by |
Section 22-101B of the Illinois Pension Code. Provided that no |
less than $528,800,000 has been deposited in the Retiree Health |
Care Trust, remaining proceeds of bonds issued under this |
subparagraph (b)(2) may be used to pay costs of issuance and |
make necessary deposits to funds and accounts with respect to |
debt service for bonds and notes issued under this subparagraph |
or subparagraph (b)(1).
|
(3) In addition, refunding bonds are authorized to be |
issued for the purpose of refunding outstanding bonds or notes |
issued under this Section 12c. |
(4) The bonds or notes issued under 12c(b)(1) shall be |
issued as soon as practicable after the Auditor General issues |
the report provided in Section 3-2.3(b) of the Illinois State |
Auditing Act. The bonds or notes issued under 12c(b)(2) shall |
be issued as soon as practicable after the Auditor General |
issues the report provided in Section 3-2.3(c) of the Illinois |
|
State Auditing Act. |
(5) With respect to bonds and notes issued under |
subparagraph (b), scheduled aggregate annual payments of |
interest or deposits into funds and accounts established for |
the purpose of such payment shall commence within one year |
after the bonds and notes are issued. With respect to principal |
and interest, scheduled aggregate annual payments of principal |
and interest or deposits into funds and accounts established |
for the purpose of such payment shall be not less than 70% in |
2009, 80% in 2010, and 90% in 2011, respectively, of scheduled |
payments or deposits of principal and interest in 2012 and |
shall be substantially equal beginning in 2012 and each year |
thereafter. For purposes of this subparagraph (b), |
"substantially equal" means that debt service in any full year |
after calendar year 2011 is not more than 115% of debt service |
in any other full year after calendar year 2011 during the term |
of the bonds or notes. For the purposes of this subsection (b), |
with respect to bonds and notes that bear interest at a |
variable rate, interest shall be assumed at a rate equal to the |
rate for United States Treasury Securities - State and Local |
Government Series for the same maturity, plus 75 basis points. |
If the Authority enters into a Swap with a counterparty |
requiring the Authority to pay a fixed interest rate on a |
notional amount, and the Authority has made a determination |
that such Swap was entered into for the purpose of providing |
substitute interest payments for variable interest rate bonds |
|
or notes of a particular maturity or maturities in a principal |
amount equal to the notional amount of the Swap, then during |
the term of the Swap for purposes of any calculation of |
interest payable on such bonds or notes, the interest rate on |
the bonds or notes of such maturity or maturities shall be |
determined as if such bonds or notes bore interest at the fixed |
interest rate payable by the Authority under such Swap. |
(6) No bond or note issued under this Section 12c shall |
mature later than December 31, 2040. |
(c) The Chicago Transit Board shall provide for the |
issuance of bonds or notes as authorized in this Section 12c by |
the adoption of an ordinance. The ordinance, together with the |
bonds or notes, shall constitute a contract among the |
Authority, the owners from time to time of the bonds or notes, |
any bond trustee with respect to the bonds or notes, any |
related credit enhancer and any provider of any related Swaps. |
(d) The Authority is authorized to cause the proceeds of |
the bonds or notes, and any interest or investment earnings on |
the bonds or notes, and of any Swaps, to be invested until the |
proceeds and any interest or investment earnings have been |
deposited with the Retirement Plan or the Retiree Health Care |
Trust. |
(e) Bonds or notes issued pursuant to this Section 12c may |
be general obligations of the Authority, to which shall be |
pledged the full faith and credit of the Authority, or may be |
obligations payable solely from particular sources of funds all |
|
as may be provided in the authorizing ordinance. The |
authorizing ordinance for the bonds and notes, whether or not |
general obligations of the Authority, may provide for the Debt |
Service (as defined in paragraph (i) of this Section 12c) to |
have a claim for payment from particular sources of funds, |
including, without limitation, amounts to be paid to the |
Authority or a bond trustee. The authorizing ordinance may |
provide for the means by which the bonds or notes (and any |
related Swaps) may be secured, which may include, a pledge of |
any revenues or funds of the Authority from whatever source |
which may by law be utilized for paying Debt Service. In |
addition to any other security, upon the written approval of |
the Regional Transportation Authority by the affirmative vote |
of 12 of its then Directors, the ordinance may provide a |
specific pledge or assignment of and lien on or security |
interest in amounts to be paid to the Authority by the Regional |
Transportation Authority and direct payment thereof to the bond |
trustee for payment of Debt Service with respect to the bonds |
or notes, subject to the provisions of existing lease |
agreements of the Authority with any public building |
commission. The authorizing ordinance may also provide a |
specific pledge or assignment of and lien on or security |
interest in and direct payment to the trustee of all or a |
portion of the moneys otherwise payable to the Authority from |
the City of Chicago pursuant to an intergovernmental agreement |
with the Authority to provide financial assistance to the |
|
Authority.
Any such pledge, assignment, lien or security |
interest for the benefit of owners of bonds or notes shall be |
valid and binding from the time the bonds or notes are issued, |
without any physical delivery or further act, and shall be |
valid and binding as against and prior to the claims of all |
other parties having claims of any kind against the Authority |
or any other person, irrespective of whether such other parties |
have notice of such pledge, assignment, lien or security |
interest, all as provided in the Local Government Debt Reform |
Act, as it may be amended from time to time. The bonds or notes |
of the Authority issued pursuant to this Section 12c shall have |
such priority of payment and as to their claim for payment from |
particular sources of funds, including their priority with |
respect to obligations of the Authority issued under other |
Sections of this Act, all as shall be provided in the |
ordinances authorizing the issuance of the bonds or notes. The |
ordinance authorizing the issuance of any bonds or notes under |
this Section may provide for the creation of, deposits in, and |
regulation and disposition of sinking fund or reserve accounts |
relating to those bonds or notes and related agreements. The |
ordinance authorizing the issuance of any such bonds or notes |
authorized under this Section 12c may contain provisions for |
the creation of a separate fund to provide for the payment of |
principal of and interest on those bonds or notes and related |
agreements. The ordinance may also provide limitations on the |
issuance of additional bonds or notes of the Authority. |
|
(f) Bonds or notes issued under this Section 12c shall not |
constitute an indebtedness of the Regional Transportation |
Authority, the State of Illinois, or of any other political |
subdivision of or municipality within the State, except the |
Authority. |
(g) The ordinance of the Chicago Transit Board authorizing |
the issuance of bonds or notes pursuant to this Section 12c may |
provide for the appointment of a corporate trustee (which may |
be any trust company or bank having the powers of a trust |
company within Illinois) with respect to bonds or notes issued |
pursuant to this Section 12c. The ordinance shall prescribe the |
rights, duties, and powers of the trustee to be exercised for |
the benefit of the Authority and the protection of the owners |
of bonds or notes issued pursuant to this Section 12c. The |
ordinance may provide for the trustee to hold in trust, invest |
and use amounts in funds and accounts created as provided by |
the ordinance with respect to the bonds or notes in accordance |
with this Section 12c. The Authority may apply, as it shall |
determine, any amounts received upon the sale of the bonds or |
notes to pay any Debt Service on the bonds or notes. The |
ordinance may provide for a trust indenture to set forth terms |
of, sources of payment for and security for the bonds and |
notes. |
(h) The State of Illinois pledges to and agrees with the |
owners of the bonds or notes issued pursuant to Section 12c |
that the State of Illinois will not limit the powers vested in |
|
the Authority by this Act to pledge and assign its revenues and |
funds as security for the payment of the bonds or notes, or |
vested in the Regional Transportation Authority by the Regional |
Transportation Authority Act or this Act, so as to materially |
impair the payment obligations of the Authority under the terms |
of any contract made by the Authority with those owners or to |
materially impair the rights and remedies of those owners until |
those bonds or notes, together with interest and any redemption |
premium, and all costs and expenses in connection with any |
action or proceedings by or on behalf of such owners are fully |
met and discharged. The Authority is authorized to include |
these pledges and agreements of the State of Illinois in any |
contract with owners of bonds or notes issued pursuant to this |
Section 12c. |
(i) For purposes of this Section, "Debt Service" with |
respect to bonds or notes includes, without limitation, |
principal (at maturity or upon mandatory redemption), |
redemption premium, interest, periodic, upfront, and |
termination payments on Swaps, fees for bond insurance or other |
credit enhancement, liquidity facilities, the funding of bond |
or note reserves, bond trustee fees, and all other costs of |
providing for the security or payment of the bonds or notes. |
(j) The Authority shall adopt a procurement program with |
respect to contracts relating to the following service |
providers in connection with the issuance of debt for the |
benefit of the Retirement Plan for Chicago Transit Authority |
|
Employees: underwriters, bond counsel, financial advisors, and |
accountants. The program shall include goals for the payment of |
not less than 30% of the total dollar value of the fees from |
these contracts to minority-owned minority owned businesses |
and women-owned female owned businesses as defined in the |
Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons |
with Disabilities Act. The Authority shall conduct outreach to |
minority-owned minority owned businesses and women-owned |
female owned businesses. Outreach shall include, but is not |
limited to, advertisements in periodicals and newspapers, |
mailings, and other appropriate media. The Authority shall |
submit to the General Assembly a comprehensive report that |
shall include, at a minimum, the details of the procurement |
plan, outreach efforts, and the results of the efforts to |
achieve goals for the payment of fees. The service providers |
selected by the Authority pursuant to such program shall not be |
subject to approval by the Regional Transportation Authority, |
and the Regional Transportation Authority's approval pursuant |
to subsection (e) of this Section 12c related to the issuance |
of debt shall not be based in any way on the service providers |
selected by the Authority pursuant to this Section. |
(k) No person holding an elective office in this State, |
holding a seat in the General Assembly, serving as a director, |
trustee, officer, or employee of the Regional Transportation |
Authority or the Chicago Transit Authority, including the |
spouse or minor child of that person, may receive a legal, |
|
banking, consulting, or other fee related to the issuance of |
any bond issued by the Chicago Transit Authority pursuant to |
this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-708, eff. 1-18-08.) |
Section 120. The School Code is amended by changing Section |
10-20.44 as follows: |
(105 ILCS 5/10-20.44) |
Sec. 10-20.44. Report on contracts. |
(a) This Section applies to all school districts, including |
a school district organized under Article 34 of this Code. |
(b) A school board must
list on the district's Internet |
website, if any, all contracts
over $25,000 and any contract |
that the school board enters into
with an exclusive bargaining |
representative. |
(c) Each year, in conjunction with the submission of the |
Statement of Affairs to the State Board of Education prior to |
December 1, provided for in Section 10-17, each school district |
shall submit to the State Board of Education an annual report |
on all contracts over $25,000 awarded by the school district |
during the previous fiscal year. The report shall include at |
least the following: |
(1) the total number of all contracts awarded by the |
school district; |
(2) the total value of all contracts awarded; |
|
(3) the number of contracts awarded to minority-owned |
minority owned businesses, women-owned female owned |
businesses, and businesses owned by persons with |
disabilities, as defined in the Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Women, Females and Persons with Disabilities |
Act, and locally owned businesses; and |
(4) the total value of contracts awarded to |
minority-owned minority owned businesses, women-owned |
female owned businesses, and businesses owned by persons |
with disabilities, as defined in the Business Enterprise |
for Minorities, Women, Females and Persons with |
Disabilities Act, and locally owned businesses. |
The report shall be made available to the public, including |
publication on the school district's Internet website, if any.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-707, eff. 1-11-08; 96-328, eff. 8-11-09.) |
Section 125. The Public University Energy Conservation Act |
is amended by changing Sections 3 and 5-10 as follows: |
(110 ILCS 62/3)
|
Sec. 3. Applicable laws. Other State laws and related |
administrative requirements apply to this Act, including, but |
not limited to, the following laws and related administrative |
requirements: the Illinois Human Rights Act, the Prevailing |
Wage Act, the Public Construction Bond Act, the Public Works |
Preference Act (repealed on June 16, 2010 by Public Act |
|
96-929), the Employment of Illinois Workers on Public Works |
Act, the Freedom of Information Act, the Open Meetings Act, the |
Illinois Architecture Practice Act of 1989, the Professional |
Engineering Practice Act of 1989, the Structural Engineering |
Practice Act of 1989, the Architectural, Engineering, and Land |
Surveying Qualifications Based Selection Act, the Public |
Contract Fraud Act, the Business Enterprise for Minorities, |
Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act, and the |
Public Works Employment Discrimination Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-333, eff. 8-12-11.)
|
(110 ILCS 62/5-10)
|
Sec. 5-10. Energy conservation measure. |
(a) "Energy conservation
measure" means any improvement, |
repair, alteration, or betterment of any
building or facility, |
subject to all applicable building codes, owned or operated by |
a public university or any
equipment, fixture, or furnishing to |
be added to or used in any
such building or facility
that is |
designed to reduce
energy consumption or operating costs, and |
may include, without limitation,
one or more of the following:
|
(1) Insulation of the building structure or systems |
within the building.
|
(2) Storm windows or doors, caulking or |
weatherstripping, multiglazed
windows or doors, heat |
absorbing or heat reflective glazed and coated
window or |
door systems, additional glazing, reductions in glass |
|
area, or
other window and door system modifications that |
reduce energy consumption.
|
(3) Automated or computerized energy control systems.
|
(4) Heating, ventilating, or air conditioning system |
modifications or
replacements.
|
(5) Replacement or modification of lighting fixtures |
to increase the
energy efficiency of the lighting system |
without increasing the overall
illumination of a facility, |
unless an increase in illumination is necessary
to conform |
to the applicable State or local building code for the |
lighting
system after the proposed modifications are made.
|
(6) Energy recovery systems.
|
(7) Energy conservation measures that provide |
long-term operating cost
reductions.
|
(b) From the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
96th General Assembly until January 1, 2015, "energy |
conservation measure" includes a renewable energy center pilot |
project at Eastern Illinois University, provided that: |
(1) the University signs a partnership contract with a |
qualified energy conservation measure provider as provided |
in this Act; |
(2) the University has responsibility for the |
qualified provider's actions with regard to applicable |
laws; |
(3) the University obtains a performance bond in
|
accordance with this Act; |
|
(4) the University and the qualified provider follow |
all aspects of the Prevailing Wage Act as provided by this |
Act; |
(5) the University and the qualified provider use an |
approved list of firms from the Capital Development Board |
(CDB), unless the University requires services that are not |
typically performed by the firms on CDB's list; |
(6) the University provides monthly progress reports |
to the Procurement Policy Board, and the University allows |
a representative from CDB to monitor the project, provided |
that such involvement is at no cost to the University; |
(7) the University requires the qualified provider to |
follow the provisions of the Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities |
Act and the Public Works Employment Discrimination Act as |
provided in this Act; |
(8) the University agrees to award new building |
construction work to a responsible bidder, as defined in |
Section 30-22 of the Illinois Procurement Code; |
(9) the University includes in its contract with the |
qualified provider a requirement that the qualified |
provider name the sub-contractors that it will use, and the |
qualified provider may not change these without the |
University's written approval; |
(10) the University follows, to the extent possible, |
the Design-Build Procurement Act for construction of the |
|
project, taking into consideration the current status of |
the project; for purposes of this Act, the definition of |
"State construction agency" in the Design-Build |
Procurement Act means Eastern Illinois University for the |
purpose of this project; |
(11) the University follows, to the extent possible, |
the Architectural, Engineering, and Land Surveying |
Qualifications Based Selection Act; |
(12) the University requires all engineering, |
architecture, and design work related to the installation |
or modification of facilities be performed by design |
professionals licensed by the State of Illinois and |
professional design firms registered in the State of |
Illinois; and |
(13) the University produces annual reports and a final |
report describing the project upon completion and files the |
reports with the Procurement Policy Board, CDB, and the |
General Assembly. |
The provisions of this subsection (b), other than this |
sentence, are inoperative after January 1, 2015. |
(Source: P.A. 96-16, eff. 6-22-09.)
|
(110 ILCS 320/1.1 rep.) |
Section 130. The University of Illinois at Chicago Act is |
amended by repealing Section 1.1. |
|
Section 135. The Illinois State University Law is amended |
by changing Section 20-115 as follows:
|
(110 ILCS 675/20-115)
|
Sec. 20-115. Illinois Institute for Entrepreneurship |
Education.
|
(a) There is created, effective July 1, 1997, within the |
State
at Illinois State University, the Illinois Institute for |
Entrepreneurship
Education, hereinafter referred to as the |
Institute.
|
(b) The Institute created under this Section shall commence |
its operations
on July 1, 1997 and shall have a board composed |
of 15 members
representative of education, commerce and |
industry, government, or labor,
appointed as follows:
2 members |
shall be
appointees of the Governor, one of whom shall be a |
minority or woman female person
as defined in Section 2 of the |
Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and
Persons |
with Disabilities Act; one member
shall be an appointee of the |
President of the Senate; one member shall be
an appointee of |
the Minority Leader of the Senate; one member shall be an
|
appointee of the Speaker of the House of Representatives; one |
member shall
be an appointee of the Minority Leader of the |
House of Representatives;
2 members shall be appointees of |
Illinois State University;
one member
shall be an appointee of |
the Board of Higher Education;
one member shall be an appointee |
of the State Board of Education;
one member shall be
an |
|
appointee of the Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity; one
member
shall be an appointee of the Illinois |
chapter of Economics America; and 3
members shall be appointed |
by majority vote of the other 12 appointed members
to
represent |
business owner-entrepreneurs.
Each member shall have
expertise |
and experience in the area of entrepreneurship education,
|
including small business and entrepreneurship. The majority of |
voting
members must be from the private sector.
The members |
initially appointed to the board of the Institute created under
|
this Section shall be appointed to take office on July 1, 1997 |
and shall by lot
determine the length of their respective terms |
as follows: 5 members shall be
selected by lot to serve terms |
of one year, 5 members shall be selected by lot
to serve terms |
of 2 years, and 5 members shall be selected by lot to serve
|
terms of 3 years.
Subsequent appointees shall each serve terms |
of 3 years.
The board shall annually select a
chairperson from |
among its members. Each board member shall serve without
|
compensation but shall be reimbursed for expenses incurred in |
the
performance of his or her duties.
|
(c) The purpose of the Institute shall be to foster the |
growth and
development of entrepreneurship education in the |
State of Illinois. The
Institute shall help remedy the |
deficiencies in the preparation of
entrepreneurship education |
teachers, increase the quality and quantity of
|
entrepreneurship education programs, improve instructional |
materials, and
prepare personnel to serve as leaders and |
|
consultants in the field of
entrepreneurship education and |
economic development. The Institute shall
promote |
entrepreneurship as a career option, promote and support the
|
development of innovative entrepreneurship education materials |
and delivery
systems, promote business, industry, and |
education partnerships, promote
collaboration and involvement |
in entrepreneurship education programs,
encourage and support |
in-service and preservice teacher education programs
within |
various
educational systems, and develop and distribute |
relevant materials. The
Institute shall provide a framework |
under which the public and private
sectors may work together |
toward entrepreneurship education goals. These
goals shall be |
achieved by bringing together programs that have an impact on
|
entrepreneurship education to achieve coordination among |
agencies and
greater efficiency in the expenditure of funds.
|
(d) Beginning July 1, 1997, the Institute shall have the |
following powers
subject to
State and Illinois State University |
Board of Trustees regulations and
guidelines:
|
(1) To employ and determine the compensation of an |
executive director
and such staff as it deems necessary;
|
(2) To own property and expend and receive funds and |
generate funds;
|
(3) To enter into agreements with public and private |
entities in the
furtherance of its purpose; and
|
(4) To request and receive the cooperation and |
assistance of all State
departments and agencies in the |
|
furtherance of its purpose.
|
(e) The board of the Institute shall be a policy making |
body with
the responsibility for planning and developing |
Institute programs.
The Institute,
through the
Board of |
Trustees of Illinois State University, shall annually report to
|
the Governor and General Assembly by January 31 as to
its |
activities and operations, including its findings and |
recommendations.
|
(f) Beginning on July 1, 1997, the Institute created under |
this Section
shall be deemed designated by law as the successor |
to the Illinois Institute
for Entrepreneurship Education, |
previously created and existing under
Section 2-11.5 of the |
Public Community College Act until its abolition on July
1,
|
1997 as provided in that Section. On July 1, 1997, all |
financial and other
records of the Institute so abolished and |
all of its property, whether real or
personal, including but |
not limited to all inventory and equipment, shall be
deemed |
transferred by operation of law to the Illinois Institute for
|
Entrepreneurship Education created under this Section 20-115. |
The Illinois
Institute for Entrepreneurship Education created |
under this Section 20-115
shall have, with respect to the |
predecessor Institute so abolished, all
authority, powers, and |
duties of a successor agency under Section 10-15 of the
|
Successor Agency Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
|
|
Section 140. The Public Utilities Act is amended by |
changing Section 9-220 as follows:
|
(220 ILCS 5/9-220) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 9-220)
|
Sec. 9-220. Rate changes based on changes in fuel costs. |
(a) Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 9-201, the
|
Commission may authorize the increase or decrease of rates and |
charges
based upon changes in the cost of fuel used in the |
generation or production
of electric power, changes in the cost |
of purchased power, or changes in
the cost of purchased gas |
through the application of fuel adjustment
clauses or purchased |
gas adjustment clauses. The Commission may also
authorize the |
increase or decrease of rates and charges based upon |
expenditures
or revenues resulting from the purchase or sale of |
emission allowances created
under the federal Clean Air Act |
Amendments of 1990,
through such fuel adjustment clauses, as a |
cost of fuel. For the purposes of
this paragraph, cost of fuel |
used in the generation or production of electric
power shall |
include the amount of any fees paid by the utility for the
|
implementation and operation of a process for the |
desulfurization of the
flue gas when burning high sulfur coal |
at any location within the State of
Illinois irrespective of |
the attainment status designation of such
location; but shall |
not include transportation costs
of coal
(i) except to the |
extent that for contracts entered into on
and after the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997,
the cost of the |
|
coal, including transportation costs,
constitutes the lowest |
cost for adequate and reliable fuel
supply reasonably available |
to the public utility in
comparison to the cost, including |
transportation costs, of
other adequate and reliable sources of |
fuel supply reasonably
available to the public utility, or (ii)
|
except as otherwise provided in the next 3 sentences of this |
paragraph.
Such costs of fuel
shall, when requested by a |
utility or at the conclusion of the utility's
next general |
electric rate proceeding, whichever shall first occur, include
|
transportation costs of coal purchased under existing coal |
purchase
contracts. For purposes of this paragraph "existing |
coal purchase
contracts" means contracts for the purchase of |
coal in effect on the
effective date of this amendatory Act of |
1991, as such contracts may
thereafter be amended, but only to |
the extent that any such amendment does
not increase the |
aggregate quantity of coal to be purchased under such
contract.
|
Nothing herein shall authorize an electric utility
to recover |
through its fuel adjustment clause any amounts of
|
transportation costs of coal that were included in the revenue
|
requirement used to set base rates in its most recent general
|
rate proceeding.
Cost shall be based upon uniformly applied |
accounting
principles. Annually, the Commission shall initiate |
public hearings to
determine whether the clauses reflect actual |
costs of fuel, gas, power, or
coal transportation purchased to |
determine whether such purchases were
prudent, and to reconcile |
any amounts collected with the actual costs of
fuel, power, |
|
gas, or coal transportation prudently purchased. In each such
|
proceeding, the burden of proof shall be upon the utility to |
establish the
prudence of its cost of fuel, power, gas, or coal
|
transportation purchases
and costs.
The Commission shall
issue |
its final order in each such annual proceeding for an
electric |
utility by December 31 of the year immediately
following the |
year to which the proceeding pertains, provided,
that the |
Commission shall issue its final order with respect
to such |
annual proceeding for the years 1996 and earlier by December |
31, 1998. |
(b) A public utility providing electric service, other than |
a public utility
described in subsections (e) or (f) of this |
Section, may at
any time during the mandatory transition period |
file with the
Commission proposed tariff sheets that eliminate |
the public
utility's fuel adjustment clause and adjust the |
public
utility's base rate tariffs by the amount necessary for |
the
base fuel component of the base rates to recover the public
|
utility's average fuel and power supply costs per kilowatt-hour |
for the 2
most recent years for which the Commission
has issued |
final orders in annual proceedings pursuant to
subsection (a), |
where the average fuel and power supply costs
per kilowatt-hour |
shall be calculated as the sum of the public
utility's prudent |
and allowable fuel and power supply costs as
found by the |
Commission in the 2 proceedings divided by the
public utility's |
actual jurisdictional kilowatt-hour sales for
those 2 years. |
Notwithstanding any contrary or inconsistent
provisions in |
|
Section 9-201 of this Act, in subsection (a) of
this Section or |
in any rules or regulations promulgated by the
Commission |
pursuant to subsection (g) of this Section, the
Commission |
shall review and shall by order approve, or approve
as |
modified, the proposed tariff sheets within 60 days after
the |
date of the public utility's filing. The Commission may
modify |
the public utility's proposed tariff sheets only to the
extent |
the Commission finds necessary to achieve conformance
to the |
requirements of this subsection (b). During the 5
years |
following the date of the Commission's order, but in any
event |
no earlier than January 1, 2007, a public utility whose
fuel |
adjustment clause has been eliminated pursuant to this
|
subsection shall not file proposed tariff sheets seeking, or
|
otherwise petition the Commission for, reinstatement of a fuel
|
adjustment clause. |
(c) Notwithstanding any contrary or inconsistent
|
provisions in Section 9-201 of this Act, in subsection (a) of
|
this Section or in any rules or regulations promulgated by the
|
Commission pursuant to subsection (g) of this Section, a
public |
utility providing electric service, other than a public utility
|
described
in subsection (e) or (f) of this Section, may at any |
time
during the mandatory transition period file with the
|
Commission proposed tariff sheets that establish the rate per
|
kilowatt-hour to be applied pursuant to the public utility's
|
fuel adjustment clause at the average value for such rate
|
during the preceding 24 months, provided that such average
rate |
|
results in a credit to customers' bills, without making
any |
revisions to the public utility's base rate tariffs. The
|
proposed tariff sheets shall establish the fuel adjustment
rate |
for a specific time period of at least 3 years but not
more |
than 5 years, provided that the terms and conditions for
any |
reinstatement earlier than 5 years shall be set forth in
the |
proposed tariff sheets and subject to modification or
approval |
by the Commission. The Commission shall review and
shall by |
order approve the proposed tariff sheets if it finds
that the |
requirements of this subsection are met. The
Commission shall |
not conduct the annual hearings specified in the
last 3 |
sentences of subsection (a) of this Section for the
utility for |
the period that the factor established pursuant to
this |
subsection is in effect. |
(d) A public utility providing electric service, or a |
public utility
providing gas service
may file with the |
Commission proposed tariff sheets that
eliminate the public |
utility's fuel or purchased gas
adjustment clause and adjust |
the public utility's base rate
tariffs to provide for recovery |
of power supply costs or gas
supply costs that would have been |
recovered through such
clause; provided, that the provisions of |
this subsection (d) shall not be
available to a public utility |
described in subsections (e) or (f) of this
Section to |
eliminate its fuel adjustment clause. Notwithstanding any |
contrary
or inconsistent
provisions in Section 9-201 of this |
Act, in subsection (a) of
this Section, or in any rules or |
|
regulations promulgated by
the Commission pursuant to |
subsection (g) of this Section, the
Commission shall review and |
shall by order approve, or approve
as modified in the |
Commission's order, the proposed tariff
sheets within 240 days |
after the date of the public utility's
filing. The Commission's |
order shall approve rates and
charges that the Commission, |
based on information in the
public utility's filing or on the |
record if a hearing is held
by the Commission, finds will |
recover the reasonable, prudent
and necessary jurisdictional |
power supply costs or gas supply
costs incurred or to be |
incurred by the public utility during
a 12 month period found |
by the Commission to be appropriate
for these purposes, |
provided, that such period shall be either
(i) a 12 month |
historical period occurring during the 15
months ending on the |
date of the public utility's filing, or
(ii) a 12 month future |
period ending no later than 15 months
following the date of the |
public utility's filing. The public
utility shall include with |
its tariff filing information
showing both (1) its actual |
jurisdictional power supply costs
or gas supply costs for a 12 |
month historical period
conforming to (i) above and (2) its |
projected jurisdictional
power supply costs or gas supply costs |
for a future 12 month
period conforming to (ii) above. If the |
Commission's order
requires modifications in the tariff sheets |
filed by the
public utility, the public utility shall have 7 |
days following
the date of the order to notify the Commission |
whether the
public utility will implement the modified tariffs |
|
or elect to
continue its fuel or purchased gas adjustment |
clause in force
as though no order had been entered. The |
Commission's order
shall provide for any reconciliation of |
power supply costs or
gas supply costs, as the case may be, and |
associated revenues
through the date that the public utility's |
fuel or purchased
gas adjustment clause is eliminated. During |
the 5 years
following the date of the Commission's order, a |
public utility
whose fuel or purchased gas adjustment clause |
has been
eliminated pursuant to this subsection shall not file |
proposed
tariff sheets seeking, or otherwise petition the |
Commission
for, reinstatement or adoption of a fuel or |
purchased gas
adjustment clause. Nothing in this subsection (d) |
shall be
construed as limiting the Commission's authority to |
eliminate
a public utility's fuel adjustment clause or |
purchased gas
adjustment clause in accordance with any other |
applicable
provisions of this Act. |
(e) Notwithstanding any contrary or inconsistent |
provisions in
Section 9-201 of this Act, in subsection (a) of |
this Section, or in
any rules promulgated by the Commission |
pursuant
to subsection (g) of this Section, a public utility |
providing
electric service to more than 1,000,000 customers in |
this State may, within the
first 6 months after the
effective |
date of this amendatory Act of 1997, file with the
Commission |
proposed tariff sheets that eliminate, effective
January 1, |
1997, the public utility's fuel adjustment clause
without |
adjusting its base rates, and such tariff sheets shall be
|
|
effective upon filing. To the extent the application of the |
fuel
adjustment clause had resulted in net charges to customers |
after
January 1, 1997, the utility shall also file a tariff |
sheet that
provides for a refund stated on a per kilowatt-hour |
basis of such
charges over a period not to exceed 6 months; |
provided
however, that such refund shall not include the |
proportional
amounts of taxes paid under the Use Tax Act, |
Service Use Tax Act,
Service Occupation Tax Act, and Retailers' |
Occupation Tax Act on
fuel used in generation. The Commission |
shall issue an order
within 45 days after the date of the |
public utility's filing
approving or approving as modified such |
tariff sheet. If the fuel
adjustment clause is eliminated |
pursuant to this subsection, the
Commission shall not conduct |
the annual hearings specified in the
last 3 sentences of |
subsection (a) of this Section for the
utility for any period |
after December 31, 1996 and prior to any
reinstatement of such |
clause. A public utility whose fuel
adjustment clause has been |
eliminated pursuant to this subsection
shall not file a |
proposed tariff sheet seeking, or otherwise
petition the |
Commission for, reinstatement of the fuel adjustment
clause |
prior to January 1, 2007. |
(f) Notwithstanding any contrary or inconsistent |
provisions in Section
9-201 of this Act, in subsection (a) of |
this Section, or in any rules or
regulations promulgated by the |
Commission pursuant to subsection (g) of this
Section, a public |
utility providing electric service to more than 500,000
|
|
customers but fewer than 1,000,000 customers in this State may, |
within the
first
6 months after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1997, file with the
Commission proposed |
tariff sheets that eliminate, effective January 1, 1997,
the |
public utility's fuel adjustment clause and adjust its base |
rates by the
amount necessary for the base fuel component of |
the base rates to recover
91% of the public utility's average |
fuel and power supply costs for the 2 most
recent years for |
which the Commission, as of January 1, 1997, has issued final
|
orders in annual proceedings pursuant to subsection (a), where |
the average fuel
and power supply costs per kilowatt-hour shall |
be calculated as the sum of the
public utility's prudent and |
allowable fuel and power supply costs as found by
the |
Commission in the 2 proceedings divided by the public utility's |
actual
jurisdictional kilowatt-hour sales for those 2 years, |
provided, that such
tariff sheets shall be effective upon |
filing. To the extent the application of
the fuel adjustment |
clause had resulted in net charges to customers after
January |
1, 1997, the utility shall also file a tariff sheet that |
provides for a
refund stated on a per kilowatt-hour basis of |
such charges over a period not to
exceed 6 months. Provided |
however, that such refund shall not include the
proportional |
amounts of taxes paid under the Use Tax Act, Service Use Tax |
Act,
Service Occupation Tax Act, and Retailers' Occupation Tax |
Act on fuel used in
generation. The Commission shall issue an |
order within 45 days after the date
of the public utility's |
|
filing approving or approving as modified such tariff
sheet. If |
the fuel adjustment clause is eliminated pursuant to this
|
subsection, the Commission shall not conduct the annual |
hearings specified in
the last 3 sentences of subsection (a) of |
this Section for the utility for any
period after December 31, |
1996 and prior to any reinstatement of such clause.
A public |
utility whose fuel adjustment clause has been eliminated |
pursuant to
this subsection shall not file a proposed tariff |
sheet seeking, or otherwise
petition the Commission for, |
reinstatement of the fuel adjustment clause prior
to January 1, |
2007. |
(g) The Commission shall have authority to promulgate rules |
and
regulations to
carry out the provisions of this Section. |
(h) Any Illinois gas utility may enter into a contract on |
or before September 30, 2011 for up to 10 years of supply with |
any company for the purchase of substitute natural gas (SNG) |
produced from coal through the gasification process if the |
company has commenced construction of a clean coal SNG facility |
by July 1, 2012 and commencement of construction shall mean |
that material physical site work has occurred, such as site |
clearing and excavation, water runoff prevention, water |
retention reservoir preparation, or foundation development. |
The contract shall contain the following provisions: (i) at |
least 90% of feedstock to be used in the gasification process |
shall be coal with a high volatile bituminous rank and greater |
than 1.7 pounds of sulfur per million Btu content; (ii) at the |
|
time the contract term commences, the price per million Btu may |
not exceed $7.95 in 2008 dollars, adjusted annually based on |
the change in the Annual Consumer Price Index for All Urban |
Consumers for the Midwest Region as published in April by the |
United States Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics |
(or a suitable Consumer Price Index calculation if this |
Consumer Price Index is not available) for the previous |
calendar year; provided that the price per million Btu shall |
not exceed $9.95 at any time during the contract; (iii) the |
utility's supply contract for the purchase of SNG does not |
exceed 15% of the annual system supply requirements of the |
utility as of 2008; and (iv) the contract costs pursuant to |
subsection (h-10) of this Section shall not include any |
lobbying expenses, charitable contributions, advertising, |
organizational memberships, carbon dioxide pipeline or |
sequestration expenses, or marketing expenses. |
Any gas utility that is providing service to more than |
150,000 customers on August 2, 2011 (the effective date of |
Public Act 97-239) shall either elect to enter into a contract |
on or before September 30, 2011 for 10 years of SNG supply with |
the owner of a clean coal SNG facility or to file biennial rate |
proceedings before the Commission in the years 2012, 2014, and |
2016, with such filings made after August 2, 2011 and no later |
than September 30 of the years 2012, 2014, and 2016 consistent |
with all requirements of 83 Ill. Adm. Code 255 and 285 as |
though the gas utility were filing for an increase in its |
|
rates, without regard to whether such filing would produce an |
increase, a decrease, or no change in the gas utility's rates, |
and the Commission shall review the gas utility's filing and |
shall issue its order in accordance with the provisions of |
Section 9-201 of this Act. |
Within 7 days after August 2, 2011, the owner of the clean |
coal SNG facility shall submit to the Illinois Power Agency and |
each gas utility that is providing service to more than 150,000 |
customers on August 2, 2011 a copy of a draft contract. Within |
30 days after the receipt of the draft contract, each such gas |
utility shall provide the Illinois Power Agency and the owner |
of the clean coal SNG facility with its comments and |
recommended revisions to the draft contract. Within 7 days |
after the receipt of the gas utility's comments and recommended |
revisions, the owner of the facility shall submit its |
responsive comments and a further revised draft of the contract |
to the Illinois Power Agency. The Illinois Power Agency shall |
review the draft contract and comments. |
During its review of the draft contract, the Illinois Power |
Agency shall: |
(1) review and confirm in writing that the terms stated |
in this subsection (h) are incorporated in the SNG |
contract; |
(2) review the SNG pricing formula included in the |
contract and approve that formula if the Illinois Power |
Agency determines that the formula, at the time the |
|
contract term commences: (A) starts with a price of $6.50 |
per MMBtu adjusted by the adjusted final capitalized plant |
cost; (B) takes into account budgeted miscellaneous net |
revenue after cost allowance, including sale of SNG |
produced by the clean coal SNG facility above the nameplate |
capacity of the facility and other by-products produced by |
the facility, as approved by the Illinois Power Agency; (C) |
does not include carbon dioxide transportation or |
sequestration expenses; and (D) includes all provisions |
required under this subsection (h); if the Illinois Power |
Agency does not approve of the SNG pricing formula, then |
the Illinois Power Agency shall modify the formula to |
ensure that it meets the requirements of this subsection |
(h); |
(3) review and approve the amount of budgeted |
miscellaneous net revenue after cost allowance, including |
sale of SNG produced by the clean coal SNG facility above |
the nameplate capacity of the facility and other |
by-products produced by the facility, to be included in the |
pricing formula; the Illinois Power Agency shall approve |
the amount of budgeted miscellaneous net revenue to be |
included in the pricing formula if it determines the |
budgeted amount to be reasonable and accurate; |
(4) review and confirm in writing that using the EIA |
Annual Energy Outlook-2011 Henry Hub Spot Price, the |
contract terms set out in subsection (h), the |
|
reconciliation account terms as set out in subsection |
(h-15), and an estimated inflation rate of 2.5% for each |
corresponding year, that there will be no cumulative |
estimated increase for residential customers; and |
(5) allocate the nameplate capacity of the clean coal |
SNG by total therms sold to ultimate customers by each gas |
utility in 2008; provided, however, no utility shall be |
required to purchase more than 42% of the projected annual |
output of the facility; additionally, the Illinois Power |
Agency shall further adjust the allocation only as required |
to take into account (A) adverse consolidation, |
derivative, or lease impacts to the balance sheet or income |
statement of any gas utility or (B) the physical capacity |
of the gas utility to accept SNG. |
If the parties to the contract do not agree on the terms |
therein, then the Illinois Power Agency shall retain an |
independent mediator to mediate the dispute between the |
parties. If the parties are in agreement on the terms of the |
contract, then the Illinois Power Agency shall approve the |
contract. If after mediation the parties have failed to come to |
agreement, then the Illinois Power Agency shall revise the |
draft contract as necessary to confirm that the contract |
contains only terms that are reasonable and equitable. The |
Illinois Power Agency may, in its discretion, retain an |
independent, qualified, and experienced expert to assist in its |
obligations under this subsection (h). The Illinois Power |
|
Agency shall adopt and make public policies detailing the |
processes for retaining a mediator and an expert under this |
subsection (h). Any mediator or expert retained under this |
subsection (h) shall be retained no later than 60 days after |
August 2, 2011. |
The Illinois Power Agency shall complete all of its |
responsibilities under this subsection (h) within 60 days after |
August 2, 2011. The clean coal SNG facility shall pay a |
reasonable fee as required by the Illinois Power Agency for its |
services under this subsection (h) and shall pay the mediator's |
and expert's reasonable fees, if any. A gas utility and its |
customers shall have no obligation to reimburse the clean coal |
SNG facility or the Illinois Power Agency of any such costs. |
Within 30 days after commercial production of SNG has |
begun, the Commission shall initiate a review to determine |
whether the final capitalized plant cost of the clean coal SNG |
facility reflects actual incurred costs and whether the |
incurred costs were reasonable. In determining the actual |
incurred costs included in the final capitalized plant cost and |
the reasonableness of those costs, the Commission may in its |
discretion retain independent, qualified, and experienced |
experts to assist in its determination. The expert shall not |
own or control any direct or indirect interest in the clean |
coal SNG facility and shall have no contractual relationship |
with the clean coal SNG facility. If an expert is retained by |
the Commission, then the clean coal SNG facility shall pay the |
|
expert's reasonable fees. The fees shall not be passed on to a |
utility or its customers. The Commission shall adopt and make |
public a policy detailing the process for retaining experts |
under this subsection (h). |
Within 30 days after completion of its review, the |
Commission shall initiate a formal proceeding on the final |
capitalized plant cost of the clean coal SNG facility at which |
comments and testimony may be submitted by any interested |
parties and the public. If the Commission finds that the final |
capitalized plant cost includes costs that were not actually |
incurred or costs that were unreasonably incurred, then the |
Commission shall disallow the amount of non-incurred or |
unreasonable costs from the SNG price under contracts entered |
into under this subsection (h). If the Commission disallows any |
costs, then the Commission shall adjust the SNG price using the |
price formula in the contract approved by the Illinois Power |
Agency under this subsection (h) to reflect the disallowed |
costs and shall enter an order specifying the revised price. In |
addition, the Commission's order shall direct the clean coal |
SNG facility to issue refunds of such sums as shall represent |
the difference between actual gross revenues and the gross |
revenue that would have been obtained based upon the same |
volume, from the price revised by the Commission. Any refund |
shall include interest calculated at a rate determined by the |
Commission and shall be returned according to procedures |
prescribed by the Commission. |
|
Nothing in this subsection (h) shall preclude any party |
affected by a decision of the Commission under this subsection |
(h) from seeking judicial review of the Commission's decision. |
(h-1) Any Illinois gas utility may enter into a sourcing |
agreement for up to 30 years of supply with the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility if the clean coal SNG brownfield facility |
has commenced construction. Any gas utility that is providing |
service to more than 150,000 customers on July 13, 2011 (the |
effective date of Public Act 97-096) shall either elect to file |
biennial rate proceedings before the Commission in the years |
2012, 2014, and 2016 or enter into a sourcing agreement or |
sourcing agreements with a clean coal SNG brownfield facility |
with an initial term of 30 years for either (i) a percentage of |
43,500,000,000 cubic feet per year, such that the utilities |
entering into sourcing agreements with the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility purchase 100%,
allocated by total therms |
sold to ultimate customers by each
gas utility in 2008 or (ii) |
such lesser amount as may be available from the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility; provided that no utility shall be required |
to purchase more than 42% of the projected annual output of the |
clean coal SNG brownfield facility, with the remainder of such |
utility's obligation to be divided proportionately between the |
other utilities, and provided that the Illinois Power Agency |
shall
further adjust the allocation only as required to take |
into
account adverse consolidation, derivative, or lease |
impacts to
the balance sheet or income statement of any gas |
|
utility. |
A gas utility electing to file biennial rate proceedings |
before the Commission must file a notice of its election with |
the Commission within 60 days after July 13, 2011 or its right |
to make the election is irrevocably waived. A gas utility |
electing to file biennial rate proceedings shall make such |
filings no later than August 1 of the years 2012, 2014, and |
2016, consistent with all requirements of 83 Ill. Adm. Code 255 |
and 285 as though the gas utility were filing for an increase |
in its rates, without regard to whether such filing would |
produce an increase, a decrease, or no change in the gas |
utility's rates, and notwithstanding any other provisions of |
this Act, the Commission shall fully review the gas utility's |
filing and shall issue its order in accordance with the |
provisions of Section 9-201 of this Act, regardless of whether |
the
Commission has approved a formula rate for the gas utility. |
Within 15 days after July 13, 2011, the owner of the clean |
coal SNG brownfield facility shall submit to the Illinois Power |
Agency and each gas utility that is providing service to more |
than 150,000 customers on July 13, 2011 a copy of a draft |
sourcing agreement. Within 45 days after receipt of the draft |
sourcing agreement, each such gas utility shall provide the |
Illinois Power Agency and the owner of a clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility with its comments and recommended |
revisions to the draft sourcing agreement. Within 15 days after |
the receipt of the gas utility's comments and recommended |
|
revisions, the owner of the clean coal SNG brownfield facility |
shall submit its responsive comments and a further revised |
draft of the sourcing agreement to the Illinois Power Agency. |
The Illinois Power Agency shall review the draft sourcing |
agreement and comments. |
If the parties to the sourcing agreement do not agree on |
the terms therein, then the Illinois Power Agency shall retain |
an independent mediator to mediate the dispute between the |
parties. If the parties are in agreement on the terms of the |
sourcing agreement, the Illinois Power Agency shall approve the |
final draft sourcing agreement. If after mediation the parties |
have failed to come to agreement, then the Illinois Power |
Agency shall revise the draft sourcing agreement as necessary |
to confirm that the final draft sourcing agreement contains |
only terms that are reasonable and equitable. The Illinois |
Power Agency shall adopt and make public a policy detailing the |
process for retaining a mediator under this subsection (h-1). |
Any mediator retained to assist with mediating disputes between |
the parties regarding the sourcing agreement shall be retained |
no later than 60 days after July 13, 2011. |
Upon approval of a final draft agreement, the Illinois |
Power Agency shall submit the final draft agreement to the |
Capital Development Board and the Commission no later than 90 |
days after July 13, 2011. The gas utility and the clean coal |
SNG brownfield facility shall pay a reasonable fee as required |
by the Illinois Power Agency for its services under this |
|
subsection (h-1) and shall pay the mediator's reasonable fees, |
if any. The Illinois Power Agency shall adopt and make public a |
policy detailing the process for retaining a mediator under |
this Section. |
The sourcing agreement between a gas utility and the clean |
coal SNG brownfield facility shall contain the following |
provisions: |
(1) Any and all coal used in the gasification process |
must be coal that has high volatile bituminous rank and |
greater than 1.7 pounds of sulfur per million Btu content. |
(2) Coal and petroleum coke are feedstocks for the |
gasification process, with coal comprising at least 50% of |
the total feedstock over the term of the sourcing agreement |
unless the facility reasonably determines that it is
|
necessary to use additional petroleum coke to deliver net
|
consumer savings, in which case the facility shall use
coal |
for at least 35% of the total feedstock over the
term of |
any sourcing agreement and with the feedstocks to be |
procured in accordance with requirements of Section 1-78 of |
the Illinois Power Agency Act. |
(3) The sourcing agreement has an initial term that |
once entered into terminates no more than 30 years after |
the commencement of the commercial production of SNG at the |
clean coal SNG brownfield facility. |
(4) The clean coal SNG brownfield facility guarantees a |
minimum of $100,000,000 in consumer savings to customers of
|
|
the utilities that have entered into sourcing agreements
|
with the clean coal SNG brownfield facility, calculated in |
real 2010 dollars at the conclusion of the term of the |
sourcing agreement by comparing the delivered SNG price to |
the Chicago City-gate price on a weighted daily basis for |
each day over the entire term of the sourcing agreement, to |
be provided in accordance with subsection (h-2) of this |
Section. |
(5) Prior to the clean coal SNG brownfield facility |
issuing a notice to proceed to construction, the clean coal |
SNG brownfield facility shall establish a consumer |
protection reserve account for the benefit of the customers |
of the utilities that have entered into sourcing agreements |
with the clean coal SNG brownfield facility pursuant to |
this subsection (h-1), with cash principal in the amount of |
$150,000,000. This cash principal shall only be |
recoverable through the consumer protection reserve |
account and not as a cost to be recovered in the delivered |
SNG price pursuant to subsection (h-3) of this Section. The |
consumer protection reserve account shall be maintained |
and administered by an independent trustee that is mutually |
agreed upon by the clean coal SNG brownfield facility, the |
utilities, and the Commission in an interest-bearing |
account in accordance with subsection (h-2) of this |
Section. |
"Consumer protection reserve account principal maximum |
|
amount" shall mean the maximum amount of principal to be |
maintained in the consumer protection reserve account. |
During the first 2 years of operation of the facility, |
there shall be no consumer protection reserve account |
maximum amount. After the first 2 years of operation of the |
facility, the consumer protection reserve account maximum |
amount shall be $150,000,000. After 5 years of operation, |
and every 5 years thereafter, the trustee shall calculate |
the 5-year average balance of the consumer protection |
reserve account. If the trustee determines that during the |
prior 5 years the consumer protection reserve account has |
had an average account balance of less than $75,000,000, |
then the consumer protection reserve account principal |
maximum amount shall be increased by $5,000,000. If the |
trustee determines that during the prior 5 years the |
consumer protection reserve account has had an average |
account balance of more than $75,000,000, then the consumer |
protection reserve account principal maximum amount shall |
be decreased by $5,000,000. |
(6) The clean coal SNG brownfield facility shall |
identify and sell economically viable by-products produced |
by the facility. |
(7) Fifty percent of all additional net revenue, |
defined as miscellaneous net revenue from products |
produced by the
facility and delivered during the month |
after cost allowance for costs associated with additional |
|
net revenue that are not otherwise recoverable pursuant to |
subsection (h-3) of this Section, including net revenue |
from sales of substitute natural gas derived from the |
facility above the nameplate capacity of the facility and |
other by-products produced by the facility, shall be |
credited to the consumer protection reserve account |
pursuant to subsection (h-2) of this Section. |
(8) The delivered SNG price per million btu to be paid |
monthly by the utility to the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility, which shall be based only upon the following: (A) |
a capital recovery charge, operations and maintenance |
costs, and sequestration costs, only to the extent approved |
by the Commission pursuant to paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) |
of subsection (h-3) of this Section; (B) the actual |
delivered and processed fuel costs pursuant to paragraph |
(4) of subsection (h-3) of this Section; (C) actual costs |
of SNG transportation pursuant to paragraph (6) of |
subsection (h-3) of this Section; (D) certain taxes and |
fees imposed by the federal government, the State, or any |
unit of local government as provided in paragraph (6) of |
subsection (h-3) of this Section; and (E) the credit, if |
any, from the consumer protection reserve account pursuant |
to subsection (h-2) of this Section. The delivered SNG |
price per million Btu shall proportionately reflect these |
elements over the term of the sourcing agreement. |
(9) A formula to translate the recoverable costs and |
|
charges under subsection (h-3) of this Section into the |
delivered SNG price per million btu. |
(10) Title to the SNG shall pass at a mutually |
agreeable point in Illinois, and may provide that, rather |
than the utility taking title to the SNG, a mutually agreed |
upon third-party gas marketer pursuant to a contract |
approved by the Illinois Power Agency or its designee may |
take title to the SNG pursuant to an agreement between the |
utility, the owner of the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility, and the third-party gas marketer. |
(11) A utility may exit the sourcing agreement without |
penalty if the clean coal SNG brownfield facility does not |
commence construction by July 1, 2015. |
(12) A utility is responsible to pay only the |
Commission determined unit price cost of SNG that is |
purchased by the utility. Nothing in the sourcing agreement |
will obligate a utility to invest capital in a clean coal |
SNG brownfield facility. |
(13) The quality of SNG must, at a minimum, be |
equivalent to the quality required for interstate pipeline |
gas before a utility is required to accept and pay for SNG |
gas. |
(14) Nothing in the sourcing agreement will require a |
utility to construct any facilities to accept delivery of |
SNG. Provided, however, if a utility is required by law or |
otherwise elects to connect the clean coal SNG brownfield |
|
facility to an interstate pipeline, then the utility shall |
be entitled to recover pursuant to its tariffs all just and |
reasonable costs that are prudently incurred. Any costs |
incurred by the utility to receive, deliver, manage, or |
otherwise accommodate purchases under the SNG sourcing |
agreement will be fully recoverable through a utility's |
purchased gas adjustment clause rider mechanism in
|
conjunction with a SNG brownfield facility rider
|
mechanism. The SNG brownfield facility rider mechanism
(A) |
shall be applicable to all customers who receive
|
transportation service from the utility, (B) shall be
|
designed to have an equal percent impact on the
|
transportation services rates of each class of the
|
utility's customers, and (C) shall accurately reflect the
|
net consumer savings, if any, and above-market costs, if
|
any, associated with the utility receiving, delivering,
|
managing, or otherwise accommodating purchases under the
|
SNG sourcing agreement. |
(15) Remedies for the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility's failure to deliver a designated amount for a |
designated period. |
(16) The clean coal SNG brownfield facility shall
make |
a good faith effort to ensure that an amount equal
to not |
less than 15% of the value of its prime
construction |
contract for the facility shall be
established as a goal to |
be awarded to minority-owned minority owned
businesses, |
|
women-owned female owned businesses, and businesses owned
|
by a person with a disability; provided that at least 75%
|
of the amount of such total goal shall be for |
minority-owned minority
owned businesses. " Minority-owned |
Minority owned business", " women-owned female
owned |
business", and "business owned by a person with a
|
disability" shall have the meanings ascribed to them in
|
Section 2 of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women,
|
Females and Persons with Disabilities Act. |
(17) Prior to the clean coal SNG brownfield facility |
issuing a notice to proceed to construction, the clean coal |
SNG brownfield facility shall file with the Commission a |
certificate from an independent engineer that the clean |
coal SNG brownfield facility has (A) obtained all |
applicable State and federal environmental permits |
required for construction; (B) obtained approval from the |
Commission of a carbon capture and sequestration plan; and |
(C) obtained all necessary permits required for |
construction for the transportation and sequestration of |
carbon dioxide as set forth in the Commission-approved |
carbon capture and sequestration plan. |
(h-2) Consumer protection reserve account. The clean coal |
SNG brownfield facility shall guarantee a minimum of |
$100,000,000 in consumer savings to customers of the utilities
|
that have entered into sourcing agreements with the clean coal
|
SNG brownfield facility, calculated in real 2010 dollars at the |
|
conclusion of the term of the sourcing agreement by comparing |
the delivered SNG price to the Chicago City-gate price on a |
weighted daily basis for each day over the entire term of the |
sourcing agreement. Prior to the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility issuing a notice to proceed to construction, the clean |
coal SNG brownfield facility shall establish a consumer |
protection reserve account for the benefit of the retail |
customers of the utilities that have entered into sourcing |
agreements with the clean coal SNG brownfield facility pursuant |
to subsection (h-1), with cash principal in the amount of |
$150,000,000. Such cash principal shall only be recovered |
through the consumer protection reserve account and not as a |
cost to be recovered in the delivered SNG price pursuant to |
subsection (h-3) of this Section. The consumer protection |
reserve account shall be maintained and administered by an |
independent trustee that is mutually agreed upon by the clean |
coal SNG brownfield facility, the utilities, and the Commission |
in an interest-bearing account in accordance with the |
following: |
(1) The clean coal SNG brownfield facility monthly |
shall calculate (A) the difference between the monthly |
delivered SNG price and the Chicago City-gate price, by |
comparing the delivered SNG price, which shall include the |
cost of transportation to the delivery point, if any, to |
the Chicago City-gate price on a weighted daily basis for |
each day of the prior month based upon a mutually agreed |
|
upon published index and (B) the overage amount, if any, by
|
calculating the annualized incremental additional cost,
if |
any, of the delivered SNG in excess of 2.015% of the
|
average annual inflation-adjusted amounts paid by all gas
|
distribution customers in connection with natural gas
|
service during the 5 years ending May 31, 2010. |
(2) During the first 2 years of operation of the |
facility: |
(A) to the extent there is an overage amount, the |
consumer protection reserve account shall be used to |
provide a credit to reduce the SNG price by an amount |
equal to the overage amount; and |
(B) to the extent the monthly delivered SNG price |
is less than or equal to the Chicago City-gate price, |
the utility shall credit the difference between the |
monthly delivered SNG price and the monthly Chicago |
City-gate price, if any, to the consumer protection |
reserve account. Such credit issued pursuant to this |
paragraph (B) shall be deemed prudent and reasonable |
and not subject to a Commission prudence review; |
(3) After 2 years of operation of the facility, and |
monthly, on an on-going basis, thereafter: |
(A) to the extent that the monthly delivered SNG |
price is less than or equal to the Chicago City-gate |
price, calculated using the weighted average of the |
daily Chicago City-gate price on a daily basis over the |
|
entire month, the utility shall credit the difference, |
if any, to the consumer protection reserve account. |
Such credit issued pursuant to this subparagraph (A) |
shall be deemed prudent and reasonable and not subject |
to a Commission prudence review; |
(B) any amounts in the consumer protection reserve |
account in excess of the consumer protection reserve |
account principal maximum amount shall be distributed |
as follows: (i) if retail customers have not realized
|
net consumer savings, calculated by comparing the
|
delivered SNG price to the weighted average of the
|
daily Chicago City-gate price on a daily basis over
the |
entire term of the sourcing agreement to date,
then 50% |
of any amounts in the consumer protection
reserve |
account in excess of the consumer protection reserve |
account principal maximum shall be
distributed to the |
clean coal SNG brownfield
facility, with the remaining |
50% of any such
additional amounts being credited to |
retail
customers, and (ii) if retail customers have |
realized net
consumer savings, then 100% of any amounts |
in the
consumer protection reserve account in excess of
|
the consumer protection reserve account principal |
maximum shall be distributed to the clean coal
SNG |
brownfield facility; provided, however, that under no |
circumstances shall the total cumulative amount |
distributed to the clean coal SNG brownfield facility |
|
under this subparagraph (B) exceed $150,000,000; |
(C) to the extent there is an overage amount, after |
distributing the amounts pursuant to subparagraph (B) |
of this paragraph (3), if any, the consumer protection |
reserve account shall be used to provide a credit to |
reduce the SNG price by an amount equal to the overage |
amount; |
(D) if retail customers have realized net consumer |
savings, calculated by comparing the delivered SNG |
price to the weighted average of the daily Chicago |
City-gate price on a daily basis over the entire term |
of the sourcing agreement to date, then after |
distributing the amounts pursuant to subparagraphs (B) |
and (C) of this paragraph (3), 50% of any additional |
amounts in the consumer protection reserve account in |
excess of the consumer protection reserve account |
principal maximum shall be distributed to the clean |
coal SNG brownfield facility, with the remaining 50% of |
any such additional amounts being credited to retail |
customers; provided, however, that if retail customers |
have not realized such net consumer savings, no such |
distribution shall be made to the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility, and 100% of such additional |
amounts shall be credited to the retail customers to |
the extent the consumer protection reserve account |
exceeds the consumer protection reserve account |
|
principal maximum amount. |
(4) Fifty percent of all additional net revenue, |
defined as miscellaneous net revenue after cost allowance |
for costs associated with additional net revenue that are |
not otherwise recoverable pursuant to subsection (h-3) of |
this Section, including net revenue from sales of |
substitute natural gas derived from the facility above the |
nameplate capacity of the facility and other by-products |
produced by the facility, shall be credited to the consumer |
protection reserve account. |
(5) At the conclusion of the term of the sourcing |
agreement, to the extent retail customers have not saved |
the minimum of $100,000,000 in consumer savings as |
guaranteed in this subsection (h-2), amounts in the |
consumer protection reserve account shall be credited to |
retail customers to the extent the retail customers have |
saved the minimum of $100,000,000; 50% of any additional |
amounts in the consumer protection reserve account shall be |
distributed to the company, and the remaining 50% shall be |
distributed to retail customers. |
(6) If, at the conclusion of the term of the sourcing |
agreement, the customers have not saved the minimum |
$100,000,000 in savings as guaranteed in this subsection |
(h-2) and the consumer protection reserve account has been |
depleted, then the clean coal SNG brownfield facility shall |
be liable for any remaining amount owed to the retail |
|
customers to the extent that the customers are provided |
with the $100,000,000 in savings as guaranteed in this |
subsection (h-2). The retail customers shall have first |
priority in recovering that debt above any creditors, |
except the original senior secured lender to the extent |
that the original senior secured lender has any senior |
secured debt outstanding, including any clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility parent companies or affiliates. |
(7) The clean coal SNG brownfield facility, the |
utilities, and the trustee shall work together to take |
commercially reasonable steps to minimize the tax impact of |
these transactions, while preserving the consumer |
benefits. |
(8) The clean coal SNG brownfield facility shall each |
month, starting in the facility's first year of commercial |
operation, file with the Commission, in such form as the |
Commission shall require, a report as to the consumer |
protection reserve account. The monthly report must |
contain the following information: |
(A) the extent the monthly delivered SNG price is |
greater than, less than, or equal to the Chicago |
City-gate price; |
(B) the amount credited or debited to the consumer |
protection reserve account during the month; |
(C) the amounts credited to consumers and |
distributed to the clean coal SNG brownfield facility |
|
during the month; |
(D) the total amount of the consumer protection |
reserve account at the beginning and end of the month; |
(E) the total amount of consumer savings to date; |
(F) a confidential summary of the inputs used to |
calculate the additional net revenue; and |
(G) any other additional information the |
Commission shall require. |
When any report is erroneous or defective or appears to |
the Commission to be erroneous or defective, the Commission |
may notify the clean coal SNG brownfield facility to amend |
the report within 30 days, and, before or after the |
termination of the 30-day period, the Commission may |
examine the trustee of the consumer protection reserve |
account or the officers, agents, employees, books, |
records, or accounts of the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility and correct such items in the report as upon such |
examination the Commission may find defective or |
erroneous. All reports shall be under oath. |
All reports made to the Commission by the clean coal |
SNG brownfield facility and the contents of the reports |
shall be open to public inspection and shall be deemed a |
public record under the Freedom of Information Act. Such |
reports shall be preserved in the office of the Commission. |
The Commission shall publish an annual summary of the |
reports prior to February 1 of the following year. The |
|
annual summary shall be made available to the public on the |
Commission's website and shall be submitted to the General |
Assembly. |
Any facility that fails to file a report required under |
this paragraph (8) to the Commission within the time |
specified or to make specific answer to any question |
propounded by the Commission within 30 days from the time |
it is lawfully required to do so, or within such further |
time not to exceed 90 days as may in its discretion be |
allowed by the Commission, shall pay a penalty of $500 to |
the Commission for each day it is in default. |
Any person who willfully makes any false report to the |
Commission or to any member, officer, or employee thereof, |
any person who willfully in a report withholds or fails to |
provide material information to which the Commission is |
entitled under this paragraph (8) and which information is |
either required to be filed by statute, rule, regulation, |
order, or decision of the Commission or has been requested |
by the Commission, and any person who willfully aids or |
abets such person shall be guilty of a Class A misdemeanor. |
(h-3) Recoverable costs and revenue by the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility. |
(1) A capital recovery charge approved by the |
Commission shall be recoverable by the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility under a sourcing agreement. The |
capital recovery charge shall be comprised of capital costs |
|
and a reasonable rate of return. "Capital costs" means |
costs to be incurred in connection with the construction |
and development of a facility, as defined in Section 1-10 |
of the Illinois Power Agency Act, and such other costs as |
the Capital Development Board deems appropriate to be |
recovered in the capital recovery charge. |
(A) Capital costs. The Capital Development Board |
shall calculate a range of capital costs that it |
believes would be reasonable for the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility to recover under the sourcing |
agreement. In making this determination, the Capital |
Development Board shall review the facility cost
|
report, if any, of the clean coal SNG brownfield
|
facility, adjusting the results based on the change in
|
the Annual Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers
|
for the Midwest Region as published in April by the
|
United States Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor
|
Statistics, the final draft of the sourcing agreement, |
and the rate of return approved by the Commission. In |
addition, the Capital Development Board may consult as |
much as it deems necessary with the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility and conduct whatever research and |
investigation it deems necessary. |
The Capital Development Board shall retain an |
engineering expert to assist in determining both the |
range of capital costs and the range of operations and |
|
maintenance costs that it believes would be reasonable |
for the clean coal SNG brownfield facility to recover |
under the sourcing agreement. Provided, however, that |
such expert shall: (i) not have been involved in the |
clean coal SNG brownfield facility's facility cost |
report, if any, (ii) not own or control any direct or |
indirect interest in the initial clean coal facility, |
and (iii) have no contractual relationship with the |
clean coal SNG brownfield facility. In order to qualify |
as an independent expert, a person or company must |
have: |
(i) direct previous experience conducting |
front-end engineering and design studies for |
large-scale energy facilities and administering |
large-scale energy operations and maintenance |
contracts, which may be particularized to the |
specific type of financing associated with the |
clean coal SNG brownfield facility; |
(ii) an advanced degree in economics, |
mathematics, engineering, or a related area of |
study; |
(iii) ten years of experience in the energy |
sector, including construction and risk management |
experience; |
(iv) expertise in assisting companies with |
obtaining financing for large-scale energy |
|
projects, which may be particularized to the |
specific type of financing associated with the |
clean coal SNG brownfield facility; |
(v) expertise in operations and maintenance |
which may be particularized to the specific type of |
operations and maintenance associated with the |
clean coal SNG brownfield facility; |
(vi) expertise in credit and contract |
protocols; |
(vii) adequate resources to perform and |
fulfill the required functions and |
responsibilities; and |
(viii) the absence of a conflict of interest |
and inappropriate bias for or against an affected |
gas utility or the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility. |
The clean coal SNG brownfield facility and the |
Illinois Power Agency shall cooperate with the Capital |
Development Board in any investigation it deems |
necessary. The Capital Development Board shall make |
its final determination of the range of capital costs |
confidentially and shall submit that range to the |
Commission in a confidential filing within 120 days |
after July 13, 2011 (the effective date of Public Act |
97-096). The clean coal SNG brownfield facility shall |
submit to the Commission its estimate of the capital |
|
costs to be recovered under the sourcing agreement. |
Only after the clean coal SNG brownfield facility has |
submitted this estimate shall the Commission publicly |
announce the range of capital costs submitted by the |
Capital Development Board. |
In the event that the estimate submitted by the |
clean coal SNG brownfield facility is within or below |
the range submitted by the Capital Development Board, |
the clean coal SNG brownfield facility's estimate |
shall be approved by the Commission as the amount of |
capital costs to be recovered under the sourcing |
agreement. In the event that the estimate submitted by |
the clean coal SNG brownfield facility is above the |
range submitted by the Capital Development Board, the |
amount of capital costs at the lowest end of the range |
submitted by the Capital Development Board shall be |
approved by the Commission as the amount of capital |
costs to be recovered under the sourcing agreement. |
Within 15 days after the Capital Development Board has |
submitted its range and the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility has submitted its estimate, the Commission |
shall approve the capital costs for the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility. |
The Capital Development Board shall monitor the |
construction of the clean coal SNG brownfield facility |
for the full duration of construction to assess |
|
potential cost overruns. The Capital Development |
Board, in its discretion, may retain an expert to |
facilitate such monitoring. The clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility shall pay a reasonable fee as |
required by the Capital Development Board for the |
Capital Development Board's services under this |
subsection (h-3) to be deposited into the Capital |
Development Board Revolving Fund, and such fee shall |
not be passed through to a utility or its customers. If |
an expert is retained by the Capital Development Board |
for monitoring of construction, then the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility must pay for the expert's |
reasonable fees and such costs shall not be passed |
through to a utility or its customers. |
(B) Rate of Return. No later than 30 days after the |
date on which the Illinois Power Agency submits a final |
draft sourcing agreement, the Commission shall hold a |
public hearing to determine the rate of return to be |
recovered under the sourcing agreement. Rate of return |
shall be comprised of the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility's actual cost of debt, including |
mortgage-style amortization, and a reasonable return |
on equity. The Commission shall post notice of the |
hearing on its website no later than 10 days prior to |
the date of the hearing. The Commission shall provide |
the public and all interested parties, including the |
|
gas utilities, the Attorney General, and the Illinois |
Power Agency, an opportunity to be heard. |
In determining the return on equity, the |
Commission shall select a commercially reasonable |
return on equity taking into account the return on |
equity being received by developers of similar |
facilities in or outside of Illinois, the need to |
balance an incentive for clean-coal technology with |
the need to protect ratepayers from high gas prices, |
the risks being borne by the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility in the final draft sourcing agreement, and any |
other information that the Commission may deem |
relevant. The Commission may establish a return on |
equity that varies with the amount of savings, if any, |
to customers during the term of the sourcing agreement, |
comparing the delivered SNG price to a daily weighted |
average price of natural gas, based upon an index. The |
Illinois Power Agency shall recommend a return on |
equity to the Commission using the same criteria. |
Within 60 days after receiving the final draft sourcing |
agreement from the Illinois Power Agency, the |
Commission shall approve the rate of return for the |
clean coal brownfield facility. Within 30 days after |
obtaining debt financing for the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility, the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility shall file a notice with the Commission |
|
identifying the actual cost of debt. |
(2) Operations and maintenance costs approved by the |
Commission shall be recoverable by the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility under the sourcing agreement. The |
operations and maintenance costs mean costs that have been |
incurred for the administration, supervision, operation, |
maintenance, preservation, and protection of the clean |
coal SNG brownfield facility's physical plant. |
The Capital Development Board shall calculate a range |
of operations and maintenance costs that it believes would |
be reasonable for the clean coal SNG brownfield facility to |
recover under the sourcing agreement, incorporating an
|
inflation index or combination of inflation indices to
most |
accurately reflect the actual costs of operating the
clean |
coal SNG brownfield facility. In making this |
determination, the Capital Development Board shall review |
the facility cost report, if any, of the clean coal SNG
|
brownfield facility, adjusting the results for inflation
|
based on the change in the Annual Consumer Price Index for
|
All Urban Consumers for the Midwest Region as published in
|
April by the United States Department of Labor, Bureau of
|
Labor Statistics, the final draft of the sourcing |
agreement, and the rate of return approved by the |
Commission. In addition, the Capital Development Board may |
consult as much as it deems necessary with the clean coal |
SNG brownfield facility and conduct whatever research and |
|
investigation it deems necessary. As set forth in |
subparagraph (A) of paragraph (1) of this subsection (h-3), |
the Capital Development Board shall retain an independent |
engineering expert to assist in determining both the range |
of operations and maintenance costs that it believes would |
be reasonable for the clean coal SNG brownfield facility to |
recover under the sourcing agreement. The clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility and the Illinois Power Agency shall |
cooperate with the Capital Development Board in any |
investigation it deems necessary. The Capital Development |
Board shall make its final determination of the range of |
operations and maintenance costs confidentially and shall |
submit that range to the Commission in a confidential |
filing within 120 days after July 13, 2011. |
The clean coal SNG brownfield facility shall submit to |
the Commission its estimate of the operations and |
maintenance costs to be recovered under the sourcing |
agreement. Only after the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility has submitted this estimate shall the Commission |
publicly announce the range of operations and maintenance |
costs submitted by the Capital Development Board. In the |
event that the estimate submitted by the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility is within or below the range submitted |
by the Capital Development Board, the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility's estimate shall be approved by the |
Commission as the amount of operations and maintenance |
|
costs to be recovered under the sourcing agreement. In the |
event that the estimate submitted by the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility is above the range submitted by the |
Capital Development Board, the amount of operations and |
maintenance costs at the lowest end of the range submitted |
by the Capital Development Board shall be approved by the |
Commission as the amount of operations and maintenance |
costs to be recovered under the sourcing agreement. Within |
15 days after the Capital Development Board has submitted |
its range and the clean coal SNG brownfield facility has |
submitted its estimate, the Commission shall approve the |
operations and maintenance costs for the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility. |
The clean coal SNG brownfield facility shall pay for |
the independent engineering expert's reasonable fees and |
such costs shall not be passed through to a utility or its |
customers. The clean coal SNG brownfield facility shall pay |
a reasonable fee as required by the Capital Development |
Board for the Capital Development Board's services under |
this subsection (h-3) to be deposited into the Capital |
Development Board Revolving Fund, and such fee shall not be |
passed through to a utility or its customers. |
(3) Sequestration costs approved by the Commission |
shall be recoverable by the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility. "Sequestration costs" means costs to be incurred |
by the clean coal SNG brownfield facility in accordance |
|
with its Commission-approved carbon capture and |
sequestration plan to: |
(A) capture carbon dioxide; |
(B) build, operate, and maintain a sequestration |
site in which carbon dioxide may be injected; |
(C) build, operate, and maintain a carbon dioxide |
pipeline; and |
(D) transport the carbon dioxide to the |
sequestration site or a pipeline. |
The Commission shall assess the prudency of the |
sequestration costs for the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility before construction commences at the |
sequestration site or pipeline. Any revenues the clean coal |
SNG brownfield facility receives as a result of the |
capture, transportation, or sequestration of carbon |
dioxide shall be first credited against all sequestration |
costs, with the positive balance, if any, treated as |
additional net revenue. |
The Commission may, in its discretion, retain an expert |
to assist in its review of sequestration costs. The clean |
coal SNG brownfield facility shall pay for the expert's |
reasonable fees if an expert is retained by the Commission, |
and such costs shall not be passed through to a utility or |
its customers. Once made, the Commission's determination |
of the amount of recoverable sequestration costs shall not |
be increased unless the clean coal SNG brownfield facility |
|
can show by clear and convincing evidence that (i) the |
costs were not reasonably foreseeable; (ii) the costs were |
due to circumstances beyond the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility's control; and (iii) the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility took all reasonable steps to mitigate the costs. |
If the Commission determines that sequestration costs may |
be increased, the Commission shall provide for notice and a |
public hearing for approval of the increased sequestration |
costs. |
(4) Actual delivered and processed fuel costs shall be |
set by the Illinois Power Agency through a SNG feedstock |
procurement, pursuant to Sections 1-20, 1-77, and 1-78 of |
the Illinois Power Agency Act, to be performed at least |
every 5 years and purchased by the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility pursuant to feedstock procurement |
contracts developed by the Illinois Power Agency, with coal |
comprising at least 50% of the total feedstock over the |
term of the sourcing agreement and petroleum coke |
comprising the remainder of the SNG feedstock. If the |
Commission fails to approve a feedstock procurement plan or |
fails to approve the results of a feedstock procurement |
event, then the fuel shall be purchased by the company |
month-by-month on the spot market and those actual |
delivered and processed fuel costs shall be recoverable |
under the sourcing agreement. If a supplier defaults under |
the terms of a procurement contract, then the Illinois |
|
Power Agency shall immediately initiate a feedstock |
procurement process to obtain a replacement supply, and, |
prior to the conclusion of that process, fuel shall be |
purchased by the company month-by-month on the spot market |
and those actual delivered and processed fuel costs shall |
be recoverable under the sourcing agreement. |
(5) Taxes and fees imposed by the federal government, |
the State, or any unit of local government applicable to |
the clean coal SNG brownfield facility, excluding income |
tax, shall be recoverable by the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility under the sourcing agreement to the extent such |
taxes and fees were not applicable to the facility on July |
13, 2011. |
(6) The actual transportation costs, in accordance |
with the applicable utility's tariffs, and third-party |
marketer costs incurred by the company, if any, associated |
with transporting the SNG from the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility to the Chicago City-gate to sell such |
SNG into the natural gas markets shall be recoverable under |
the sourcing agreement. |
(7) Unless otherwise provided, within 30 days after a |
decision of the Commission on recoverable costs under this |
Section, any interested party to the Commission's decision |
may apply for a rehearing with respect to the decision. The |
Commission shall receive and consider the application for |
rehearing and shall grant or deny the application in whole |
|
or in part within 20 days after the date of the receipt of |
the application by the Commission. If no rehearing is |
applied for within the required 30 days or an application |
for rehearing is denied, then the Commission decision shall |
be final. If an application for rehearing is granted, then |
the Commission shall hold a rehearing within 30 days after |
granting the application. The decision of the Commission |
upon rehearing shall be final. |
Any person affected by a decision of the Commission |
under this subsection (h-3) may have the decision reviewed |
only under and in accordance with the Administrative Review |
Law. Unless otherwise provided, the provisions of the |
Administrative Review Law, all amendments and |
modifications to that Law, and the rules adopted pursuant |
to that Law shall apply to and govern all proceedings for |
the judicial review of final administrative decisions of |
the Commission under this subsection (h-3). The term |
"administrative decision" is defined as in Section 3-101 of |
the Code of Civil Procedure. |
(8) The Capital Development Board shall adopt and make |
public a policy detailing the process for retaining experts |
under this Section. Any experts retained to assist with |
calculating the range of capital costs or operations and |
maintenance costs shall be retained no later than 45 days |
after July 13, 2011. |
(h-4) No later than 90 days after the Illinois Power Agency |
|
submits the final draft sourcing agreement pursuant to |
subsection (h-1), the Commission shall approve a sourcing |
agreement containing (i) the capital costs, rate of return, and |
operations and maintenance costs established pursuant to |
subsection (h-3) and (ii) all other terms and conditions, |
rights, provisions, exceptions, and limitations contained in |
the final draft sourcing agreement; provided, however, the |
Commission shall correct typographical and scrivener's errors |
and modify the contract only as necessary to provide that the |
gas utility does not have the right to terminate the sourcing |
agreement due to any future events that may occur other than |
the clean coal SNG brownfield facility's failure to timely meet |
milestones, uncured default, extended force majeure, or |
abandonment. Once the sourcing agreement is approved, then the |
gas utility subject to that sourcing agreement shall have 45 |
days after the date of the Commission's approval to enter into |
the sourcing agreement. |
(h-5) Sequestration enforcement. |
(A) All contracts entered into under subsection (h) of |
this Section and all sourcing agreements under subsection |
(h-1) of this Section, regardless of duration, shall |
require the owner of any facility supplying SNG under the |
contract or sourcing agreement to provide certified |
documentation to the Commission each year, starting in the |
facility's first year of commercial operation, accurately |
reporting the quantity of carbon dioxide emissions from the |
|
facility that have been captured and sequestered and |
reporting any quantities of carbon dioxide released from |
the site or sites at which carbon dioxide emissions were |
sequestered in prior years, based on continuous monitoring |
of those sites. |
(B) If, in any year, the owner of the clean coal SNG |
facility fails to demonstrate that the SNG facility |
captured and sequestered at least 90% of the total carbon |
dioxide emissions that the facility would otherwise emit or |
that sequestration of emissions from prior years has |
failed, resulting in the release of carbon dioxide into the |
atmosphere, then the owner of the clean coal SNG facility |
must pay a penalty of $20 per ton of excess carbon dioxide |
emissions not to exceed $40,000,000, in any given year |
which shall be deposited into the Energy Efficiency Trust |
Fund and distributed pursuant to subsection (b) of Section |
6-6 of the Renewable Energy, Energy Efficiency, and Coal |
Resources Development Law of 1997. On or before the 5-year |
anniversary of the execution of the contract and every 5 |
years thereafter, an expert hired by the owner of the |
facility with the approval of the Attorney General shall |
conduct an analysis to determine the cost of sequestration |
of at least 90% of the total carbon dioxide emissions the |
plant would otherwise emit. If the analysis shows that the |
actual annual cost is greater than the penalty, then the |
penalty shall be increased to equal the actual cost. |
|
Provided, however, to the extent that the owner of the |
facility described in subsection (h) of this Section can |
demonstrate that the failure was as a result of acts of God |
(including fire, flood, earthquake, tornado, lightning, |
hurricane, or other natural disaster); any amendment, |
modification, or abrogation of any applicable law or |
regulation that would prevent performance; war; invasion; |
act of foreign enemies; hostilities (regardless of whether |
war is declared); civil war; rebellion; revolution; |
insurrection; military or usurped power or confiscation; |
terrorist activities; civil disturbance; riots; |
nationalization; sabotage; blockage; or embargo, the owner |
of the facility described in subsection (h) of this Section |
shall not be subject to a penalty if and only if (i) it |
promptly provides notice of its failure to the Commission; |
(ii) as soon as practicable and consistent with any order |
or direction from the Commission, it submits to the |
Commission proposed modifications to its carbon capture |
and sequestration plan; and (iii) it carries out its |
proposed modifications in the manner and time directed by |
the Commission. |
If the Commission finds that the facility has not |
satisfied each of these requirements, then the facility |
shall be subject to the penalty. If the owner of the clean |
coal SNG facility captured and sequestered more than 90% of |
the total carbon dioxide emissions that the facility would |
|
otherwise emit, then the owner of the facility may credit |
such additional amounts to reduce the amount of any future |
penalty to be paid. The penalty resulting from the failure |
to capture and sequester at least the minimum amount of |
carbon dioxide shall not be passed on to a utility or its |
customers. |
If the clean coal SNG facility fails to meet the |
requirements specified in this subsection (h-5), then the |
Attorney General, on behalf of the People of the State of |
Illinois, shall bring an action to enforce the obligations |
related to the facility set forth in this subsection (h-5), |
including any penalty payments owed, but not including the |
physical obligation to capture and sequester at least 90% |
of the total carbon dioxide emissions that the facility |
would otherwise emit. Such action may be filed in any |
circuit court in Illinois. By entering into a contract |
pursuant to subsection (h) of this Section, the clean coal |
SNG facility agrees to waive any objections to venue or to |
the jurisdiction of the court with regard to the Attorney |
General's action under this subsection (h-5). |
Compliance with the sequestration requirements and any |
penalty requirements specified in this subsection (h-5) |
for the clean coal SNG facility shall be assessed annually |
by the Commission, which may in its discretion retain an |
expert to facilitate its assessment. If any expert is |
retained by the Commission, then the clean coal SNG |
|
facility shall pay for the expert's reasonable fees, and |
such costs shall not be passed through to the utility or |
its customers. |
In addition, carbon dioxide emission credits received |
by the clean coal SNG facility in connection with |
sequestration of carbon dioxide from the facility must be |
sold in a timely fashion with any revenue, less applicable |
fees and expenses and any expenses required to be paid by |
facility for carbon dioxide transportation or |
sequestration, deposited into the reconciliation account |
within 30 days after receipt of such funds by the owner of |
the clean coal SNG facility. |
The clean coal SNG facility is prohibited from |
transporting or sequestering carbon dioxide unless the |
owner of the carbon dioxide pipeline that transfers the |
carbon dioxide from the facility and the owner of the |
sequestration site where the carbon dioxide captured by the |
facility is stored has acquired all applicable permits |
under applicable State and federal laws, statutes, rules, |
or regulations prior to the transfer or sequestration of |
carbon dioxide. The responsibility for compliance with the |
sequestration requirements specified in this subsection |
(h-5) for the clean coal SNG facility shall reside solely |
with the clean coal SNG facility, regardless of whether the |
facility has contracted with another party to capture, |
transport, or sequester carbon dioxide. |
|
(C) If, in any year, the owner of a clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility fails to demonstrate that the clean |
coal SNG brownfield facility captured and sequestered at |
least 85% of the total carbon dioxide emissions that the |
facility would otherwise emit, then the owner of the clean |
coal SNG brownfield facility must pay a penalty of $20 per |
ton of excess carbon emissions up to $20,000,000, which |
shall be deposited into the Energy Efficiency Trust Fund |
and distributed pursuant to subsection (b) of Section 6-6 |
of the Renewable Energy, Energy Efficiency, and Coal |
Resources Development Law of 1997. Provided, however, to |
the extent that the owner of the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility can demonstrate that the failure was as a result |
of acts of God (including fire, flood, earthquake, tornado, |
lightning, hurricane, or other natural disaster); any |
amendment, modification, or abrogation of any applicable |
law or regulation that would prevent performance; war; |
invasion; act of foreign enemies; hostilities (regardless |
of whether war is declared); civil war; rebellion; |
revolution; insurrection; military or usurped power or |
confiscation; terrorist activities; civil disturbances; |
riots; nationalization; sabotage; blockage; or embargo, |
the owner of the clean coal SNG brownfield facility shall |
not be subject to a penalty if and only if (i) it promptly |
provides notice of its failure to the Commission; (ii) as |
soon as practicable and consistent with any order or |
|
direction from the Commission, it submits to the Commission |
proposed modifications to its carbon capture and |
sequestration plan; and (iii) it carries out its proposed |
modifications in the manner and time directed by the |
Commission. If the Commission finds that the facility has |
not satisfied each of these requirements, then the facility |
shall be subject to the penalty. If the owner of a clean |
coal SNG brownfield facility demonstrates that the clean |
coal SNG brownfield facility captured and sequestered more |
than 85% of the total carbon emissions that the facility |
would otherwise emit, the owner of the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility may credit such additional amounts to |
reduce the amount of any future penalty to be paid. The |
penalty resulting from the failure to capture and sequester |
at least the minimum amount of carbon dioxide shall not be |
passed on to a utility or its customers. |
In addition to any penalty for the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility's failure to capture and sequester at |
least its minimum sequestration requirement, the Attorney |
General, on behalf of the People of the State of Illinois, |
shall bring an action for specific performance of this |
subsection (h-5). Such action may be filed in any circuit |
court in Illinois. By entering into a sourcing agreement |
pursuant to subsection (h-1) of this Section, the clean |
coal SNG brownfield facility agrees to waive any objections |
to venue or to the jurisdiction of the court with regard to |
|
the Attorney General's action for specific performance |
under this subsection (h-5). |
Compliance with the sequestration requirements and |
penalty requirements specified in this subsection (h-5) |
for the clean coal SNG brownfield facility shall be |
assessed annually by the Commission, which may in its |
discretion retain an expert to facilitate its assessment. |
If an expert is retained by the Commission, then the clean |
coal SNG brownfield facility shall pay for the expert's |
reasonable fees, and such costs shall not be passed through |
to a utility or its customers. A SNG facility operating |
pursuant to this subsection (h-5) shall not forfeit its |
designation as a clean coal SNG facility or a clean coal |
SNG brownfield facility if the facility fails to fully |
comply with the applicable carbon sequestration |
requirements in any given year, provided the requisite |
offsets are purchased or requisite penalties are paid. |
Responsibility for compliance with the sequestration |
requirements specified in this subsection (h-5) for the |
clean coal SNG brownfield facility shall reside solely with |
the clean coal SNG brownfield facility regardless of |
whether the facility has contracted with another party to |
capture, transport, or sequester carbon dioxide.
|
(h-7) Sequestration permitting, oversight, and |
investigations. |
(1) No clean coal facility or clean coal SNG brownfield |
|
facility may transport or sequester carbon dioxide unless |
the Commission approves the method of carbon dioxide |
transportation or sequestration. Such approval shall be |
required regardless of whether the facility has contracted |
with another to transport or sequester the carbon dioxide. |
Nothing in this subsection (h-7) shall release the owner or |
operator of a carbon dioxide sequestration site or carbon |
dioxide pipeline from any other permitting requirements |
under applicable State and federal laws, statutes, rules, |
or regulations. |
(2) The Commission shall review carbon dioxide |
transportation and sequestration methods proposed by a |
clean coal facility or a clean coal SNG brownfield facility |
and shall approve those methods it deems reasonable and |
cost-effective. For purposes of this review, |
"cost-effective" means a commercially reasonable price for |
similar carbon dioxide transportation or sequestration |
techniques. In determining whether sequestration is |
reasonable and cost-effective, the Commission may consult |
with the Illinois State Geological Survey and retain third |
parties to assist in its determination, provided that such |
third parties shall not own or control any direct or |
indirect interest in the facility that is proposing the |
carbon dioxide transportation or the carbon dioxide |
sequestration method and shall have no contractual |
relationship with that facility. If a third party is |
|
retained by the Commission, then the facility proposing the |
carbon dioxide transportation or sequestration method |
shall pay for the expert's reasonable fees, and these costs |
shall not be passed through to a utility or its customers. |
No later than 6 months prior to the date upon which the |
owner intends to commence construction of a clean coal |
facility or the clean coal SNG brownfield facility, the |
owner of the facility shall file with the Commission a |
carbon dioxide transportation or sequestration plan. The |
Commission shall hold a public hearing within 30 days after |
receipt of the facility's carbon dioxide transportation or |
sequestration plan. The Commission shall post notice of the |
review on its website upon submission of a carbon dioxide |
transportation or sequestration method and shall accept |
written public comments. The Commission shall take the |
comments into account when making its decision. |
The Commission may not approve a carbon dioxide |
sequestration method if the owner or operator of the |
sequestration site has not received (i) an Underground |
Injection Control permit from the United States |
Environmental Protection Agency, or from the Illinois |
Environmental Protection Agency pursuant to the |
Environmental Protection Act; (ii) an Underground |
Injection Control permit from the Illinois Department of |
Natural Resources pursuant to the Illinois Oil and Gas Act; |
or (iii) an Underground Injection Control permit from the |
|
United States Environmental Protection Agency or a permit |
similar to items (i) or (ii) from the state in which the |
sequestration site is located if the sequestration will |
take place outside of Illinois. The Commission shall |
approve or deny the carbon dioxide transportation or |
sequestration method within 90 days after the receipt of |
all required information. |
(3) At least annually, the Illinois Environmental |
Protection Agency shall inspect all carbon dioxide |
sequestration sites in Illinois. The Illinois |
Environmental Protection Agency may, as often as deemed |
necessary, monitor and conduct investigations of those |
sites. The owner or operator of the sequestration site must |
cooperate with the Illinois Environmental Protection |
Agency investigations of carbon dioxide sequestration |
sites. |
If the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency |
determines at any time a site creates conditions that |
warrant the issuance of a seal order under Section 34 of |
the Environmental Protection Act, then the Illinois |
Environmental Protection Agency shall seal the site |
pursuant to the Environmental Protection Act. If the |
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency determines at any |
time a carbon dioxide sequestration site creates |
conditions that warrant the institution of a civil action |
for an injunction under Section 43 of the Environmental |
|
Protection Act, then the Illinois Environmental Protection |
Agency shall request the State's Attorney or the Attorney |
General institute such action. The Illinois Environmental |
Protection Agency shall provide notice of any such actions |
as soon as possible on its website. The SNG facility shall |
incur all reasonable costs associated with any such |
inspection or monitoring of the sequestration sites, and |
these costs shall not be recoverable from utilities or |
their customers. |
(4) (Blank). |
(h-9) The clean coal SNG brownfield facility shall have the |
right to recover prudently incurred increased costs or reduced |
revenue resulting from any new or amendatory legislation or |
other action. The State of Illinois pledges that the State will |
not enact any law or take any action to: |
(1) break, or repeal the authority for, sourcing |
agreements approved by the Commission and entered into |
between public utilities and the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility; |
(2) deny public utilities full cost recovery for their |
costs incurred under those sourcing agreements; or |
(3) deny the clean coal SNG brownfield facility full |
cost and revenue recovery as provided under those sourcing |
agreements that are recoverable pursuant to subsection |
(h-3) of this Section. |
These pledges are for the benefit of the parties to those |
|
sourcing agreements and the issuers and holders of bonds or |
other obligations issued or incurred to finance or refinance |
the clean coal SNG brownfield facility. The clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility is authorized to include and refer to these |
pledges in any financing agreement into which it may enter in |
regard to those sourcing agreements. |
The State of Illinois retains and reserves all other rights |
to enact new or amendatory legislation or take any other |
action, without impairment of the right of the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility to recover prudently incurred increased |
costs or reduced revenue resulting from the new or amendatory |
legislation or other action, including, but not limited to, |
such legislation or other action that would (i) directly or |
indirectly raise the costs the clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility must incur; (ii) directly or indirectly place |
additional restrictions, regulations, or requirements on the |
clean coal SNG brownfield facility; (iii) prohibit |
sequestration in general or prohibit a specific sequestration |
method or project; or (iv) increase minimum sequestration |
requirements for the clean coal SNG brownfield facility to the |
extent technically feasible. The clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility shall have the right to recover prudently incurred |
increased costs or reduced revenue resulting from the new or |
amendatory legislation or other action as described in this |
subsection (h-9). |
(h-10) Contract costs for SNG incurred by an Illinois gas |
|
utility are reasonable and prudent and recoverable through the |
purchased gas adjustment clause and are not subject to review |
or disallowance by the Commission. Contract costs are costs |
incurred by the utility under the terms of a contract that |
incorporates the terms stated in subsection (h) of this Section |
as confirmed in writing by the Illinois Power Agency as set |
forth in subsection (h) of this Section, which confirmation |
shall be deemed conclusive, or as a consequence of or condition |
to its performance under the contract, including (i) amounts |
paid for SNG under the SNG contract and (ii) costs of |
transportation and storage services of SNG purchased from |
interstate pipelines under federally approved tariffs. The |
Illinois gas utility shall initiate a clean coal SNG facility |
rider mechanism that (A) shall be applicable to all customers |
who receive transportation service from the utility, (B) shall |
be designed to have an equal percentage impact on the |
transportation services rates of each class of the utility's |
total customers, and (C) shall accurately reflect the net |
customer savings, if any, and above market costs, if any, under |
the SNG contract. Any contract, the terms of which have been |
confirmed in writing by the Illinois Power Agency as set forth |
in subsection (h) of this Section and the performance of the |
parties under such contract cannot be grounds for challenging |
prudence or cost recovery by the utility through the purchased |
gas adjustment clause, and in such cases, the Commission is |
directed not to consider, and has no authority to consider, any |
|
attempted challenges. |
The contracts entered into by Illinois gas utilities |
pursuant to subsection (h) of this Section shall provide that |
the utility retains the right to terminate the contract without |
further obligation or liability to any party if the contract |
has been impaired as a result of any legislative, |
administrative, judicial, or other governmental action that is |
taken that eliminates all or part of the prudence protection of |
this subsection (h-10) or denies the recoverability of all or |
part of the contract costs through the purchased gas adjustment |
clause. Should any Illinois gas utility exercise its right |
under this subsection (h-10) to terminate the contract, all |
contract costs incurred prior to termination are and will be |
deemed reasonable, prudent, and recoverable as and when |
incurred and not subject to review or disallowance by the |
Commission. Any order, issued by the State requiring or |
authorizing the discontinuation of the merchant function, |
defined as the purchase and sale of natural gas by an Illinois |
gas utility for the ultimate consumer in its service territory |
shall include provisions necessary to prevent the impairment of |
the value of any contract hereunder over its full term. |
(h-11) All costs incurred by an Illinois gas utility in |
procuring SNG from a clean coal SNG brownfield facility |
pursuant to subsection (h-1) or a third-party marketer pursuant |
to subsection (h-1) are reasonable and prudent and recoverable |
through the purchased gas adjustment clause in conjunction with
|
|
a SNG brownfield facility rider mechanism and are not subject |
to review or disallowance by the Commission; provided that
if a |
utility is required by law or otherwise elects to connect
the |
clean coal SNG brownfield facility to an interstate
pipeline, |
then the utility shall be entitled to recover
pursuant to its |
tariffs all just and reasonable costs that are
prudently |
incurred. Sourcing agreement costs are costs incurred by the |
utility under the terms of a sourcing agreement that |
incorporates the terms stated in subsection (h-1) of this |
Section as approved by the Commission as set forth in |
subsection (h-4) of this Section, which approval shall be |
deemed conclusive, or as a consequence of or condition to its |
performance under the contract, including (i) amounts paid for |
SNG under the SNG contract and (ii) costs of transportation and |
storage services of SNG purchased from interstate pipelines |
under federally approved tariffs. Any sourcing agreement, the |
terms of which have been approved by the Commission as set |
forth in subsection (h-4) of this Section, and the performance |
of the parties under the sourcing agreement cannot be grounds |
for challenging prudence or cost recovery by the utility, and |
in these cases, the Commission is directed not to consider, and |
has no authority to consider, any attempted challenges. |
(h-15) Reconciliation account. The clean coal SNG facility |
shall establish a reconciliation account for the benefit of the |
retail customers of the utilities that have entered into |
contracts with the clean coal SNG facility pursuant to |
|
subsection (h). The reconciliation account shall be maintained |
and administered by an independent trustee that is mutually |
agreed upon by the owners of the clean coal SNG facility, the |
utilities, and the Commission in an interest-bearing account in |
accordance with the following: |
(1) The clean coal SNG facility shall conduct an |
analysis annually within 60 days after receiving the |
necessary cost information, which shall be provided by the |
gas utility within 6 months after the end of the preceding |
calendar year, to determine (i) the average annual contract |
SNG cost, which shall be calculated as the total amount |
paid for SNG purchased from the clean coal SNG facility |
over the preceding 12 months, plus the cost to the utility |
of the required transportation and storage services of SNG, |
divided by the total number of MMBtus of SNG actually |
purchased from the clean coal SNG facility in the preceding |
12 months under the utility contract; (ii) the average |
annual natural gas purchase cost, which shall be calculated |
as the total annual supply costs paid for baseload natural |
gas (excluding any SNG) purchased by such utility over the |
preceding 12 months plus the costs of transportation and |
storage services of such natural gas (excluding such costs |
for SNG), divided by the total number of MMbtus of baseload |
natural gas (excluding SNG) actually purchased by the |
utility during the year; (iii) the cost differential, which |
shall be the difference between the average annual contract |
|
SNG cost and the average annual natural gas purchase cost; |
and (iv) the revenue share target which shall be the cost |
differential multiplied by the total amount of SNG |
purchased over the preceding 12 months under such utility |
contract. |
(A) To the extent the annual average contract SNG |
cost is less than the annual average natural gas |
purchase cost, the utility shall credit an amount equal |
to the revenue share target to the reconciliation |
account. Such credit payment shall be made monthly |
starting within 30 days after the completed analysis in |
this subsection (h-15) and based on collections from |
all customers via a line item charge in all customer |
bills designed to have an equal percentage impact on |
the transportation services of each class of |
customers. Credit payments made pursuant to this |
subparagraph (A) shall be deemed prudent and |
reasonable and not subject to Commission prudence |
review. |
(B) To the extent the annual average contract SNG |
cost is greater than the annual average natural gas |
purchase cost, the reconciliation account shall be |
used to provide a credit equal to the revenue share |
target to the utilities to be used to reduce the |
utility's natural gas costs through the purchased gas |
adjustment clause. Such payment shall be made within 30 |
|
days after the completed analysis pursuant to this |
subsection (h-15), but only to the extent that the |
reconciliation account has a positive balance. |
(2) At the conclusion of the term of the SNG contracts |
pursuant to subsection (h) and the completion of the final |
annual analysis pursuant to this subsection (h-15), to the |
extent the facility owes any amount to retail customers, |
amounts in the account shall be credited to retail |
customers to the extent the owed amount is repaid; 50% of |
any additional amount in the reconciliation account shall |
be distributed to the utilities to be used to reduce the |
utilities' natural gas costs through the purchase gas |
adjustment clause with the remaining amount distributed to |
the clean coal SNG facility. Such payment shall be made |
within 30 days after the last completed analysis pursuant |
to this subsection (h-15). If the facility has repaid all |
owed amounts, if any, to retail customers and has |
distributed 50% of any additional amount in the account to |
the utilities, then the owners of the clean coal SNG |
facility shall have no further obligation to the utility or |
the retail customers. |
If, at the conclusion of the term of the contracts |
pursuant to subsection (h) and the completion of the final |
annual analysis pursuant to this subsection (h-15), the |
facility owes any amount to retail customers and the |
account has been depleted, then the clean coal SNG facility |
|
shall be liable for any remaining amount owed to the retail |
customers. The clean coal SNG facility shall market the |
daily production of SNG and distribute on a monthly basis |
5% of the amounts collected with respect to such future |
sales to the utilities in proportion to each utility's SNG |
contract to be used to reduce the utility's natural gas |
costs through the purchase gas adjustment clause; such |
payments to the utility shall continue until either 15 |
years after the conclusion of the contract or such time as |
the sum of such payments equals the remaining amount owed |
to the retail customers at the end of the contract, |
whichever is earlier. If the debt to the retail customers |
is not repaid within 15 years after the conclusion of the |
contract, then the owner of the clean coal SNG facility |
must sell the facility, and all proceeds from that sale |
must be used to repay any amount owed to the retail |
customers under this subsection (h-15). |
The retail customers shall have first priority in |
recovering that debt above any creditors, except the |
secured lenders to the extent that the secured lenders have |
any secured debt outstanding, including any parent |
companies or affiliates of the clean coal SNG facility. |
(3) 50% of all additional net revenue, defined as |
miscellaneous net revenue after cost allowance and above |
the budgeted estimate established for revenue pursuant to |
subsection (h), including sale of substitute natural gas |
|
derived from the clean coal SNG facility above the |
nameplate capacity of the facility and other by-products |
produced by the facility, shall be credited to the |
reconciliation account on an annual basis with such payment |
made within 30 days after the end of each calendar year |
during the term of the contract. |
(4) The clean coal SNG facility shall each year, |
starting in the facility's first year of commercial |
operation, file with the Commission, in such form as the |
Commission shall require, a report as to the reconciliation |
account. The annual report must contain the following |
information: |
(A) the revenue share target amount; |
(B) the amount credited or debited to the |
reconciliation account during the year; |
(C) the amount credited to the utilities to be used |
to reduce the utilities natural gas costs though the |
purchase gas adjustment clause; |
(D) the total amount of reconciliation account at |
the beginning and end of the year; |
(E) the total amount of consumer savings to date; |
and |
(F) any additional information the Commission may |
require. |
When any report is erroneous or defective or appears to the |
Commission to be erroneous or defective, the Commission may |
|
notify the clean coal SNG facility to amend the report within |
30 days; before or after the termination of the 30-day period, |
the Commission may examine the trustee of the reconciliation |
account or the officers, agents, employees, books, records, or |
accounts of the clean coal SNG facility and correct such items |
in the report as upon such examination the Commission may find |
defective or erroneous. All reports shall be under oath. |
All reports made to the Commission by the clean coal SNG |
facility and the contents of the reports shall be open to |
public inspection and shall be deemed a public record under the |
Freedom of Information Act. Such reports shall be preserved in |
the office of the Commission. The Commission shall publish an |
annual summary of the reports prior to February 1 of the |
following year. The annual summary shall be made available to |
the public on the Commission's website and shall be submitted |
to the General Assembly. |
Any facility that fails to file the report required under |
this paragraph (4) to the Commission within the time specified |
or to make specific answer to any question propounded by the |
Commission within 30 days after the time it is lawfully |
required to do so, or within such further time not to exceed 90 |
days as may be allowed by the Commission in its discretion, |
shall pay a penalty of $500 to the Commission for each day it |
is in default. |
Any person who willfully makes any false report to the |
Commission or to any member, officer, or employee thereof, any |
|
person who willfully in a report withholds or fails to provide |
material information to which the Commission is entitled under |
this paragraph (4) and which information is either required to |
be filed by statute, rule, regulation, order, or decision of |
the Commission or has been requested by the Commission, and any |
person who willfully aids or abets such person shall be guilty |
of a Class A misdemeanor. |
(h-20) The General Assembly authorizes the Illinois |
Finance Authority to issue bonds to the maximum extent |
permitted to finance coal gasification facilities described in |
this Section, which constitute both "industrial projects" |
under Article 801 of the Illinois Finance Authority Act and |
"clean coal and energy projects" under Sections 825-65 through |
825-75 of the Illinois Finance Authority Act. |
Administrative costs incurred by the Illinois Finance |
Authority in performance of this subsection (h-20) shall be |
subject to reimbursement by the clean coal SNG facility on |
terms as the Illinois Finance Authority and the clean coal SNG |
facility may agree. The utility and its customers shall have no |
obligation to reimburse the clean coal SNG facility or the |
Illinois Finance Authority for any such costs. |
(h-25) The State of Illinois pledges that the State may not |
enact any law or take any action to (1) break or repeal the |
authority for SNG purchase contracts entered into between |
public gas utilities and the clean coal SNG facility pursuant |
to subsection (h) of this Section or (2) deny public gas |
|
utilities their full cost recovery for contract costs, as |
defined in subsection (h-10), that are incurred under such SNG |
purchase contracts. These pledges are for the benefit of the |
parties to such SNG purchase contracts and the issuers and |
holders of bonds or other obligations issued or incurred to |
finance or refinance the clean coal SNG facility. The |
beneficiaries are authorized to include and refer to these |
pledges in any finance agreement into which they may enter in |
regard to such contracts. |
(h-30) The State of Illinois retains and reserves all other |
rights to enact new or amendatory legislation or take any other |
action, including, but not limited to, such legislation or |
other action that would (1) directly or indirectly raise the |
costs that the clean coal SNG facility must incur; (2) directly |
or indirectly place additional restrictions, regulations, or |
requirements on the clean coal SNG facility; (3) prohibit |
sequestration in general or prohibit a specific sequestration |
method or project; or (4) increase minimum sequestration |
requirements. |
(i) If a gas utility or an affiliate of a gas utility has |
an ownership interest in any entity that produces or sells |
synthetic natural gas, Article VII of this Act shall apply.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-96, eff. 7-13-11; 97-239, eff. 8-2-11; 97-630, |
eff. 12-8-11; 97-906, eff. 8-7-12; 97-1081, eff. 8-24-12; |
98-463, eff. 8-16-13.) |
|
Section 145. The Illinois Horse Racing Act of 1975 is |
amended by changing Sections 12.1 and 12.2 as follows:
|
(230 ILCS 5/12.1) (from Ch. 8, par. 37-12.1)
|
Sec. 12.1.
(a) The General Assembly finds that the Illinois |
Racing
Industry does not include a fair proportion of minority |
or female workers.
|
Therefore, the General Assembly urges that the job training |
institutes, trade
associations and employers involved in the |
Illinois Horse Racing Industry
take affirmative action to |
encourage equal employment opportunity to all
workers |
regardless of race, color, creed or sex.
|
Before an organization license, inter-track wagering |
license or
inter-track wagering location license can be |
granted, the applicant for any
such license shall execute and |
file with the Board a good faith affirmative
action plan to |
recruit, train and upgrade minorities and females in all
|
classifications with the applicant for license. One year after |
issuance of
any such license, and each year thereafter, the |
licensee shall file a
report with the Board evidencing and |
certifying compliance with the
originally filed affirmative |
action plan.
|
(b) At least 10% of the total amount of all State contracts |
for the
infrastructure improvement of any race track grounds in |
this State shall be let
to minority-owned minority owned |
businesses or women-owned female owned businesses. "State |
|
contract",
" minority-owned minority owned business" and |
" women-owned female owned business" shall have the meanings
|
ascribed to them under the Business Enterprise for Minorities, |
Women Females , and
Persons with Disabilities Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-16, eff. 6-28-01.)
|
(230 ILCS 5/12.2) |
Sec. 12.2. Business enterprise program. |
(a) For the purposes of this Section, the terms "minority", |
" minority-owned minority owned business", " woman female ", |
" women-owned female owned business", "person with a |
disability", and "business owned by a person with a disability" |
have the meanings ascribed to them in the Business Enterprise |
for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities |
Act. |
(b) The Board shall, by rule, establish goals for the award |
of contracts by each organization licensee or inter-track |
wagering licensee to businesses owned by minorities, women |
females , and persons with disabilities, expressed as |
percentages of an organization licensee's or inter-track |
wagering licensee's total dollar amount of contracts awarded |
during each calendar year. Each organization licensee or |
inter-track wagering licensee must make every effort to meet |
the goals established by the Board pursuant to this Section. |
When setting the goals for the award of contracts, the Board |
shall not include contracts where: (1) licensees are purchasing |
|
goods or services from vendors or suppliers or in markets where |
there are no or a limited number of minority-owned minority |
owned businesses, women-owned women owned businesses, or |
businesses owned by persons with disabilities that would be |
sufficient to satisfy the goal; (2) there are no or a limited |
number of suppliers licensed by the Board; (3) the licensee or |
its parent company owns a company that provides the goods or |
services; or (4) the goods or services are provided to the |
licensee by a publicly traded company. |
(c) Each organization licensee or inter-track wagering |
licensee shall file with the Board an annual report of its |
utilization of minority-owned minority owned businesses, |
women-owned female owned businesses, and businesses owned by |
persons with disabilities during the preceding calendar year. |
The reports shall include a self-evaluation of the efforts of |
the organization licensee or inter-track wagering licensee to |
meet its goals under this Section. |
(d) The organization licensee or inter-track wagering
|
licensee shall have the right to request a waiver from the |
requirements of this Section. The Board shall grant the waiver |
where the organization licensee or inter-track wagering
|
licensee demonstrates that there has been made a good faith |
effort to comply with the goals for participation by |
minority-owned minority owned businesses, women-owned female
|
owned businesses, and businesses owned by persons with
|
disabilities. |
|
(e) If the Board determines that its goals and policies are |
not being met by any organization licensee or inter-track |
wagering licensee, then the Board may: |
(1) adopt remedies for such violations; and |
(2) recommend that the organization licensee or |
inter-track wagering licensee provide additional |
opportunities for participation by minority-owned minority |
owned businesses, women-owned female owned businesses, and |
businesses owned by persons with disabilities; such |
recommendations may include, but shall not be limited to: |
(A) assurances of stronger and better focused
|
solicitation efforts to obtain more minority-owned |
minority owned businesses, women-owned female owned |
businesses, and businesses owned by persons with |
disabilities as potential sources of supply; |
(B) division of job or project requirements, when
|
economically feasible, into tasks or quantities to |
permit participation of minority-owned minority owned |
businesses, women-owned female owned businesses, and |
businesses owned by persons with disabilities; |
(C) elimination of extended experience or
|
capitalization requirements, when programmatically |
feasible, to permit participation of minority-owned |
minority owned businesses, women-owned female owned |
businesses, and businesses owned by persons with |
disabilities; |
|
(D) identification of specific proposed contracts |
as
particularly attractive or appropriate for |
participation by minority-owned minority owned |
businesses, women-owned female owned businesses, and |
businesses owned by persons with disabilities, such |
identification to result from and be coupled with the |
efforts of items (A) through (C);
and |
(E) implementation of regulations established
for |
the use of the sheltered market process. |
(f) The Board shall file, no later than March 1 of each |
year, an annual report that shall detail the level of |
achievement toward the goals specified in this Section over the |
3 most recent fiscal years. The annual report shall include, |
but need not be limited to: |
(1) a summary detailing expenditures subject
to the |
goals, the actual goals specified, and the goals attained |
by each organization licensee or inter-track wagering |
licensee; |
(2) a summary of the number of contracts awarded and
|
the average contract amount by each organization licensee |
or inter-track wagering licensee; |
(3) an analysis of the level of overall goal
|
achievement concerning purchases from minority-owned |
minority owned businesses, women-owned female owned |
businesses, and businesses owned by persons with |
disabilities; |
|
(4) an analysis of the number of minority-owned |
minority owned businesses, women-owned female owned |
businesses, and businesses owned by persons with |
disabilities that are certified under the program as well |
as the number of those businesses that received State |
procurement contracts; and |
(5) (blank).
|
(Source: P.A. 98-490, eff. 8-16-13; 99-78, eff. 7-20-15; |
99-891, eff. 1-1-17 .) |
Section 150. The Riverboat Gambling Act is amended by |
changing Sections 4, 7, 7.1, 7.4, 7.6, and 11.2 as follows:
|
(230 ILCS 10/4) (from Ch. 120, par. 2404)
|
Sec. 4. Definitions. As used in this Act:
|
(a) "Board" means the Illinois Gaming Board.
|
(b) "Occupational license" means a license issued by the |
Board to a
person or entity to perform an occupation which the |
Board has identified as
requiring a license to engage in |
riverboat gambling in Illinois.
|
(c) "Gambling game" includes, but is not limited to, |
baccarat,
twenty-one, poker, craps, slot machine, video game of |
chance, roulette
wheel, klondike table, punchboard, faro |
layout, keno layout, numbers
ticket, push card, jar ticket, or |
pull tab which is authorized by the Board
as a wagering device |
under this Act.
|
|
(d) "Riverboat" means a self-propelled excursion boat, a
|
permanently moored barge, or permanently moored barges that are |
permanently
fixed together to operate as one vessel, on which |
lawful gambling is
authorized and licensed as
provided in this |
Act.
|
(e) "Managers license" means a license issued by the Board |
to a person or
entity
to manage gambling operations conducted |
by the State pursuant to Section 7.3.
|
(f) "Dock" means the location where a riverboat moors for |
the purpose of
embarking passengers for and disembarking |
passengers from the riverboat.
|
(g) "Gross receipts" means the total amount of money |
exchanged for the
purchase of chips, tokens or electronic cards |
by riverboat patrons.
|
(h) "Adjusted gross receipts" means the gross receipts less
|
winnings paid to wagerers.
|
(i) "Cheat" means to alter the selection of criteria which |
determine the
result of a gambling game or the amount or |
frequency of payment in a gambling
game.
|
(j) (Blank).
|
(k) "Gambling operation" means the conduct of authorized |
gambling games
upon a riverboat.
|
(l) "License bid" means the lump sum amount of money that |
an applicant
bids and agrees to pay the State in return for an |
owners license that is
re-issued on or after July 1, 2003.
|
(m) The terms "minority person", " woman female ", and |
|
"person with a disability" shall have the same meaning
as
|
defined in
Section 2 of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, |
Women Females , and Persons with
Disabilities Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 96-1392, eff. 1-1-11.)
|
(230 ILCS 10/7) (from Ch. 120, par. 2407)
|
Sec. 7. Owners Licenses.
|
(a) The Board shall issue owners licenses to persons, firms |
or
corporations which apply for such licenses upon payment to |
the Board of the
non-refundable license fee set by the Board, |
upon payment of a $25,000
license fee for the first year of |
operation and a $5,000 license fee for
each succeeding year and |
upon a determination by the Board that the
applicant is |
eligible for an owners license pursuant to this Act and the
|
rules of the Board. From the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 95th General Assembly until (i) 3 years after the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 95th General |
Assembly, (ii) the date any organization licensee begins to |
operate a slot machine or video game of chance under the |
Illinois Horse Racing Act of 1975 or this Act, (iii) the date |
that payments begin under subsection (c-5) of Section 13 of the |
Act, or (iv) the wagering tax imposed under Section 13 of this |
Act is increased by law to reflect a tax rate that is at least |
as stringent or more stringent than the tax rate contained in |
subsection (a-3) of Section 13, whichever occurs first, as a |
condition of licensure and as an alternative source of payment |
|
for those funds payable under subsection (c-5) of Section 13 of |
the Riverboat Gambling Act, any owners licensee that holds or |
receives its owners license on or after the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly, other than an |
owners licensee operating a riverboat with adjusted gross |
receipts in calendar year 2004 of less than $200,000,000, must |
pay into the Horse Racing Equity Trust Fund, in addition to any |
other payments required under this Act, an amount equal to 3% |
of the adjusted gross receipts received by the owners licensee. |
The payments required under this Section shall be made by the |
owners licensee to the State Treasurer no later than 3:00 |
o'clock p.m. of the day after the day when the adjusted gross |
receipts were received by the owners licensee. A person, firm |
or corporation is ineligible to receive
an owners license if:
|
(1) the person has been convicted of a felony under the |
laws of this
State, any other state, or the United States;
|
(2) the person has been convicted of any violation of |
Article 28 of the
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal |
Code of 2012, or substantially similar laws of any other |
jurisdiction;
|
(3) the person has submitted an application for a |
license under this
Act which contains false information;
|
(4) the person is
a member of the Board;
|
(5) a person defined in (1), (2), (3) or (4) is an |
officer, director or
managerial employee of the firm or |
corporation;
|
|
(6) the firm or corporation employs a person defined in |
(1), (2), (3) or
(4) who participates in the management or |
operation of gambling operations
authorized under this |
Act;
|
(7) (blank); or
|
(8) a license of the person, firm or corporation issued |
under
this Act, or a license to own or operate gambling |
facilities
in any other jurisdiction, has been revoked.
|
The Board is expressly prohibited from making changes to |
the requirement that licensees make payment into the Horse |
Racing Equity Trust Fund without the express authority of the |
Illinois General Assembly and making any other rule to |
implement or interpret this amendatory Act of the 95th General |
Assembly. For the purposes of this paragraph, "rules" is given |
the meaning given to that term in Section 1-70 of the Illinois |
Administrative Procedure Act. |
(b) In determining whether to grant an owners license to an |
applicant, the
Board shall consider:
|
(1) the character, reputation, experience and |
financial integrity of the
applicants and of any other or |
separate person that either:
|
(A) controls, directly or indirectly, such |
applicant, or
|
(B) is controlled, directly or indirectly, by such |
applicant or by a
person which controls, directly or |
indirectly, such applicant;
|
|
(2) the facilities or proposed facilities for the |
conduct of riverboat
gambling;
|
(3) the highest prospective total revenue to be derived |
by the State
from the conduct of riverboat gambling;
|
(4) the extent to which the ownership of the applicant |
reflects the
diversity of the State by including minority |
persons, women females , and persons with a disability
and |
the good faith affirmative action plan of
each applicant to |
recruit, train and upgrade minority persons, women |
females , and persons with a disability in all employment |
classifications;
|
(5) the financial ability of the applicant to purchase |
and maintain
adequate liability and casualty insurance;
|
(6) whether the applicant has adequate capitalization |
to provide and
maintain, for the duration of a license, a |
riverboat;
|
(7) the extent to which the applicant exceeds or meets |
other standards
for the issuance of an owners license which |
the Board may adopt by rule;
and
|
(8) The amount of the applicant's license bid.
|
(c) Each owners license shall specify the place where |
riverboats shall
operate and dock.
|
(d) Each applicant shall submit with his application, on |
forms
provided by the Board, 2 sets of his fingerprints.
|
(e) The Board may issue up to 10 licenses authorizing the |
holders of such
licenses to own riverboats. In the application |
|
for an owners license, the
applicant shall state the dock at |
which the riverboat is based and the water
on which the |
riverboat will be located. The Board shall issue 5 licenses to
|
become effective not earlier than January 1, 1991. Three of |
such licenses
shall authorize riverboat gambling on the |
Mississippi River, or, with approval
by the municipality in |
which the
riverboat was docked on August 7, 2003 and with Board |
approval, be authorized to relocate to a new location,
in a
|
municipality that (1) borders on the Mississippi River or is |
within 5
miles of the city limits of a municipality that |
borders on the Mississippi
River and (2), on August 7, 2003, |
had a riverboat conducting riverboat gambling operations |
pursuant to
a license issued under this Act; one of which shall |
authorize riverboat
gambling from a home dock in the city of |
East St. Louis. One other license
shall
authorize riverboat |
gambling on
the Illinois River south of Marshall County. The |
Board shall issue one
additional license to become effective |
not earlier than March 1, 1992, which
shall authorize riverboat |
gambling on the Des Plaines River in Will County.
The Board may |
issue 4 additional licenses to become effective not
earlier |
than
March 1, 1992. In determining the water upon which |
riverboats will operate,
the Board shall consider the economic |
benefit which riverboat gambling confers
on the State, and |
shall seek to assure that all regions of the State share
in the |
economic benefits of riverboat gambling.
|
In granting all licenses, the Board may give favorable |
|
consideration to
economically depressed areas of the State, to |
applicants presenting plans
which provide for significant |
economic development over a large geographic
area, and to |
applicants who currently operate non-gambling riverboats in
|
Illinois.
The Board shall review all applications for owners |
licenses,
and shall inform each applicant of the Board's |
decision.
The Board may grant an owners license to an
applicant |
that has not submitted the highest license bid, but if it does |
not
select the highest bidder, the Board shall issue a written |
decision explaining
why another
applicant was selected and |
identifying the factors set forth in this Section
that favored |
the winning bidder.
|
In addition to any other revocation powers granted to the |
Board under this
Act,
the Board may revoke the owners license |
of a licensee which fails
to begin conducting gambling within |
15 months
of receipt of the
Board's approval of the application |
if the Board determines that license
revocation is in the best |
interests of the State.
|
(f) The first 10 owners licenses issued under this Act |
shall permit the
holder to own up to 2 riverboats and equipment |
thereon
for a period of 3 years after the effective date of the |
license. Holders of
the first 10 owners licenses must pay the |
annual license fee for each of
the 3
years during which they |
are authorized to own riverboats.
|
(g) Upon the termination, expiration, or revocation of each |
of the first
10 licenses, which shall be issued for a 3 year |
|
period, all licenses are
renewable annually upon payment of the |
fee and a determination by the Board
that the licensee |
continues to meet all of the requirements of this Act and the
|
Board's rules.
However, for licenses renewed on or after May 1, |
1998, renewal shall be
for a period of 4 years, unless the |
Board sets a shorter period.
|
(h) An owners license shall entitle the licensee to own up |
to 2
riverboats. A licensee shall limit the number of gambling |
participants to
1,200 for any such owners license.
A licensee |
may operate both of its riverboats concurrently, provided that |
the
total number of gambling participants on both riverboats |
does not exceed
1,200. Riverboats licensed to operate on the
|
Mississippi River and the Illinois River south of Marshall |
County shall
have an authorized capacity of at least 500 |
persons. Any other riverboat
licensed under this Act shall have |
an authorized capacity of at least 400
persons.
|
(i) A licensed owner is authorized to apply to the Board |
for and, if
approved therefor, to receive all licenses from the |
Board necessary for the
operation of a riverboat, including a |
liquor license, a license
to prepare and serve food for human |
consumption, and other necessary
licenses. All use, occupation |
and excise taxes which apply to the sale of
food and beverages |
in this State and all taxes imposed on the sale or use
of |
tangible personal property apply to such sales aboard the |
riverboat.
|
(j) The Board may issue or re-issue a license authorizing a |
|
riverboat to
dock
in a municipality or approve a relocation |
under Section 11.2 only if, prior
to the issuance or |
re-issuance of
the license or approval, the governing body of |
the municipality in which
the riverboat will dock has by a |
majority vote approved the docking of
riverboats in the |
municipality. The Board may issue or re-issue a license
|
authorizing a
riverboat to dock in areas of a county outside |
any municipality or approve a
relocation under Section 11.2 |
only if, prior to the issuance or re-issuance
of the license
or |
approval, the
governing body of the county has by a majority |
vote approved of the docking of
riverboats within such areas.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1392, eff. 1-1-11; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
|
(230 ILCS 10/7.1)
|
Sec. 7.1. Re-issuance of revoked or non-renewed owners |
licenses.
|
(a) If an owners license terminates or expires without |
renewal or the Board
revokes or determines not to renew an |
owners license (including, without
limitation, an owners |
license for a licensee that was not conducting riverboat
|
gambling operations on January 1, 1998)
and that revocation or |
determination is final, the Board may re-issue such
license to
|
a qualified applicant pursuant to an open and competitive |
bidding process, as
set forth in Section 7.5, and subject to |
the maximum number of authorized
licenses set forth in Section
|
7(e).
|
|
(b) To be a qualified applicant, a person, firm, or |
corporation cannot be
ineligible to receive an owners license |
under Section 7(a) and must submit an
application for an owners |
license that complies with Section 6. Each such
applicant must |
also submit evidence to the Board that minority persons and |
women
females hold ownership interests in the applicant of at |
least 16% and 4%
respectively.
|
(c) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in Section |
7(e), an applicant
may apply to the Board for approval of |
relocation of a re-issued license to a
new home dock location |
authorized under Section 3(c) upon receipt of the
approval from |
the municipality or county, as the case may be, pursuant to
|
Section 7(j).
|
(d) In determining whether to grant a re-issued owners |
license to an
applicant, the
Board shall consider all of the |
factors set forth in Sections 7(b) and (e) as
well as the |
amount of the applicant's license bid. The Board may
grant the |
re-issued owners license to an applicant that has not submitted |
the
highest license bid, but if it does not select the highest |
bidder,
the Board shall issue a written decision explaining why |
another applicant was
selected and identifying the factors set |
forth in Sections 7(b) and (e) that
favored the winning bidder.
|
(e) Re-issued owners licenses shall be subject to annual |
license fees as
provided for in Section 7(a) and shall be |
governed by the provisions of
Sections 7(f), (g), (h), and (i).
|
(Source: P.A. 93-28, eff. 6-20-03.)
|
|
(230 ILCS 10/7.4)
|
Sec. 7.4. Managers licenses.
|
(a) A qualified person may apply to the Board for a |
managers license to
operate
and manage any gambling operation |
conducted by the State. The application shall
be
made on forms |
provided by the Board and shall contain such information as the
|
Board
prescribes, including but not limited to information |
required in Sections 6(a),
(b), and
(c) and information |
relating to the applicant's proposed price to manage State
|
gambling
operations and to provide the riverboat, gambling |
equipment, and supplies
necessary to
conduct State gambling |
operations.
|
(b) Each applicant must submit evidence to the Board that |
minority persons
and women
females hold ownership interests in |
the applicant of at least 16% and 4%,
respectively.
|
(c) A person, firm, or corporation is ineligible to receive |
a managers
license if:
|
(1) the person has been convicted of a felony under the |
laws of this
State, any other state, or the United States;
|
(2) the person has been convicted of any violation of |
Article 28 of
the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal |
Code of 2012, or substantially similar laws of any other
|
jurisdiction;
|
(3) the person has submitted an application for a |
license under this
Act which contains false information;
|
|
(4) the person is a member of the Board;
|
(5) a person defined in (1), (2), (3), or (4) is an |
officer, director, or
managerial employee of the firm or |
corporation;
|
(6) the firm or corporation employs a person defined in |
(1), (2), (3),
or (4) who participates in the management or |
operation of gambling
operations authorized under this |
Act; or
|
(7) a license of the person, firm, or corporation |
issued under this Act,
or
a license to own or operate |
gambling facilities in any other jurisdiction, has
been |
revoked.
|
(d) Each applicant shall submit with his or her |
application, on forms
prescribed by
the Board, 2 sets of his or |
her fingerprints.
|
(e) The Board shall charge each applicant a fee, set by the |
Board, to defray
the costs associated with the background |
investigation conducted by the
Board.
|
(f) A person who knowingly makes a false statement on an |
application is
guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
|
(g) The managers license shall be for a term not to exceed |
10 years, shall
be
renewable at the Board's option, and shall |
contain such terms and
provisions as the Board deems necessary |
to protect or enhance the
credibility and integrity of State |
gambling operations, achieve the highest
prospective total |
revenue to the State, and otherwise serve the interests of
the |
|
citizens of Illinois.
|
(h) Issuance of a managers license shall be subject to an |
open and
competitive bidding
process. The Board may select an |
applicant other than the lowest bidder by
price. If it does not |
select the lowest bidder, the Board shall issue a notice
of who
|
the lowest bidder was and a written decision as to why another |
bidder was
selected.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
|
(230 ILCS 10/7.6) |
Sec. 7.6. Business enterprise program. |
(a) For the purposes of this Section, the terms "minority", |
" minority-owned minority owned business", " woman female ", " |
women-owned female owned business", "person with a |
disability", and "business owned by a person with a disability" |
have the meanings ascribed to them in the Business Enterprise |
for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities |
Act. |
(b) The Board shall, by rule, establish goals for the award |
of contracts by each owners licensee to businesses owned by |
minorities, women females , and persons with disabilities, |
expressed as percentages of an owners licensee's total dollar |
amount of contracts awarded during each calendar year. Each |
owners licensee must make every effort to meet the goals |
established by the Board pursuant to this Section. When setting |
the goals for the award of contracts, the Board shall not |
|
include contracts where: (1) any purchasing mandates would be |
dependent upon the availability of minority-owned minority |
owned businesses, women-owned female owned businesses, and |
businesses owned by persons with disabilities ready, willing, |
and able with capacity to provide quality goods and services to |
a gaming operation at reasonable prices; (2) there are no or a |
limited number of licensed suppliers as defined by this Act for |
the goods or services provided to the licensee; (3) the |
licensee or its parent company owns a company that provides the |
goods or services; or (4) the goods or services are provided to |
the licensee by a publicly traded company. |
(c) Each owners licensee shall file with the Board an |
annual report of its utilization of minority-owned minority |
owned businesses, women-owned female owned businesses, and |
businesses owned by persons with disabilities during the |
preceding calendar year. The reports shall include a |
self-evaluation of the efforts of the owners licensee to meet |
its goals under this Section. |
(d) The owners licensee shall have the right to request a |
waiver from the requirements of this Section. The Board shall |
grant the waiver where the owners licensee demonstrates that |
there has been made a good faith effort to comply with the |
goals for participation by minority-owned minority owned |
businesses, women-owned female
owned businesses, and |
businesses owned by persons with
disabilities. |
(e) If the Board determines that its goals and policies are |
|
not being met by any owners licensee, then the Board may: |
(1) adopt remedies for such violations; and |
(2) recommend that the owners licensee provide |
additional opportunities for participation by |
minority-owned minority owned businesses, women-owned |
female owned businesses, and businesses owned by persons |
with disabilities; such recommendations may include, but |
shall not be limited to: |
(A) assurances of stronger and better focused
|
solicitation efforts to obtain more minority-owned |
minority owned businesses, women-owned female owned |
businesses, and businesses owned by persons with |
disabilities as potential sources of supply; |
(B) division of job or project requirements, when
|
economically feasible, into tasks or quantities to |
permit participation of minority-owned minority owned |
businesses, women-owned female owned businesses, and |
businesses owned by persons with disabilities; |
(C) elimination of extended experience or
|
capitalization requirements, when programmatically |
feasible, to permit participation of minority-owned |
minority owned businesses, women-owned female owned |
businesses, and businesses owned by persons with |
disabilities; |
(D) identification of specific proposed contracts |
as
particularly attractive or appropriate for |
|
participation by minority-owned minority owned |
businesses, women-owned female owned businesses, and |
businesses owned by persons with disabilities, such |
identification to result from and be coupled with the |
efforts of items (A) through (C);
and |
(E) implementation of regulations established
for |
the use of the sheltered market process. |
(f) The Board shall file, no later than March 1 of each |
year, an annual report that shall detail the level of |
achievement toward the goals specified in this Section over the |
3 most recent fiscal years. The annual report shall include, |
but need not be limited to: |
(1) a summary detailing expenditures subject
to the |
goals, the actual goals specified, and the goals attained |
by each owners licensee; and |
(2) an analysis of the level of overall goal
|
achievement concerning purchases from minority-owned |
minority owned businesses, women-owned female owned |
businesses, and businesses owned by persons with |
disabilities.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-490, eff. 8-16-13; 99-78, eff. 7-20-15.)
|
(230 ILCS 10/11.2)
|
Sec. 11.2. Relocation of riverboat home dock.
|
(a) A licensee that was not conducting
riverboat gambling |
on January 1, 1998 may apply to the Board for renewal and
|
|
approval of relocation to a new home dock location authorized |
under Section
3(c) and
the Board
shall grant the application |
and approval upon receipt by the licensee of
approval from the |
new municipality or county, as the case may be, in which the
|
licensee wishes to relocate pursuant to Section 7(j).
|
(b) Any licensee that relocates its home dock
pursuant
to |
this Section shall attain a level of at least 20% minority |
person and woman female
ownership, at least 16% and 4% |
respectively, within a time period
prescribed by the Board,
but |
not to exceed 12 months from the date
the licensee
begins |
conducting gambling at the new home dock location. The 12-month |
period
shall be extended by the amount of
time
necessary to |
conduct a background investigation pursuant to Section 6.
For |
the purposes of this
Section, the terms " woman female " and |
"minority person" have the meanings provided in
Section 2 of |
the
Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and |
Persons with Disabilities
Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-40, eff. 6-25-99.)
|
Section 155. The Environmental Protection Act is amended by |
changing Section 14.7 as follows: |
(415 ILCS 5/14.7) |
(This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a |
delayed effective date ) |
Sec. 14.7. Preservation of community water supplies. |
|
(a) The Agency shall adopt rules governing certain |
corrosion prevention projects carried out on community water |
supplies. Those rules shall not apply to buried pipelines |
including, but not limited to, pipes, mains, and joints. The |
rules shall exclude routine maintenance activities of |
community water supplies including, but not limited to, the use |
of protective coatings applied by the owner's utility personnel |
during the course of performing routine maintenance |
activities. The activities may include, but not be limited to, |
the painting of fire hydrants; routine over-coat painting of |
interior and exterior building surfaces such as floors, doors, |
windows, and ceilings; and routine touch-up and over-coat |
application of protective coatings typically found on water |
utility pumps, pipes, tanks, and other water treatment plant |
appurtenances and utility owned structures. Those rules shall |
include: |
(1) standards for ensuring that community water |
supplies carry out corrosion prevention and mitigation |
methods according to corrosion prevention industry |
standards adopted by the Agency; |
(2) requirements that community water supplies use: |
(A) protective coatings personnel to carry out |
corrosion prevention and mitigation methods on exposed |
water treatment tanks, exposed non-concrete water |
treatment structures, exposed water treatment pipe |
galleys; exposed pumps; and generators; the Agency |
|
shall not limit to protective coatings personnel any |
other work relating to prevention and mitigation |
methods on any other water treatment appurtenances |
where protective coatings are utilized for corrosion |
control and prevention to prolong the life of the water |
utility asset; and |
(B) inspectors to ensure that best practices and |
standards are adhered to on each corrosion prevention |
project; and |
(3) standards to prevent environmental degradation |
that might occur as a result of carrying out corrosion |
prevention and mitigation methods including, but not |
limited to, standards to prevent the improper handling and |
containment of hazardous materials, especially lead paint, |
removed from the exterior of a community water supply. |
In adopting rules under this subsection (a), the Agency
|
shall obtain input from corrosion industry experts
|
specializing in the training of personnel to
carry out |
corrosion prevention and mitigation methods. |
(b) As used in this Section: |
"Community water supply" has the meaning ascribed to that
|
term in Section 3.145 of this Act. |
"Corrosion" means a naturally occurring phenomenon
|
commonly defined as the deterioration of a metal that results |
from a chemical or electrochemical reaction
with its |
environment. |
|
"Corrosion prevention and mitigation methods" means the |
preparation, application, installation,
removal, or general |
maintenance as necessary of a
protective coating system, |
including any or more of the
following: |
(A) surface preparation and coating application on
|
the exterior or interior of a community water supply; |
or |
(B) shop painting of structural steel fabricated
|
for installation as part of a community water supply. |
"Corrosion prevention project" means carrying out
|
corrosion prevention and mitigation methods. "Corrosion |
prevention project" does not include clean-up related to |
surface preparation. |
"Protective coatings personnel" means personnel employed |
or retained by a contractor providing services covered by this |
Section to carry out corrosion prevention or mitigation methods |
or inspections. |
(c) This Section shall apply to only those projects |
receiving 100% funding from the State. |
(d) Each contract procured pursuant to the Illinois |
Procurement Code for the provision of services covered by this |
Section (1) shall comply with applicable provisions of the |
Illinois Procurement Code and (2) shall include provisions for |
reporting participation by minority persons, as defined by |
Section 2 of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women |
Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act; women females , as |
|
defined by Section 2 of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, |
Women Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act; and veterans, |
as defined by Section 45-57 of the Illinois Procurement Code, |
in apprenticeship and training programs in which the contractor |
or his or her subcontractors participate. The requirements of |
this Section do not apply to an individual licensed under the |
Professional Engineering Practice Act of 1989 or the Structural |
Engineering Act of 1989.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-923, eff. 7-1-17.) |
Section 160. The Public Private Agreements for the Illiana |
Expressway Act is amended by changing Section 20 as follows: |
(605 ILCS 130/20)
|
Sec. 20. Procurement; request for proposals process. |
(a) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, |
the Department on behalf of the State shall select a contractor |
through a competitive request for proposals process governed by |
the Illinois Procurement Code and rules adopted under that Code |
and this Act. |
(b) The competitive request for proposals process shall, at |
a minimum, solicit statements of qualification and proposals |
from offerors. |
(c) The competitive request for proposals process shall, at |
a minimum, take into account the following criteria: |
(1) The offeror's plans for the Illiana Expressway |
|
project; |
(2) The offeror's current and past business practices; |
(3) The offeror's poor or inadequate past performance |
in developing, financing, constructing, managing, or |
operating highways or other public assets; |
(4) The offeror's ability to meet and past performance |
in meeting or exhausting good faith efforts to meet the |
utilization goals for business enterprises established in |
the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and |
Persons with Disabilities Act; |
(5) The offeror's ability to comply with and past |
performance in complying with Section 2-105 of the Illinois |
Human Rights Act; and |
(6) The offeror's plans to comply with the Business |
Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with |
Disabilities Act and Section 2-105 of the Illinois Human |
Rights Act.
|
(d) The Department shall retain the services of an advisor |
or advisors with significant experience in the development, |
financing, construction, management, or operation of public |
assets to assist in the preparation of the request for |
proposals. |
(e) The Department shall not include terms in the request |
for proposals that provide an advantage, whether directly or |
indirectly, to any contractor presently providing goods, |
services, or equipment to the Department. |
|
(f) The Department shall select at least 2 offerors as |
finalists. The Department shall submit the offerors' |
statements of qualification and proposals to the Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability and the Procurement |
Policy Board, which shall, within 30 days of the submission, |
complete a review of the statements of qualification and |
proposals and, jointly or separately, report on, at a minimum, |
the satisfaction of the criteria contained in the request for |
proposals, the qualifications of the offerors, and the value of |
the proposals to the State. The Department shall not select an |
offeror as the contractor for the Illiana Expressway project |
until it has received and considered the findings of the |
Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability and |
the Procurement Policy Board as set forth in their respective |
reports. |
(g) Before awarding a public private agreement to an |
offeror, the Department shall schedule and hold a public |
hearing or hearings on the proposed public private agreement |
and publish notice of the hearing or hearings at least 7 days |
before the hearing and in accordance with Section 4-219 of the |
Illinois Highway Code. The notice must include the following: |
(1) the date, time, and place of the hearing and the |
address of the Department; |
(2) the subject matter of the hearing; |
(3) a description of the agreement that may be awarded; |
and |
|
(4) the recommendation that has been made to select an |
offeror as the contractor for the Illiana Expressway |
project. |
At the hearing, the Department shall allow the public to be |
heard on the subject of the hearing. |
(h) After the procedures required in this Section have been |
completed, the Department shall make a determination as to |
whether the offeror should be designated as the contractor for |
the Illiana Expressway project and shall submit the decision to |
the Governor and to the Governor's Office of Management and |
Budget. After review of the Department's determination, the |
Governor may accept or reject the determination. If the |
Governor accepts the determination of the Department, the |
Governor shall designate the offeror for the Illiana Expressway |
project.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-913, eff. 6-9-10.) |
Section 165. The Public-Private Agreements for the South |
Suburban Airport Act is amended by changing Section 2-30 as |
follows: |
(620 ILCS 75/2-30)
|
Sec. 2-30. Request for proposals process to enter into |
public-private agreements.
|
(a) Notwithstanding any provisions of the Illinois |
Procurement Code, the Department, on behalf of the State, shall |
|
select a contractor through a competitive request for proposals |
process governed by Section 2-30 of this Act. The Department |
will consult with the chief procurement officer for |
construction or construction-related activities designated |
pursuant to clause (2) of Section 1-15.15 of the Illinois |
Procurement Code on the competitive request for proposals |
process, and the Secretary will determine, in consultation with |
the chief procurement officer, which procedures to adopt and |
apply to the competitive request for proposals process in order |
to ensure an open, transparent, and efficient process that |
accomplishes the purposes of this Act. |
(b) The competitive request for proposals process shall, at |
a minimum, solicit statements of qualification and proposals |
from offerors. |
(c) The competitive request for proposals process shall, at |
a minimum, take into account the following criteria: |
(1) the offeror's plans for the South Suburban Airport |
project; |
(2) the offeror's current and past business practices; |
(3) the offeror's poor or inadequate past performance |
in developing, financing, constructing, managing, or |
operating airports or other public assets; |
(4) the offeror's ability to meet the utilization goals |
for business enterprises established in the Business |
Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with |
Disabilities Act; |
|
(5) the offeror's ability to comply with Section 2-105 |
of the Illinois Human Rights Act; and |
(6) the offeror's plans to comply with the Business |
Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and Persons with |
Disabilities Act and Section 2-105 of the Illinois Human |
Rights Act. |
(d) The Department shall retain the services of an advisor |
or advisors with significant experience in the development, |
financing, construction, management, or operation of public |
assets to assist in the preparation of the request for |
proposals. |
(e) The Department shall not include terms in the request |
for proposals that provide an advantage, whether directly or |
indirectly, to any contractor presently providing goods, |
services, or equipment to the Department. |
(f) The Department shall select one or more offerors as |
finalists. The Department shall submit the offeror's |
statements of qualification and proposals to the Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability and the Procurement |
Policy Board, which shall, within 30 days after the submission, |
complete a review of the statements of qualification and |
proposals and, jointly or separately, report on, at a minimum, |
the satisfaction of the criteria contained in the request for |
proposals, the qualifications of the offerors, and the value of |
the proposals to the State. The Department shall not select an |
offeror as the contractor for the South Suburban Airport |
|
project until it has received and considered the findings of |
the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability |
and the Procurement Policy Board as set forth in their |
respective reports. |
(g) Before awarding a public-private agreement to an |
offeror, the Department shall schedule and hold a public |
hearing or hearings on the proposed public-private agreement |
and publish notice of the hearing or hearings at least 7 days |
before the hearing. The notice shall include the following: |
(1) the date, time, and place of the hearing and the |
address of the Department; |
(2) the subject matter of the hearing; |
(3) a description of the agreement that may be awarded; |
and |
(4) the recommendation that has been made to select an |
offeror as the contractor for the South Suburban Airport |
project. |
At the hearing, the Department shall allow the public to be |
heard on the subject of the hearing. |
(h) After the procedures required in this Section have been |
completed, the Department shall make a determination as to |
whether the offeror should be designated as the contractor for |
the South Suburban Airport project and shall submit the |
decision to the Governor and to the Governor's Office of |
Management and Budget. After review of the Department's |
determination, the Governor may accept or reject the |
|
determination. If the Governor accepts the determination of the |
Department, the Governor shall designate the offeror for the |
South Suburban Airport project.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-109, eff. 7-25-13.) |
Section 170. The Public-Private Partnerships for |
Transportation Act is amended by changing Section 25 as |
follows: |
(630 ILCS 5/25)
|
Sec. 25. Design-build procurement. |
(a) This Section 25 shall apply only to transportation |
projects for which the Department or the Authority intends to |
execute a design-build agreement, in which case the Department |
or the Authority shall abide by the requirements and procedures |
of this Section 25 in addition to other applicable requirements |
and procedures set forth in this Act. |
(b)(1) The transportation agency must issue a notice of |
intent to receive proposals for the project at least 14 days |
before issuing the request for the qualifications. The |
transportation agency must publish the advance notice in a |
daily newspaper of general circulation in the county where the |
transportation agency is located. The transportation agency is |
encouraged to use publication of the notice in related |
construction industry service publications. A brief |
description of the proposed procurement must be included in the |
|
notice. The transportation agency must provide a copy of the |
request for qualifications to any party requesting a copy. |
(2) The request for qualifications shall be prepared for |
each project and must contain, without limitation, the |
following information: (i) the name of the transportation |
agency; (ii) a preliminary schedule for the completion of the |
contract; (iii) the proposed budget for the project and the |
source of funds, to the extent not already reflected in the |
Department's Multi-Year Highway Improvement Program; (iv) the |
shortlisting process for entities or groups of entities such as |
unincorporated joint ventures wishing to submit proposals (the |
transportation agency shall include, at a minimum, its normal |
prequalification, licensing, registration, and other |
requirements, but nothing contained herein precludes the use of |
additional criteria by the transportation agency); (v) a |
summary of anticipated material requirements of the contract, |
including but not limited to, the proposed terms and |
conditions, required performance and payment bonds, insurance, |
and the utilization goals established by the transportation |
agency for minority and women business enterprises and |
compliance with Section 2-105 of the Illinois Human Rights Act; |
and (vi) the anticipated number of entities that will be |
shortlisted for the request for proposals phase. |
(3) The transportation agency may include any other |
relevant information in the request for qualifications that it |
chooses to supply. The private entity shall be entitled to rely |
|
upon the accuracy of this documentation in the development of |
its statement of qualifications and its proposal only to the |
extent expressly warranted by the transportation agency. |
(4) The date that statements of qualifications are due must |
be at least 21 calendar days after the date of the issuance of |
the request for qualifications. In the event the cost of the |
project is estimated to exceed $12,000,000, then the statement |
of qualifications due date must be at least 28 calendar days |
after the date of the issuance of the request for |
qualifications. The transportation agency shall include in the |
request for proposals a minimum of 30 days to develop the |
proposals after the selection of entities from the evaluation |
of the statements of qualifications is completed. |
(c)(1) The transportation agency shall develop, with the |
assistance of a licensed design professional, the request for |
qualifications and the request for proposals, which shall |
include scope and performance criteria. The scope and |
performance criteria must be in sufficient detail and contain |
adequate information to reasonably apprise the private |
entities of the transportation agency's overall programmatic |
needs and goals, including criteria and preliminary design |
plans, general budget parameters, schedule, and delivery |
requirements. |
(2) Each request for qualifications and request for |
proposals shall also include a description of the level of |
design to be provided in the proposals. This description must |
|
include the scope and type of renderings, drawings, and |
specifications that, at a minimum, will be required by the |
transportation agency to be produced by the private entities. |
(3) The scope and performance criteria shall be prepared by |
a design professional who is an employee of the transportation |
agency, or the transportation agency may contract with an |
independent design professional selected under the |
Architectural, Engineering, and Land Surveying Qualifications |
Based Selection Act to provide these services. |
(4) The design professional that prepares the scope and |
performance criteria is prohibited from participating in any |
private entity proposal for the project. |
(d)(1) The transportation agency must use a two phase |
procedure for the selection of the successful design-build |
entity. The request for qualifications phase will evaluate and |
shortlist the private entities based on qualifications, and the |
request for proposals will evaluate the technical and cost |
proposals. |
(2) The transportation agency shall include in the request |
for qualifications the evaluating factors to be used in the |
request for qualifications phase. These factors are in addition |
to any prequalification requirements of private entities that |
the transportation agency has set forth. Each request for |
qualifications shall establish the relative importance |
assigned to each evaluation factor, including any weighting of |
criteria to be employed by the transportation agency. The |
|
transportation agency must maintain a record of the evaluation |
scoring to be disclosed in event of a protest regarding the |
solicitation. |
The transportation agency shall include the following |
criteria in every request for qualifications phase evaluation |
of private entities: (i) experience of personnel; (ii) |
successful experience with similar project types; (iii) |
financial capability; (iv) timeliness of past performance; (v) |
experience with similarly sized projects; (vi) successful |
reference checks of the firm; (vii) commitment to assign |
personnel for the duration of the project and qualifications of |
the entity's consultants; and (viii) ability or past |
performance in meeting or exhausting good faith efforts to meet |
the utilization goals for business enterprises established in |
the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women Females , and |
Persons with Disabilities Act and in complying with Section |
2-105 of the Illinois Human Rights Act. No proposal shall be |
considered that does not include an entity's plan to comply |
with the requirements regarding minority and women business |
enterprises and economically disadvantaged firms established |
by the transportation agency and with Section 2-105 of the |
Illinois Human Rights Act. The transportation agency may |
include any additional relevant criteria in the request for |
qualifications phase that it deems necessary for a proper |
qualification review. |
Upon completion of the qualifications evaluation, the |
|
transportation agency shall create a shortlist of the most |
highly qualified private entities. |
The transportation agency shall notify the entities |
selected for the shortlist in writing. This notification shall |
commence the period for the preparation of the request for |
proposals phase technical and cost evaluations. The |
transportation agency must allow sufficient time for the |
shortlist entities to prepare their proposals considering the |
scope and detail requested by the transportation agency. |
(3) The transportation agency shall include in the request |
for proposals the evaluating factors to be used in the |
technical and cost submission components. Each request for |
proposals shall establish, for both the technical and cost |
submission components, the relative importance assigned to |
each evaluation factor, including any weighting of criteria to |
be employed by the transportation agency. The transportation |
agency must maintain a record of the evaluation scoring to be |
disclosed in event of a protest regarding the solicitation. |
The transportation agency shall include the following |
criteria in every request for proposals phase technical |
evaluation of private entities: (i) compliance with objectives |
of the project; (ii) compliance of proposed services to the |
request for proposal requirements; (iii) compliance with the |
request for proposal requirements of products or materials |
proposed; (iv) quality of design parameters; and (v) design |
concepts. The transportation agency may include any additional |
|
relevant technical evaluation factors it deems necessary for |
proper selection. |
The transportation agency shall include the following |
criteria in every request for proposals phase cost evaluation: |
the total project cost and the time of completion. The |
transportation agency may include any additional relevant |
technical evaluation factors it deems necessary for proper |
selection. The guaranteed maximum project cost criteria |
weighing factor shall not exceed 30%. |
The transportation agency shall directly employ or retain a |
licensed design professional to evaluate the technical and cost |
submissions to determine if the technical submissions are in |
accordance with generally accepted industry standards. |
(e) Statements of qualifications and proposals must be |
properly identified and sealed. Statements of qualifications |
and proposals may not be reviewed until after the deadline for |
submission has passed as set forth in the request for |
qualifications or the request for proposals. All private |
entities submitting statements of qualifications or proposals |
shall be disclosed after the deadline for submission, and all |
private entities who are selected for request for proposals |
phase evaluation shall also be disclosed at the time of that |
determination. |
Design-build proposals shall include a bid bond in the form |
and security as designated in the request for proposals. |
Proposals shall also contain a separate sealed envelope with |
|
the cost information within the overall proposal submission. |
Proposals shall include a list of all design professionals and |
other entities to which any work identified in Section 30-30 of |
the Illinois Procurement Code as a subdivision of construction |
work may be subcontracted during the performance of the |
contract to the extent known at the time of proposal. If the |
information is not known at the time of proposal, then the |
design-build agreement shall require the identification prior |
to a previously unlisted subcontractor commencing work on the |
transportation project. |
Statements of qualifications and proposals must meet all |
material requirements of the request for qualifications or |
request for proposals, or else they may be rejected as |
non-responsive. The transportation agency shall have the right |
to reject any and all statements of qualifications and |
proposals. |
The private entity's proprietary intellectual property |
contained in the drawings and specifications of any |
unsuccessful statement of qualifications or proposal shall |
remain the property of the private entity. |
The transportation agency shall review the statements of |
qualifications and the proposals for compliance with the |
performance criteria and evaluation factors. |
Statements of qualifications and proposals may be |
withdrawn prior to the due date and time for submissions for |
any cause. After evaluation begins by the transportation |
|
agency, clear and convincing evidence of error is required for |
withdrawal.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-502, eff. 8-23-11; 97-858, eff. 7-27-12.) |
Section 175. The Criminal Code of 2012 is amended by |
changing Sections 17-10.3 and 33E-2 as follows: |
(720 ILCS 5/17-10.3) |
Sec. 17-10.3. Deception relating to certification of |
disadvantaged business enterprises. |
(a) Fraudulently obtaining or retaining certification. A |
person
who, in the course of business, fraudulently obtains or |
retains
certification as a minority-owned minority owned |
business, women-owned female owned business, service-disabled |
veteran-owned small business, or veteran-owned small business |
commits
a Class 2 felony. |
(b) Willfully making a false statement. A person who, in |
the
course of business, willfully makes a false statement |
whether by affidavit,
report or other representation, to an |
official or employee of a State
agency or the Minority and |
Female Business Enterprise Council for Minorities, Women, and |
Persons with Disabilities for the
purpose of influencing the |
certification or denial of certification of any
business entity |
as a minority-owned minority owned business, women-owned |
female owned business, service-disabled veteran-owned small |
business, or veteran-owned small business
commits a Class 2 |
|
felony. |
(c) Willfully obstructing or impeding an official or |
employee of
any agency in his or her investigation.
Any person |
who, in the course of business, willfully obstructs or impedes
|
an official or employee of any State agency or the Minority and |
Female
Business Enterprise Council for Minorities, Women, and |
Persons with Disabilities
who is investigating the |
qualifications of a business
entity which has requested |
certification as a minority-owned minority owned business, |
women-owned
female owned business, service-disabled |
veteran-owned small business, or veteran-owned small business |
commits a Class 2 felony. |
(d) Fraudulently obtaining public moneys reserved for
|
disadvantaged business enterprises. Any person who, in the |
course of
business, fraudulently obtains public moneys |
reserved for, or allocated or
available to, minority-owned |
minority owned businesses, women-owned female owned |
businesses, service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses, |
or veteran-owned small businesses commits a
Class 2 felony. |
(e) Definitions. As used in this Article, " minority-owned |
minority owned
business", " women-owned female owned business", |
"State agency" with respect to minority-owned minority owned |
businesses and women-owned female owned businesses, and |
"certification" with respect to minority-owned minority owned |
businesses and women-owned female owned businesses shall
have |
the meanings ascribed to them in Section 2 of the Business |
|
Enterprise for
Minorities, Women Females , and
Persons with |
Disabilities Act. As used in this Article, "service-disabled |
veteran-owned small business", "veteran-owned small business", |
"State agency" with respect to service-disabled veteran-owned |
small businesses and veteran-owned small businesses, and |
"certification" with respect to service-disabled veteran-owned |
small businesses and veteran-owned small businesses have the |
same meanings as in Section 45-57 of the Illinois Procurement |
Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11; 97-260, eff. 8-5-11.)
|
(720 ILCS 5/33E-2) (from Ch. 38, par. 33E-2)
|
Sec. 33E-2. Definitions. In this Act:
|
(a) "Public contract" means any
contract for goods, |
services or construction let to any person with or
without bid |
by any unit of State or local government.
|
(b) "Unit of State or local government" means the State, |
any unit of state
government or agency thereof, any county or |
municipal government or committee
or agency thereof, or any |
other entity which is funded by or expends tax
dollars or the |
proceeds of publicly guaranteed bonds.
|
(c) "Change order" means a change in a contract term other |
than as
specifically provided for in the contract which |
authorizes or necessitates
any increase or decrease in the cost |
of the contract or the time to completion.
|
(d) "Person" means any individual, firm, partnership,
|
|
corporation, joint venture or other entity, but does not |
include a unit
of State or local government.
|
(e) "Person employed by any unit of State or local |
government" means
any employee of a unit of State or local |
government and any person defined in
subsection (d) who is |
authorized by such unit of State or local government
to act on |
its behalf in relation to any public contract.
|
(f) "Sheltered market" has the meaning ascribed to it in |
Section 8b of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women
|
Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act; except that, with |
respect to State contracts set aside for award to |
service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses and |
veteran-owned small businesses pursuant to Section 45-57 of the |
Illinois Procurement Code, "sheltered market" means |
procurements pursuant to that Section.
|
(g) "Kickback" means any money, fee, commission, credit, |
gift, gratuity,
thing of value, or compensation of any kind |
which is provided, directly or
indirectly, to any prime |
contractor, prime contractor employee,
subcontractor, or |
subcontractor employee for the purpose of improperly
obtaining |
or rewarding favorable treatment in connection with a prime
|
contract or in connection with a subcontract relating to a |
prime contract.
|
(h) "Prime contractor" means any person who has entered |
into
a public contract.
|
(i) "Prime contractor employee" means any officer, |
|
partner, employee, or
agent of a prime contractor.
|
(i-5) "Stringing" means knowingly structuring a contract
|
or job order to avoid the contract or job order being subject |
to competitive
bidding requirements.
|
(j) "Subcontract" means a contract or contractual action |
entered into by
a prime contractor or subcontractor for the |
purpose of obtaining goods or
services of any kind under a |
prime contract.
|
(k) "Subcontractor" (1) means any person, other than the |
prime
contractor, who offers to furnish or furnishes any goods |
or services of any
kind under a prime contract or a subcontract |
entered into in connection
with such prime contract; and (2) |
includes any person who offers to furnish
or furnishes goods or |
services to the prime contractor or a higher tier
|
subcontractor.
|
(l) "Subcontractor employee" means any officer, partner, |
employee, or
agent of a subcontractor.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-260, eff. 8-5-11.)
|
Section 180. The Business Corporation Act of 1983 is |
amended by changing Section 14.05 as follows:
|
(805 ILCS 5/14.05) (from Ch. 32, par. 14.05)
|
Sec. 14.05. Annual report of domestic or foreign |
corporation. Each domestic corporation organized under any |
general law or
special act of this State authorizing the |
|
corporation to issue shares,
other than homestead |
associations, building and loan associations, banks
and |
insurance companies (which includes a syndicate or limited |
syndicate
regulated under Article V 1/2 of the Illinois |
Insurance Code or member of a
group of underwriters regulated |
under Article V of that Code), and each
foreign corporation |
(except members of a group of underwriters regulated
under |
Article V of the Illinois Insurance Code) authorized to |
transact
business in this State, shall file, within the time |
prescribed by this
Act, an annual report setting forth:
|
(a) The name of the corporation.
|
(b) The address, including street and number, or rural |
route number, of
its registered office in this State, and |
the name of its registered agent
at that address.
|
(c) The address, including street and number, or rural |
route number, of
its principal office.
|
(d) The names and respective addresses, including |
street and
number, or rural route number, of its directors |
and officers.
|
(e) A statement of the aggregate number of shares which |
the corporation
has authority to issue, itemized by classes |
and series, if any, within a class.
|
(f) A statement of the aggregate number of issued |
shares, itemized by
classes, and series, if any, within a |
class.
|
(g) A statement, expressed in dollars, of the amount of |
|
paid-in capital
of the corporation as defined in this Act.
|
(h) Either a statement that (1) all the property of the |
corporation is
located in this State and all of its |
business is transacted at or from places
of business in |
this State, or the corporation elects to pay the annual
|
franchise tax on the basis of its entire paid-in capital, |
or (2) a
statement, expressed in dollars, of the value of |
all the property owned by
the corporation, wherever |
located, and the value of the property located
within this |
State, and a statement, expressed in dollars, of the gross
|
amount of business transacted by the corporation and the |
gross amount thereof
transacted by the corporation at or |
from places of business in this State
as of the close of |
its fiscal year on or immediately preceding the last day of
|
the third month prior to the anniversary month or in the |
case of a
corporation which has established an extended |
filing month, as of the close
of its fiscal year on or |
immediately preceding the last day of the third month
prior |
to the extended filing month; however, in the case of a |
domestic
corporation that has not completed its first |
fiscal year, the statement with
respect to property owned |
shall be as of the last day of the third month
preceding |
the anniversary month and the statement with respect to |
business
transacted shall be furnished for the period |
between the date
of incorporation and the last day of the |
third month preceding the
anniversary month. In the case of |
|
a foreign corporation that has not been
authorized to |
transact business in this State for a period of 12 months |
and
has not commenced transacting business prior to |
obtaining
authority, the statement with respect to |
property owned shall be as of the
last day of the third |
month preceding the anniversary month and the
statement |
with respect to business transacted shall be furnished for |
the
period between the date of its authorization to |
transact business in this
State and the last day of the |
third month preceding the anniversary month.
If the data |
referenced in item (2) of this subsection is not completed,
|
the franchise tax provided for in this Act shall be |
computed on the basis of
the entire paid-in capital.
|
(i) A statement, including the basis therefor, of |
status as a
" minority-owned minority owned business" or as |
a " women-owned female owned business" as those terms
are |
defined in the Business Enterprise for
Minorities, Women |
Females , and Persons with Disabilities Act.
|
(j) Additional information as may be necessary or |
appropriate in
order to enable the Secretary of State to |
administer this Act and to verify
the proper amount of fees |
and franchise taxes payable by the corporation.
|
The annual report shall be made on forms prescribed and |
furnished by
the Secretary of State, and the information |
therein required by paragraphs
(a) through (d), both inclusive, |
of this Section, shall be given as of the date
of the execution |
|
of the annual report and the information therein required
by |
paragraphs (e), (f) and (g) of this Section shall be given as |
of the
last day of the third month preceding the anniversary |
month, except that
the information required by paragraphs (e), |
(f) and (g) shall, in the case
of a corporation which has |
established an extended filing month, be given
in its final |
transition annual report and each subsequent annual report as
|
of the close of its fiscal year immediately preceding its |
extended filing
month. It shall be executed by the corporation |
by its president, a
vice-president, secretary, assistant |
secretary, treasurer or other officer
duly authorized by the |
board of directors of the corporation to execute
those reports, |
and verified by him or her, or, if the corporation is in the
|
hands of a receiver or trustee, it shall be executed on behalf |
of the
corporation and verified by the receiver or trustee.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-16, eff. 6-28-01; 92-33, eff. 7-1-01; 93-59, |
7-1-03.)
|
Section 999. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
|