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Public Act 101-0657 |
SB1608 Enrolled | LRB101 08148 HLH 53214 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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Article 1. |
Section 1-5. The Business Enterprise for Minorities, |
Women, and Persons with
Disabilities Act is amended by changing |
Section 4 as follows:
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(30 ILCS 575/4) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.604)
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(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2024)
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Sec. 4. Award of State contracts.
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(a) Except as provided in subsection (b), not less than 30% |
20% of
the total dollar amount of State contracts, as defined |
by the Secretary of
the Council and approved by the Council, |
shall be established as an aspirational goal to
be awarded to |
businesses owned by minorities,
women, and persons with |
disabilities; provided, however, that
of the total amount of |
all
State contracts awarded to businesses owned by
minorities, |
women, and persons with disabilities pursuant to
this Section, |
contracts representing at least 16% 11% shall be awarded to |
businesses owned by minorities, contracts representing at |
least 10% 7% shall be awarded to women-owned businesses, and |
contracts representing at least 4% 2% shall be awarded to |
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businesses owned by persons with disabilities.
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(a-5) In addition to the aspirational goals in awarding |
State contracts set under subsection (a), the Department of |
Central Management Services shall by rule further establish |
committed diversity aspirational goals for State contracts |
awarded to businesses owned by minorities, women, and persons |
with disabilities. Such efforts shall include, but not be |
limited to, further concerted outreach efforts to businesses |
owned by minorities, women, and persons with disabilities. |
The above percentage relates to the total dollar amount of |
State
contracts during each State fiscal year, calculated by |
examining
independently each type of contract for each agency |
or public institutions of higher education which
lets such |
contracts. Only that percentage of arrangements which |
represents the participation of businesses owned by
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minorities, women, and persons with disabilities on such |
contracts shall
be included. State contracts subject to the |
requirements of this Act shall include the requirement that |
only expenditures to businesses owned by minorities, women, and |
persons with disabilities that perform a commercially useful |
function may be counted toward the goals set forth by this Act. |
Contracts shall include a definition of "commercially useful |
function" that is consistent with 49 CFR 26.55(c).
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(b) Not less
than 20% of the total dollar amount of State |
construction contracts is
established as an aspirational goal |
to be awarded to businesses owned by minorities, women, and |
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persons with disabilities; provided that, contracts |
representing at least 11% of the total dollar amount of State |
construction contracts shall be awarded to businesses owned by |
minorities; contracts representing at least 7% of the total |
dollar amount of State construction contracts shall be awarded |
to women-owned businesses; and contracts representing at least |
2% of the total dollar amount of State construction contracts |
shall be awarded to businesses owned by persons with |
disabilities.
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(c) (Blank). |
(d) Within one year after April 28, 2009 (the effective |
date of Public Act 96-8), the Department of Central Management |
Services shall conduct a social scientific study that measures |
the impact of discrimination on minority and women business |
development in Illinois. Within 18 months after April 28, 2009 |
(the effective date of Public Act 96-8), the Department shall |
issue a report of its findings and any recommendations on |
whether to adjust the goals for minority and women |
participation established in this Act. Copies of this report |
and the social scientific study shall be filed with the |
Governor and the General Assembly. |
By December 1, 2020, the Department of Central Management |
Services shall conduct a new social scientific study that |
measures the impact of discrimination on minority and women |
business development in Illinois. By June 1, 2022, the |
Department shall issue a report of its findings and any |
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recommendations on whether to adjust the goals for minority and |
women participation established in this Act. Copies of this |
report and the social scientific study shall be filed with the |
Governor , the Advisory Board, and the General Assembly. By |
December 1, 2022, the Department of Central Management Services |
Business Enterprise Program shall develop a model for social |
scientific disparity study sourcing for local governmental |
units to adapt and implement to address regional disparities in |
public procurement. |
(e) Except as permitted under this Act or as otherwise |
mandated by federal law or regulation, those who submit bids or |
proposals for State contracts subject to the provisions of this |
Act, whose bids or proposals are successful and include a |
utilization plan but that fail to meet the goals set forth in |
subsection (b) of this Section, shall be notified of that |
deficiency and shall be afforded a period not to exceed 10 |
calendar days from the date of notification to cure that |
deficiency in the bid or proposal. The deficiency in the bid or |
proposal may only be cured by contracting with additional |
subcontractors who are owned by minorities or women. Any |
increase in cost to
a contract for the addition of a |
subcontractor to cure a bid's deficiency shall not affect the |
bid price,
shall not be used in the request for an exemption in |
this Act, and in no case shall an identified subcontractor with |
a certification made pursuant to this Act be terminated from |
the contract without the written consent of the State agency or |
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public institution of higher education entering into the |
contract. |
(f) Non-construction solicitations that include Business |
Enterprise Program participation goals shall require bidders |
and offerors to include utilization plans. Utilization plans |
are due at the time of bid or offer submission. Failure to |
complete and include a utilization plan, including |
documentation demonstrating good faith effort when requesting |
a waiver, shall render the bid or offer non-responsive. |
(Source: P.A. 100-391, eff. 8-25-17; 101-170, eff. 1-1-20; |
101-601, eff. 1-1-20; revised 10-26-20.) |
Article 5. |
Section 5-5. The Illinois Procurement Code is amended by |
changing Sections 20-15, 20-60, and 35-30 and by adding Section |
50-85 as follows:
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(30 ILCS 500/20-15)
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Sec. 20-15. Competitive sealed proposals.
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(a) Conditions for use. When provided under this Code or |
under
rules, or when
the purchasing agency determines in |
writing that the use of
competitive sealed bidding
is either |
not practicable or not advantageous to the State, a
contract |
may be entered into by
competitive sealed proposals.
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(b) Request for proposals. Proposals shall be solicited
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through a request for proposals.
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(c) Public notice. Public notice of the request for
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proposals shall be published in the
Illinois Procurement |
Bulletin at least 14 calendar days before the date set
in the |
invitation for the opening
of proposals.
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(d) Receipt of proposals. Proposals shall be opened
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publicly or via an electronic procurement system in the |
presence of one or
more witnesses at the time and place |
designated in the request for
proposals, but proposals shall
be |
opened in a manner to avoid disclosure of contents to competing
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offerors during the process
of negotiation. A record of |
proposals shall be prepared and
shall be open for public |
inspection
after contract award.
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(e) Evaluation factors. The requests for proposals shall
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state the relative importance of
price and other evaluation |
factors. Proposals shall be submitted
in 3 2 parts: the first, |
covering
items except price; and the second, commitment to |
diversity; and the third, all other items. Each part of all |
proposals shall be evaluated and ranked independently of the |
other parts of all proposals. The results of the evaluation of |
all 3 parts shall be used in ranking of proposals covering |
price . The first
part of all proposals shall be
evaluated and |
ranked independently of the second part of
all proposals.
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(e-5) Method of scoring. |
(1) The point scoring methodology for competitive |
sealed proposals shall provide points for commitment to |
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diversity. Those points shall be equivalent to 20% of the |
points assigned to the third part of the proposal, all |
other items. |
(2) Factors to be considered in the award of these |
points shall be set by rule by the applicable chief |
procurement officer and may include, but are not limited |
to: |
(A) whether or how well the respondent, on the |
solicitation being evaluated, met the goal of |
contracting or subcontracting with businesses owned by |
women, minorities, or persons with disabilities; |
(B) whether the respondent, on the solicitation |
being evaluated, assisted businesses owned by women, |
minorities, or persons with disabilities in obtaining |
lines of credit, insurance, necessary equipment, |
supplies, materials, or related assistance or |
services; |
(C) the percentage of prior year revenues of the |
respondent that involve businesses owned by women, |
minorities, or persons with disabilities; |
(D) whether the respondent has a written supplier |
diversity program, including, but not limited to, use |
of diversity vendors in the supply chain and a training |
or mentoring program with businesses owned by women, |
minorities, or persons with disabilities; and |
(E) the percentage of members of the respondent's |
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governing board, senior executives, and managers who |
are women, minorities, or persons with disabilities. |
(3) If any State agency or public institution of higher |
education contract is eligible to be paid for or |
reimbursed, in whole or in part, with federal-aid funds, |
grants, or loans, and the provisions of this subsection |
(e-5) would result in the loss of those federal-aid funds, |
grants, or loans, then the contract is exempt from the |
provisions of this Section in order to remain eligible for |
those federal-aid funds, grants, or loans.
For the purposes |
of this subsection (e-5): |
"Manager" means a person who controls or administers |
all or part of a company or similar organization. |
"Minorities" has the same meaning as "minority person" |
under Section 2 of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, |
Women, and Persons with Disabilities Act. |
"Persons with disabilities" has the same meaning as |
"person with a disability" under Section 2 of the Business |
Enterprise for Minorities, Women, and Persons with |
Disabilities Act. |
"Senior executive" means the chief executive officer, |
chief operating officer, chief financial officer, or |
anyone else in charge of a principal business unit or |
function. |
"Women" has the same meaning as "woman" under Section 2 |
of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women, and |
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Persons with Disabilities Act. |
(f) Discussion with responsible offerors and revisions of |
offers or
proposals. As provided in the
request for proposals |
and under rules, discussions
may be conducted with
responsible |
offerors who submit offers or proposals determined to be
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reasonably susceptible of being
selected for award for the |
purpose of clarifying and assuring full
understanding of and
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responsiveness to the solicitation requirements. Those |
offerors
shall be accorded fair and equal
treatment with |
respect to any opportunity for discussion and
revision of |
proposals. Revisions
may be permitted after submission and |
before award for the
purpose of obtaining best and final
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offers. In conducting discussions there shall be no disclosure |
of
any information derived from
proposals submitted by |
competing offerors.
If information is disclosed to any offeror, |
it shall be
provided to all competing offerors.
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(g) Award. Awards shall be made to the responsible offeror
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whose proposal is
determined in writing to be the most |
advantageous to the State,
taking into consideration price and |
the evaluation factors set forth in the request for proposals.
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The contract file shall contain
the basis on which the award is
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made.
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(Source: P.A. 100-43, eff. 8-9-17.)
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(30 ILCS 500/20-60) |
Sec. 20-60. Duration of contracts. |
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(a) Maximum duration. A contract may be entered into for
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any period of time deemed
to be in the best interests of the |
State but not
exceeding 10 years inclusive, beginning January |
1, 2010, of proposed contract renewals. Third parties may lease |
State-owned dark fiber networks for any period of time deemed |
to be in the best interest of the State, but not exceeding 20 |
years. The length of
a lease for real property or capital |
improvements shall be in
accordance with the provisions of
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Section 40-25. The length of energy conservation program |
contracts or energy savings contracts or leases shall be in |
accordance with the provisions of Section 25-45. A contract for |
bond or mortgage insurance awarded by the Illinois Housing |
Development Authority, however, may be entered into for any |
period of time less than or equal to the maximum period of time |
that the subject bond or mortgage may remain outstanding.
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(b) Subject to appropriation. All contracts made or entered
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into shall recite that they are
subject to termination and |
cancellation in any year for which the
General Assembly fails |
to make
an appropriation to make payments under the terms of |
the contract. |
(c) The chief procurement officer shall file a proposed |
extension or renewal of a contract with the Procurement Policy |
Board prior to entering into any extension or renewal if the |
cost associated with the extension or renewal exceeds $249,999. |
The Procurement Policy Board may object to the proposed |
extension or renewal within 30 calendar days and require a |
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hearing before the Board prior to entering into the extension |
or renewal. If the Procurement Policy Board does not object |
within 30 calendar days or takes affirmative action to |
recommend the extension or renewal, the chief procurement |
officer may enter into the extension or renewal of a contract. |
This subsection does not apply to any emergency procurement, |
any procurement under Article 40, or any procurement exempted |
by Section 1-10(b) of this Code. If any State agency contract |
is paid for in whole or in part with federal-aid funds, grants, |
or loans and the provisions of this subsection would result in |
the loss of those federal-aid funds, grants, or loans, then the |
contract is exempt from the provisions of this subsection in |
order to remain eligible for those federal-aid funds, grants, |
or loans, and the State agency shall file notice of this |
exemption with the Procurement Policy Board prior to entering |
into the proposed extension or renewal. Nothing in this |
subsection permits a chief procurement officer to enter into an |
extension or renewal in violation of subsection (a). By August |
1 each year, the Procurement Policy Board shall file a report |
with the General Assembly identifying for the previous fiscal |
year (i) the proposed extensions or renewals that were filed |
with the Board and whether the Board objected and (ii) the |
contracts exempt from this subsection. |
(d) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of |
this Section, the Department of Innovation and Technology may |
enter into leases for dark fiber networks for any period of |
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time deemed to be in the best interests of the State but not |
exceeding 20 years inclusive. The Department of Innovation and |
Technology may lease dark fiber networks from third parties |
only for the primary purpose of providing services (i) to the |
offices of Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Attorney General, |
Secretary of State, Comptroller, or Treasurer and State |
agencies, as defined under Section 5-15 of the Civil |
Administrative Code of Illinois or (ii) for anchor |
institutions, as defined in Section 7 of the Illinois Century |
Network Act. Dark fiber network lease contracts shall be |
subject to all other provisions of this Code and any applicable |
rules or requirements, including, but not limited to, |
publication of lease solicitations, use of standard State |
contracting terms and conditions, and approval of vendor |
certifications and financial disclosures. |
(e) As used in this Section, "dark fiber network" means a |
network of fiber optic cables laid but currently unused by a |
third party that the third party is leasing for use as network |
infrastructure. |
(f) No vendor shall be eligible for renewal of a contract |
when that vendor has failed to meet the goals agreed to in the |
vendor's utilization plan unless the State agency has |
determined that the vendor made good faith efforts toward |
meeting the contract goals and has issued a waiver or that |
vendor is not otherwise excused from compliance by the chief |
procurement officer in consultation with the purchasing State |
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agency. The form and content of the waiver shall be prescribed |
by each chief procurement officer who shall maintain on his or |
her official website a database of waivers granted under this |
Section with respect to contracts under his or her |
jurisdiction. The database shall be updated periodically and |
shall be searchable by contractor name and by contracting State |
agency or public institution of higher education. |
(Source: P.A. 100-23, eff. 7-6-17; 100-611, eff. 7-20-18; |
101-81, eff. 7-12-19.) |
(30 ILCS 500/35-30) |
Sec. 35-30. Awards. |
(a) All State contracts for professional and artistic |
services, except as
provided in this Section, shall be awarded |
using the
competitive request for proposal process outlined in |
this Section. The scoring for requests for proposals shall |
include the commitment to diversity factors and methodology |
described in subsection (e-5) of Section 20-15. |
(b) For each contract offered, the chief procurement |
officer, State
purchasing officer, or his or her designee shall |
use the appropriate standard
solicitation
forms
available from |
the chief procurement officer for matters other than |
construction or the higher
education chief procurement |
officer. |
(c) Prepared forms shall be submitted to the chief |
procurement officer for matters other than construction or the |
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higher education chief procurement officer,
whichever is |
appropriate, for
publication in its Illinois Procurement |
Bulletin and circulation to the chief procurement officer for |
matters other than construction
or the higher education chief |
procurement officer's list of
prequalified vendors. Notice of |
the offer or request for
proposal shall appear at least 14 |
calendar days before the response to the offer is due. |
(d) All interested respondents shall return their |
responses to the chief procurement officer for matters other |
than construction
or the higher education chief procurement |
officer,
whichever is appropriate, which shall open
and record |
them. The chief procurement officer for matters other than |
construction or higher education chief procurement officer
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then shall forward the responses, together
with any
information |
it has available about the qualifications and other State work
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of the respondents. |
(e) After evaluation, ranking, and selection, the |
responsible chief
procurement officer, State purchasing |
officer, or
his or her designee shall notify the chief |
procurement officer for matters other than construction
or the |
higher education chief procurement officer, whichever is |
appropriate,
of the successful respondent and shall forward
a |
copy of the signed contract for the chief procurement officer |
for matters other than construction or higher education chief
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procurement officer's file. The chief procurement officer for |
matters other than construction or higher education chief
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procurement officer shall
publish the names of the
responsible |
procurement decision-maker,
the agency letting the contract, |
the
successful respondent, a contract reference, and value of |
the let contract
in the next appropriate volume of the Illinois |
Procurement Bulletin. |
(f) For all professional and artistic contracts with |
annualized value
that exceeds $100,000, evaluation and ranking |
by price are required. Any chief
procurement officer or State |
purchasing officer,
but not their designees, may select a |
respondent other than the lowest respondent by
price. In any |
case, when the contract exceeds the $100,000 threshold and
the |
lowest respondent is not selected, the chief procurement |
officer or the State
purchasing officer shall forward together
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with the contract notice of who the low respondent by price was |
and a written decision as
to why another was selected to the |
chief procurement officer for matters other than construction |
or
the higher education chief procurement officer, whichever is |
appropriate.
The chief procurement officer for matters other |
than construction or higher education chief procurement |
officer shall publish as
provided in subsection (e) of Section |
35-30,
but
shall include notice of the chief procurement |
officer's or State purchasing
officer's written decision. |
(g) The chief procurement officer for matters other than |
construction and higher education chief
procurement officer |
may each refine, but not
contradict, this Section by |
promulgating rules
for submission to the Procurement Policy |
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Board and then to the Joint Committee
on Administrative Rules. |
Any
refinement shall be based on the principles and procedures |
of the federal
Architect-Engineer Selection Law, Public Law |
92-582 Brooks Act, and the
Architectural, Engineering, and Land |
Surveying Qualifications Based Selection
Act; except that |
pricing shall be an integral part of the selection process. |
(Source: P.A. 100-43, eff. 8-9-17.) |
(30 ILCS 500/50-85 new) |
Sec. 50-85. Diversity training. |
(a) Each chief procurement |
officer, State purchasing officer, procurement compliance |
monitor, applicable support staff of each chief procurement |
officer, State agency purchasing and contracting staff, those |
identified under subsection (c) of Section 5-45 of the State |
Officials and Employees Ethics Act who have the authority to |
participate personally and substantially in the award of State |
contracts, and any other State agency staff with substantial |
procurement and contracting responsibilities as determined by |
the chief procurement officer, in consultation with the State |
agency, shall complete annual training for diversity and |
inclusion. Each chief procurement officer shall prescribe the |
program of diversity and inclusion training appropriate for |
each chief procurement officer's jurisdiction. |
Section 5-10. The Business Enterprise for Minorities, |
Women, and Persons with
Disabilities Act is amended by changing |
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Sections 4f and 6 as follows: |
(30 ILCS 575/4f) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2024) |
Sec. 4f. Award of State contracts. |
(1) It is hereby declared to be the public policy of the |
State of Illinois to promote and encourage each State agency |
and public institution of higher education to use businesses |
owned by minorities, women, and persons with disabilities in |
the area of goods and services, including, but not limited to, |
insurance services, investment management services, |
information technology services, accounting services, |
architectural and engineering services, and legal services. |
Furthermore, each State agency and public institution of higher |
education shall utilize such firms to the greatest extent |
feasible within the bounds of financial and fiduciary prudence, |
and take affirmative steps to remove any barriers to the full |
participation of such firms in the procurement and contracting |
opportunities afforded. |
(a) When a State agency or public institution of higher |
education, other than a community college, awards a |
contract for insurance services, for each State agency or |
public institution of higher education, it shall be the |
aspirational goal to use insurance brokers owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities as |
defined by this Act, for not less than 20% of the total |
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annual premiums or fees; provided that, contracts |
representing at least 11% of the total annual premiums or |
fees shall be awarded to businesses owned by minorities; |
contracts representing at least 7% of the total annual |
premiums or fees shall be awarded to women-owned |
businesses; and contracts representing at least 2% of the |
total annual premiums or fees shall be awarded to |
businesses owned by persons with disabilities. |
(b) When a State agency or public institution of higher |
education, other than a community college, awards a |
contract for investment services, for each State agency or |
public institution of higher education, it shall be the |
aspirational goal to use emerging investment managers |
owned by minorities, women, and persons with disabilities |
as defined by this Act, for not less than 20% of the total |
funds under management; provided that, contracts |
representing at least 11% of the total funds under |
management shall be awarded to businesses owned by |
minorities; contracts representing at least 7% of the total |
funds under management shall be awarded to women-owned |
businesses; and contracts representing at least 2% of the |
total funds under management shall be awarded to businesses |
owned by persons with disabilities. Furthermore, it is the |
aspirational goal that not less than 20% of the direct |
asset managers of the State funds be minorities, women, and |
persons with disabilities. |
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(c) When a State agency or public institution of higher |
education, other than a community college, awards |
contracts for information technology services, accounting |
services, architectural and engineering services, and |
legal services, for each State agency and public |
institution of higher education, it shall be the |
aspirational goal to use such firms owned by minorities, |
women, and persons with disabilities as defined by this Act |
and lawyers who are minorities, women, and persons with |
disabilities as defined by this Act, for not less than 20% |
of the total dollar amount of State contracts; provided |
that, contracts representing at least 11% of the total |
dollar amount of State contracts shall be awarded to |
businesses owned by minorities or minority lawyers; |
contracts representing at least 7% of the total dollar |
amount of State contracts shall be awarded to women-owned |
businesses or women who are lawyers; and contracts |
representing at least 2% of the total dollar amount of |
State contracts shall be awarded to businesses owned by |
persons with disabilities or persons with disabilities who |
are lawyers. |
(d) When a community college awards a contract for |
insurance services, investment services, information |
technology services, accounting services, architectural |
and engineering services, and legal services, it shall be |
the aspirational goal of each community college to use |
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businesses owned by minorities, women, and persons with |
disabilities as defined in this Act for not less than 20% |
of the total amount spent on contracts for these services |
collectively; provided that, contracts representing at |
least 11% of the total amount spent on contracts for these |
services shall be awarded to businesses owned by |
minorities; contracts representing at least 7% of the total |
amount spent on contracts for these services shall be |
awarded to women-owned businesses; and contracts |
representing at least 2% of the total amount spent on |
contracts for these services shall be awarded to businesses |
owned by persons with disabilities. When a community |
college awards contracts for investment services, |
contracts awarded to investment managers who are not |
emerging investment managers as defined in this Act shall |
not be considered businesses owned by minorities, women, or |
persons with disabilities for the purposes of this Section. |
(e) When a State agency or public institution of higher |
education issues competitive solicitations and the award |
history for a service or supply category shows awards to a |
class of business owners that are underrepresented, the |
Council shall determine the reason for the disparity and |
shall identify potential and appropriate methods to |
minimize or eliminate the cause for the disparity. |
If any State agency or public institution of higher |
education contract is eligible to be paid for or |
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reimbursed, in whole or in part, with federal-aid funds, |
grants, or loans, and the provisions of this paragraph (e) |
would result in the loss of those federal-aid funds, |
grants, or loans, then the contract is exempt from the |
provisions of this paragraph (e) in order to remain |
eligible for those federal-aid funds, grants, or loans. |
(2) As used in this Section: |
"Accounting services" means the measurement, |
processing and communication of financial information |
about economic entities including, but is not limited to, |
financial accounting, management accounting, auditing, |
cost containment and auditing services, taxation and |
accounting information systems. |
"Architectural and engineering services" means |
professional services of an architectural or engineering |
nature, or incidental services, that members of the |
architectural and engineering professions, and individuals |
in their employ, may logically or justifiably perform, |
including studies, investigations, surveying and mapping, |
tests, evaluations, consultations, comprehensive planning, |
program management, conceptual designs, plans and |
specifications, value engineering, construction phase |
services, soils engineering, drawing reviews, preparation |
of operating and maintenance manuals, and other related |
services. |
"Emerging investment manager" means an investment |
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manager or claims consultant having assets under |
management below $10 billion or otherwise adjudicating |
claims. |
"Information technology services" means, but is not |
limited to, specialized technology-oriented solutions by |
combining the processes and functions of software, |
hardware, networks, telecommunications, web designers, |
cloud developing resellers, and electronics. |
"Insurance broker" means an insurance brokerage firm, |
claims administrator, or both, that procures, places all |
lines of insurance, or administers claims with annual |
premiums or fees of at least $5,000,000 but not more than |
$10,000,000. |
"Legal services" means work performed by a lawyer |
including, but not limited to, contracts in anticipation of |
litigation, enforcement actions, or investigations. |
(3) Each State agency and public institution of higher |
education shall adopt policies that identify its plan and |
implementation procedures for increasing the use of service |
firms owned by minorities, women, and persons with |
disabilities. |
(4) Except as provided in subsection (5), the Council shall |
file no later than March 1 of each year an annual report to the |
Governor, the Bureau on Apprenticeship Programs, and the |
General Assembly. The report filed with the General Assembly |
shall be filed as required in Section 3.1 of the General |
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Assembly Organization Act. This report shall: (i) identify the |
service firms used by each State agency and public institution |
of higher education, (ii) identify the actions it has |
undertaken to increase the use of service firms owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities, including |
encouraging non-minority-owned firms to use other service |
firms owned by minorities, women, and persons with disabilities |
as subcontractors when the opportunities arise, (iii) state any |
recommendations made by the Council to each State agency and |
public institution of higher education to increase |
participation by the use of service firms owned by minorities, |
women, and persons with disabilities, and (iv) include the |
following: |
(A) For insurance services: the names of the insurance |
brokers or claims consultants used, the total of risk |
managed by each State agency and public institution of |
higher education by insurance brokers, the total |
commissions, fees paid, or both, the lines or insurance |
policies placed, and the amount of premiums placed; and the |
percentage of the risk managed by insurance brokers, the |
percentage of total commission, fees paid, or both, the |
lines or insurance policies placed, and the amount of |
premiums placed with each by the insurance brokers owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities by each |
State agency and public institution of higher education. |
(B) For investment management services: the names of |
|
the investment managers used, the total funds under |
management of investment managers; the total commissions, |
fees paid, or both; the total and percentage of funds under |
management of emerging investment managers owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities, |
including the total and percentage of total commissions, |
fees paid, or both by each State agency and public |
institution of higher education. |
(C) The names of service firms, the percentage and |
total dollar amount paid for professional services by |
category by each State agency and public institution of |
higher education. |
(D) The names of service firms, the percentage and |
total dollar amount paid for services by category to firms |
owned by minorities, women, and persons with disabilities |
by each State agency and public institution of higher |
education. |
(E) The total number of contracts awarded for services |
by category and the total number of contracts awarded to |
firms owned by minorities, women, and persons with |
disabilities by each State agency and public institution of |
higher education. |
(5) For community college districts, the Business |
Enterprise Council shall only report the following information |
for each community college district: (i) the name of the |
community colleges in the district, (ii) the name and contact |
|
information of a person at each community college appointed to |
be the single point of contact for vendors owned by minorities, |
women, or persons with disabilities, (iii) the policy of the |
community college district concerning certified vendors, (iv) |
the certifications recognized by the community college |
district for determining whether a business is owned or |
controlled by a minority, woman, or person with a disability, |
(v) outreach efforts conducted by the community college |
district to increase the use of certified vendors, (vi) the |
total expenditures by the community college district in the |
prior fiscal year in the divisions of work specified in |
paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of subsection (1) of this Section |
and the amount paid to certified vendors in those divisions of |
work, and (vii) the total number of contracts entered into for |
the divisions of work specified in paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) |
of subsection (1) of this Section and the total number of |
contracts awarded to certified vendors providing these |
services to the community college district. The Business |
Enterprise Council shall not make any utilization reports under |
this Act for community college districts for Fiscal Year 2015 |
and Fiscal Year 2016, but shall make the report required by |
this subsection for Fiscal Year 2017 and for each fiscal year |
thereafter. The Business Enterprise Council shall report the |
information in items (i), (ii), (iii), and (iv) of this |
subsection beginning in September of 2016. The Business |
Enterprise Council may collect the data needed to make its |
|
report from the Illinois Community College Board. |
(6) The status of the utilization of services shall be |
discussed at each of the regularly scheduled Business |
Enterprise Council meetings. Time shall be allotted for the |
Council to receive, review, and discuss the progress of the use |
of service firms owned by minorities, women, and persons with |
disabilities by each State agency and public institution of |
higher education; and any evidence regarding past or present |
racial, ethnic, or gender-based discrimination which directly |
impacts a State agency or public institution of higher |
education contracting with such firms. If after reviewing such |
evidence the Council finds that there is or has been such |
discrimination against a specific group, race or sex, the |
Council shall establish sheltered markets or adjust existing |
sheltered markets tailored to address the Council's specific |
findings for the divisions of work specified in paragraphs (a), |
(b), and (c) of subsection (1) of this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-391, eff. 8-25-17; 101-170, eff. 1-1-20 .)
|
(30 ILCS 575/6) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.606)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2024)
|
Sec. 6. Agency compliance plans. Each State agency and |
public institutions of higher education
under the
jurisdiction |
of this Act
shall file
with the Council an annual compliance |
plan which shall outline the
goals of the State agency or |
public institutions of higher education for contracting with |
|
businesses owned by minorities, women, and
persons with |
disabilities for the then current fiscal
year, the manner in |
which the agency intends to reach these goals and a
timetable |
for reaching these goals. The Council shall review and approve
|
the plan of each State agency and public institutions of higher |
education and may reject any
plan that does
not comply with
|
this Act or any rules or regulations promulgated pursuant to |
this Act.
|
(a) The compliance plan shall also include, but not be |
limited to, (1) a
policy statement, signed by the State agency |
or public institution of higher education head,
expressing a
|
commitment to
encourage the use of
businesses owned by
|
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities, (2) the |
designation of
the liaison
officer
provided for in Section 5 of |
this Act, (3) procedures to distribute to
potential contractors |
and vendors the list of all businesses legitimately classified |
as businesses owned by
minorities, women, and persons with |
disabilities and so certified under
this Act, (4) procedures to |
set
separate contract goals on specific prime contracts and |
purchase orders
with subcontracting possibilities based upon |
the type of work or services
and subcontractor availability, |
(5) procedures to assure that contractors
and vendors make good |
faith efforts to meet contract goals, (6) procedures
for |
contract goal exemption, modification and waiver, and (7) the |
delineation
of separate contract goals for businesses owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with
disabilities.
|
|
(b) Approval of the compliance plans shall include such |
delegation of
responsibilities to the requesting State agency |
or public institution of higher education as
the Council
deems |
necessary
and appropriate to fulfill the purpose of this Act. |
Such responsibilities
may include, but need not be limited to |
those outlined in subsections (1),
(2) and (3) of Section 7, |
paragraph (a) of Section 8, and Section 8a of this Act.
|
(c) Each State agency and public institution of higher |
education under the jurisdiction of
this Act
shall
file with |
the Council an annual report of its utilization of businesses |
owned
by minorities, women, and persons with disabilities |
during the preceding fiscal year including lapse period |
spending
and a mid-fiscal year report of its utilization to |
date for the then current
fiscal year. The reports shall |
include a self-evaluation of the efforts of the
State agency or |
public institution of higher education to meet its goals under |
the
Act , as well as a plan to increase the diversity of the |
vendors engaged in contracts with the State agency or public |
institution of higher education, with a particular focus on the |
most underrepresented in contract awards .
|
(d) Notwithstanding any provisions to the contrary in this |
Act,
any State
agency or public institution of higher education |
which administers a construction program,
for which federal law |
or regulations establish standards and procedures for
the |
utilization of minority-owned and women-owned businesses and |
disadvantaged businesses,
shall implement a disadvantaged |
|
business enterprise program to include minority-owned and |
women-owned businesses and disadvantaged businesses, using
the |
federal
standards and procedures for the establishment of goals |
and
utilization procedures for the State-funded, as well as the |
federally
assisted, portions of the program. In such cases, |
these goals shall not
exceed those established pursuant to the |
relevant federal statutes or
regulations.
Notwithstanding the |
provisions of Section 8b, the Illinois Department of
|
Transportation is authorized to establish sheltered markets |
for the
State-funded portions of the program consistent with |
federal law and
regulations.
Additionally, a compliance plan |
which is filed by such State
agency or public institution of |
higher education pursuant to this Act, which incorporates
|
equivalent terms and
conditions of its federally-approved |
compliance plan, shall be deemed
approved under this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-462, eff. 8-25-15; 100-391, eff. 8-25-17 .)
|
Article 10. |
Section 10-5. The Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is |
amended by adding Section 605-1055 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 605/605-1055 new) |
Sec. 605-1055. Illinois SBIR/STTR Matching Funds Program. |
(a) There is established the Illinois Small Business |
|
Innovation Research (SBIR) and Small Business Technology |
Transfer (STTR) Matching Funds Program to be administered by |
the Department. In order to foster job creation and economic |
development in the State, the Department may make grants to |
eligible businesses to match funds received by the business as |
an SBIR or STTR Phase I award and to encourage businesses to |
apply for Phase II awards. |
(b) In order to be eligible for a grant under this Section, |
a business must satisfy all of the following conditions: |
(1) The business must be a for-profit, Illinois-based |
business. For the purposes of this Section, an |
Illinois-based business is one that has its principal place |
of business in this State; |
(2) The business must have received an SBIR/STTR Phase |
I award from a participating federal agency in response to |
a specific federal solicitation. To receive the full match, |
the business must also have submitted a final Phase I |
report, demonstrated that the sponsoring agency has |
interest in the Phase II proposal, and submitted a Phase II |
proposal to the agency. |
(3) The business must satisfy all federal SBIR/STTR |
requirements. |
(4) The business shall not receive concurrent funding |
support from other sources that duplicates the purpose of |
this Section. |
(5) The business must certify that at least 51% of the |
|
research described in the federal SBIR/STTR Phase II |
proposal will be conducted in this State and that the |
business will remain an Illinois-based business for the |
duration of the SBIR/STTR Phase II project. |
(6) The business must demonstrate its ability to |
conduct research in its SBIR/STTR Phase II proposal. |
(c) The Department may award grants to match the funds |
received by a business through an SBIR/STTR Phase I proposal up |
to a maximum of $50,000. Seventy-five percent of the total |
grant shall be remitted to the business upon receipt of the |
SBIR/STTR Phase I award and application for funds under this |
Section. Twenty-five percent of the total grant shall be |
remitted to the business upon submission by the business of the |
Phase II application to the funding agency and acceptance of |
the Phase I report by the funding agency. A business may |
receive only one grant under this Section per year. A business |
may receive only one grant under this Section with respect to |
each federal proposal submission. Over its lifetime, a business |
may receive a maximum of 5 awards under this Section. |
(d) A business shall apply, under oath, to the Department |
for a grant under this Section on a form prescribed by the |
Department that includes at least all of the following: |
(1) the name of the business, the form of business |
organization under which it is operated, and the names and |
addresses of the principals or management of the business; |
(2) an acknowledgment of receipt of the Phase I report |
|
and Phase II proposal by the relevant federal agency; and |
(3) any other information necessary for the Department |
to evaluate the application.
|
Article 15. |
Section 15-5. The Department of Central Management |
Services Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is |
amended by adding Section 405-535 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 405/405-535 new) |
Sec. 405-535. African Descent-Citizens Reparations |
Commission. |
(a) The African Descent-Citizens Reparations Commission is |
hereby established within the Department of Central Management |
Services. |
(b) The Commission shall include the following members: |
(1) the Governor or his or her designee; |
(2) one member of the House of Representatives |
appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives; |
(3) one member of the Senate appointed by the President |
of the Senate; |
(4) one member of the House of Representatives |
appointed by the Minority Leader of the House of |
Representatives; |
(5) one member of the Senate appointed by the Minority |
|
Leader of the Senate; |
(6) three representatives of a national coalition that |
supports reparations for African Americans appointed by |
the Governor; and |
(7) ten members of the public appointed by the |
Governor, at least 8 of whom are African American |
descendants of slavery. |
(c) Appointment of members to the Commission shall be made |
within 60 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 101st General Assembly, with the first meeting of the |
Commission to be held at a reasonable period of time |
thereafter. The Chairperson of the Commission shall be elected |
from among the members during the first meeting. Members of the |
Commission shall serve without compensation, but may be |
reimbursed for travel expenses. The 10 members of the public |
appointed by the Governor shall be from diverse backgrounds, |
including businesspersons and persons without high school |
diplomas. |
(d) Administrative support and staffing for the Commission |
shall be provided by the Department of Central Management |
Services. Any State agency under the jurisdiction of the |
Governor shall provide testimony and documents as directed by |
the Department. |
(e) The Commission shall perform the following duties: |
(1) develop and implement measures to ensure equity, |
equality, and parity for African American descendants of |
|
slavery; |
(2) hold hearings to discuss the implementation of |
measures to ensure equity, equality, and parity for African |
American descendants of slavery; |
(3) educate the public on reparations for African |
American descendants of slavery; |
(4) report to the General Assembly information and |
findings regarding the work of the Commission under this |
Section and the feasibility of reparations for Illinois |
African American descendants of slavery, including any |
recommendations on the subject; and |
(5) discuss and perform actions regarding the |
following issues: |
(i) Preservation of African American neighborhoods |
and communities through investment in business |
development, home ownership, and affordable housing at |
the median income of each neighborhood, with a full |
range of housing services and strengthening of |
institutions, which shall include, without limitation, |
schools, parks, and community centers. |
(ii) Building and development of a Vocational |
Training Center for People of African |
Descent-Citizens, with satellite centers throughout |
the State, to address the racial disparity in the |
building trades and the de-skilling of African |
American labor through the historic discrimination in |
|
the building trade unions. The Center shall also have |
departments for legitimate activities in the informal |
economy and apprenticeship. |
(iii) Ensuring proportional economic |
representation in all State contracts, including |
reviews and updates of the State procurement and |
contracting requirements and procedures with the |
express goal of increasing the number of African |
American vendors and contracts for services to an |
equitable level reflecting their population in the |
State. |
(iv) Creation and enforcement of an Illinois |
Slavery Era Disclosure Bill mandating that in addition |
to disclosure, an affidavit must be submitted entitled |
"Statement of Financial Reparations" that has been |
negotiated between the Commission established under |
this Section and a corporation or institution that |
disclosed ties to the enslavement or injury of people |
of African descent in the United States of America. |
(f) Beginning January 1, 2022, and for each year |
thereafter, the Commission shall submit a report regarding its |
actions and any information as required under this Section to |
the Governor and the General Assembly. The report of the |
Commission shall also be made available to the public on the |
Internet website of the Department of Central Management |
Services. |
|
Article 20. |
Section 20-5. The Deposit of State Moneys Act is amended by |
changing Section 22.5 as follows:
|
(15 ILCS 520/22.5) (from Ch. 130, par. 41a)
|
(For force and effect of certain provisions, see Section 90 |
of P.A. 94-79) |
Sec. 22.5. Permitted investments. The State Treasurer may, |
with the
approval of the Governor, invest and reinvest any |
State money in the treasury
which is not needed for current |
expenditures due or about to become due, in
obligations of the |
United States government or its agencies or of National
|
Mortgage Associations established by or under the National |
Housing Act, 12
U.S.C. 1701 et seq., or
in mortgage |
participation certificates representing undivided interests in
|
specified, first-lien conventional residential Illinois |
mortgages that are
underwritten, insured, guaranteed, or |
purchased by the Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation or in |
Affordable Housing Program Trust Fund Bonds or
Notes as defined |
in and issued pursuant to the Illinois Housing Development
Act. |
All such obligations shall be considered as cash and may
be |
delivered over as cash by a State Treasurer to his successor.
|
The State Treasurer may, with the approval of the Governor, |
purchase
any state bonds with any money in the State Treasury |
|
that has been set
aside and held for the payment of the |
principal of and interest on the
bonds. The bonds shall be |
considered as cash and may be delivered over
as cash by the |
State Treasurer to his successor.
|
The State Treasurer may, with the approval of the Governor, |
invest or
reinvest any State money in the treasury that is not |
needed for
current expenditure due or about to become due, or |
any money in the
State Treasury that has been set aside and |
held for the payment of the
principal of and the interest on |
any State bonds, in shares,
withdrawable accounts, and |
investment certificates of savings and
building and loan |
associations, incorporated under the laws of this
State or any |
other state or under the laws of the United States;
provided, |
however, that investments may be made only in those savings
and |
loan or building and loan associations the shares and |
withdrawable
accounts or other forms of investment securities |
of which are insured
by the Federal Deposit Insurance |
Corporation.
|
The State Treasurer may not invest State money in any |
savings and
loan or building and loan association unless a |
commitment by the savings
and loan (or building and loan) |
association, executed by the president
or chief executive |
officer of that association, is submitted in the
following |
form:
|
The .................. Savings and Loan (or Building |
and Loan)
Association pledges not to reject arbitrarily |
|
mortgage loans for
residential properties within any |
specific part of the community served
by the savings and |
loan (or building and loan) association because of
the |
location of the property. The savings and loan (or building |
and
loan) association also pledges to make loans available |
on low and
moderate income residential property throughout |
the community within
the limits of its legal restrictions |
and prudent financial practices.
|
The State Treasurer may, with the approval of the Governor, |
invest or
reinvest any State money in the treasury
that is not |
needed for current expenditures due or about to become
due, or |
any money in the State Treasury that has been set aside and
|
held for the payment of the principal of and interest on any |
State
bonds, in bonds issued by counties or municipal |
corporations of the
State of Illinois.
|
The State Treasurer may invest or reinvest up to 5% of the |
College Savings Pool Administrative Trust Fund, the Illinois |
Public Treasurer Investment Pool (IPTIP) Administrative Trust |
Fund, and the State Treasurer's Administrative Fund that is not |
needed for current expenditures due or about to become due, in |
common or preferred stocks of publicly traded corporations, |
partnerships, or limited liability companies, organized in the |
United States, with assets exceeding $500,000,000 if: (i) the |
purchases do not exceed 1% of the corporation's or the limited |
liability company's outstanding common and preferred stock; |
(ii) no more than 10% of the total funds are invested in any |
|
one publicly traded corporation, partnership, or limited |
liability company; and (iii) the corporation or the limited |
liability company has not been placed on the list of restricted |
companies by the Illinois Investment Policy Board under Section |
1-110.16 of the Illinois Pension Code. |
The State Treasurer may, with the approval of the Governor, |
invest or
reinvest any State money in the Treasury which is not |
needed for current
expenditure, due or about to become due, or |
any money in the State Treasury
which has been set aside and |
held for the payment of the principal of and
the interest on |
any State bonds, in participations in loans, the principal
of |
which participation is fully guaranteed by an agency or |
instrumentality
of the United States government; provided, |
however, that such loan
participations are represented by |
certificates issued only by banks which
are incorporated under |
the laws of this State or any other state
or under the laws of |
the United States, and such banks, but not
the loan |
participation certificates, are insured by the Federal Deposit
|
Insurance Corporation.
|
Whenever the total amount of vouchers presented to the |
Comptroller under Section 9 of the State Comptroller Act |
exceeds the funds available in the General Revenue Fund by |
$1,000,000,000 or more, then the State Treasurer may invest any |
State money in the Treasury, other than money in the General |
Revenue Fund, Health Insurance Reserve Fund, Attorney General |
Court Ordered and Voluntary Compliance Payment Projects Fund, |
|
Attorney General Whistleblower Reward and Protection Fund, and |
Attorney General's State Projects and Court Ordered |
Distribution Fund, which is not needed for current |
expenditures, due or about to become due, or any money in the |
State Treasury which has been set aside and held for the |
payment of the principal of and the interest on any State bonds |
with the Office of the Comptroller in order to enable the |
Comptroller to pay outstanding vouchers. At any time, and from |
time to time outstanding, such investment shall not be greater |
than $2,000,000,000. Such investment shall be deposited into |
the General Revenue Fund or Health Insurance Reserve Fund as |
determined by the Comptroller. Such investment shall be repaid |
by the Comptroller with an interest rate tied to the London |
Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) or the Federal Funds Rate or an |
equivalent market established variable rate, but in no case |
shall such interest rate exceed the lesser of the penalty rate |
established under the State Prompt Payment Act or the timely |
pay interest rate under Section 368a of the Illinois Insurance |
Code. The State Treasurer and the Comptroller shall enter into |
an intergovernmental agreement to establish procedures for |
such investments, which market established variable rate to |
which the interest rate for the investments should be tied, and |
other terms which the State Treasurer and Comptroller |
reasonably believe to be mutually beneficial concerning these |
investments by the State Treasurer. The State Treasurer and |
Comptroller shall also enter into a written agreement for each |
|
such investment that specifies the period of the investment, |
the payment interval, the interest rate to be paid, the funds |
in the Treasury from which the Treasurer will draw the |
investment, and other terms upon which the State Treasurer and |
Comptroller mutually agree. Such investment agreements shall |
be public records and the State Treasurer shall post the terms |
of all such investment agreements on the State Treasurer's |
official website. In compliance with the intergovernmental |
agreement, the Comptroller shall order and the State Treasurer |
shall transfer amounts sufficient for the payment of principal |
and interest invested by the State Treasurer with the Office of |
the Comptroller under this paragraph from the General Revenue |
Fund or the Health Insurance Reserve Fund to the respective |
funds in the Treasury from which the State Treasurer drew the |
investment. Public Act 100-1107 shall constitute an |
irrevocable and continuing authority for all amounts necessary |
for the payment of principal and interest on the investments |
made with the Office of the Comptroller by the State Treasurer |
under this paragraph, and the irrevocable and continuing |
authority for and direction to the Comptroller and Treasurer to |
make the necessary transfers. |
The State Treasurer may, with the approval of the Governor, |
invest or
reinvest any State money in the Treasury that is not |
needed for current
expenditure, due or about to become due, or |
any money in the State Treasury
that has been set aside and |
held for the payment of the principal of and
the interest on |
|
any State bonds, in any of the following:
|
(1) Bonds, notes, certificates of indebtedness, |
Treasury bills, or other
securities now or hereafter issued |
that are guaranteed by the full faith
and credit of the |
United States of America as to principal and interest.
|
(2) Bonds, notes, debentures, or other similar |
obligations of the United
States of America, its agencies, |
and instrumentalities.
|
(2.5) Bonds, notes, debentures, or other similar |
obligations of a
foreign government, other than the |
Republic of the Sudan, that are guaranteed by the full |
faith and credit of that
government as to principal and |
interest, but only if the foreign government
has not |
defaulted and has met its payment obligations in a timely |
manner on
all similar obligations for a period of at least |
25 years immediately before
the time of acquiring those |
obligations.
|
(3) Interest-bearing savings accounts, |
interest-bearing certificates of
deposit, interest-bearing |
time deposits, or any other investments
constituting |
direct obligations of any bank as defined by the Illinois
|
Banking Act.
|
(4) Interest-bearing accounts, certificates of |
deposit, or any other
investments constituting direct |
obligations of any savings and loan
associations |
incorporated under the laws of this State or any other |
|
state or
under the laws of the United States.
|
(5) Dividend-bearing share accounts, share certificate |
accounts, or
class of share accounts of a credit union |
chartered under the laws of this
State or the laws of the |
United States; provided, however, the principal
office of |
the credit union must be located within the State of |
Illinois.
|
(6) Bankers' acceptances of banks whose senior |
obligations are rated in
the top 2 rating categories by 2 |
national rating agencies and maintain that
rating during |
the term of the investment.
|
(7) Short-term obligations of either corporations or |
limited liability companies organized in the United
States |
with assets exceeding $500,000,000 if (i) the obligations |
are rated
at the time of purchase at one of the 3 highest |
classifications established
by at least 2 standard rating |
services and mature not later than 270
days from the date |
of purchase, (ii) the purchases do not exceed 10% of
the |
corporation's or the limited liability company's |
outstanding obligations, (iii) no more than one-third of
|
the public agency's funds are invested in short-term |
obligations of
either corporations or limited liability |
companies, and (iv) the corporation or the limited |
liability company has not been placed on the list of |
restricted companies by the Illinois Investment Policy |
Board under Section 1-110.16 of the Illinois Pension Code.
|
|
(7.5) Obligations of either corporations or limited |
liability companies organized in the United States, that |
have a significant presence in this State, with assets |
exceeding $500,000,000 if: (i) the obligations are rated at |
the time of purchase at one of the 3 highest |
classifications established by at least 2 standard rating |
services and mature more than 270 days, but less than 10 |
years, from the date of purchase; (ii) the purchases do not |
exceed 10% of the corporation's or the limited liability |
company's outstanding obligations; (iii) no more than |
one-third of the public agency's funds are invested in such |
obligations of corporations or limited liability |
companies; and (iv) the corporation or the limited |
liability company has not been placed on the list of |
restricted companies by the Illinois Investment Policy |
Board under Section 1-110.16 of the Illinois Pension Code. |
(8) Money market mutual funds registered under the |
Investment Company
Act of 1940.
|
(9) The Public Treasurers' Investment Pool created |
under Section 17 of
the State Treasurer Act or in a fund |
managed, operated, and administered by
a bank.
|
(10) Repurchase agreements of government securities |
having the meaning
set out in the Government Securities Act |
of 1986, as now or hereafter amended or succeeded, subject |
to the provisions
of that Act and the regulations issued |
thereunder.
|
|
(11) Investments made in accordance with the |
Technology Development
Act.
|
(12) Investments made in accordance with the Student |
Investment Account Act. |
(13) Investments constituting direct obligations of a |
community development financial institution, which is |
certified by the United States Treasury Community |
Development Financial Institutions Fund and is operating |
in the State of Illinois. |
(14) Investments constituting direct obligations of a |
minority depository institution, as designated by the |
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, that is operating |
in the State of Illinois. |
For purposes of this Section, "agencies" of the United |
States
Government includes:
|
(i) the federal land banks, federal intermediate |
credit banks, banks for
cooperatives, federal farm credit |
banks, or any other entity authorized
to issue debt |
obligations under the Farm Credit Act of 1971 (12 U.S.C. |
2001
et seq.) and Acts amendatory thereto;
|
(ii) the federal home loan banks and the federal home |
loan
mortgage corporation;
|
(iii) the Commodity Credit Corporation; and
|
(iv) any other agency created by Act of Congress.
|
The Treasurer may, with the approval of the Governor, lend |
any securities
acquired under this Act. However, securities may |
|
be lent under this Section
only in accordance with Federal |
Financial Institution Examination Council
guidelines and only |
if the securities are collateralized at a level sufficient
to |
assure the safety of the securities, taking into account market |
value
fluctuation. The securities may be collateralized by cash |
or collateral
acceptable under Sections 11 and 11.1.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1107, eff. 8-27-18; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19; |
101-206, eff. 8-2-19; 101-586, eff. 8-26-19; revised 9-25-19.)
|
Article 25. |
Section 25-5. The Department of Central Management |
Services Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is |
amended by adding Section 405-535 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 405/405-535 new) |
Sec. 405-535. Race and gender wage reports. |
(a) Each State agency and public institution of higher |
education shall annually submit to the Department a report, |
categorized by both race and gender, specifying the respective |
wage earnings of employees of that State agency or public |
institution of higher education. |
(b) The Department shall compile the information submitted |
under this Section and make that information available to the |
public on the Internet website of the Department. |
(c) The Department shall annually submit a report of the |
|
information compiled under this Section to the Governor, the |
General Assembly, and the Business Enterprise Council for |
Minorities, Women, and Persons with Disabilities. |
(d) As used in this Section: |
"Public institution of higher education" has the meaning |
provided in Section 1 of the Board of Higher Education Act. |
"State agency" has the meaning provided in subsection (b) |
of Section 405-5. |
Section 25-10. The Business Enterprise for Minorities, |
Women, and Persons with
Disabilities Act is amended by adding |
Section 8k as follows: |
(30 ILCS 575/8k new) |
Sec. 8k. Race and gender wage report. The Department of |
Central Management Services shall annually submit a report to |
the Council, categorized by both race and gender, specifying |
the respective wage earnings of State employees as compiled |
under Section 405-535 of the Department of Central Management |
Services Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois. |
Article 30. |
Section 30-1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
Community Development Loan Guarantee Act. References in this |
Article to "this Act" mean this Article. |
|
Section 30-5. Policy. The General Assembly finds that it is |
vital for the State to invest in community economic |
development, particularly in communities which have been |
historically excluded from investment opportunities due to |
redlining, discriminatory banking practices, and racism. The |
purpose of this Act is to establish a Program for guaranteeing |
small business loans and consumer loans to borrowers who would |
otherwise not qualify in communities of color and low-income |
communities. |
Section 30-10. Definitions. As used in this Act: |
"Financial institution" means a bank, a savings and loan |
association, a savings bank, a credit union, a minority |
depository institution as designated by the Federal Deposit |
Insurance Corporation, or a community development financial |
institution certified by the United States Treasury Community |
Development Financial Institutions Fund, which is operating in |
the State of Illinois. |
"Loan Guarantee Account" means an account at a financial |
institution outside the State Treasury of which the State |
Treasurer is custodian with the purpose of guaranteeing loans |
made by a financial institution in accordance with this Act. |
Section 30-15. Establishment of the Loan Guarantee |
Program. The State Treasurer may establish at any eligible |
|
financial institution a Loan Guarantee Account as a special |
account outside the State treasury and with the State Treasurer |
as custodian. This Account may be used to cover the losses on |
guaranteed loans at the participating financial institution.
|
Section 30-20. Eligible institutions. The State Treasurer |
shall determine the eligibility of financial institutions to |
participate in the Program. In addition to any other |
requirements of this Act and in accordance with any applicable |
federal law or program, the State Treasurer in determining |
eligibility of financial institutions shall consider (i) the |
financial institution's commitment to low-income communities |
as defined in Section 45D(e) of the Internal Revenue Code of |
1986 codified at 26 U.S.C. Section 45D(e), and (ii) the |
financial institution's commitment to communities considered |
disproportionately impacted areas, depressed areas, or |
enterprise zones as determined, designated, or certified by the |
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity in accordance |
with any applicable federal law or program. |
Section 30-25. Fees. The State Treasurer may establish, as |
a component of the Program, fees of no more than 5% of the |
total guaranteed loan amount. The fees shall be deposited into |
the Loan Guarantee Account. |
Section 30-30. Use of the Loan Guarantee Account. |
|
(a) Moneys in the Account may be used by the participating |
financial institution to cover losses on guaranteed loans up to |
the full amount in the Account or the amount of loss, whichever |
is lesser. The State of Illinois and the State Treasurer shall |
not be responsible for any losses in excess of the full amount |
in the Loan Guarantee Account at the financial institution. |
(b) The State Treasurer may set a cap on the total funds |
held in any Loan Guarantee Account at any participating |
financial institution. Funds in excess of the cap may be |
withdrawn by the Treasurer. |
(c) The State Treasurer shall withdraw the full amount in |
the Account in the event the Loan Guarantee Program is |
discontinued, or the financial institution leaves the Program. |
Section 30-35. Limitations on Funding. The State Treasurer |
may use up to $10,000,000 of investment earnings each year for |
the Loan Guarantee Program, provided that no more than |
$50,000,000 may be used for guaranteeing loans at any given |
time. |
Section 30-40. Rules. The State Treasurer shall adopt rules |
that are necessary and proper to implement and administer this |
Act including, but not limited to, fees and eligibility. |
Article 35.
|
|
Section 35-1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
Illinois Community Reinvestment Act. References in this |
Article to "this Act" mean this Article. |
Section 35-5. Definitions. As used in this Act:
|
"Covered financial institution" means a bank chartered |
under the Illinois Banking Act, a savings bank chartered under |
the Illinois Savings Bank Act, a credit union incorporated |
under the Illinois Credit Union Act, an entity licensed under |
the Illinois Residential Mortgage License Act of 1987 which |
lent or originated 50 or more residential mortgage loans in the |
previous calendar year, and any other financial institution |
under the jurisdiction of the Department as designated by rule |
by the Secretary. |
"Department" means the Department of Financial and |
Professional Regulation.
|
"Division of Banking" means the Division of Banking within |
the Department.
|
"Division of Financial Institutions" means the Division of |
Financial Institutions within the Department.
|
"Secretary" means the Secretary of Financial and |
Professional Regulation, or his or her designee, including the |
Director of the Division of Banking or the Director of the |
Division of Financial Institutions.
|
Section 35-10. Financial services needs of local |
|
communities; assessment factors.
|
(a) Each covered financial institution shall have a |
continuing and affirmative obligation to meet the financial |
services needs of the communities in which its offices, |
branches, and other facilities are maintained, consistent with |
the safe and sound operation of the financial institution, and |
for credit unions, consistent with its common bond. In |
addition, each covered financial institution that provides all |
or a majority of its products and services via mobile and other |
digital channels shall have a continuing and affirmative |
obligation to help meet the financial services needs of |
deposit-based assessment areas, including areas contiguous |
thereto, low-income and moderate-income neighborhoods, and |
areas where there is a lack of access to safe and affordable |
banking and lending services, consistent with the safe and |
sound operation of such financial institutions, and for credit |
unions, consistent with its common bond.
|
(b) The Secretary shall assess the record of each covered |
financial institution in satisfying its obligation under |
subsection (a). To assist in carrying out this Act, the |
Secretary shall adopt rules incorporating the regulations |
applicable to covered financial institutions under federal |
law, and the Secretary may make such adjustments and exceptions |
thereto as are deemed necessary.
|
(c) In addition, the Secretary shall adopt rules providing |
for an assessment of the following factors pertaining to |
|
whether covered financial institutions are meeting the |
financial services needs of local communities:
|
(1) activities to ascertain the financial services |
needs of the community, including communication with |
community members regarding the financial services |
provided;
|
(2) extent of marketing to make members of the |
community aware of the financial services offered;
|
(3) origination of mortgage loans, including, but not |
limited to, home improvement and rehabilitation loans, and |
other efforts to assist existing low-income and |
moderate-income residents to be able to remain in |
affordable housing in their neighborhoods;
|
(4) for small business lenders, the origination of |
loans to businesses with gross annual revenues of |
$1,000,000 or less, particularly those in low-income and |
moderate-income neighborhoods; |
(5) participation, including investments, in community |
development and redevelopment programs, small business |
technical assistance programs, minority-owned depository |
institutions, community development financial |
institutions, and mutually-owned financial institutions;
|
(6) efforts working with delinquent customers to |
facilitate a resolution of the delinquency;
|
(7) origination of loans that show an undue |
concentration and a systematic pattern of lending |
|
resulting in the loss of affordable housing units;
|
(8) evidence of discriminatory and prohibited |
practices; and
|
(9) such other factors or requirements as in the |
judgment of the Secretary reasonably bear upon the extent |
to which a covered financial institution is meeting the |
financial services needs of its entire community, |
including responsiveness to community needs as reflected |
by public comments.
|
Section 35-15. Examinations.
|
(a) The Secretary shall have the authority to examine each |
covered financial institution for compliance with this Act, in |
consultation with State and federal regulators with an |
appropriate regulatory interest, for and in compliance with |
applicable State and federal fair lending laws, including, but |
not limited to, the Illinois Human Rights Act, the federal |
Equal Credit Opportunity Act, and the federal Home Mortgage |
Disclosure Act, as often as the Secretary deems necessary and |
proper. The Secretary may adopt rules with respect to the |
frequency and manner of examination including the imposition of |
examination fees. The Secretary shall appoint a suitable person |
to perform such examination. The Secretary and his or her |
appointees may examine the entire books, records, documents, |
and operations of each covered financial institution, its |
parent company, and its subsidiaries, affiliates, or agents, |
|
and may examine any of the covered financial institution's, its |
parent company's or its subsidiaries', affiliates', or agents' |
officers, directors, employees, and agents under oath. Any |
document or record prepared or obtained in connection with or |
relating to any such examination, and any record prepared or |
obtained by the Secretary to the extent that the record |
summarizes or contains information derived from any document or |
record described in this subsection (a), shall not be disclosed |
to the public unless otherwise provided by this Act. |
(b) Upon the completion of the examination of a covered |
financial institution under this Section, the Secretary shall |
prepare a written evaluation of the covered financial |
institution's record of performance relative to this Act. Each |
written evaluation required under this subsection (b) shall |
have a public section, which shall include no less information |
than would be disclosed in a written evaluation under the |
federal Community Reinvestment Act, and a confidential |
section. The Secretary shall give the covered financial |
institution an opportunity to comment on the evaluation, and |
then shall make the public section of the written evaluation |
open to public inspection upon request. The written evaluation |
shall include, but is not limited to:
|
(1) the assessment factors utilized to determine the |
covered financial institution's descriptive rating;
|
(2) the Secretary's conclusions with respect to each |
such assessment factor;
|
|
(3) a discussion of the facts supporting such |
conclusions;
|
(4) the covered financial institution's descriptive |
rating and the basis therefor; and
|
(5) a summary of public comments.
|
(c) Based upon the examination, the covered financial |
institution shall be assigned one of the following ratings:
|
(1) outstanding record of performance in meeting its |
community financial services needs;
|
(2) satisfactory record of performance in meeting its |
community financial services needs;
|
(3) needs to improve record of performance in meeting |
its community services needs; or
|
(4) substantial noncompliance in meeting its community |
financial services needs.
|
(d) Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions of this |
Section, the Secretary may establish an alternative |
examination procedure for any covered financial institution, |
which, as of the most recent examination, has been assigned a |
rating of outstanding or satisfactory for its record of |
performance in meeting its community financial services needs.
|
Section 35-20. Public notice. Each covered financial |
institution shall provide, in the public lobby of each of its |
offices, if any, and on its website, a public notice that is |
substantially similar to the following:
|
|
"STATE OF ILLINOIS
|
COMMUNITY REINVESTMENT NOTICE |
The Department of Financial and Professional Regulation |
(Department) evaluates our performance in meeting the |
financial services needs of this community, including the needs |
of low-income to moderate-income households. The Department |
takes this evaluation into account when deciding on certain |
applications submitted by us for approval by the Department. |
Your involvement is encouraged. You may obtain a copy of our |
evaluation. You may also submit signed, written comments about |
our performance in meeting community financial services needs |
to the Department.". |
Section 35-25. Cooperative agreements.
|
(a) For the purposes of this Act, the Secretary may conduct |
any examinations under this Act with State, other state, and |
federal regulators, and may enter into cooperative agreements |
relative to the coordination of or joint participation in any |
such examinations, the amount and assessment of fees therefor |
or enforcement actions relevant thereto, and may accept reports |
of examinations by such regulators under such arrangements or |
agreements.
|
(b) Nothing in this Section shall be construed as limiting |
in any way the authority of the Secretary to independently |
conduct examinations of and enforcement actions against any |
|
covered financial institution.
|
(c) Any coordination or joint participation established |
under this Section may seek to promote efficient regulation and |
effect cost reductions for the Department and covered financial |
institutions. Any information or material shared for purposes |
of such coordination or joint participation shall continue to |
be subject to the requirements under any federal law or State |
law regarding the privacy or confidentiality of the information |
or material, and any privilege arising under federal or State |
law, including the rules of any federal or State court, with |
respect to the information or material, shall continue to apply |
to the information or material, but any such coordination or |
joint participation shall not limit public participation as |
permitted under certain federal regulations.
|
Section 35-30. Corporate activities and renewal |
applications. In considering an application for the |
establishment of a branch, office, or other facility, the |
relocation of a main office, branch, office, or other facility, |
a license renewal, change in control of a covered financial |
institution, or a merger or consolidation with or the |
acquisition of assets or assumption of liabilities of any |
covered financial institution, out-of-state bank, credit |
union, or residential mortgage licensee, national bank or |
credit union, or foreign financial institution, the Secretary |
shall consider, but not be limited to, the record of |
|
performance of the covered financial institution and its parent |
company, including all subsidiaries thereof, relative to this |
Act. The record of performance of the covered financial |
institution may be the basis for the denial of any such |
application. |
Section 35-35. Rules. In addition to such powers as may be |
prescribed by this Act, the Secretary is hereby authorized and |
empowered to adopt rules consistent with the purposes of this |
Act, including, but not limited to: (i) rules in connection |
with the lending, service, and investment activities of covered |
financial institutions as may be necessary and appropriate for |
promoting access to appropriate financial services for all |
communities in this State; (ii) rules as may be necessary and |
appropriate to define fair lending practices in connection with |
the activities of covered financial institutions in this State; |
(iii) rules that define the terms used in this Act and as may |
be necessary and appropriate to interpret and implement the |
provisions of this Act; (iv) rules that create a public |
comments process; and (v) rules as may be necessary for the |
enforcement of this Act. |
Section 35-40. Superiority of Act. To the extent this Act |
conflicts with any other State law, this Act is superior and |
supersedes those laws; provided that, nothing herein shall |
apply to any lender that is a bank, savings bank, savings and |
|
loan association, or credit union chartered under the laws of |
the United States. |
Section 35-45. Severability. The provisions of this Act are |
severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes. |
Section 35-100. The Deposit of State Moneys Act is amended |
by changing Section 16.3 as follows:
|
(15 ILCS 520/16.3)
|
Sec. 16.3.
Consideration of financial institution's |
commitment to its
community.
|
(a) In addition to any other
requirements of this Act, the |
State Treasurer shall is authorized to consider the
financial
|
institution's record and current level of financial commitment |
to its local
community when deciding whether to deposit State |
funds in that financial
institution. The State Treasurer may |
consider factors including, but not
necessarily limited to:
|
(1) for financial institutions subject to the federal |
Community
Reinvestment Act of
1977, the current and |
historical ratings that the
financial institution has |
received, to the extent that those ratings are
publicly |
available, under the federal Community Reinvestment Act of |
1977;
|
(2) any changes in ownership, management, policies, or |
practices of the
financial
institution that may affect the |
|
level of the financial institution's commitment
to its |
community;
|
(3) the financial impact that the withdrawal or denial |
of
deposits of State funds might have on the financial |
institution; and
|
(4) the
financial impact to the State as a result of |
withdrawing State
funds or refusing to deposit additional |
State funds in the
financial institution.
|
(a-5) Effective January 1, 2022, no State funds may be |
deposited in a financial institution subject to the federal |
Community Reinvestment Act of 1977 unless the institution has a |
current rating of satisfactory or outstanding under the |
Community Reinvestment Act of 1977. |
(a-10) When investing or depositing State funds, the State |
Treasurer may give preference to financial institutions that |
have a current rating of outstanding under the federal |
Community Reinvestment Act of 1977. |
(b) Nothing in this Section shall be construed as |
authorizing the State
Treasurer to conduct an examination or |
investigation of a financial institution
or to receive |
information that is not publicly available and the disclosure |
of
which is otherwise prohibited by law.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-251, eff. 7-1-04 .)
|
Section 35-105. The Public Funds Investment Act is amended |
by changing Section 8 as follows:
|
|
(30 ILCS 235/8)
|
Sec. 8.
Consideration of financial institution's |
commitment to its
community.
|
(a) In addition to any
other requirements of this Act, a |
public agency shall is authorized to consider the
financial |
institution's record and current level of financial commitment |
to its
local community when deciding whether to deposit public |
funds in that
financial institution. The public agency may |
consider factors including, but
not necessarily limited to:
|
(1) for financial institutions subject to the federal |
Community
Reinvestment Act of 1977, the current and |
historical ratings that the
financial institution has |
received, to the extent that those ratings are
publicly |
available, under the federal Community Reinvestment Act
of |
1977;
|
(2) any changes in ownership, management, policies, or |
practices of
the
financial institution that may affect the |
level of the financial institution's
commitment to its |
community;
|
(3) the financial impact that the withdrawal or
denial |
of deposits of public funds might have on the financial |
institution;
|
(4) the financial impact to the public agency as a |
result of withdrawing
public
funds or refusing to deposit |
additional public funds in the financial
institution; and
|
|
(5) any
additional burden on the resources of the |
public agency that might result from
ceasing to maintain |
deposits of public funds at the financial institution under
|
consideration.
|
(a-5) Effective January 1, 2022, no public funds may be |
deposited in a financial institution subject to the federal |
Community Reinvestment Act of 1977 unless the institution has a |
current rating of satisfactory or outstanding under the |
Community Reinvestment Act of 1977. |
(a-10) When investing or depositing public funds, the |
public agency may give preference to financial institutions |
that have a current rating of outstanding under the federal |
Community Reinvestment Act of 1977. |
(b) Nothing in this Section shall be construed as |
authorizing the public
agency to conduct an examination or |
investigation of a financial institution or
to receive |
information that is not publicly available and the disclosure |
of
which is otherwise prohibited by law.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-251, eff. 7-1-04 .)
|
Article 40. |
Section 40-1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
Commission on Equity and Inclusion Act. References in this |
Article to "this Act" mean this Article. |
|
Section 40-5. Commission on Equity and Inclusion.
|
(a) There is hereby created the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion, which shall consist of 7 members appointed by the |
Governor with the advice and consent of the Senate. No more |
than 4 members shall be of the same political party. The |
Governor shall designate one member as chairperson, who shall |
be the chief administrative and executive officer of the |
Commission, and shall have general supervisory authority over |
all personnel of the Commission.
|
(b) Of the members first appointed, 4 shall be appointed |
for a term to expire on the third Monday of January, 2023, and |
3 (including the Chairperson) shall be appointed for a term to |
expire on the third Monday of January, 2025.
|
Thereafter, each member shall serve for a term of 4 years |
and until his or her successor is appointed and qualified; |
except that any member chosen to fill a vacancy occurring |
otherwise than by expiration of a term shall be appointed only |
for the unexpired term of the member whom he or she shall |
succeed and until his or her successor is appointed and |
qualified.
|
(c) In case of a vacancy on the Commission during the |
recess of the Senate, the Governor shall make a temporary |
appointment until the next meeting of the Senate, when he or |
she shall appoint a person to fill the vacancy. Any person so |
nominated who is confirmed by the Senate shall hold office |
during the remainder of the term and until his or her successor |
|
is appointed and qualified. Vacancies in the Commission shall |
not impair the right of the remaining members to exercise all |
the powers of the Commission.
|
(d) The Chairperson of the Commission shall be compensated |
at the rate of $128,000 per year, or as otherwise set by this |
Section, during his or her service as Chairperson, and each |
other member shall be compensated at the rate of $121,856 per |
year, or as otherwise set by this Section. In addition, all |
members of the Commission shall be reimbursed for expenses |
actually and necessarily incurred by them in the performance of |
their duties.
Members of the Commission are eligible to receive |
pension under the State Employees' Retirement System of |
Illinois as provided under Article 14 of the Illinois Pension |
Code. |
(e) The budget established for the Commission for any given |
fiscal year shall be no less than that established for the |
Human Rights Commission for that same fiscal year.
|
Section 40-10. Powers and duties. In addition to the other |
powers and duties which may be prescribed in this Act or |
elsewhere, the Commission shall have the following powers and |
duties:
|
(1) The Commission shall have a role in all State and |
university procurement by facilitating and streamlining |
communications between the Business Enterprise Council for |
Minorities, Women, and Persons with Disabilities, the |
|
purchasing entities, the Chief Procurement Officers, and |
others.
|
(2) The Commission may create a scoring evaluation for |
State agency directors, public university presidents and |
chancellors, and public community college presidents. The |
scoring shall be based on the following 3 principles: (i) |
increasing capacity; (ii) growing revenue; and (iii) |
enhancing credentials. These principles should be the |
foundation of the agency compliance plan required under |
Section 6 of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women, |
and Persons with Disabilities Act. |
(4) The Commission shall exercise the oversight powers |
and duties provided to it under Section 5-7 of the Illinois |
Procurement Code.
|
(5) The Commission, working with State agencies, shall |
provide support for diversity in State hiring.
|
(6) The Commission shall oversee the implementation of |
diversity training of the State workforce.
|
(7) Each January, and as otherwise frequently as may be |
deemed necessary and appropriate by the Commission, the |
Commission shall propose and submit to the Governor and the |
General Assembly legislative changes to increase inclusion |
and diversity in State government.
|
(8) The Commission shall have oversight over the |
following entities:
|
(A) the Illinois African-American Family |
|
Commission;
|
(B) the Illinois Latino Family Commission;
|
(C) the Asian American Family Commission;
|
(D) the Illinois Muslim American Advisory Council;
|
(E) the Illinois African-American Fair Contracting |
Commission created under Executive Order 2018-07; and
|
(F) the Business Enterprise Council
for |
Minorities, Women, and Persons with Disabilities.
|
(9) The Commission shall adopt any rules necessary for |
the implementation and administration of the requirements |
of this Act.
|
Section 40-100. The Department of Transportation Law of the
|
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by adding |
Section 2705-597 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 2705/2705-597 new) |
Sec. 2705-597. Equal Employment Opportunity
Contract |
Compliance Officers. Notwithstanding any Department policy or |
rule to the contrary, the Secretary shall have jurisdiction |
over all Equal Employment Opportunity
Contract Compliance |
Officers within the Department, or within districts controlled |
by the Department, and shall be responsible for the evaluation |
of such officers. |
Section 40-105. The Illinois African-American Family |
|
Commission Act is amended by changing Section 30 and by adding |
Section 35 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 3903/30)
|
Sec. 30. Reporting. The Illinois African-American Family |
Commission shall annually report to the Governor , and the |
General Assembly , and the Commission on Equity and Inclusion on |
the Commission's progress toward its goals and objectives.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-867, eff. 8-5-04.) |
(20 ILCS 3903/35 new) |
Sec. 35. Oversight. Notwithstanding any provision of law |
to the contrary, the Commission on Equity and Inclusion |
established under the Commission on Equity and Inclusion Act |
shall have general oversight of the operations of the Illinois |
African-American Family Commission. |
Section 40-110. The Asian American Family Commission Act is |
amended by changing Section 20 and by adding Section 25 as |
follows: |
(20 ILCS 3916/20)
|
Sec. 20. Report. The Asian American Family Commission shall |
annually report to the Governor , and the General Assembly , and |
the Commission on Equity and Inclusion on the Commission's |
progress toward its goals and objectives.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 101-392, eff. 1-1-20 .) |
(20 ILCS 3916/25 new) |
Sec. 25. Oversight. Notwithstanding any provision of law to |
the contrary, the Commission on Equity and Inclusion |
established under the Commission on Equity and Inclusion Act |
shall have general oversight of the operations of the Asian |
American Family Commission. |
Section 40-115. The Illinois Latino Family Commission Act |
is amended by changing Section 30 and by adding Section 35 as |
follows: |
(20 ILCS 3983/30)
|
Sec. 30. Reporting. The Illinois Latino Family Commission |
shall annually report to the Governor , and the General |
Assembly , and the Commission on Equity and Inclusion on the |
Commission's progress towards its goals and objectives.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-619, eff. 9-14-07.) |
(20 ILCS 3983/35 new) |
Sec. 35. Oversight. Notwithstanding any provision of law to |
the contrary, the Commission on Equity and Inclusion |
established under the Commission on Equity and Inclusion Act |
shall have general oversight of the operations of the Illinois |
Latino Family Commission. |
|
Section 40-120. The Illinois Muslim American Advisory |
Council Act is amended by changing Section 30 and by adding |
Section 35 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 5110/30)
|
Sec. 30. Reports. The Council shall issue semi-annual |
reports on its policy recommendations by June 30th and December |
31st of each year to the Governor , and the General Assembly , |
and the Commission on Equity and Inclusion .
|
(Source: P.A. 100-459, eff. 8-25-17.) |
(20 ILCS 5110/35 new) |
Sec. 35. Oversight. Notwithstanding any provision of law to |
the contrary, the Commission on Equity and Inclusion |
established under the Commission on Equity and Inclusion Act |
shall have general oversight of the operations of the Council. |
Section 40-125. The Illinois Procurement Code is amended by |
changing Sections 5-30, 10-20, 20-10, 20-25, 20-30, 20-60, |
35-15, 35-30, 40-20, 50-20, and 50-35 and by adding Section 5-7 |
as follows: |
(30 ILCS 500/5-7 new) |
Sec. 5-7. Commission on Equity and Inclusion; powers and |
duties. |
|
(a) The Commission on Equity and Inclusion, as created |
under the Commission on Equity and Inclusion Act, shall have |
the powers and duties provided under this Section with respect |
to this Code. Nothing in this Section shall be construed as |
overriding the authority and duties of the Procurement Policy |
Board as provided under Section 5-5. The powers and duties of |
the Commission as provided under this Section shall be |
exercised alongside, but independent of, that of the |
Procurement Policy Board. |
(b) The Commission on Equity and Inclusion shall have the |
authority and responsibility to review, comment upon, and |
recommend, consistent with this Code, rules and practices |
governing the procurement, management, control, and disposal |
of supplies, services, professional or artistic services, |
construction, and real property and capital improvement leases |
procured by the State. The Commission on Equity and Inclusion |
shall also have the authority to recommend a program for |
professional development and provide opportunities for |
training in procurement practices and policies to chief |
procurement officers and their staffs in order to ensure that |
all procurement is conducted in an efficient, professional, and |
appropriately transparent manner. |
(c) Upon a majority vote of its members, the Commission on |
Equity and Inclusion may review a contract. Upon a three-fifths |
vote of its members, the Commission may propose procurement |
rules for consideration by chief procurement officers. These |
|
proposals shall be published in each volume of the Procurement |
Bulletin. Except as otherwise provided by law, the Commission |
on Equity and Inclusion shall act upon the vote of a majority |
of its members who have been appointed and are serving. |
(d) The Commission on Equity and Inclusion may review, |
study, and hold public hearings concerning the implementation |
and administration of this Code. Each chief procurement |
officer, State purchasing officer, procurement compliance |
monitor, and State agency shall cooperate with the Commission, |
provide information to the Commission on Equity and Inclusion, |
and be responsive to the Commission in the Commission's conduct |
of its reviews, studies, and hearings. |
(e) Upon a three-fifths vote of its members, the Commission |
on Equity and Inclusion shall review a proposal, bid, or |
contract and issue a recommendation to void a contract or |
reject a proposal or bid based on any conflict of interest or |
violation of this Code. A recommendation of the Commission |
shall be delivered to the appropriate chief procurement officer |
and Executive Ethics Commission within 7 calendar days and must |
be published in the next volume of the Procurement Bulletin. |
The bidder, offeror, potential contractor, contractor, or |
subcontractor shall have 15 calendar days to provide a written |
response to the notice, and a hearing before the Commission on |
the alleged conflict of interest or violation shall be held |
upon request by the bidder, offeror, potential contractor, |
contractor, or subcontractor. The requested hearing date and |
|
time shall be determined by the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion, but in no event shall the hearing occur later than |
15 calendar days after the date of the request. |
(30 ILCS 500/5-30) |
Sec. 5-30. Proposed contracts; Procurement Policy Board ; |
Commission on Equity and Inclusion . |
(a) Except as provided in subsection (c), within 14 |
calendar days after notice of the awarding or letting of a |
contract has appeared in the Procurement Bulletin in accordance |
with subsection (b) of Section 15-25, the Board or the |
Commission on Equity and Inclusion may request in writing from |
the contracting agency and the contracting agency shall |
promptly, but in no event later than 7 calendar days after |
receipt of the request, provide to the requesting entity Board , |
by electronic or other means satisfactory to the requesting |
entity Board , documentation in the possession of the |
contracting agency concerning the proposed contract. Nothing |
in this subsection is intended to waive or abrogate any |
privilege or right of confidentiality authorized by law. |
(b) No contract subject to this Section may be entered into |
until the 14-day period described in subsection (a) has |
expired, unless the contracting agency requests in writing that |
the Board and the Commission on Equity and Inclusion waive the |
period and the Board and the Commission on Equity and Inclusion |
grant grants the waiver in writing.
|
|
(c) This Section does not apply to (i) contracts entered |
into under this Code for small and emergency procurements as |
those procurements are defined in Article 20 and (ii) contracts |
for professional and artistic services that are nonrenewable, |
one year or less in duration, and have a value of less than |
$20,000. If requested in writing by the Board or the Commission |
on Equity and Inclusion , however, the contracting agency must |
promptly, but in no event later than 10 calendar days after |
receipt of the request, transmit to the Board or the Commission |
on Equity and Inclusion a copy of the contract for an emergency |
procurement and documentation in the possession of the |
contracting agency concerning the contract.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-43, eff. 8-9-17.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-10)
|
(Text of Section from P.A. 96-159, 96-588, 97-96, 97-895, |
98-1076, 99-906, 100-43, and 101-31) |
Sec. 20-10. Competitive sealed bidding; reverse auction.
|
(a) Conditions for use. All contracts shall be awarded by
|
competitive sealed bidding
except as otherwise provided in |
Section 20-5.
|
(b) Invitation for bids. An invitation for bids shall be
|
issued and shall include a
purchase description and the |
material contractual terms and
conditions applicable to the
|
procurement.
|
(c) Public notice. Public notice of the invitation for bids |
|
shall be
published in the Illinois Procurement Bulletin at |
least 14 calendar days before the date
set in the invitation |
for the opening of bids.
|
(d) Bid opening. Bids shall be opened publicly or through |
an electronic procurement system in the
presence of one or more |
witnesses
at the time and place designated in the invitation |
for bids. The
name of each bidder, including earned and applied |
bid credit from the Illinois Works Jobs Program Act, the amount
|
of each bid, and other relevant information as may be specified |
by
rule shall be
recorded. After the award of the contract, the |
winning bid and the
record of each unsuccessful bid shall be |
open to
public inspection.
|
(e) Bid acceptance and bid evaluation. Bids shall be
|
unconditionally accepted without
alteration or correction, |
except as authorized in this Code. Bids
shall be evaluated |
based on the
requirements set forth in the invitation for bids, |
which may
include criteria to determine
acceptability such as |
inspection, testing, quality, workmanship,
delivery, and |
suitability for a
particular purpose. Those criteria that will |
affect the bid price and be considered in evaluation
for award, |
such as discounts, transportation costs, and total or
life |
cycle costs, shall be
objectively measurable. The invitation |
for bids shall set forth
the evaluation criteria to be used.
|
(f) Correction or withdrawal of bids. Correction or
|
withdrawal of inadvertently
erroneous bids before or after |
award, or cancellation of awards of
contracts based on bid
|
|
mistakes, shall be permitted in accordance with rules.
After |
bid opening, no
changes in bid prices or other provisions of |
bids prejudicial to
the interest of the State or fair
|
competition shall be permitted. All decisions to permit the
|
correction or withdrawal of bids
based on bid mistakes shall be |
supported by written determination
made by a State purchasing |
officer.
|
(g) Award. The contract shall be awarded with reasonable
|
promptness by written notice
to the lowest responsible and |
responsive bidder whose bid meets
the requirements and criteria
|
set forth in the invitation for bids, except when a State |
purchasing officer
determines it is not in the best interest of |
the State and by written
explanation determines another bidder |
shall receive the award. The explanation
shall appear in the |
appropriate volume of the Illinois Procurement Bulletin. The |
written explanation must include:
|
(1) a description of the agency's needs; |
(2) a determination that the anticipated cost will be |
fair and reasonable; |
(3) a listing of all responsible and responsive |
bidders; and |
(4) the name of the bidder selected, the total contract |
price, and the reasons for selecting that bidder. |
Each chief procurement officer may adopt guidelines to |
implement the requirements of this subsection (g). |
The written explanation shall be filed with the Legislative |
|
Audit Commission , and the Commission on Equity and Inclusion, |
and the Procurement Policy Board, and be made available for |
inspection by the public, within 30 calendar days after the |
agency's decision to award the contract. |
(h) Multi-step sealed bidding. When it is considered
|
impracticable to initially prepare
a purchase description to |
support an award based on price, an
invitation for bids may be |
issued
requesting the submission of unpriced offers to be |
followed by an
invitation for bids limited to
those bidders |
whose offers have been qualified under the criteria
set forth |
in the first solicitation.
|
(i) Alternative procedures. Notwithstanding any other |
provision of this Act to the contrary, the Director of the |
Illinois Power Agency may create alternative bidding |
procedures to be used in procuring professional services under |
Section 1-56, subsections (a) and (c) of Section 1-75 and |
subsection (d) of Section 1-78 of the Illinois Power Agency Act |
and Section 16-111.5(c) of the Public Utilities Act and to |
procure renewable energy resources under Section 1-56 of the |
Illinois Power Agency Act. These alternative procedures shall |
be set forth together with the other criteria contained in the |
invitation for bids, and shall appear in the appropriate volume |
of the Illinois Procurement Bulletin.
|
(j) Reverse auction. Notwithstanding any other provision |
of this Section and in accordance with rules adopted by the |
chief procurement officer, that chief procurement officer may |
|
procure supplies or services through a competitive electronic |
auction bidding process after the chief procurement officer |
determines that the use of such a process will be in the best |
interest of the State. The chief procurement officer shall |
publish that determination in his or her next volume of the |
Illinois Procurement Bulletin. |
An invitation for bids shall be issued and shall include |
(i) a procurement description, (ii) all contractual terms, |
whenever practical, and (iii) conditions applicable to the |
procurement, including a notice that bids will be received in |
an electronic auction manner. |
Public notice of the invitation for bids shall be given in |
the same manner as provided in subsection (c). |
Bids shall be accepted electronically at the time and in |
the manner designated in the invitation for bids. During the |
auction, a bidder's price shall be disclosed to other bidders. |
Bidders shall have the opportunity to reduce their bid prices |
during the auction. At the conclusion of the auction, the |
record of the bid prices received and the name of each bidder |
shall be open to public inspection. |
After the auction period has terminated, withdrawal of bids |
shall be permitted as provided in subsection (f). |
The contract shall be awarded within 60 calendar days after |
the auction by written notice to the lowest responsible bidder, |
or all bids shall be rejected except as otherwise provided in |
this Code. Extensions of the date for the award may be made by |
|
mutual written consent of the State purchasing officer and the |
lowest responsible bidder. |
This subsection does not apply to (i) procurements of |
professional and artistic services, (ii) telecommunications |
services, communication services, and information services, |
and (iii) contracts for construction projects, including |
design professional services. |
(Source: P.A. 100-43, eff. 8-9-17; 101-31, eff. 6-28-19.)
|
(Text of Section from P.A. 96-159, 96-795, 97-96, 97-895, |
98-1076, 99-906, 100-43, and 101-31)
|
Sec. 20-10. Competitive sealed bidding; reverse auction.
|
(a) Conditions for use. All contracts shall be awarded by
|
competitive sealed bidding
except as otherwise provided in |
Section 20-5.
|
(b) Invitation for bids. An invitation for bids shall be
|
issued and shall include a
purchase description and the |
material contractual terms and
conditions applicable to the
|
procurement.
|
(c) Public notice. Public notice of the invitation for bids |
shall be
published in the Illinois Procurement Bulletin at |
least 14 calendar days before the date
set in the invitation |
for the opening of bids.
|
(d) Bid opening. Bids shall be opened publicly or through |
an electronic procurement system in the
presence of one or more |
witnesses
at the time and place designated in the invitation |
|
for bids. The
name of each bidder, including earned and applied |
bid credit from the Illinois Works Jobs Program Act, the amount
|
of each bid, and other relevant information as may be specified |
by
rule shall be
recorded. After the award of the contract, the |
winning bid and the
record of each unsuccessful bid shall be |
open to
public inspection.
|
(e) Bid acceptance and bid evaluation. Bids shall be
|
unconditionally accepted without
alteration or correction, |
except as authorized in this Code. Bids
shall be evaluated |
based on the
requirements set forth in the invitation for bids, |
which may
include criteria to determine
acceptability such as |
inspection, testing, quality, workmanship,
delivery, and |
suitability for a
particular purpose. Those criteria that will |
affect the bid price and be considered in evaluation
for award, |
such as discounts, transportation costs, and total or
life |
cycle costs, shall be
objectively measurable. The invitation |
for bids shall set forth
the evaluation criteria to be used.
|
(f) Correction or withdrawal of bids. Correction or
|
withdrawal of inadvertently
erroneous bids before or after |
award, or cancellation of awards of
contracts based on bid
|
mistakes, shall be permitted in accordance with rules.
After |
bid opening, no
changes in bid prices or other provisions of |
bids prejudicial to
the interest of the State or fair
|
competition shall be permitted. All decisions to permit the
|
correction or withdrawal of bids
based on bid mistakes shall be |
supported by written determination
made by a State purchasing |
|
officer.
|
(g) Award. The contract shall be awarded with reasonable
|
promptness by written notice
to the lowest responsible and |
responsive bidder whose bid meets
the requirements and criteria
|
set forth in the invitation for bids, except when a State |
purchasing officer
determines it is not in the best interest of |
the State and by written
explanation determines another bidder |
shall receive the award. The explanation
shall appear in the |
appropriate volume of the Illinois Procurement Bulletin. The |
written explanation must include:
|
(1) a description of the agency's needs; |
(2) a determination that the anticipated cost will be |
fair and reasonable; |
(3) a listing of all responsible and responsive |
bidders; and |
(4) the name of the bidder selected, the total contract |
price, and the reasons for selecting that bidder. |
Each chief procurement officer may adopt guidelines to |
implement the requirements of this subsection (g). |
The written explanation shall be filed with the Legislative |
Audit Commission , and the Commission on Equity and Inclusion, |
and the Procurement Policy Board, and be made available for |
inspection by the public, within 30 days after the agency's |
decision to award the contract. |
(h) Multi-step sealed bidding. When it is considered
|
impracticable to initially prepare
a purchase description to |
|
support an award based on price, an
invitation for bids may be |
issued
requesting the submission of unpriced offers to be |
followed by an
invitation for bids limited to
those bidders |
whose offers have been qualified under the criteria
set forth |
in the first solicitation.
|
(i) Alternative procedures. Notwithstanding any other |
provision of this Act to the contrary, the Director of the |
Illinois Power Agency may create alternative bidding |
procedures to be used in procuring professional services under |
subsections (a) and (c) of Section 1-75 and subsection (d) of |
Section 1-78 of the Illinois Power Agency Act and Section |
16-111.5(c) of the Public Utilities Act and to procure |
renewable energy resources under Section 1-56 of the Illinois |
Power Agency Act. These alternative procedures shall be set |
forth together with the other criteria contained in the |
invitation for bids, and shall appear in the appropriate volume |
of the Illinois Procurement Bulletin.
|
(j) Reverse auction. Notwithstanding any other provision |
of this Section and in accordance with rules adopted by the |
chief procurement officer, that chief procurement officer may |
procure supplies or services through a competitive electronic |
auction bidding process after the chief procurement officer |
determines that the use of such a process will be in the best |
interest of the State. The chief procurement officer shall |
publish that determination in his or her next volume of the |
Illinois Procurement Bulletin. |
|
An invitation for bids shall be issued and shall include |
(i) a procurement description, (ii) all contractual terms, |
whenever practical, and (iii) conditions applicable to the |
procurement, including a notice that bids will be received in |
an electronic auction manner. |
Public notice of the invitation for bids shall be given in |
the same manner as provided in subsection (c). |
Bids shall be accepted electronically at the time and in |
the manner designated in the invitation for bids. During the |
auction, a bidder's price shall be disclosed to other bidders. |
Bidders shall have the opportunity to reduce their bid prices |
during the auction. At the conclusion of the auction, the |
record of the bid prices received and the name of each bidder |
shall be open to public inspection. |
After the auction period has terminated, withdrawal of bids |
shall be permitted as provided in subsection (f). |
The contract shall be awarded within 60 calendar days after |
the auction by written notice to the lowest responsible bidder, |
or all bids shall be rejected except as otherwise provided in |
this Code. Extensions of the date for the award may be made by |
mutual written consent of the State purchasing officer and the |
lowest responsible bidder. |
This subsection does not apply to (i) procurements of |
professional and artistic services, (ii) telecommunications |
services, communication services, and information services,
|
and (iii) contracts for construction projects, including |
|
design professional services. |
(Source: P.A. 100-43, eff. 8-9-17; 101-31, eff. 6-28-19.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-25)
|
Sec. 20-25. Sole source procurements. |
(a) In accordance with
standards set by rule,
contracts may |
be awarded without use of the specified
method of source |
selection when
there is only one economically feasible source |
for the item. A State contract may be awarded as a sole source |
contract unless an interested party submits a written request |
for a public hearing at which the chief procurement officer and |
purchasing agency present written justification for the |
procurement method. Any interested party may present |
testimony. A sole source contract where a hearing was requested |
by an interested party may be awarded after the hearing is |
conducted with the approval of the chief procurement officer. |
(b) This Section may not be used as a basis for amending a |
contract for professional or artistic services if the amendment |
would result in an increase in the amount paid under the |
contract of more than 5% of the initial award, or would extend |
the contract term beyond the time reasonably needed for a |
competitive procurement, not to exceed 2 months. |
(c) Notice of intent to enter into a sole source contract |
shall be provided to the Procurement Policy Board and the |
Commission on Equity and Inclusion and published in the online |
electronic Bulletin at least 14 calendar days before the public |
|
hearing required in subsection (a). The notice shall include |
the sole source procurement justification form prescribed by |
the Board, a description of the item to be procured, the |
intended sole source contractor, and the date, time, and |
location of the public hearing. A copy of the notice and all |
documents provided at the hearing shall be included in the |
subsequent Procurement Bulletin.
|
(d) By August 1 each year, each chief procurement officer |
shall file a report with the General Assembly identifying each |
contract the officer sought under the sole source procurement |
method and providing the justification given for seeking sole |
source as the procurement method for each of those contracts. |
(Source: P.A. 100-43, eff. 8-9-17.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-30)
|
Sec. 20-30. Emergency purchases.
|
(a) Conditions for use. In accordance with standards set by
|
rule, a purchasing
agency may make emergency procurements |
without competitive sealed
bidding or prior notice
when there |
exists a threat to public health or public safety, or
when |
immediate expenditure is
necessary for repairs to State |
property in order to protect
against further loss of or damage |
to
State property, to prevent or minimize serious disruption in |
critical State
services that affect health, safety, or |
collection of substantial State revenues, or to ensure the
|
integrity of State records; provided, however, that the term of |
|
the emergency purchase shall be limited to the time reasonably |
needed for a competitive procurement, not to exceed 90 calendar |
days. A contract may be extended beyond 90 calendar days if the |
chief procurement officer determines additional time is |
necessary and that the contract scope and duration are limited |
to the emergency. Prior to execution of the extension, the |
chief procurement officer must hold a public hearing and |
provide written justification for all emergency contracts. |
Members of the public may present testimony. Emergency |
procurements shall be made
with as much competition
as is |
practicable under the circumstances , and shall include best |
efforts to include contractors certified under the Business |
Enterprise Program .
A written
description of the basis for the |
emergency and reasons for the
selection of the particular
|
contractor shall be included in the contract file.
|
(b) Notice. Notice of all emergency procurements shall be |
provided to the Procurement Policy Board and the Commission on |
Equity and Inclusion and published in the online electronic |
Bulletin no later than 5 calendar days after the contract is |
awarded. Notice of intent to extend an emergency contract shall |
be provided to the Procurement Policy Board and the Commission |
on Equity and Inclusion and published in the online electronic |
Bulletin at least 14 calendar days before the public hearing. |
Notice shall include at least a description of the need for the |
emergency purchase, the contractor, and if applicable, the |
date, time, and location of the public hearing. A copy of this |
|
notice and all documents provided at the hearing shall be |
included in the subsequent Procurement Bulletin. Before the |
next appropriate volume of the Illinois Procurement
Bulletin, |
the purchasing agency shall publish in the
Illinois Procurement |
Bulletin a copy of each written description
and reasons and the |
total cost
of each emergency procurement made during the |
previous month.
When only an estimate of the
total cost is |
known at the time of publication, the estimate shall
be |
identified as an estimate and
published. When the actual total |
cost is determined, it shall
also be published in like manner
|
before the 10th day of the next succeeding month.
|
(c) Statements. A chief procurement officer making a |
procurement
under this Section shall file statements
with the |
Procurement Policy Board , the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion, and the Auditor General within
10 calendar days
|
after the procurement setting
forth the amount expended, the |
name of the contractor involved,
and the conditions and
|
circumstances requiring the emergency procurement. When only |
an
estimate of the cost is
available within 10 calendar days |
after the procurement, the actual cost
shall be reported |
immediately
after it is determined. At the end of each fiscal |
quarter, the
Auditor General shall file with the
Legislative |
Audit Commission and the Governor a complete listing
of all |
emergency
procurements reported during that fiscal quarter. |
The Legislative
Audit Commission shall
review the emergency |
procurements so reported and, in its annual
reports, advise the |
|
General
Assembly of procurements that appear to constitute an |
abuse of
this Section.
|
(d) Quick purchases. The chief procurement officer may |
promulgate rules
extending the circumstances by which a |
purchasing agency may make purchases
under this Section, |
including but not limited to the procurement of items
available |
at a discount for a limited period of time. The chief |
procurement officer shall adopt rules regarding good faith and |
best efforts from contractors and companies certified under the |
Business Enterprise Program.
|
(e) The changes to this Section made by this amendatory Act |
of the 96th General Assembly apply to procurements executed on |
or after its effective date.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-43, eff. 8-9-17.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-60) |
Sec. 20-60. Duration of contracts. |
(a) Maximum duration. A contract may be entered into for
|
any period of time deemed
to be in the best interests of the |
State but not
exceeding 10 years inclusive, beginning January |
1, 2010, of proposed contract renewals. Third parties may lease |
State-owned dark fiber networks for any period of time deemed |
to be in the best interest of the State, but not exceeding 20 |
years. The length of
a lease for real property or capital |
improvements shall be in
accordance with the provisions of
|
Section 40-25. The length of energy conservation program |
|
contracts or energy savings contracts or leases shall be in |
accordance with the provisions of Section 25-45. A contract for |
bond or mortgage insurance awarded by the Illinois Housing |
Development Authority, however, may be entered into for any |
period of time less than or equal to the maximum period of time |
that the subject bond or mortgage may remain outstanding.
|
(b) Subject to appropriation. All contracts made or entered
|
into shall recite that they are
subject to termination and |
cancellation in any year for which the
General Assembly fails |
to make
an appropriation to make payments under the terms of |
the contract. |
(c) The chief procurement officer shall file a proposed |
extension or renewal of a contract with the Procurement Policy |
Board and the Commission on Equity and Inclusion prior to |
entering into any extension or renewal if the cost associated |
with the extension or renewal exceeds $249,999. The Procurement |
Policy Board or the Commission on Equity and Inclusion may |
object to the proposed extension or renewal within 30 calendar |
days and require a hearing before the Board or the Commission |
on Equity and Inclusion prior to entering into the extension or |
renewal. If the Procurement Policy Board or the Commission on |
Equity and Inclusion does not object within 30 calendar days or |
takes affirmative action to recommend the extension or renewal, |
the chief procurement officer may enter into the extension or |
renewal of a contract. This subsection does not apply to any |
emergency procurement, any procurement under Article 40, or any |
|
procurement exempted by Section 1-10(b) of this Code. If any |
State agency contract is paid for in whole or in part with |
federal-aid funds, grants, or loans and the provisions of this |
subsection would result in the loss of those federal-aid funds, |
grants, or loans, then the contract is exempt from the |
provisions of this subsection in order to remain eligible for |
those federal-aid funds, grants, or loans, and the State agency |
shall file notice of this exemption with the Procurement Policy |
Board or the Commission on Equity and Inclusion prior to |
entering into the proposed extension or renewal. Nothing in |
this subsection permits a chief procurement officer to enter |
into an extension or renewal in violation of subsection (a). By |
August 1 each year, the Procurement Policy Board and the |
Commission on Equity and Inclusion shall each shall file a |
report with the General Assembly identifying for the previous |
fiscal year (i) the proposed extensions or renewals that were |
filed and whether such extensions and renewals were objected to |
with the Board and whether the Board objected and (ii) the |
contracts exempt from this subsection. |
(d) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of |
this Section, the Department of Innovation and Technology may |
enter into leases for dark fiber networks for any period of |
time deemed to be in the best interests of the State but not |
exceeding 20 years inclusive. The Department of Innovation and |
Technology may lease dark fiber networks from third parties |
only for the primary purpose of providing services (i) to the |
|
offices of Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Attorney General, |
Secretary of State, Comptroller, or Treasurer and State |
agencies, as defined under Section 5-15 of the Civil |
Administrative Code of Illinois or (ii) for anchor |
institutions, as defined in Section 7 of the Illinois Century |
Network Act. Dark fiber network lease contracts shall be |
subject to all other provisions of this Code and any applicable |
rules or requirements, including, but not limited to, |
publication of lease solicitations, use of standard State |
contracting terms and conditions, and approval of vendor |
certifications and financial disclosures. |
(e) As used in this Section, "dark fiber network" means a |
network of fiber optic cables laid but currently unused by a |
third party that the third party is leasing for use as network |
infrastructure. |
(Source: P.A. 100-23, eff. 7-6-17; 100-611, eff. 7-20-18; |
101-81, eff. 7-12-19.) |
(30 ILCS 500/35-15) |
Sec. 35-15. Prequalification. |
(a) The chief procurement officer for matters other than |
construction and the higher education
chief procurement |
officer shall each develop appropriate
and reasonable |
prequalification standards and categories of professional and
|
artistic services. |
(b) The prequalifications and categorizations shall be |
|
submitted to the
Procurement Policy Board and the Commission on |
Equity and Inclusion and published for public comment prior to |
their
submission to the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules |
for approval. |
(c) The chief procurement officer for matters other than |
construction and the higher education
chief procurement |
officer shall each also assemble and
maintain a comprehensive |
list of prequalified and categorized businesses and
persons. |
(d) Prequalification shall not be used to bar or prevent |
any qualified
business or person from bidding or responding to |
invitations for bid or requests for
proposal. |
(Source: P.A. 100-43, eff. 8-9-17.) |
(30 ILCS 500/35-30) |
Sec. 35-30. Awards. |
(a) All State contracts for professional and artistic |
services, except as
provided in this Section, shall be awarded |
using the
competitive request for proposal process outlined in |
this Section. |
(b) For each contract offered, the chief procurement |
officer, State
purchasing officer, or his or her designee shall |
use the appropriate standard
solicitation
forms
available from |
the chief procurement officer for matters other than |
construction or the higher
education chief procurement |
officer. |
(c) Prepared forms shall be submitted to the chief |
|
procurement officer for matters other than construction or the |
higher education chief procurement officer,
whichever is |
appropriate, for
publication in its Illinois Procurement |
Bulletin and circulation to the chief procurement officer for |
matters other than construction
or the higher education chief |
procurement officer's list of
prequalified vendors. Notice of |
the offer or request for
proposal shall appear at least 14 |
calendar days before the response to the offer is due. |
(d) All interested respondents shall return their |
responses to the chief procurement officer for matters other |
than construction
or the higher education chief procurement |
officer,
whichever is appropriate, which shall open
and record |
them. The chief procurement officer for matters other than |
construction or higher education chief procurement officer
|
then shall forward the responses, together
with any
information |
it has available about the qualifications and other State work
|
of the respondents. |
(e) After evaluation, ranking, and selection, the |
responsible chief
procurement officer, State purchasing |
officer, or
his or her designee shall notify the chief |
procurement officer for matters other than construction
or the |
higher education chief procurement officer, whichever is |
appropriate,
of the successful respondent and shall forward
a |
copy of the signed contract for the chief procurement officer |
for matters other than construction or higher education chief
|
procurement officer's file. The chief procurement officer for |
|
matters other than construction or higher education chief
|
procurement officer shall
publish the names of the
responsible |
procurement decision-maker,
the agency letting the contract, |
the
successful respondent, a contract reference, and value of |
the let contract
in the next appropriate volume of the Illinois |
Procurement Bulletin. |
(f) For all professional and artistic contracts with |
annualized value
that exceeds $100,000, evaluation and ranking |
by price are required. Any chief
procurement officer or State |
purchasing officer,
but not their designees, may select a |
respondent other than the lowest respondent by
price. In any |
case, when the contract exceeds the $100,000 threshold and
the |
lowest respondent is not selected, the chief procurement |
officer or the State
purchasing officer shall forward together
|
with the contract notice of who the low respondent by price was |
and a written decision as
to why another was selected to the |
chief procurement officer for matters other than construction |
or
the higher education chief procurement officer, whichever is |
appropriate.
The chief procurement officer for matters other |
than construction or higher education chief procurement |
officer shall publish as
provided in subsection (e) of Section |
35-30,
but
shall include notice of the chief procurement |
officer's or State purchasing
officer's written decision. |
(g) The chief procurement officer for matters other than |
construction and higher education chief
procurement officer |
may each refine, but not
contradict, this Section by |
|
promulgating rules
for submission to the Procurement Policy |
Board and the Commission on Equity and Inclusion and then to |
the Joint Committee
on Administrative Rules. Any
refinement |
shall be based on the principles and procedures of the federal
|
Architect-Engineer Selection Law, Public Law 92-582 Brooks |
Act, and the
Architectural, Engineering, and Land Surveying |
Qualifications Based Selection
Act; except that pricing shall |
be an integral part of the selection process. |
(Source: P.A. 100-43, eff. 8-9-17.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/40-20)
|
Sec. 40-20. Request for information.
|
(a) Conditions for use. Leases shall be procured by request
|
for information except as
otherwise provided in Section 40-15.
|
(b) Form. A request for information shall be issued and
|
shall include:
|
(1) the type of property to be leased;
|
(2) the proposed uses of the property;
|
(3) the duration of the lease;
|
(4) the preferred location of the property; and
|
(5) a general description of the configuration |
desired.
|
(c) Public notice. Public notice of the request for
|
information for the availability of real
property to lease |
shall be published in the appropriate volume of the Illinois
|
Procurement Bulletin at least 14 calendar days before
the date |
|
set forth in the request for receipt of responses and
shall |
also be published in similar
manner in a newspaper of general |
circulation in the community or
communities where the using
|
agency is seeking space.
|
(d) Response. The request for information response shall
|
consist of written information
sufficient to show that the |
respondent can meet minimum criteria
set forth in the request. |
State
purchasing officers may enter into discussions with |
respondents
for the purpose of clarifying
State needs and the |
information supplied by the respondents. On
the basis of the |
information
supplied and discussions, if any, a State |
purchasing officer shall
make a written determination
|
identifying the responses that meet the minimum criteria set |
forth
in the request for information.
Negotiations shall be |
entered into with all qualified respondents
for the purpose of |
securing a
lease that is in the best interest of the State. A |
written report
of the negotiations shall be
retained in the |
lease files and shall include the reasons for the
final |
selection. All leases shall
be reduced to writing; one copy |
shall be filed with the Comptroller in accordance with the |
provisions
of Section 20-80, and one copy each shall be filed |
with the Board and the Commission on Equity and Inclusion .
|
When the lowest response by price is not selected, the |
State purchasing
officer shall forward to the chief procurement |
officer, along with the lease,
notice of the identity of the |
lowest respondent by price and written reasons
for the |
|
selection of a different response. The chief procurement |
officer shall
publish the written reasons in the next volume of |
the Illinois Procurement
Bulletin. |
(e) Board and Commission on Equity and Inclusion review. |
Upon receipt of (1) any proposed lease of real property of |
10,000 or more square feet or (2) any proposed lease of real |
property with annual rent payments of $100,000 or more, the |
Procurement Policy Board and the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion shall have 30 calendar days to review the proposed |
lease. If neither the Board nor the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion the Board does not object in writing within 30 |
calendar days, then the proposed lease shall become effective |
according to its terms as submitted. The leasing agency shall |
make any and all materials available to the Board and the |
Commission on Equity and Inclusion to assist in the review |
process.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-1076, eff. 1-1-15 .)
|
(30 ILCS 500/50-20)
|
Sec. 50-20. Exemptions. The appropriate chief
procurement |
officer may file a request with the Executive Ethics Commission |
to exempt named individuals from the
prohibitions of
Section |
50-13 when, in his or her judgment, the public interest in
|
having
the
individual in the service of the State outweighs the |
public policy evidenced in
that Section. The Executive Ethics |
Commission may grant an exemption after a public hearing at |
|
which any person may present testimony. The chief procurement |
officer shall publish notice of the date, time, and location of |
the hearing in the online electronic Bulletin at least 14 |
calendar days prior to the hearing and provide notice to the |
individual subject to the waiver , and the Procurement Policy |
Board , and the Commission on Equity and Inclusion . The |
Executive Ethics Commission shall also provide public notice of |
the date, time, and location of the hearing on its website. If |
the Commission grants an exemption, the exemption is effective |
only if it is filed with the
Secretary of State and the |
Comptroller prior to the execution of any contract and includes |
a statement setting forth
the name of the individual and all |
the pertinent facts that would make that
Section applicable, |
setting forth the reason for the exemption, and declaring
the |
individual exempted from that Section.
Notice of each exemption |
shall be published in the Illinois Procurement
Bulletin. A |
contract for which a waiver has been issued but has not been |
filed in accordance with this Section is voidable by the State. |
The changes to this Section made by this amendatory Act of the |
96th General Assembly shall apply to exemptions granted on or |
after its effective date.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-1076, eff. 1-1-15 .)
|
(30 ILCS 500/50-35) |
Sec. 50-35. Financial disclosure and potential conflicts |
of interest. |
|
(a) All bids and offers from responsive bidders, offerors, |
vendors, or contractors with an annual value of
more than |
$50,000, and all submissions to a vendor portal, shall be |
accompanied by disclosure of the financial
interests of the |
bidder, offeror, potential contractor, or contractor and each |
subcontractor to be used. In addition, all subcontracts |
identified as provided by Section 20-120 of this Code with an |
annual value of
more than $50,000 shall be accompanied by |
disclosure of the financial
interests of each subcontractor. |
The financial disclosure of
each successful bidder, offeror, |
potential contractor, or contractor and its subcontractors |
shall be incorporated as a material term of the contract and |
shall become
part of the publicly available contract or |
procurement file
maintained by the appropriate chief |
procurement officer. Each disclosure under this Section shall |
be signed and made under penalty of perjury by an authorized |
officer or employee on behalf of the bidder, offeror, potential |
contractor, contractor, or subcontractor, and must be filed |
with the Procurement Policy Board and the Commission on Equity |
and Inclusion . |
(b) Disclosure shall include any
ownership or distributive |
income share that is in excess of 5%, or an amount
greater than |
60% of the annual salary of the Governor, of the disclosing |
entity
or its parent entity, whichever is less, unless the |
bidder, offeror, potential contractor, contractor, or |
subcontractor
(i) is a
publicly traded entity subject to |
|
Federal 10K reporting, in which case it may
submit its 10K
|
disclosure in place of the prescribed disclosure, or (ii) is a |
privately held
entity that is exempt from Federal 10k reporting |
but has more than 100
shareholders, in which case it may submit |
the information that Federal 10k
reporting companies are |
required to report under 17 CFR 229.401 and list the
names of |
any person or entity holding any ownership share that is in |
excess of
5% in place of the prescribed disclosure. The form of |
disclosure shall
be prescribed by the applicable chief |
procurement officer and must include at
least the names,
|
addresses, and dollar or proportionate share of ownership of |
each person
identified in this Section, their instrument of |
ownership or beneficial
relationship, and notice of any |
potential conflict of interest resulting from
the current |
ownership or beneficial relationship of each individual |
identified in
this Section having in addition any of the |
following relationships: |
(1) State employment, currently or in the previous 3 |
years, including
contractual employment of services. |
(2) State employment of spouse, father, mother, son, or |
daughter,
including
contractual employment for services in |
the previous 2 years. |
(3) Elective status; the holding of elective office of |
the State of
Illinois, the government of the United States, |
any unit of local government
authorized by the Constitution |
of the State of Illinois or the statutes of the
State of |
|
Illinois currently or in the previous 3 years. |
(4) Relationship to anyone holding elective office |
currently or in the
previous 2 years; spouse, father, |
mother, son, or daughter. |
(5) Appointive office; the holding of any appointive |
government office of
the State of Illinois, the United |
States of America, or any unit of local
government |
authorized by the Constitution of the State of Illinois or |
the
statutes of the State of Illinois, which office |
entitles the holder to
compensation in excess of expenses |
incurred in the discharge of that office
currently or in |
the previous 3 years. |
(6) Relationship to anyone holding appointive office |
currently or in the
previous 2 years; spouse, father, |
mother, son, or daughter. |
(7) Employment, currently or in the previous 3 years, |
as or by any
registered lobbyist of the State government. |
(8) Relationship to anyone who is or was a registered |
lobbyist in the
previous 2 years; spouse, father, mother, |
son, or daughter. |
(9) Compensated employment, currently or in the |
previous 3 years, by any
registered election or re-election |
committee registered with the Secretary of
State or any |
county clerk in the State of Illinois, or any political |
action
committee registered with either the Secretary of |
State or the Federal Board of
Elections. |
|
(10) Relationship to anyone; spouse, father, mother, |
son, or daughter; who
is or was a compensated employee in |
the last 2 years of any registered
election or re-election |
committee registered with the Secretary of State or any
|
county clerk in the State of Illinois, or any political |
action committee
registered with either the Secretary of |
State or the Federal Board of
Elections. |
(b-1) The disclosure required under this Section must also |
include the name and address of each lobbyist required to |
register under the Lobbyist Registration Act and other agent of |
the bidder, offeror, potential contractor, contractor, or |
subcontractor who is not identified under subsections (a) and |
(b) and who has communicated, is communicating, or may |
communicate with any State officer or employee concerning the |
bid or offer. The disclosure under this subsection is a |
continuing obligation and must be promptly supplemented for |
accuracy throughout the process and throughout the term of the |
contract if the bid or offer is successful. |
(b-2) The disclosure required under this Section must also |
include, for each of the persons identified in subsection (b) |
or (b-1), each of the following that occurred within the |
previous 10 years: suspension or debarment from contracting |
with any governmental entity; professional licensure |
discipline; bankruptcies; adverse civil judgments and |
administrative findings; and criminal felony convictions. The |
disclosure under this subsection is a continuing obligation and |
|
must be promptly supplemented for accuracy throughout the |
process and throughout the term of the contract if the bid or |
offer is successful. |
(c) The disclosure in subsection (b) is not intended to |
prohibit or prevent
any
contract. The disclosure is meant to |
fully and publicly disclose any potential
conflict to the chief |
procurement officers, State purchasing officers, their
|
designees, and executive officers so they may adequately |
discharge their duty
to protect the State. |
(d) When a potential for a conflict of interest is |
identified, discovered, or reasonably suspected, the chief |
procurement officer or State procurement officer shall send the |
contract to the Procurement Policy Board and the Commission on |
Equity and Inclusion . In accordance with the objectives of |
subsection (c), if the Procurement Policy Board or the |
Commission on Equity and Inclusion finds evidence of a |
potential conflict of interest not originally disclosed by the |
bidder, offeror, potential contractor, contractor, or |
subcontractor, the Board or the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion shall provide written notice to the bidder, offeror, |
potential contractor, contractor, or subcontractor that is |
identified, discovered, or reasonably suspected of having a |
potential conflict of interest. The bidder, offeror, potential |
contractor, contractor, or subcontractor shall have 15 |
calendar days to respond in writing to the Board or the |
Commission on Equity and Inclusion , and a hearing before the |
|
Board or the Commission on Equity and Inclusion will be granted |
upon request by the bidder, offeror, potential contractor, |
contractor, or subcontractor, at a date and time to be |
determined by the Board or the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion , but which in no event shall occur later than 15 |
calendar days after the date of the request. Upon |
consideration, the Board or the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion shall recommend, in writing, whether to allow or void |
the contract, bid, offer, or subcontract weighing the best |
interest of the State of Illinois. All recommendations shall be |
submitted to the Executive Ethics Commission. The Executive |
Ethics Commission must hold a public hearing within 30 calendar |
days after receiving the Board's or the Commission on Equity |
and Inclusion's recommendation if the Procurement Policy Board |
or the Commission on Equity and Inclusion makes a |
recommendation to (i) void a contract or (ii) void a bid or |
offer and the chief procurement officer selected or intends to |
award the contract to the bidder, offeror, or potential |
contractor. A chief procurement officer is prohibited from |
awarding a contract before a hearing if the Board or the |
Commission on Equity and Inclusion recommendation does not |
support a bid or offer. The recommendation and proceedings of |
any hearing, if applicable, shall be available to the public. |
(e) These thresholds and disclosure do not relieve the |
chief procurement
officer, the State purchasing officer, or
|
their designees from reasonable care and diligence for any |
|
contract, bid,
offer, or submission to a vendor portal. The |
chief procurement officer, the State purchasing officer, or
|
their designees shall be
responsible for using any reasonably |
known and publicly available information
to
discover any |
undisclosed potential conflict of interest and act to protect |
the
best interest of the State of Illinois. |
(f) Inadvertent or accidental failure to fully disclose |
shall render the
contract, bid, offer, proposal, subcontract, |
or relationship voidable by the chief procurement
officer if he |
or she deems it in
the best interest of the State of Illinois |
and, at his or her discretion, may
be cause for barring from |
future contracts, bids, offers, proposals, subcontracts, or
|
relationships with the State for a period of up to 2 years. |
(g) Intentional, willful, or material failure to disclose |
shall render the
contract, bid, offer, proposal, subcontract, |
or relationship voidable by the chief procurement
officer if he |
or she deems it in
the best interest of the State of Illinois |
and shall result in debarment from
future contracts, bids, |
offers, proposals, subcontracts, or relationships for a period |
of not less
than 2 years and not more than 10 years. |
Reinstatement after 2 years and
before 10 years must be |
reviewed and commented on in writing by the Governor
of the |
State of Illinois, or by an executive ethics board or |
commission he or
she
might designate. The comment shall be |
returned to the responsible chief
procurement officer who must
|
rule in writing whether and when to reinstate. |
|
(h) In addition, all disclosures shall note any other |
current or pending
contracts, bids, offers, proposals, |
subcontracts, leases, or other ongoing procurement |
relationships the bidder, offeror, potential contractor, |
contractor, or subcontractor has with any other unit of State
|
government and shall clearly identify the unit and the |
contract, offer, proposal,
lease, or other relationship. |
(i) The bidder, offeror, potential contractor, or |
contractor has a continuing obligation to supplement the |
disclosure required by this Section throughout the bidding |
process during the term of any contract, and during the vendor |
portal registration process. |
(Source: P.A. 97-490, eff. 8-22-11; 97-895, eff. 8-3-12; |
98-1076, eff. 1-1-15 .) |
Section 40-130. The Business Enterprise for Minorities, |
Women, and Persons with
Disabilities Act is amended by changing |
Sections 2, 4, 4f, 5, 7, and 8 and by adding Section 5.5 as |
follows:
|
(30 ILCS 575/2)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2024) |
Sec. 2. Definitions.
|
(A) For the purpose of this Act, the following
terms shall |
have the following definitions:
|
(1) "Minority person" shall mean a person who is a |
|
citizen or lawful
permanent resident of the United States |
and who is any of the following:
|
(a) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person |
having origins in any of the original peoples of North |
and South America, including Central America, and who |
maintains tribal affiliation or community attachment). |
(b) Asian (a person having origins in any of the |
original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or |
the Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited |
to, Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, |
Pakistan, the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and |
Vietnam). |
(c) Black or African American (a person having |
origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa). |
(d) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican, |
Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other |
Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race). |
(e) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a |
person having origins in any of the original peoples of |
Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
|
(2) "Woman" shall mean a person who is a citizen or |
lawful permanent
resident of the United States and who is |
of the female gender.
|
(2.05) "Person with a disability" means a person who is |
a citizen or
lawful resident of the United States and is a |
person qualifying as a person with a disability under |
|
subdivision (2.1) of this subsection (A).
|
(2.1) "Person with a disability" means a person with a |
severe physical or mental disability that:
|
(a) results from:
|
amputation,
|
arthritis,
|
autism,
|
blindness,
|
burn injury,
|
cancer,
|
cerebral palsy,
|
Crohn's disease, |
cystic fibrosis,
|
deafness,
|
head injury,
|
heart disease,
|
hemiplegia,
|
hemophilia,
|
respiratory or pulmonary dysfunction,
|
an intellectual disability,
|
mental illness,
|
multiple sclerosis,
|
muscular dystrophy,
|
musculoskeletal disorders,
|
neurological disorders, including stroke and |
epilepsy,
|
|
paraplegia,
|
quadriplegia and other spinal cord conditions,
|
sickle cell anemia,
|
ulcerative colitis, |
specific learning disabilities, or
|
end stage renal failure disease; and
|
(b) substantially limits one or more of the |
person's major life activities.
|
Another disability or combination of disabilities may |
also be considered
as a severe disability for the purposes |
of item (a) of this
subdivision (2.1) if it is determined |
by an evaluation of
rehabilitation potential to
cause a |
comparable degree of substantial functional limitation |
similar to
the specific list of disabilities listed in item |
(a) of this
subdivision (2.1).
|
(3) "Minority-owned business" means a business which |
is at least
51% owned by one or more minority persons, or |
in the case of a
corporation, at least 51% of the stock in |
which is owned by one or
more minority persons; and the |
management and daily business operations of
which are |
controlled by one or more of the minority individuals who |
own it.
|
(4) "Women-owned business" means a business which is at |
least
51% owned by one or more women, or, in the case of a |
corporation, at
least 51% of the stock in which is owned by |
one or more women; and the
management and daily business |
|
operations of which are controlled by one or
more of the |
women who own it.
|
(4.1) "Business owned by a person with a disability" |
means a business
that is at least 51% owned by one or more |
persons with a disability
and the management and daily |
business operations of which
are controlled by one or more |
of the persons with disabilities who own it. A
|
not-for-profit agency for persons with disabilities that |
is exempt from
taxation under Section 501 of the Internal |
Revenue Code of 1986 is also
considered a "business owned |
by a person with a disability".
|
(4.2) "Council" means the Business Enterprise Council |
for Minorities, Women, and Persons with Disabilities |
created under Section 5 of this Act.
|
(4.3) "Commission" means, unless the context clearly |
indicates otherwise, the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion created under the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion Act. |
(5) "State contracts" means all contracts entered into |
by the State, any agency or department thereof, or any |
public institution of higher education, including |
community college districts, regardless of the source of |
the funds with which the contracts are paid, which are not |
subject to federal reimbursement. "State contracts" does |
not include contracts awarded by a retirement system, |
pension fund, or investment board subject to Section |
|
1-109.1 of the Illinois Pension Code. This definition shall |
control over any existing definition under this Act or |
applicable administrative rule.
|
"State construction contracts" means all State |
contracts entered
into by a State agency or public |
institution of higher education for the repair, |
remodeling,
renovation or
construction of a building or |
structure, or for the construction or
maintenance of a |
highway defined in Article 2 of the Illinois Highway
Code.
|
(6) "State agencies" shall mean all departments, |
officers, boards,
commissions, institutions and bodies |
politic and corporate of the State,
but does not include |
the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois,
the |
Board of Trustees of Southern Illinois University,
the |
Board of Trustees
of Chicago State University, the Board of |
Trustees of Eastern Illinois
University, the Board of |
Trustees of Governors State University, the Board of
|
Trustees of Illinois State University, the Board of |
Trustees of Northeastern
Illinois
University, the Board of |
Trustees of Northern Illinois University, the Board of
|
Trustees of Western Illinois University,
municipalities or |
other local governmental units, or other State |
constitutional
officers.
|
(7) "Public institutions of higher education" means |
the University of Illinois, Southern Illinois University, |
Chicago State University, Eastern Illinois University, |
|
Governors State University, Illinois State University, |
Northeastern Illinois University, Northern Illinois |
University, Western Illinois University, the public |
community colleges of the State, and any other public |
universities, colleges, and community colleges now or |
hereafter established or authorized by the General |
Assembly.
|
(8) "Certification" means a determination made by the |
Council
or by one delegated authority from the Council to |
make certifications, or by
a State agency with statutory |
authority to make such a certification, that a
business |
entity is a business owned by a
minority, woman, or person |
with a disability for whatever
purpose. A business owned |
and controlled by women shall be certified as a |
"woman-owned business". A business owned and controlled by |
women who are also minorities shall be certified as both a |
"women-owned business" and a "minority-owned business".
|
(9) "Control" means the exclusive or ultimate and sole |
control of the
business including, but not limited to, |
capital investment and all other
financial matters, |
property, acquisitions, contract negotiations, legal
|
matters, officer-director-employee selection and |
comprehensive hiring,
operating responsibilities, |
cost-control matters, income and dividend
matters, |
financial transactions and rights of other shareholders or |
joint
partners. Control shall be real, substantial and |
|
continuing, not pro forma.
Control shall include the power |
to direct or cause the direction of the
management and |
policies of the business and to make the day-to-day as well
|
as major decisions in matters of policy, management and |
operations.
Control shall be exemplified by possessing the |
requisite knowledge and
expertise to run the particular |
business and control shall not include
simple majority or |
absentee ownership.
|
(10) "Business" means a business that has annual gross |
sales of less than $75,000,000 as evidenced by the federal |
income tax return of the business. A firm with gross sales |
in excess of this cap may apply to the Council for |
certification for a particular contract if the firm can |
demonstrate that the contract would have significant |
impact on businesses owned by minorities, women, or persons |
with disabilities as suppliers or subcontractors or in |
employment of minorities, women, or persons with |
disabilities.
|
(11) "Utilization plan" means a form and additional |
documentations included in all bids or proposals that |
demonstrates a vendor's proposed utilization of vendors |
certified by the Business Enterprise Program to meet the |
targeted goal. The utilization plan shall demonstrate that |
the Vendor has either: (1) met the entire contract goal or |
(2) requested a full or partial waiver and made good faith |
efforts towards meeting the goal. |
|
(12) "Business Enterprise Program" means the Business |
Enterprise Program of the Department of Central Management |
Services. |
(B) When a business is owned at least 51% by any |
combination of
minority persons, women, or persons with |
disabilities,
even though none of the 3 classes alone holds at |
least a 51% interest, the
ownership
requirement for purposes of |
this Act is considered to be met or in excess of the entire |
contract goal . The
certification category for the business is |
that of the class holding the
largest ownership
interest in the |
business. If 2 or more classes have equal ownership interests,
|
the certification category shall be determined by
the business.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-391, eff. 8-25-17; 101-601, eff. 1-1-20.)
|
(30 ILCS 575/4) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.604)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2024)
|
Sec. 4. Award of State contracts.
|
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b), not less than 20% |
of
the total dollar amount of State contracts, as defined by |
the Secretary of
the Council and approved by the Council, shall |
be established as an aspirational goal to
be awarded to |
businesses owned by minorities,
women, and persons with |
disabilities; provided, however, that
of the total amount of |
all
State contracts awarded to businesses owned by
minorities, |
women, and persons with disabilities pursuant to
this Section, |
contracts representing at least 11% shall be awarded to |
|
businesses owned by minorities, contracts representing at |
least 7% shall be awarded to women-owned businesses, and |
contracts representing at least 2% shall be awarded to |
businesses owned by persons with disabilities.
|
The above percentage relates to the total dollar amount of |
State
contracts during each State fiscal year, calculated by |
examining
independently each type of contract for each agency |
or public institutions of higher education which
lets such |
contracts. Only that percentage of arrangements which |
represents the participation of businesses owned by
|
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities on such |
contracts shall
be included. State contracts subject to the |
requirements of this Act shall include the requirement that |
only expenditures to businesses owned by minorities, women, and |
persons with disabilities that perform a commercially useful |
function may be counted toward the goals set forth by this Act. |
Contracts shall include a definition of "commercially useful |
function" that is consistent with 49 CFR 26.55(c).
|
(b) Not less
than 20% of the total dollar amount of State |
construction contracts is
established as an aspirational goal |
to be awarded to businesses owned by minorities, women, and |
persons with disabilities; provided that, contracts |
representing at least 11% of the total dollar amount of State |
construction contracts shall be awarded to businesses owned by |
minorities; contracts representing at least 7% of the total |
dollar amount of State construction contracts shall be awarded |
|
to women-owned businesses; and contracts representing at least |
2% of the total dollar amount of State construction contracts |
shall be awarded to businesses owned by persons with |
disabilities.
|
(c) (Blank). |
(d) Within one year after April 28, 2009 (the effective |
date of Public Act 96-8), the Department of Central Management |
Services shall conduct a social scientific study that measures |
the impact of discrimination on minority and women business |
development in Illinois. Within 18 months after April 28, 2009 |
(the effective date of Public Act 96-8), the Department shall |
issue a report of its findings and any recommendations on |
whether to adjust the goals for minority and women |
participation established in this Act. Copies of this report |
and the social scientific study shall be filed with the |
Governor and the General Assembly. |
By December 1, 2020, the Department of Central Management |
Services shall conduct a new social scientific study that |
measures the impact of discrimination on minority and women |
business development in Illinois. By June 1, 2022, the |
Department shall issue a report of its findings and any |
recommendations on whether to adjust the goals for minority and |
women participation established in this Act. Copies of this |
report and the social scientific study shall be filed with the |
Governor , the Advisory Board, and the General Assembly. By |
December 1, 2022, the Department of Central Management Services |
|
Business Enterprise Program shall develop a model for social |
scientific disparity study sourcing for local governmental |
units to adapt and implement to address regional disparities in |
public procurement. |
(e) Except as permitted under this Act or as otherwise |
mandated by federal law or regulation, those who submit bids or |
proposals for State contracts subject to the provisions of this |
Act, whose bids or proposals are successful and include a |
utilization plan but that fail to meet the goals set forth in |
subsection (b) of this Section, shall be notified of that |
deficiency and shall be afforded a period not to exceed 10 |
calendar days from the date of notification to cure that |
deficiency in the bid or proposal. The deficiency in the bid or |
proposal may only be cured by contracting with additional |
subcontractors who are owned by minorities or women. Any |
increase in cost to
a contract for the addition of a |
subcontractor to cure a bid's deficiency shall not affect the |
bid price,
shall not be used in the request for an exemption in |
this Act, and in no case shall an identified subcontractor with |
a certification made pursuant to this Act be terminated from |
the contract without the written consent of the State agency or |
public institution of higher education entering into the |
contract. The Commission on Equity and Inclusion shall be |
notified of all utilization plan deficiencies on submitted bids |
or proposals for State contracts under this subsection (e). |
(f) Non-construction solicitations that include Business |
|
Enterprise Program participation goals shall require bidders |
and offerors to include utilization plans. Utilization plans |
are due at the time of bid or offer submission. Failure to |
complete and include a utilization plan, including |
documentation demonstrating good faith effort when requesting |
a waiver, shall render the bid or offer non-responsive. The |
Commission on Equity and Inclusion shall be notified of all |
bids and offers that fail to include a utilization plan as |
required under this subsection (f). |
(g) Bids or proposals for State contracts shall be examined |
to determine if the bid or proposal is responsible, |
competitive, and whether the services to be provided are likely |
to be completed based upon the pricing. If the bid or proposal |
is responsible, competitive, and the services to be provided |
are likely to be completed based on the prices listed, then the |
bid is deemed responsive. If the bid or proposal is not |
responsible, competitive, and the services to be provided are |
not likely to be completed based on the prices listed, then the |
entire bid is deemed non-responsive. The Commission on Equity |
and Inclusion shall be notified of all non-responsive bids or |
proposals for State contracts under this subsection (g). |
(Source: P.A. 100-391, eff. 8-25-17; 101-170, eff. 1-1-20; |
101-601, eff. 1-1-20; revised 10-26-20.) |
(30 ILCS 575/4f) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2024) |
|
Sec. 4f. Award of State contracts. |
(1) It is hereby declared to be the public policy of the |
State of Illinois to promote and encourage each State agency |
and public institution of higher education to use businesses |
owned by minorities, women, and persons with disabilities in |
the area of goods and services, including, but not limited to, |
insurance services, investment management services, |
information technology services, accounting services, |
architectural and engineering services, and legal services. |
Furthermore, each State agency and public institution of higher |
education shall utilize such firms to the greatest extent |
feasible within the bounds of financial and fiduciary prudence, |
and take affirmative steps to remove any barriers to the full |
participation of such firms in the procurement and contracting |
opportunities afforded. |
(a) When a State agency or public institution of higher |
education, other than a community college, awards a |
contract for insurance services, for each State agency or |
public institution of higher education, it shall be the |
aspirational goal to use insurance brokers owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities as |
defined by this Act, for not less than 20% of the total |
annual premiums or fees; provided that, contracts |
representing at least 11% of the total annual premiums or |
fees shall be awarded to businesses owned by minorities; |
contracts representing at least 7% of the total annual |
|
premiums or fees shall be awarded to women-owned |
businesses; and contracts representing at least 2% of the |
total annual premiums or fees shall be awarded to |
businesses owned by persons with disabilities. |
(b) When a State agency or public institution of higher |
education, other than a community college, awards a |
contract for investment services, for each State agency or |
public institution of higher education, it shall be the |
aspirational goal to use emerging investment managers |
owned by minorities, women, and persons with disabilities |
as defined by this Act, for not less than 20% of the total |
funds under management; provided that, contracts |
representing at least 11% of the total funds under |
management shall be awarded to businesses owned by |
minorities; contracts representing at least 7% of the total |
funds under management shall be awarded to women-owned |
businesses; and contracts representing at least 2% of the |
total funds under management shall be awarded to businesses |
owned by persons with disabilities. Furthermore, it is the |
aspirational goal that not less than 20% of the direct |
asset managers of the State funds be minorities, women, and |
persons with disabilities. |
(c) When a State agency or public institution of higher |
education, other than a community college, awards |
contracts for information technology services, accounting |
services, architectural and engineering services, and |
|
legal services, for each State agency and public |
institution of higher education, it shall be the |
aspirational goal to use such firms owned by minorities, |
women, and persons with disabilities as defined by this Act |
and lawyers who are minorities, women, and persons with |
disabilities as defined by this Act, for not less than 20% |
of the total dollar amount of State contracts; provided |
that, contracts representing at least 11% of the total |
dollar amount of State contracts shall be awarded to |
businesses owned by minorities or minority lawyers; |
contracts representing at least 7% of the total dollar |
amount of State contracts shall be awarded to women-owned |
businesses or women who are lawyers; and contracts |
representing at least 2% of the total dollar amount of |
State contracts shall be awarded to businesses owned by |
persons with disabilities or persons with disabilities who |
are lawyers. |
(d) When a community college awards a contract for |
insurance services, investment services, information |
technology services, accounting services, architectural |
and engineering services, and legal services, it shall be |
the aspirational goal of each community college to use |
businesses owned by minorities, women, and persons with |
disabilities as defined in this Act for not less than 20% |
of the total amount spent on contracts for these services |
collectively; provided that, contracts representing at |
|
least 11% of the total amount spent on contracts for these |
services shall be awarded to businesses owned by |
minorities; contracts representing at least 7% of the total |
amount spent on contracts for these services shall be |
awarded to women-owned businesses; and contracts |
representing at least 2% of the total amount spent on |
contracts for these services shall be awarded to businesses |
owned by persons with disabilities. When a community |
college awards contracts for investment services, |
contracts awarded to investment managers who are not |
emerging investment managers as defined in this Act shall |
not be considered businesses owned by minorities, women, or |
persons with disabilities for the purposes of this Section. |
(2) As used in this Section: |
"Accounting services" means the measurement, |
processing and communication of financial information |
about economic entities including, but is not limited to, |
financial accounting, management accounting, auditing, |
cost containment and auditing services, taxation and |
accounting information systems. |
"Architectural and engineering services" means |
professional services of an architectural or engineering |
nature, or incidental services, that members of the |
architectural and engineering professions, and individuals |
in their employ, may logically or justifiably perform, |
including studies, investigations, surveying and mapping, |
|
tests, evaluations, consultations, comprehensive planning, |
program management, conceptual designs, plans and |
specifications, value engineering, construction phase |
services, soils engineering, drawing reviews, preparation |
of operating and maintenance manuals, and other related |
services. |
"Emerging investment manager" means an investment |
manager or claims consultant having assets under |
management below $10 billion or otherwise adjudicating |
claims. |
"Information technology services" means, but is not |
limited to, specialized technology-oriented solutions by |
combining the processes and functions of software, |
hardware, networks, telecommunications, web designers, |
cloud developing resellers, and electronics. |
"Insurance broker" means an insurance brokerage firm, |
claims administrator, or both, that procures, places all |
lines of insurance, or administers claims with annual |
premiums or fees of at least $5,000,000 but not more than |
$10,000,000. |
"Legal services" means work performed by a lawyer |
including, but not limited to, contracts in anticipation of |
litigation, enforcement actions, or investigations. |
(3) Each State agency and public institution of higher |
education shall adopt policies that identify its plan and |
implementation procedures for increasing the use of service |
|
firms owned by minorities, women, and persons with |
disabilities. All plan and implementation procedures for |
increasing the use of service firms owned by minorities, women, |
and persons with disabilities must be submitted to and approved |
by the Commission on Equity and Inclusion on an annual basis. |
(4) Except as provided in subsection (5), the Council shall |
file no later than March 1 of each year an annual report to the |
Governor, the Bureau on Apprenticeship Programs, and the |
General Assembly. The report filed with the General Assembly |
shall be filed as required in Section 3.1 of the General |
Assembly Organization Act. This report shall: (i) identify the |
service firms used by each State agency and public institution |
of higher education, (ii) identify the actions it has |
undertaken to increase the use of service firms owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities, including |
encouraging non-minority-owned firms to use other service |
firms owned by minorities, women, and persons with disabilities |
as subcontractors when the opportunities arise, (iii) state any |
recommendations made by the Council to each State agency and |
public institution of higher education to increase |
participation by the use of service firms owned by minorities, |
women, and persons with disabilities, and (iv) include the |
following: |
(A) For insurance services: the names of the insurance |
brokers or claims consultants used, the total of risk |
managed by each State agency and public institution of |
|
higher education by insurance brokers, the total |
commissions, fees paid, or both, the lines or insurance |
policies placed, and the amount of premiums placed; and the |
percentage of the risk managed by insurance brokers, the |
percentage of total commission, fees paid, or both, the |
lines or insurance policies placed, and the amount of |
premiums placed with each by the insurance brokers owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities by each |
State agency and public institution of higher education. |
(B) For investment management services: the names of |
the investment managers used, the total funds under |
management of investment managers; the total commissions, |
fees paid, or both; the total and percentage of funds under |
management of emerging investment managers owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities, |
including the total and percentage of total commissions, |
fees paid, or both by each State agency and public |
institution of higher education. |
(C) The names of service firms, the percentage and |
total dollar amount paid for professional services by |
category by each State agency and public institution of |
higher education. |
(D) The names of service firms, the percentage and |
total dollar amount paid for services by category to firms |
owned by minorities, women, and persons with disabilities |
by each State agency and public institution of higher |
|
education. |
(E) The total number of contracts awarded for services |
by category and the total number of contracts awarded to |
firms owned by minorities, women, and persons with |
disabilities by each State agency and public institution of |
higher education. |
(5) For community college districts, the Business |
Enterprise Council shall only report the following information |
for each community college district: (i) the name of the |
community colleges in the district, (ii) the name and contact |
information of a person at each community college appointed to |
be the single point of contact for vendors owned by minorities, |
women, or persons with disabilities, (iii) the policy of the |
community college district concerning certified vendors, (iv) |
the certifications recognized by the community college |
district for determining whether a business is owned or |
controlled by a minority, woman, or person with a disability, |
(v) outreach efforts conducted by the community college |
district to increase the use of certified vendors, (vi) the |
total expenditures by the community college district in the |
prior fiscal year in the divisions of work specified in |
paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of subsection (1) of this Section |
and the amount paid to certified vendors in those divisions of |
work, and (vii) the total number of contracts entered into for |
the divisions of work specified in paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) |
of subsection (1) of this Section and the total number of |
|
contracts awarded to certified vendors providing these |
services to the community college district. The Business |
Enterprise Council shall not make any utilization reports under |
this Act for community college districts for Fiscal Year 2015 |
and Fiscal Year 2016, but shall make the report required by |
this subsection for Fiscal Year 2017 and for each fiscal year |
thereafter. The Business Enterprise Council shall report the |
information in items (i), (ii), (iii), and (iv) of this |
subsection beginning in September of 2016. The Business |
Enterprise Council may collect the data needed to make its |
report from the Illinois Community College Board. |
(6) The status of the utilization of services shall be |
discussed at each of the regularly scheduled Business |
Enterprise Council meetings. Time shall be allotted for the |
Council to receive, review, and discuss the progress of the use |
of service firms owned by minorities, women, and persons with |
disabilities by each State agency and public institution of |
higher education; and any evidence regarding past or present |
racial, ethnic, or gender-based discrimination which directly |
impacts a State agency or public institution of higher |
education contracting with such firms. If after reviewing such |
evidence the Council finds that there is or has been such |
discrimination against a specific group, race or sex, the |
Council shall establish sheltered markets or adjust existing |
sheltered markets tailored to address the Council's specific |
findings for the divisions of work specified in paragraphs (a), |
|
(b), and (c) of subsection (1) of this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-391, eff. 8-25-17; 101-170, eff. 1-1-20 .)
|
(30 ILCS 575/5) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.605)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2024)
|
Sec. 5. Business Enterprise Council.
|
(1) To help implement, monitor , and enforce the goals of |
this Act, there
is created the Business Enterprise Council for
|
Minorities, Women, and Persons with Disabilities, hereinafter
|
referred to as the Council, composed of the Chairperson of the |
Commission on Equity and Inclusion, the Secretary of Human |
Services and
the Directors of the Department of
Human Rights, |
the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, the
|
Department of Central Management Services, the Department of |
Transportation and
the
Capital Development Board, or their duly |
appointed representatives, with the Comptroller, or his or her |
designee, serving as an advisory member of the Council. Ten
|
individuals representing businesses that are minority-owned , |
or women-owned , or
owned by persons with disabilities, 2 |
individuals representing the business
community, and a |
representative of public institutions of higher education |
shall be appointed by the Governor. These members shall serve |
2-year 2
year terms and shall be eligible for reappointment. |
Any vacancy occurring on
the Council shall also be filled by |
the Governor. Any member appointed to fill
a vacancy occurring |
prior to the expiration of the term for which his or her
|
|
predecessor was appointed shall be appointed for the remainder |
of such term.
Members of the Council shall serve without |
compensation but shall be reimbursed
for any ordinary and |
necessary expenses incurred in the performance of their
duties.
|
The Chairperson of the Commission Director of the |
Department of Central Management Services shall serve
as the |
Council chairperson and shall select, subject to approval of |
the
council, a Secretary responsible for the operation of the |
program who shall
serve as the Division Manager of the Business
|
Enterprise for Minorities, Women, and Persons with |
Disabilities Division
of the Department of Central Management |
Services.
|
The Director of each State agency and the chief executive |
officer of
each public institution institutions of higher |
education shall appoint a liaison to the Council. The liaison
|
shall be responsible for submitting to the Council any reports |
and
documents necessary under this Act.
|
(2) The Council's authority and responsibility shall be to:
|
(a) Devise a certification procedure to assure that |
businesses taking
advantage of this Act are legitimately |
classified as businesses owned by minorities, women, or |
persons with
disabilities and a registration procedure to |
recognize, without additional evidence of Business |
Enterprise Program eligibility, the certification of |
businesses owned by minorities, women, or persons with |
disabilities certified by the City of Chicago, Cook County, |
|
or other jurisdictional programs with requirements and |
procedures equaling or exceeding those in this Act.
|
(b) Maintain a list of all
businesses legitimately |
classified as businesses owned by minorities, women, or |
persons with disabilities to provide to State agencies and |
public institutions of higher education.
|
(c) Review rules and regulations for the |
implementation of the program for businesses owned by |
minorities, women,
and persons with disabilities.
|
(d) Review compliance plans submitted by each State |
agency and public institution institutions of higher |
education
pursuant to this Act.
|
(e) Make annual reports as provided in Section 8f to |
the Governor and
the General Assembly on the
status of the |
program.
|
(f) Serve as a central clearinghouse for information on |
State
contracts, including the maintenance of a list of all |
pending State
contracts upon which businesses owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities may bid.
|
At the Council's discretion, maintenance of the list may |
include 24-hour
electronic access to the list along with |
the bid and application information.
|
(g) Establish a toll-free toll free telephone number to |
facilitate information
requests concerning the |
certification process and pending contracts.
|
(3) No premium bond rate of a surety company for a bond |
|
required of a business owned by a minority, woman, or person
|
with a disability bidding for a State contract shall be
higher |
than the lowest rate charged by that surety company for a |
similar
bond in the same classification of work that would be |
written for a business not owned by a minority, woman, or |
person with a disability.
|
(4) Any Council member who has direct financial or personal |
interest in
any measure pending before the Council shall |
disclose this fact to the
Council and refrain from |
participating in the determination upon such measure.
|
(5) The Secretary shall have the following duties and |
responsibilities:
|
(a) To be responsible for the day-to-day operation of |
the Council.
|
(b) To serve as a coordinator for all of the State's |
programs for businesses owned by minorities, women,
and |
persons with disabilities and as the information and |
referral center
for all State initiatives for businesses
|
owned by minorities, women, and persons with disabilities.
|
(c) To establish an enforcement procedure whereby the |
Council may
recommend to the appropriate State legal |
officer that the State exercise
its legal remedies which |
shall include (1) termination of the contract
involved, (2) |
prohibition of participation by the respondent in public
|
contracts for a period not to exceed 3 years, (3) |
imposition of a penalty
not to exceed any profit acquired |
|
as a result of violation, or (4) any
combination thereof. |
Such procedures shall require prior approval by Council. |
All funds collected as penalties under this subsection |
shall be used exclusively for maintenance and further |
development of the Business Enterprise Program and |
encouragement of participation in State procurement by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities.
|
(d) To devise appropriate policies, regulations , and |
procedures for
including participation by businesses owned
|
by minorities, women, and persons with disabilities as |
prime contractors ,
including, but not limited to : , (i) |
encouraging the inclusions of qualified businesses owned |
by minorities, women, and
persons with disabilities on |
solicitation lists, (ii)
investigating the potential of |
blanket bonding programs for small
construction jobs, and |
(iii) investigating and making recommendations
concerning |
the use of the sheltered market process.
|
(e) To devise procedures for the waiver of the |
participation goals in
appropriate circumstances.
|
(f) To accept donations and, with the approval of the |
Council or the Chairperson
Director of Central Management |
Services , grants related to the purposes of
this Act; to |
conduct seminars related to the purpose of this Act and to
|
charge reasonable registration fees; and to sell |
directories, vendor lists ,
and other such information to |
interested parties, except that forms
necessary to become |
|
eligible for the program shall be provided free of
charge |
to a business or individual applying for the program.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-391, eff. 8-25-17; 100-801, eff. 8-10-18; |
101-601, eff. 1-1-20; revised 8-18-20.)
|
(30 ILCS 575/5.5 new) |
Sec. 5.5. Transfer of Council functions. |
(a) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, |
beginning on and after the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 101st General Assembly, the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion shall have jurisdiction over the functions of the |
Business Enterprise Council. |
(b) All powers, duties, rights, and responsibilities of the |
Department of Central Management Services relating to |
jurisdiction over the Council are transferred to the |
Commission. |
(c) All books, records, papers, documents, property, |
contracts, causes of action, and pending
business pertaining to |
the powers, duties, rights, and
responsibilities of the |
Department of Central Management Services relating to |
jurisdiction over the Council are transferred to the |
Commission. |
(30 ILCS 575/7) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.607) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2024) |
Sec. 7. Exemptions; waivers; publication of data. |
|
(1) Individual contract exemptions.
The Council, at the |
written request of the affected agency,
public institution of |
higher education, or recipient of a grant or loan of State |
funds of $250,000 or more complying with Section 45 of the |
State Finance Act, may permit an individual contract or |
contract package,
(related contracts being bid or awarded |
simultaneously for the same project
or improvements) be made |
wholly or partially exempt from State contracting
goals for |
businesses owned by
minorities, women, and persons with |
disabilities prior to the advertisement
for bids or |
solicitation of proposals whenever there has been a
|
determination, reduced to writing and based on the best |
information
available at the time of the determination, that |
there is an insufficient
number of businesses owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities to ensure |
adequate
competition and an expectation of reasonable prices on |
bids or proposals
solicited for the individual contract or |
contract package in question. Any such exemptions shall be |
given by
the Council to the Bureau on Apprenticeship Programs. |
(a) Written request for contract exemption. A written |
request for an individual contract exemption must include, |
but is not limited to, the following: |
(i) a list of eligible businesses owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities; |
(ii) a clear demonstration that the number of |
eligible businesses identified in subparagraph (i) |
|
above is insufficient to ensure adequate competition; |
(iii) the difference in cost between the contract |
proposals being offered by businesses owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities and |
the agency or public institution of higher education's |
expectations of reasonable prices on bids or proposals |
within that class; and |
(iv) a list of eligible businesses owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with
disabilities that |
the contractor has used in the current and prior fiscal |
years. |
(b) Determination. The Council's determination |
concerning an individual contract exemption must consider, |
at a minimum, the following: |
(i) the justification for the requested exemption, |
including whether diligent efforts were undertaken to |
identify and solicit eligible businesses owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities; |
(ii) the total number of exemptions granted to the |
affected agency, public institution of higher |
education, or recipient of a grant or loan of State |
funds of $250,000 or more complying with Section 45 of |
the State Finance Act that have been granted by the |
Council in the current and prior fiscal years; and |
(iii) the percentage of contracts awarded by the |
agency or public institution of higher education to |
|
eligible businesses owned by minorities, women, and |
persons with disabilities in the current and prior |
fiscal years. |
(2) Class exemptions. |
(a) Creation. The Council, at the written request of |
the affected agency or public institution of higher |
education, may permit an entire
class of
contracts be made |
exempt from State
contracting goals for businesses owned by |
minorities, women, and persons
with disabilities whenever |
there has been a determination, reduced to
writing and |
based on the best information available at the time of the
|
determination, that there is an insufficient number of |
qualified businesses owned by minorities, women, and |
persons with
disabilities to ensure adequate competition |
and an
expectation of reasonable prices on bids or |
proposals within that class. Any such exemption shall be |
given by
the Council to the Bureau on Apprenticeship |
Programs. |
(a-1) Written request for class exemption. A written |
request for a class exemption must include, but is not |
limited to, the following: |
(i) a list of eligible businesses owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities; |
(ii) a clear demonstration that the number of |
eligible businesses identified in subparagraph (i) |
above is insufficient to ensure adequate competition; |
|
(iii) the difference in cost between the contract |
proposals being offered by eligible businesses owned |
by minorities, women, and persons with disabilities |
and the agency or public institution of higher |
education's expectations of reasonable prices on bids |
or proposals within that class; and |
(iv) the number of class exemptions the affected |
agency or public institution
of higher education |
requested in the current and prior fiscal years. |
(a-2) Determination. The Council's determination |
concerning class exemptions must consider, at a minimum, |
the following: |
(i) the justification for the requested exemption, |
including whether diligent efforts were undertaken to |
identify and solicit eligible businesses owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities; |
(ii) the total number of class exemptions granted |
to the requesting agency or public institution of |
higher education that have been granted by the Council |
in the current and prior fiscal years; and |
(iii) the percentage of contracts awarded by the |
agency or public institution of higher education to |
eligible businesses owned by minorities, women, and |
persons with disabilities the current and prior fiscal |
years. |
(b) Limitation. Any such class exemption shall not be |
|
permitted for a
period of more than one year at a time. |
(3) Waivers. Where a particular contract requires a |
contractor to meet
a goal established pursuant to this Act, the |
contractor shall have the right
to request from the Council, in |
consultation with the Commission, a waiver from such |
requirements. The Council may grant the waiver only upon a |
demonstration by the contractor of unreasonable responses to |
the request for proposals given the class of contract shall |
grant the
waiver where the contractor demonstrates that there |
has been made a good
faith effort to comply with the goals for
|
participation by businesses owned by minorities, women, and |
persons with
disabilities . Any such waiver shall also be
|
transmitted in writing to the Bureau on Apprenticeship |
Programs. |
(a) Request for waiver. A contractor's request for a |
waiver under this subsection (3) must include, but is not |
limited to, the following, if available: |
(i) a list of eligible businesses owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities that |
pertain to the class of contracts in the requested |
waiver . Eligible businesses are only eligible if the |
business is certified for the products or work |
advertised in the solicitation ; |
(ii) (Blank); a clear demonstration that the |
number of eligible businesses identified in |
subparagraph (i) above is insufficient to ensure |
|
competition; |
(iii) the difference in cost between the contract |
proposals being offered by businesses owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities and |
the agency or the public institution of higher |
education's expectations of reasonable prices on bids |
or proposals within that class; and |
(iv) a list of businesses owned by minorities, |
women, and persons with disabilities that the |
contractor has used in the current and prior fiscal |
years. |
(b) Determination. The Council's determination , in |
consultation with the Commission, concerning waivers must |
include following: |
(i) the justification for the requested waiver, |
including whether the requesting contractor made a |
proper demonstration of unreasonable responses to the |
request for proposals given the class of contract good |
faith effort to identify and solicit eligible |
businesses owned by minorities, women, and persons |
with disabilities ; |
(ii) the total number of waivers the contractor has |
been granted by the Council in the current and prior |
fiscal years; |
(iii) the percentage of contracts awarded by the |
agency or public institution of higher education to |
|
eligible businesses owned by minorities, women, and |
persons with disabilities in the current and prior |
fiscal years; and |
(iv) the contractor's use of businesses owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities in |
the current and prior fiscal years. |
(3.5) (Blank). |
(4) Conflict with other laws. In the event that any State |
contract, which
otherwise would be subject to the provisions of |
this Act, is or becomes
subject to federal laws or regulations |
which conflict with the provisions
of this Act or actions of |
the State taken pursuant hereto, the provisions
of the federal |
laws or regulations shall apply and the contract shall be
|
interpreted and enforced accordingly. |
(5) Each chief procurement officer, as defined in the |
Illinois Procurement Code, shall maintain on his or her |
official Internet website a database of the following: (i) |
waivers granted under this Section with respect to contracts |
under his or her jurisdiction; (ii) a State agency or public |
institution of higher education's written request for an |
exemption of an individual contract or an entire class of |
contracts; and (iii) the Council's written determination |
granting or denying a request for an exemption of an individual |
contract or an entire class of contracts. The database, which |
shall be updated periodically as necessary, shall be searchable |
by contractor name and by contracting State agency. |
|
(6) Each chief procurement officer, as defined by the |
Illinois Procurement Code, shall maintain on its website a list |
of all firms that have been prohibited from bidding, offering, |
or entering into a contract with the State of Illinois as a |
result of violations of this Act. |
Each public notice required by law of the award of a State |
contract shall include for each bid or offer submitted for that |
contract the following: (i) the bidder's or offeror's name, |
(ii) the bid amount, (iii) the name or names of the certified |
firms identified in the bidder's or offeror's submitted |
utilization plan, and (iv) the bid's amount and percentage of |
the contract awarded to businesses owned by minorities, women, |
and persons with disabilities identified in the utilization |
plan. |
(Source: P.A. 100-391, eff. 8-25-17; 101-170, eff. 1-1-20; |
101-601, eff. 1-1-20.)
|
(30 ILCS 575/8) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.608)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2024)
|
Sec. 8. Enforcement. |
(1) The Commission on Equity and Inclusion Council shall |
make such findings, recommendations
and proposals to the |
Governor as are necessary and appropriate to enforce
this Act. |
If, as a result of its monitoring activities, the Commission |
Council determines
that its goals and policies are not being |
met by any State agency or public institution of higher |
|
education,
the Commission Council
may recommend any or all of |
the following actions:
|
(a) Establish enforcement procedures whereby the |
Commission Council may recommend
to the appropriate State |
agency, public institutions of higher education, or law |
enforcement
officer that legal or
administrative remedies |
be initiated for violations of contract provisions
or rules |
issued hereunder or by a contracting State agency or public |
institutions of higher education. State agencies and |
public institutions of higher education
shall be |
authorized to adopt remedies for such violations which |
shall include
(1) termination of the contract involved, (2) |
prohibition of participation
of the respondents in public |
contracts for a period not to exceed one year,
(3) |
imposition of a penalty not to exceed any profit acquired |
as a result
of violation, or (4) any combination thereof.
|
(b) If the Commission Council concludes that a |
compliance plan submitted under Section
6 is unlikely to |
produce the
participation
goals for businesses owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with
disabilities within |
the then current fiscal year, the Commission Council may |
recommend
that
the State agency or public institution of |
higher education revise its plan to provide
additional
|
opportunities
for participation by businesses owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities. Such |
recommended revisions may
include, but shall not be limited |
|
to, the following:
|
(i) assurances of stronger and better focused |
solicitation efforts to
obtain more businesses owned |
by minorities, women, and persons with disabilities as |
potential sources of
supply;
|
(ii) division of job or project requirements, when |
economically feasible,
into tasks or quantities to |
permit participation of
businesses owned by |
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities;
|
(iii) elimination of extended experience or |
capitalization requirements,
when programmatically |
feasible, to permit participation of businesses owned |
by minorities, women, and persons with
disabilities;
|
(iv) identification of specific proposed contracts |
as particularly
attractive or appropriate for |
participation by
businesses owned by minorities, |
women, and persons with disabilities,
such |
identification to result from and be coupled with the
|
efforts of subparagraphs
(i) through (iii);
|
(v) implementation of those regulations |
established for the use of the
sheltered market |
process.
|
(2) State agencies and public institutions of higher |
education shall review a vendor's compliance with its |
utilization plan and the terms of its contract. Without |
limitation, a vendor's failure to comply with its contractual |
|
commitments as contained in the utilization plan; failure to |
cooperate in providing information regarding its compliance |
with its utilization plan; or the provision of false or |
misleading information or statements concerning compliance, |
certification status, or eligibility of the Business |
Enterprise Program-certified vendor, good faith efforts, or |
any other material fact or representation shall constitute a |
material breach of the contract and entitle the State agency or |
public institution of higher education to declare a default, |
terminate the contract, or exercise those remedies provided for |
in the contract, at law, or in equity. |
(3) A vendor shall be in breach of the contract and may be |
subject to penalties for failure to meet contract goals |
established under this Act, unless the vendor can show that it |
made good faith efforts to meet the contract goals. |
(Source: P.A. 99-462, eff. 8-25-15; 100-391, eff. 8-25-17 .)
|
Article 45. |
Section 45-5. The Technology Development Act is amended by |
changing Sections 10, 11, and 20 as follows: |
(30 ILCS 265/10)
|
Sec. 10. Technology Development Account.
|
(a) The State Treasurer may segregate a portion of the |
Treasurer's
investment
portfolio, that at no time shall be |
|
greater than 1% of the portfolio, in the
Technology Development |
Account, an account that shall be maintained separately
and |
apart from other moneys invested by the Treasurer. The |
Treasurer may make
investments from the Account that help |
attract, assist, and retain quality
technology businesses in |
Illinois. The earnings on the Account shall be
accounted for |
separately from other investments made by the Treasurer.
|
(b) Moneys in the Account may be invested by the State |
Treasurer
to
provide venture capital to technology businesses |
seeking to locate, expand, or
remain in
Illinois by placing |
money with Illinois venture capital firms for investment by
the |
venture
capital firms in technology businesses. "Venture |
capital", as used in this
Act, means
equity financing that is |
provided for starting up, expanding, or relocating a
company, |
or
related purposes such as financing for seed capital, |
research and development,
introduction of a product or process |
into the marketplace, or similar needs
requiring risk
capital. |
"Technology business", as used in this Act, means a company |
that has
as its
principal function the providing of services |
including computer, information
transfer,
communication, |
distribution, processing, administrative, laboratory,
|
experimental,
developmental, technical, testing services, |
manufacture of goods or materials,
the
processing of goods or |
materials by physical or chemical change, computer
related
|
activities, robotics, biological or pharmaceutical industrial |
activity, or
technology
oriented or emerging industrial |
|
activity. "Illinois venture capital firms", as
used in this
|
Act, means an entity that has a majority of its
employees in
|
Illinois or that has at least one managing partner domiciled in |
Illinois that
has made significant capital investments in |
Illinois companies and that
provides equity financing for |
starting up or expanding a
company, or
related purposes such as |
financing for seed capital, research and development,
|
introduction of a product or process into the marketplace, or |
similar needs
requiring risk
capital.
|
(c) Any fund created by an Illinois venture capital firm in |
which the State
Treasurer places money pursuant to this Act |
shall be required by the State
Treasurer to
seek investments in |
technology businesses seeking to locate, expand, or remain
in
|
Illinois.
|
(d) The investment of the State Treasurer in any fund |
created by an Illinois
venture capital firm in which the State |
Treasurer places money pursuant to this Section
Act shall
not |
exceed 10% of the total investments in the fund.
|
(e) The State Treasurer shall not invest more than |
one-third of the
Technology
Development Account in any given |
calendar year.
|
(f) The Treasurer may deposit no more than 15% 10% of the |
earnings of the
investments in the Technology Development |
Account into the Technology
Development Fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-395, eff. 8-1-05.)
|
|
(30 ILCS 265/11) |
Sec. 11. Technology Development Account II. |
(a) Including the amount provided in Section 10 of this |
Act, the State Treasurer shall segregate a portion of the |
Treasurer's State investment portfolio, that at no time shall |
be greater than 5% of the portfolio, in the Technology |
Development Account IIa ("TDA IIa"), an account that shall be |
maintained separately and apart from other moneys invested by |
the Treasurer. Distributions from the investments in TDA IIa |
may be reinvested into TDA IIa without being counted against |
the 5% cap. The aggregate investment in TDA IIa and the |
aggregate commitment of investment capital in a TDA |
II-Recipient Fund shall at no time be greater than 5% of the |
State's investment portfolio, which shall be calculated as: (1) |
the balance at the inception of the State's fiscal year; or (2) |
the average balance in the immediately preceding 5 fiscal |
years, whichever number is greater. Distributions from a TDA |
II-Recipient Fund, in an amount not to exceed the commitment |
amount and total distributions received , may be reinvested into |
TDA IIa without being counted against the 5% cap. The Treasurer |
may make investments from TDA IIa that help attract, assist, |
and retain quality technology businesses in Illinois. The |
earnings on TDA IIa shall be accounted for separately from |
other investments made by the Treasurer. |
(b) The Treasurer may solicit proposals from entities to |
manage and be the General Partner of a separate fund |
|
("Technology Development Account IIb" or "TDA IIb") consisting |
of investments from private sector investors that must invest, |
at the direction of the general partner, in tandem with TDA IIa |
in a pro-rata portion. The Treasurer may enter into an |
agreement with the entity managing TDA IIb to advise on the |
investment strategy of TDA IIa and TDA IIb (collectively |
"Technology Development Account II" or "TDA II") and fulfill |
other mutually agreeable terms. Funds in TDA IIb shall be kept |
separate and apart from moneys in the State treasury. |
(c) All or a portion of the moneys in TDA IIa shall be |
invested by the State Treasurer to provide venture capital to |
technology businesses, including co-investments, seeking to |
locate, expand, or remain in Illinois by placing money with |
Illinois venture capital firms for investment by the venture |
capital firms in technology businesses. "Venture capital", as |
used in this Section, means equity financing that is provided |
for starting up, expanding, or relocating a company, or related |
purposes such as financing for seed capital, research and |
development, introduction of a product or process into the |
marketplace, or similar needs requiring risk capital. |
"Technology business", as used in this Section, means a company |
that has as its principal function the providing of services, |
including computer, information transfer, communication, |
distribution, processing, administrative, laboratory, |
experimental, developmental, technical, or testing services; |
manufacture of goods or materials; the processing of goods or |
|
materials by physical or chemical change; computer related |
activities; robotics, biological, or pharmaceutical industrial |
activities; or technology-oriented or emerging industrial |
activity. "Illinois venture capital firm", as used in this |
Section, means an entity that: (1) has a majority of its |
employees in Illinois (more than 50%) or that has at least one |
general partner or principal domiciled in Illinois, and that |
(2) provides equity financing for starting up or expanding a |
company, or related purposes such as financing for seed |
capital, research and development, introduction of a product or |
process into the marketplace, or similar needs requiring risk |
capital. "Illinois venture capital firm" may also mean an |
entity that has a track record of identifying, evaluating, and |
investing in Illinois companies and that provides equity |
financing for starting up or expanding a company, or related |
purposes such as financing for seed capital, research and |
development, introduction of a product or process into the |
marketplace, or similar needs requiring risk capital. For |
purposes of this Section, "track record" means having made, on |
average, at least one investment in an Illinois company in each |
of its funds if the Illinois venture capital firm has multiple |
funds or at least 2 investments in Illinois companies if the |
Illinois venture capital firm has only one fund. In no case |
shall more than 15% of the capital in the TDA IIa be invested |
in firms based outside of Illinois. |
(d) Any fund created by an Illinois venture capital firm in |
|
which the State Treasurer places money pursuant to this Section |
shall be required by the State Treasurer to seek investments in |
technology businesses seeking to locate, expand, or remain in |
Illinois. Any fund created by an Illinois venture capital firm |
in which the State Treasurer places money under this Section |
("TDA II-Recipient Fund") shall invest a minimum of twice (2x) |
the aggregate amount of investable capital that is received |
from the State Treasurer under this Section in Illinois |
companies during the life of the fund. "Illinois companies", as |
used in this Section, are companies that are headquartered or |
that otherwise have a significant presence in the State at the |
time of initial or follow-on investment. Investable capital is |
calculated as committed capital, as defined in the firm's |
applicable fund's governing documents, less related estimated |
fees and expenses to be incurred during the life of the fund. |
For the purposes of this subsection (d), "significant presence" |
means at least one physical office and one full-time employee |
within the geographic borders of this State. |
Any TDA II-Recipient Fund shall also invest additional |
capital in Illinois companies during the life of the fund if, |
as determined by the fund's manager, the investment: |
(1) is consistent with the firm's fiduciary |
responsibility to its limited partners; |
(2) is consistent with the fund manager's investment |
strategy; and |
(3) demonstrates the potential to create risk-adjusted |
|
financial returns consistent with the fund manager's |
investment goals. |
In addition to any reporting requirements set forth in |
Section 10 of this Act, any TDA II-Recipient Fund shall report |
the following additional information to the Treasurer on a |
quarterly or annual basis, as determined by the Treasurer, for |
all investments: |
(1) the names of portfolio companies invested in during |
the applicable investment period; |
(2) the addresses of reported portfolio companies; |
(3) the date of the initial (and follow-on) investment; |
(4) the cost of the investment; |
(5) the current fair market value of the investment; |
(6) for Illinois companies, the number of Illinois |
employees on the investment date; and |
(7) for Illinois companies, the current number of |
Illinois employees. |
If, as of the earlier to occur of (i) the fourth year of |
the investment period of any TDA II-Recipient Fund or (ii) when |
that TDA II-Recipient Fund has drawn more than 60% of the |
investable capital of all limited partners, that TDA |
II-Recipient Fund has failed to invest the minimum amount |
required under this subsection (d) in Illinois companies, then |
the Treasurer shall deliver written notice to the manager of |
that fund seeking compliance with the minimum amount |
requirement under this subsection (d). If, after 180 days of |
|
delivery of notice, the TDA II-Recipient Fund has still failed |
to invest the minimum amount required under this subsection (d) |
in Illinois companies, then the Treasurer may elect, in |
writing, to terminate any further commitment to make capital |
contributions to that fund which otherwise would have been made |
under this Section. |
(e) The Notwithstanding the limitation found in subsection |
(d) of Section 10 of this Act, the investment of the State |
Treasurer in any fund created by an Illinois venture capital |
firm in which the State Treasurer places money pursuant to this |
Section shall not exceed 15% of the total TDA IIa account |
balance. |
(f) (Blank). |
(g) The Treasurer may deposit no more than 15% 10% of the |
earnings of the investments in the Technology Development |
Account IIa into the Technology Development Fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1081, eff. 8-24-18.) |
(30 ILCS 265/20)
|
Sec. 20. Technology Development Fund. The Technology |
Development Fund is
created as a special fund outside the State |
treasury with the State Treasurer
as custodian. Moneys in the |
Fund may be used by the State Treasurer to pay
expenses related |
to investments from the Technology Development Account. Moneys
|
in the Fund in excess of those expenses may be provided as |
grants to : (i) Illinois
schools to purchase computers , and to |
|
upgrade technology , and support career and technical |
education; or (ii) incubators, accelerators, innovation |
research, technology transfer, and educational programs that |
provide training, support, and other resources to technology |
businesses to promote the growth of jobs and entrepreneurial |
and venture capital environments in communities of color or |
underrepresented or under-resourced communities in the State .
|
(Source: P.A. 94-395, eff. 8-1-05.)
|
Article 50. |
Section 50-5. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
changing Section 9A-11 as follows:
|
(305 ILCS 5/9A-11) (from Ch. 23, par. 9A-11)
|
Sec. 9A-11. Child care.
|
(a) The General Assembly recognizes that families with |
children need child
care in order to work. Child care is |
expensive and families with low incomes,
including those who |
are transitioning from welfare to work, often struggle to
pay |
the costs of day care. The
General Assembly understands the |
importance of helping low-income working
families become and |
remain self-sufficient. The General Assembly also believes
|
that it is the responsibility of families to share in the costs |
of child care.
It is also the preference of the General |
Assembly that all working poor
families should be treated |
|
equally, regardless of their welfare status.
|
(b) To the extent resources permit, the Illinois Department |
shall provide
child care services to parents or other relatives |
as defined by rule who are
working or participating in |
employment or Department approved
education or training |
programs. At a minimum, the Illinois Department shall
cover the |
following categories of families:
|
(1) recipients of TANF under Article IV participating |
in work and training
activities as specified in the |
personal plan for employment and
self-sufficiency;
|
(2) families transitioning from TANF to work;
|
(3) families at risk of becoming recipients of TANF;
|
(4) families with special needs as defined by rule;
|
(5) working families with very low incomes as defined |
by rule;
|
(6) families that are not recipients of TANF and that |
need child care assistance to participate in education and |
training activities; and |
(7) families with children under the age of 5 who have |
an open intact family services case with the Department of |
Children and Family Services. Any family that receives |
child care assistance in accordance with this paragraph |
shall remain eligible for child care assistance 6 months |
after the child's intact family services case is closed, |
regardless of whether the child's parents or other |
relatives as defined by rule are working or participating |
|
in Department approved employment or education or training |
programs. The Department of Human Services, in |
consultation with the Department of Children and Family |
Services, shall adopt rules to protect the privacy of |
families who are the subject of an open intact family |
services case when such families enroll in child care |
services. Additional rules shall be adopted to offer |
children who have an open intact family services case the |
opportunity to receive an Early Intervention screening and |
other services that their families may be eligible for as |
provided by the Department of Human Services. |
The Department shall specify by rule the conditions of |
eligibility, the
application process, and the types, amounts, |
and duration of services.
Eligibility for
child care benefits |
and the amount of child care provided may vary based on
family |
size, income,
and other factors as specified by rule.
|
The Department shall update the Child Care Assistance |
Program Eligibility Calculator posted on its website to include |
a question on whether a family is applying for child care |
assistance for the first time or is applying for a |
redetermination of eligibility. |
A family's eligibility for child care services shall be |
redetermined no sooner than 12 months following the initial |
determination or most recent redetermination. During the |
12-month periods, the family shall remain eligible for child |
care services regardless of (i) a change in family income, |
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unless family income exceeds 85% of State median income, or |
(ii) a temporary change in the ongoing status of the parents or |
other relatives, as defined by rule, as working or attending a |
job training or educational program. |
In determining income eligibility for child care benefits, |
the Department
annually, at the beginning of each fiscal year, |
shall
establish, by rule, one income threshold for each family |
size, in relation to
percentage of State median income for a |
family of that size, that makes
families with incomes below the |
specified threshold eligible for assistance
and families with |
incomes above the specified threshold ineligible for
|
assistance. Through and including fiscal year 2007, the |
specified threshold must be no less than 50% of the
|
then-current State median income for each family size. |
Beginning in fiscal year 2008, the specified threshold must be |
no less than 185% of the then-current federal poverty level for |
each family size. Notwithstanding any other provision of law or |
administrative rule to the contrary, beginning in fiscal year |
2019, the specified threshold for working families with very |
low incomes as defined by rule must be no less than 185% of the |
then-current federal poverty level for each family size.
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In determining eligibility for
assistance, the Department |
shall not give preference to any category of
recipients
or give |
preference to individuals based on their receipt of benefits |
under this
Code.
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Nothing in this Section shall be
construed as conferring |
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entitlement status to eligible families.
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The Illinois
Department is authorized to lower income |
eligibility ceilings, raise parent
co-payments, create waiting |
lists, or take such other actions during a fiscal
year as are |
necessary to ensure that child care benefits paid under this
|
Article do not exceed the amounts appropriated for those child |
care benefits.
These changes may be accomplished by emergency |
rule under Section 5-45 of the
Illinois Administrative |
Procedure Act, except that the limitation on the number
of |
emergency rules that may be adopted in a 24-month period shall |
not apply.
|
The Illinois Department may contract with other State |
agencies or child care
organizations for the administration of |
child care services.
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(c) Payment shall be made for child care that otherwise |
meets the
requirements of this Section and applicable standards |
of State and local
law and regulation, including any |
requirements the Illinois Department
promulgates by rule in |
addition to the licensure
requirements
promulgated by the |
Department of Children and Family Services and Fire
Prevention |
and Safety requirements promulgated by the Office of the State
|
Fire Marshal, and is provided in any of the following:
|
(1) a child care center which is licensed or exempt |
from licensure
pursuant to Section 2.09 of the Child Care |
Act of 1969;
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(2) a licensed child care home or home exempt from |
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licensing;
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(3) a licensed group child care home;
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(4) other types of child care, including child care |
provided
by relatives or persons living in the same home as |
the child, as determined by
the Illinois Department by |
rule.
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(c-5)
Solely for the purposes of coverage under the |
Illinois Public Labor Relations Act, child and day care home |
providers, including licensed and license exempt, |
participating in the Department's child care assistance |
program shall be considered to be public employees and the |
State of Illinois shall be considered to be their employer as |
of January 1, 2006 (the effective date of Public Act 94-320), |
but not before. The State shall engage in collective bargaining |
with an exclusive representative of child and day care home |
providers participating in the child care assistance program |
concerning their terms and conditions of employment that are |
within the State's control. Nothing in this subsection shall be |
understood to limit the right of families receiving services |
defined in this Section to select child and day care home |
providers or supervise them within the limits of this Section. |
The State shall not be considered to be the employer of child |
and day care home providers for any purposes not specifically |
provided in Public Act 94-320, including, but not limited to, |
purposes of vicarious liability in tort and purposes of |
statutory retirement or health insurance benefits. Child and |
|
day care home providers shall not be covered by the State |
Employees Group Insurance Act of 1971. |
In according child and day care home providers and their |
selected representative rights under the Illinois Public Labor |
Relations Act, the State intends that the State action |
exemption to application of federal and State antitrust laws be |
fully available to the extent that their activities are |
authorized by Public Act 94-320.
|
(d) The Illinois Department shall establish, by rule, a |
co-payment scale that provides for cost sharing by families |
that receive
child care services, including parents whose only |
income is from
assistance under this Code. The co-payment shall |
be based on family income and family size and may be based on |
other factors as appropriate. Co-payments may be waived for |
families whose incomes are at or below the federal poverty |
level.
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(d-5) The Illinois Department, in consultation with its |
Child Care and Development Advisory Council, shall develop a |
plan to revise the child care assistance program's co-payment |
scale. The plan shall be completed no later than February 1, |
2008, and shall include: |
(1) findings as to the percentage of income that the |
average American family spends on child care and the |
relative amounts that low-income families and the average |
American family spend on other necessities of life;
|
(2) recommendations for revising the child care |
|
co-payment scale to assure that families receiving child |
care services from the Department are paying no more than |
they can reasonably afford; |
(3) recommendations for revising the child care |
co-payment scale to provide at-risk children with complete |
access to Preschool for All and Head Start; and |
(4) recommendations for changes in child care program |
policies that affect the affordability of child care.
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(e) (Blank).
|
(f) The Illinois Department shall, by rule, set rates to be |
paid for the
various types of child care. Child care may be |
provided through one of the
following methods:
|
(1) arranging the child care through eligible |
providers by use of
purchase of service contracts or |
vouchers;
|
(2) arranging with other agencies and community |
volunteer groups for
non-reimbursed child care;
|
(3) (blank); or
|
(4) adopting such other arrangements as the Department |
determines
appropriate.
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(f-1) Within 30 days after June 4, 2018 (the effective date |
of Public Act 100-587), the Department of Human Services shall |
establish rates for child care providers that are no less than |
the rates in effect on January 1, 2018 increased by 4.26%. |
(f-5) (Blank). |
(g) Families eligible for assistance under this Section |
|
shall be given the
following options:
|
(1) receiving a child care certificate issued by the |
Department or a
subcontractor of the Department that may be |
used by the parents as payment for
child care and |
development services only; or
|
(2) if space is available, enrolling the child with a |
child care provider
that has a purchase of service contract |
with the Department or a subcontractor
of the Department |
for the provision of child care and development services.
|
The Department may identify particular priority |
populations for whom they may
request special |
consideration by a provider with purchase of service
|
contracts, provided that the providers shall be permitted |
to maintain a balance
of clients in terms of household |
incomes and families and children with special
needs, as |
defined by rule.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-387, eff. 8-25-17; 100-587, eff. 6-4-18; |
100-860, eff. 2-14-19; 100-909, eff. 10-1-18; 100-916, eff. |
8-17-18; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19.)
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Article 99. |
Section 99-99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law, except that Articles 1 and 40 take effect January |
1, 2022. |