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Public Act 100-1148 |
HB3538 Enrolled | LRB100 05680 RJF 15698 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 Illinois Administrative Procedure Act is |
amended by changing Section 5-140 as follows:
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(5 ILCS 100/5-140) (from Ch. 127, par. 1005-140)
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Sec. 5-140. Reports to the General Assembly. The Joint |
Committee shall
report its findings, conclusions, and |
recommendations, including suggested
legislation, to the |
General Assembly by February 1 of each year.
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The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader, and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives, the President, the Minority
Leader, and the |
Secretary of the Senate, and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization
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Act, and filing additional copies with the State Government |
Report
Distribution Center for the General Assembly as required |
under paragraph
(t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
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(Source: P.A. 87-823.)
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Section 10. The Election Code is amended by changing |
Section 1A-8 as follows:
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(10 ILCS 5/1A-8) (from Ch. 46, par. 1A-8)
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Sec. 1A-8. The State Board of Elections shall exercise the |
following
powers and perform the following duties in addition |
to any powers or duties
otherwise provided for by law:
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(1) Assume all duties and responsibilities of the State |
Electoral Board
and the Secretary of State as heretofore |
provided in this Code;
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(2) Disseminate information to and consult with |
election authorities
concerning the conduct of elections |
and registration in accordance with the
laws of this State |
and the laws of the United States;
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(3) Furnish to each election authority prior to each |
primary and general
election and any other election it |
deems necessary, a manual of uniform
instructions |
consistent with the provisions of this Code which shall be |
used
by election authorities in the preparation of the |
official manual of
instruction to be used by the judges of |
election in any such election. In
preparing such manual, |
the State Board shall consult with representatives
of the |
election authorities throughout the State. The State Board |
may
provide separate portions of the uniform instructions |
applicable to
different election jurisdictions which |
administer elections under different
options provided by |
law. The State Board may by regulation require
particular |
portions of the uniform instructions to be included in any
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official manual of instructions published by election |
authorities. Any
manual of instructions published by any |
election authority shall be
identical with the manual of |
uniform instructions issued by the Board, but
may be |
adapted by the election authority to accommodate special or |
unusual
local election problems, provided that all manuals |
published by election
authorities must be consistent with |
the provisions of this Code in all
respects and must |
receive the approval of the State Board of Elections
prior |
to publication; provided further that if the State Board |
does not
approve or disapprove of a proposed manual within |
60 days of its
submission, the manual shall be deemed |
approved.
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(4) Prescribe and require the use of such uniform |
forms, notices, and
other supplies not inconsistent with |
the provisions of this Code as it shall
deem advisable |
which shall be used by election authorities in the conduct
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of elections and registrations;
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(5) Prepare and certify the form of ballot for any |
proposed amendment to
the Constitution of the State of |
Illinois, or any referendum to be
submitted to the electors |
throughout the State or, when required to do so
by law, to |
the voters of any area or unit of local government of the |
State;
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(6) Require such statistical reports regarding the |
conduct of elections
and registration from election |
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authorities as may be deemed necessary;
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(7) Review and inspect procedures and records relating |
to conduct of
elections and registration as may be deemed |
necessary, and to report
violations of election laws to the |
appropriate State's Attorney or the Attorney General;
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(8) Recommend to the General Assembly legislation to |
improve the
administration of elections and registration;
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(9) Adopt, amend or rescind rules and regulations in |
the performance of
its duties provided that all such rules |
and regulations must be consistent
with the provisions of |
this Article 1A or issued pursuant to authority
otherwise |
provided by law;
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(10) Determine the validity and sufficiency of |
petitions filed under
Article XIV, Section 3, of the |
Constitution of the State of Illinois of 1970;
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(11) Maintain in its principal office a research |
library that includes,
but is not limited to, abstracts of |
votes by precinct for general primary
elections and general |
elections, current precinct maps and current precinct
poll |
lists from all election jurisdictions within the State. The |
research
library shall be open to the public during regular |
business hours. Such
abstracts, maps and lists shall be |
preserved as permanent records and shall
be available for |
examination and copying at a reasonable cost;
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(12) Supervise the administration of the registration |
and election laws
throughout the State;
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(13) Obtain from the Department of Central Management |
Services,
under Section 405-250 of the Department of |
Central Management
Services Law (20 ILCS 405/405-250),
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such use
of electronic data processing equipment as may be |
required to perform the
duties of the State Board of |
Elections and to provide election-related
information to |
candidates, public and party officials, interested civic
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organizations and the general public in a timely and |
efficient manner;
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(14) To take such action as may be necessary or |
required to give
effect to directions of the national |
committee or State central committee of an established
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political party under Sections 7-8, 7-11, and 7-14.1 or |
such other
provisions as may be applicable pertaining to |
the selection of delegates
and alternate delegates to an |
established political party's national
nominating |
conventions or, notwithstanding any candidate |
certification
schedule contained within this Code, the |
certification of the
Presidential and Vice
Presidential |
candidate selected by the established political party's |
national nominating
convention;
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(15) To post all early voting sites separated by |
election authority and hours of operation on its website at |
least 5 business days before the period for early voting |
begins; |
(16) To post on its website the statewide totals, and |
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totals separated by each election authority, for each of |
the counts received pursuant to Section 1-9.2; and |
(17) To post on its website, in a downloadable format, |
the information received from each election authority |
under Section 1-17. |
The Board may by regulation delegate any of its duties or
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functions under this Article, except that final determinations |
and orders
under this Article shall be issued only by the |
Board.
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The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader, and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives, the President, the Minority
Leader, and the |
Secretary of the Senate, and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act, and
filing such additional copies with the State |
Government Report Distribution
Center for the General Assembly |
as is required under paragraph (t) of
Section 7 of the State |
Library Act.
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(Source: P.A. 100-623, eff. 7-20-18; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18.)
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Section 15. The Executive Reorganization Implementation |
Act is amended by changing Section 11 as follows:
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(15 ILCS 15/11) (from Ch. 127, par. 1811)
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Sec. 11.
Every agency created or assigned new functions |
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pursuant to a
reorganization shall report to the General |
Assembly not later than 6 months
after the reorganization takes |
effect and annually thereafter for 3 years.
This report shall |
include data on the economies effected by the reorganization
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and an analysis of the effect of the reorganization on State |
government.
The report shall also include the agency's |
recommendations for further legislation
relating to |
reorganization.
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The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General |
Assembly",
approved February
25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional copies with the State Government
Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly as is required |
under
paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
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(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
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Section 20. The Illinois Act on the Aging is amended by |
changing Sections 4.02 and 7.09 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 105/4.02) (from Ch. 23, par. 6104.02)
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Sec. 4.02. Community Care Program. The Department shall |
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establish a program of services to
prevent unnecessary |
institutionalization of persons age 60 and older in
need of |
long term care or who are established as persons who suffer |
from
Alzheimer's disease or a related disorder under the |
Alzheimer's Disease
Assistance Act, thereby enabling them
to |
remain in their own homes or in other living arrangements. Such
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preventive services, which may be coordinated with other |
programs for the
aged and monitored by area agencies on aging |
in cooperation with the
Department, may include, but are not |
limited to, any or all of the following:
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(a) (blank);
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(b) (blank);
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(c) home care aide services;
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(d) personal assistant services;
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(e) adult day services;
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(f) home-delivered meals;
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(g) education in self-care;
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(h) personal care services;
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(i) adult day health services;
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(j) habilitation services;
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(k) respite care;
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(k-5) community reintegration services;
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(k-6) flexible senior services; |
(k-7) medication management; |
(k-8) emergency home response;
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(l) other nonmedical social services that may enable |
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the person
to become self-supporting; or
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(m) clearinghouse for information provided by senior |
citizen home owners
who want to rent rooms to or share |
living space with other senior citizens.
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The Department shall establish eligibility standards for |
such
services. In determining the amount and nature of services
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for which a person may qualify, consideration shall not be |
given to the
value of cash, property or other assets held in |
the name of the person's
spouse pursuant to a written agreement |
dividing marital property into equal
but separate shares or |
pursuant to a transfer of the person's interest in a
home to |
his spouse, provided that the spouse's share of the marital
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property is not made available to the person seeking such |
services.
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Beginning January 1, 2008, the Department shall require as |
a condition of eligibility that all new financially eligible |
applicants apply for and enroll in medical assistance under |
Article V of the Illinois Public Aid Code in accordance with |
rules promulgated by the Department.
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The Department shall, in conjunction with the Department of |
Public Aid (now Department of Healthcare and Family Services),
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seek appropriate amendments under Sections 1915 and 1924 of the |
Social
Security Act. The purpose of the amendments shall be to |
extend eligibility
for home and community based services under |
Sections 1915 and 1924 of the
Social Security Act to persons |
who transfer to or for the benefit of a
spouse those amounts of |
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income and resources allowed under Section 1924 of
the Social |
Security Act. Subject to the approval of such amendments, the
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Department shall extend the provisions of Section 5-4 of the |
Illinois
Public Aid Code to persons who, but for the provision |
of home or
community-based services, would require the level of |
care provided in an
institution, as is provided for in federal |
law. Those persons no longer
found to be eligible for receiving |
noninstitutional services due to changes
in the eligibility |
criteria shall be given 45 days notice prior to actual
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termination. Those persons receiving notice of termination may |
contact the
Department and request the determination be |
appealed at any time during the
45 day notice period. The |
target
population identified for the purposes of this Section |
are persons age 60
and older with an identified service need. |
Priority shall be given to those
who are at imminent risk of |
institutionalization. The services shall be
provided to |
eligible persons age 60 and older to the extent that the cost
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of the services together with the other personal maintenance
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expenses of the persons are reasonably related to the standards
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established for care in a group facility appropriate to the |
person's
condition. These non-institutional services, pilot |
projects or
experimental facilities may be provided as part of |
or in addition to
those authorized by federal law or those |
funded and administered by the
Department of Human Services. |
The Departments of Human Services, Healthcare and Family |
Services,
Public Health, Veterans' Affairs, and Commerce and |
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Economic Opportunity and
other appropriate agencies of State, |
federal and local governments shall
cooperate with the |
Department on Aging in the establishment and development
of the |
non-institutional services. The Department shall require an |
annual
audit from all personal assistant
and home care aide |
vendors contracting with
the Department under this Section. The |
annual audit shall assure that each
audited vendor's procedures |
are in compliance with Department's financial
reporting |
guidelines requiring an administrative and employee wage and |
benefits cost split as defined in administrative rules. The |
audit is a public record under
the Freedom of Information Act. |
The Department shall execute, relative to
the nursing home |
prescreening project, written inter-agency
agreements with the |
Department of Human Services and the Department
of Healthcare |
and Family Services, to effect the following: (1) intake |
procedures and common
eligibility criteria for those persons |
who are receiving non-institutional
services; and (2) the |
establishment and development of non-institutional
services in |
areas of the State where they are not currently available or |
are
undeveloped. On and after July 1, 1996, all nursing home |
prescreenings for
individuals 60 years of age or older shall be |
conducted by the Department.
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As part of the Department on Aging's routine training of |
case managers and case manager supervisors, the Department may |
include information on family futures planning for persons who |
are age 60 or older and who are caregivers of their adult |
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children with developmental disabilities. The content of the |
training shall be at the Department's discretion. |
The Department is authorized to establish a system of |
recipient copayment
for services provided under this Section, |
such copayment to be based upon
the recipient's ability to pay |
but in no case to exceed the actual cost of
the services |
provided. Additionally, any portion of a person's income which
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is equal to or less than the federal poverty standard shall not |
be
considered by the Department in determining the copayment. |
The level of
such copayment shall be adjusted whenever |
necessary to reflect any change
in the officially designated |
federal poverty standard.
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The Department, or the Department's authorized |
representative, may
recover the amount of moneys expended for |
services provided to or in
behalf of a person under this |
Section by a claim against the person's
estate or against the |
estate of the person's surviving spouse, but no
recovery may be |
had until after the death of the surviving spouse, if
any, and |
then only at such time when there is no surviving child who
is |
under age 21 or blind or who has a permanent and total |
disability. This
paragraph, however, shall not bar recovery, at |
the death of the person, of
moneys for services provided to the |
person or in behalf of the person under
this Section to which |
the person was not entitled;
provided that such recovery shall |
not be enforced against any real estate while
it is occupied as |
a homestead by the surviving spouse or other dependent, if no
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claims by other creditors have been filed against the estate, |
or, if such
claims have been filed, they remain dormant for |
failure of prosecution or
failure of the claimant to compel |
administration of the estate for the purpose
of payment. This |
paragraph shall not bar recovery from the estate of a spouse,
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under Sections 1915 and 1924 of the Social Security Act and |
Section 5-4 of the
Illinois Public Aid Code, who precedes a |
person receiving services under this
Section in death. All |
moneys for services
paid to or in behalf of the person under |
this Section shall be claimed for
recovery from the deceased |
spouse's estate. "Homestead", as used
in this paragraph, means |
the dwelling house and
contiguous real estate occupied by a |
surviving spouse
or relative, as defined by the rules and |
regulations of the Department of Healthcare and Family |
Services, regardless of the value of the property.
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The Department shall increase the effectiveness of the |
existing Community Care Program by: |
(1) ensuring that in-home services included in the care |
plan are available on evenings and weekends; |
(2) ensuring that care plans contain the services that |
eligible participants
need based on the number of days in a |
month, not limited to specific blocks of time, as |
identified by the comprehensive assessment tool selected |
by the Department for use statewide, not to exceed the |
total monthly service cost maximum allowed for each |
service; the Department shall develop administrative rules |
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to implement this item (2); |
(3) ensuring that the participants have the right to |
choose the services contained in their care plan and to |
direct how those services are provided, based on |
administrative rules established by the Department; |
(4) ensuring that the determination of need tool is |
accurate in determining the participants' level of need; to |
achieve this, the Department, in conjunction with the Older |
Adult Services Advisory Committee, shall institute a study |
of the relationship between the Determination of Need |
scores, level of need, service cost maximums, and the |
development and utilization of service plans no later than |
May 1, 2008; findings and recommendations shall be |
presented to the Governor and the General Assembly no later |
than January 1, 2009; recommendations shall include all |
needed changes to the service cost maximums schedule and |
additional covered services; |
(5) ensuring that homemakers can provide personal care |
services that may or may not involve contact with clients, |
including but not limited to: |
(A) bathing; |
(B) grooming; |
(C) toileting; |
(D) nail care; |
(E) transferring; |
(F) respiratory services; |
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(G) exercise; or |
(H) positioning; |
(6) ensuring that homemaker program vendors are not |
restricted from hiring homemakers who are family members of |
clients or recommended by clients; the Department may not, |
by rule or policy, require homemakers who are family |
members of clients or recommended by clients to accept |
assignments in homes other than the client; |
(7) ensuring that the State may access maximum federal |
matching funds by seeking approval for the Centers for |
Medicare and Medicaid Services for modifications to the |
State's home and community based services waiver and |
additional waiver opportunities, including applying for |
enrollment in the Balance Incentive Payment Program by May |
1, 2013, in order to maximize federal matching funds; this |
shall include, but not be limited to, modification that |
reflects all changes in the Community Care Program services |
and all increases in the services cost maximum; |
(8) ensuring that the determination of need tool |
accurately reflects the service needs of individuals with |
Alzheimer's disease and related dementia disorders; |
(9) ensuring that services are authorized accurately |
and consistently for the Community Care Program (CCP); the |
Department shall implement a Service Authorization policy |
directive; the purpose shall be to ensure that eligibility |
and services are authorized accurately and consistently in |
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the CCP program; the policy directive shall clarify service |
authorization guidelines to Care Coordination Units and |
Community Care Program providers no later than May 1, 2013; |
(10) working in conjunction with Care Coordination |
Units, the Department of Healthcare and Family Services, |
the Department of Human Services, Community Care Program |
providers, and other stakeholders to make improvements to |
the Medicaid claiming processes and the Medicaid |
enrollment procedures or requirements as needed, |
including, but not limited to, specific policy changes or |
rules to improve the up-front enrollment of participants in |
the Medicaid program and specific policy changes or rules |
to insure more prompt submission of bills to the federal |
government to secure maximum federal matching dollars as |
promptly as possible; the Department on Aging shall have at |
least 3 meetings with stakeholders by January 1, 2014 in |
order to address these improvements; |
(11) requiring home care service providers to comply |
with the rounding of hours worked provisions under the |
federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and as set forth in |
29 CFR 785.48(b) by May 1, 2013; |
(12) implementing any necessary policy changes or |
promulgating any rules, no later than January 1, 2014, to |
assist the Department of Healthcare and Family Services in |
moving as many participants as possible, consistent with |
federal regulations, into coordinated care plans if a care |
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coordination plan that covers long term care is available |
in the recipient's area; and |
(13) maintaining fiscal year 2014 rates at the same |
level established on January 1, 2013. |
By January 1, 2009 or as soon after the end of the Cash and |
Counseling Demonstration Project as is practicable, the |
Department may, based on its evaluation of the demonstration |
project, promulgate rules concerning personal assistant |
services, to include, but need not be limited to, |
qualifications, employment screening, rights under fair labor |
standards, training, fiduciary agent, and supervision |
requirements. All applicants shall be subject to the provisions |
of the Health Care Worker Background Check Act.
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The Department shall develop procedures to enhance |
availability of
services on evenings, weekends, and on an |
emergency basis to meet the
respite needs of caregivers. |
Procedures shall be developed to permit the
utilization of |
services in successive blocks of 24 hours up to the monthly
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maximum established by the Department. Workers providing these |
services
shall be appropriately trained.
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Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
1991, no person
may perform chore/housekeeping and home care |
aide services under a program
authorized by this Section unless |
that person has been issued a certificate
of pre-service to do |
so by his or her employing agency. Information
gathered to |
effect such certification shall include (i) the person's name,
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(ii) the date the person was hired by his or her current |
employer, and
(iii) the training, including dates and levels. |
Persons engaged in the
program authorized by this Section |
before the effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1991 shall |
be issued a certificate of all pre- and
in-service training |
from his or her employer upon submitting the necessary
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information. The employing agency shall be required to retain |
records of
all staff pre- and in-service training, and shall |
provide such records to
the Department upon request and upon |
termination of the employer's contract
with the Department. In |
addition, the employing agency is responsible for
the issuance |
of certifications of in-service training completed to their
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employees.
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The Department is required to develop a system to ensure |
that persons
working as home care aides and personal assistants
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receive increases in their
wages when the federal minimum wage |
is increased by requiring vendors to
certify that they are |
meeting the federal minimum wage statute for home care aides
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and personal assistants. An employer that cannot ensure that |
the minimum
wage increase is being given to home care aides and |
personal assistants
shall be denied any increase in |
reimbursement costs.
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The Community Care Program Advisory Committee is created in |
the Department on Aging. The Director shall appoint individuals |
to serve in the Committee, who shall serve at their own |
expense. Members of the Committee must abide by all applicable |
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ethics laws. The Committee shall advise the Department on |
issues related to the Department's program of services to |
prevent unnecessary institutionalization. The Committee shall |
meet on a bi-monthly basis and shall serve to identify and |
advise the Department on present and potential issues affecting |
the service delivery network, the program's clients, and the |
Department and to recommend solution strategies. Persons |
appointed to the Committee shall be appointed on, but not |
limited to, their own and their agency's experience with the |
program, geographic representation, and willingness to serve. |
The Director shall appoint members to the Committee to |
represent provider, advocacy, policy research, and other |
constituencies committed to the delivery of high quality home |
and community-based services to older adults. Representatives |
shall be appointed to ensure representation from community care |
providers including, but not limited to, adult day service |
providers, homemaker providers, case coordination and case |
management units, emergency home response providers, statewide |
trade or labor unions that represent home care
aides and direct |
care staff, area agencies on aging, adults over age 60, |
membership organizations representing older adults, and other |
organizational entities, providers of care, or individuals |
with demonstrated interest and expertise in the field of home |
and community care as determined by the Director. |
Nominations may be presented from any agency or State |
association with interest in the program. The Director, or his |
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or her designee, shall serve as the permanent co-chair of the |
advisory committee. One other co-chair shall be nominated and |
approved by the members of the committee on an annual basis. |
Committee members' terms of appointment shall be for 4 years |
with one-quarter of the appointees' terms expiring each year. A |
member shall continue to serve until his or her replacement is |
named. The Department shall fill vacancies that have a |
remaining term of over one year, and this replacement shall |
occur through the annual replacement of expiring terms. The |
Director shall designate Department staff to provide technical |
assistance and staff support to the committee. Department |
representation shall not constitute membership of the |
committee. All Committee papers, issues, recommendations, |
reports, and meeting memoranda are advisory only. The Director, |
or his or her designee, shall make a written report, as |
requested by the Committee, regarding issues before the |
Committee.
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The Department on Aging and the Department of Human |
Services
shall cooperate in the development and submission of |
an annual report on
programs and services provided under this |
Section. Such joint report
shall be filed with the Governor and |
the General Assembly on or before
September 30 each year.
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The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
|
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research Unit,
as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act and
filing such additional copies with the State Government |
Report Distribution
Center for the General Assembly as is |
required under paragraph (t) of
Section 7 of the State Library |
Act.
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Those persons previously found eligible for receiving |
non-institutional
services whose services were discontinued |
under the Emergency Budget Act of
Fiscal Year 1992, and who do |
not meet the eligibility standards in effect
on or after July |
1, 1992, shall remain ineligible on and after July 1,
1992. |
Those persons previously not required to cost-share and who |
were
required to cost-share effective March 1, 1992, shall |
continue to meet
cost-share requirements on and after July 1, |
1992. Beginning July 1, 1992,
all clients will be required to |
meet
eligibility, cost-share, and other requirements and will |
have services
discontinued or altered when they fail to meet |
these requirements. |
For the purposes of this Section, "flexible senior |
services" refers to services that require one-time or periodic |
expenditures including, but not limited to, respite care, home |
modification, assistive technology, housing assistance, and |
transportation.
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The Department shall implement an electronic service |
verification based on global positioning systems or other |
cost-effective technology for the Community Care Program no |
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later than January 1, 2014. |
The Department shall require, as a condition of |
eligibility, enrollment in the medical assistance program |
under Article V of the Illinois Public Aid Code (i) beginning |
August 1, 2013, if the Auditor General has reported that the |
Department has failed
to comply with the reporting requirements |
of Section 2-27 of
the Illinois State Auditing Act; or (ii) |
beginning June 1, 2014, if the Auditor General has reported |
that the
Department has not undertaken the required actions |
listed in
the report required by subsection (a) of Section 2-27 |
of the
Illinois State Auditing Act. |
The Department shall delay Community Care Program services |
until an applicant is determined eligible for medical |
assistance under Article V of the Illinois Public Aid Code (i) |
beginning August 1, 2013, if the Auditor General has reported |
that the Department has failed
to comply with the reporting |
requirements of Section 2-27 of
the Illinois State Auditing |
Act; or (ii) beginning June 1, 2014, if the Auditor General has |
reported that the
Department has not undertaken the required |
actions listed in
the report required by subsection (a) of |
Section 2-27 of the
Illinois State Auditing Act. |
The Department shall implement co-payments for the |
Community Care Program at the federally allowable maximum level |
(i) beginning August 1, 2013, if the Auditor General has |
reported that the Department has failed
to comply with the |
reporting requirements of Section 2-27 of
the Illinois State |
|
Auditing Act; or (ii) beginning June 1, 2014, if the Auditor |
General has reported that the
Department has not undertaken the |
required actions listed in
the report required by subsection |
(a) of Section 2-27 of the
Illinois State Auditing Act. |
The Department shall provide a bi-monthly report on the |
progress of the Community Care Program reforms set forth in |
this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly to the |
Governor, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, the |
Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, the
President |
of the
Senate, and the Minority Leader of the Senate. |
The Department shall conduct a quarterly review of Care |
Coordination Unit performance and adherence to service |
guidelines. The quarterly review shall be reported to the |
Speaker of the House of Representatives, the Minority Leader of |
the House of Representatives, the
President of the
Senate, and |
the Minority Leader of the Senate. The Department shall collect |
and report longitudinal data on the performance of each care |
coordination unit. Nothing in this paragraph shall be construed |
to require the Department to identify specific care |
coordination units. |
In regard to community care providers, failure to comply |
with Department on Aging policies shall be cause for |
disciplinary action, including, but not limited to, |
disqualification from serving Community Care Program clients. |
Each provider, upon submission of any bill or invoice to the |
Department for payment for services rendered, shall include a |
|
notarized statement, under penalty of perjury pursuant to |
Section 1-109 of the Code of Civil Procedure, that the provider |
has complied with all Department policies. |
The Director of the Department on Aging shall make |
information available to the State Board of Elections as may be |
required by an agreement the State Board of Elections has |
entered into with a multi-state voter registration list |
maintenance system. |
Within 30 days after July 6, 2017 (the effective date of |
Public Act 100-23), rates shall be increased to $18.29 per |
hour, for the purpose of increasing, by at least $.72 per hour, |
the wages paid by those vendors to their employees who provide |
homemaker services. The Department shall pay an enhanced rate |
under the Community Care Program to those in-home service |
provider agencies that offer health insurance coverage as a |
benefit to their direct service worker employees consistent |
with the mandates of Public Act 95-713. For State fiscal years |
2018 and 2019, the enhanced rate shall be $1.77 per hour. The |
rate shall be adjusted using actuarial analysis based on the |
cost of care, but shall not be set below $1.77 per hour. The |
Department shall adopt rules, including emergency rules under |
subsections (y) and (bb) of Section 5-45 of the Illinois |
Administrative Procedure Act, to implement the provisions of |
this paragraph. |
The General Assembly finds it necessary to authorize an |
aggressive Medicaid enrollment initiative designed to maximize |
|
federal Medicaid funding for the Community Care Program which |
produces significant savings for the State of Illinois. The |
Department on Aging shall establish and implement a Community |
Care Program Medicaid Initiative. Under the Initiative, the
|
Department on Aging shall, at a minimum: (i) provide an |
enhanced rate to adequately compensate care coordination units |
to enroll eligible Community Care Program clients into |
Medicaid; (ii) use recommendations from a stakeholder |
committee on how best to implement the Initiative; and (iii) |
establish requirements for State agencies to make enrollment in |
the State's Medical Assistance program easier for seniors. |
The Community Care Program Medicaid Enrollment Oversight |
Subcommittee is created as a subcommittee of the Older Adult |
Services Advisory Committee established in Section 35 of the |
Older Adult Services Act to make recommendations on how best to |
increase the number of medical assistance recipients who are |
enrolled in the Community Care Program. The Subcommittee shall |
consist of all of the following persons who must be appointed |
within 30 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 100th General Assembly: |
(1) The Director of Aging, or his or her designee, who |
shall serve as the chairperson of the Subcommittee. |
(2) One representative of the Department of Healthcare |
and Family Services, appointed by the Director of |
Healthcare and Family Services. |
(3) One representative of the Department of Human |
|
Services, appointed by the Secretary of Human Services. |
(4) One individual representing a care coordination |
unit, appointed by the Director of Aging. |
(5) One individual from a non-governmental statewide |
organization that advocates for seniors, appointed by the |
Director of Aging. |
(6) One individual representing Area Agencies on |
Aging, appointed by the Director of Aging. |
(7) One individual from a statewide association |
dedicated to Alzheimer's care, support, and research, |
appointed by the Director of Aging. |
(8) One individual from an organization that employs |
persons who provide services under the Community Care |
Program, appointed by the Director of Aging. |
(9) One member of a trade or labor union representing |
persons who provide services under the Community Care |
Program, appointed by the Director of Aging. |
(10) One member of the Senate, who shall serve as |
co-chairperson, appointed by the President of the Senate. |
(11) One member of the Senate, who shall serve as |
co-chairperson, appointed by the Minority Leader of the |
Senate. |
(12) One member of the House of
Representatives, who |
shall serve as co-chairperson, appointed by the Speaker of |
the House of Representatives. |
(13) One member of the House of Representatives, who |
|
shall serve as co-chairperson, appointed by the Minority |
Leader of the House of Representatives. |
(14) One individual appointed by a labor organization |
representing frontline employees at the Department of |
Human Services. |
The Subcommittee shall provide oversight to the Community |
Care Program Medicaid Initiative and shall meet quarterly. At |
each Subcommittee meeting the Department on Aging shall provide |
the following data sets to the Subcommittee: (A) the number of |
Illinois residents, categorized by planning and service area, |
who are receiving services under the Community Care Program and |
are enrolled in the State's Medical Assistance Program; (B) the |
number of Illinois residents, categorized by planning and |
service area, who are receiving services under the Community |
Care Program, but are not enrolled in the State's Medical |
Assistance Program; and (C) the number of Illinois residents, |
categorized by planning and service area, who are receiving |
services under the Community Care Program and are eligible for |
benefits under the State's Medical Assistance Program, but are |
not enrolled in the State's Medical Assistance Program. In |
addition to this data, the Department on Aging shall provide |
the Subcommittee with plans on how the Department on Aging will |
reduce the number of Illinois residents who are not enrolled in |
the State's Medical Assistance Program but who are eligible for |
medical assistance benefits. The Department on Aging shall |
enroll in the State's Medical Assistance Program those Illinois |
|
residents who receive services under the Community Care Program |
and are eligible for medical assistance benefits but are not |
enrolled in the State's Medicaid Assistance Program. The data |
provided to the Subcommittee shall be made available to the |
public via the Department on Aging's website. |
The Department on Aging, with the involvement of the |
Subcommittee, shall collaborate with the Department of Human |
Services and the Department of Healthcare and Family Services |
on how best to achieve the responsibilities of the Community |
Care Program Medicaid Initiative. |
The Department on Aging, the Department of Human Services, |
and the Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall |
coordinate and implement a streamlined process for seniors to |
access benefits under the State's Medical Assistance Program. |
The Subcommittee shall collaborate with the Department of |
Human Services on the adoption of a uniform application |
submission process. The Department of Human Services and any |
other State agency involved with processing the medical |
assistance application of any person enrolled in the Community |
Care Program shall include the appropriate care coordination |
unit in all communications related to the determination or |
status of the application. |
The Community Care Program Medicaid Initiative shall |
provide targeted funding to care coordination units to help |
seniors complete their applications for medical assistance |
benefits. On and after July 1, 2019, care coordination units |
|
shall receive no less than $200 per completed application. |
The Community Care Program Medicaid Initiative shall cease |
operation 5 years after the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 100th General Assembly, after which the Subcommittee |
shall dissolve. |
(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15; 100-23, eff. 7-6-17; |
100-587, eff. 6-4-18.)
|
(20 ILCS 105/7.09) (from Ch. 23, par. 6107.09)
|
Sec. 7.09. The Council shall have the following powers and |
duties:
|
(1) review and comment upon reports of the Department to |
the Governor
and the General Assembly;
|
(2) prepare and submit to the Governor, the General |
Assembly and the
Director an annual report evaluating the level |
and quality of all programs,
services and facilities provided |
to the aging by State agencies;
|
(3) review and comment upon the comprehensive state plan |
prepared by the
Department;
|
(4) review and comment upon disbursements by the Department |
of public
funds to private agencies;
|
(5) recommend candidates to the Governor for appointment as |
Director of
the Department;
|
(6) consult with the Director regarding the operations of |
the
Department.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
|
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General |
Assembly",
approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional copies
with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is required |
under
paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
|
Section 25. The Department of Central Management Services |
Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by |
changing Section 405-300 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 405/405-300) (was 20 ILCS 405/67.02)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 100-1109 )
|
Sec. 405-300. Lease or purchase of facilities; training |
programs.
|
(a) To lease or purchase office and storage space,
|
buildings, land, and other
facilities for all State agencies, |
authorities, boards, commissions,
departments, institutions, |
and bodies politic and all other administrative
units or |
outgrowths of the executive branch of State government except |
the
Constitutional officers, the State Board of Education and |
|
the State
colleges and universities and their governing bodies. |
However, before
leasing or purchasing any office or storage |
space, buildings, land
or other facilities in any municipality |
the Department shall survey the
existing State-owned and |
State-leased property
to make a determination of need.
|
The leases shall be for
a term not to exceed 5 years, |
except that the leases
may contain a renewal clause subject to |
acceptance by the State after
that date or an option to |
purchase. The purchases shall be made
through
contracts that |
(i) may provide for the title to the property to
transfer
|
immediately to the State or a trustee or nominee for the |
benefit of the
State, (ii) shall provide for the consideration |
to be
paid in installments to
be made at stated intervals |
during a certain term not to exceed 30 years
from the date of |
the contract, and (iii) may provide for the
payment of interest |
on the unpaid balance at a rate that does not exceed
a rate |
determined by adding 3 percentage points to the annual yield on
|
United States Treasury
obligations of comparable maturity as |
most recently published in the Wall
Street Journal at the time |
such contract is signed. The leases and
purchase
contracts |
shall be and shall recite
that they are subject to termination |
and cancellation in any year for which
the General Assembly |
fails to make an appropriation to pay the rent or
purchase |
installments payable
under the terms of the lease or purchase |
contract.
Additionally, the purchase contract shall specify |
that title to
the office
and storage space, buildings, land, |
|
and other facilities being acquired
under
the contract shall |
revert to the Seller in the event of the
failure
of the General |
Assembly to appropriate suitable funds.
However, this |
limitation on the
term of the leases does not apply to leases |
to and with the
Illinois
Building Authority, as provided for in |
the Building Authority Act. Leases to and with that Authority |
may be
entered into for a term not to exceed 30 years and shall |
be and shall
recite that they are subject to termination and |
cancellation in any year
for which the General Assembly fails |
to make an appropriation to pay the
rent payable under the |
terms of the lease. These limitations do
not
apply if the lease |
or purchase contract contains a provision
limiting the |
liability for
the payment of the rentals or installments |
thereof solely to funds
received from the Federal government.
|
(b) To lease from an airport authority office, aircraft |
hangar, and
service buildings constructed upon a public airport |
under the Airport
Authorities Act for the use and occupancy of |
the State Department of
Transportation. The lease may be |
entered into for a term not
to exceed
30 years.
|
(c) To establish training programs for teaching State |
leasing procedures
and practices to new employees of the |
Department and to keep all employees
of the Department informed |
about current leasing practices and developments
in the real |
estate industry.
|
(d) To enter into an agreement with a municipality or |
county to
construct, remodel, or convert a structure for the |
|
purposes of its serving
as a correctional institution or |
facility pursuant to paragraph (c) of
Section 3-2-2 of the |
Unified Code of Corrections.
|
(e) To enter into an agreement with a private individual,
|
trust, partnership,
or corporation or a municipality or other |
unit of local government, when
authorized to do so by the |
Department of Corrections,
whereby that individual, trust, |
partnership, or corporation or
municipality or other unit of |
local government will construct, remodel,
or convert a |
structure for the purposes of its serving as a correctional
|
institution or facility and then lease the structure to the
|
Department
for the use of the Department of Corrections. A |
lease entered into pursuant
to the authority granted in this
|
subsection shall be for a
term not to exceed 30 years but may |
grant to the State the
option to purchase the structure |
outright.
|
The leases shall be and shall recite that they are subject |
to
termination and cancellation in any year for which the |
General Assembly
fails to make an appropriation to pay the rent |
payable under the terms of the
lease.
|
(f) On and after September 17, 1983, the powers granted to
|
the Department under this Section shall be exercised |
exclusively by the
Department, and no other State agency may |
concurrently exercise any such
power unless specifically |
authorized otherwise by a later enacted law.
This subsection is |
not intended to impair any contract existing as of
September |
|
17, 1983.
|
However, no lease for more than 10,000 square feet of space |
shall be executed
unless the Director, in consultation with the |
Executive Director of the
Capital
Development Board, has |
certified that leasing is in the best interest of
the State, |
considering programmatic requirements, availability of vacant
|
State-owned space, the cost-benefits of purchasing or |
constructing new
space,
and other criteria as he or she shall |
determine. The Director shall not
permit
multiple leases for |
less than 10,000 square feet to be executed in order
to evade |
this provision.
|
(g) To develop and implement, in cooperation with the |
Interagency
Energy Conservation Committee, a system for |
evaluating energy consumption in
facilities leased by the |
Department, and to develop energy consumption
standards for use |
in evaluating prospective lease sites.
|
(h) (1) After June 1, 1998 (the effective date of Public |
Act 90-520), the
Department
shall not
enter into an |
agreement for the installment purchase or lease purchase of
|
buildings,
land, or facilities
unless:
|
(A) the using agency certifies to the Department |
that the agency
reasonably
expects that the building, |
land, or facilities being considered for
purchase will
|
meet a permanent space need;
|
(B) the building or facilities will be |
substantially occupied by State
agencies
after |
|
purchase (or after acceptance in the case of a build to |
suit);
|
(C) the building or facilities shall be in new or |
like new condition and
have a
remaining economic life |
exceeding the term of the contract;
|
(D) no structural or other major building |
component or system has a
remaining economic life of |
less than 10 years;
|
(E) the building, land, or facilities:
|
(i) is free of any identifiable environmental |
hazard or
|
(ii) is subject to a management plan, provided |
by the seller and
acceptable to the State, to |
address the known environmental
hazard;
|
(F) the building, land, or facilities satisfy |
applicable
accessibility
and applicable building |
codes; and
|
(G) the State's cost to lease purchase or |
installment purchase the
building,
land, or facilities |
is less than the cost to lease space of comparable
|
quality, size, and location over the lease purchase or |
installment purchase
term.
|
(2) The Department shall establish the methodology for |
comparing lease
costs to
the costs of installment or lease |
purchases. The cost comparison shall take
into account all
|
relevant cost factors, including, but not limited to, debt |
|
service,
operating
and maintenance costs,
insurance and |
risk costs, real estate taxes, reserves for replacement and
|
repairs, security costs,
and utilities. The methodology |
shall also provide:
|
(A) that the comparison will be made using level |
payment plans; and
|
(B) that a purchase price must not exceed the fair |
market value of the
buildings, land, or facilities and |
that the purchase price
must be substantiated by
an |
appraisal or by a competitive selection process.
|
(3) If the Department intends to enter into an |
installment purchase or
lease purchase agreement for |
buildings, land, or facilities under circumstances
that do |
not satisfy the conditions specified by this Section, it |
must issue a
notice to the Secretary of the Senate and the |
Clerk of the House. The notice
shall contain (i) specific |
details of the State's proposed purchase, including
the |
amounts, purposes, and financing terms; (ii) a specific |
description of how
the proposed purchase varies from the |
procedures set forth in this Section; and
(iii) a specific |
justification, signed by the Director, stating why
it is in |
the
State's best interests to proceed with the purchase. |
The Department may not
proceed with such an installment |
purchase or lease purchase agreement if,
within 60 calendar |
days after delivery of the notice, the General Assembly, by
|
joint resolution, disapproves the transaction. Delivery |
|
may take place on a
day and at an hour when the Senate and |
House are not in session so long as the
offices of |
Secretary and Clerk are open to receive the notice. In |
determining
the 60-day period within which the General |
Assembly must act,
the day on which
delivery is made to the |
Senate and House shall not be counted. If delivery of
the |
notice to the 2 houses occurs on different days, the 60-day
|
period shall begin on the day following the later delivery.
|
(4) On or before February 15 of each year, the |
Department shall submit an
annual report to the Director of |
the
Governor's Office of Management and Budget and the |
General
Assembly regarding installment purchases or lease |
purchases of buildings, land,
or facilities that were |
entered into during the preceding calendar year. The
report |
shall include a summary statement of the aggregate amount |
of the State's
obligations under those purchases; specific |
details pertaining to
each purchase,
including the |
amounts, purposes, and financing terms and payment |
schedule
for each
purchase; and any other matter that the |
Department deems advisable.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly |
shall be satisfied by
filing copies of the report with the |
Auditor General, the Speaker, the Minority
Leader, and the |
Clerk of the House of Representatives and the President,
|
the
Minority Leader,
and the Secretary of the Senate, the |
Chairs of the Appropriations Committees,
and the |
|
Legislative Research Unit, as required
by Section 3.1 of |
the General Assembly Organization Act, and filing
|
additional
copies with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General
Assembly as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library
Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15.)
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 100-1109 )
|
Sec. 405-300. Lease or purchase of facilities; training |
programs.
|
(a) To lease or purchase office and storage space,
|
buildings, land, and other
facilities for all State agencies, |
authorities, boards, commissions,
departments, institutions, |
and bodies politic and all other administrative
units or |
outgrowths of the executive branch of State government except |
the
Constitutional officers, the State Board of Education and |
the State
colleges and universities and their governing bodies. |
However, before
leasing or purchasing any office or storage |
space, buildings, land
or other facilities in any municipality |
the Department shall survey the
existing State-owned and |
State-leased property
to make a determination of need.
|
The leases shall be for
a term not to exceed 5 years, |
except that the leases
may contain a renewal clause subject to |
acceptance by the State after
that date or an option to |
purchase. The purchases shall be made
through
contracts that |
(i) may provide for the title to the property to
transfer
|
|
immediately to the State or a trustee or nominee for the |
benefit of the
State, (ii) shall provide for the consideration |
to be
paid in installments to
be made at stated intervals |
during a certain term not to exceed 30 years
from the date of |
the contract, and (iii) may provide for the
payment of interest |
on the unpaid balance at a rate that does not exceed
a rate |
determined by adding 3 percentage points to the annual yield on
|
United States Treasury
obligations of comparable maturity as |
most recently published in the Wall
Street Journal at the time |
such contract is signed. The leases and
purchase
contracts |
shall be and shall recite
that they are subject to termination |
and cancellation in any year for which
the General Assembly |
fails to make an appropriation to pay the rent or
purchase |
installments payable
under the terms of the lease or purchase |
contract.
Additionally, the purchase contract shall specify |
that title to
the office
and storage space, buildings, land, |
and other facilities being acquired
under
the contract shall |
revert to the Seller in the event of the
failure
of the General |
Assembly to appropriate suitable funds.
However, this |
limitation on the
term of the leases does not apply to leases |
to and with the
Illinois
Building Authority, as provided for in |
the Building Authority Act. Leases to and with that Authority |
may be
entered into for a term not to exceed 30 years and shall |
be and shall
recite that they are subject to termination and |
cancellation in any year
for which the General Assembly fails |
to make an appropriation to pay the
rent payable under the |
|
terms of the lease. These limitations do
not
apply if the lease |
or purchase contract contains a provision
limiting the |
liability for
the payment of the rentals or installments |
thereof solely to funds
received from the Federal government.
|
(b) To lease from an airport authority office, aircraft |
hangar, and
service buildings constructed upon a public airport |
under the Airport
Authorities Act for the use and occupancy of |
the State Department of
Transportation. The lease may be |
entered into for a term not
to exceed
30 years.
|
(c) To establish training programs for teaching State |
leasing procedures
and practices to new employees of the |
Department and to keep all employees
of the Department informed |
about current leasing practices and developments
in the real |
estate industry.
|
(d) To enter into an agreement with a municipality or |
county to
construct, remodel, or convert a structure for the |
purposes of its serving
as a correctional institution or |
facility pursuant to paragraph (c) of
Section 3-2-2 of the |
Unified Code of Corrections.
|
(e) To enter into an agreement with a private individual,
|
trust, partnership,
or corporation or a municipality or other |
unit of local government, when
authorized to do so by the |
Department of Corrections,
whereby that individual, trust, |
partnership, or corporation or
municipality or other unit of |
local government will construct, remodel,
or convert a |
structure for the purposes of its serving as a correctional
|
|
institution or facility and then lease the structure to the
|
Department
for the use of the Department of Corrections. A |
lease entered into pursuant
to the authority granted in this
|
subsection shall be for a
term not to exceed 30 years but may |
grant to the State the
option to purchase the structure |
outright.
|
The leases shall be and shall recite that they are subject |
to
termination and cancellation in any year for which the |
General Assembly
fails to make an appropriation to pay the rent |
payable under the terms of the
lease.
|
(f) On and after September 17, 1983, the powers granted to
|
the Department under this Section shall be exercised |
exclusively by the
Department, and no other State agency may |
concurrently exercise any such
power unless specifically |
authorized otherwise by a later enacted law.
This subsection is |
not intended to impair any contract existing as of
September |
17, 1983.
|
However, no lease for more than 10,000 square feet of space |
shall be executed
unless the Director, in consultation with the |
Executive Director of the
Capital
Development Board, has |
certified that leasing is in the best interest of
the State, |
considering programmatic requirements, availability of vacant
|
State-owned space, the cost-benefits of purchasing or |
constructing new
space,
and other criteria as he or she shall |
determine. The Director shall not
permit
multiple leases for |
less than 10,000 square feet to be executed in order
to evade |
|
this provision.
|
(g) To develop and implement, in cooperation with the |
Interagency
Energy Conservation Committee, a system for |
evaluating energy consumption in
facilities leased by the |
Department, and to develop energy consumption
standards for use |
in evaluating prospective lease sites.
|
(h) (1) After June 1, 1998 (the effective date of Public |
Act 90-520), the
Department
shall not
enter into an |
agreement for the installment purchase or lease purchase of
|
buildings,
land, or facilities
unless:
|
(A) the using agency certifies to the Department |
that the agency
reasonably
expects that the building, |
land, or facilities being considered for
purchase will
|
meet a permanent space need;
|
(B) the building or facilities will be |
substantially occupied by State
agencies
after |
purchase (or after acceptance in the case of a build to |
suit);
|
(C) the building or facilities shall be in new or |
like new condition and
have a
remaining economic life |
exceeding the term of the contract;
|
(D) no structural or other major building |
component or system has a
remaining economic life of |
less than 10 years;
|
(E) the building, land, or facilities:
|
(i) is free of any identifiable environmental |
|
hazard or
|
(ii) is subject to a management plan, provided |
by the seller and
acceptable to the State, to |
address the known environmental
hazard;
|
(F) the building, land, or facilities satisfy |
applicable
accessibility
and applicable building |
codes; and
|
(G) the State's cost to lease purchase or |
installment purchase the
building,
land, or facilities |
is less than the cost to lease space of comparable
|
quality, size, and location over the lease purchase or |
installment purchase
term.
|
(2) The Department shall establish the methodology for |
comparing lease
costs to
the costs of installment or lease |
purchases. The cost comparison shall take
into account all
|
relevant cost factors, including, but not limited to, debt |
service,
operating
and maintenance costs,
insurance and |
risk costs, real estate taxes, reserves for replacement and
|
repairs, security costs,
and utilities. The methodology |
shall also provide:
|
(A) that the comparison will be made using level |
payment plans; and
|
(B) that a purchase price must not exceed the fair |
market value of the
buildings, land, or facilities and |
that the purchase price
must be substantiated by
an |
appraisal or by a competitive selection process.
|
|
(3) If the Department intends to enter into an |
installment purchase or
lease purchase agreement for |
buildings, land, or facilities under circumstances
that do |
not satisfy the conditions specified by this Section, it |
must issue a
notice to the Secretary of the Senate and the |
Clerk of the House. The notice
shall contain (i) specific |
details of the State's proposed purchase, including
the |
amounts, purposes, and financing terms; (ii) a specific |
description of how
the proposed purchase varies from the |
procedures set forth in this Section; and
(iii) a specific |
justification, signed by the Director, stating why
it is in |
the
State's best interests to proceed with the purchase. |
The Department may not
proceed with such an installment |
purchase or lease purchase agreement if,
within 60 calendar |
days after delivery of the notice, the General Assembly, by
|
joint resolution, disapproves the transaction. Delivery |
may take place on a
day and at an hour when the Senate and |
House are not in session so long as the
offices of |
Secretary and Clerk are open to receive the notice. In |
determining
the 60-day period within which the General |
Assembly must act,
the day on which
delivery is made to the |
Senate and House shall not be counted. If delivery of
the |
notice to the 2 houses occurs on different days, the 60-day
|
period shall begin on the day following the later delivery.
|
(4) On or before February 15 of each year, the |
Department shall submit an
annual report to the Director of |
|
the
Governor's Office of Management and Budget and the |
General
Assembly regarding installment purchases or lease |
purchases of buildings, land,
or facilities that were |
entered into during the preceding calendar year. The
report |
shall include a summary statement of the aggregate amount |
of the State's
obligations under those purchases; specific |
details pertaining to
each purchase,
including the |
amounts, purposes, and financing terms and payment |
schedule
for each
purchase; and any other matter that the |
Department deems advisable. The report shall also contain |
an analysis of all leases that meet both of the following |
criteria: (1) the lease contains a purchase option clause; |
and (2) the third full year of the lease has been |
completed. That analysis shall include, without |
limitation, a recommendation of whether it is in the |
State's best interest to exercise the purchase option or to |
seek to renew the lease without exercising the clause.
|
The requirement for reporting shall be satisfied by
|
filing copies of the report with each of the following: (1) |
the Auditor General; (2) the Chairs of the Appropriations |
Committees; (3) the General Assembly and the Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability as required by |
Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organizations Act the |
Clerk of the House of Representatives and the Secretary of |
the Senate in electronic form only, in the manner that the |
Clerk and the Secretary shall direct; (4) the Legislative |
|
Research Unit ; and (4) (5) the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General
Assembly as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library
Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15; 100-1109, eff. 1-1-19.)
|
Section 30. The Personnel Code is amended by changing |
Sections 4c and 9 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 415/4c) (from Ch. 127, par. 63b104c) |
Sec. 4c. General exemptions. The following positions in |
State
service shall be exempt from jurisdictions A, B, and C, |
unless the
jurisdictions shall be extended as provided in this |
Act:
|
(1) All officers elected by the people.
|
(2) All positions under the Lieutenant Governor, |
Secretary of State,
State Treasurer, State Comptroller, |
State Board of Education, Clerk of
the Supreme Court,
|
Attorney General, and State Board of Elections.
|
(3) Judges, and officers and employees of the courts, |
and notaries
public.
|
(4) All officers and employees of the Illinois General |
Assembly, all
employees of legislative commissions, all |
officers and employees of the
Illinois Legislative |
Reference Bureau , the Legislative
Research Unit, and the |
Legislative Printing Unit.
|
(5) All positions in the Illinois National Guard and |
|
Illinois State
Guard, paid from federal funds or positions
|
in the State Military Service filled by enlistment and paid |
from State
funds.
|
(6) All employees of the Governor at the executive |
mansion and on
his immediate personal staff.
|
(7) Directors of Departments, the Adjutant General, |
the Assistant
Adjutant General, the Director of the |
Illinois Emergency
Management Agency, members of boards |
and commissions, and all other
positions appointed by the |
Governor by and with the consent of the
Senate.
|
(8) The presidents, other principal administrative |
officers, and
teaching, research and extension faculties |
of
Chicago State University, Eastern Illinois University, |
Governors State
University, Illinois State University, |
Northeastern Illinois University,
Northern Illinois |
University, Western Illinois University, the Illinois
|
Community College Board, Southern Illinois
University, |
Illinois Board of Higher Education, University of
|
Illinois, State Universities Civil Service System, |
University Retirement
System of Illinois, and the |
administrative officers and scientific and
technical staff |
of the Illinois State Museum.
|
(9) All other employees except the presidents, other |
principal
administrative officers, and teaching, research |
and extension faculties
of the universities under the |
jurisdiction of the Board of Regents and
the colleges and |
|
universities under the jurisdiction of the Board of
|
Governors of State Colleges and Universities, Illinois |
Community College
Board, Southern Illinois University, |
Illinois Board of Higher Education,
Board of Governors of |
State Colleges and Universities, the Board of
Regents, |
University of Illinois, State Universities Civil Service
|
System, University Retirement System of Illinois, so long |
as these are
subject to the provisions of the State |
Universities Civil Service Act.
|
(10) The State Police so long as they are subject to |
the merit
provisions of the State Police Act.
|
(11) (Blank).
|
(12) The technical and engineering staffs of the |
Department of
Transportation, the Department of Nuclear |
Safety, the Pollution Control
Board, and the Illinois |
Commerce Commission, and the technical and engineering
|
staff providing architectural and engineering services in |
the Department of
Central Management Services.
|
(13) All employees of the Illinois State Toll Highway |
Authority.
|
(14) The Secretary of the Illinois Workers' |
Compensation Commission.
|
(15) All persons who are appointed or employed by the |
Director of
Insurance under authority of Section 202 of the |
Illinois Insurance Code
to assist the Director of Insurance |
in discharging his responsibilities
relating to the |
|
rehabilitation, liquidation, conservation, and
dissolution |
of companies that are subject to the jurisdiction of the
|
Illinois Insurance Code.
|
(16) All employees of the St. Louis Metropolitan Area |
Airport
Authority.
|
(17) All investment officers employed by the Illinois |
State Board of
Investment.
|
(18) Employees of the Illinois Young Adult |
Conservation Corps program,
administered by the Illinois |
Department of Natural Resources, authorized
grantee under |
Title VIII of the Comprehensive
Employment and Training Act |
of 1973, 29 USC 993.
|
(19) Seasonal employees of the Department of |
Agriculture for the
operation of the Illinois State Fair |
and the DuQuoin State Fair, no one
person receiving more |
than 29 days of such employment in any calendar year.
|
(20) All "temporary" employees hired under the |
Department of Natural
Resources' Illinois Conservation |
Service, a youth
employment program that hires young people |
to work in State parks for a period
of one year or less.
|
(21) All hearing officers of the Human Rights |
Commission.
|
(22) All employees of the Illinois Mathematics and |
Science Academy.
|
(23) All employees of the Kankakee River Valley Area
|
Airport Authority.
|
|
(24) The commissioners and employees of the Executive |
Ethics
Commission.
|
(25) The Executive Inspectors General, including |
special Executive
Inspectors General, and employees of |
each Office of an
Executive Inspector General.
|
(26) The commissioners and employees of the |
Legislative Ethics
Commission.
|
(27) The Legislative Inspector General, including |
special Legislative
Inspectors General, and employees of |
the Office of
the Legislative Inspector General.
|
(28) The Auditor General's Inspector General and |
employees of the Office
of the Auditor General's Inspector |
General.
|
(29) All employees of the Illinois Power Agency. |
(30) Employees having demonstrable, defined advanced |
skills in accounting, financial reporting, or technical |
expertise who are employed within executive branch |
agencies and whose duties are directly related to the |
submission to the Office of the Comptroller of financial |
information for the publication of the Comprehensive |
Annual Financial Report (CAFR). |
(31) All employees of the Illinois Sentencing Policy |
Advisory Council. |
(Source: P.A. 97-618, eff. 10-26-11; 97-1055, eff. 8-23-12; |
98-65, eff. 7-15-13.)
|
|
(20 ILCS 415/9) (from Ch. 127, par. 63b109)
|
Sec. 9. Director, powers and duties. The Director, as |
executive
head of the Department, shall direct and supervise |
all its
administrative and technical activities. In addition to |
the duties
imposed upon him elsewhere in this law, it shall be |
his duty:
|
(1) To apply and carry out this law and the rules |
adopted
thereunder.
|
(2) To attend meetings of the Commission.
|
(3) To establish and maintain a roster of all employees |
subject to
this Act, in which there shall be set forth, as |
to each employee, the
class, title, pay, status, and other |
pertinent data.
|
(4) To appoint, subject to the provisions of this Act, |
such
employees of the Department and such experts and |
special assistants as
may be necessary to carry out |
effectively this law.
|
(5) Subject to such exemptions or modifications as may |
be necessary
to assure the continuity of federal |
contributions in those agencies
supported in whole or in |
part by federal funds, to make appointments to
vacancies; |
to approve all written charges seeking discharge, |
demotion,
or other disciplinary measures provided in this |
Act and to approve
transfers of employees from one |
geographical area to another in the
State, in offices, |
positions or places of employment covered by this
Act, |
|
after consultation with the operating unit.
|
(6) To formulate and administer service wide policies |
and programs
for the improvement of employee |
effectiveness, including training,
safety, health, |
incentive recognition, counseling, welfare and employee
|
relations. The Department shall formulate and administer |
recruitment
plans and testing of potential employees for |
agencies having direct
contact with significant numbers of |
non-English speaking or otherwise
culturally distinct |
persons. The Department shall require each State agency
to |
annually assess the need for employees with appropriate |
bilingual
capabilities to serve the significant numbers of |
non-English speaking or
culturally distinct persons. The |
Department shall develop a uniform
procedure for assessing |
an agency's need for employees with appropriate
bilingual |
capabilities. Agencies shall establish occupational titles |
or
designate positions as "bilingual option" for persons |
having sufficient
linguistic ability or cultural knowledge |
to be able to render effective
service to such persons. The |
Department shall ensure that any such option
is exercised |
according to the agency's needs assessment and the
|
requirements of this Code. The Department shall make annual |
reports of the
needs assessment of each agency and the |
number of positions calling for
non-English linguistic |
ability to whom vacancy postings were sent, and the
number |
filled by each agency. Such policies and programs shall be |
|
subject
to approval by the Governor. Such policies, program |
reports and needs
assessment reports shall be filed with |
the General Assembly
by January 1 of each year and shall be |
available to the public.
|
The Department shall include within the report |
required above
the number of persons receiving the |
bilingual pay supplement established by
Section 8a.2 of |
this Code. The report shall provide the number of persons
|
receiving the bilingual pay supplement for languages other |
than English and for
signing. The report shall also |
indicate the number of persons, by the
categories of |
Hispanic and non-Hispanic, who are receiving the bilingual |
pay
supplement for language skills other than signing, in a |
language other than
English.
|
(7) To conduct negotiations affecting pay, hours of |
work, or other
working conditions of employees subject to |
this Act.
|
(8) To make continuing studies to improve the |
efficiency of State
services to the residents of Illinois, |
including but not limited to those
who are non-English |
speaking or culturally distinct, and to report his
findings |
and recommendations to the Commission and the Governor.
|
(9) To investigate from time to time the operation and |
effect of
this law and the rules made thereunder and to |
report his findings and
recommendations to the Commission |
and to the
Governor.
|
|
(10) To make an annual report regarding the work of the |
Department,
and such special reports as he may consider |
desirable, to the Commission
and to the Governor, or as the |
Governor or Commission may request.
|
(11) (Blank).
|
(12) To prepare and publish a semi-annual statement |
showing the
number of employees exempt and non-exempt from |
merit selection in each
department. This report shall be in |
addition to other information on
merit selection |
maintained for public information under existing law.
|
(13) To authorize in every department or agency subject |
to
Jurisdiction C the use of flexible hours positions. A |
flexible hours
position is one that does not require an |
ordinary work schedule as
determined by the Department and |
includes but is not limited to: 1) a
part time job of 20 |
hours or more per week, 2) a job which is shared by
2 |
employees or a compressed work week consisting of an |
ordinary number
of working hours performed on fewer than |
the number of days ordinarily
required to perform that job. |
The Department may define flexible time
to include other |
types of jobs that are defined above.
|
The Director and the director of each department or |
agency shall
together establish goals for flexible hours |
positions to be available in
every department or agency.
|
The Department shall give technical assistance to |
departments and
agencies in achieving their goals, and |
|
shall report to the Governor and
the General Assembly each |
year on the progress of each department and
agency.
|
When a goal of 10% of the positions in a department or |
agency being
available on a flexible hours basis has been |
reached, the Department
shall evaluate the effectiveness |
and efficiency of the program and
determine whether to |
expand the number of positions available for
flexible hours |
to 20%.
|
When a goal of 20% of the positions in a department or |
agency being
available on a flexible hours basis has been |
reached, the Department
shall evaluate the effectiveness |
and efficiency of the program and
determine whether to |
expand the number of positions available for
flexible |
hours.
|
Each department shall develop a plan for |
implementation of flexible
work requirements designed to |
reduce the need for day care of employees'
children outside |
the home. Each department shall submit a report of its
plan |
to the Department of Central Management Services and the |
General
Assembly. This report shall be submitted |
biennially by March 1, with the
first report due March 1, |
1993.
|
(14) To perform any other lawful acts which he may |
consider
necessary or desirable to carry out the purposes |
and provisions of this
law.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
|
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation
to the General |
Assembly", approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and
filing |
such additional copies with the State Government Report |
Distribution
Center for the General Assembly as is required |
under paragraph (t) of
Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-692, eff. 7-1-14.)
|
Section 35. The Children and Family Services Act is amended |
by changing Section 5.15 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 505/5.15)
|
Sec. 5.15. Daycare; Department of Human Services.
|
(a) For the purpose of ensuring effective statewide |
planning,
development, and utilization of resources for the day |
care of children,
operated under various auspices, the |
Department of Human Services is designated
to
coordinate all |
day care activities for children of the State and shall
develop |
or continue, and shall update every year,
a State comprehensive |
day-care plan for submission to the
Governor that identifies |
high-priority areas and groups, relating them
to available |
resources and identifying the most effective approaches to
the |
|
use of existing day care services. The State comprehensive |
day-care
plan shall be made available to the General Assembly |
following the
Governor's approval of the plan.
|
The plan shall include methods and procedures for the |
development of
additional day care resources for children to |
meet the goal of reducing
short-run and long-run dependency and |
to provide necessary enrichment and
stimulation to the |
education of young children. Recommendations shall be
made for |
State policy on optimum use of private and public, local, State
|
and federal resources, including an estimate of the resources |
needed for
the licensing and regulation of day care facilities.
|
A written report shall be submitted to the Governor and the |
General
Assembly annually on April 15. The report shall include |
an
evaluation of
developments over the preceding fiscal year, |
including cost-benefit
analyses of various arrangements. |
Beginning with the report in 1990 submitted
by the Department's |
predecessor agency and every
2 years thereafter, the report |
shall also include the following:
|
(1) An assessment of the child care services, needs and
|
available resources throughout the State and an assessment |
of the adequacy
of existing child care services, including, |
but not limited to, services
assisted under this Act and |
under any other program administered by other
State |
agencies.
|
(2) A survey of day care facilities to determine the
|
number of qualified caregivers, as defined by rule, |
|
attracted to vacant
positions and any problems encountered |
by facilities in attracting and
retaining capable |
caregivers. The report shall include an assessment, based
|
on the
survey, of improvements in employee benefits that |
may attract capable
caregivers.
|
(3) The average wages and salaries and fringe benefit
|
packages paid to caregivers throughout the State,
computed |
on a regional basis, compared to similarly qualified |
employees in
other but related fields.
|
(4) The qualifications of new caregivers hired at
|
licensed day care facilities during the previous 2-year |
period.
|
(5) Recommendations for increasing caregiver wages and
|
salaries to ensure quality care for children.
|
(6) Evaluation of the fee structure and income
|
eligibility for child care subsidized by the State.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader, and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives, the President, the Minority
Leader, and the |
Secretary of the Senate, and the Legislative Research Unit,
as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act,
and filing such additional copies with the
State |
Government Report Distribution Center for the General Assembly |
as is
required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State |
Library Act.
|
|
(b) The Department of Human Services shall establish |
policies and procedures
for
developing and implementing |
interagency agreements with other
agencies of
the State |
providing child care services or reimbursement for such |
services.
The plans shall be annually reviewed and modified for |
the purpose of
addressing issues of applicability and service |
system barriers.
|
(c) In cooperation with other State agencies, the |
Department of Human
Services shall develop and implement, or |
shall continue, a
resource and referral system for the
State of |
Illinois either within the Department or by contract with local |
or
regional agencies. Funding for implementation of this system |
may be
provided through Department appropriations or other |
inter-agency funding
arrangements. The resource and referral |
system shall provide at least the
following services:
|
(1) Assembling and maintaining a data base on the |
supply
of child care services.
|
(2) Providing information and referrals for parents.
|
(3) Coordinating the development of new child care |
resources.
|
(4) Providing technical assistance and training to |
child
care service providers.
|
(5) Recording and analyzing the demand for child care |
services.
|
(d) The Department of Human Services shall conduct day care |
planning
activities with the following priorities:
|
|
(1) Development of voluntary day care resources
|
wherever possible, with the provision for grants-in-aid |
only where
demonstrated to be useful and necessary as |
incentives or supports.
By January 1, 2002, the Department |
shall design a plan to create more child
care slots as well |
as goals and timetables to improve quality and |
accessibility
of child care.
|
(2) Emphasis on service to children of recipients of
|
public assistance when such service will allow training or |
employment of
the parent toward achieving the goal of |
independence.
|
(3) (Blank).
|
(4) Care of children from families in stress and crises
|
whose members potentially may become, or are in danger of |
becoming,
non-productive and dependent.
|
(5) Expansion of family day care facilities wherever |
possible.
|
(6) Location of centers in economically depressed
|
neighborhoods, preferably in multi-service centers with |
cooperation of
other agencies.
The Department shall |
coordinate the provision of grants, but only to the
extent
|
funds are specifically appropriated for this purpose,
to |
encourage the
creation and expansion of child care centers |
in high need communities to be
issued by the State, |
business, and local governments.
|
(7) Use of existing facilities free of charge or for
|
|
reasonable rental whenever possible in lieu of |
construction.
|
(8) Development of strategies for assuring a more
|
complete range of day care options, including provision of |
day care
services in homes, in schools, or in centers, |
which will enable a parent or
parents to complete a course |
of education or obtain or maintain employment
and the |
creation of more child care options for swing shift, |
evening, and
weekend workers and for working women with |
sick children. The Department shall
encourage companies to |
provide child care in their own offices or in the
building |
in which the corporation is located so that employees of |
all the
building's tenants can benefit from the facility.
|
(9) Development of strategies for subsidizing students |
pursuing degrees
in the child care field.
|
(10) Continuation and expansion of service programs |
that assist
teen parents to continue and complete their |
education.
|
Emphasis shall be given to support services that will help |
to ensure
such parents' graduation from high school and to |
services for participants
in any programs of job training |
conducted
by the
Department.
|
(e) The Department of Human Services shall actively |
stimulate the
development of public and private resources at |
the local level. It shall also
seek the fullest utilization of |
federal funds directly or indirectly available
to the |
|
Department.
|
Where appropriate, existing non-governmental agencies or
|
associations shall be involved in planning by the Department.
|
(f) To better accommodate the child care needs of low |
income working
families, especially those who receive |
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families
(TANF) or who are |
transitioning from TANF to work, or who are at risk of
|
depending on TANF in the absence of child care, the Department |
shall complete a
study using outcome-based assessment |
measurements to analyze the various types
of child care needs, |
including but not limited to: child care homes; child care
|
facilities; before and after school care; and evening and |
weekend care. Based
upon
the findings of the study, the |
Department shall develop a plan by April 15,
1998, that |
identifies the various types of child care needs within various
|
geographic locations. The plan shall include, but not be |
limited to, the
special needs of parents and guardians in need |
of non-traditional child care
services such as early mornings, |
evenings, and weekends; the needs of very low
income families |
and children and how they might be better served; and
|
strategies to assist child care providers to meet the needs and |
schedules of
low income families.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-468, eff. 8-22-01.)
|
Section 40. The Administration of Psychotropic Medications |
to Children Act is amended by changing Section 15 as follows: |
|
(20 ILCS 535/15)
|
Sec. 15. Annual report. |
(a) No later than December 31 of each year, the Department |
shall prepare and submit an annual report, covering the |
previous fiscal year, to the General Assembly concerning the |
administration of psychotropic medication to persons for whom |
it is legally responsible. This report shall include, but is |
not limited to, the following: |
(1) The number of violations of any rule enacted |
pursuant to Section 5 of this Act. |
(2) The number of warnings issued pursuant to |
subsection (b) of Section 10 of this Act. |
(3) The number of physicians who have been issued |
warnings pursuant to subsection (b) of Section 10 of this |
Act. |
(4) The number of physicians who have been reported to |
the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation |
pursuant to subsection (c) of Section 10 of this Act, and, |
if available, the results of such reports. |
(5) The number of facilities that have been reported to |
the Department of Public Health pursuant to subsection (d) |
of Section 10 of this Act and, if available, the results of |
such reports. |
(6) The number of Department-licensed facilities that |
have been the subject of licensing complaints pursuant to |
|
subsection (f) of Section 10 of this Act, and if available, |
the results of the complaint investigations. |
(7) Any recommendations for legislative changes or |
amendments to any of its rules or procedures established or |
maintained in compliance with this Act. |
(b) The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly |
shall be satisfied by filing copies of the report with the |
Speaker, the Minority Leader, and the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives, the President, the Minority Leader, and the |
Secretary of the Senate, and the Legislative Research Unit, as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act and by filing additional copies with the State Government |
Report Distribution Center for the General Assembly as required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-245, eff. 8-4-11.) |
Section 45. The Energy Policy and Planning Act is amended |
by changing Section 4 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 1120/4) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 7804)
|
Sec. 4. Authority. (1) The Department in addition to its |
preparation of
energy contingency plans, shall also analyze, |
prepare, and recommend a
comprehensive energy plan for the |
State of Illinois.
|
The plan shall identify emerging trends related to energy |
supply,
demand, conservation, public health and safety |
|
factors, and should specify
the levels of statewide and service |
area energy needs, past, present, and
estimated future demand, |
as well as the potential social, economic, or
environmental |
effects caused by the continuation of existing trends and by
|
the various alternatives available to the State.
The plan shall |
also conform to the requirements of Section 8-402 of the
Public |
Utilities Act. The Department shall design programs as |
necessary to
achieve the purposes of this Act and the planning |
objectives of The Public
Utilities Act. The Department's energy |
plan, and any programs designed
pursuant to this Section shall |
be filed with the Commission in accordance
with the |
Commission's planning responsibilities and hearing |
requirements
related thereto. The Department shall |
periodically review the plan,
objectives and programs at least |
every 2 years, and the results of such
review and any resulting |
changes in the Department's plan or programs shall
be filed |
with the Commission.
|
The Department's plan and programs and any review thereof, |
shall also be
filed with the Governor, the General Assembly, |
and the Public Counsel, and
shall be available to the public |
upon request.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
|
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation
to the General |
Assembly", approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and
filing |
such additional copies with the State Government Report |
Distribution
Center for the General Assembly as is required |
under paragraph (t) of
Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-617.)
|
Section 50. The Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Administrative Act is amended by changing Section |
73 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 1705/73) |
Sec. 73. Report; Williams v. Quinn consent decree. |
(a) Annual Report. |
(1) No later than December 31, 2011, and on December |
31st of each of the following 4 years, the Department of |
Human Services shall prepare and submit an annual report to |
the General Assembly concerning the implementation of the |
Williams v. Quinn consent decree and other efforts to move |
persons with mental illnesses from institutional settings |
to community-based settings. This report shall include: |
(A) The number of persons who have been moved from |
long-term care facilities to community-based settings |
during the previous year and the number of persons |
projected to be moved during the next year. |
|
(B) Any implementation or compliance reports |
prepared by the State for the Court or the |
court-appointed monitor in Williams v. Quinn. |
(C) Any reports from the court-appointed monitor |
or findings by the Court reflecting the Department's |
compliance or failure to comply with the Williams v. |
Quinn consent decree and any other order issued during |
that proceeding. |
(D) Statistics reflecting the number and types of |
community-based services provided to persons who have |
been moved from long-term care facilities to |
community-based settings. |
(E) Any additional community-based services which |
are or will be needed in order to ensure maximum |
community integration as provided for by the Williams |
v. Quinn consent decree, and the Department's plan for |
providing these services. |
(F) Any and all costs associated with |
transitioning residents from institutional settings to |
community-based settings, including, but not limited |
to, the cost of residential services, the cost of |
outpatient treatment, and the cost of all community |
support services facilitating the community-based |
setting. |
(2) The requirement for reporting to the General |
Assembly shall be satisfied by filing copies of the report |
|
with the Speaker, Minority Leader, and Clerk of the House |
of Representatives; the President, Minority Leader, and |
Secretary of the Senate; and the Legislative Research Unit, |
as required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly |
Organization Act, and by filing additional copies with the |
State Government Report Distribution Center for the |
General Assembly as required under paragraph (t) of Section |
7 of the State Library Act. |
(b) Department rule. The Department of Human Services shall |
draft and promulgate a new rule governing community-based |
residential settings.
The new rule for community-based |
residential settings shall include settings that offer to |
persons with serious mental illness (i) community-based |
residential recovery-oriented mental health care, treatment, |
and services; and (ii) community-based residential mental |
health and co-occurring substance use disorder care, |
treatment, and services. |
Community-based residential settings shall honor a |
consumer's choice as well as a consumer's right to live in the: |
(1) Least restrictive environment. |
(2) Most appropriate integrated setting. |
(3) Least restrictive environment and most appropriate |
integrated setting designed to assist the individual in |
living in a safe, appropriate, and therapeutic |
environment. |
(4) Least restrictive environment and most appropriate |
|
integrated setting that affords the person the opportunity |
to live similarly to persons without serious mental |
illness. |
The new rule for community-based residential settings |
shall be drafted in such a manner as to delineate |
State-supported care, treatment, and services appropriately |
governed within the new rule, and shall continue eligibility |
for eligible individuals in programs governed by Title 59, Part |
132 of the Illinois Administrative Code.
The Department shall |
draft a new rule for community-based residential settings by |
January 1, 2012. The new rule must include, but shall not be |
limited to, standards for: |
(i) Administrative requirements. |
(ii) Monitoring, review, and reporting. |
(iii) Certification requirements. |
(iv) Life safety. |
(c) Study of housing and residential services. By no later |
than October 1, 2011, the Department shall conduct a statewide |
study to assess the existing types of community-based housing |
and residential services currently being provided to |
individuals with mental illnesses in Illinois. This study shall |
include State-funded and federally funded housing and |
residential services. The results of this study shall be used |
to inform the rulemaking process outlined in subsection (b).
|
(Source: P.A. 97-529, eff. 8-23-11; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12.) |
|
Section 55. The Rehabilitation of Persons with |
Disabilities Act is amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 2405/3) (from Ch. 23, par. 3434)
|
Sec. 3. Powers and duties. The Department shall have the |
powers and
duties enumerated
herein:
|
(a) To co-operate with the federal government in the |
administration
of the provisions of the federal |
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended,
of the Workforce
|
Innovation and Opportunity Act,
and of the federal Social |
Security Act to the extent and in the manner
provided in |
these Acts.
|
(b) To prescribe and supervise such courses of |
vocational training
and provide such other services as may |
be necessary for the habilitation
and rehabilitation of |
persons with one or more disabilities, including the
|
administrative activities under subsection (e) of this |
Section, and to
co-operate with State and local school |
authorities and other recognized
agencies engaged in |
habilitation, rehabilitation and comprehensive
|
rehabilitation services; and to cooperate with the |
Department of Children
and Family Services regarding the |
care and education of children with one
or more |
disabilities.
|
(c) (Blank).
|
(d) To report in writing, to the Governor, annually on |
|
or before the
first day of December, and at such other |
times and in such manner and
upon such subjects as the |
Governor may require. The annual report shall
contain (1) a |
statement of the existing condition of comprehensive
|
rehabilitation services, habilitation and rehabilitation |
in the State;
(2) a statement of suggestions and |
recommendations with reference to the
development of |
comprehensive rehabilitation services, habilitation and
|
rehabilitation in the State; and (3) an itemized statement |
of the
amounts of money received from federal, State and |
other sources, and of
the objects and purposes to which the |
respective items of these several
amounts have been |
devoted.
|
(e) (Blank).
|
(f) To establish a program of services to prevent the |
unnecessary
institutionalization of persons in need of |
long term care and who meet the criteria for blindness or |
disability as defined by the Social Security Act, thereby |
enabling them to
remain in their own homes. Such preventive
|
services include any or all of the following:
|
(1) personal assistant services;
|
(2) homemaker services;
|
(3) home-delivered meals;
|
(4) adult day care services;
|
(5) respite care;
|
(6) home modification or assistive equipment;
|
|
(7) home health services;
|
(8) electronic home response;
|
(9) brain injury behavioral/cognitive services;
|
(10) brain injury habilitation;
|
(11) brain injury pre-vocational services; or
|
(12) brain injury supported employment.
|
The Department shall establish eligibility
standards |
for such services taking into consideration the unique
|
economic and social needs of the population for whom they |
are to
be provided. Such eligibility standards may be based |
on the recipient's
ability to pay for services; provided, |
however, that any portion of a
person's income that is |
equal to or less than the "protected income" level
shall |
not be considered by the Department in determining |
eligibility. The
"protected income" level shall be |
determined by the Department, shall never be
less than the |
federal poverty standard, and shall be adjusted each year |
to
reflect changes in the Consumer Price Index For All |
Urban Consumers as
determined by the United States |
Department of Labor. The standards must
provide that a |
person may not have more than $10,000 in assets to be |
eligible for the services, and the Department may increase |
or decrease the asset limitation by rule. The Department |
may not decrease the asset level below $10,000.
|
The services shall be provided, as established by the
|
Department by rule, to eligible persons
to prevent |
|
unnecessary or premature institutionalization, to
the |
extent that the cost of the services, together with the
|
other personal maintenance expenses of the persons, are |
reasonably
related to the standards established for care in |
a group facility
appropriate to their condition. These |
non-institutional
services, pilot projects or experimental |
facilities may be provided as part of
or in addition to |
those authorized by federal law or those funded and
|
administered by the Illinois Department on Aging. The |
Department shall set rates and fees for services in a fair |
and equitable manner. Services identical to those offered |
by the Department on Aging shall be paid at the same rate.
|
Except as otherwise provided in this paragraph, |
personal assistants shall be paid at a rate negotiated
|
between the State and an exclusive representative of |
personal
assistants under a collective bargaining |
agreement. In no case
shall the Department pay personal |
assistants an hourly wage
that is less than the federal |
minimum wage. Within 30 days after July 6, 2017 (the |
effective date of Public Act 100-23), the hourly wage paid |
to personal assistants and individual maintenance home |
health workers shall be increased by $0.48 per hour.
|
Solely for the purposes of coverage under the Illinois |
Public Labor
Relations
Act, personal assistants providing
|
services under
the Department's Home Services Program |
shall be considered to be public
employees
and the State of |
|
Illinois shall be considered to be their employer as of |
July 16, 2003 (the
effective date of Public Act 93-204), |
but not before. Solely for the purposes of coverage under |
the Illinois Public Labor Relations Act, home care and home |
health workers who function as personal assistants and |
individual maintenance home health workers and who also |
provide services under the Department's Home Services |
Program shall be considered to be public employees, no |
matter whether the State provides such services through |
direct fee-for-service arrangements, with the assistance |
of a managed care organization or other intermediary, or |
otherwise, and the State of Illinois shall be considered to |
be the employer of those persons as of January 29, 2013 |
(the effective date of Public Act 97-1158), but not before |
except as otherwise provided under this subsection (f). The |
State
shall
engage in collective bargaining with an |
exclusive representative of home care and home health |
workers who function as personal assistants and individual |
maintenance home health workers working under the Home |
Services Program
concerning
their terms and conditions of |
employment that are within the State's control.
Nothing in
|
this paragraph shall be understood to limit the right of |
the persons receiving
services
defined in this Section to |
hire and fire
home care and home health workers who |
function as personal assistants
and individual maintenance |
home health workers working under the Home Services Program |
|
or to supervise them within the limitations set by the Home |
Services Program. The
State
shall not be considered to be |
the employer of
home care and home health workers who |
function as personal
assistants and individual maintenance |
home health workers working under the Home Services Program |
for any purposes not specifically provided in Public Act |
93-204 or Public Act 97-1158, including but not limited to, |
purposes of vicarious liability
in tort and
purposes of |
statutory retirement or health insurance benefits. Home |
care and home health workers who function as personal |
assistants and individual maintenance home health workers |
and who also provide services under the Department's Home |
Services Program shall not be covered by the State |
Employees Group
Insurance Act
of 1971.
|
The Department shall execute, relative to nursing home |
prescreening, as authorized by Section 4.03 of the Illinois |
Act on the Aging,
written inter-agency agreements with the |
Department on Aging and
the Department of Healthcare and |
Family Services, to effect the intake procedures
and |
eligibility criteria for those persons who may need long |
term care. On and after July 1, 1996, all nursing
home |
prescreenings for individuals 18 through 59 years of age |
shall be
conducted by the Department, or a designee of the
|
Department.
|
The Department is authorized to establish a system of |
recipient cost-sharing
for services provided under this |
|
Section. The cost-sharing shall be based upon
the |
recipient's ability to pay for services, but in no case |
shall the
recipient's share exceed the actual cost of the |
services provided. Protected
income shall not be |
considered by the Department in its determination of the
|
recipient's ability to pay a share of the cost of services. |
The level of
cost-sharing shall be adjusted each year to |
reflect changes in the "protected
income" level. The |
Department shall deduct from the recipient's share of the
|
cost of services any money expended by the recipient for |
disability-related
expenses.
|
To the extent permitted under the federal Social |
Security Act, the Department, or the Department's |
authorized representative, may recover
the amount of |
moneys expended for services provided to or in behalf of a |
person
under this Section by a claim against the person's |
estate or against the estate
of the person's surviving |
spouse, but no recovery may be had until after the
death of |
the surviving spouse, if any, and then only at such time |
when there is
no surviving child who is under age 21 or |
blind or who has a permanent and total disability. This |
paragraph, however, shall not bar recovery, at the death of |
the
person, of moneys for services provided to the person |
or in behalf of the
person under this Section to which the |
person was not entitled; provided that
such recovery shall |
not be enforced against any real estate while
it is |
|
occupied as a homestead by the surviving spouse or other |
dependent, if no
claims by other creditors have been filed |
against the estate, or, if such
claims have been filed, |
they remain dormant for failure of prosecution or
failure |
of the claimant to compel administration of the estate for |
the purpose
of payment. This paragraph shall not bar |
recovery from the estate of a spouse,
under Sections 1915 |
and 1924 of the Social Security Act and Section 5-4 of the
|
Illinois Public Aid Code, who precedes a person receiving |
services under this
Section in death. All moneys for |
services
paid to or in behalf of the person under this |
Section shall be claimed for
recovery from the deceased |
spouse's estate. "Homestead", as used in this
paragraph, |
means the dwelling house and
contiguous real estate |
occupied by a surviving spouse or relative, as defined
by |
the rules and regulations of the Department of Healthcare |
and Family Services,
regardless of the value of the |
property.
|
The Department shall submit an annual report on |
programs and
services provided under this Section. The |
report shall be filed
with the Governor and the General |
Assembly on or before March
30
each year.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly |
shall be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the |
Speaker, the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and |
|
the Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research |
Unit,
as required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly |
Organization Act, and filing
additional copies with the |
State
Government Report Distribution Center for the |
General Assembly as
required under paragraph (t) of Section |
7 of the State Library Act.
|
(g) To establish such subdivisions of the Department
as |
shall be desirable and assign to the various subdivisions |
the
responsibilities and duties placed upon the Department |
by law.
|
(h) To cooperate and enter into any necessary |
agreements with the
Department of Employment Security for |
the provision of job placement and
job referral services to |
clients of the Department, including job
service |
registration of such clients with Illinois Employment |
Security
offices and making job listings maintained by the |
Department of Employment
Security available to such |
clients.
|
(i) To possess all powers reasonable and necessary for
|
the exercise and administration of the powers, duties and
|
responsibilities of the Department which are provided for |
by law.
|
(j) (Blank).
|
(k) (Blank).
|
(l) To establish, operate, and maintain a Statewide |
Housing Clearinghouse
of information on available |
|
government subsidized housing accessible to
persons with |
disabilities and available privately owned housing |
accessible to
persons with disabilities. The information |
shall include, but not be limited to, the
location, rental |
requirements, access features and proximity to public
|
transportation of available housing. The Clearinghouse |
shall consist
of at least a computerized database for the |
storage and retrieval of
information and a separate or |
shared toll free telephone number for use by
those seeking |
information from the Clearinghouse. Department offices and
|
personnel throughout the State shall also assist in the |
operation of the
Statewide Housing Clearinghouse. |
Cooperation with local, State, and federal
housing |
managers shall be sought and extended in order to |
frequently and
promptly update the Clearinghouse's |
information.
|
(m) To assure that the names and case records of |
persons who received or
are
receiving services from the |
Department, including persons receiving vocational
|
rehabilitation, home services, or other services, and |
those attending one of
the Department's schools or other |
supervised facility shall be confidential and
not be open |
to the general public. Those case records and reports or |
the
information contained in those records and reports |
shall be disclosed by the
Director only to proper law |
enforcement officials, individuals authorized by a
court, |
|
the General Assembly or any committee or commission of the |
General
Assembly, and other persons and for reasons as the |
Director designates by rule.
Disclosure by the Director may |
be only in accordance with other applicable
law.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15; 100-23, eff. 7-6-17; |
100-477, eff. 9-8-17; 100-587, eff. 6-4-18; 100-863, eff. |
8-14-18.)
|
Section 60. The Department of Transportation Law of the
|
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by changing |
Section 2705-205 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 2705/2705-205) (was 20 ILCS 2705/49.21)
|
Sec. 2705-205. Study of demand for transportation. The |
Department has the
power, in
cooperation with State |
universities and other research oriented
institutions, to |
study the extent and nature of the demand for
transportation |
and to collect and assemble information regarding the most
|
feasible, technical and socio-economic solutions for meeting |
that demand
and the costs thereof. The Department has the power |
to report to the
Governor and the General Assembly,
by February |
15 of each odd-numbered year, the results of the study
and
|
recommendations based on the study.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader, and
the Clerk of the House of |
|
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader, and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General
Assembly Organization |
Act and by filing additional
copies
with the State Government |
Report Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is |
required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library
|
Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
Section 65. The Governor's Office of Management and Budget |
Act is amended by changing Section 5.1 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 3005/5.1) (from Ch. 127, par. 415)
|
Sec. 5.1. Under such regulations as the Governor may |
prescribe, every
State agency, other than State colleges and |
universities, agencies of
legislative and judicial branches of |
State government, and elected State
executive officers not |
including the Governor, shall file with the Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability
Legislative Research |
Unit
all applications for
federal grants, contracts and |
agreements. The Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Legislative Research Unit shall immediately |
forward all such materials to the Office for
the
Office's |
approval. Any application for federal funds which has
not |
received
Office approval shall be considered void and any funds |
received
as a result of
such application shall be returned to |
|
the federal government before they are
spent. Each State agency |
subject to this Section shall, at least 45 days before
|
submitting its application to the federal agency, report in |
detail to the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability
Legislative Research Unit
what
the
grant is |
intended to
accomplish and the specific plans for spending the |
federal dollars
received pursuant to the grant. The Commission |
on Government Forecasting and Accountability Legislative |
Research Unit shall immediately forward such materials to the |
Office. The
Office may approve the submission of an application |
to the
federal agency in
less than 45 days after its receipt by |
the Office when the
Office determines
that the circumstances |
require an expedited application. Such reports of
applications |
and plans of expenditure shall include but shall not be limited
|
to:
|
(1) an estimate of both the direct and indirect costs |
in non-federal
revenues of participation in the federal |
program;
|
(2) the probable length of duration of the program, a |
schedule of
fund receipts and an estimate of the cost to |
the State of maintaining
the program if and when the |
federal financial assistance or grant is
terminated;
|
(3) a list of State or local agencies utilizing the |
financial
assistance as direct recipients or subgrantees;
|
(4) a description of each program proposed to be funded |
by the
financial assistance or grant; and
|
|
(5) a description of any financial, program or planning
|
commitment on the part of the State required by the federal |
government
as a requirement for receipt of the financial |
assistance or grant.
|
All State agencies subject to this Section shall |
immediately file with
the Commission on Government Forecasting |
and Accountability Legislative Research Unit, any awards of |
federal
funds and any and all changes in the programs, in |
awards, in program duration,
in schedule of fund receipts, and |
in estimated costs to the State of
maintaining the program if |
and when federal assistance is terminated, or in
direct and |
indirect costs, of any grant under which they are or expect to |
be
receiving federal funds. The Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability Legislative Research Unit shall
|
immediately forward such materials to the Office.
|
The Office in cooperation with the Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability Legislative Research Unit shall |
develop standard forms and a system of identifying
numbers for |
the applications and reports required by this Section.
Upon |
receipt from the State agencies of each application and report, |
the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability
|
Legislative Research Unit shall promptly designate the
|
appropriate identifying number therefor
and communicate such |
number to the respective State agency, the Comptroller and
the |
Office.
|
Each State agency subject to this Section shall include in |
|
each
report to the Comptroller of the receipt of federal funds |
the identifying
number applicable to the grant under which such |
funds are received.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03; 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
Section 70. The Illinois Environmental Facilities |
Financing Act is amended by changing Section 7 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 3515/7) (from Ch. 127, par. 727)
|
Sec. 7. Powers. In addition to the powers otherwise |
authorized by
law, for the purposes of this Act, the State |
authority shall have the
following powers together with all |
powers incidental thereto or necessary
for the performance |
thereof:
|
(1) to have perpetual succession as a body politic and |
corporate;
|
(2) to adopt bylaws for the regulation of its affairs |
and
the conduct of its business;
|
(3) to sue and be sued and to prosecute and
defend |
actions in the courts;
|
(4) to have and to use a corporate seal
and to alter |
the same at pleasure;
|
(5) to maintain an office at such place or places as it |
may designate;
|
(6) to determine the location, pursuant to the |
Environmental Protection
Act, and the manner of |
|
construction of any environmental or hazardous waste
|
treatment facility to be financed under this Act and to |
acquire, construct,
reconstruct, repair, alter, improve, |
extend, own, finance, lease, sell and
otherwise dispose of |
the facility, to enter into contracts for any and all
of |
such purposes, to designate a person as its agent to |
determine the
location and manner of construction of an |
environmental or hazardous waste
treatment facility |
undertaken by such person under the provisions of this
Act |
and as agent of the authority to acquire, construct, |
reconstruct,
repair, alter, improve, extend, own, lease, |
sell and otherwise dispose of
the facility, and to enter |
into contracts for any and all of such purposes;
|
(7) to finance and to lease or sell to a person any or |
all of the
environmental or hazardous waste treatment |
facilities upon such
terms and conditions as the directing |
body considers proper, and to
charge and collect rent or |
other payments therefor and to terminate any
such lease or |
sales agreement or financing agreement upon the failure of
|
the lessee, purchaser or debtor to comply with any of the |
obligations
thereof; and to include in any such lease or |
other agreement, if
desired, provisions that the lessee, |
purchaser or debtor thereunder
shall have options to renew |
the term of the lease, sales or other
agreement for such |
period or periods and at such rent or other
consideration |
as shall be determined by the directing body or to
purchase |
|
any or all of the environmental or hazardous waste |
treatment
facilities for a nominal amount or otherwise or |
that at or prior to the
payment of all of the indebtedness |
incurred by the authority for the
financing of such |
environmental or hazardous waste treatment facilities the
|
authority may convey any or all of the environmental or |
hazardous waste
treatment facilities to the lessee or |
purchaser thereof with or without consideration;
|
(8) to issue bonds for any of its corporate
purposes, |
including a bond issuance for the purpose of financing a |
group
of projects involving environmental facilities, and |
to refund those bonds,
all as provided for in this Act and |
subject to Section 13 of this Act;
|
(9) generally to fix and revise from time to time and |
charge and collect
rates, rents, fees and charges for the |
use of and services furnished or to
be furnished by any |
environmental or hazardous waste treatment facility or
any |
portion thereof and to contract with any person, firm or |
corporation or
other body public or private in respect |
thereof;
|
(10) to employ consulting engineers, architects, |
attorneys,
accountants, construction and financial |
experts, superintendents,
managers and such other |
employees and agents as may be necessary in its
judgment |
and to fix their compensation;
|
(11) to receive and accept from any public agency loans |
|
or grants for or
in aid of the construction of any |
environmental facility and any portion
thereof, or for |
equipping the facility, and to receive and accept grants,
|
gifts or other contributions from any source;
|
(12) to refund outstanding obligations
incurred by any |
person to finance the cost of an environmental or hazardous
|
waste treatment facility including obligations incurred |
for environmental
or hazardous waste treatment facilities |
undertaken and completed prior to
or after the enactment of |
this Act when the authority finds that such
financing is in |
the public interest;
|
(13) to prohibit the financing of environmental |
facilities for new
coal-fired electric steam generating |
plants and new coal-fired industrial
boilers which do not |
use Illinois coal as the primary source of fuel;
|
(14) to set and impose appropriate financial penalties |
on any person who
receives financing from the State |
authority based on a commitment to use
Illinois coal as the |
primary source of fuel at a new coal-fired electric
utility |
steam generating plant or new coal-fired industrial boiler |
and
later uses non-Illinois coal as the primary source of |
fuel;
|
(15) to fix, determine, charge and collect any |
premiums, fees, charges,
costs and expenses, including, |
without limitation, any application fees,
program fees, |
commitment fees, financing charges or publication fees in
|
|
connection with its activities under this Act;
all expenses |
of the State authority incurred in carrying out this Act |
are
payable solely from funds provided under the authority |
of this Act and no
liability shall be incurred by any |
authority beyond the extent to which moneys
are provided |
under this Act. All fees and moneys accumulated by the |
Authority
as provided in this Act or the Illinois Finance
|
Authority Act
shall be held outside of the State treasury |
and in the custody of the Treasurer
of the Authority; and
|
(16) to do all things necessary and convenient to carry |
out the purposes of
this Act.
|
The State authority may not operate any environmental or |
hazardous waste
treatment facility as a business except for the |
purpose of protecting or
maintaining such facility as security |
for bonds of the State authority. No
environmental or hazardous |
waste treatment facilities completed prior to
January 1, 1970 |
may be financed by the State authority under this Act, but
|
additions and improvements to such environmental or hazardous |
waste
treatment facilities which are commenced subsequent to |
January 1, 1970 may
be financed by the State authority. Any |
lease, sales agreement or other
financing agreement in |
connection with an environmental
or hazardous waste treatment |
facility entered into pursuant to this Act
must be for a term |
not shorter than the longest maturity of any bonds
issued to |
finance such environmental or hazardous waste treatment |
facility
or a portion thereof and must provide for rentals
or |
|
other payments adequate to pay the principal of and interest |
and
premiums, if any, on such bonds as the same fall due and to |
create and
maintain such reserves and accounts for |
depreciation, if any, as the
directing body determines to be |
necessary.
|
The Authority shall give priority to providing financing |
for the
establishment of hazardous waste treatment facilities |
necessary to achieve
the goals of Section 22.6 of the |
Environmental Protection Act.
|
The Authority shall give special consideration to small |
businesses in
authorizing the issuance of bonds for the |
financing of environmental
facilities pursuant to subsection |
(c) of Section 2.
|
The Authority shall make a financial report on all projects |
financed
under this Section to the General Assembly, to the |
Governor, and to the
Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability by April 1 of each year. Such
report shall be a |
public record and open for inspection at the offices
of the |
Authority during normal business hours. The report shall
|
include: (a) all applications for loans and other financial |
assistance
presented to the members of the Authority during |
such fiscal year, (b)
all projects and owners thereof which |
have received any form of
financial assistance from the |
Authority during such year, (c) the nature
and amount of all |
such assistance, and (d) projected activities of the
Authority |
for the next fiscal year, including projection of the total
|
|
amount of loans and other financial assistance anticipated and |
the
amount of revenue bonds or other evidences of indebtedness |
that will be
necessary to provide the projected level of |
assistance during the next
fiscal year.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General
|
Assembly", approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such
additional copies with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for
the General Assembly as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the
State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-205, eff. 1-1-04; 93-1067, eff. 1-15-05.)
|
Section 75. The Arts Council Act is amended by changing |
Section 4 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 3915/4) (from Ch. 127, par. 214.14)
|
Sec. 4.
The Council has the power and duty (a) to survey |
and assess the
needs of the arts, both visual and performing, |
throughout the State; (b) to
identify existing legislation, |
policies and programs which affect the arts
and to evaluate |
their effectiveness; (c) to stimulate public understanding
and |
|
recognition of the importance of cultural institutions in |
Illinois; (d)
to promote an encouraging atmosphere for creative |
artists residing in
Illinois; (e) to encourage the use of local |
resources for the development
and support of the arts; and (f) |
to report to the Governor and to the
General Assembly |
biennially, on or about the third Monday in January of
each |
odd-numbered year, the results of and its recommendations based |
upon
its investigations.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General |
Assembly",
approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional copies
with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
|
Section 80. The Illinois Criminal Justice Information Act |
is amended by changing Section 7 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 3930/7) (from Ch. 38, par. 210-7)
|
Sec. 7. Powers and duties. The Authority shall have the |
|
following
powers, duties, and responsibilities:
|
(a) To develop and operate comprehensive information |
systems for the
improvement and coordination of all aspects |
of law enforcement, prosecution,
and corrections;
|
(b) To define, develop, evaluate, and correlate State |
and local programs
and projects associated with the |
improvement of law enforcement and the
administration of |
criminal justice;
|
(c) To act as a central repository and clearing house |
for federal, state,
and local research studies, plans, |
projects, proposals, and other information
relating to all |
aspects of criminal justice system improvement and to |
encourage
educational programs for citizen support of |
State and local efforts to make
such improvements;
|
(d) To undertake research studies to aid in |
accomplishing its purposes;
|
(e) To monitor the operation of existing criminal |
justice information
systems in order to protect the |
constitutional rights and privacy of
individuals about |
whom criminal history record information has been |
collected;
|
(f) To provide an effective administrative forum for |
the protection of
the rights of individuals concerning |
criminal history record information;
|
(g) To issue regulations, guidelines, and procedures |
which ensure the privacy
and security of criminal history |
|
record information
consistent with State and federal laws;
|
(h) To act as the sole administrative appeal body in |
the State of
Illinois to conduct hearings and make final |
determinations concerning
individual challenges to the |
completeness and accuracy of criminal
history record |
information;
|
(i) To act as the sole, official, criminal justice body |
in the State of
Illinois to conduct annual and periodic |
audits of the procedures, policies,
and practices of the |
State central repositories for criminal history
record |
information to verify compliance with federal and state |
laws and
regulations governing such information;
|
(j) To advise the Authority's Statistical Analysis |
Center;
|
(k) To apply for, receive, establish priorities for, |
allocate, disburse,
and spend grants of funds that are made |
available by and received on or
after January 1, 1983 from |
private sources or from the United States pursuant
to the |
federal Crime Control Act of 1973, as amended, and similar |
federal
legislation, and to enter into agreements with the |
United States government
to further the purposes of this |
Act, or as may be required as a condition
of obtaining |
federal funds;
|
(l) To receive, expend, and account for such funds of |
the State of Illinois
as may be made available to further |
the purposes of this Act;
|
|
(m) To enter into contracts and to cooperate with units |
of general local
government or combinations of such units, |
State agencies, and criminal justice
system agencies of |
other states for the purpose of carrying out the duties
of |
the Authority imposed by this Act or by the federal Crime |
Control Act
of 1973, as amended;
|
(n) To enter into contracts and cooperate with units of |
general local
government outside of Illinois, other |
states' agencies, and private
organizations outside of |
Illinois to provide computer software or design
that has |
been developed for the Illinois criminal justice system, or |
to
participate in the cooperative development or design of |
new software or
systems to be used by the Illinois criminal |
justice system . ;
|
(o) To establish general policies concerning criminal |
justice information
systems and to promulgate such rules, |
regulations, and procedures as are
necessary to the |
operation of the Authority and to the uniform consideration
|
of appeals and audits;
|
(p) To advise and to make recommendations to the |
Governor and the General
Assembly on policies relating to |
criminal justice information systems;
|
(q) To direct all other agencies under the jurisdiction |
of the Governor
to provide whatever assistance and |
information the Authority may lawfully
require to carry out |
its functions;
|
|
(r) To exercise any other powers that are reasonable |
and necessary to
fulfill the responsibilities of the |
Authority under this Act and to comply
with the |
requirements of applicable federal law or regulation;
|
(s) To exercise the rights, powers, and duties which |
have been vested
in the Authority by the Illinois Uniform |
Conviction Information Act;
|
(t) (Blank);
|
(u) To exercise the rights, powers, and duties vested |
in the Authority by the Illinois Public Safety Agency |
Network Act; |
(v) To provide technical assistance in the form of |
training to local governmental entities within Illinois |
requesting such assistance for the purposes of procuring |
grants for gang intervention and gang prevention programs |
or other criminal justice programs from the United States |
Department of Justice; |
(w) To conduct strategic planning and provide |
technical assistance to implement comprehensive trauma |
recovery services for violent crime victims in underserved |
communities with high levels of violent crime, with the |
goal of providing a safe, community-based, culturally |
competent environment in which to access services |
necessary to facilitate recovery from the effects of |
chronic and repeat exposure to trauma. Services may |
include, but are not limited to, behavioral health |
|
treatment, financial recovery, family support and |
relocation assistance, and support in navigating the legal |
system; and |
(x) To coordinate statewide violence prevention |
efforts and assist in the implementation of trauma recovery |
centers and analyze trauma recovery services. The |
Authority shall develop, publish, and facilitate the |
implementation of a 4-year statewide violence prevention |
plan, which shall incorporate public health, public |
safety, victim services, and trauma recovery centers and |
services. |
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader, and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives, the President, the Minority
Leader, and the |
Secretary of the Senate, and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act, and
filing such additional copies with the State |
Government Report Distribution
Center for the General Assembly |
as is required under paragraph (t) of
Section 7 of the State |
Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-938, eff. 1-1-18; 100-373, eff. 1-1-18; |
100-575, eff. 1-8-18; 100-621, eff. 7-20-18; revised 9-25-18.)
|
Section 85. The Guardianship and Advocacy Act is amended by |
changing Section 5 as follows:
|
|
(20 ILCS 3955/5) (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 705)
|
Sec. 5.
(a) The Commission shall establish throughout the |
State such regions
as it considers appropriate to effectuate |
the purposes of the Authority
under this Act, taking into |
account the requirements of State and federal
statutes; |
population; civic, health and social service boundaries; and |
other
pertinent factors.
|
(b) The Commission shall act through its divisions as |
provided in this Act.
|
(c) The Commission shall establish general policy |
guidelines for the
operation of the Legal Advocacy Service, |
Human Rights Authority and State Guardian in
furtherance of |
this Act. Any action taken by a regional authority is subject
|
to the review and approval of the Commission. The Commission, |
acting on a request from the Director, may disapprove
any |
action of a regional authority, in which case the regional |
authority shall
cease such action.
|
(d) The Commission shall hire a Director and staff to carry |
out the powers
and duties of the Commission and its divisions |
pursuant to this Act and
the rules and regulations promulgated |
by the Commission. All staff other
than the Director shall be |
subject to the Personnel Code.
|
(e) The Commission shall review and evaluate the operations |
of the
divisions.
|
(f) The Commission shall operate subject to the provisions |
|
of the Illinois Procurement Code.
|
(g) The Commission shall prepare its budget.
|
(h) The Commission shall prepare an annual report on its |
operations and
submit the report to the Governor and the |
General Assembly.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research Unit, as
|
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General
|
Assembly", approved February 25, 1874 , and filing such |
additional copies with
the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly as is
required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(i) The Commission shall establish rules and regulations |
for the conduct
of the work of its divisions, including rules |
and regulations for the Legal
Advocacy Service and the State |
Guardian in evaluating an eligible person's
or ward's financial |
resources for the purpose of determining whether the
eligible |
person or ward has the ability to pay for legal or guardianship
|
services received. The determination of the eligible person's |
financial
ability to pay for legal services shall be based upon |
the number of dependents
in the eligible person's family unit |
and the income, liquid assets and
necessary expenses, as |
|
prescribed by rule of the Commission of: (1) the
eligible |
person; (2) the eligible person's spouse; and (3) the parents |
of minor
eligible persons. The determination of a ward's |
ability to pay for
guardianship services shall be based upon |
the ward's estate. An eligible
person or ward found to have |
sufficient financial resources shall be required
to pay the |
Commission in accordance with standards established by the
|
Commission. No fees may be charged for legal services given |
unless the
eligible person is given notice at the start of such |
services that
such fees might be charged. No fees may be |
charged for guardianship
services given unless the ward is |
given notice of the request for fees
filed with the probate |
court and the court approves the amount of fees to
be assessed. |
All fees collected shall be deposited with the State Treasurer
|
and placed in the Guardianship and Advocacy Fund. The |
Commission shall
establish rules and regulations regarding the |
procedures of appeal for clients
prior to termination or |
suspension of legal services. Such rules and
regulations shall |
include, but not be limited to, client notification
procedures |
prior to the actual termination, the scope of issues subject to
|
appeal, and procedures specifying when a final administrative |
decision is made.
|
(j) The Commission shall take such actions as it deems |
necessary and
appropriate to receive private, federal and other |
public funds to help support
the divisions and to safeguard the |
rights of eligible persons. Private funds
and property may be |
|
accepted, held, maintained, administered and disposed of by
the |
Commission, as trustee, for such purposes for the benefit of |
the People of
the State of Illinois pursuant to the terms of |
the instrument granting the
funds or property to the |
Commission.
|
(k) The Commission may expend funds under the State's plan |
to protect
and advocate the rights of persons with a |
developmental disability established
under the federal |
Developmental Disabilities Services and Facilities
|
Construction Act (Public Law 94-103, Title II). If the Governor |
designates the
Commission to be the organization or agency to |
provide the services called for
in the State plan, the |
Commission shall make these protection and advocacy
services |
available to persons with a developmental disability by |
referral or by
contracting for these services to the extent |
practicable. If the Commission is
unable to so make available |
such protection and advocacy services, it shall
provide them |
through persons in its own employ.
|
(l) The Commission shall, to the extent funds are |
available, monitor
issues concerning the rights of eligible |
persons and the care and treatment
provided to those persons, |
including but not limited to the incidence of
abuse or neglect |
of eligible persons. For purposes of that monitoring the
|
Commission shall have access to reports of suspected abuse or |
neglect and
information regarding the disposition of such |
reports, subject to the
provisions of the Mental Health and |
|
Developmental Disabilities Confidentiality
Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-271, eff. 1-1-10.)
|
Section 90. The General Assembly Organization Act is |
amended by changing Section 3.1 as follows:
|
(25 ILCS 5/3.1) (from Ch. 63, par. 3.1)
|
Sec. 3.1. Notwithstanding any provision of law to the |
contrary, whenever Whenever any law or resolution requires a |
report to the General
Assembly, that reporting requirement |
shall be satisfied by filing : with the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the Secretary of the Senate in electronic |
form only, in the manner that the Clerk and the Secretary shall |
direct; and with the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability, in the manner that the Commission shall direct |
one copy
of the report with each of the following: the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader
and the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit . In |
addition, the reporting entity must make a copy of the report |
available for a reasonable time on its Internet site or on the |
Internet site of the public entity that hosts the reporting |
entity's World Wide Web page, if any. Additional
copies shall |
be filed with the State Government Report Distribution Center
|
for the General Assembly as required under paragraph (t) of |
Section 7 of
the State Library Act.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 94-565, eff. 1-1-06.)
|
Section 95. The Reports to Legislative Research Unit Act is |
amended by changing Sections 0.01 and 1 as follows:
|
(25 ILCS 110/0.01) (from Ch. 63, par. 1050)
|
Sec. 0.01. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
|
Reports to the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Legislative Research Unit Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-1324.)
|
(25 ILCS 110/1) (from Ch. 63, par. 1051)
|
Sec. 1. Reporting Appointments to the Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability Legislative Research |
Unit .
|
(a) As used in this Act, "separate or interagency board or |
commission"
includes any body in the legislative, executive, or |
judicial branch of
State government that contains any members |
other than those serving in a
single State agency, and that is |
charged with policy-making or licensing
functions or with |
making recommendations regarding such functions to any
|
authority in State government. The term also includes any body, |
regardless
of its level of government, to which any |
constitutional officer in the
executive branch of State |
government makes an appointment. The term does
not include any |
body whose members are elected by vote of the electors.
|
|
(b) Within 30 days after the effective date of this Act, or |
within 30
days after the creation of any separate or |
interagency board or commission,
whichever is later, each |
appointing authority for that board or commission
shall make an |
initial report in writing to the Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability Legislative Research Unit .
Each |
initial report shall contain the following information:
|
(1) The name of the board or commission, and a complete |
citation or copy
of the statute, order, or other document |
creating it.
|
(2) An address and telephone number, if any, that can be |
used to
communicate with the board or commission.
|
(3) For each person appointed by that appointing authority |
to the board
or commission whose latest term has not expired: |
the name, mailing
address, residence address, Representative |
District of residence, date of
appointment, and expected |
expiration of latest term. At the request of the
appointee, the |
report may in lieu of the appointee's residence address list
|
the municipality, if any, and county in which the appointee |
resides. If an
appointment requires confirmation, the report |
shall state the fact,
and the appointing authority shall report |
the confirmation as a report of
change under subsection (c). If |
the statute, order, or other
document creating the board or |
commission imposes any qualification or
background requirement |
on some but not all members of the board or
commission, the |
report shall state which of such requirements each person
|
|
appointed fulfills.
|
(c) Each appointing authority for a separate or interagency |
board or
commission, within 15 days after any change in the |
information required by
subsection (b) to be reported that |
concerns an appointee of that authority,
shall report the |
change in writing to the Commission on Government Forecasting |
and Accountability Legislative Research Unit . Any
such report |
concerning a new appointment shall list the name of the
|
previous appointee, if any, who the new appointee replaces.
|
(d) Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 100th General Assembly, all prior powers, duties, and |
responsibilities of the Legislative Research Unit under this |
Section shall be assumed by the Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability. |
(Source: P.A. 86-591.)
|
Section 100. The Legislative Commission Reorganization Act |
of 1984 is amended by changing Sections 1-3, 1-4, 1-5, 4-1, |
4-2, 4-2.1, 4-3, 4-4, 4-7, 4-9, 10-1, 10-2, 10-3, 10-4, 10-5, |
and 10-6 as follows: |
(25 ILCS 130/1-3) (from Ch. 63, par. 1001-3)
|
Sec. 1-3. Legislative support services agencies. The Joint |
Committee on
Legislative Support Services is responsible for |
establishing general policy and
coordinating activities among |
the legislative support services agencies. The
legislative |
|
support services agencies include the following:
|
(1) Joint Committee on Administrative Rules;
|
(2) Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability;
|
(3) Legislative Information System;
|
(4) Legislative Reference Bureau;
|
(5) Legislative Audit Commission;
|
(6) Legislative Printing Unit;
|
(7) (Blank); and Legislative Research Unit; and
|
(8) Office of the Architect of the Capitol.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04; 93-1067, eff. 1-15-05.)
|
(25 ILCS 130/1-4) (from Ch. 63, par. 1001-4)
|
Sec. 1-4.
In addition to its general policy making and |
coordinating
responsibilities for the legislative support |
services agencies, the Joint
Committee on Legislative Support |
Services shall have the following powers
and duties with |
respect to such agencies:
|
(1) To approve the executive director pursuant to Section |
1-5(e);
|
(2) To establish uniform hiring practices and personnel |
procedures,
including affirmative action, to assure equality |
of employment opportunity;
|
(3) To establish uniform contract procedures, including |
affirmative
action, to assure equality in the awarding of |
contracts, and to maintain a
list of all contracts entered |
|
into;
|
(4) To establish uniform travel regulations and approve all |
travel
outside the State of Illinois;
|
(5) To coordinate all leases and rental of real property;
|
(6) Except as otherwise expressly provided by law, to |
coordinate and
serve as the agency authorized to assign studies |
to be performed by any
legislative support services agency. Any |
study requested by resolution or
joint resolution of either |
house of the General Assembly shall be subject
to the powers of |
the Joint Committee to allocate resources available to the
|
General Assembly hereunder; provided, however, that nothing |
herein shall be
construed to preclude the participation by |
public members in such studies
or prohibit their reimbursement |
for reasonable and necessary expenses in
connection therewith;
|
(7) To make recommendations to the General Assembly |
regarding the
continuance of the various committees, boards and |
commissions that are the
subject of the statutory provisions |
repealed March 31, 1985, under
Article 11 of this Act;
|
(8) To assist the Auditor General as necessary to assure |
the orderly and
efficient termination of the various |
committees, boards and commissions
that are subject to Article |
12 of this Act;
|
(9) To consider and make recommendations to the General |
Assembly
regarding further reorganization of the legislative |
support services
agencies, and other legislative committees, |
boards and commissions, as it
may from time to time determine |
|
to be necessary;
|
(10) To consider and recommend a comprehensive transition |
plan for the
legislative support services agencies, including |
but not limited to issues
such as the consolidation of the |
organizational structure, centralization
or decentralization |
of staff, appropriate level of member participation,
|
guidelines for policy development, further reductions which |
may be
necessary, and measures which can be taken to improve |
efficiency, and
ensure accountability. To assist in such |
recommendations the Joint
Committee may appoint an Advisory |
Group. Recommendations of the Joint
Committee shall be reported |
to the members of the General Assembly no later
than November |
13, 1984. The requirement for reporting to the General
Assembly |
shall be satisfied by filing copies of the report with the
|
Speaker, the Minority Leader and the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives
and the President, the Minority Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and
the Legislative Research Unit, as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General
Assembly Organization |
Act, and filing such additional copies with the State
|
Government Report Distribution Center for the General Assembly |
as is
required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State |
Library Act;
|
(11) To contract for the establishment of child care |
services pursuant
to the State Agency Employees Child Care |
Services Act; and
|
(12) To use funds appropriated from the General Assembly |
|
Computer
Equipment Revolving Fund for the purchase of computer |
equipment for the
General Assembly and for related expenses and |
for other operational purposes
of the General Assembly in |
accordance with Section 6 of
the Legislative Information System |
Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99.)
|
(25 ILCS 130/1-5) (from Ch. 63, par. 1001-5) |
Sec. 1-5. Composition of agencies; directors.
|
(a)
The Boards of the Joint Committee on Administrative |
Rules, the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability, and the Legislative Audit Committee , and the |
Legislative Research Unit shall each
consist of 12 members of |
the General Assembly, of whom 3 shall be appointed by
the |
President of the Senate, 3 shall be appointed by the Minority |
Leader of the
Senate, 3 shall be appointed by the Speaker of |
the House of Representatives,
and 3 shall be appointed by the |
Minority Leader of the House of
Representatives. All |
appointments shall be in writing and filed with the
Secretary |
of State as a public record.
|
Members shall serve a 2-year term, and must be appointed by
|
the Joint
Committee during the month of January in each |
odd-numbered year for terms
beginning February 1. Any vacancy |
in an Agency shall be filled by appointment
for the balance of |
the term in the same manner as the original appointment. A
|
vacancy shall exist when a member no longer holds the elected |
|
legislative
office held at the time of the appointment or at |
the termination of the
member's legislative service.
|
During the month of February of each odd-numbered year, the |
Joint Committee on Legislative Support Services shall select |
from the members of the Board of each Agency 2 co-chairpersons |
and such other officers as the Joint Committee deems necessary. |
The co-chairpersons of each Board shall serve for a 2-year |
term, beginning February 1 of the odd-numbered year, and the 2 |
co-chairpersons shall not be members of or identified with the |
same house or the same political party. |
Each Board shall meet twice annually or more often upon the |
call of the chair or any 9 members. A quorum of the Board shall |
consist of a majority of the appointed members. |
(b) The Board of each of the following legislative support |
agencies shall consist of the Secretary and Assistant Secretary |
of the Senate and the Clerk and Assistant Clerk of the House of |
Representatives: the Legislative Information System, the |
Legislative Printing Unit, the Legislative Reference Bureau, |
and the Office of the Architect of the Capitol. The |
co-chairpersons of the Board of the Office of the Architect of |
the Capitol shall be the Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk |
of the House of Representatives, each ex officio.
|
The Chairperson of each of the other Boards shall be the |
member who is affiliated with the same caucus as the then |
serving Chairperson of the Joint Committee on Legislative |
Support Services. Each Board shall meet twice annually or more |
|
often upon the call of the chair or any 3 members. A quorum of |
the Board shall consist of a majority of the appointed members. |
When the Board of the Office of the Architect of the |
Capitol has cast a tied vote concerning the design, |
implementation, or construction of a project within the |
legislative complex, as defined in Section 8A-15, the Architect |
of the Capitol may cast the tie-breaking vote. |
(c) (Blank).
|
(d) Members of each Agency shall serve without |
compensation, but shall be
reimbursed for expenses incurred in |
carrying out the duties of the Agency
pursuant to rules and |
regulations adopted by the Joint Committee on
Legislative |
Support Services.
|
(e) Beginning February 1, 1985, and every 2 years |
thereafter,
the Joint
Committee shall select an Executive |
Director who shall be the chief
executive officer and staff |
director of each Agency. The Executive Director
shall receive a |
salary as fixed by the Joint Committee and shall be authorized
|
to employ and fix the compensation of necessary professional, |
technical
and secretarial staff and prescribe their duties, |
sign contracts, and issue
vouchers for the payment of |
obligations pursuant to rules and regulations
adopted by the |
Joint Committee on Legislative Support Services. The
Executive |
Director and other employees of the Agency shall not be subject
|
to the Personnel Code.
|
The executive director of the Office of the Architect of |
|
the Capitol shall
be known as the Architect of the Capitol.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-692, eff. 7-1-14.) |
(25 ILCS 130/4-1) (from Ch. 63, par. 1004-1)
|
Sec. 4-1. For purposes of the Successor Agency Act and |
Section 9b of the
State
Finance
Act, the Legislative Research |
Unit is the successor to the
Illinois Commission on
|
Intergovernmental Cooperation.
The Legislative Research Unit |
succeeds to and assumes all powers, duties,
rights, |
responsibilities, personnel, assets, liabilities, and |
indebtedness of
the Illinois Commission on Intergovernmental |
Cooperation.
Any reference in any law, rule, form, or other
|
document to the
Illinois Commission on
Intergovernmental |
Cooperation
is
deemed to be a reference to the Legislative |
Research Unit.
|
For purposes of the Successor Agency Act and Section 9b of |
the State Finance Act, on and after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly, the Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability is the successor to |
the Legislative Research Unit. The Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability succeeds to and assumes all |
powers, duties, rights, responsibilities, personnel, assets, |
liabilities, and indebtedness of the Legislative Research Unit |
with respect to the provisions of this Article 4. |
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
|
(25 ILCS 130/4-2) (from Ch. 63, par. 1004-2)
|
Sec. 4-2. Intergovernmental functions. It shall be the |
function of the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability
Legislative Research Unit :
|
(1) To carry forward the participation of this State as |
a member of
the Council of State Governments.
|
(2) To encourage and assist the legislative, |
executive,
administrative and judicial officials and |
employees of this State to
develop and maintain friendly |
contact by correspondence, by conference,
and otherwise, |
with officials and employees of the other States, of the
|
Federal Government, and of local units of government.
|
(3) To endeavor to advance cooperation between this |
State and other
units of government whenever it seems |
advisable to do so by formulating
proposals for, and by |
facilitating:
|
(a) The adoption of compacts.
|
(b) The enactment of uniform or reciprocal |
statutes.
|
(c) The adoption of uniform or reciprocal |
administrative rules and
regulations.
|
(d) The informal cooperation of governmental |
offices with one
another.
|
(e) The personal cooperation of governmental |
officials and employees
with one another individually.
|
(f) The interchange and clearance of research and |
|
information.
|
(g) Any other suitable process, and
|
(h) To do all such acts as will enable this State |
to do its part in
forming a more perfect union among |
the various governments in the United
States and in |
developing the Council of State Governments for that |
purpose.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
(25 ILCS 130/4-2.1)
|
Sec. 4-2.1. Federal program functions. The Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability Legislative
Research |
Unit is established as the information
center for the
General |
Assembly in the field of federal-state relations and as State
|
Central Information Reception Agency for the purpose of |
receiving
information from federal agencies under the United |
States Office
of Management and Budget circular A-98 and the |
United States Department
of the Treasury Circular TC-1082 or |
any successor circulars promulgated
under authority of the |
United States Inter-governmental Cooperation Act of
1968. Its |
powers and duties in this capacity include, but are not limited |
to:
|
(a) Compiling and maintaining current information on |
available and
pending federal aid programs for the use of |
the General Assembly and
legislative agencies;
|
(b) Analyzing the relationship of federal aid programs |
|
with
state and locally financed programs, and assessing the |
impact of federal
aid programs on the State generally;
|
(c) Reporting annually to the General Assembly on the |
adequacy of
programs financed by federal aid in the State, |
the types and nature of
federal aid programs in which State |
agencies or local governments did
not participate, and to |
make recommendations on such matters;
|
(d) Cooperating with the
Governor's Office of |
Management and Budget and with any
State of Illinois |
offices located in Washington, D.C., in obtaining
|
information concerning federal grant-in-aid legislation |
and proposals
having an impact on the State of Illinois;
|
(e) Cooperating with the
Governor's Office of |
Management and Budget in developing forms
and identifying |
number systems for the documentation of applications,
|
awards, receipts and expenditures of federal funds by State |
agencies;
|
(f) Receiving from every State agency, other than State |
colleges and
universities, agencies of legislative and |
judicial branches of State
government, and elected State |
executive officers not including the
Governor, all |
applications for federal grants, contracts and agreements |
and
notification of any awards of federal funds and any and |
all changes in the
programs, in awards, in program |
duration, in schedule of fund receipts, and
in estimated |
costs to the State of maintaining the program if and when
|
|
federal assistance is terminated, or in direct and indirect |
costs, of any
grant under which they are or expect to be |
receiving federal funds;
|
(g) Forwarding to the
Governor's Office of Management |
and Budget all documents received
under paragraph (f) after |
assigning an appropriate, State application
identifier |
number to all applications; and
|
(h) Reporting such information as is received under
|
subparagraph (f) to the President and Minority Leader of |
the Senate and the
Speaker and Minority Leader of the House |
of Representatives and their
respective appropriation |
staffs and to any member of the General Assembly
on a |
monthly basis at the request of the member.
|
The State colleges and universities, the agencies of the |
legislative
and judicial branches of State government, and the |
elected State
executive officers, not including the Governor, |
shall submit to
the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Legislative Research Unit , in a manner |
prescribed by
the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Legislative Research Unit , summaries
of |
applications for federal funds filed and grants of federal |
funds awarded.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
(25 ILCS 130/4-3) (from Ch. 63, par. 1004-3)
|
Sec. 4-3. The Commission on Government Forecasting and |
|
Accountability Legislative Research Unit
shall
establish such |
committees as it deems
advisable, in order that they may confer |
and formulate proposals concerning
effective means to secure |
intergovernmental harmony, and may perform other
functions for |
the Commission Unit in obedience to its decision. Subject
to |
the
approval of the Commission Unit , the member or members of |
each such
committee
shall be appointed by the co-chairmen of |
the Commission Unit . State
officials or
employees who are not |
members of the Commission Unit may be appointed as members of |
any such committee, but private
citizens holding no |
governmental position in this State shall not be
eligible. The |
Commission Unit may provide such other rules as it
considers
|
appropriate concerning the membership and the functioning of |
any such
committee. The Commission Unit may provide for |
advisory boards for
itself and
for its various committees, and |
may authorize private citizens to serve on
such boards.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
(25 ILCS 130/4-4) (from Ch. 63, par. 1004-4)
|
Sec. 4-4. The General Assembly finds that the most |
efficient and productive
use of federal block grant funds can |
be achieved through the coordinated
efforts of the Legislature, |
the Executive, State and local agencies and
private citizens. |
Such coordination is possible through the creation of
an |
Advisory Committee on Block Grants empowered to review, analyze |
and make
recommendations through the Commission on Government |
|
Forecasting and Accountability Legislative Research Unit to |
the
General Assembly and the Governor
on the use of federally |
funded block grants.
|
The Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Legislative Research Unit shall establish an |
Advisory
Committee
on Block Grants.
The primary purpose of the |
Advisory Committee shall be the oversight of
the distribution |
and use of federal block grant funds.
|
The Advisory Committee shall consist of 4 public members |
appointed
by the Joint Committee on Legislative Support |
Services and the members
of the Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability Legislative Research Unit . A |
chairperson shall be
chosen by the members of the Advisory
|
Committee.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
(25 ILCS 130/4-7) (from Ch. 63, par. 1004-7)
|
Sec. 4-7. The Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Legislative Research Unit
shall
report to the |
Governor and to the Legislature
within 15 days after the |
convening of each General Assembly,
and at
such other time as |
it deems appropriate. The members of all
committees which it |
establishes shall serve without compensation for such
service, |
but they shall be paid their necessary expenses in carrying out
|
their obligations under this Act. The Commission Unit may by
|
contributions to the
Council of State Governments, participate |
|
with other states in maintaining
the said Council's district |
and central secretariats, and its other
governmental services.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the
Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate, and filing such additional copies
with |
the State Government Report Distribution Center for the General |
Assembly
as is required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the |
State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
(25 ILCS 130/4-9) (from Ch. 63, par. 1004-9)
|
Sec. 4-9. Intergovernmental Cooperation Conference Fund.
|
(a) There is hereby created the Intergovernmental
|
Cooperation Conference Fund, hereinafter called the "Fund". |
The Fund shall
be outside the State treasury, but the State |
Treasurer shall act as
ex-officio custodian of the Fund.
|
(b) The Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Legislative Research Unit
may charge and
|
collect fees from participants at
conferences held in |
connection with the Commission's Unit's exercise of
its powers
|
and duties. The fees shall be charged in an amount calculated |
to cover the
cost of the conferences and shall be deposited in |
the Fund.
|
(c) Monies in the Fund shall be used to pay the costs of |
|
the
conferences.
As soon as may be practicable after the close |
of business on June 30 of
each year, the Commission Unit shall |
notify the Comptroller of the
amount
remaining in the Fund |
which is not necessary to pay the expenses of
conferences held |
during the expiring fiscal year. Such amount shall be
|
transferred by the Comptroller and the Treasurer from the Fund |
to the
General Revenue Fund. If, during
any fiscal year, the |
monies in the Fund are insufficient to pay the costs
of |
conferences held during that fiscal year, the difference shall |
be paid
from other monies which may be available to the |
Commission.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
(25 ILCS 130/10-1) (from Ch. 63, par. 1010-1)
|
Sec. 10-1.
The Legislative Research Unit is hereby |
established as a
legislative support services agency until the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 100th General |
Assembly . The Legislative Research Unit is
subject to the |
provisions of this Act, and shall exercise the powers and
|
duties delegated to it herein and such other functions as may |
be provided by law.
|
For purposes of the Successor Agency Act and Section 9b of |
the State Finance Act, on and after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly, the Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability is the successor to |
the Legislative Research Unit. The Commission on Government |
|
Forecasting and Accountability succeeds to and assumes all |
powers, duties, rights, responsibilities, personnel, assets, |
liabilities, and indebtedness of the Legislative Research Unit |
with respect to the provisions of this Article 10. |
(Source: P.A. 83-1257.)
|
(25 ILCS 130/10-2) (from Ch. 63, par. 1010-2)
|
Sec. 10-2.
The Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Legislative Research Unit shall collect |
information
concerning the government and
general welfare of |
the State, examine the effects of constitutional
provisions and |
previously enacted statutes, consider important issues of
|
public policy and questions of state-wide interest, and perform |
research
and provide information as may be requested by the |
members of the General
Assembly or as the Joint Committee on |
Legislative Support Services
considers necessary or desirable.
|
The Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Legislative Research Unit shall maintain an |
up-to-date computerized
record of the information required to |
be reported to it by Section 1 of "An
Act concerning State |
boards and commissions and amending a named Act",
enacted by |
the 86th General
Assembly, which information shall be a public |
record under The Freedom of
Information Act. The Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability Legislative Research |
Unit may prescribe forms for
making initial reports and reports |
of change under that Section, and may
request information to |
|
verify compliance with that Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-591.)
|
(25 ILCS 130/10-3) (from Ch. 63, par. 1010-3)
|
Sec. 10-3. The Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Legislative Research Unit may administer a |
legislative
staff internship program in cooperation with a |
university in the State
designated by the Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability Legislative Research |
Unit .
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
(25 ILCS 130/10-4) (from Ch. 63, par. 1010-4)
|
Sec. 10-4.
The Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Legislative Research Unit , upon the |
recommendation of the sponsoring
committee, shall recruit, |
select, appoint, fix the stipends of, and assign
interns to |
appropriate officers and agencies of the General Assembly for
|
the pursuit of education, study or research. Such persons shall |
be
appointed for internships not to exceed 12 months.
|
(Source: P.A. 83-1257.)
|
(25 ILCS 130/10-5) (from Ch. 63, par. 1010-5)
|
Sec. 10-5.
The Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Legislative Research Unit may accept monetary |
gifts or grants from a
charitable foundation or from a |
|
professional association or from other
reputable sources for |
the operation of a legislative staff internship
program. Such |
gifts and grants may be held in trust by the Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability Legislative Research |
Unit and
expended for operating the program. Expenses of |
operating the program may
also be paid out of funds |
appropriated to the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Legislative Research Unit or to the
General |
Assembly, its officers, committees or agencies.
|
(Source: P.A. 83-1257.)
|
(25 ILCS 130/10-6) (from Ch. 63, par. 1010-6)
|
Sec. 10-6. Each quarter of the calendar year the Commission |
on Government Forecasting and Accountability Legislative
|
Research Unit shall prepare and provide
to each member of the |
General Assembly abstracts and indexes of reports
filed with it |
as reports to the General Assembly. With such abstracts and
|
indexes the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Legislative Research Unit shall include a |
convenient form by which
each member of the General Assembly |
may request, from the State Government
Report Distribution |
Center in the State Library, copies of such reports
as the |
member may wish to receive.
For the purpose of receiving |
reports filed under this Section the Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability
Legislative Research Unit shall |
succeed to the powers and duties formerly
exercised by the |
|
Legislative Council.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
Section 105. The Legislative Reference Bureau Act is |
amended by changing Section 5.02 as follows:
|
(25 ILCS 135/5.02) (from Ch. 63, par. 29.2)
|
Sec. 5.02. Legislative Synopsis and Digest.
|
(a) The Legislative Reference Bureau shall collect, |
catalogue, classify,
index, completely digest, topically |
index, and summarize all bills,
resolutions, and orders |
introduced in each branch of the General Assembly, as
well as |
related amendments, conference committee reports, and veto |
messages, as
soon as practicable after they have been printed |
or otherwise published.
|
(b) The Digest shall be published online each week during |
the regular and special sessions of the
General Assembly when |
practical. Cumulative editions of the Digest shall be published |
online and in printed form after the first year, and after |
adjournment sine die, of each General Assembly.
|
(c) The Legislative Reference Bureau shall furnish the |
printed cumulative edition of the Digest, without
cost, as |
follows: 2 copies of the Digest to each member of the General |
Assembly, 1 copy to
each elected State officer in the executive |
department, 40 copies to the Chief
Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and 30 copies to the Secretary of the
Senate |
|
for the use of the committee clerks and employees of the |
respective
offices, 15 copies to the Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability Legislative Research Unit , and |
the number of copies
requested in writing by the President of |
the Senate, the Speaker of the House,
the Minority Leader of |
the Senate, and the Minority Leader of the House.
|
(d) The Legislative Reference Bureau shall also furnish to |
each county
clerk, without cost, one copy of the printed |
cumulative edition of the Digest for each 100,000 inhabitants |
or
fraction thereof in his or her county according to the last |
preceding federal
decennial census.
|
(d-5) Any person to whom a set number of copies of the |
printed cumulative edition is to be provided under subsection |
(c) or (d) may receive a lesser number of copies upon request. |
(e) Upon receipt of an application from any other
person, |
signed by the applicant and accompanied by the payment of
a fee |
of $55, the Legislative Reference Bureau shall furnish to the
|
applicant a copy of the printed cumulative edition of the |
Digest for the calendar year issued after receipt of
the |
application. |
(f) For the calendar year beginning January 1, 2018, and |
each calendar year thereafter, any person who receives one or |
more copies of the printed cumulative edition under subsection |
(c), (d), or (e) may, upon request, receive a set of the |
printed interim editions for that year. Requests for printed |
interim editions must be received before January 1 of the year |
|
to which the request applies.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-239, eff. 8-18-17.)
|
Section 110. The Legislative Information System Act is |
amended by changing Sections 5.05, 5.07, and 8 as follows:
|
(25 ILCS 145/5.05) (from Ch. 63, par. 42.15-5)
|
Sec. 5.05.
To provide such technical services, computer |
time,
programming and systems, input-output devices and all |
necessary,
related equipment, supplies and services as are |
required for
data processing applications by the Legislative |
Reference Bureau,
the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Legislative Research Unit , the Clerk of the |
House of Representatives
and the Secretary of the Senate in |
performing their respective
duties for the General Assembly.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
|
(25 ILCS 145/5.07) (from Ch. 63, par. 42.15-7)
|
Sec. 5.07. To make a biennial report to the General |
Assembly,
by April 1 of each odd-numbered year, summarizing its
|
accomplishments in the preceding 2 years and its |
recommendations,
including any proposed legislation it |
considers necessary or
desirable to effectuate the purposes of |
this Act.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
|
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative
Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act, and filing such additional copies
with the State |
Government Report Distribution Center for the General Assembly
|
as is required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State |
Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
(25 ILCS 145/8) (from Ch. 63, par. 42.18)
|
Sec. 8. The System may utilize the services of an advisory
|
committee for conceptualization, design and implementation
of |
applications considered or adopted by the System. The
advisory |
committee shall be comprised of (a) 8 legislative
staff |
assistants, 2 to be appointed by the Speaker of the
House of |
Representatives, 2 by the Minority Leader thereof,
2 by the |
President of the Senate and 2 by the Minority Leader
thereof, |
but at least one of the appointments by each
legislative leader |
must be from the staff of legislative
appropriation committees; |
(b) one professional staff member
from the Legislative |
Reference Bureau, appointed by the
Executive Director thereof; |
and one from the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Legislative
Research Unit ,
appointed by the |
Executive Director thereof; and (c) the Executive Director of
|
the Legislative Information System, who shall serve as
|
|
temporary chairman of the advisory committee until a permanent
|
chairman is chosen from among its members. Members of the
|
advisory committee shall have no vote on the
Joint Committee.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
Section 115. The Legislative Audit Commission Act is |
amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
|
(25 ILCS 150/3) (from Ch. 63, par. 106)
|
Sec. 3.
The Commission
shall receive the reports of the |
Auditor General and
other financial statements and shall |
determine what remedial measures, if
any, are needed, and |
whether special studies and investigations are
necessary. If |
the Commission shall deem such studies and investigations to
be |
necessary, the Commission may direct the Auditor General to |
undertake
such studies or investigations.
|
When a disagreement between the Audit Commission and an |
agency under the
Governor's jurisdiction arises in the process |
of the Audit Commission's
review of audit reports relating to |
such agency, the Audit Commission shall
promptly advise the |
Governor of such areas of disagreement. The Governor
shall |
respond to the Audit Commission within a reasonable period of |
time,
and in no event later than 60 days, expressing his views |
concerning such
areas of disagreement and indicating the |
corrective action taken by his
office with reference thereto |
or, if no action is taken, indicating the
reasons therefor.
|
|
The Audit Commission also promptly shall advise all other |
responsible
officials of the Executive, Judicial and |
Legislative branches of the State
government of areas of |
disagreement arising in the process of the
Commission's review |
of their respective audit reports. With reference to
his |
particular office, each such responsible official shall |
respond to the
Audit Commission within a reasonable period of |
time, and in no event later
than 60 days, expressing his view |
concerning such areas of disagreement and
indicating the |
corrective action taken with reference thereto or stating
the |
reasons that no action has been taken.
|
The Commission shall report its activities to the General |
Assembly
including such remedial measures as it deems to be |
necessary. The report of
the Commission shall be made to the |
General Assembly not
less often than annually and not later |
than March 1 in each year.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General |
Assembly",
approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional copies
with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is required |
|
under
paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
In addition, the Commission has the powers and duties |
provided for in the
"Illinois State Auditing Act", enacted by |
the 78th General Assembly, and,
if the provisions of that Act |
are conflict with those of this Act, that Act prevails.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
|
Section 120. The Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Act is amended by changing Sections 3 and 4 and |
by adding Section 7 as follows: |
(25 ILCS 155/3) (from Ch. 63, par. 343) |
Sec. 3. The Commission shall:
|
(1) Study from time to time and report to the General |
Assembly on
economic development and trends in the State.
|
(2) Make such special economic and fiscal studies as it |
deems
appropriate or desirable or as the General Assembly |
may request.
|
(3) Based on its studies, recommend such State fiscal |
and economic
policies as it deems appropriate or desirable |
to improve the functioning
of State government and the |
economy of the various regions within the
State.
|
(4) Prepare annually a State economic report.
|
(5) Provide information for all appropriate |
legislative
organizations and personnel on economic trends |
in relation to long range
planning and budgeting.
|
|
(6) Study and make such recommendations as it deems |
appropriate to
the General Assembly on local and regional |
economic and fiscal policy
and on federal fiscal policy as |
it may affect Illinois.
|
(7) Review capital expenditures, appropriations and |
authorizations
for both the State's general obligation and |
revenue bonding authorities.
At the direction of the |
Commission, specific reviews may include
economic |
feasibility reviews of existing or proposed revenue bond
|
projects to determine the accuracy of the original estimate |
of useful
life of the projects, maintenance requirements |
and ability to meet debt
service requirements through their |
operating expenses.
|
(8) Receive and review all executive agency and revenue |
bonding
authority annual and 3 year plans. The Commission |
shall prepare a
consolidated review of these plans, an |
updated assessment of current
State agency capital plans, a |
report on the outstanding and unissued
bond |
authorizations, an evaluation of the State's ability to |
market
further bond issues and shall submit them as the |
"Legislative Capital
Plan Analysis" to the House and Senate |
Appropriations Committees at
least once a year. The |
Commission shall annually submit to the General
Assembly on |
the first Wednesday of April a report on the State's |
long-term
capital needs, with particular emphasis upon and |
detail of the 5-year
period in the immediate future.
|
|
(9) Study and make recommendations it deems |
appropriate to the
General Assembly on State bond |
financing, bondability guidelines, and
debt management. At |
the direction of the Commission, specific studies
and |
reviews may take into consideration short and long-run |
implications
of State bonding and debt management policy.
|
(10) Comply with the provisions of the "State Debt
|
Impact Note Act" as now or hereafter amended.
|
(11) Comply with the provisions of the Pension Impact |
Note Act, as now
or hereafter amended.
|
(12) By August 1st of each year, the Commission must |
prepare and cause to
be published a summary report of State |
appropriations for the State fiscal year
beginning the |
previous July 1st. The summary report must discuss major
|
categories of appropriations, the issues the General |
Assembly faced in
allocating appropriations, comparisons |
with appropriations for previous
State fiscal years, and |
other matters helpful in providing the citizens of
Illinois |
with an overall understanding of appropriations for that |
fiscal year.
The summary report must be written in plain |
language and designed for
readability. Publication must be |
in newspapers of general circulation in the
various areas |
of the State to ensure distribution statewide. The summary
|
report must also be published on the General Assembly's web |
site.
|
(13) Comply with the provisions of the State Facilities |
|
Closure Act.
|
(14) For fiscal year 2012 and thereafter, develop a |
3-year budget forecast for the State, including |
opportunities and threats concerning anticipated revenues |
and expenditures, with an appropriate level of detail. |
(15) Perform the powers, duties, rights, and |
responsibilities of the Legislative Research Unit as |
transferred to the Commission under Section 7. |
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative
Research
Unit, as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly
Organization |
Act, and
filing such additional copies with the State |
Government Report Distribution
Center for the General Assembly |
as is required under paragraph (t) of
Section 7 of the State |
Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-958, eff. 7-1-10.)
|
(25 ILCS 155/4) (from Ch. 63, par. 344) |
Sec. 4. (a) The Commission shall publish, at the convening |
of each regular
session of the General Assembly, a report on |
the estimated income of the
State from all applicable revenue |
sources for the next ensuing fiscal
year and of any other funds |
estimated to be available for such fiscal
year. The Commission, |
|
in its discretion, may consult with the Governor's Office of |
Management and Budget in preparing the report. On the third |
Wednesday in March after the session convenes, the
Commission |
shall issue a revised and updated set of revenue figures
|
reflecting the latest available information. The House and |
Senate by
joint resolution shall adopt or modify such estimates |
as may be
appropriate. The joint resolution shall constitute |
the General
Assembly's estimate, under paragraph (b) of Section |
2 of Article VIII of
the Constitution, of the funds estimated |
to be available during the next
fiscal year.
|
(b) On the third Wednesday in March, the Commission shall |
issue estimated:
|
(1) pension funding requirements under P.A. 86-273; |
and
|
(2) liabilities of the State employee group health |
insurance program.
|
These estimated costs shall be for the fiscal year |
beginning the following
July 1.
|
(c) The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly |
shall be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the |
Speaker, the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative
Research
unit, as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly
Organization |
Act, and filing
such
additional copies with the State |
Government Report Distribution Center for the
General Assembly |
|
as is required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State
|
Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-958, eff. 7-1-10.) |
(25 ILCS 155/7 new) |
Sec. 7. Transfer of Legislative Research Unit functions. On |
and after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
100th General Assembly: |
(a) All powers, duties, rights, and responsibilities of the |
Legislative Research Unit are transferred to the Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability. Any reference in |
any law, rule, form, or other document to the Legislative |
Research Unit is deemed to be a reference to the Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability. |
(b) All powers, duties, rights, and responsibilities of the |
Executive Director of the Legislative Research Unit are |
transferred to the Executive Director of the Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability. Any reference in |
any law, appropriation, rule, form, or other document to the |
Executive Director of the Legislative Research Unit is deemed |
to be a reference to the Executive Director of the Commission |
on Government Forecasting and Accountability for all purposes. |
(c) All personnel of the Legislative Research Unit are |
transferred to the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability. The status and rights of the transferred |
personnel under the Personnel Code, the Illinois Public Labor |
|
Relations Act, and applicable collective bargaining agreements |
or under any pension, retirement, or annuity plan shall not be |
affected by this Section. |
(d) All books, records, papers, documents, property (real |
and personal), contracts, causes of action, and pending |
business of the Legislative Research Unit shall be transferred |
to the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability. |
(e) All unexpended appropriations and balances and other |
funds available for use by the Legislative Research Unit shall |
be transferred for use by the Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability. Unexpended balances so |
transferred shall be expended only for the purpose for which |
the appropriations were originally made. |
(f) The powers, duties, rights, and responsibilities of the |
Legislative Research Unit with respect to the personnel |
transferred under this Section shall be vested in and shall be |
exercised by the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability. |
(g) Whenever reports or notices are now required to be made |
or given or papers or documents furnished or served by any |
person to or upon the Legislative Research Unit, the same shall |
be made, given, furnished, or served in the same manner to or |
upon the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability. |
(h) Any rules of the Legislative Research Unit that are in |
|
full force on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
100th General Assembly shall become the rules of the Commission |
on Government Forecasting and Accountability. This Section |
does not affect the legality of any such rules in the Illinois |
Administrative Code. |
(i) Any proposed rules filed with the Secretary of State by |
the Legislative Research Unit that are pending in the |
rulemaking process on the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 100th General Assembly, and that pertain to the powers, |
duties, rights, and responsibilities transferred under this |
Section, shall be deemed to have been filed by the Commission |
on Government Forecasting and Accountability. As soon as |
practicable, the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability shall revise and clarify the rules transferred |
to it under this Section using the procedures for |
recodification of rules available under the Illinois |
Administrative Procedure Act, except that existing title, |
part, and section numbering for the affected rules may be |
retained. The Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability may propose and adopt under the Illinois |
Administrative Procedure Act such other rules of the |
Legislative Research Unit that will now be administered by the |
Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability. |
Section 125. The Illinois State Auditing Act is amended by |
changing Section 3-15 as follows:
|
|
(30 ILCS 5/3-15) (from Ch. 15, par. 303-15)
|
Sec. 3-15.
Reports
of Auditor General.
By March 1, each |
year, the Auditor General shall submit to the
Commission, the |
General Assembly and the Governor an annual report
summarizing |
all audits, investigations and special studies made under this
|
Act during the last preceding calendar year.
|
Once each 3 months, the Auditor General shall submit to the |
Commission a
quarterly report concerning the operation of his |
office, including relevant
fiscal and personnel matters, |
details of any contractual services utilized
during that |
period, a summary of audits and studies still in process and
|
such other information as the Commission requires.
|
The Auditor General shall prepare and distribute such other |
reports as
may be required by the Commission.
|
All post audits directed by resolution of the House or |
Senate shall be
reported to the members of the General |
Assembly, unless the directing
resolution specifies otherwise.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General |
Assembly",
approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
|
such additional copies
with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
|
Section 130. The Intergovernmental Drug Laws Enforcement |
Act is amended by changing Section 6 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 715/6) (from Ch. 56 1/2, par. 1706)
|
Sec. 6.
The Director shall report annually, no later than |
February
1, to the Governor and the General Assembly on the |
operations of the
Metropolitan Enforcement Groups, including a |
breakdown of the
appropriation for the current fiscal year |
indicating the amount of the
State grant each MEG received or |
will receive.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General |
Assembly",
approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional copies
with the State Government
Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly as is required |
under
paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
|
Section 135. The State Mandates Act is amended by changing |
Sections 4 and 7 as follows: |
(30 ILCS 805/4) (from Ch. 85, par. 2204)
|
Sec. 4. Collection and maintenance of information |
concerning state
mandates.
|
(a) The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, |
hereafter referred to
as the Department, shall be responsible |
for:
|
(1) Collecting and maintaining information on State |
mandates, including
information required for effective |
implementation of the provisions of this
Act.
|
(2) Reviewing local government applications for |
reimbursement submitted
under this Act in cases in which |
the General Assembly has appropriated funds
to reimburse |
local governments for costs associated with the |
implementation of
a State mandate. In cases in which there |
is no appropriation for
reimbursement, upon a request for |
determination of a mandate by a unit of local
government, |
or more than one unit of local government filing a single |
request,
other than a school district or a community |
college district, the Department
shall determine whether a |
Public Act constitutes a mandate and, if so, the
Statewide |
cost of implementation.
|
|
(3) Hearing complaints or suggestions from local |
governments and other
affected organizations as to |
existing or proposed State mandates.
|
(4) Reporting each year to the Governor and the General |
Assembly regarding
the administration of provisions of |
this Act and changes proposed to this
Act.
|
The Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Legislative Research Unit shall conduct
public |
hearings as needed to review the
information collected and the
|
recommendations made by the Department under this subsection |
(a). The
Department shall cooperate fully with the Commission |
on Government Forecasting and Accountability Legislative |
Research Unit , providing any
information, supporting |
documentation and other assistance required by the Commission |
on Government Forecasting and Accountability
Legislative |
Research Unit to facilitate the conduct of the
hearing.
|
(b) Within 2 years following the effective date of this |
Act,
the Department shall collect and tabulate relevant |
information as to the
nature and scope of each existing State |
mandate, including but not
necessarily limited to (i) identity |
of type of local government and
local government agency or |
official to whom the mandate is directed;
(ii) whether or not |
an identifiable local direct cost is necessitated by
the |
mandate and the estimated annual amount; (iii) extent of State
|
financial participation, if any, in meeting identifiable |
costs;
(iv) State agency, if any, charged with supervising the |
|
implementation
of the mandate; and (v) a brief description of |
the mandate and a citation of
its origin in statute or |
regulation.
|
(c) The resulting information from subsection (b) shall
be |
published in a catalog
available to members of the General |
Assembly, State and local officials,
and interested citizens. |
As new mandates are enacted they shall be added
to the catalog, |
and each January 31 the Department shall list each new
mandate |
enacted at the preceding session of the General Assembly, and
|
the estimated additional identifiable direct costs, if any |
imposed upon
local governments. A revised version of the |
catalog shall be published
every 2 years beginning with the |
publication date of the first catalog.
|
(d) Failure of the General Assembly to appropriate adequate
|
funds for reimbursement as required by this Act shall not |
relieve the
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity |
from
its obligations under this
Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
(30 ILCS 805/7) (from Ch. 85, par. 2207)
|
Sec. 7. Review of existing mandates. |
(a) Beginning with the 2019 catalog and every other year |
thereafter, concurrently with, or within
3 months subsequent to |
the publication of a catalog of State mandates as
prescribed in |
subsection (b) of Section 4, the Department shall submit to
the |
Governor and the General Assembly a review and report on |
|
mandates enacted in the previous 2 years
and remaining in |
effect at the time of submittal
of the report. The Department |
may fulfill its responsibilities for compiling the report by |
entering into a contract for service.
|
Beginning with the 2017 catalog and every 10 years |
thereafter, concurrently with, or within 3 months subsequent to |
the publication of a catalog of State mandates as prescribed in |
subsection (b) of Section 4, the Department shall submit to the |
Governor and the General Assembly a review and report on all |
effective mandates at the time of submittal of the reports. |
(b) The report shall include for each mandate the factual
|
information specified in subsection (b) of Section 4 for the |
catalog. The report may also include the following: (1)
extent |
to which the enactment of the mandate was requested, supported, |
encouraged
or opposed by local governments or their respective |
organization;
(2) whether the mandate continues to meet a |
Statewide policy objective or
has achieved the initial policy |
intent in whole or in part; (3) amendments
if any are required |
to make the mandate more effective; (4) whether the mandate
|
should be retained or rescinded; (5) whether State financial |
participation
in helping meet the identifiable increased local |
costs arising from the
mandate should be initiated, and if so, |
recommended ratios and phasing-in
schedules; (6) any other |
information or recommendations which the
Department considers |
pertinent; (7) any comments about the mandate submitted by |
affected units of government; and (8) a statewide cost of |
|
compliance estimate.
|
(c) The appropriate committee of each house of the General |
Assembly shall
review the report and shall initiate such |
legislation or other action as
it deems necessary.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader, the |
Secretary of the Senate, the members of the committees required
|
to review the report under subsection (c) and the Legislative |
Research
Unit, as
required by Section 3.1 of the General |
Assembly Organization Act, and filing such
additional copies |
with the State Government Report Distribution Center for
the |
General Assembly as is required under paragraph (t) of Section |
7 of
the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-789, eff. 8-12-16; 100-201, eff. 8-18-17; |
100-242, eff. 1-1-18 .)
|
Section 140. The Property Tax Code is amended by changing |
Section 16-190 as follows:
|
(35 ILCS 200/16-190)
|
Sec. 16-190. Record of proceedings and orders.
|
(a) The Property Tax Appeal
Board shall keep a record of |
its proceedings and orders and the record shall be
a public |
record. In all cases where the contesting party is seeking a |
|
change of
$100,000 or more in assessed valuation, the |
contesting party must provide a
court reporter at his or her |
own expense. The original certified transcript of
such hearing |
shall be forwarded to the Springfield office of the Property |
Tax
Appeal Board and shall become part of the Board's official |
record of the
proceeding on appeal. Each year the Property Tax |
Appeal Board shall publish a
volume containing a synopsis of |
representative cases decided by the Board
during that year. The |
publication shall be organized by or cross-referenced by
the |
issue presented before the Board in each case contained in the
|
publication. The publication shall be available for inspection |
by the public at
the Property Tax Appeal Board offices and |
copies shall be available for a
reasonable cost, except as |
provided in Section 16-191.
|
(b) The Property Tax Appeal Board shall provide annually, |
no later than
February 1, to the Governor and the General |
Assembly a report that contains for
each county the following:
|
(1) the total number of cases for commercial and |
industrial property
requesting a reduction in assessed |
value of $100,000 or more for each of the
last 5 years;
|
(2) the total number of cases for commercial and |
industrial property
decided by the Property Tax Appeal |
Board for each of the last 5 years; and
|
(3) the total change in assessed value based on the |
Property Tax Appeal
Board decisions for commercial |
property and industrial property for each of the
last 5 |
|
years.
|
(c) The requirement for providing a report to the General |
Assembly shall be
satisfied by filing copies of the report with |
the following:
|
(1) the Speaker of the House of Representatives;
|
(2) the Minority Leader of the House of |
Representatives;
|
(3) the Clerk of the House of Representatives;
|
(4) the President of the Senate;
|
(5) the Minority Leader of the Senate;
|
(6) the Secretary of the Senate;
|
(7) the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability Legislative Research Unit , as required by |
Section 3.1 of the
General Assembly Organization Act; and
|
(8) the State Government Report Distribution Center |
for the General
Assembly, as required by subsection (t) of |
Section 7 of the State
Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
|
Section 145. The Illinois Pension Code is amended by |
changing Sections 1A-108, 5-226, 6-220, 21-120, and 22A-109 as |
follows:
|
(40 ILCS 5/1A-108)
|
Sec. 1A-108. Report to the Governor and General Assembly. |
On or before
October 1 following the convening of a regular |
|
session of the General Assembly,
the Division shall submit a |
report to the Governor and General Assembly setting
forth the |
latest financial statements on the pension funds operating in |
the
State of Illinois, a summary of the current provisions |
underlying these funds,
and a report on any changes that have |
occurred in these provisions since the
date of the last such |
report submitted by the Division.
|
The report shall also include the results of examinations |
made by the
Division of any pension fund and any specific |
recommendations for legislative
and administrative correction |
that the Division deems necessary. The report
may embody |
general recommendations concerning desirable changes in any |
existing
pension, annuity, or retirement laws designed to |
standardize and establish
uniformity in their basic provisions |
and to bring about an improvement in the
financial condition of |
the pension funds. The purposes of these
recommendations and |
the objectives sought shall be clearly expressed in the
report.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied by
filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader, and the
Clerk of the House of |
Representatives, the President, the Minority Leader, and
the |
Secretary of the Senate, and the Legislative Research Unit, as |
required by
Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act, and filing additional
copies with the State Government |
Report Distribution Center for the General
Assembly as required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library
Act.
|
|
Upon request, the Division shall distribute additional |
copies of the report
at no charge to the secretary of each |
pension fund established under Article 3
or 4, the treasurer or |
fiscal officer of each municipality with an established
police |
or firefighter pension fund, the executive director of every |
other
pension fund established under this Code, and to public |
libraries, State
agencies, and police, firefighter, and |
municipal organizations active in the
public pension area.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-507, eff. 8-22-97.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/5-226) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 5-226)
|
Sec. 5-226.
Examination
and report by Director of |
Insurance.
The Director of Insurance biennially shall make a |
thorough examination
of the fund provided for in this Article. |
He or she shall report the results
thereof with such |
recommendations as he or she deems proper to the Governor for
|
transmittal to the General Assembly, and send a copy to the |
board and to
the city council of the city. The city council |
shall file such report and
recommendations in the official |
record of its proceedings.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
|
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General |
Assembly",
approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional copies
with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is required |
under
paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/6-220) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 6-220)
|
Sec. 6-220.
Examination
and report by director of |
insurance.
The Director of Insurance biennially shall make a |
thorough examination
of the fund provided for in this Article. |
He or she shall report the results
thereof with such |
recommendations as he or she deems proper to the Governor for
|
transmittal to the General Assembly and send a copy to the |
board and to the
city council of the city. The city council |
shall file such report and
recommendations in the official |
record of its proceedings.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General |
Assembly",
approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional copies
with the State Government Report |
|
Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/21-120) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 21-120)
|
Sec. 21-120. Report. The State Agency shall submit a report |
to the
General Assembly at the
beginning of each Regular |
Session, covering the administration and
operation of this |
Article during the preceding biennium, including such
|
recommendations for amendments to this Article as it considers |
proper.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation
to the General |
Assembly",
approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional copies
with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1028.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/22A-109) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 22A-109)
|
Sec. 22A-109. Membership of board. The board shall consist |
|
of the following
members: |
(1) Five trustees appointed by the Governor with the |
advice and consent of the Senate who may not hold an |
elective State office. |
(2) The Treasurer. |
(3) The Comptroller, who shall represent the State |
Employees' Retirement System of Illinois. |
(4) The Chairperson of the General Assembly Retirement |
System. |
(5) The Chairperson of the Judges Retirement System of |
Illinois. |
The appointive
members shall serve for terms of 4 years except |
that the terms of office of the
original appointive members |
pursuant to this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly |
shall be as follows: One member for a term of 1
year; 1 member |
for a term of 2 years; 1 member for a term of 3 years; and 2 |
members for a term of 4 years. Vacancies among the appointive
|
members shall be filled for unexpired terms by appointment in
|
like manner as for original appointments, and appointive |
members shall
continue in office until their successors have |
been appointed and have
qualified.
|
Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the |
contrary, the term of office of each trustee of the Board |
appointed by the Governor who is sitting on the Board on the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General |
Assembly is terminated on that effective date. A trustee |
|
sitting on the board on the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 96th General Assembly may not hold over in office |
for more than 60 days after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly. Nothing in this |
Section shall prevent the Governor from making a temporary |
appointment or nominating a trustee holding office on the day |
before the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th |
General Assembly. |
Each person appointed to membership shall qualify by taking |
an oath of
office before the Secretary of State stating that he |
will diligently and
honestly administer the affairs of the |
board and will not violate or knowingly
permit the violation of |
any provisions of this Article.
|
Members of the board shall receive no salary for service on |
the board but
shall be reimbursed for travel expenses incurred |
while on business for the
board according to the standards in |
effect for members of the Commission on Government Forecasting |
and Accountability Illinois
Legislative Research Unit .
|
A majority of the members of the board shall constitute a |
quorum. The
board shall elect from its membership, biennially, |
a Chairman, Vice Chairman
and a Recording Secretary. These |
officers, together with one other member
elected by the board, |
shall constitute the executive committee. During the
interim |
between regular meetings of the board, the executive committee |
shall
have authority to conduct all business of the board and |
shall report such
business conducted at the next following |
|
meeting of the board for ratification.
|
No member of the board shall have any interest in any |
brokerage fee,
commission or other profit or gain arising out |
of any investment made by
the board. This paragraph does not |
preclude ownership by any member of any
minority interest in |
any common stock or any corporate obligation in which
|
investment is made by the board.
|
The board shall contract for a blanket fidelity bond in the |
penal sum of
not less than $1,000,000.00 to cover members of |
the board, the director and
all other employees of the board |
conditioned for the faithful performance of
the duties of their |
respective offices, the premium on which shall be paid by
the |
board.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-708, eff. 7-29-16.)
|
Section 150. The Midwestern Higher Education Compact Act is |
amended by changing Section 2a as follows: |
(45 ILCS 155/2a) (from Ch. 144, par. 2803)
|
Sec. 2a. The Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability, Legislative Research Unit in
order to ensure |
the purposes of this Act as determined by Section 1, shall
in |
January of 1993 and each January thereafter report to the |
Governor and
General Assembly. This report shall contain a |
program evaluation and
recommendations as to the advisability |
of the continued participation of
Illinois in the Midwestern |
|
Higher Education Compact.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
Section 155. The Illinois Fire Protection Training Act is |
amended by changing Section 13 as follows:
|
(50 ILCS 740/13) (from Ch. 85, par. 543)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 100-600 )
|
Sec. 13. Additional powers and duties. In addition to
the |
other powers and duties given to the Office by this Act, the |
Office:
|
(1) may employ a Director of Personnel Standards
and |
Education and other necessary clerical
and technical |
personnel;
|
(2) may make such reports and recommendations to the |
Governor and
the General Assembly in regard to fire |
protection personnel, standards,
education, and related |
topics as it deems proper;
|
(3) shall report to the Governor and the General |
Assembly no later
than March 1 of each year the affairs and |
activities of the Office
for the preceding year.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
|
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General |
Assembly",
approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional copies
with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 100-600 )
|
Sec. 13. Additional powers and duties. In addition to
the |
other powers and duties given to the Office by this Act, the |
Office:
|
(1) may employ a Manager of Personnel Standards
and |
Education and other necessary clerical
and technical |
personnel;
|
(2) may make such reports and recommendations to the |
Governor and
the General Assembly in regard to fire |
protection personnel, standards,
education, and related |
topics as it deems proper;
|
(3) shall report to the Governor and the General |
Assembly no later
than March 1 of each year the affairs and |
activities of the Office
for the preceding year.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
|
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General |
Assembly",
approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional copies
with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-600, eff. 1-1-19.)
|
Section 160. The Illinois Municipal Code is amended by |
changing Section 11-4-5 as follows:
|
(65 ILCS 5/11-4-5) (from Ch. 24, par. 11-4-5)
|
Sec. 11-4-5.
The books of the house of correction shall be |
kept so as to
clearly exhibit the state of the prisoners, the |
number received and
discharged, the number employed as servants |
or in cultivating or improving
the premises, the number |
employed in each branch of industry carried on,
and the |
receipts from, and expenditures for, and on account of, each
|
department of business, or for improvement of the premises. A |
quarterly
statement shall be made out, which shall specify |
minutely, all receipts and
expenditures, from whom received and |
to whom paid, and for what purpose,
proper vouchers for each, |
to be audited and certified by the inspectors, and
submitted to |
the comptroller of the city, and by him or her, to the |
corporate
authorities thereof, for examination and approval. |
|
The accounts of the
house of correction shall be annually |
closed and balanced on the first day
of January of each year, |
and a full report of the operations of the
preceding year shall |
be made out and submitted to the corporate authorities
of the |
city, and to the Governor of the state, to be transmitted
by |
the Governor to the General Assembly.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as
|
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the
General |
Assembly", approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such
additional copies with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for
the General Assembly as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the
State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
|
Section 165. The Interstate Airport Authorities Act is |
amended by changing Section 2 as follows:
|
(70 ILCS 10/2) (from Ch. 15 1/2, par. 252)
|
Sec. 2.
(a) Governmental units in each of the party states |
are hereby
authorized to combine in the creation of an airport |
authority for the
purpose of jointly supporting and operating |
|
an airport terminal and all
properties attached thereto. The |
number of such governmental units are
not limited as to |
character or size except that membership shall be
composed of |
an equal number of members from each party state, designated
or |
appointed by the legislative body of the participating |
governmental
unit: Provided, That the federal government may be |
represented by a
non-voting agent or representative if |
authorized by federal law.
|
(b) The authorized airport authority shall come into being |
upon the
passage of resolutions or ordinances containing |
identical agreement duly
and legally enacted by the legislative |
bodies of the governmental units
to be combined into the |
airport authority. If passage is by resolution,
it may be joint |
or several, however, the resolution, ordinance or
enabling |
legislation of the combining governmental units shall provide
|
for the number of members, the residence requirements of the |
members,
the length of term of the members and shall authorize |
the appointment of
an additional member to be made by the |
governor of each party state. If
the member appointed by the |
governor shall be selected from the
membership or staff of the |
Department of Aeronautics or its successor agency
or |
aeronautics
commission of his state, there shall be no |
limitation as to place of
residence, and the length of tenure |
of office shall be at the pleasure
of the governor.
|
(c) The respective members of the airport authority, except |
any
member representing the federal government, shall each be |
|
entitled to
one vote. Any action of the membership of the |
airport authority shall
not be official unless taken at a |
meeting in which a majority of the
voting members from each |
party state are present and unless a majority
of those from |
each state concur: Provided, That any action not binding
for |
such reason may be ratified within thirty days by the |
concurrence of
a majority of the members of each party state. |
In the absence of any
member, his vote may be cast by another |
representative or member of his
state if the representative |
casting such vote shall have a written
proxy in proper form as |
may be required by the airport authority.
|
(d) The airport authority may sue and be sued, and shall |
adopt an
official seal.
|
(e) The airport authority shall have the power to appoint |
and remove
or discharge personnel as may be necessary for the |
performance of the
airport's functions irrespective of the |
civil service, personnel or
other merit system laws of either |
of the party states.
|
(f) The airport authority shall elect annually, from its |
membership,
a chairman, a vice-chairman and a treasurer.
|
(g) The airport authority may establish and maintain or |
participate
in programs of employee benefits as may be |
appropriate to afford
employees of the airport authority terms |
and conditions of employment
similar to those enjoyed by the |
employees of each of the party states.
|
(h) The airport authority may borrow, accept, or contract |
|
for the
services of personnel from any state or the United |
States or any
subdivision or agency thereof, from any |
interstate agency, or from any
institution, person, firm or |
corporation.
|
(i) The airport authority may accept for any of its |
purposes and
functions any and all donations and grants of |
money, equipment,
supplies, materials and services, |
conditional or otherwise, from any
state, from the United |
States, from any subdivision or agency thereof,
from any |
interstate agency, or from any institution, person, firm or
|
corporation; and may receive, utilize and dispose of the same.
|
(j) The airport authority may establish and maintain such |
facilities
as may be necessary for the transaction of its |
business. The airport
authority may acquire, hold and convey |
real and personal property and
any interest therein, and may |
enter into such contracts for the
improvements upon real estate |
appurtenant to the airport, including
farming, extracting |
minerals, subleasing, subdividing, promoting and
developing of |
such real estate as shall aid and encourage the
development and |
service of the airport. The airport authority may engage
|
contractors to provide airport services, and shall carefully |
observe all
appropriate federal or state regulations in the |
operation of the air
facility.
|
(k) The airport authority may adopt official rules and |
regulations
for the conduct of its business, and may amend or |
rescind the same when
necessary.
|
|
(l) The airport authority shall annually make a report to |
the
governor of each party state concerning the activities of |
the airport
authority for the preceding year; and shall embody |
in such report
recommendations as may have been adopted by the |
airport authority. The
copies of such report shall be submitted |
to the legislature or general
assembly of each of the party |
states at any regular session of such
legislative body. The |
airport authority may issue such additional
reports as may be |
deemed necessary.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General |
Assembly",
approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional copies
with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
|
Section 170. The Quad Cities Regional Economic Development
|
Authority Act, approved September 22, 1987 is amended by |
changing Section 6 as follows: |
|
(70 ILCS 510/6) (from Ch. 85, par. 6206)
|
Sec. 6. Records and Reports of the Authority. The secretary |
shall
keep a record of the proceedings of the Authority. The |
treasurer of the
Authority shall be custodian of all Authority |
funds, and shall be bonded in
such amount as the other members |
of the Authority may designate. The
accounts and bonds of the |
Authority shall be set up and maintained in a
manner approved |
by the Auditor General, and the Authority shall file with
the |
Auditor General a certified annual report within 120 days after |
the
close of its fiscal year. The Authority shall also file |
with the Governor,
the Secretary of the Senate, the Clerk of |
the House of Representatives, and
the Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability Legislative Research Unit , by |
March 1 of each year, a
written report covering its activities |
and any activities of any
instrumentality corporation |
established pursuant to this Act for the
previous fiscal year. |
In its report to be filed by March 1, 1988, the
Authority shall |
present an economic development strategy for the Quad
Cities |
region for the year beginning July 1, 1988 and for the 4 years |
next
ensuing. In each annual report thereafter, the Authority |
shall make
modifications in such economic development strategy |
for the 4 years
beginning on the next ensuing July 1, to |
reflect changes in economic
conditions or other factors, |
including the policies of the Authority and
the State of |
Illinois. It also shall present an economic development
|
strategy for the fifth year beginning after the next ensuing |
|
July 1. The
strategy shall recommend specific legislative and |
administrative action by
the State, the Authority, units of |
local government or other governmental
agencies. Such |
recommendations may include, but are not limited to, new
|
programs, modifications to existing programs, credit |
enhancements for bonds
issued by the Authority, and amendments |
to this Act. When filed, such
report shall be a public record |
and
open for inspection at the offices of the Authority during |
normal business hours.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
Section 175. The Illinois Urban Development Authority Act |
is amended by changing Section 6 as follows: |
(70 ILCS 531/6)
|
Sec. 6. Records and reports of the Authority. The secretary |
shall keep a
record of the proceedings of the Authority. The |
treasurer of the Authority
shall be
custodian of all Authority |
funds, and shall be bonded in such amount as the
other
members |
of the Authority may designate. The accounts and bonds of the |
Authority
shall
be set up and maintained in a manner approved |
by the Auditor General, and the
Authority
shall file with the |
Auditor General a certified annual report within 120 days
after |
the
close of its fiscal year. The Authority shall also file |
with the Governor, the
Secretary of
the Senate, the Clerk of |
the House of Representatives, and the Commission on Government |
|
Forecasting and Accountability Legislative Research Unit , by |
March 1 of each year, a written report
covering
its activities |
and any activities of any instrumentality corporation
|
established under
this Act for the previous fiscal year. In its |
report to be filed by March 1,
2010, the
Authority shall |
present an economic development strategy for all |
municipalities
with a
municipal poverty rate greater than 3% in |
excess of the statewide average, the
Authority
shall make |
modifications in the economic development strategy for the 4 |
years
beginning on the next ensuing July 1, to reflect changes |
in economic conditions
or
other factors, including the policies |
of the Authority and the State of
Illinois. It
shall also |
present an economic development strategy for the fifth year
|
beginning after the
next ensuing July 1. The strategy shall |
recommend specific legislative and
administrative action by |
the State, the Authority, units of local government,
or
other |
governmental agencies. These recommendations may include, but |
are not
limited to, new programs, modifications to existing |
programs, credit
enhancements for bonds issued by the |
Authority, and amendments to this Act.
When filed, the report |
shall be a public record and open for inspection at the
offices |
of the Authority during normal business hours.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-234, eff. 1-1-10.) |
Section 180. The Illinois Medical District Act is amended |
by changing Section 2 as follows:
|
|
(70 ILCS 915/2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 5002)
|
Sec. 2. Illinois Medical District Commission.
|
(a) There is hereby created a political subdivision, unit |
of local government, body politic and corporate under
the |
corporate name of Illinois Medical District Commission,
|
hereinafter called the
Commission, whose general purpose in |
addition to and not in limitation of
those purposes and powers |
set forth in other Sections of this Act shall be to:
|
(1) maintain the proper surroundings for a medical |
center and a related
technology center in order to attract, |
stabilize, and retain therein
hospitals, clinics, research |
facilities, educational facilities, or other
facilities |
permitted under this Act;
|
(2) provide for the orderly creation and expansion of |
(i) various
county, and local governmental facilities as |
permitted under this Act,
including, but not limited to, |
juvenile detention facilities, (ii)
other ancillary or |
related facilities which the Commission may from time to
|
time determine are established and operated for any aspect |
of the carrying
out of the Commission's purposes as set |
forth in this Act, or are
established and operated for the |
study, diagnosis, and treatment of human
ailments and |
injuries, whether physical or mental, or to promote |
medical,
surgical, and scientific research and knowledge |
as permitted under this Act,
(iii) medical research and |
|
high technology parks, together with the
necessary lands, |
buildings, facilities, equipment, and personal property
|
therefore, and (iv) other facility development to generate |
and maintain revenue streams sufficient to fund the |
operations of the Commission and for the District, and to |
provide for any cash reserves as the Commission shall deem |
prudent.
|
(b) The Commission shall have perpetual succession, power
|
to contract and be contracted with, to sue and be sued in its |
corporate name, but judgment shall not in any case be issued |
against any property of the Commission, to have and use a |
common
seal, and to alter the same at pleasure. All actions |
sounding in tort
against the Commission shall be prosecuted in |
the Court of Claims. The
principal office of the Commission |
shall be in the city of Chicago, and
the Commission may |
establish such other offices within the state of
Illinois at |
such places as to the Commission shall seem advisable. Such
|
Commission shall consist of 7 members, 4 of whom shall be |
appointed by the
Governor, 2 by the Mayor of Chicago, and one |
by the President of the County
Board of Cook County. All |
members shall hold office for a term of 5 years
and until their |
successors are appointed as provided in this
Act; provided, |
that as soon as possible after the effective date of this
|
amendatory Act, the Governor shall appoint 4 members for terms
|
expiring, respectively, on June 30, 1952, 1953, 1954 and 1955. |
The terms
of all members heretofore appointed by the Governor |
|
shall expire upon
the commencement of the terms of the members |
appointed pursuant to this
amendatory Act. Any vacancy in the |
membership of the Commission
occurring by reason of the death, |
resignation, disqualification, removal
or inability or refusal |
to act of any of the members of the Commission
shall be filled |
by the person who had appointed the particular member,
and for |
the unexpired term of office of that particular member. A |
vacancy
caused by the expiration of the period for which the |
member was appointed
shall be filled by a new appointment for a |
term of 5 years from the date of
such expiration of the prior 5 |
year term notwithstanding when such
appointment is actually |
made. The Commission shall obtain such personnel as to the |
Commission shall
seem advisable to carry out the purposes of |
this Act and the work of the
Commission. The Commission may |
appoint a General Attorney and define the
duties of that |
General Attorney.
|
The Commission shall hold regular meetings annually for the |
election
of a president, vice-president, secretary, and |
treasurer and for the
adoption of a budget. Special meetings |
may be called by the President or
by any 2 members. Each member |
shall take an oath of office for the
faithful performance of |
his duties. Four members of the Commission shall
constitute a |
quorum for the transaction of business.
|
The Commission shall submit, to the General Assembly not |
later than
March 1 of each odd-numbered year, a detailed report |
covering its
operations for the 2 preceding calendar years and |
|
a statement of its
program for the next 2 years.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act,
and filing such additional copies with the State |
Government Report
Distribution Center for the General Assembly |
as is required under paragraph
(t) of Section 7 of the State |
Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-825, eff. 7-18-12.)
|
Section 185. The Mid-Illinois Medical District Act is |
amended by changing Section 10 as follows:
|
(70 ILCS 925/10)
|
Sec. 10. Mid-Illinois
Medical District Commission.
|
(a) There is created a body politic and corporate under
the |
corporate name of the Mid-Illinois
Medical District Commission
|
whose general purpose, in addition to and not in limitation of
|
those purposes and powers set forth in this Act, is to:
|
(1) maintain the proper surroundings for a medical |
center and a related
technology center in order to attract, |
stabilize, and retain within the
District hospitals, |
clinics, research facilities, educational facilities, or
|
|
other facilities permitted under this Act;
|
(2) provide for the orderly creation, maintenance, |
development, and
expansion of (i) health care
facilities |
and other ancillary or related facilities that the |
Commission may
from time to time determine are established |
and operated (A) for any aspect of
the carrying out of the |
Commission's purposes as set forth in this Act, (B) for
the |
study, diagnosis, and treatment of human ailments and |
injuries, whether
physical or mental, or (C) to promote |
medical, surgical, and scientific
research and knowledge |
as permitted under this Act; and (ii) medical research
and |
high technology parks, together with the necessary lands, |
buildings,
facilities, equipment, and personal property |
for those parks; and
|
(3) convene dialogue among leaders in the public and |
the private sectors on topics and issues associated with |
training in the delivery of health care services in the |
District's program area.
|
(b) The Commission has perpetual succession and the power
|
to contract and be contracted with, to sue and be sued except |
in actions
sounding in tort, to plead and be impleaded, to have |
and use a common
seal, and to alter the same at pleasure. All |
actions sounding in tort
against the Commission shall be |
prosecuted in the Court of Claims. The
principal office of the |
Commission shall be in the City of Springfield.
|
(c) The Commission shall consist of the following members: |
|
4 members
appointed by the Governor, with the advice and |
consent of the Senate; 4
members appointed by the Mayor of |
Springfield, with the advice
and consent of the Springfield |
city council; and one member
appointed by the Chairperson of |
the
County Board of Sangamon County.
The initial members of the |
Commission appointed by the Governor shall be
appointed for
|
terms ending, respectively on the second, third, fourth, and |
fifth
anniversaries of their appointments.
The initial members |
appointed by the Mayor of Springfield shall be appointed 2
each |
for terms ending, respectively, on the second and third |
anniversaries of
their
appointments. The initial member |
appointed by the Chairperson of the County
Board of Sangamon
|
County shall be appointed for a term ending on the fourth |
anniversary of the
appointment.
Thereafter, all the members |
shall be appointed to hold office for a term of 5
years and |
until their successors are appointed as provided in this Act. |
Within 60 days after the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 95th General Assembly, the Governor shall appoint 2 |
additional members to the Commission. One member shall serve |
for a term of 4 years and one member shall serve for a term of 5 |
years. Their successors shall be appointed for 5-year terms. |
Those additional members and their successors shall be limited |
to residents of the following counties in
Illinois: Cass, |
Christian, Logan, Macoupin, Mason, Menard, Montgomery, Morgan, |
or Scott.
|
(d) Any vacancy in the membership of the Commission
|
|
occurring by reason of the death, resignation, |
disqualification, removal,
or inability or refusal to act of |
any of the members of the Commission
shall be filled by the |
authority that had appointed the particular member,
and for the |
unexpired term of office of that particular member. A vacancy
|
caused by the expiration of the period for which the member was |
appointed
shall be filled by a new appointment for a term of 5 |
years from the date of
the expiration of the prior 5-year term |
notwithstanding when the
appointment is actually made. The |
Commission shall obtain, under the
provisions of the Personnel |
Code, such personnel as to the Commission shall
deem advisable |
to carry out the purposes of this Act and the work of the
|
Commission.
|
(e) The Commission shall hold regular meetings annually for |
the election of
a President, Vice-President, Secretary, and |
Treasurer, for the adoption of a
budget, and for such other |
business as may properly come before it. The
Commission shall |
elect as the President a member of the
Commission appointed by |
the Mayor of Springfield and as the Vice-President
a member of |
the Commission appointed by the Governor.
The Commission shall |
establish the duties and responsibilities of its officers
by |
rule. The President or any 4
members of the Commission
may call |
special meetings of the Commission. Each Commissioner shall |
take an
oath of office for the faithful performance of his or |
her duties. The
Commission may
not transact business at a |
meeting of the Commission unless there is present at
the |
|
meeting a quorum consisting of at least 6
Commissioners. |
Meetings may be held
by
telephone conference or other |
communications equipment by means of which all
persons |
participating in the meeting can communicate with each other.
|
(f) The Commission shall submit to the General Assembly, |
not later than
March 1 of each odd-numbered year, a detailed |
report covering its
operations for the 2 preceding calendar |
years and a statement of its
program for the next 2 years.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader, and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader, and the |
Secretary of the Senate and with the Legislative Research
Unit, |
as required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act,
and by filing such additional copies with the State |
Government Report
Distribution Center for the General Assembly |
as is required under paragraph
(t) of Section 7 of the State |
Library Act.
|
(g) The Auditor General shall conduct audits of the |
Commission in the same
manner as the Auditor General conducts |
audits of State agencies under the
Illinois State Auditing Act.
|
(h) Neither the Commission nor the District have any power |
to tax.
|
(i) The Commission is a public body and subject to the Open |
Meetings Act and
the Freedom of Information Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-693, eff. 11-5-07.)
|
|
Section 190. The Mid-America Medical District Act is |
amended by changing Section 10 as follows: |
(70 ILCS 930/10)
|
Sec. 10. Mid-America Medical District Commission. |
(a) There is created a body politic and corporate under
the |
corporate name of the Mid-America Medical District Commission
|
whose general purpose, in addition to and not in limitation of
|
those purposes and powers set forth in this Act, is to:
|
(1) maintain the proper surroundings for a medical |
center and a related
technology center in order to attract, |
stabilize, and retain within the
District hospitals, |
clinics, research facilities, educational facilities, or
|
other facilities permitted under this Act;
|
(2) provide for the orderly creation, maintenance, |
development, and
expansion of (i) health care
facilities |
and other ancillary or related facilities that the |
Commission may
from time to time determine are established |
and operated (A) for any aspect of
the carrying out of the |
Commission's purposes as set forth in this Act, (B) for
the |
study, diagnosis, and treatment of human ailments and |
injuries, whether
physical or mental, or (C) to promote |
medical, surgical, and scientific
research and knowledge |
as permitted under this Act; and (ii) medical research
and |
high technology parks, together with the necessary lands, |
|
buildings,
facilities, equipment, and personal property |
for those parks; and
|
(3) convene dialogue among leaders in the public and
|
the private sectors on topics and issues associated with |
training in the delivery of health care services within the |
District's program area. |
(b) The Commission has perpetual succession and the power
|
to contract and be contracted with, to sue and be sued except |
in actions
sounding in tort, to plead and be impleaded, to have |
and use a common
seal, and to alter the same at pleasure. All |
actions sounding in tort
against the Commission shall be |
prosecuted in the Court of Claims. The
principal office of the |
Commission shall be located within the District. The Commission |
shall obtain, under the
provisions of the Personnel Code, such |
personnel as the Commission shall
deem advisable to carry out |
the purposes of this Act and the work of the
Commission.
|
(c) The
Commission shall consist of 15 appointed members |
and 3 ex-officio members. Three members shall be appointed by |
the Governor. Three members shall be appointed by the Mayor of |
East St. Louis, with the consent of the city council. Three |
members shall be appointed by the Chairman of the County Board |
of St. Clair County. Three members shall be appointed by the |
Mayor of the City of Belleville with the advice and consent of |
the corporate authorities of the City of Belleville. Three |
members shall be appointed by the Mayor of the City of O'Fallon |
with the advice and consent of the corporate authorities of the |
|
City of O'Fallon. All appointed members shall hold office for a |
term of 3 years ending on December 31, and until their |
successors are appointed; except that of the initial appointed |
members, each appointing authority shall designate one |
appointee to serve for a term ending December 31, 2007, one |
appointee to serve for a term ending December 31, 2008, and one |
appointee to serve for a term ending December 31, 2009. Of the |
initial members appointed by the Mayor of the City of |
Belleville, with the advice and consent of the corporate |
authorities of the City of Belleville, the Mayor shall |
designate one appointee to serve for a term ending December 31, |
2011, one appointee to serve for a term ending December 31, |
2012, and one appointee to serve for a term ending December 31, |
2013. Of the initial members appointed by the Mayor of the City |
of O'Fallon, with the advice and consent of the corporate |
authorities of the City of O'Fallon, the Mayor shall designate |
one appointee to serve for a term ending December 31, 2011, one |
appointee to serve for a term ending December 31, 2012, and one |
appointee to serve for a term ending December 31, 2013. |
The Director of Commerce and Economic Opportunity or his or |
her designee, the Director of Public Health or his or her |
designee, and the Secretary of Human Services or his or her |
designee shall serve as ex-officio members.
|
(d) Any vacancy in the appointed membership of the |
Commission
occurring by reason of the death, resignation, |
disqualification, removal,
or inability or refusal to act of |
|
any of the members of the Commission
shall be filled by the |
authority that had appointed the particular member,
and for the |
unexpired term of office of that particular member.
|
(e) The Commission shall hold regular meetings annually for |
the election of
a President, Vice-President, Secretary, and |
Treasurer, for the adoption of a
budget, and for such other |
business as may properly come before it. The Commission shall |
establish the duties and responsibilities of its officers
by |
rule. The President or any 9 members of the Commission
may call |
special meetings of the Commission. Each Commissioner shall |
take an
oath of office for the faithful performance of his or |
her duties. The
Commission may
not transact business at a |
meeting of the Commission unless there is present at
the |
meeting a quorum consisting of at least 7
Commissioners. |
Meetings may be held
by
telephone conference or other |
communications equipment by means of which all
persons |
participating in the meeting can communicate with each other.
|
(f) The Commission shall submit to the General Assembly, |
not later than
March 1 of each odd-numbered year, a detailed |
report covering its
operations for the 2 preceding calendar |
years and a statement of its
program for the next 2 years.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader, and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader, and the |
Secretary of the Senate and with the Legislative Research
Unit, |
|
as required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act,
and by filing such additional copies with the State |
Government Report
Distribution Center for the General Assembly |
as is required under paragraph
(t) of Section 7 of the State |
Library Act.
|
(g) The Auditor General shall conduct audits of the |
Commission in the same
manner as the Auditor General conducts |
audits of State agencies under the
Illinois State Auditing Act.
|
(h) Neither the Commission nor the District have any power |
to tax.
|
(i) The Commission is a public body and subject to the Open |
Meetings Act and
the Freedom of Information Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-583, eff. 8-26-11.) |
Section 195. The Roseland Community Medical District Act is |
amended by changing Section 10 as follows: |
(70 ILCS 935/10)
|
Sec. 10. The Roseland Community Medical District |
Commission. |
(a) There is created a body politic and corporate under the |
corporate name of the Roseland Community Medical District |
Commission whose general purpose, in addition to and not in |
limitation of those purposes and powers set forth in this Act, |
is to: |
(1) maintain the proper surroundings for a medical |
|
center and a related technology center in order to attract, |
stabilize, and retain within the District hospitals, |
clinics, research facilities, educational facilities, or |
other facilities permitted under this Act; and |
(2) provide for the orderly creation, maintenance, |
development, and expansion of (i) health care facilities |
and other ancillary or related facilities that the |
Commission may from time to time determine are established |
and operated (A) for any aspect of the carrying out of the |
Commission's purposes as set forth in this Act, (B) for the |
study, diagnosis, and treatment of human ailments and |
injuries, whether physical or mental, or (C) to promote |
medical, surgical, and scientific research and knowledge |
as permitted under this Act; and (ii) medical research and |
high technology parks, together with the necessary lands, |
buildings, facilities, equipment, and personal property |
for those parks. |
(b) The Commission has perpetual succession and the power |
to contract and be contracted with, to sue and be sued except |
in tort actions, to plead and be impleaded, to have and use a |
common seal, and to alter the same at pleasure. All tort |
actions against the Commission shall be prosecuted in the Court |
of Claims. The principal office of the Commission shall be |
located at the Roseland Community Hospital. The Commission |
shall obtain any personnel as the Commission deems advisable to |
carry out the purposes of this Act and the work of the |
|
Commission. |
(c) The Commission shall consist of 9 appointed members and |
3 ex officio members. Three members shall be appointed by the |
Governor. Three members shall be appointed by the Mayor of the |
City of Chicago. Three members shall be appointed by the |
Chairman of the County Board of Cook County. All appointed |
members shall hold office for a term of 3 years ending on |
December 31, and until their successors are appointed and have |
qualified; except that of the initial appointed members, each |
appointing authority shall designate one appointee to serve for |
a term ending December 31, 2011, one appointee to serve for a |
term ending December 31, 2012, and one appointee to serve for a |
term ending December 31, 2013.
The Director of Commerce and |
Economic Opportunity or his or her designee, the Director of |
Public Health or his or her designee, and the Secretary of |
Human Services or his or her designee shall serve as ex officio |
members.
|
(d) Any vacancy in the appointed membership of the |
Commission occurring by reason of the death, resignation, |
disqualification, removal, or inability or refusal to act of |
any of the members of the Commission shall be filled by the |
authority that appointed the particular member, and for the |
unexpired term of office of that particular member.
|
(e) The Commission shall hold regular meetings annually for |
the election of a President, Vice President, Secretary, and |
Treasurer, for the adoption of a budget, and for any other |
|
business as may properly come before it. The Commission shall |
establish the duties and responsibilities of its officers by |
rule. The President or any 3 members of the Commission may call |
special meetings of the Commission. Each commissioner shall |
take an oath of office for the faithful performance of his or |
her duties. The Commission may not transact business at a |
meeting of the Commission unless there is present at the |
meeting a quorum consisting of at least 7 commissioners. |
Meetings may be held by telephone conference or other |
communications equipment by means of which all persons |
participating in the meeting can communicate with each other.
|
(f) The Commission shall submit to the General Assembly, |
not later than March 1 of each odd numbered year, a detailed |
report covering its operations for the 2 preceding calendar |
years and a statement of its program for the next 2 years. |
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader, and the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives; the President, the Minority Leader, and the |
Secretary of the Senate; the Legislative Research Unit as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act; and the State Government Report Distribution Center for |
the General Assembly as is required under paragraph (t) of |
Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(g) The Auditor General shall conduct audits of the |
Commission in the same manner as the Auditor General conducts |
|
audits of State agencies under the Illinois State Auditing Act.
|
(h) Neither the Commission nor the District have any power |
to tax.
|
(i) The Commission is a public body and subject to the Open |
Meetings Act and the Freedom of Information Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-259, eff. 8-5-11.) |
Section 200. The Metropolitan Water Reclamation District |
Act is amended by changing Section 4b as follows:
|
(70 ILCS 2605/4b) (from Ch. 42, par. 323b)
|
Sec. 4b. The Governor shall appoint, by and with the advice |
and
consent of the Senate, a State Sanitary District Observer. |
The term of
the person first appointed shall expire on the |
third Monday in January,
1969. If the Senate is not in session |
when the first appointment is
made, the Governor shall make a |
temporary appointment as in the case of
a vacancy. Thereafter |
the term of office of the State Sanitary District
Observer |
shall be for 2 years commencing on the third Monday in January
|
of 1969 and each odd-numbered year thereafter. Any person |
appointed to
such office shall hold office for the duration of |
his term and until his
successor is appointed and qualified.
|
The State Sanitary District Observer must have a knowledge |
of the
principles of sanitary engineering. He shall be paid |
from the State
Treasury an annual salary of $15,000 or as
set |
by the Compensation Review Board, whichever is greater, and |
|
shall also be
reimbursed for necessary expenses incurred in the |
performance of his duties.
|
The State Sanitary District Observer has the same right as |
any
Trustee or the Executive Director to attend any meeting in
|
connection with the business of The Metropolitan Sanitary |
District of
Greater Chicago. He shall have access to all |
records and works of the
District. He may conduct inquiries and |
investigations into the
efficiency and adequacy of the |
operations of the District, including the
effect of the |
operations of the District upon areas of the State outside
the |
boundaries of the District.
|
The State Sanitary District Observer shall report to the |
Governor,
the General Assembly, the Department of Natural |
Resources,
and the Environmental Protection Agency annually |
and more frequently if
requested by the Governor.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research Unit, as
|
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General
|
Assembly", approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional
copies with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General
Assembly as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library
Act.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 95-923, eff. 1-1-09.)
|
Section 205. The School Code is amended by changing |
Sections 2-3.39 and 34A-606 as follows:
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.39) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.39)
|
Sec. 2-3.39. Department of Transitional Bilingual |
Education. To establish a Department of Transitional Bilingual |
Education. In selecting
staff for the Department of |
Transitional
Bilingual Education the State Board of Education
|
shall give preference to persons
who are natives of foreign |
countries where languages to be used in
transitional bilingual |
education programs are the predominant languages.
The |
Department of Transitional Bilingual Education has the power |
and
duty to:
|
(1) Administer and enforce the provisions of Article |
14C of this
Code including the power to promulgate any |
necessary rules and
regulations.
|
(2) Study, review, and evaluate all available |
resources and programs
that, in whole or in part, are or |
could be directed towards meeting the
language capability |
needs of child English learners and adult English learners |
residing in the State.
|
(3) Gather information about the theory and practice of |
bilingual
education in this State and elsewhere, and |
encourage experimentation and
innovation in the field of |
|
bilingual education.
|
(4) Provide for the maximum practical involvement of |
parents of
bilingual children, transitional bilingual |
education teachers,
representatives of community groups, |
educators, and laymen knowledgeable
in the field of |
bilingual education in the formulation of policy and
|
procedures relating to the administration of Article 14C of |
this Code.
|
(5) Consult with other public departments and |
agencies, including
but not limited to the Department of |
Community Affairs, the Department
of Public Welfare, the |
Division of Employment Security, the Commission
Against |
Discrimination, and the United States Department of |
Health,
Education, and Welfare in connection with the |
administration of Article
14C of this Code.
|
(6) Make recommendations in the areas of preservice and |
in-service
training for transitional bilingual education |
teachers, curriculum
development, testing and testing |
mechanisms, and the development of
materials for |
transitional bilingual education programs.
|
(7) Undertake any further activities which may assist |
in the full
implementation of Article 14C of this Code and |
to make an annual report
to the General Assembly to include |
an evaluation of the program, the
need for continuing such |
a program, and recommendations for improvement.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly |
|
shall be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the |
Speaker, the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and |
the Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
|
Unit, as required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly |
Organization Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to |
the General Assembly",
approved February 25, 1874, as |
amended , and filing such additional copies
with the State |
Government Report Distribution Center for the General |
Assembly
as is required under
paragraph (t) of Section 7 of |
the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-30, eff. 7-10-15.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34A-606) (from Ch. 122, par. 34A-606)
|
Sec. 34A-606. Reports.
|
(a) The Directors, upon taking office and annually |
thereafter, shall
prepare and submit to the Governor, Mayor, |
General Assembly, and City Council
a report which shall include |
the audited financial statement for the preceding
Fiscal Year |
of the Board, an approved Financial Plan or a statement of |
reasons
for the failure to adopt such a Financial Plan, a |
statement of the major
steps necessary to accomplish the |
objectives of the Financial Plan, and
a request for any |
legislation necessary to achieve the objectives of the
|
Financial Plan.
|
(b) Annual reports shall be submitted on or before May 1 of |
|
each year.
|
(c) The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly |
shall be
satisfied by filing copies of the report with the |
Board, the Governor,
the Mayor and also the Speaker, the |
Minority Leader and the Clerk of the
House of Representatives |
and the President, the Minority Leader and the
Secretary of the |
Senate and the Legislative Research Unit, as required
by |
Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization Act "An Act to |
revise the law in relation to the General
Assembly", approved |
February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing such
additional |
copies with the State Government Report Distribution Center for
|
the General Assembly as is required under paragraph (t) of |
Section 7 of the
State Library Act.
|
(d) Each annual report required to be submitted through May |
1, 1995,
shall also include: (i) a description of the |
activities of the Authority;
(ii) an analysis of the |
educational performance of the Board for
the preceding school |
year; (iii) an Approved System-Wide Educational Reform
Goals |
and Objectives Plan or a statement of reasons for the failure |
to
adopt such an Approved System-Wide Educational Reform Goals |
and Objectives
Plan; (iv) a statement of the major steps |
necessary to accomplish the goals
of the Approved System-Wide |
Educational Reform Goals and Objectives Plan;
(v) a commentary |
with respect to those Board policies and rules and those
|
provisions of The School Code and collective bargaining |
agreements between
the Board and its employees which, in the |
|
opinion of the Authority, are
obstacles and a hindrance to |
fulfillment of any Approved System-Wide
Educational Reform |
Goals and Objectives Plan; and (vi) a request for any
|
legislative action necessary to achieve the goals of the |
Approved
System-Wide Educational Reform Goals and Objectives |
Plan.
|
(Source: P.A. 85-1418; 86-1477.)
|
Section 210. The P-20 Longitudinal Education Data System |
Act is amended by changing Section 15 as follows: |
(105 ILCS 13/15)
|
Sec. 15. Establishment of the longitudinal data system and |
data warehouse. |
(a) The State Education Authorities shall jointly |
establish and maintain a longitudinal data system by entering |
into one or more agreements that link early learning, |
elementary, and secondary school student unit records with |
institution of higher learning student unit records. To the |
extent authorized by this Section and Section 20 of this Act: |
(1) the State Board is responsible for collecting and |
maintaining authoritative enrollment, completion, and |
student characteristic information on early learning, |
public school (kindergarten through grade 12), and |
non-public school (kindergarten through grade 12) |
students; |
|
(2) the Community College Board is responsible for |
collecting and maintaining authoritative enrollment, |
completion, and student characteristic information on |
community college students; and |
(3) the Board of Higher Education is responsible for |
collecting and maintaining authoritative enrollment, |
completion, and student characteristic information on |
students enrolled in institutions of higher learning, |
other than community colleges. |
(b) On or before June 30, 2013, subject to the availability |
of funding through appropriations made specifically for the |
purposes of this Act, the State Education Authorities shall |
improve and expand the longitudinal data system to enable the |
State Education Authorities to perform or cause to be performed |
all of the following activities and functions: |
(1) Reduce, to the maximum extent possible, the data |
collection burden on school districts and institutions of |
higher learning by using data submitted to the system for |
multiple reporting and analysis functions. |
(2) Provide authorized officials of early learning |
programs, schools, school districts, and institutions of |
higher learning with access to their own student-level |
data, summary reports, and data that can be integrated with |
additional data maintained outside of the system to inform |
education decision-making. |
(3) Link data to instructional management tools that |
|
support instruction and assist collaboration among |
teachers and postsecondary instructors. |
(4) Enhance and expand existing high |
school-to-postsecondary reporting systems to inform school |
and school district officials, education policymakers, and |
members of the public about public school students' |
performance in postsecondary education. |
(5) Provide data reporting, analysis, and planning |
tools that assist with financial oversight, human resource |
management, and other education support functions. |
(6) Improve student access to educational |
opportunities by linking data to student college and career |
planning portals, facilitating the submission of |
electronic transcripts and scholarship and financial aid |
applications, and enabling the transfer of student records |
to officials of a school or institution of higher learning |
where a student enrolls or seeks or intends to enroll. |
(7) Establish a public Internet web interface that |
provides non-confidential data reports and permits queries |
so that parents, the media, and other members of the public |
can more easily access information pertaining to |
statewide, district, and school performance. |
(8) Provide research and reports to the General |
Assembly that assist with evaluating the effectiveness of |
specific programs and that enable legislators to analyze |
educational performance within their legislative |
|
districts. |
(9) Allow the State Education Authorities to |
efficiently meet federal and State reporting requirements |
by drawing data for required reports from multiple State |
systems. |
(10) Establish a system to evaluate teacher and |
administrator preparation programs using student academic |
growth as one component of evaluation.
|
(11) In accordance with a data sharing agreement |
entered into between the State Education Authorities and |
the Illinois Student Assistance Commission, establish |
procedures and systems to evaluate the relationship |
between need-based financial aid and student enrollment |
and success in institutions of higher learning.
|
(12) In accordance with data sharing agreements |
entered into between the State Education Authorities and |
health and human service agencies, establish procedures |
and systems to evaluate the relationship between education |
and other student and family support systems. |
(13) In accordance with data sharing agreements |
entered into between the State Education Authorities and |
employment and workforce development agencies, establish |
procedures and systems to evaluate the relationship |
between education programs and outcomes and employment |
fields, employment locations, and employment outcomes.
|
(c) On or before June 30, 2013, subject to the availability |
|
of funding through appropriations made specifically for the |
purposes of this Act, the State Board shall establish a data |
warehouse that integrates data from multiple student unit |
record systems and supports all of the uses and functions of |
the longitudinal data system set forth in this Act. The data |
warehouse must be developed in cooperation with the Community |
College Board and the Board of Higher Education and must have |
the ability to integrate longitudinal data from early learning |
through the postsecondary level in accordance with one or more |
data sharing agreements entered into among the State Education |
Authorities. The data warehouse, as integrated with the |
longitudinal data system, must include, but is not limited to, |
all of the following elements: |
(1) A unique statewide student identifier that |
connects student data across key databases across years. |
The unique statewide student identifier must not be derived |
from a student's social security number and must be |
provided to institutions of higher learning to assist with |
linkages between early learning through secondary and |
postsecondary data. |
(2) Student-level enrollment, demographic, and program |
participation information, including information on |
participation in dual credit programs. |
(3) The ability to match individual students' |
elementary and secondary test records from year to year to |
measure academic growth. |
|
(4) Information on untested students in the elementary |
and secondary levels, and the reasons they were not tested. |
(5) A teacher and administrator identifier system with |
the ability to match students to early learning, |
elementary, and secondary teachers and elementary and |
secondary administrators. Information able to be obtained |
only as a result of the linkage of teacher and student data |
through the longitudinal data system may not be used by a |
school district for decisions involving teacher pay or |
teacher benefits unless the district and the exclusive |
bargaining representative of the district's teachers, if |
any, have agreed to this use. Information able to be |
obtained only as a result of the linkage of teacher and |
student data through the longitudinal data system may not |
be used by a school district as part of an evaluation under |
Article 24A of the School Code unless, in good faith |
cooperation with the school district's teachers or, where |
applicable, the exclusive bargaining representative of the |
school district's teachers, the school district has |
developed an evaluation plan or substantive change to an |
evaluation plan that specifically describes the school |
district's rationale for using this information for |
evaluations, how this information will be used as part of |
the evaluation process, and how this information will |
relate to evaluation standards. However, nothing in this |
subdivision (5) or elsewhere in this Act limits or |
|
restricts (i) a district's use of any local or State data |
that has been obtained independently from the linkage of |
teacher and student data through the longitudinal data |
system or (ii) a charter school's use of any local or State |
data in connection with teacher pay, benefits, or |
evaluations. |
(6) Student-level transcript information, including |
information on courses completed and grades earned, from |
middle and high schools. The State Board shall establish a |
statewide course classification system based upon the |
federal School Codes for Exchange of Data or a similar |
course classification system. Each school district and |
charter school shall map its course descriptions to the |
statewide course classification system for the purpose of |
State reporting. School districts and charter schools are |
not required to change or modify the locally adopted course |
descriptions used for all other purposes. The State Board |
shall establish or contract for the establishment of a |
technical support and training system to assist schools and |
districts with the implementation of this item (6) and |
shall, to the extent possible, collect transcript data |
using a system that permits automated reporting from |
district student information systems. |
(7) Student-level college readiness test scores. |
(8) Student-level graduation and dropout data. |
(9) The ability to match early learning through |
|
secondary student unit records with institution of higher |
learning student unit record systems.
|
(10) A State data audit system assessing data quality, |
validity, and reliability.
|
(d) Using data provided to and maintained by the |
longitudinal data system, the State Education Authorities may, |
in addition to functions and activities specified elsewhere in |
this Section, perform and undertake the following: |
(1) research for or on behalf of early learning |
programs, schools, school districts, or institutions of |
higher learning, which may be performed by one or more |
State Education Authorities or through agreements with |
research organizations meeting all of the requirements of |
this Act and privacy protection laws; and |
(2) audits or evaluations of federal or |
State-supported education programs and activities to |
enforce federal or State legal requirements with respect to |
those programs. Each State Education Authority may assist |
another State Education Authority with audit, evaluation, |
or enforcement activities and may disclose education |
records with each other for those activities relating to |
any early learning through postsecondary program. The |
State Education Authorities may disclose student |
information to authorized officials of a student's former |
early learning program, school, or school district to |
assist with the evaluation of federal or State-supported |
|
education programs.
|
(e) In establishing, operating, and expanding the |
longitudinal data system, the State Education Authorities |
shall convene stakeholders and create opportunities for input |
and advice in the areas of data ownership, data use, research |
priorities, data management, confidentiality, data access, and |
reporting from the system. Such stakeholders include, but are |
not limited to, public and non-public institutions of higher |
learning, school districts, charter schools, non-public |
elementary and secondary schools, early learning programs, |
teachers, professors, parents, principals and administrators, |
school research consortiums, education policy and advocacy |
organizations, news media, the Illinois Student Assistance |
Commission, the Illinois Education Research Council, the |
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, the Illinois |
Early Learning Council, and the Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability Legislative Research Unit . |
(f) Representatives of the State Education Authorities |
shall report to and advise the Illinois P-20 Council on the |
implementation, operation, and expansion of the longitudinal |
data system. |
(g) Appropriations made to the State Education Authorities |
for the purposes of this Act shall be used exclusively for |
expenses for the development and operation of the longitudinal |
data system. Authorized expenses of the State Education |
Authorities may relate to contracts with outside vendors for |
|
the development and operation of the system, agreements with |
other governmental entities or research organizations for |
authorized uses and functions of the system, technical support |
and training for entities submitting data to the system, or |
regular or contractual employees necessary for the system's |
development or operation.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-107, eff. 7-30-09.) |
Section 215. The Board of Higher Education Act is amended |
by changing Section 9.04 as follows:
|
(110 ILCS 205/9.04) (from Ch. 144, par. 189.04)
|
Sec. 9.04.
To submit
to the Governor and the General |
Assembly a written report
covering the activities engaged in |
and recommendations made. This report shall
be submitted in |
accordance with the
requirements of Section 3 of the State |
Finance Act.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing electronic or paper copies of the report |
with the Speaker, the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the |
House of Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader |
and the Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
|
Unit, as required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly |
Organization Act, and filing such additional electronic or |
paper copies
with the State Government Report Distribution |
Center for the General Assembly
as is required under
paragraph |
|
(t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-167, eff. 1-1-18 .)
|
Section 220. The Family Practice Residency Act is amended |
by changing Section 9 as follows:
|
(110 ILCS 935/9) (from Ch. 144, par. 1459)
|
Sec. 9.
The Department shall annually report to the General |
Assembly
and the Governor the results and progress of the |
programs established by
this Act on or before March 15th.
|
The annual report to the General Assembly and the Governor |
shall include
the impact of programs established under this Act |
on the ability of
designated shortage areas to attract and |
retain physicians and other health
care personnel. The report |
shall include recommendations to improve that
ability.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act,
and filing such additional copies with the State |
Government Report
Distribution Center for the General Assembly |
as is required under paragraph
(t) of Section 7 of the State |
Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-965; 87-430; 87-633; 87-895.)
|
|
Section 225. The Governor's Scholars Board of Sponsors Act |
is amended by changing Section 4 as follows:
|
(110 ILCS 940/4) (from Ch. 127, par. 63b134)
|
Sec. 4.
The Board
of Sponsors shall make a detailed report |
of its activities and
recommendations to the 77th General |
Assembly and to the Governor not later
than February 1, 1971 |
and by February 1 of each odd numbered year
thereafter and |
shall submit recommendations for such legislation as it
deems |
necessary.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General |
Assembly",
approved February
25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional copies with the State Government
Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly as is required |
under
paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
|
Section 230. The Podiatric Scholarship and Residency Act is |
amended by changing Section 25 as follows:
|
|
(110 ILCS 978/25)
|
Sec. 25. Annual reports. The Department shall annually |
report to the General Assembly
and the Governor the results and |
progress of the programs established by
this Act on or before |
March 15th.
|
The Department shall, no later than July 1, 1994, report to |
the General
Assembly and the Governor concerning the impact of |
programs established
under this Act on the ability of |
designated shortage areas to attract and
retain podiatric |
physicians and other health care personnel. The report shall |
include
recommendations to improve that ability.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act,
and filing additional copies with the State Government |
Report Distribution
Center for the General Assembly that are |
required under paragraph (t) of
Section 7 of the State Library |
Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-1195.)
|
Section 235. The Coal Mining Act is amended by changing |
Section 4.18 as follows:
|
|
(225 ILCS 705/4.18) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 418)
|
Sec. 4.18.
On the receipt of each State Mine Inspector's |
report the Mining
Board shall compile and summarize the data to |
be included in the report
of the Mining Board, known as the |
Annual Coal Report, which shall within
four months thereafter, |
be printed, bound, and transmitted to the Governor
and General |
Assembly for the information of the public. The printing
and |
binding of the Annual Coal Reports shall
be provided for by the |
Department
of Central Management Services in like manner and |
numbers, as it provides
for the publication of other official |
reports.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General |
Assembly",
approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional copies
with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
|
Section 240. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
|
changing Sections 5-5, 5-5.8, and 12-5 as follows:
|
(305 ILCS 5/5-5) (from Ch. 23, par. 5-5)
|
Sec. 5-5. Medical services. The Illinois Department, by |
rule, shall
determine the quantity and quality of and the rate |
of reimbursement for the
medical assistance for which
payment |
will be authorized, and the medical services to be provided,
|
which may include all or part of the following: (1) inpatient |
hospital
services; (2) outpatient hospital services; (3) other |
laboratory and
X-ray services; (4) skilled nursing home |
services; (5) physicians'
services whether furnished in the |
office, the patient's home, a
hospital, a skilled nursing home, |
or elsewhere; (6) medical care, or any
other type of remedial |
care furnished by licensed practitioners; (7)
home health care |
services; (8) private duty nursing service; (9) clinic
|
services; (10) dental services, including prevention and |
treatment of periodontal disease and dental caries disease for |
pregnant women, provided by an individual licensed to practice |
dentistry or dental surgery; for purposes of this item (10), |
"dental services" means diagnostic, preventive, or corrective |
procedures provided by or under the supervision of a dentist in |
the practice of his or her profession; (11) physical therapy |
and related
services; (12) prescribed drugs, dentures, and |
prosthetic devices; and
eyeglasses prescribed by a physician |
skilled in the diseases of the eye,
or by an optometrist, |
whichever the person may select; (13) other
diagnostic, |
|
screening, preventive, and rehabilitative services, including |
to ensure that the individual's need for intervention or |
treatment of mental disorders or substance use disorders or |
co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders is |
determined using a uniform screening, assessment, and |
evaluation process inclusive of criteria, for children and |
adults; for purposes of this item (13), a uniform screening, |
assessment, and evaluation process refers to a process that |
includes an appropriate evaluation and, as warranted, a |
referral; "uniform" does not mean the use of a singular |
instrument, tool, or process that all must utilize; (14)
|
transportation and such other expenses as may be necessary; |
(15) medical
treatment of sexual assault survivors, as defined |
in
Section 1a of the Sexual Assault Survivors Emergency |
Treatment Act, for
injuries sustained as a result of the sexual |
assault, including
examinations and laboratory tests to |
discover evidence which may be used in
criminal proceedings |
arising from the sexual assault; (16) the
diagnosis and |
treatment of sickle cell anemia; and (17)
any other medical |
care, and any other type of remedial care recognized
under the |
laws of this State. The term "any other type of remedial care" |
shall
include nursing care and nursing home service for persons |
who rely on
treatment by spiritual means alone through prayer |
for healing.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, a |
comprehensive
tobacco use cessation program that includes |
|
purchasing prescription drugs or
prescription medical devices |
approved by the Food and Drug Administration shall
be covered |
under the medical assistance
program under this Article for |
persons who are otherwise eligible for
assistance under this |
Article.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, |
reproductive health care that is otherwise legal in Illinois |
shall be covered under the medical assistance program for |
persons who are otherwise eligible for medical assistance under |
this Article. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, the |
Illinois
Department may not require, as a condition of payment |
for any laboratory
test authorized under this Article, that a |
physician's handwritten signature
appear on the laboratory |
test order form. The Illinois Department may,
however, impose |
other appropriate requirements regarding laboratory test
order |
documentation.
|
Upon receipt of federal approval of an amendment to the |
Illinois Title XIX State Plan for this purpose, the Department |
shall authorize the Chicago Public Schools (CPS) to procure a |
vendor or vendors to manufacture eyeglasses for individuals |
enrolled in a school within the CPS system. CPS shall ensure |
that its vendor or vendors are enrolled as providers in the |
medical assistance program and in any capitated Medicaid |
managed care entity (MCE) serving individuals enrolled in a |
school within the CPS system. Under any contract procured under |
|
this provision, the vendor or vendors must serve only |
individuals enrolled in a school within the CPS system. Claims |
for services provided by CPS's vendor or vendors to recipients |
of benefits in the medical assistance program under this Code, |
the Children's Health Insurance Program, or the Covering ALL |
KIDS Health Insurance Program shall be submitted to the |
Department or the MCE in which the individual is enrolled for |
payment and shall be reimbursed at the Department's or the |
MCE's established rates or rate methodologies for eyeglasses. |
On and after July 1, 2012, the Department of Healthcare and |
Family Services may provide the following services to
persons
|
eligible for assistance under this Article who are |
participating in
education, training or employment programs |
operated by the Department of Human
Services as successor to |
the Department of Public Aid:
|
(1) dental services provided by or under the |
supervision of a dentist; and
|
(2) eyeglasses prescribed by a physician skilled in the |
diseases of the
eye, or by an optometrist, whichever the |
person may select.
|
On and after July 1, 2018, the Department of Healthcare and |
Family Services shall provide dental services to any adult who |
is otherwise eligible for assistance under the medical |
assistance program. As used in this paragraph, "dental |
services" means diagnostic, preventative, restorative, or |
corrective procedures, including procedures and services for |
|
the prevention and treatment of periodontal disease and dental |
caries disease, provided by an individual who is licensed to |
practice dentistry or dental surgery or who is under the |
supervision of a dentist in the practice of his or her |
profession. |
On and after July 1, 2018, targeted dental services, as set |
forth in Exhibit D of the Consent Decree entered by the United |
States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, |
Eastern Division, in the matter of Memisovski v. Maram, Case |
No. 92 C 1982, that are provided to adults under the medical |
assistance program shall be established at no less than the |
rates set forth in the "New Rate" column in Exhibit D of the |
Consent Decree for targeted dental services that are provided |
to persons under the age of 18 under the medical assistance |
program. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code and |
subject to federal approval, the Department may adopt rules to |
allow a dentist who is volunteering his or her service at no |
cost to render dental services through an enrolled |
not-for-profit health clinic without the dentist personally |
enrolling as a participating provider in the medical assistance |
program. A not-for-profit health clinic shall include a public |
health clinic or Federally Qualified Health Center or other |
enrolled provider, as determined by the Department, through |
which dental services covered under this Section are performed. |
The Department shall establish a process for payment of claims |
|
for reimbursement for covered dental services rendered under |
this provision. |
The Illinois Department, by rule, may distinguish and |
classify the
medical services to be provided only in accordance |
with the classes of
persons designated in Section 5-2.
|
The Department of Healthcare and Family Services must |
provide coverage and reimbursement for amino acid-based |
elemental formulas, regardless of delivery method, for the |
diagnosis and treatment of (i) eosinophilic disorders and (ii) |
short bowel syndrome when the prescribing physician has issued |
a written order stating that the amino acid-based elemental |
formula is medically necessary.
|
The Illinois Department shall authorize the provision of, |
and shall
authorize payment for, screening by low-dose |
mammography for the presence of
occult breast cancer for women |
35 years of age or older who are eligible
for medical |
assistance under this Article, as follows: |
(A) A baseline
mammogram for women 35 to 39 years of |
age.
|
(B) An annual mammogram for women 40 years of age or |
older. |
(C) A mammogram at the age and intervals considered |
medically necessary by the woman's health care provider for |
women under 40 years of age and having a family history of |
breast cancer, prior personal history of breast cancer, |
positive genetic testing, or other risk factors. |
|
(D) A comprehensive ultrasound screening and MRI of an |
entire breast or breasts if a mammogram demonstrates |
heterogeneous or dense breast tissue, when medically |
necessary as determined by a physician licensed to practice |
medicine in all of its branches. |
(E) A screening MRI when medically necessary, as |
determined by a physician licensed to practice medicine in |
all of its branches. |
All screenings
shall
include a physical breast exam, |
instruction on self-examination and
information regarding the |
frequency of self-examination and its value as a
preventative |
tool. For purposes of this Section, "low-dose mammography" |
means
the x-ray examination of the breast using equipment |
dedicated specifically
for mammography, including the x-ray |
tube, filter, compression device,
and image receptor, with an |
average radiation exposure delivery
of less than one rad per |
breast for 2 views of an average size breast.
The term also |
includes digital mammography and includes breast |
tomosynthesis. As used in this Section, the term "breast |
tomosynthesis" means a radiologic procedure that involves the |
acquisition of projection images over the stationary breast to |
produce cross-sectional digital three-dimensional images of |
the breast. If, at any time, the Secretary of the United States |
Department of Health and Human Services, or its successor |
agency, promulgates rules or regulations to be published in the |
Federal Register or publishes a comment in the Federal Register |
|
or issues an opinion, guidance, or other action that would |
require the State, pursuant to any provision of the Patient |
Protection and Affordable Care Act (Public Law 111-148), |
including, but not limited to, 42 U.S.C. 18031(d)(3)(B) or any |
successor provision, to defray the cost of any coverage for |
breast tomosynthesis outlined in this paragraph, then the |
requirement that an insurer cover breast tomosynthesis is |
inoperative other than any such coverage authorized under |
Section 1902 of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. 1396a, and |
the State shall not assume any obligation for the cost of |
coverage for breast tomosynthesis set forth in this paragraph.
|
On and after January 1, 2016, the Department shall ensure |
that all networks of care for adult clients of the Department |
include access to at least one breast imaging Center of Imaging |
Excellence as certified by the American College of Radiology. |
On and after January 1, 2012, providers participating in a |
quality improvement program approved by the Department shall be |
reimbursed for screening and diagnostic mammography at the same |
rate as the Medicare program's rates, including the increased |
reimbursement for digital mammography. |
The Department shall convene an expert panel including |
representatives of hospitals, free-standing mammography |
facilities, and doctors, including radiologists, to establish |
quality standards for mammography. |
On and after January 1, 2017, providers participating in a |
breast cancer treatment quality improvement program approved |
|
by the Department shall be reimbursed for breast cancer |
treatment at a rate that is no lower than 95% of the Medicare |
program's rates for the data elements included in the breast |
cancer treatment quality program. |
The Department shall convene an expert panel, including |
representatives of hospitals, free-standing free standing |
breast cancer treatment centers, breast cancer quality |
organizations, and doctors, including breast surgeons, |
reconstructive breast surgeons, oncologists, and primary care |
providers to establish quality standards for breast cancer |
treatment. |
Subject to federal approval, the Department shall |
establish a rate methodology for mammography at federally |
qualified health centers and other encounter-rate clinics. |
These clinics or centers may also collaborate with other |
hospital-based mammography facilities. By January 1, 2016, the |
Department shall report to the General Assembly on the status |
of the provision set forth in this paragraph. |
The Department shall establish a methodology to remind |
women who are age-appropriate for screening mammography, but |
who have not received a mammogram within the previous 18 |
months, of the importance and benefit of screening mammography. |
The Department shall work with experts in breast cancer |
outreach and patient navigation to optimize these reminders and |
shall establish a methodology for evaluating their |
effectiveness and modifying the methodology based on the |
|
evaluation. |
The Department shall establish a performance goal for |
primary care providers with respect to their female patients |
over age 40 receiving an annual mammogram. This performance |
goal shall be used to provide additional reimbursement in the |
form of a quality performance bonus to primary care providers |
who meet that goal. |
The Department shall devise a means of case-managing or |
patient navigation for beneficiaries diagnosed with breast |
cancer. This program shall initially operate as a pilot program |
in areas of the State with the highest incidence of mortality |
related to breast cancer. At least one pilot program site shall |
be in the metropolitan Chicago area and at least one site shall |
be outside the metropolitan Chicago area. On or after July 1, |
2016, the pilot program shall be expanded to include one site |
in western Illinois, one site in southern Illinois, one site in |
central Illinois, and 4 sites within metropolitan Chicago. An |
evaluation of the pilot program shall be carried out measuring |
health outcomes and cost of care for those served by the pilot |
program compared to similarly situated patients who are not |
served by the pilot program. |
The Department shall require all networks of care to |
develop a means either internally or by contract with experts |
in navigation and community outreach to navigate cancer |
patients to comprehensive care in a timely fashion. The |
Department shall require all networks of care to include access |
|
for patients diagnosed with cancer to at least one academic |
commission on cancer-accredited cancer program as an |
in-network covered benefit. |
Any medical or health care provider shall immediately |
recommend, to
any pregnant woman who is being provided prenatal |
services and is suspected
of having a substance use disorder as |
defined in the Substance Use Disorder Act, referral to a local |
substance use disorder treatment program licensed by the |
Department of Human Services or to a licensed
hospital which |
provides substance abuse treatment services. The Department of |
Healthcare and Family Services
shall assure coverage for the |
cost of treatment of the drug abuse or
addiction for pregnant |
recipients in accordance with the Illinois Medicaid
Program in |
conjunction with the Department of Human Services.
|
All medical providers providing medical assistance to |
pregnant women
under this Code shall receive information from |
the Department on the
availability of services under any
|
program providing case management services for addicted women,
|
including information on appropriate referrals for other |
social services
that may be needed by addicted women in |
addition to treatment for addiction.
|
The Illinois Department, in cooperation with the |
Departments of Human
Services (as successor to the Department |
of Alcoholism and Substance
Abuse) and Public Health, through a |
public awareness campaign, may
provide information concerning |
treatment for alcoholism and drug abuse and
addiction, prenatal |
|
health care, and other pertinent programs directed at
reducing |
the number of drug-affected infants born to recipients of |
medical
assistance.
|
Neither the Department of Healthcare and Family Services |
nor the Department of Human
Services shall sanction the |
recipient solely on the basis of
her substance abuse.
|
The Illinois Department shall establish such regulations |
governing
the dispensing of health services under this Article |
as it shall deem
appropriate. The Department
should
seek the |
advice of formal professional advisory committees appointed by
|
the Director of the Illinois Department for the purpose of |
providing regular
advice on policy and administrative matters, |
information dissemination and
educational activities for |
medical and health care providers, and
consistency in |
procedures to the Illinois Department.
|
The Illinois Department may develop and contract with |
Partnerships of
medical providers to arrange medical services |
for persons eligible under
Section 5-2 of this Code. |
Implementation of this Section may be by
demonstration projects |
in certain geographic areas. The Partnership shall
be |
represented by a sponsor organization. The Department, by rule, |
shall
develop qualifications for sponsors of Partnerships. |
Nothing in this
Section shall be construed to require that the |
sponsor organization be a
medical organization.
|
The sponsor must negotiate formal written contracts with |
medical
providers for physician services, inpatient and |
|
outpatient hospital care,
home health services, treatment for |
alcoholism and substance abuse, and
other services determined |
necessary by the Illinois Department by rule for
delivery by |
Partnerships. Physician services must include prenatal and
|
obstetrical care. The Illinois Department shall reimburse |
medical services
delivered by Partnership providers to clients |
in target areas according to
provisions of this Article and the |
Illinois Health Finance Reform Act,
except that:
|
(1) Physicians participating in a Partnership and |
providing certain
services, which shall be determined by |
the Illinois Department, to persons
in areas covered by the |
Partnership may receive an additional surcharge
for such |
services.
|
(2) The Department may elect to consider and negotiate |
financial
incentives to encourage the development of |
Partnerships and the efficient
delivery of medical care.
|
(3) Persons receiving medical services through |
Partnerships may receive
medical and case management |
services above the level usually offered
through the |
medical assistance program.
|
Medical providers shall be required to meet certain |
qualifications to
participate in Partnerships to ensure the |
delivery of high quality medical
services. These |
qualifications shall be determined by rule of the Illinois
|
Department and may be higher than qualifications for |
participation in the
medical assistance program. Partnership |
|
sponsors may prescribe reasonable
additional qualifications |
for participation by medical providers, only with
the prior |
written approval of the Illinois Department.
|
Nothing in this Section shall limit the free choice of |
practitioners,
hospitals, and other providers of medical |
services by clients.
In order to ensure patient freedom of |
choice, the Illinois Department shall
immediately promulgate |
all rules and take all other necessary actions so that
provided |
services may be accessed from therapeutically certified |
optometrists
to the full extent of the Illinois Optometric |
Practice Act of 1987 without
discriminating between service |
providers.
|
The Department shall apply for a waiver from the United |
States Health
Care Financing Administration to allow for the |
implementation of
Partnerships under this Section.
|
The Illinois Department shall require health care |
providers to maintain
records that document the medical care |
and services provided to recipients
of Medical Assistance under |
this Article. Such records must be retained for a period of not |
less than 6 years from the date of service or as provided by |
applicable State law, whichever period is longer, except that |
if an audit is initiated within the required retention period |
then the records must be retained until the audit is completed |
and every exception is resolved. The Illinois Department shall
|
require health care providers to make available, when |
authorized by the
patient, in writing, the medical records in a |
|
timely fashion to other
health care providers who are treating |
or serving persons eligible for
Medical Assistance under this |
Article. All dispensers of medical services
shall be required |
to maintain and retain business and professional records
|
sufficient to fully and accurately document the nature, scope, |
details and
receipt of the health care provided to persons |
eligible for medical
assistance under this Code, in accordance |
with regulations promulgated by
the Illinois Department. The |
rules and regulations shall require that proof
of the receipt |
of prescription drugs, dentures, prosthetic devices and
|
eyeglasses by eligible persons under this Section accompany |
each claim
for reimbursement submitted by the dispenser of such |
medical services.
No such claims for reimbursement shall be |
approved for payment by the Illinois
Department without such |
proof of receipt, unless the Illinois Department
shall have put |
into effect and shall be operating a system of post-payment
|
audit and review which shall, on a sampling basis, be deemed |
adequate by
the Illinois Department to assure that such drugs, |
dentures, prosthetic
devices and eyeglasses for which payment |
is being made are actually being
received by eligible |
recipients. Within 90 days after September 16, 1984 (the |
effective date of Public Act 83-1439), the Illinois Department |
shall establish a
current list of acquisition costs for all |
prosthetic devices and any
other items recognized as medical |
equipment and supplies reimbursable under
this Article and |
shall update such list on a quarterly basis, except that
the |
|
acquisition costs of all prescription drugs shall be updated no
|
less frequently than every 30 days as required by Section |
5-5.12.
|
Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the Illinois |
Department shall, within 365 days after July 22, 2013 (the |
effective date of Public Act 98-104), establish procedures to |
permit skilled care facilities licensed under the Nursing Home |
Care Act to submit monthly billing claims for reimbursement |
purposes. Following development of these procedures, the |
Department shall, by July 1, 2016, test the viability of the |
new system and implement any necessary operational or |
structural changes to its information technology platforms in |
order to allow for the direct acceptance and payment of nursing |
home claims. |
Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the Illinois |
Department shall, within 365 days after August 15, 2014 (the |
effective date of Public Act 98-963), establish procedures to |
permit ID/DD facilities licensed under the ID/DD Community Care |
Act and MC/DD facilities licensed under the MC/DD Act to submit |
monthly billing claims for reimbursement purposes. Following |
development of these procedures, the Department shall have an |
additional 365 days to test the viability of the new system and |
to ensure that any necessary operational or structural changes |
to its information technology platforms are implemented. |
The Illinois Department shall require all dispensers of |
medical
services, other than an individual practitioner or |
|
group of practitioners,
desiring to participate in the Medical |
Assistance program
established under this Article to disclose |
all financial, beneficial,
ownership, equity, surety or other |
interests in any and all firms,
corporations, partnerships, |
associations, business enterprises, joint
ventures, agencies, |
institutions or other legal entities providing any
form of |
health care services in this State under this Article.
|
The Illinois Department may require that all dispensers of |
medical
services desiring to participate in the medical |
assistance program
established under this Article disclose, |
under such terms and conditions as
the Illinois Department may |
by rule establish, all inquiries from clients
and attorneys |
regarding medical bills paid by the Illinois Department, which
|
inquiries could indicate potential existence of claims or liens |
for the
Illinois Department.
|
Enrollment of a vendor
shall be
subject to a provisional |
period and shall be conditional for one year. During the period |
of conditional enrollment, the Department may
terminate the |
vendor's eligibility to participate in, or may disenroll the |
vendor from, the medical assistance
program without cause. |
Unless otherwise specified, such termination of eligibility or |
disenrollment is not subject to the
Department's hearing |
process.
However, a disenrolled vendor may reapply without |
penalty.
|
The Department has the discretion to limit the conditional |
enrollment period for vendors based upon category of risk of |
|
the vendor. |
Prior to enrollment and during the conditional enrollment |
period in the medical assistance program, all vendors shall be |
subject to enhanced oversight, screening, and review based on |
the risk of fraud, waste, and abuse that is posed by the |
category of risk of the vendor. The Illinois Department shall |
establish the procedures for oversight, screening, and review, |
which may include, but need not be limited to: criminal and |
financial background checks; fingerprinting; license, |
certification, and authorization verifications; unscheduled or |
unannounced site visits; database checks; prepayment audit |
reviews; audits; payment caps; payment suspensions; and other |
screening as required by federal or State law. |
The Department shall define or specify the following: (i) |
by provider notice, the "category of risk of the vendor" for |
each type of vendor, which shall take into account the level of |
screening applicable to a particular category of vendor under |
federal law and regulations; (ii) by rule or provider notice, |
the maximum length of the conditional enrollment period for |
each category of risk of the vendor; and (iii) by rule, the |
hearing rights, if any, afforded to a vendor in each category |
of risk of the vendor that is terminated or disenrolled during |
the conditional enrollment period. |
To be eligible for payment consideration, a vendor's |
payment claim or bill, either as an initial claim or as a |
resubmitted claim following prior rejection, must be received |
|
by the Illinois Department, or its fiscal intermediary, no |
later than 180 days after the latest date on the claim on which |
medical goods or services were provided, with the following |
exceptions: |
(1) In the case of a provider whose enrollment is in |
process by the Illinois Department, the 180-day period |
shall not begin until the date on the written notice from |
the Illinois Department that the provider enrollment is |
complete. |
(2) In the case of errors attributable to the Illinois |
Department or any of its claims processing intermediaries |
which result in an inability to receive, process, or |
adjudicate a claim, the 180-day period shall not begin |
until the provider has been notified of the error. |
(3) In the case of a provider for whom the Illinois |
Department initiates the monthly billing process. |
(4) In the case of a provider operated by a unit of |
local government with a population exceeding 3,000,000 |
when local government funds finance federal participation |
for claims payments. |
For claims for services rendered during a period for which |
a recipient received retroactive eligibility, claims must be |
filed within 180 days after the Department determines the |
applicant is eligible. For claims for which the Illinois |
Department is not the primary payer, claims must be submitted |
to the Illinois Department within 180 days after the final |
|
adjudication by the primary payer. |
In the case of long term care facilities, within 45 |
calendar days of receipt by the facility of required |
prescreening information, new admissions with associated |
admission documents shall be submitted through the Medical |
Electronic Data Interchange (MEDI) or the Recipient |
Eligibility Verification (REV) System or shall be submitted |
directly to the Department of Human Services using required |
admission forms. Effective September
1, 2014, admission |
documents, including all prescreening
information, must be |
submitted through MEDI or REV. Confirmation numbers assigned to |
an accepted transaction shall be retained by a facility to |
verify timely submittal. Once an admission transaction has been |
completed, all resubmitted claims following prior rejection |
are subject to receipt no later than 180 days after the |
admission transaction has been completed. |
Claims that are not submitted and received in compliance |
with the foregoing requirements shall not be eligible for |
payment under the medical assistance program, and the State |
shall have no liability for payment of those claims. |
To the extent consistent with applicable information and |
privacy, security, and disclosure laws, State and federal |
agencies and departments shall provide the Illinois Department |
access to confidential and other information and data necessary |
to perform eligibility and payment verifications and other |
Illinois Department functions. This includes, but is not |
|
limited to: information pertaining to licensure; |
certification; earnings; immigration status; citizenship; wage |
reporting; unearned and earned income; pension income; |
employment; supplemental security income; social security |
numbers; National Provider Identifier (NPI) numbers; the |
National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB); program and agency |
exclusions; taxpayer identification numbers; tax delinquency; |
corporate information; and death records. |
The Illinois Department shall enter into agreements with |
State agencies and departments, and is authorized to enter into |
agreements with federal agencies and departments, under which |
such agencies and departments shall share data necessary for |
medical assistance program integrity functions and oversight. |
The Illinois Department shall develop, in cooperation with |
other State departments and agencies, and in compliance with |
applicable federal laws and regulations, appropriate and |
effective methods to share such data. At a minimum, and to the |
extent necessary to provide data sharing, the Illinois |
Department shall enter into agreements with State agencies and |
departments, and is authorized to enter into agreements with |
federal agencies and departments, including but not limited to: |
the Secretary of State; the Department of Revenue; the |
Department of Public Health; the Department of Human Services; |
and the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. |
Beginning in fiscal year 2013, the Illinois Department |
shall set forth a request for information to identify the |
|
benefits of a pre-payment, post-adjudication, and post-edit |
claims system with the goals of streamlining claims processing |
and provider reimbursement, reducing the number of pending or |
rejected claims, and helping to ensure a more transparent |
adjudication process through the utilization of: (i) provider |
data verification and provider screening technology; and (ii) |
clinical code editing; and (iii) pre-pay, pre- or |
post-adjudicated predictive modeling with an integrated case |
management system with link analysis. Such a request for |
information shall not be considered as a request for proposal |
or as an obligation on the part of the Illinois Department to |
take any action or acquire any products or services. |
The Illinois Department shall establish policies, |
procedures,
standards and criteria by rule for the acquisition, |
repair and replacement
of orthotic and prosthetic devices and |
durable medical equipment. Such
rules shall provide, but not be |
limited to, the following services: (1)
immediate repair or |
replacement of such devices by recipients; and (2) rental, |
lease, purchase or lease-purchase of
durable medical equipment |
in a cost-effective manner, taking into
consideration the |
recipient's medical prognosis, the extent of the
recipient's |
needs, and the requirements and costs for maintaining such
|
equipment. Subject to prior approval, such rules shall enable a |
recipient to temporarily acquire and
use alternative or |
substitute devices or equipment pending repairs or
|
replacements of any device or equipment previously authorized |
|
for such
recipient by the Department. Notwithstanding any |
provision of Section 5-5f to the contrary, the Department may, |
by rule, exempt certain replacement wheelchair parts from prior |
approval and, for wheelchairs, wheelchair parts, wheelchair |
accessories, and related seating and positioning items, |
determine the wholesale price by methods other than actual |
acquisition costs. |
The Department shall require, by rule, all providers of |
durable medical equipment to be accredited by an accreditation |
organization approved by the federal Centers for Medicare and |
Medicaid Services and recognized by the Department in order to |
bill the Department for providing durable medical equipment to |
recipients. No later than 15 months after the effective date of |
the rule adopted pursuant to this paragraph, all providers must |
meet the accreditation requirement.
|
In order to promote environmental responsibility, meet the |
needs of recipients and enrollees, and achieve significant cost |
savings, the Department, or a managed care organization under |
contract with the Department, may provide recipients or managed |
care enrollees who have a prescription or Certificate of |
Medical Necessity access to refurbished durable medical |
equipment under this Section (excluding prosthetic and |
orthotic devices as defined in the Orthotics, Prosthetics, and |
Pedorthics Practice Act and complex rehabilitation technology |
products and associated services) through the State's |
assistive technology program's reutilization program, using |
|
staff with the Assistive Technology Professional (ATP) |
Certification if the refurbished durable medical equipment: |
(i) is available; (ii) is less expensive, including shipping |
costs, than new durable medical equipment of the same type; |
(iii) is able to withstand at least 3 years of use; (iv) is |
cleaned, disinfected, sterilized, and safe in accordance with |
federal Food and Drug Administration regulations and guidance |
governing the reprocessing of medical devices in health care |
settings; and (v) equally meets the needs of the recipient or |
enrollee. The reutilization program shall confirm that the |
recipient or enrollee is not already in receipt of same or |
similar equipment from another service provider, and that the |
refurbished durable medical equipment equally meets the needs |
of the recipient or enrollee. Nothing in this paragraph shall |
be construed to limit recipient or enrollee choice to obtain |
new durable medical equipment or place any additional prior |
authorization conditions on enrollees of managed care |
organizations. |
The Department shall execute, relative to the nursing home |
prescreening
project, written inter-agency agreements with the |
Department of Human
Services and the Department on Aging, to |
effect the following: (i) intake
procedures and common |
eligibility criteria for those persons who are receiving
|
non-institutional services; and (ii) the establishment and |
development of
non-institutional services in areas of the State |
where they are not currently
available or are undeveloped; and |
|
(iii) notwithstanding any other provision of law, subject to |
federal approval, on and after July 1, 2012, an increase in the |
determination of need (DON) scores from 29 to 37 for applicants |
for institutional and home and community-based long term care; |
if and only if federal approval is not granted, the Department |
may, in conjunction with other affected agencies, implement |
utilization controls or changes in benefit packages to |
effectuate a similar savings amount for this population; and |
(iv) no later than July 1, 2013, minimum level of care |
eligibility criteria for institutional and home and |
community-based long term care; and (v) no later than October |
1, 2013, establish procedures to permit long term care |
providers access to eligibility scores for individuals with an |
admission date who are seeking or receiving services from the |
long term care provider. In order to select the minimum level |
of care eligibility criteria, the Governor shall establish a |
workgroup that includes affected agency representatives and |
stakeholders representing the institutional and home and |
community-based long term care interests. This Section shall |
not restrict the Department from implementing lower level of |
care eligibility criteria for community-based services in |
circumstances where federal approval has been granted.
|
The Illinois Department shall develop and operate, in |
cooperation
with other State Departments and agencies and in |
compliance with
applicable federal laws and regulations, |
appropriate and effective
systems of health care evaluation and |
|
programs for monitoring of
utilization of health care services |
and facilities, as it affects
persons eligible for medical |
assistance under this Code.
|
The Illinois Department shall report annually to the |
General Assembly,
no later than the second Friday in April of |
1979 and each year
thereafter, in regard to:
|
(a) actual statistics and trends in utilization of |
medical services by
public aid recipients;
|
(b) actual statistics and trends in the provision of |
the various medical
services by medical vendors;
|
(c) current rate structures and proposed changes in |
those rate structures
for the various medical vendors; and
|
(d) efforts at utilization review and control by the |
Illinois Department.
|
The period covered by each report shall be the 3 years |
ending on the June
30 prior to the report. The report shall |
include suggested legislation
for consideration by the General |
Assembly. The 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, and |
filing The filing of one copy of the
report with the Speaker, |
one copy with the Minority Leader and one copy
with the Clerk |
of the House of Representatives, one copy with the President,
|
one copy with the Minority Leader and one copy with the |
Secretary of the
Senate, one copy with the Legislative Research |
Unit, and such additional
copies
with the State Government |
|
Report Distribution Center for the General
Assembly as is |
required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State
Library |
Act shall be deemed sufficient to comply with this Section .
|
Rulemaking authority to implement Public Act 95-1045, if |
any, is conditioned on the rules being adopted in accordance |
with all provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure |
Act and all rules and procedures of the Joint Committee on |
Administrative Rules; any purported rule not so adopted, for |
whatever reason, is unauthorized. |
On and after July 1, 2012, the Department shall reduce any |
rate of reimbursement for services or other payments or alter |
any methodologies authorized by this Code to reduce any rate of |
reimbursement for services or other payments in accordance with |
Section 5-5e. |
Because kidney transplantation can be an appropriate, |
cost-effective cost effective
alternative to renal dialysis |
when medically necessary and notwithstanding the provisions of |
Section 1-11 of this Code, beginning October 1, 2014, the |
Department shall cover kidney transplantation for noncitizens |
with end-stage renal disease who are not eligible for |
comprehensive medical benefits, who meet the residency |
requirements of Section 5-3 of this Code, and who would |
otherwise meet the financial requirements of the appropriate |
class of eligible persons under Section 5-2 of this Code. To |
qualify for coverage of kidney transplantation, such person |
must be receiving emergency renal dialysis services covered by |
|
the Department. Providers under this Section shall be prior |
approved and certified by the Department to perform kidney |
transplantation and the services under this Section shall be |
limited to services associated with kidney transplantation. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code to the |
contrary, on or after July 1, 2015, all FDA approved forms of |
medication assisted treatment prescribed for the treatment of |
alcohol dependence or treatment of opioid dependence shall be |
covered under both fee for service and managed care medical |
assistance programs for persons who are otherwise eligible for |
medical assistance under this Article and shall not be subject |
to any (1) utilization control, other than those established |
under the American Society of Addiction Medicine patient |
placement criteria,
(2) prior authorization mandate, or (3) |
lifetime restriction limit
mandate. |
On or after July 1, 2015, opioid antagonists prescribed for |
the treatment of an opioid overdose, including the medication |
product, administration devices, and any pharmacy fees related |
to the dispensing and administration of the opioid antagonist, |
shall be covered under the medical assistance program for |
persons who are otherwise eligible for medical assistance under |
this Article. As used in this Section, "opioid antagonist" |
means a drug that binds to opioid receptors and blocks or |
inhibits the effect of opioids acting on those receptors, |
including, but not limited to, naloxone hydrochloride or any |
other similarly acting drug approved by the U.S. Food and Drug |
|
Administration. |
Upon federal approval, the Department shall provide |
coverage and reimbursement for all drugs that are approved for |
marketing by the federal Food and Drug Administration and that |
are recommended by the federal Public Health Service or the |
United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for |
pre-exposure prophylaxis and related pre-exposure prophylaxis |
services, including, but not limited to, HIV and sexually |
transmitted infection screening, treatment for sexually |
transmitted infections, medical monitoring, assorted labs, and |
counseling to reduce the likelihood of HIV infection among |
individuals who are not infected with HIV but who are at high |
risk of HIV infection. |
A federally qualified health center, as defined in Section |
1905(l)(2)(B) of the federal
Social Security Act, shall be |
reimbursed by the Department in accordance with the federally |
qualified health center's encounter rate for services provided |
to medical assistance recipients that are performed by a dental |
hygienist, as defined under the Illinois Dental Practice Act, |
working under the general supervision of a dentist and employed |
by a federally qualified health center. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, the |
Illinois Department shall authorize licensed dietitian |
nutritionists and certified diabetes educators to counsel |
senior diabetes patients in the senior diabetes patients' homes |
to remove the hurdle of transportation for senior diabetes |
|
patients to receive treatment. |
(Source: P.A. 99-78, eff. 7-20-15; 99-180, eff. 7-29-15; |
99-236, eff. 8-3-15; 99-407 (see Section 20 of P.A. 99-588 for |
the effective date of P.A. 99-407); 99-433, eff. 8-21-15; |
99-480, eff. 9-9-15; 99-588, eff. 7-20-16; 99-642, eff. |
7-28-16; 99-772, eff. 1-1-17; 99-895, eff. 1-1-17; 100-201, |
eff. 8-18-17; 100-395, eff. 1-1-18; 100-449, eff. 1-1-18; |
100-538, eff. 1-1-18; 100-587, eff. 6-4-18; 100-759, eff. |
1-1-19; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18; 100-974, eff. 8-19-18; |
100-1009, eff. 1-1-19; 100-1018, eff. 1-1-19; revised |
10-9-18.)
|
(305 ILCS 5/5-5.8) (from Ch. 23, par. 5-5.8)
|
Sec. 5-5.8. Report on nursing home reimbursement. The |
Illinois
Department shall report annually to the General |
Assembly, no later than the
first Monday in April of 1982, and |
each year thereafter, in regard to:
|
(a) the rate structure used by the Illinois Department to |
reimburse
nursing facilities;
|
(b) changes in the rate structure for reimbursing nursing |
facilities;
|
(c) the administrative and program costs of reimbursing |
nursing facilities;
|
(d) the availability of beds in nursing facilities for |
public aid
recipients; and
|
(e) the number of closings of nursing facilities, and the |
|
reasons
for those closings.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research Unit,
as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the
General |
Assembly", approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such
additional copies with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for
the General Assembly as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the
State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
|
(305 ILCS 5/12-5) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-5)
|
Sec. 12-5. Appropriations; uses; federal grants; report to
|
General Assembly. From the sums appropriated by the General |
Assembly,
the Illinois Department shall order for payment by |
warrant from the State
Treasury grants for public aid under |
Articles III, IV, and V,
including
grants for funeral and |
burial expenses, and all costs of administration of
the |
Illinois Department and the County Departments relating |
thereto. Moneys
appropriated to the Illinois Department for |
public aid under Article VI may
be used, with the consent of |
the Governor, to co-operate
with federal, State, and local |
agencies in the development of work
projects designed to |
|
provide suitable employment for persons receiving
public aid |
under Article VI. The Illinois Department, with the consent
of |
the Governor, may be the agent of the State for the receipt and
|
disbursement of federal funds or commodities for public aid |
purposes
under Article VI and for related purposes in which the
|
co-operation of the Illinois Department is sought by the |
federal
government, and, in connection therewith, may make |
necessary
expenditures from moneys appropriated for public aid |
under any Article
of this Code and for administration. The |
Illinois Department, with the
consent of the Governor, may be |
the agent of the State for the receipt and
disbursement of |
federal funds pursuant to the Immigration Reform and
Control |
Act of 1986 and may make necessary expenditures from monies
|
appropriated to it for operations, administration, and grants, |
including
payment to the Health Insurance Reserve Fund for |
group insurance costs at
the rate certified by the Department |
of Central Management Services. All
amounts received by the |
Illinois Department pursuant to the Immigration Reform
and |
Control Act of 1986 shall be deposited in the Immigration |
Reform and
Control Fund. All amounts received into the |
Immigration Reform and Control
Fund as reimbursement for |
expenditures from the General Revenue Fund shall be
transferred |
to the General Revenue Fund.
|
All grants received by the Illinois Department for programs |
funded by the
Federal Social Services Block Grant shall be |
deposited in the Social Services
Block Grant Fund. All funds |
|
received into the Social Services Block Grant Fund
as |
reimbursement for expenditures from the General Revenue Fund |
shall be
transferred to the General Revenue Fund. All funds |
received into the Social
Services Block Grant fund for |
reimbursement for expenditure out of the Local
Initiative Fund |
shall be transferred into the Local Initiative Fund. Any other
|
federal funds received into the Social Services Block Grant |
Fund shall be
transferred to the DHS Special Purposes Trust |
Fund. All federal funds received by
the Illinois Department as |
reimbursement for Employment and Training Programs
for |
expenditures made by the Illinois Department from grants, |
gifts, or
legacies as provided in Section 12-4.18 or made by an |
entity other than the
Illinois Department and all federal funds |
received from the Emergency Contingency Fund for State |
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Programs established |
by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 shall be |
deposited into the Employment and Training Fund.
|
During each State fiscal year, an amount not exceeding a |
total of $68,800,000 of the federal funds received by the
|
Illinois Department under the provisions of Title IV-A of the |
federal Social Security Act shall be deposited
into the DCFS |
Children's Services
Fund.
|
All federal funds, except those covered by the foregoing 3
|
paragraphs, received as reimbursement for expenditures from |
the General Revenue
Fund shall be deposited in the General |
Revenue Fund for administrative and
distributive expenditures |
|
properly chargeable by federal law or regulation to
aid |
programs established under Articles III through XII and Titles |
IV, XVI, XIX
and XX of the Federal Social Security Act. Any |
other federal funds received by
the Illinois Department under |
Sections 12-4.6, 12-4.18 and
12-4.19 that are required by |
Section 12-10 of this Code to be paid into the
DHS Special |
Purposes Trust Fund shall be deposited into the DHS Special |
Purposes Trust
Fund. Any other federal funds received by the |
Illinois Department pursuant to
the Child Support Enforcement |
Program established by Title IV-D of the Social
Security Act |
shall be deposited in the Child Support Enforcement Trust Fund
|
as required under Section 12-10.2 or in the Child Support |
Administrative Fund as required under Section 12-10.2a of this |
Code. Any other federal funds received by the Illinois |
Department for
expenditures made under Title XIX of the Social |
Security Act and Articles
V and VI of this Code that are |
required by Section 15-2 of this Code
to be paid into the |
County Provider Trust Fund shall be deposited
into the County |
Provider Trust Fund. Any other federal funds received
by the |
Illinois Department for hospital
inpatient, hospital |
ambulatory care, and disproportionate share hospital
|
expenditures made under Title XIX of the Social Security Act |
and Article V of
this Code that are required by Section 5A-8 of |
this Code to be paid into the
Hospital Provider Fund shall be |
deposited into the Hospital Provider Fund. Any
other federal |
funds received by the Illinois Department for medical
|
|
assistance program expenditures made under Title XIX of the |
Social Security
Act and Article V of this Code that are |
required by Section 5B-8 of this
Code to be paid into the |
Long-Term Care Provider Fund shall be deposited
into the |
Long-Term Care Provider Fund. Any other federal funds received |
by
the Illinois Department for medical assistance program |
expenditures made
under Title XIX of the Social Security Act |
and Article V of this Code that
are required by Section 5C-7 of |
this Code to be paid into the
Care Provider Fund for Persons |
with a Developmental Disability shall be deposited into the
|
Care Provider Fund for Persons with a Developmental Disability. |
Any other federal funds received
by the Illinois Department for |
trauma center
adjustment payments that are required by Section |
5-5.03 of this Code and made
under Title XIX of the Social |
Security Act and Article V of this Code shall be
deposited into |
the Trauma Center Fund. Any other federal funds received by
the |
Illinois Department as reimbursement for expenses for early |
intervention
services paid from the Early Intervention |
Services Revolving Fund shall be
deposited into that Fund.
|
The Illinois Department shall report to the General |
Assembly at the
end of each fiscal quarter the amount of all |
funds received and paid into
the Social Services Block Grant |
Fund and the Local Initiative Fund and the
expenditures and |
transfers of such funds for services, programs and other
|
purposes authorized by law. Such report shall be filed with the |
Speaker,
Minority Leader and Clerk of the House, with the |
|
President, Minority Leader
and Secretary of the Senate, with |
the Chairmen of the House and Senate
Appropriations Committees, |
the House Human Resources Committee and the
Senate Public |
Health, Welfare and Corrections Committee, or the successor
|
standing Committees of each as provided by the rules of the |
House and
Senate, respectively, with the Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability Legislative Research |
Unit and with the State
Government Report Distribution Center |
for the General Assembly as is
required under paragraph (t) of |
Section 7 of the State Library Act
shall be deemed sufficient |
to comply with this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15; 99-933, Article 5, Section |
5-130, eff. 1-27-17; 99-933, Article 15, Section 15-50, eff. |
1-27-17; 100-587, eff. 6-4-18; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18.) |
Section 245. The Interagency Board for Children who are |
Deaf or Hard-of-Hearing and
have an Emotional or Behavioral |
Disorder Act is amended by changing Section 11 as follows:
|
(325 ILCS 35/11) (from Ch. 23, par. 6711)
|
Sec. 11. Reports. The Board shall make a report of its work |
annually to
the State Superintendent of Education and to the |
Governor and to each
regular session of the General Assembly.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
|
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research Unit,
as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act and filing such additional copies with the
State Government |
Report Distribution Center for the General Assembly as is
|
required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library |
Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-1200; 87-1127.)
|
Section 250. The Psychiatry Practice Incentive Act is |
amended by changing Section 35 as follows: |
(405 ILCS 100/35)
|
Sec. 35. Annual report. The Department may annually report |
to the General Assembly and the Governor the results and |
progress of all programs established under this Act.
|
The annual report to the General Assembly and the Governor |
must include the impact of programs established under this Act |
on the ability of designated shortage areas to attract and |
retain physicians and other health care personnel. The report |
shall include recommendations to improve that ability. |
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader, and the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research Unit, as |
|
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act, and by filing such additional copies with the State |
Government Report Distribution Center for the General Assembly |
as is required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State |
Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-933, eff. 1-27-17.) |
Section 255. The Environmental Protection Act is amended by |
changing Section 6.1 as follows:
|
(415 ILCS 5/6.1) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1006.1)
|
Sec. 6.1. The Department of Commerce and Community Affairs |
(now Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity) shall |
conduct studies of the effects of all
State and federal sulfur |
dioxide regulations and emission standards on the use
of |
Illinois coal and other fuels, and
shall report the results of |
such studies to the Governor and the General
Assembly. The |
reports shall be made by July 1, 1980 and biennially |
thereafter.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General
|
|
Assembly", approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional
copies with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General
Assembly as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library
Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
|
Section 260. The Illinois Highway Code is amended by |
changing Section 4-201.16 as follows:
|
(605 ILCS 5/4-201.16) (from Ch. 121, par. 4-201.16)
|
Sec. 4-201.16.
Land acquired for highway purposes, |
including
buildings or improvements upon such property, may be |
rented between the
time of acquisition and the time when the |
land is needed for highway
purposes.
|
The Department shall file an annual report with the General |
Assembly,
by October 1 of each year, which details, by county, |
the number of
rented parcels, the total amount of rent received |
from these parcels,
and the number of parcels which include |
buildings or improvements.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General |
|
Assembly",
approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional copies
with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
|
Section 265. The Rivers, Lakes, and Streams Act is amended |
by changing Sections 14a, 16, and 20 as follows:
|
(615 ILCS 5/14a) (from Ch. 19, par. 61a)
|
Sec. 14a.
It is the express intention of this legislation |
that close
cooperation shall exist between the Pollution |
Control Board, the
Environmental Protection Agency, and the |
Department of Natural Resources and
that every resource of |
State government shall be applied to the proper
preservation |
and utilization of the waters of Lake Michigan.
|
The Environmental Protection Agency shall work in close |
cooperation
with the City of Chicago and other affected units |
of government to: (1)
terminate discharge of pollutional waste |
materials to Lake Michigan from
vessels in both intra-state and |
inter-state navigation, and (2) abate
domestic, industrial, |
and other pollution to assure that Lake Michigan
beaches in |
Illinois are suitable for full body contact sports, meeting
|
criteria of the Pollution Control Board.
|
The Environmental Protection Agency shall regularly |
conduct water
quality and lake bed surveys to evaluate the |
|
ecology and the quality of
water in Lake Michigan. Results of |
such surveys shall be made available,
without charge, to all |
interested persons and agencies. It shall be the
responsibility |
of the Director of the Environmental Protection Agency to
|
report biennially or at such other times as the Governor shall |
direct;
such report shall provide hydrologic, biologic, and |
chemical data
together with recommendations to the Governor and |
members of the General
Assembly.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research Unit, as
|
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General
|
Assembly", approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional
copies with the State Government
Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly as is required |
under
paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
In meeting the requirements of this Act, the Pollution |
Control Board,
Environmental Protection Agency and Department |
of
Natural Resources are authorized to be in direct contact |
with individuals,
municipalities, public and private |
corporations and other organizations
which are or may be |
contributing to the discharge of pollution to Lake
Michigan.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-78, eff. 7-15-13.)
|
|
(615 ILCS 5/16) (from Ch. 19, par. 63)
|
Sec. 16.
The Department of Natural Resources shall plan and |
devise methods,
ways and means for the preservation and |
beautifying of the public bodies of
water of the State, and for |
making the same more available for the use of
the public, and |
it shall from time to time report its findings and
conclusions |
to the Governor and general assembly, and from time to time
|
submit to the general assembly drafts of such measures as it |
may deem
necessary to be enacted for the accomplishment of such |
purpose, or for the
protection of such bodies of water.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to
the General |
Assembly", approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such
additional copies
with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
|
(615 ILCS 5/20) (from Ch. 19, par. 67)
|
Sec. 20.
The Department of Natural Resources shall
obtain |
|
data and information
as to the availability of the various |
streams of Illinois for water power,
and preserve all such |
data, and report to the Governor and the general
assembly such |
facts as to the amount of water power which can be so
|
developed, from time to time, as in its judgment should be |
communicated,
looking to the preservation of the rights of the |
State of Illinois in the
water power and navigation of this |
State.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to
the General |
Assembly", approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such
additional copies
with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
|
Section 270. The Flood Control Act of 1945 is amended by |
changing Section 5 as follows:
|
(615 ILCS 15/5) (from Ch. 19, par. 126e)
|
Sec. 5.
It shall be the duty of the Department of Natural |
|
Resources to
execute examinations and surveys of the scope |
necessary
and practical under this Act: The Director of Natural |
Resources may in his
discretion or at the direction of the |
General
Assembly cause an examination of any project for the |
improvement of any of the
rivers and waters of Illinois for any |
improvements authorized under this Act
and a report on the |
improvements shall be submitted to the Governor, the
members of |
the General Assembly of the Legislative Districts in which the
|
improvements are located, and the General Assembly. The |
requirement for
reporting to the General Assembly shall be |
satisfied by filing copies of the
report with the Speaker, the |
Minority Leader, and the Clerk of the House of
Representatives; |
and the President, the Minority Leader, and the Secretary of
|
the Senate; and the Legislative Research Unit, as required by |
Section 3.1 of
the General Assembly Organization Act, and |
filing any additional copies with
the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly as
required under |
paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act. All
|
reports shall include, as may be practicable,
a comprehensive |
study of the watersheds involved, any other matter
required by |
the Director of Natural Resources, and any or all data as may |
be pertinent in regard to:
|
(a) the extent and character of the area affected;
|
(b) the hydrography of the area affected, including |
rainfall and
run-off, frequency and severity of floods, |
frequency and degree of low
flows;
|
|
(c) flood damages to rural property, growing crops, |
urban property,
industrial property, and communications, |
including highways, railways, and
waterways;
|
(d) the probable effect upon any navigable water or |
waterway;
|
(e) the possible economical development and |
utilization of water power;
|
(f) the possible economical reclamation and drainage |
of the bottomland
and upland areas;
|
(g) any other allied uses that may be properly related |
to or coordinated
with the project, including but not |
limited to, any benefits for public water
supply uses, |
public recreational uses, or wild life conservation;
|
(h) the estimated cost of the improvement and a |
statement of special
or local benefit that will accrue to |
localities affected by the improvement and
a statement of |
general or state wide benefits, with recommendations as to |
what
local cooperation, participation, and cost sharing |
should be required, if any,
on account of the special or |
local benefit.
|
The heads of the several Departments of the State shall, |
upon the
request of the Director of Natural Resources, detail |
representatives from their respective Departments to
assist |
the Department of Natural Resources in the study
of the |
watersheds, to the end that duplication of work may be avoided |
and the
various services of the State economically coordinated |
|
therein.
|
In the exercise of its duties under this Section, the |
Department may
accept or amend a work plan of the United States |
government. The federal
work plan as accepted by the Department |
shall be filed as provided for in this
Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 88-517; 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
|
Section 275. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by |
changing Section 15-203 as follows:
|
(625 ILCS 5/15-203) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 15-203)
|
Sec. 15-203.
Records
of violations.
The Department of State |
Police shall maintain records
of the number
of violators of |
such acts apprehended and the number of convictions
obtained. A |
resume of such records shall be included in the Department's
|
annual report to the Governor; and the Department shall also |
present such
resume to each regular session of the General |
Assembly.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act
to revise the law in relation to the General |
Assembly", approved February
25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
|
such additional copies with the State Government
Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly as is required |
under
paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
|
Section 280. The Illinois Abortion Law of 1975 is amended |
by changing Section 10 as follows:
|
(720 ILCS 510/10) (from Ch. 38, par. 81-30)
|
Sec. 10.
A report of each abortion performed shall be made |
to the
Department on forms prescribed by it. Such report forms |
shall not
identify the patient by name, but by an individual |
number to be noted in
the patient's permanent record in the |
possession of the physician, and
shall include information |
concerning:
|
(1) Identification of the physician who performed the |
abortion and
the facility where the abortion was performed and |
a patient
identification number;
|
(2) State in which the patient resides;
|
(3) Patient's date of birth, race and marital status;
|
(4) Number of prior pregnancies;
|
(5) Date of last menstrual period;
|
(6) Type of abortion procedure performed;
|
(7) Complications and whether the abortion resulted in a |
live birth;
|
(8) The date the abortion was performed;
|
|
(9) Medical indications for any abortion performed when the |
fetus was viable;
|
(10) The information required by Sections 6(1)(b) and |
6(4)(b) of this
Act, if applicable;
|
(11) Basis for any medical judgment that a medical |
emergency existed
when required under Sections 6(2)(a) and 6(6) |
and when required to
be reported in accordance with this |
Section by any provision of this Law; and
|
(12) The pathologist's test results pursuant to Section 12 |
of this Act.
|
Such form shall be completed by
the hospital or other |
licensed facility, signed by the physician who
performed the |
abortion or pregnancy termination, and transmitted to the
|
Department not later than 10 days following the end of the |
month in
which the abortion was performed.
|
In the event that a complication of an abortion occurs or |
becomes
known after submission of such form, a correction using |
the same patient
identification number shall be submitted to |
the Department within 10
days of its becoming known.
|
The Department may prescribe rules and regulations |
regarding the
administration of this Law and shall prescribe |
regulations to secure the
confidentiality of the woman's |
identity in the information to be
provided under the "Vital |
Records Act". All reports received
by the Department shall be |
treated as confidential and the Department
shall secure the
|
woman's anonymity. Such reports shall be used only for |
|
statistical purposes.
|
Upon 30 days public notice, the Department is empowered to |
require
reporting of any additional information which, in the |
sound discretion
of the Department, is necessary to develop |
statistical data relating to
the protection of maternal or |
fetal life or health, or is necessary to
enforce the provisions |
of this Law, or is necessary to develop useful
criteria for |
medical decisions. The Department shall annually report to
the |
General Assembly all statistical data gathered under this Law |
and its
recommendations to further the purpose of this Law.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General
|
Assembly", approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional copies
with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
|
Section 285. The Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 is |
amended by changing Sections 108A-11 and 108B-13 as follows:
|
|
(725 ILCS 5/108A-11) (from Ch. 38, par. 108A-11)
|
Sec. 108A-11. Reports Concerning Use of Eavesdropping |
Devices. (a) In January of each year the State's Attorney of |
each county in which
eavesdropping devices were used pursuant |
to the provisions of this
Article shall report to the |
Department of State Police the
following with respect to each |
application for an order authorizing the
use of an |
eavesdropping device, or an extension thereof, made during the
|
preceding calendar year:
|
(1) the fact that such an order, extension, or
subsequent |
approval of an emergency was applied for;
|
(2) the kind of order or extension applied for;
|
(3) a statement as to whether the order or extension
was |
granted as applied for was modified, or was denied;
|
(4) the period authorized by the order or extensions
in |
which an eavesdropping device could be used;
|
(5) the felony specified in the order extension or denied |
application;
|
(6) the identity of the applying investigative or
law |
enforcement officer and agency making the application
and the |
State's Attorney authorizing the application; and
|
(7) the nature of the facilities from which or the place |
where
the eavesdropping device was to be used.
|
(b) Such report shall also include the following:
|
(1) a general description of the uses of eavesdropping
|
devices actually made under such order to
overheard or record |
|
conversations, including: (a)
the approximate nature and |
frequency of incriminating
conversations overheard, (b) the |
approximate nature
and frequency of other conversations |
overheard, (c)
the approximate number of persons whose |
conversations
were overheard, and (d) the approximate nature, |
amount,
and cost of the manpower and other resources used
|
pursuant to the authorization to use an eavesdropping device;
|
(2) the number of arrests resulting from authorized
uses of |
eavesdropping devices and the offenses for
which arrests were |
made;
|
(3) the number of trials resulting from such uses
of |
eavesdropping devices;
|
(4) the number of motions to suppress made with
respect to |
such uses, and the number granted or denied; and
|
(5) the number of convictions resulting from such
uses and |
the offenses for which the convictions were obtained
and a |
general assessment of the importance of the convictions.
|
(c) In April of each year, the Department of State Police
|
shall transmit to the General Assembly
a report including |
information on the number of
applications for orders |
authorizing the use of eavesdropping
devices, the number of |
orders and extensions granted or denied
during the preceding |
calendar year, and the convictions arising
out of such uses.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
|
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation
to the General |
Assembly", approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and
filing |
such additional copies with the State Government Report |
Distribution
Center for the General Assembly as is required |
under paragraph (t) of
Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-391.)
|
(725 ILCS 5/108B-13) (from Ch. 38, par. 108B-13)
|
Sec. 108B-13. Reports concerning use of eavesdropping |
devices.
|
(a) Within 30 days after the expiration of an order and |
each extension
thereof
authorizing an interception, or within |
30 days after the denial of an
application or disapproval of an |
application subsequent to any alleged
emergency situation, the |
State's Attorney shall report to the Department of
State Police |
the following:
|
(1) the fact that such an order, extension, or |
subsequent approval of an
emergency was applied for;
|
(2) the kind of order or extension applied for;
|
(3) a statement as to whether the order or extension |
was granted as
applied for was modified, or was denied;
|
(4) the period authorized by the order or extensions in |
which an
eavesdropping device could be used;
|
|
(5) the offense enumerated in Section 108B-3 which is |
specified in the
order or extension or in the denied |
application;
|
(6) the identity of the applying electronic criminal |
surveillance
officer and agency making the application and |
the State's Attorney
authorizing the application; and
|
(7) the nature of the facilities from which or the |
place where the
eavesdropping device was to be used.
|
(b) In January of each year the State's Attorney of each |
county in which
an interception occurred pursuant to the |
provisions of this Article shall
report to the Department of |
State Police the following:
|
(1) a general description of the uses of eavesdropping |
devices actually
made under such order to overhear or |
record conversations, including: (a)
the approximate |
nature and frequency of incriminating conversations
|
overheard, (b) the approximate nature and frequency of |
other conversations
overheard, (c) the approximate number |
of persons whose conversations were
overheard, and (d) the |
approximate nature, amount, and cost of the manpower
and |
other resources used pursuant to the authorization to use |
an
eavesdropping device;
|
(2) the number of arrests resulting from authorized |
uses of
eavesdropping devices and the offenses for which |
arrests were made;
|
(3) the number of trials resulting from such uses of |
|
eavesdropping devices;
|
(4) the number of motions to suppress made with respect |
to such uses,
and the number granted or denied; and
|
(5) the number of convictions resulting from such uses |
and the offenses for
which the convictions were obtained |
and a general assessment of the
importance of the |
convictions.
|
On or before March 1 of each year, the Director of the |
Department of
State Police shall submit to the Governor a |
report of all intercepts as
defined herein conducted pursuant |
to this Article and terminated during the
preceding calendar |
year. Such report shall include:
|
(1) the reports of State's Attorneys forwarded to the
|
Director as required in this Section;
|
(2) the number of Department personnel authorized to |
possess, install,
or operate electronic, mechanical, or |
other devices;
|
(3) the number of Department and other law enforcement |
personnel who
participated or engaged in the seizure of |
intercepts pursuant to this
Article during the preceding |
calendar year;
|
(4) the number of electronic criminal surveillance |
officers trained by
the Department;
|
(5) the total cost to the Department of all activities |
and procedures
relating to the seizure of intercepts during |
the preceding calendar year,
including costs of equipment, |
|
manpower, and expenses incurred as
compensation for use of |
facilities or technical assistance provided to or
by the |
Department; and
|
(6) a summary of the use of eavesdropping devices |
pursuant to orders of
interception including (a) the |
frequency of use in each county, (b) the
frequency of use |
for each crime enumerated in Section 108B-3 of the Code of
|
Criminal Procedure of 1963, as amended, (c) the type and |
frequency of
eavesdropping device use, and (d) the |
frequency of use by each police
department or law |
enforcement agency of this State.
|
(d) In April of each year, the Director of the Department |
of State
Police and the Governor shall each transmit to the |
General
Assembly reports including information on the number of |
applications for
orders authorizing the use of eavesdropping |
devices, the number of orders
and extensions granted or denied |
during the preceding calendar year, the
convictions arising out |
of such uses, and a summary of the information
required by |
subsections (a) and (b) of this Section.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research Unit, as
|
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act, and filing
such
additional copies with the State |
|
Government Report Distribution Center for
the General Assembly |
as is required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the
State |
Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 85-1203; 86-1226; 86-1475 .)
|
Section 290. The State Appellate Defender Act is amended by |
changing Section 10 as follows:
|
(725 ILCS 105/10) (from Ch. 38, par. 208-10)
|
Sec. 10. Powers and duties of State Appellate Defender.
|
(a) The State Appellate Defender shall represent indigent |
persons on
appeal in criminal and delinquent minor proceedings, |
when appointed to do so by
a court under a Supreme Court Rule |
or law of this State.
|
(b) The State Appellate Defender shall submit a budget for |
the
approval of the State Appellate Defender Commission.
|
(c) The State Appellate Defender may:
|
(1) maintain a panel of private attorneys available to |
serve as
counsel on a case basis;
|
(2) establish programs, alone or in conjunction with |
law schools,
for the purpose of utilizing volunteer law |
students as legal assistants;
|
(3) cooperate and consult with state agencies, |
professional
associations, and other groups concerning the |
causes of criminal
conduct, the rehabilitation and |
correction of persons charged with and
convicted of crime, |
|
the administration of criminal justice, and, in
counties of |
less than 1,000,000 population, study, design, develop and
|
implement model systems for the delivery of trial level |
defender
services, and make an annual report to the General |
Assembly;
|
(4) hire investigators to provide investigative |
services to appointed counsel and county
public defenders;
|
(5) (blank);
|
(5.5) provide training to county public defenders; |
(5.7) provide county public defenders with the |
assistance of expert witnesses and investigators from |
funds appropriated to the State Appellate Defender |
specifically for that purpose by the General Assembly. The |
Office of the State Appellate Defender shall not be |
appointed to act as trial counsel; |
(6) develop a Juvenile Defender Resource Center to:
(i) |
study, design, develop, and implement model systems for the |
delivery of trial level defender services for juveniles in |
the justice system; (ii) in cases in which a sentence of |
incarceration or an adult sentence, or both, is an |
authorized disposition, provide trial counsel with legal |
advice and the assistance of expert witnesses and |
investigators from funds appropriated to the Office of the |
State Appellate Defender by the General Assembly |
specifically for that purpose; (iii) develop and provide |
training to public defenders on juvenile justice issues, |
|
utilizing resources including the State and local bar |
associations, the Illinois Public Defender Association, |
law schools, the Midwest Juvenile Defender Center, and pro |
bono efforts by law firms; and
(iv) make an annual report |
to the General Assembly. |
(d) (Blank).
|
(e) The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly |
shall be
satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the |
Speaker, the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization
|
Act and filing such additional copies with the State Government |
Report
Distribution Center for
the General Assembly as is |
required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the
State Library |
Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-78, eff. 7-20-15.)
|
Section 295. The State's Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor's |
Act is amended by changing Section 4.06 as follows:
|
(725 ILCS 210/4.06) (from Ch. 14, par. 204.06)
|
Sec. 4.06.
The board shall submit an annual report to the |
General
Assembly and Governor regarding the operation of the |
Office of the State's
Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
|
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General
|
Assembly", approved February 25, 1874, as amended , and filing |
such additional copies
with the State Government Report |
Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
|
Section 300. The Commission on Young Adult Employment Act |
is amended by changing Section 20 as follows: |
(820 ILCS 85/20) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2019)
|
Sec. 20. Findings and recommendations. The Commission |
shall meet and begin its work no later than 60 days after the |
appointment of all Commission members. By November 30, 2015, |
and by November 30 of every year thereafter, the Commission |
shall submit a report to the General Assembly setting forth its |
findings and recommendations. The requirement for reporting to |
the General Assembly shall be satisfied by filing copies of the |
report with the Speaker, Minority Leader, and Clerk of the |
House of Representatives, the President, Minority Leader, and |
|
Secretary of the Senate, and the Legislative Research Unit as |
required under Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-338, eff. 8-11-15.) |
Section 305. The Public Safety Employee Benefits Act is |
amended by changing Section 17 as follows: |
(820 ILCS 320/17) |
Sec. 17. Reporting forms. |
(a) A person who qualified for benefits under subsections |
(a) and (b) of Section 10 of this Act (hereinafter referred to |
as "PSEBA recipient") shall be required to file a form with his |
or her employer as prescribed in this Section. The Commission |
on Government Forecasting and Accountability (COGFA) shall use |
the form created in this Act and prescribe the content of the |
report in cooperation with one statewide labor organization |
representing police, one statewide law enforcement |
organization, one statewide labor organization representing |
firefighters employed by at least 100 municipalities in this |
State that is affiliated with the Illinois State Federation of |
Labor, one statewide labor organization representing |
correctional officers and parole agents that is affiliated with |
the Illinois State Federation of Labor, one statewide |
organization representing municipalities, and one regional |
organization representing municipalities. COGFA may accept |
|
comment from any source, but shall not be required to solicit |
public comment. Within 60 days after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, COGFA shall remit |
a copy of the form contained in this subsection to all |
employers subject to this Act and shall make a copy available |
on its website. |
"PSEBA RECIPIENT REPORTING FORM: |
Under Section 17 of the Public Safety Employee Benefits |
Act (820 ILCS 320/17), the Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability (COGFA) is charged with |
creating and submitting a report to the Governor and the |
General Assembly setting forth information regarding |
recipients and benefits payable under the Public Safety |
Employee Benefits Act (Act). The Act requires employers |
providing PSEBA benefits to distribute this form to any |
former peace officer, firefighter, or correctional officer |
currently in receipt of PSEBA benefits. |
The responses to the questions below will be used by |
COGFA to compile information regarding the PSEBA benefit |
for its report. The Act prohibits the release of any |
personal information concerning the PSEBA recipient and |
exempts the reported information from the requirements of |
the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). |
The Act requires the PSEBA recipient to complete this |
form and submit it to the employer providing PSEBA benefits |
|
within 60 days of receipt. If the PSEBA recipient fails to |
submit this form within 60 days of receipt, the employer is |
required to notify the PSEBA recipient of non-compliance |
and provide an additional 30 days to submit the required |
form. Failure to submit the form in a timely manner will |
result in the PSEBA recipient incurring responsibility for |
reimbursing the employer for premiums paid during the |
period the form is due and not filed. |
(1) PSEBA recipient's name: |
(2) PSEBA recipient's date of birth: |
(3) Name of the employer providing PSEBA benefits: |
(4) Date the PSEBA benefit first became payable: |
(5) What was the medical diagnosis of the injury |
that qualified you for the PSEBA benefit? |
(6) Are you currently employed with compensation? |
(7) If so, what is the name(s) of your current |
employer(s)? |
(8) Are you or your spouse enrolled in a health |
insurance plan provided by your current employer or |
another source? |
(9) Have you or your spouse been offered or |
provided access to health insurance from your current |
employer(s)? |
If you answered yes to question 8 or 9, please provide |
the name of the employer, the name of the insurance |
provider(s), and a general description of the type(s) of |
|
insurance offered (HMO, PPO, HSA, etc.): |
(10) Are you or your spouse enrolled in a health |
insurance plan provided by a current employer of your |
spouse? |
(11) Have you or your spouse been offered or |
provided access to health insurance provided by a |
current employer of your spouse? |
If you answered yes to question 10 or 11, please |
provide the name of the employer, the name of the insurance |
provider, and a general description of the type of |
insurance offered (HMO, PPO, HSA, etc.) by an employer of |
your spouse:" |
COGFA shall notify an employer of its obligation to notify |
any PSEBA recipient receiving benefits under this Act of that |
recipient's obligation to file a report under this Section. A |
PSEBA recipient receiving benefits under this Act must complete |
and return this form to the employer within 60 days of receipt |
of such form. Any PSEBA recipient who has been given notice as |
provided under this Section and who fails to timely file a |
report under this Section within 60 days after receipt of this |
form shall be notified by the employer that he or she has 30 |
days to submit the report or risk incurring the cost of his or |
her benefits provided under this Act. An employer may seek |
reimbursement for premium payments for a PSEBA recipient who |
fails to file this report with the employer 30 days after |
|
receiving this notice. The PSEBA recipient is responsible for |
reimbursing the employer for premiums paid during the period |
the report is due and not filed. Employers shall return this |
form to COGFA within 30 days after receiving the form from the |
PSEBA recipient. |
Any information collected by the employer under this |
Section shall be exempt from the requirements of the Freedom of |
Information Act except for data collected in the aggregate that |
does not reveal any personal information concerning the PSEBA |
recipient. |
By July 1 of every even-numbered year, beginning in 2016, |
employers subject to this Act must send the form contained in |
this subsection to all PSEBA recipients eligible for benefits |
under this Act. The PSEBA recipient must complete and return |
this form by September 1 of that year. Any PSEBA recipient who |
has been given notice as provided under this Section and who |
fails to timely file a completed form under this Section within |
60 days after receipt of this form shall be notified by the |
employer that he or she has 30 days to submit the form or risk |
incurring the costs of his or her benefits provided under this |
Act. The PSEBA recipient is responsible for reimbursing the |
employer for premiums paid during the period the report is due |
and not filed. The employer shall resume premium payments upon |
receipt of the completed form. Employers shall return this form |
to COGFA within 30 days after receiving the form from the PSEBA |
recipient. |
|
(b) An employer subject to this Act shall complete and file |
the form contained in this subsection. |
"EMPLOYER SUBJECT TO PSEBA REPORTING FORM: |
Under Section 17 of the Public Safety Employee Benefits |
Act (820 ILCS 320/17), the Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability (COGFA) is charged with |
creating and submitting a report to the Governor and |
General Assembly setting forth information regarding |
recipients and benefits payable under the Public Safety |
Employee Benefits Act (Act). |
The responses to the questions below will be used by |
COGFA to compile information regarding the PSEBA benefit |
for its report. |
The Act requires all employers subject to the PSEBA Act |
to submit the following information within 120 days after |
receipt of this form. |
(1) Name of the employer: |
(2) The number of PSEBA benefit applications filed |
under the Act during the reporting period provided in |
the aggregate and listed individually by name of |
applicant and date of application: |
(3) The number of PSEBA benefits and names of PSEBA |
recipients receiving benefits awarded under the Act |
during the reporting period provided in the aggregate |
and listed individually by name of applicant and date |
|
of application: |
(4) The cost of the health insurance premiums paid |
due to PSEBA benefits awarded under the Act during the |
reporting period provided in the aggregate and listed |
individually by name of PSEBA recipient: |
(5) The number of PSEBA benefit applications filed |
under the Act since the inception of the Act provided |
in the aggregate and listed individually by name of |
applicant and date of application: |
(6) The number of PSEBA benefits awarded under the |
Act since the inception of the Act provided in the |
aggregate and listed individually by name of applicant |
and date of application: |
(7) The cost of health insurance premiums paid due |
to PSEBA benefits awarded under the Act since the |
inception of the Act provided in the aggregate and |
listed individually by name of PSEBA recipient: |
(8) The current annual cost of health insurance |
premiums paid for PSEBA benefits awarded under the Act |
provided in the aggregate and listed individually by |
name of PSEBA recipient: |
(9) The annual cost of health insurance premiums |
paid for PSEBA benefits awarded under the Act listed by |
year since the inception of the Act provided in annual |
aggregate amounts and listed individually by name of |
PSEBA recipient: |
|
(10) A description of health insurance benefit |
levels currently provided by the employer to the PSEBA |
recipient: |
(11) The total cost of the monthly health insurance |
premium currently provided to the PSEBA recipient: |
(12) The other costs of the health insurance |
benefit currently provided to the PSEBA recipient |
including, but not limited to: |
(i) the co-pay requirements of the health |
insurance policy provided to the PSEBA recipient; |
(ii) the out-of-pocket deductibles of the |
health insurance policy provided to the PSEBA |
recipient; |
(iii) any pharmaceutical benefits and co-pays |
provided in the insurance policy; and |
(iv) any policy limits of the health insurance |
policy provided to the PSEBA recipient." |
An employer covered under this Act shall file copies of the |
PSEBA Recipient Reporting Form and the Employer Subject to the |
PSEBA Act Reporting Form with COGFA within 120 days after |
receipt of the Employer Subject to the PSEBA Act Reporting |
Form. |
The first form filed with COGFA under this Section shall |
contain all information required by this Section. All forms |
filed by the employer thereafter shall set forth the required |
|
information for the 24-month period ending on June 30 preceding |
the deadline date for filing the report. |
Whenever possible, communication between COGFA and |
employers as required by this Act shall be through electronic |
means. |
(c) For the purpose of creating the report required under |
subsection (d), upon receipt of each PSEBA Benefit Recipient |
Form, or as soon as reasonably practicable, COGFA shall make a |
determination of whether the PSEBA benefit recipient or the |
PSEBA benefit recipient's spouse meets one of the following |
criteria: |
(1) the PSEBA benefit recipient or the PSEBA benefit |
recipient's spouse is receiving health insurance from a |
current employer, a current employer of his or her spouse, |
or another source; |
(2) the PSEBA benefit recipient or the PSEBA benefit |
recipient's spouse has been offered or provided access to |
health insurance from a current employer or employers. |
If one or both of the criteria are met, COGFA shall make |
the following determinations of the associated costs and |
benefit levels of health insurance provided or offered to the |
PSEBA benefit recipient or the PSEBA benefit recipient's |
spouse: |
(A) a description of health insurance benefit levels |
offered to or received by the PSEBA benefit recipient or |
the PSEBA benefit recipient's spouse from a current |
|
employer or a current employer of the PSEBA benefit |
recipient's spouse; |
(B) the monthly premium cost of health insurance |
benefits offered to or received by the PSEBA benefit |
recipient or the PSEBA benefit recipient's spouse from a |
current employer or a current employer of the PSEBA benefit |
recipient's spouse including, but not limited to: |
(i) the total monthly cost of the health insurance |
premium; |
(ii) the monthly amount of the health insurance |
premium to be paid by the employer; |
(iii) the monthly amount of the health insurance |
premium to be paid by the PSEBA benefit recipient or |
the PSEBA benefit recipient's spouse; |
(iv) the co-pay requirements of the health |
insurance policy; |
(v) the out-of-pocket deductibles of the health |
insurance policy; |
(vi) any pharmaceutical benefits and co-pays |
provided in the insurance policy; |
(vii) any policy limits of the health insurance |
policy. |
COGFA shall summarize the related costs and benefit levels |
of health insurance provided or available to the PSEBA benefit |
recipient or the PSEBA benefit recipient's spouse and contrast |
the results to the cost and benefit levels of health insurance |
|
currently provided by the employer subject to this Act. This |
information shall be included in the report required in |
subsection (d). |
(d) By June 1, 2014, and by January 1 of every odd-numbered |
year thereafter beginning in 2017, COGFA shall submit a report |
to the Governor and the General Assembly setting forth the |
information received under subsections (a) and (b). The report |
shall aggregate data in such a way as to not reveal the |
identity of any single beneficiary. The requirement for |
reporting to the General Assembly shall be satisfied by filing |
copies of the report with the Speaker, Minority Leader, and |
Clerk of the House of Representatives, the President, Minority |
Leader, and Secretary of the Senate, the Legislative Research |
Unit as required under Section 3.1 of the General Assembly |
Organization Act, and the State Government Report Distribution |
Center for the General Assembly as required under paragraph (t) |
of Section 7 of the State Library Act. COGFA shall make this |
report available electronically on a publicly accessible |
website.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-561, eff. 8-27-13; 99-239, eff. 8-3-15.) |
Section 995. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes |
changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text |
that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section |
represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does |
not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes |