Public Act 102-0098
 
HB1443 EnrolledLRB102 03459 BMS 13472 b

    AN ACT concerning regulation.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 1. The Illinois Administrative Procedure Act is
amended by changing Section 5-45 as follows:
 
    (5 ILCS 100/5-45)  (from Ch. 127, par. 1005-45)
    Sec. 5-45. Emergency rulemaking.
    (a) "Emergency" means the existence of any situation that
any agency finds reasonably constitutes a threat to the public
interest, safety, or welfare.
    (b) If any agency finds that an emergency exists that
requires adoption of a rule upon fewer days than is required by
Section 5-40 and states in writing its reasons for that
finding, the agency may adopt an emergency rule without prior
notice or hearing upon filing a notice of emergency rulemaking
with the Secretary of State under Section 5-70. The notice
shall include the text of the emergency rule and shall be
published in the Illinois Register. Consent orders or other
court orders adopting settlements negotiated by an agency may
be adopted under this Section. Subject to applicable
constitutional or statutory provisions, an emergency rule
becomes effective immediately upon filing under Section 5-65
or at a stated date less than 10 days thereafter. The agency's
finding and a statement of the specific reasons for the
finding shall be filed with the rule. The agency shall take
reasonable and appropriate measures to make emergency rules
known to the persons who may be affected by them.
    (c) An emergency rule may be effective for a period of not
longer than 150 days, but the agency's authority to adopt an
identical rule under Section 5-40 is not precluded. No
emergency rule may be adopted more than once in any 24-month
period, except that this limitation on the number of emergency
rules that may be adopted in a 24-month period does not apply
to (i) emergency rules that make additions to and deletions
from the Drug Manual under Section 5-5.16 of the Illinois
Public Aid Code or the generic drug formulary under Section
3.14 of the Illinois Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, (ii)
emergency rules adopted by the Pollution Control Board before
July 1, 1997 to implement portions of the Livestock Management
Facilities Act, (iii) emergency rules adopted by the Illinois
Department of Public Health under subsections (a) through (i)
of Section 2 of the Department of Public Health Act when
necessary to protect the public's health, (iv) emergency rules
adopted pursuant to subsection (n) of this Section, (v)
emergency rules adopted pursuant to subsection (o) of this
Section, or (vi) emergency rules adopted pursuant to
subsection (c-5) of this Section. Two or more emergency rules
having substantially the same purpose and effect shall be
deemed to be a single rule for purposes of this Section.
    (c-5) To facilitate the maintenance of the program of
group health benefits provided to annuitants, survivors, and
retired employees under the State Employees Group Insurance
Act of 1971, rules to alter the contributions to be paid by the
State, annuitants, survivors, retired employees, or any
combination of those entities, for that program of group
health benefits, shall be adopted as emergency rules. The
adoption of those rules shall be considered an emergency and
necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (d) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the State's fiscal year 1999 budget,
emergency rules to implement any provision of Public Act
90-587 or 90-588 or any other budget initiative for fiscal
year 1999 may be adopted in accordance with this Section by the
agency charged with administering that provision or
initiative, except that the 24-month limitation on the
adoption of emergency rules and the provisions of Sections
5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules adopted under this
subsection (d). The adoption of emergency rules authorized by
this subsection (d) shall be deemed to be necessary for the
public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (e) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the State's fiscal year 2000 budget,
emergency rules to implement any provision of Public Act 91-24
or any other budget initiative for fiscal year 2000 may be
adopted in accordance with this Section by the agency charged
with administering that provision or initiative, except that
the 24-month limitation on the adoption of emergency rules and
the provisions of Sections 5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to
rules adopted under this subsection (e). The adoption of
emergency rules authorized by this subsection (e) shall be
deemed to be necessary for the public interest, safety, and
welfare.
    (f) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the State's fiscal year 2001 budget,
emergency rules to implement any provision of Public Act
91-712 or any other budget initiative for fiscal year 2001 may
be adopted in accordance with this Section by the agency
charged with administering that provision or initiative,
except that the 24-month limitation on the adoption of
emergency rules and the provisions of Sections 5-115 and 5-125
do not apply to rules adopted under this subsection (f). The
adoption of emergency rules authorized by this subsection (f)
shall be deemed to be necessary for the public interest,
safety, and welfare.
    (g) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the State's fiscal year 2002 budget,
emergency rules to implement any provision of Public Act 92-10
or any other budget initiative for fiscal year 2002 may be
adopted in accordance with this Section by the agency charged
with administering that provision or initiative, except that
the 24-month limitation on the adoption of emergency rules and
the provisions of Sections 5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to
rules adopted under this subsection (g). The adoption of
emergency rules authorized by this subsection (g) shall be
deemed to be necessary for the public interest, safety, and
welfare.
    (h) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the State's fiscal year 2003 budget,
emergency rules to implement any provision of Public Act
92-597 or any other budget initiative for fiscal year 2003 may
be adopted in accordance with this Section by the agency
charged with administering that provision or initiative,
except that the 24-month limitation on the adoption of
emergency rules and the provisions of Sections 5-115 and 5-125
do not apply to rules adopted under this subsection (h). The
adoption of emergency rules authorized by this subsection (h)
shall be deemed to be necessary for the public interest,
safety, and welfare.
    (i) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the State's fiscal year 2004 budget,
emergency rules to implement any provision of Public Act 93-20
or any other budget initiative for fiscal year 2004 may be
adopted in accordance with this Section by the agency charged
with administering that provision or initiative, except that
the 24-month limitation on the adoption of emergency rules and
the provisions of Sections 5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to
rules adopted under this subsection (i). The adoption of
emergency rules authorized by this subsection (i) shall be
deemed to be necessary for the public interest, safety, and
welfare.
    (j) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of the State's fiscal year
2005 budget as provided under the Fiscal Year 2005 Budget
Implementation (Human Services) Act, emergency rules to
implement any provision of the Fiscal Year 2005 Budget
Implementation (Human Services) Act may be adopted in
accordance with this Section by the agency charged with
administering that provision, except that the 24-month
limitation on the adoption of emergency rules and the
provisions of Sections 5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules
adopted under this subsection (j). The Department of Public
Aid may also adopt rules under this subsection (j) necessary
to administer the Illinois Public Aid Code and the Children's
Health Insurance Program Act. The adoption of emergency rules
authorized by this subsection (j) shall be deemed to be
necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (k) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of the State's fiscal year
2006 budget, emergency rules to implement any provision of
Public Act 94-48 or any other budget initiative for fiscal
year 2006 may be adopted in accordance with this Section by the
agency charged with administering that provision or
initiative, except that the 24-month limitation on the
adoption of emergency rules and the provisions of Sections
5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules adopted under this
subsection (k). The Department of Healthcare and Family
Services may also adopt rules under this subsection (k)
necessary to administer the Illinois Public Aid Code, the
Senior Citizens and Persons with Disabilities Property Tax
Relief Act, the Senior Citizens and Disabled Persons
Prescription Drug Discount Program Act (now the Illinois
Prescription Drug Discount Program Act), and the Children's
Health Insurance Program Act. The adoption of emergency rules
authorized by this subsection (k) shall be deemed to be
necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (l) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of the State's fiscal year
2007 budget, the Department of Healthcare and Family Services
may adopt emergency rules during fiscal year 2007, including
rules effective July 1, 2007, in accordance with this
subsection to the extent necessary to administer the
Department's responsibilities with respect to amendments to
the State plans and Illinois waivers approved by the federal
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services necessitated by the
requirements of Title XIX and Title XXI of the federal Social
Security Act. The adoption of emergency rules authorized by
this subsection (l) shall be deemed to be necessary for the
public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (m) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of the State's fiscal year
2008 budget, the Department of Healthcare and Family Services
may adopt emergency rules during fiscal year 2008, including
rules effective July 1, 2008, in accordance with this
subsection to the extent necessary to administer the
Department's responsibilities with respect to amendments to
the State plans and Illinois waivers approved by the federal
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services necessitated by the
requirements of Title XIX and Title XXI of the federal Social
Security Act. The adoption of emergency rules authorized by
this subsection (m) shall be deemed to be necessary for the
public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (n) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of the State's fiscal year
2010 budget, emergency rules to implement any provision of
Public Act 96-45 or any other budget initiative authorized by
the 96th General Assembly for fiscal year 2010 may be adopted
in accordance with this Section by the agency charged with
administering that provision or initiative. The adoption of
emergency rules authorized by this subsection (n) shall be
deemed to be necessary for the public interest, safety, and
welfare. The rulemaking authority granted in this subsection
(n) shall apply only to rules promulgated during Fiscal Year
2010.
    (o) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of the State's fiscal year
2011 budget, emergency rules to implement any provision of
Public Act 96-958 or any other budget initiative authorized by
the 96th General Assembly for fiscal year 2011 may be adopted
in accordance with this Section by the agency charged with
administering that provision or initiative. The adoption of
emergency rules authorized by this subsection (o) is deemed to
be necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare. The
rulemaking authority granted in this subsection (o) applies
only to rules promulgated on or after July 1, 2010 (the
effective date of Public Act 96-958) through June 30, 2011.
    (p) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Public Act 97-689,
emergency rules to implement any provision of Public Act
97-689 may be adopted in accordance with this subsection (p)
by the agency charged with administering that provision or
initiative. The 150-day limitation of the effective period of
emergency rules does not apply to rules adopted under this
subsection (p), and the effective period may continue through
June 30, 2013. The 24-month limitation on the adoption of
emergency rules does not apply to rules adopted under this
subsection (p). The adoption of emergency rules authorized by
this subsection (p) is deemed to be necessary for the public
interest, safety, and welfare.
    (q) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Articles 7, 8, 9, 11, and
12 of Public Act 98-104, emergency rules to implement any
provision of Articles 7, 8, 9, 11, and 12 of Public Act 98-104
may be adopted in accordance with this subsection (q) by the
agency charged with administering that provision or
initiative. The 24-month limitation on the adoption of
emergency rules does not apply to rules adopted under this
subsection (q). The adoption of emergency rules authorized by
this subsection (q) is deemed to be necessary for the public
interest, safety, and welfare.
    (r) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Public Act 98-651,
emergency rules to implement Public Act 98-651 may be adopted
in accordance with this subsection (r) by the Department of
Healthcare and Family Services. The 24-month limitation on the
adoption of emergency rules does not apply to rules adopted
under this subsection (r). The adoption of emergency rules
authorized by this subsection (r) is deemed to be necessary
for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (s) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Sections 5-5b.1 and 5A-2
of the Illinois Public Aid Code, emergency rules to implement
any provision of Section 5-5b.1 or Section 5A-2 of the
Illinois Public Aid Code may be adopted in accordance with
this subsection (s) by the Department of Healthcare and Family
Services. The rulemaking authority granted in this subsection
(s) shall apply only to those rules adopted prior to July 1,
2015. Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, any
emergency rule adopted under this subsection (s) shall only
apply to payments made for State fiscal year 2015. The
adoption of emergency rules authorized by this subsection (s)
is deemed to be necessary for the public interest, safety, and
welfare.
    (t) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Article II of Public Act
99-6, emergency rules to implement the changes made by Article
II of Public Act 99-6 to the Emergency Telephone System Act may
be adopted in accordance with this subsection (t) by the
Department of State Police. The rulemaking authority granted
in this subsection (t) shall apply only to those rules adopted
prior to July 1, 2016. The 24-month limitation on the adoption
of emergency rules does not apply to rules adopted under this
subsection (t). The adoption of emergency rules authorized by
this subsection (t) is deemed to be necessary for the public
interest, safety, and welfare.
    (u) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of the Burn Victims Relief
Act, emergency rules to implement any provision of the Act may
be adopted in accordance with this subsection (u) by the
Department of Insurance. The rulemaking authority granted in
this subsection (u) shall apply only to those rules adopted
prior to December 31, 2015. The adoption of emergency rules
authorized by this subsection (u) is deemed to be necessary
for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (v) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Public Act 99-516,
emergency rules to implement Public Act 99-516 may be adopted
in accordance with this subsection (v) by the Department of
Healthcare and Family Services. The 24-month limitation on the
adoption of emergency rules does not apply to rules adopted
under this subsection (v). The adoption of emergency rules
authorized by this subsection (v) is deemed to be necessary
for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (w) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Public Act 99-796,
emergency rules to implement the changes made by Public Act
99-796 may be adopted in accordance with this subsection (w)
by the Adjutant General. The adoption of emergency rules
authorized by this subsection (w) is deemed to be necessary
for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (x) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Public Act 99-906,
emergency rules to implement subsection (i) of Section
16-115D, subsection (g) of Section 16-128A, and subsection (a)
of Section 16-128B of the Public Utilities Act may be adopted
in accordance with this subsection (x) by the Illinois
Commerce Commission. The rulemaking authority granted in this
subsection (x) shall apply only to those rules adopted within
180 days after June 1, 2017 (the effective date of Public Act
99-906). The adoption of emergency rules authorized by this
subsection (x) is deemed to be necessary for the public
interest, safety, and welfare.
    (y) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Public Act 100-23,
emergency rules to implement the changes made by Public Act
100-23 to Section 4.02 of the Illinois Act on the Aging,
Sections 5.5.4 and 5-5.4i of the Illinois Public Aid Code,
Section 55-30 of the Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse and
Dependency Act, and Sections 74 and 75 of the Mental Health and
Developmental Disabilities Administrative Act may be adopted
in accordance with this subsection (y) by the respective
Department. The adoption of emergency rules authorized by this
subsection (y) is deemed to be necessary for the public
interest, safety, and welfare.
    (z) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Public Act 100-554,
emergency rules to implement the changes made by Public Act
100-554 to Section 4.7 of the Lobbyist Registration Act may be
adopted in accordance with this subsection (z) by the
Secretary of State. The adoption of emergency rules authorized
by this subsection (z) is deemed to be necessary for the public
interest, safety, and welfare.
    (aa) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
initial implementation of the changes made to Articles 5, 5A,
12, and 14 of the Illinois Public Aid Code under the provisions
of Public Act 100-581, the Department of Healthcare and Family
Services may adopt emergency rules in accordance with this
subsection (aa). The 24-month limitation on the adoption of
emergency rules does not apply to rules to initially implement
the changes made to Articles 5, 5A, 12, and 14 of the Illinois
Public Aid Code adopted under this subsection (aa). The
adoption of emergency rules authorized by this subsection (aa)
is deemed to be necessary for the public interest, safety, and
welfare.
    (bb) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Public Act 100-587,
emergency rules to implement the changes made by Public Act
100-587 to Section 4.02 of the Illinois Act on the Aging,
Sections 5.5.4 and 5-5.4i of the Illinois Public Aid Code,
subsection (b) of Section 55-30 of the Alcoholism and Other
Drug Abuse and Dependency Act, Section 5-104 of the
Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013, and
Section 75 and subsection (b) of Section 74 of the Mental
Health and Developmental Disabilities Administrative Act may
be adopted in accordance with this subsection (bb) by the
respective Department. The adoption of emergency rules
authorized by this subsection (bb) is deemed to be necessary
for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (cc) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Public Act 100-587,
emergency rules may be adopted in accordance with this
subsection (cc) to implement the changes made by Public Act
100-587 to: Sections 14-147.5 and 14-147.6 of the Illinois
Pension Code by the Board created under Article 14 of the Code;
Sections 15-185.5 and 15-185.6 of the Illinois Pension Code by
the Board created under Article 15 of the Code; and Sections
16-190.5 and 16-190.6 of the Illinois Pension Code by the
Board created under Article 16 of the Code. The adoption of
emergency rules authorized by this subsection (cc) is deemed
to be necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (dd) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Public Act 100-864,
emergency rules to implement the changes made by Public Act
100-864 to Section 3.35 of the Newborn Metabolic Screening Act
may be adopted in accordance with this subsection (dd) by the
Secretary of State. The adoption of emergency rules authorized
by this subsection (dd) is deemed to be necessary for the
public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (ee) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Public Act 100-1172,
emergency rules implementing the Illinois Underground Natural
Gas Storage Safety Act may be adopted in accordance with this
subsection by the Department of Natural Resources. The
adoption of emergency rules authorized by this subsection is
deemed to be necessary for the public interest, safety, and
welfare.
    (ff) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
initial implementation of the changes made to Articles 5A and
14 of the Illinois Public Aid Code under the provisions of
Public Act 100-1181, the Department of Healthcare and Family
Services may on a one-time-only basis adopt emergency rules in
accordance with this subsection (ff). The 24-month limitation
on the adoption of emergency rules does not apply to rules to
initially implement the changes made to Articles 5A and 14 of
the Illinois Public Aid Code adopted under this subsection
(ff). The adoption of emergency rules authorized by this
subsection (ff) is deemed to be necessary for the public
interest, safety, and welfare.
    (gg) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Public Act 101-1,
emergency rules may be adopted by the Department of Labor in
accordance with this subsection (gg) to implement the changes
made by Public Act 101-1 to the Minimum Wage Law. The adoption
of emergency rules authorized by this subsection (gg) is
deemed to be necessary for the public interest, safety, and
welfare.
    (hh) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Public Act 101-10,
emergency rules may be adopted in accordance with this
subsection (hh) to implement the changes made by Public Act
101-10 to subsection (j) of Section 5-5.2 of the Illinois
Public Aid Code. The adoption of emergency rules authorized by
this subsection (hh) is deemed to be necessary for the public
interest, safety, and welfare.
    (ii) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Public Act 101-10,
emergency rules to implement the changes made by Public Act
101-10 to Sections 5-5.4 and 5-5.4i of the Illinois Public Aid
Code may be adopted in accordance with this subsection (ii) by
the Department of Public Health. The adoption of emergency
rules authorized by this subsection (ii) is deemed to be
necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (jj) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Public Act 101-10,
emergency rules to implement the changes made by Public Act
101-10 to Section 74 of the Mental Health and Developmental
Disabilities Administrative Act may be adopted in accordance
with this subsection (jj) by the Department of Human Services.
The adoption of emergency rules authorized by this subsection
(jj) is deemed to be necessary for the public interest,
safety, and welfare.
    (kk) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act, and
Public Act 101-27, and this amendatory Act of the 102nd
General Assembly, the Department of Revenue, the Department of
Public Health, the Department of Agriculture, the Department
of State Police, and the Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation may adopt emergency rules in
accordance with this subsection (kk). The rulemaking authority
granted in this subsection (kk) shall apply only to rules
adopted before December 31, 2021. Notwithstanding the
provisions of subsection (c), emergency rules adopted under
this subsection (kk) shall be effective for 180 days. The
adoption of emergency rules authorized by this subsection (kk)
is deemed to be necessary for the public interest, safety, and
welfare.
    (ll) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of the Leveling the Playing
Field for Illinois Retail Act, emergency rules may be adopted
in accordance with this subsection (ll) to implement the
changes made by the Leveling the Playing Field for Illinois
Retail Act. The adoption of emergency rules authorized by this
subsection (ll) is deemed to be necessary for the public
interest, safety, and welfare.
    (mm) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Section 25-70 of the
Sports Wagering Act, emergency rules to implement Section
25-70 of the Sports Wagering Act may be adopted in accordance
with this subsection (mm) by the Department of the Lottery as
provided in the Sports Wagering Act. The adoption of emergency
rules authorized by this subsection (mm) is deemed to be
necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (nn) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the Sports Wagering Act, emergency rules to
implement the Sports Wagering Act may be adopted in accordance
with this subsection (nn) by the Illinois Gaming Board. The
adoption of emergency rules authorized by this subsection (nn)
is deemed to be necessary for the public interest, safety, and
welfare.
    (oo) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of subsection (c) of Section
20 of the Video Gaming Act, emergency rules to implement the
provisions of subsection (c) of Section 20 of the Video Gaming
Act may be adopted in accordance with this subsection (oo) by
the Illinois Gaming Board. The adoption of emergency rules
authorized by this subsection (oo) is deemed to be necessary
for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (pp) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of Section 50 of the Sexual
Assault Evidence Submission Act, emergency rules to implement
Section 50 of the Sexual Assault Evidence Submission Act may
be adopted in accordance with this subsection (pp) by the
Department of State Police. The adoption of emergency rules
authorized by this subsection (pp) is deemed to be necessary
for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (qq) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of the Illinois Works Jobs
Program Act, emergency rules may be adopted in accordance with
this subsection (qq) to implement the Illinois Works Jobs
Program Act. The adoption of emergency rules authorized by
this subsection (qq) is deemed to be necessary for the public
interest, safety, and welfare.
(Source: P.A. 100-23, eff. 7-6-17; 100-554, eff. 11-16-17;
100-581, eff. 3-12-18; 100-587, Article 95, Section 95-5, eff.
6-4-18; 100-587, Article 110, Section 110-5, eff. 6-4-18;
100-864, eff. 8-14-18; 100-1172, eff. 1-4-19; 100-1181, eff.
3-8-19; 101-1, eff. 2-19-19; 101-10, Article 20, Section 20-5,
eff. 6-5-19; 101-10, Article 35, Section 35-5, eff. 6-5-19;
101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-31, Article 15, Section 15-5, eff.
6-28-19; 101-31, Article 25, Section 25-900, eff. 6-28-19;
101-31, Article 35, Section 35-3, eff. 6-28-19; 101-377, eff.
8-16-19; 101-601, eff. 12-10-19.)
 
    Section 5. The Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
Program Act is amended by changing Sections 55, 100, 115, 130,
and 145 and by adding Sections 115.5 and 162 as follows:
 
    (410 ILCS 130/55)
    Sec. 55. Registration of qualifying patients and
designated caregivers.
    (a) The Department of Public Health shall issue registry
identification cards to qualifying patients and designated
caregivers who submit a completed application, and at minimum,
the following, in accordance with Department of Public Health
rules:
        (1) A written certification, on a form developed by
    the Department of Public Health consistent with Section 36
    and issued by a certifying health care professional,
    within 90 days immediately preceding the date of an
    application and submitted by the qualifying patient or his
    or her designated caregiver;
        (2) upon the execution of applicable privacy waivers,
    the patient's medical documentation related to his or her
    debilitating condition and any other information that may
    be reasonably required by the Department of Public Health
    to confirm that the certifying health care professional
    and patient have a bona fide health care
    professional-patient relationship, that the qualifying
    patient is in the certifying health care professional's
    care for his or her debilitating medical condition, and to
    substantiate the patient's diagnosis;
        (3) the application or renewal fee as set by rule;
        (4) the name, address, date of birth, and social
    security number of the qualifying patient, except that if
    the applicant is homeless no address is required;
        (5) the name, address, and telephone number of the
    qualifying patient's certifying health care professional;
        (6) the name, address, and date of birth of the
    designated caregiver, if any, chosen by the qualifying
    patient;
        (7) (blank) the name of the registered medical
    cannabis dispensing organization the qualifying patient
    designates;
        (8) signed statements from the patient and designated
    caregiver asserting that they will not divert medical
    cannabis; and
        (9) (blank).
    (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, a
person provided a written certification for a debilitating
medical condition who has submitted a completed online
application to the Department of Public Health shall receive a
provisional registration and be entitled to purchase medical
cannabis from a specified licensed dispensing organization for
a period of 90 days or until his or her application has been
denied or he or she receives a registry identification card,
whichever is earlier. However, a person may obtain an
additional provisional registration after the expiration of 90
days after the date of application if the Department of Public
Health does not provide the individual with a registry
identification card or deny the individual's application
within those 90 days.
    The provisional registration may not be extended if the
individual does not respond to the Department of Public
Health's request for additional information or corrections to
required application documentation.
    In order for a person to receive medical cannabis under
this subsection, a person must present his or her provisional
registration along with a valid driver's license or State
identification card to the licensed dispensing organization
specified in his or her application. The dispensing
organization shall verify the person's provisional
registration through the Department of Public Health's online
verification system.
    Upon verification of the provided documents, the
dispensing organization shall dispense no more than 2.5 ounces
of medical cannabis during a 14-day period to the person for a
period of 90 days, until his or her application has been
denied, or until he or she receives a registry identification
card from the Department of Public Health, whichever is
earlier.
    Persons with provisional registrations must keep their
provisional registration in his or her possession at all times
when transporting or engaging in the medical use of cannabis.
    (c) No person or business shall charge a fee for
assistance in the preparation, compilation, or submission of
an application to the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
Program or the Opioid Alternative Pilot Program. A violation
of this subsection is a Class C misdemeanor, for which
restitution to the applicant and a fine of up to $1,500 may be
imposed. All fines shall be deposited into the Compassionate
Use of Medical Cannabis Fund after restitution has been made
to the applicant. The Department of Public Health shall refer
individuals making complaints against a person or business
under this Section to the Illinois State Police, who shall
enforce violations of this provision. All application forms
issued by the Department shall state that no person or
business may charge a fee for assistance in the preparation,
compilation, or submission of an application to the
Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program or the Opioid
Alternative Pilot Program.
(Source: P.A. 100-1114, eff. 8-28-18; 101-363, eff. 8-9-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 130/100)
    Sec. 100. Cultivation center agent identification card.
    (a) The Department of Agriculture shall:
        (1) verify the information contained in an application
    or renewal for a cultivation center identification card
    submitted under this Act, and approve or deny an
    application or renewal, within 30 days of receiving a
    completed application or renewal application and all
    supporting documentation required by rule;
        (2) issue a cultivation center agent identification
    card to a qualifying agent within 15 business days of
    approving the application or renewal;
        (3) enter the registry identification number of the
    cultivation center where the agent works; and
        (4) allow for an electronic application process, and
    provide a confirmation by electronic or other methods that
    an application has been submitted.
    (b) A cultivation center agent must keep his or her
identification card visible at all times when on the property
of a cultivation center and during the transportation of
medical cannabis to a registered dispensary organization.
    (c) The cultivation center agent identification cards
shall contain the following:
        (1) the name of the cardholder;
        (2) the date of issuance and expiration date of
    cultivation center agent identification cards;
        (3) a random 10 digit alphanumeric identification
    number containing at least 4 numbers and at least 4
    letters; that is unique to the holder; and
        (4) a photograph of the cardholder.
    (d) The cultivation center agent identification cards
shall be immediately returned to the cultivation center upon
termination of employment.
    (e) Any card lost by a cultivation center agent shall be
reported to the State Police and the Department of Agriculture
immediately upon discovery of the loss.
    (f) An applicant shall be denied a cultivation center
agent identification card if he or she has been convicted of an
excluded offense.
    (g) An agent applicant may begin employment at a
cultivation center while the agent applicant's identification
card application is pending. Upon approval, the Department
shall issue the agent's identification card to the agent. If
denied, the cultivation center and the agent applicant shall
be notified and the agent applicant must cease all activity at
the cultivation center immediately.
(Source: P.A. 98-122, eff. 1-1-14.)
 
    (410 ILCS 130/115)
    Sec. 115. Registration of dispensing organizations.
    (a) The Department of Financial and Professional
Regulation may issue up to 60 dispensing organization
registrations for operation. The Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation may not issue less than the 60
registrations if there are qualified applicants who have
applied with the Department of Financial and Professional
Regulation. The organizations shall be geographically
dispersed throughout the State to allow all registered
qualifying patients reasonable proximity and access to a
dispensing organization.
    (a-5) The For any dispensing organization registered on or
after July 1, 2019, the Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation shall adopt rules to create a
registration process for Social Equity Justice Involved
Applicants and Qualifying Applicants, a streamlined
application, and a Social Equity Justice Involved Medical
Lottery under Section 115.5 to issue the remaining available 5
dispensing organization registrations for operation award not
less than 20% of all available points to applicants that
qualify as Social Equity Applicants. For purposes of this
Section:
    "Disproportionately Impacted Area" means a census tract or
comparable geographic area that satisfies the following
criteria as determined by the Department of Commerce and
Economic Opportunity, that:
        (1) meets at least one of the following criteria:
            (A) the area has a poverty rate of at least 20%
        according to the latest federal decennial census; or
            (B) 75% or more of the children in the area
        participate in the federal free lunch program
        according to reported statistics from the State Board
        of Education; or
            (C) at least 20% of the households in the area
        receive assistance under the Supplemental Nutrition
        Assistance Program; or
            (D) the area has an average unemployment rate, as
        determined by the Illinois Department of Employment
        Security, that is more than 120% of the national
        unemployment average, as determined by the United
        States Department of Labor, for a period of at least 2
        consecutive calendar years preceding the date of the
        application; and
        (2) has high rates of arrest, conviction, and
    incarceration related to sale, possession, use,
    cultivation, manufacture, or transport of cannabis.
    "Qualifying Applicant" means an applicant that: (i)
submitted an application pursuant to Section 15-30 of the
Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act that received at least 85% of
250 application points available under Section 15-30 of the
Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act as the applicant's final
score; (ii) received points at the conclusion of the scoring
process for meeting the definition of a "Social Equity
Applicant" as set forth under the Cannabis Regulation and Tax
Act; and (iii) is an applicant that did not receive a
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License through
a Qualifying Applicant Lottery pursuant to Section 15-35 of
the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act or any Tied Applicant
Lottery conducted under the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act.
    "Social Equity Justice Involved Applicant" means an
applicant that is an Illinois resident and one of the
following that meets one of the following criteria:
        (1) an applicant with at least 51% ownership and
    control by one or more individuals who have resided for at
    least 5 of the preceding 10 years in a Disproportionately
    Impacted Area;
        (2) an applicant with at least 51% of ownership and
    control by one or more individuals who have been arrested
    for, convicted of, or adjudicated delinquent for any
    offense that is eligible for expungement under subsection
    (i) of Section 5.2 of the Criminal Identification Act or
    member of an impacted family; or
        (3) an applicant with at least 51% ownership and
    control by one or more members of an impacted family. for
    applicants with a minimum of 10 full-time employees, an
    applicant with at least 51% of current employees who:
            (A) currently reside in a Disproportionately
        Impacted Area; or
            (B) have been arrested for, convicted of, or
        adjudicated delinquent for any offense that is
        eligible for expungement or member of an impacted
        family.
    (b) A dispensing organization may only operate if it has
been issued a registration from the Department of Financial
and Professional Regulation. The Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation shall adopt rules establishing the
procedures for applicants for dispensing organizations.
    (c) When applying for a dispensing organization
registration, the applicant shall submit, at a minimum, the
following in accordance with Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation rules:
        (1) a non-refundable application fee established by
    rule;
        (2) the proposed legal name of the dispensing
    organization;
        (3) the proposed physical address of the dispensing
    organization;
        (4) the name, address, and date of birth of each
    principal officer and board member of the dispensing
    organization, provided that all those individuals shall be
    at least 21 years of age;
        (5) (blank) information, in writing, regarding any
    instances in which a business or not-for-profit that any
    of the prospective board members managed or served on the
    board was convicted, fined, censured, or had a
    registration suspended or revoked in any administrative or
    judicial proceeding;
        (6) (blank) proposed operating by-laws that include
    procedures for the oversight of the medical cannabis
    dispensing organization and procedures to ensure accurate
    record keeping and security measures that are in
    accordance with the rules applied by the Department of
    Financial and Professional Regulation under this Act. The
    by-laws shall include a description of the enclosed,
    locked facility where medical cannabis will be stored by
    the dispensing organization; and
        (7) (blank) signed statements from each dispensing
    organization agent stating that they will not divert
    medical cannabis.
    (d) The Department of Financial and Professional
Regulation shall conduct a background check of the prospective
dispensing organization agents in order to carry out this
Section. The Department of State Police shall charge a fee for
conducting the criminal history record check, which shall be
deposited in the State Police Services Fund and shall not
exceed the actual cost of the record check. Each person
applying as a dispensing organization agent shall submit a
full set of fingerprints to the Department of State Police for
the purpose of obtaining a State and federal criminal records
check. These fingerprints shall be checked against the
fingerprint records now and hereafter, to the extent allowed
by law, filed in the Department of State Police and Federal
Bureau of Investigation criminal history records databases.
The Department of State Police shall furnish, following
positive identification, all Illinois conviction information
to the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation.
    (e) A dispensing organization must pay a registration fee
set by the Department of Financial and Professional
Regulation.
    (f) An application for a medical cannabis dispensing
organization registration must be denied if any of the
following conditions are met:
        (1) the applicant failed to submit the materials
    required by this Section, including if the applicant's
    plans do not satisfy the security, oversight, or
    recordkeeping rules issued by the Department of Financial
    and Professional Regulation;
        (2) the applicant would not be in compliance with
    local zoning rules issued in accordance with Section 140;
        (3) the applicant does not meet the requirements of
    Section 130;
        (4) one or more of the prospective principal officers
    or board members has been convicted of an excluded
    offense;
        (5) one or more of the prospective principal officers
    or board members has served as a principal officer or
    board member for a registered medical cannabis dispensing
    organization that has had its registration revoked; and
        (6) one or more of the principal officers or board
    members is under 21 years of age.
(Source: P.A. 101-363, eff. 8-9-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 130/115.5 new)
    Sec. 115.5. Social Equity Justice Involved Medical
Lottery.
    (a) In this Section:
    "By lot" has the same meaning as defined in Section 1-10 of
the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act.
    "Qualifying Applicant" has the same meaning as defined in
subsection (a-5) of Section 115.
    "Social Equity Justice Involved Applicant" has the same
meaning as defined in subsection (a-5) of Section 115.
    "Social Equity Justice Involved Medical Lottery" means the
process of issuing 5 available medical cannabis dispensing
organization registrations by lot, conducted by the Department
of Financial and Professional Regulation, for applicants who
are either: (i) Social Equity Justice Involved Applicants; or
(ii) Qualifying Applicants.
    (b) The Department of Financial and Professional
Regulation shall conduct a Social Equity Justice Involved
Medical Lottery to award up to 5 medical cannabis dispensing
organization registrations by lot in accordance with Section
115.
    (c) The Department of Financial and Professional
Regulation shall adopt rules through emergency rulemaking in
accordance with subsection (kk) of Section 5-45 of the
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act to create a registration
process, a streamlined application, an application fee not to
exceed $5,000 for purposes of this Section, and limits on the
number of entries into the Social Equity Justice Involved
Medical Lottery, as well as any other measures to reduce
barriers to enter the cannabis industry. The General Assembly
finds that the adoption of rules to regulate cannabis use is
deemed an emergency and necessary for the public interest,
safety, and welfare.
    (d) Social Equity Justice Involved Applicants awarded a
registration under subsection (a-5) of Section 115 are
eligible to serve purchasers at the same site and a secondary
site under the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act, subject to
application and inspection processes established by the
Department. The licenses issued under this Section shall be
valid for 2 years after the date of issuance and shall renew in
the manner proscribed by the Department.
    (e) No applicant may be awarded more than one medical
cannabis dispensing organization registration at the
conclusion of the lottery conducted under this Section.
    (f) No individual may be listed as a principal officer of
more than one medical cannabis dispensing organization
registration awarded under this Section.
 
    (410 ILCS 130/130)
    Sec. 130. Requirements; prohibitions; penalties;
dispensing organizations.
    (a) The Department of Financial and Professional
Regulation shall implement the provisions of this Section by
rule.
    (b) A dispensing organization shall maintain operating
documents which shall include procedures for the oversight of
the registered dispensing organization and procedures to
ensure accurate recordkeeping.
    (c) A dispensing organization shall implement appropriate
security measures, as provided by rule, to deter and prevent
the theft of cannabis and unauthorized entrance into areas
containing cannabis.
    (d) A dispensing organization may not be located within
1,000 feet of the property line of a pre-existing public or
private preschool or elementary or secondary school or day
care center, day care home, group day care home, or part day
child care facility. A registered dispensing organization may
not be located in a house, apartment, condominium, or an area
zoned for residential use. This subsection shall not apply to
any dispensing organizations registered on or after July 1,
2019.
    (e) A dispensing organization is prohibited from acquiring
cannabis from anyone other than a cultivation center, craft
grower, processing organization, another dispensing
organization, or transporting organization licensed or
registered under this Act or the Cannabis Regulation and Tax
Act registered cultivation center. A dispensing organization
is prohibited from obtaining cannabis from outside the State
of Illinois.
    (f) A registered dispensing organization is prohibited
from dispensing cannabis for any purpose except to assist
registered qualifying patients with the medical use of
cannabis directly or through the qualifying patients'
designated caregivers.
    (g) The area in a dispensing organization where medical
cannabis is stored can only be accessed by dispensing
organization agents working for the dispensing organization,
Department of Financial and Professional Regulation staff
performing inspections, law enforcement or other emergency
personnel, and contractors working on jobs unrelated to
medical cannabis, such as installing or maintaining security
devices or performing electrical wiring.
    (h) A dispensing organization may not dispense more than
2.5 ounces of cannabis to a registered qualifying patient,
directly or via a designated caregiver, in any 14-day period
unless the qualifying patient has a Department of Public
Health-approved quantity waiver. Any Department of Public
Health-approved quantity waiver process must be made available
to qualified veterans.
    (i) Except as provided in subsection (i-5), before medical
cannabis may be dispensed to a designated caregiver or a
registered qualifying patient, a dispensing organization agent
must determine that the individual is a current cardholder in
the verification system and must verify each of the following:
        (1) that the registry identification card presented to
    the registered dispensing organization is valid;
        (2) that the person presenting the card is the person
    identified on the registry identification card presented
    to the dispensing organization agent;
        (3) (blank); and that the dispensing organization is
    the designated dispensing organization for the registered
    qualifying patient who is obtaining the cannabis directly
    or via his or her designated caregiver; and
        (4) that the registered qualifying patient has not
    exceeded his or her adequate supply.
    (i-5) A dispensing organization may dispense medical
cannabis to an Opioid Alternative Pilot Program participant
under Section 62 and to a person presenting proof of
provisional registration under Section 55. Before dispensing
medical cannabis, the dispensing organization shall comply
with the requirements of Section 62 or Section 55, whichever
is applicable, and verify the following:
        (1) that the written certification presented to the
    registered dispensing organization is valid and an
    original document;
        (2) that the person presenting the written
    certification is the person identified on the written
    certification; and
        (3) that the participant has not exceeded his or her
    adequate supply.
    (j) Dispensing organizations shall ensure compliance with
this limitation by maintaining internal, confidential records
that include records specifying how much medical cannabis is
dispensed to the registered qualifying patient and whether it
was dispensed directly to the registered qualifying patient or
to the designated caregiver. Each entry must include the date
and time the cannabis was dispensed. Additional recordkeeping
requirements may be set by rule.
    (k) The health care professional-patient privilege as set
forth by Section 8-802 of the Code of Civil Procedure shall
apply between a qualifying patient and a registered dispensing
organization and its agents with respect to communications and
records concerning qualifying patients' debilitating
conditions.
    (l) A dispensing organization may not permit any person to
consume cannabis on the property of a medical cannabis
organization.
    (m) A dispensing organization may not share office space
with or refer patients to a certifying health care
professional.
    (n) Notwithstanding any other criminal penalties related
to the unlawful possession of cannabis, the Department of
Financial and Professional Regulation may revoke, suspend,
place on probation, reprimand, refuse to issue or renew, or
take any other disciplinary or non-disciplinary action as the
Department of Financial and Professional Regulation may deem
proper with regard to the registration of any person issued
under this Act to operate a dispensing organization or act as a
dispensing organization agent, including imposing fines not to
exceed $10,000 for each violation, for any violations of this
Act and rules adopted in accordance with this Act. The
procedures for disciplining a registered dispensing
organization shall be determined by rule. All final
administrative decisions of the Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation are subject to judicial review under
the Administrative Review Law and its rules. The term
"administrative decision" is defined as in Section 3-101 of
the Code of Civil Procedure.
    (o) Dispensing organizations are subject to random
inspection and cannabis testing by the Department of Financial
and Professional Regulation, and the Illinois State Police,
the Department of Revenue, the Department of Public Health,
the Department of Agriculture, or as provided by rule.
    (p) The Department of Financial and Professional
Regulation shall adopt rules permitting returns, and potential
refunds, for damaged or inadequate products.
    (q) The Department of Financial and Professional
Regulation may issue nondisciplinary citations for minor
violations which may be accompanied by a civil penalty not to
exceed $10,000 per violation. The penalty shall be a civil
penalty or other condition as established by rule. The
citation shall be issued to the licensee and shall contain the
licensee's name, address, and license number, a brief factual
statement, the Sections of the law or rule allegedly violated,
and the civil penalty, if any, imposed. The citation must
clearly state that the licensee may choose, in lieu of
accepting the citation, to request a hearing. If the licensee
does not dispute the matter in the citation with the
Department of Financial and Professional Regulation within 30
days after the citation is served, then the citation shall
become final and shall not be subject to appeal.
(Source: P.A. 100-1114, eff. 8-28-18; 101-363, eff. 8-9-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 130/145)
    Sec. 145. Confidentiality.
    (a) The following information received and records kept by
the Department of Public Health, Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation, Department of Agriculture, or
Department of State Police for purposes of administering this
Act are subject to all applicable federal privacy laws,
confidential, and exempt from the Freedom of Information Act,
and not subject to disclosure to any individual or public or
private entity, except as necessary for authorized employees
of those authorized agencies to perform official duties under
this Act and the following information received and records
kept by Department of Public Health, Department of
Agriculture, Department of Financial and Professional
Regulation, and Department of State Police, excluding any
existing or non-existing Illinois or national criminal history
record information as defined in subsection (d), may be
disclosed to each other upon request:
        (1) Applications and renewals, their contents, and
    supporting information submitted by qualifying patients
    and designated caregivers, including information regarding
    their designated caregivers and certifying health care
    professionals.
        (2) Applications and renewals, their contents, and
    supporting information submitted by or on behalf of
    cultivation centers and dispensing organizations in
    compliance with this Act, including their physical
    addresses. This does not preclude the release of ownership
    information of cannabis business establishment licenses.
        (3) The individual names and other information
    identifying persons to whom the Department of Public
    Health has issued registry identification cards.
        (4) Any dispensing information required to be kept
    under Section 135, Section 150, or Department of Public
    Health, Department of Agriculture, or Department of
    Financial and Professional Regulation rules shall identify
    cardholders and registered cultivation centers by their
    registry identification numbers and medical cannabis
    dispensing organizations by their registration number and
    not contain names or other personally identifying
    information.
        (5) All medical records provided to the Department of
    Public Health in connection with an application for a
    registry card.
    (b) Nothing in this Section precludes the following:
        (1) Department of Agriculture, Department of Financial
    and Professional Regulation, or Public Health employees
    may notify law enforcement about falsified or fraudulent
    information submitted to the Departments if the employee
    who suspects that falsified or fraudulent information has
    been submitted conferred with his or her supervisor and
    both agree that circumstances exist that warrant
    reporting.
        (2) If the employee conferred with his or her
    supervisor and both agree that circumstances exist that
    warrant reporting, Department of Public Health employees
    may notify the Department of Financial and Professional
    Regulation if there is reasonable cause to believe a
    certifying health care professional:
            (A) issued a written certification without a bona
        fide health care professional-patient relationship
        under this Act;
            (B) issued a written certification to a person who
        was not under the certifying health care
        professional's care for the debilitating medical
        condition; or
            (C) failed to abide by the acceptable and
        prevailing standard of care when evaluating a
        patient's medical condition.
        (3) The Department of Public Health, Department of
    Agriculture, and Department of Financial and Professional
    Regulation may notify State or local law enforcement about
    apparent criminal violations of this Act if the employee
    who suspects the offense has conferred with his or her
    supervisor and both agree that circumstances exist that
    warrant reporting.
        (4) Medical cannabis cultivation center agents and
    medical cannabis dispensing organizations may notify the
    Department of Public Health, Department of Financial and
    Professional Regulation, or Department of Agriculture of a
    suspected violation or attempted violation of this Act or
    the rules issued under it.
        (5) Each Department may verify registry identification
    cards under Section 150.
        (6) The submission of the report to the General
    Assembly under Section 160.
    (b-5) Each Department responsible for licensure under this
Act shall publish on the Department's website a list of the
ownership information of cannabis business establishment
licensees under the Department's jurisdiction. The list shall
include, but shall not be limited to, the name of the person or
entity holding each cannabis business establishment license
and the address at which the entity is operating under this
Act. This list shall be published and updated monthly.
    (c) Except for any ownership information released pursuant
to subsection (b-5) or as otherwise authorized or required by
law, it It is a Class B misdemeanor with a $1,000 fine for any
person, including an employee or official of the Department of
Public Health, Department of Financial and Professional
Regulation, or Department of Agriculture or another State
agency or local government, to breach the confidentiality of
information obtained under this Act.
    (d) The Department of Public Health, the Department of
Agriculture, the Department of State Police, and the
Department of Financial and Professional Regulation shall not
share or disclose any existing or non-existing Illinois or
national criminal history record information. For the purposes
of this Section, "any existing or non-existing Illinois or
national criminal history record information" means any
Illinois or national criminal history record information,
including but not limited to the lack of or non-existence of
these records.
(Source: P.A. 101-363, eff. 8-9-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 130/162 new)
    Sec. 162. Market research study. The Illinois Cannabis
Regulation Oversight Officer shall conduct a market research
study on or before January 1, 2022. The study shall evaluate
the ownership demographics of licensees and applicants for
licenses under this Act.
 
    Section 10. The Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act is amended
by changing Sections 1-10, 5-45, 7-30, 10-35, 10-40, 15-15,
15-25, 15-30, 15-35, 15-40, 15-70, 15-85, 15-135, 20-30, 25-5,
25-30, 25-35, 30-5, 30-30, 35-5, 35-25, 35-30, 40-25, 40-30,
55-21, 55-28, and 55-30 and by adding Sections 15-30.20,
15-35.10, 15-35.20, 20-55, 30-55, 35-45, and 40-45 as follows:
 
    (410 ILCS 705/1-10)
    Sec. 1-10. Definitions. In this Act:
    "Adult Use Cultivation Center License" means a license
issued by the Department of Agriculture that permits a person
to act as a cultivation center under this Act and any
administrative rule made in furtherance of this Act.
    "Adult Use Dispensing Organization License" means a
license issued by the Department of Financial and Professional
Regulation that permits a person to act as a dispensing
organization under this Act and any administrative rule made
in furtherance of this Act.
    "Advertise" means to engage in promotional activities
including, but not limited to: newspaper, radio, Internet and
electronic media, and television advertising; the distribution
of fliers and circulars; billboard advertising; and the
display of window and interior signs. "Advertise" does not
mean exterior signage displaying only the name of the licensed
cannabis business establishment.
    "Application points" means the number of points a
Dispensary Applicant receives on an application for a
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License.
    "BLS Region" means a region in Illinois used by the United
States Bureau of Labor Statistics to gather and categorize
certain employment and wage data. The 17 such regions in
Illinois are: Bloomington, Cape Girardeau, Carbondale-Marion,
Champaign-Urbana, Chicago-Naperville-Elgin, Danville,
Davenport-Moline-Rock Island, Decatur, Kankakee, Peoria,
Rockford, St. Louis, Springfield, Northwest Illinois
nonmetropolitan area, West Central Illinois nonmetropolitan
area, East Central Illinois nonmetropolitan area, and South
Illinois nonmetropolitan area.
    "By lot" means a randomized method of choosing between 2
or more Eligible Tied Applicants or 2 or more Qualifying
Applicants.
    "Cannabis" means marijuana, hashish, and other substances
that are identified as including any parts of the plant
Cannabis sativa and including derivatives or subspecies, such
as indica, of all strains of cannabis, whether growing or not;
the seeds thereof, the resin extracted from any part of the
plant; and any compound, manufacture, salt, derivative,
mixture, or preparation of the plant, its seeds, or resin,
including tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and all other naturally
produced cannabinol derivatives, whether produced directly or
indirectly by extraction; however, "cannabis" does not include
the mature stalks of the plant, fiber produced from the
stalks, oil or cake made from the seeds of the plant, any other
compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or
preparation of the mature stalks (except the resin extracted
from it), fiber, oil or cake, or the sterilized seed of the
plant that is incapable of germination. "Cannabis" does not
include industrial hemp as defined and authorized under the
Industrial Hemp Act. "Cannabis" also means cannabis flower,
concentrate, and cannabis-infused products.
    "Cannabis business establishment" means a cultivation
center, craft grower, processing organization, infuser
organization, dispensing organization, or transporting
organization.
    "Cannabis concentrate" means a product derived from
cannabis that is produced by extracting cannabinoids,
including tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), from the plant through
the use of propylene glycol, glycerin, butter, olive oil or
other typical cooking fats; water, ice, or dry ice; or butane,
propane, CO2, ethanol, or isopropanol and with the intended
use of smoking or making a cannabis-infused product. The use
of any other solvent is expressly prohibited unless and until
it is approved by the Department of Agriculture.
    "Cannabis container" means a sealed or resealable,
traceable, container, or package used for the purpose of
containment of cannabis or cannabis-infused product during
transportation.
    "Cannabis flower" means marijuana, hashish, and other
substances that are identified as including any parts of the
plant Cannabis sativa and including derivatives or subspecies,
such as indica, of all strains of cannabis; including raw
kief, leaves, and buds, but not resin that has been extracted
from any part of such plant; nor any compound, manufacture,
salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of such plant, its
seeds, or resin.
    "Cannabis-infused product" means a beverage, food, oil,
ointment, tincture, topical formulation, or another product
containing cannabis or cannabis concentrate that is not
intended to be smoked.
    "Cannabis paraphernalia" means equipment, products, or
materials intended to be used for planting, propagating,
cultivating, growing, harvesting, manufacturing, producing,
processing, preparing, testing, analyzing, packaging,
repackaging, storing, containing, concealing, ingesting, or
otherwise introducing cannabis into the human body.
    "Cannabis plant monitoring system" or "plant monitoring
system" means a system that includes, but is not limited to,
testing and data collection established and maintained by the
cultivation center, craft grower, or processing organization
and that is available to the Department of Revenue, the
Department of Agriculture, the Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation, and the Department of State Police
for the purposes of documenting each cannabis plant and
monitoring plant development throughout the life cycle of a
cannabis plant cultivated for the intended use by a customer
from seed planting to final packaging.
    "Cannabis testing facility" means an entity registered by
the Department of Agriculture to test cannabis for potency and
contaminants.
    "Clone" means a plant section from a female cannabis plant
not yet rootbound, growing in a water solution or other
propagation matrix, that is capable of developing into a new
plant.
    "Community College Cannabis Vocational Training Pilot
Program faculty participant" means a person who is 21 years of
age or older, licensed by the Department of Agriculture, and
is employed or contracted by an Illinois community college to
provide student instruction using cannabis plants at an
Illinois Community College.
    "Community College Cannabis Vocational Training Pilot
Program faculty participant Agent Identification Card" means a
document issued by the Department of Agriculture that
identifies a person as Community College Cannabis Vocational
Training Pilot Program faculty participant.
    "Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License"
means a contingent license awarded to top-scoring applicants
for an Adult Use Dispensing Organization License that reserves
the right to an Adult Use Dispensing Organization License if
the applicant meets certain conditions described in this Act,
but does not entitle the recipient to begin purchasing or
selling cannabis or cannabis-infused products.
    "Conditional Adult Use Cultivation Center License" means a
license awarded to top-scoring applicants for an Adult Use
Cultivation Center License that reserves the right to an Adult
Use Cultivation Center License if the applicant meets certain
conditions as determined by the Department of Agriculture by
rule, but does not entitle the recipient to begin growing,
processing, or selling cannabis or cannabis-infused products.
    "Craft grower" means a facility operated by an
organization or business that is licensed by the Department of
Agriculture to cultivate, dry, cure, and package cannabis and
perform other necessary activities to make cannabis available
for sale at a dispensing organization or use at a processing
organization. A craft grower may contain up to 5,000 square
feet of canopy space on its premises for plants in the
flowering state. The Department of Agriculture may authorize
an increase or decrease of flowering stage cultivation space
in increments of 3,000 square feet by rule based on market
need, craft grower capacity, and the licensee's history of
compliance or noncompliance, with a maximum space of 14,000
square feet for cultivating plants in the flowering stage,
which must be cultivated in all stages of growth in an enclosed
and secure area. A craft grower may share premises with a
processing organization or a dispensing organization, or both,
provided each licensee stores currency and cannabis or
cannabis-infused products in a separate secured vault to which
the other licensee does not have access or all licensees
sharing a vault share more than 50% of the same ownership.
    "Craft grower agent" means a principal officer, board
member, employee, or other agent of a craft grower who is 21
years of age or older.
    "Craft Grower Agent Identification Card" means a document
issued by the Department of Agriculture that identifies a
person as a craft grower agent.
    "Cultivation center" means a facility operated by an
organization or business that is licensed by the Department of
Agriculture to cultivate, process, transport (unless otherwise
limited by this Act), and perform other necessary activities
to provide cannabis and cannabis-infused products to cannabis
business establishments.
    "Cultivation center agent" means a principal officer,
board member, employee, or other agent of a cultivation center
who is 21 years of age or older.
    "Cultivation Center Agent Identification Card" means a
document issued by the Department of Agriculture that
identifies a person as a cultivation center agent.
    "Currency" means currency and coin of the United States.
    "Dispensary" means a facility operated by a dispensing
organization at which activities licensed by this Act may
occur.
    "Dispensary Applicant" means the Proposed Dispensing
Organization Name as stated on an application for a
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License.
    "Dispensing organization" means a facility operated by an
organization or business that is licensed by the Department of
Financial and Professional Regulation to acquire cannabis from
a cultivation center, craft grower, processing organization,
or another dispensary for the purpose of selling or dispensing
cannabis, cannabis-infused products, cannabis seeds,
paraphernalia, or related supplies under this Act to
purchasers or to qualified registered medical cannabis
patients and caregivers. As used in this Act, "dispensing
organization" includes a registered medical cannabis
organization as defined in the Compassionate Use of Medical
Cannabis Program Act or its successor Act that has obtained an
Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License.
    "Dispensing organization agent" means a principal officer,
employee, or agent of a dispensing organization who is 21
years of age or older.
    "Dispensing organization agent identification card" means
a document issued by the Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation that identifies a person as a
dispensing organization agent.
    "Disproportionately Impacted Area" means a census tract or
comparable geographic area that satisfies the following
criteria as determined by the Department of Commerce and
Economic Opportunity, that:
        (1) meets at least one of the following criteria:
            (A) the area has a poverty rate of at least 20%
        according to the latest federal decennial census; or
            (B) 75% or more of the children in the area
        participate in the federal free lunch program
        according to reported statistics from the State Board
        of Education; or
            (C) at least 20% of the households in the area
        receive assistance under the Supplemental Nutrition
        Assistance Program; or
            (D) the area has an average unemployment rate, as
        determined by the Illinois Department of Employment
        Security, that is more than 120% of the national
        unemployment average, as determined by the United
        States Department of Labor, for a period of at least 2
        consecutive calendar years preceding the date of the
        application; and
        (2) has high rates of arrest, conviction, and
    incarceration related to the sale, possession, use,
    cultivation, manufacture, or transport of cannabis.
    "Early Approval Adult Use Cultivation Center License"
means a license that permits a medical cannabis cultivation
center licensed under the Compassionate Use of Medical
Cannabis Program Act as of the effective date of this Act to
begin cultivating, infusing, packaging, transporting (unless
otherwise provided in this Act), processing and selling
cannabis or cannabis-infused product to cannabis business
establishments for resale to purchasers as permitted by this
Act as of January 1, 2020.
    "Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License"
means a license that permits a medical cannabis dispensing
organization licensed under the Compassionate Use of Medical
Cannabis Program Act as of the effective date of this Act to
begin selling cannabis or cannabis-infused product to
purchasers as permitted by this Act as of January 1, 2020.
    "Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization at a
secondary site" means a license that permits a medical
cannabis dispensing organization licensed under the
Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act as of the
effective date of this Act to begin selling cannabis or
cannabis-infused product to purchasers as permitted by this
Act on January 1, 2020 at a different dispensary location from
its existing registered medical dispensary location.
    "Eligible Tied Applicant" means a Tied Applicant that is
eligible to participate in the process by which a remaining
available license is distributed by lot pursuant to a Tied
Applicant Lottery.
    "Enclosed, locked facility" means a room, greenhouse,
building, or other enclosed area equipped with locks or other
security devices that permit access only by cannabis business
establishment agents working for the licensed cannabis
business establishment or acting pursuant to this Act to
cultivate, process, store, or distribute cannabis.
    "Enclosed, locked space" means a closet, room, greenhouse,
building or other enclosed area equipped with locks or other
security devices that permit access only by authorized
individuals under this Act. "Enclosed, locked space" may
include:
        (1) a space within a residential building that (i) is
    the primary residence of the individual cultivating 5 or
    fewer cannabis plants that are more than 5 inches tall and
    (ii) includes sleeping quarters and indoor plumbing. The
    space must only be accessible by a key or code that is
    different from any key or code that can be used to access
    the residential building from the exterior; or
        (2) a structure, such as a shed or greenhouse, that
    lies on the same plot of land as a residential building
    that (i) includes sleeping quarters and indoor plumbing
    and (ii) is used as a primary residence by the person
    cultivating 5 or fewer cannabis plants that are more than
    5 inches tall, such as a shed or greenhouse. The structure
    must remain locked when it is unoccupied by people.
    "Financial institution" has the same meaning as "financial
organization" as defined in Section 1501 of the Illinois
Income Tax Act, and also includes the holding companies,
subsidiaries, and affiliates of such financial organizations.
    "Flowering stage" means the stage of cultivation where and
when a cannabis plant is cultivated to produce plant material
for cannabis products. This includes mature plants as follows:
        (1) if greater than 2 stigmas are visible at each
    internode of the plant; or
        (2) if the cannabis plant is in an area that has been
    intentionally deprived of light for a period of time
    intended to produce flower buds and induce maturation,
    from the moment the light deprivation began through the
    remainder of the marijuana plant growth cycle.
    "Individual" means a natural person.
    "Infuser organization" or "infuser" means a facility
operated by an organization or business that is licensed by
the Department of Agriculture to directly incorporate cannabis
or cannabis concentrate into a product formulation to produce
a cannabis-infused product.
    "Kief" means the resinous crystal-like trichomes that are
found on cannabis and that are accumulated, resulting in a
higher concentration of cannabinoids, untreated by heat or
pressure, or extracted using a solvent.
    "Labor peace agreement" means an agreement between a
cannabis business establishment and any labor organization
recognized under the National Labor Relations Act, referred to
in this Act as a bona fide labor organization, that prohibits
labor organizations and members from engaging in picketing,
work stoppages, boycotts, and any other economic interference
with the cannabis business establishment. This agreement means
that the cannabis business establishment has agreed not to
disrupt efforts by the bona fide labor organization to
communicate with, and attempt to organize and represent, the
cannabis business establishment's employees. The agreement
shall provide a bona fide labor organization access at
reasonable times to areas in which the cannabis business
establishment's employees work, for the purpose of meeting
with employees to discuss their right to representation,
employment rights under State law, and terms and conditions of
employment. This type of agreement shall not mandate a
particular method of election or certification of the bona
fide labor organization.
    "Limited access area" means a room or other area under the
control of a cannabis dispensing organization licensed under
this Act and upon the licensed premises where cannabis sales
occur with access limited to purchasers, dispensing
organization owners and other dispensing organization agents,
or service professionals conducting business with the
dispensing organization, or, if sales to registered qualifying
patients, caregivers, provisional patients, and Opioid
Alternative Pilot Program participants licensed pursuant to
the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act are also
permitted at the dispensary, registered qualifying patients,
caregivers, provisional patients, and Opioid Alternative Pilot
Program participants.
    "Member of an impacted family" means an individual who has
a parent, legal guardian, child, spouse, or dependent, or was
a dependent of an individual who, prior to the effective date
of this Act, was arrested for, convicted of, or adjudicated
delinquent for any offense that is eligible for expungement
under this Act.
    "Mother plant" means a cannabis plant that is cultivated
or maintained for the purpose of generating clones, and that
will not be used to produce plant material for sale to an
infuser or dispensing organization.
    "Ordinary public view" means within the sight line with
normal visual range of a person, unassisted by visual aids,
from a public street or sidewalk adjacent to real property, or
from within an adjacent property.
    "Ownership and control" means ownership of at least 51% of
the business, including corporate stock if a corporation, and
control over the management and day-to-day operations of the
business and an interest in the capital, assets, and profits
and losses of the business proportionate to percentage of
ownership.
    "Person" means a natural individual, firm, partnership,
association, joint stock company, joint venture, public or
private corporation, limited liability company, or a receiver,
executor, trustee, guardian, or other representative appointed
by order of any court.
    "Possession limit" means the amount of cannabis under
Section 10-10 that may be possessed at any one time by a person
21 years of age or older or who is a registered qualifying
medical cannabis patient or caregiver under the Compassionate
Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act.
    "Principal officer" includes a cannabis business
establishment applicant or licensed cannabis business
establishment's board member, owner with more than 1% interest
of the total cannabis business establishment or more than 5%
interest of the total cannabis business establishment of a
publicly traded company, president, vice president, secretary,
treasurer, partner, officer, member, manager member, or person
with a profit sharing, financial interest, or revenue sharing
arrangement. The definition includes a person with authority
to control the cannabis business establishment, a person who
assumes responsibility for the debts of the cannabis business
establishment and who is further defined in this Act.
    "Primary residence" means a dwelling where a person
usually stays or stays more often than other locations. It may
be determined by, without limitation, presence, tax filings;
address on an Illinois driver's license, an Illinois
Identification Card, or an Illinois Person with a Disability
Identification Card; or voter registration. No person may have
more than one primary residence.
    "Processing organization" or "processor" means a facility
operated by an organization or business that is licensed by
the Department of Agriculture to either extract constituent
chemicals or compounds to produce cannabis concentrate or
incorporate cannabis or cannabis concentrate into a product
formulation to produce a cannabis product.
    "Processing organization agent" means a principal officer,
board member, employee, or agent of a processing organization.
    "Processing organization agent identification card" means
a document issued by the Department of Agriculture that
identifies a person as a processing organization agent.
    "Purchaser" means a person 21 years of age or older who
acquires cannabis for a valuable consideration. "Purchaser"
does not include a cardholder under the Compassionate Use of
Medical Cannabis Program Act.
    "Qualifying Applicant" means an applicant that submitted
an application pursuant to Section 15-30 that received at
least 85% of 250 application points available under Section
15-30 as the applicant's final score and meets the definition
of "Social Equity Applicant" as set forth under this Section.
    "Qualifying Social Equity Justice Involved Applicant"
means an applicant that submitted an application pursuant to
Section 15-30 that received at least 85% of 250 application
points available under Section 15-30 as the applicant's final
score and meets the criteria of either paragraph (1) or (2) of
the definition of "Social Equity Applicant" as set forth under
this Section.
    "Qualified Social Equity Applicant" means a Social Equity
Applicant who has been awarded a conditional license under
this Act to operate a cannabis business establishment.
    "Resided" means an individual's primary residence was
located within the relevant geographic area as established by
2 of the following:
        (1) a signed lease agreement that includes the
    applicant's name;
        (2) a property deed that includes the applicant's
    name;
        (3) school records;
        (4) a voter registration card;
        (5) an Illinois driver's license, an Illinois
    Identification Card, or an Illinois Person with a
    Disability Identification Card;
        (6) a paycheck stub;
        (7) a utility bill;
        (8) tax records; or
        (9) any other proof of residency or other information
    necessary to establish residence as provided by rule.
    "Smoking" means the inhalation of smoke caused by the
combustion of cannabis.
    "Social Equity Applicant" means an applicant that is an
Illinois resident that meets one of the following criteria:
        (1) an applicant with at least 51% ownership and
    control by one or more individuals who have resided for at
    least 5 of the preceding 10 years in a Disproportionately
    Impacted Area;
        (2) an applicant with at least 51% ownership and
    control by one or more individuals who:
            (i) have been arrested for, convicted of, or
        adjudicated delinquent for any offense that is
        eligible for expungement under this Act; or
            (ii) is a member of an impacted family;
        (3) for applicants with a minimum of 10 full-time
    employees, an applicant with at least 51% of current
    employees who:
            (i) currently reside in a Disproportionately
        Impacted Area; or
            (ii) have been arrested for, convicted of, or
        adjudicated delinquent for any offense that is
        eligible for expungement under this Act or member of
        an impacted family.
    Nothing in this Act shall be construed to preempt or limit
the duties of any employer under the Job Opportunities for
Qualified Applicants Act. Nothing in this Act shall permit an
employer to require an employee to disclose sealed or expunged
offenses, unless otherwise required by law.
    "Tied Applicant" means an application submitted by a
Dispensary Applicant pursuant to Section 15-30 that received
the same number of application points under Section 15-30 as
the Dispensary Applicant's final score as one or more
top-scoring applications in the same BLS Region and would have
been awarded a license but for the one or more other
top-scoring applications that received the same number of
application points. Each application for which a Dispensary
Applicant was required to pay a required application fee for
the application period ending January 2, 2020 shall be
considered an application of a separate Tied Applicant.
    "Tied Applicant Lottery" means the process established
under 68 Ill. Adm. Code 1291.50 for awarding Conditional Adult
Use Dispensing Organization Licenses pursuant to Sections
15-25 and 15-30 among Eligible Tied Applicants.
    "Tincture" means a cannabis-infused solution, typically
comprised of alcohol, glycerin, or vegetable oils, derived
either directly from the cannabis plant or from a processed
cannabis extract. A tincture is not an alcoholic liquor as
defined in the Liquor Control Act of 1934. A tincture shall
include a calibrated dropper or other similar device capable
of accurately measuring servings.
    "Transporting organization" or "transporter" means an
organization or business that is licensed by the Department of
Agriculture to transport cannabis or cannabis-infused product
on behalf of a cannabis business establishment or a community
college licensed under the Community College Cannabis
Vocational Training Pilot Program.
    "Transporting organization agent" means a principal
officer, board member, employee, or agent of a transporting
organization.
    "Transporting organization agent identification card"
means a document issued by the Department of Agriculture that
identifies a person as a transporting organization agent.
    "Unit of local government" means any county, city,
village, or incorporated town.
    "Vegetative stage" means the stage of cultivation in which
a cannabis plant is propagated to produce additional cannabis
plants or reach a sufficient size for production. This
includes seedlings, clones, mothers, and other immature
cannabis plants as follows:
        (1) if the cannabis plant is in an area that has not
    been intentionally deprived of light for a period of time
    intended to produce flower buds and induce maturation, it
    has no more than 2 stigmas visible at each internode of the
    cannabis plant; or
        (2) any cannabis plant that is cultivated solely for
    the purpose of propagating clones and is never used to
    produce cannabis.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/5-45)
    Sec. 5-45. Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer.
    (a) The position of Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight
Officer is created within the Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation under the Secretary of Financial and
Professional Regulation. The Cannabis Regulation Oversight
Officer serves a coordinating role among State agencies
regarding this Act and the Compassionate Use of Medical
Cannabis Program Act. The Illinois Cannabis Regulation
Oversight Officer shall be appointed by the Governor with the
advice and consent of the Senate. The term of office of the
Officer shall expire on the third Monday of January in
odd-numbered years provided that he or she shall hold office
until a successor is appointed and qualified. In case of
vacancy in office during the recess of the Senate, the
Governor shall make a temporary appointment until the next
meeting of the Senate, when the Governor shall nominate some
person to fill the office, and 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.
    (b) The Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer has
the authority to may:
        (1) maintain a staff;
        (2) make recommendations for administrative and
    statutory policy, statute, and rule changes;
        (3) collect data both in Illinois and outside Illinois
    regarding the regulation of cannabis;
        (4) compile or assist in the compilation of any
    reports required by this Act;
        (5) ensure the coordination of efforts between various
    State agencies involved in regulating and taxing the sale
    of cannabis in Illinois; and
        (6) encourage, promote, suggest, and report best
    practices for ensuring diversity in the cannabis industry
    in Illinois.
    (c) The Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer and
the Officer's staff shall not:
        (1) participate in the issuance or award of any
    cannabis business establishment license licensing or the
    making of awards; or
        (2) participate in discipline related to any cannabis
    business establishment any adjudicative decision-making
    process involving licensing or licensee discipline.
    The Illinois Cannabis Regulation Officer is not prohibited
from coordinating with and making recommendations to agencies
regarding licensing and disciplinary policies and procedures.
    (d) Any funding required for the Illinois Cannabis
Regulation Oversight Officer, its staff, or its activities
shall be drawn from the Cannabis Regulation Fund.
    (e) The Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer
shall commission and publish one or more disparity and
availability studies that a disparity and availability study
by March 1, 2021 that: (1) evaluates whether there exists
discrimination in the State's cannabis industry; and (2) if
so, evaluates the impact of such discrimination on the State
and includes recommendations to the Department of Financial
and Professional Regulation and the Department of Agriculture
for reducing or eliminating any identified barriers to entry
in the cannabis market. Such disparity and availability
studies shall examine each license type issued pursuant to
Sections 15-25, 15-30.1, or 15-35.20, subsection (a) of
Section 30-5, or subsection (a) of Section 35-5, and shall be
initiated within 180 days from the issuance of the first of
each license authorized by those Sections. The results of each
disparity and availability study shall be reported to the
General Assembly and the Governor no later than 12 months
after the commission of each study.
    The Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer shall
forward a copy of its findings and recommendations to the
Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, the
Department of Agriculture, the Department of Commerce and
Economic Opportunity, the General Assembly, and the Governor.
    (f) The Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer may
compile, collect, or otherwise gather data necessary for the
administration of this Act and to carry out the Officer's duty
relating to the recommendation of policy changes. The Illinois
Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer may direct the
Department of Agriculture, Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation, Department of Public Health,
Department of Human Services, and Department of Commerce and
Economic Opportunity to assist in the compilation, collection,
and data gathering authorized pursuant to this subsection. The
Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer shall compile
all of the data into a single report and submit the report to
the Governor and the General Assembly and publish the report
on its website.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/7-30)
    Sec. 7-30. Reporting. By January 1, 2021, and on January 1
of every year thereafter, or upon request by the Illinois
Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer, each cannabis business
establishment licensed under this Act and the Compassionate
Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act shall report to the
Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer, on a form to
be provided by the Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight
Officer, information that will allow it to assess the extent
of diversity in the medical and adult use cannabis industry
and methods for reducing or eliminating any identified
barriers to entry, including access to capital. Failure of a
cannabis business establishment to respond to the request of
the Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer to complete the
form, report, and any other request for information may be
grounds for disciplinary action by the Department of Financial
and Professional Regulation or the Department of Agriculture.
The information to be collected shall be designed to identify
the following:
        (1) the number and percentage of licenses provided to
    Social Equity Applicants and to businesses owned by
    minorities, women, veterans, and people with disabilities;
        (2) the total number and percentage of employees in
    the cannabis industry who meet the criteria in (3)(i) or
    (3)(ii) in the definition of Social Equity Applicant or
    who are minorities, women, veterans, or people with
    disabilities;
        (3) the total number and percentage of contractors and
    subcontractors in the cannabis industry that meet the
    definition of a Social Equity Applicant or who are owned
    by minorities, women, veterans, or people with
    disabilities, if known to the cannabis business
    establishment; and
        (4) recommendations on reducing or eliminating any
    identified barriers to entry, including access to capital,
    in the cannabis industry.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/10-35)
    Sec. 10-35. Limitations and penalties.
    (a) This Act does not permit any person to engage in, and
does not prevent the imposition of any civil, criminal, or
other penalties for engaging in, any of the following conduct:
        (1) undertaking any task under the influence of
    cannabis when doing so would constitute negligence,
    professional malpractice, or professional misconduct;
        (2) possessing cannabis:
            (A) in a school bus, unless permitted for a
        qualifying patient or caregiver pursuant to the
        Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act;
            (B) on the grounds of any preschool or primary or
        secondary school, unless permitted for a qualifying
        patient or caregiver pursuant to the Compassionate Use
        of Medical Cannabis Program Act;
            (C) in any correctional facility;
            (D) in a vehicle not open to the public unless the
        cannabis is in a reasonably secured, sealed or
        resealable container and reasonably inaccessible while
        the vehicle is moving; or
            (E) in a private residence that is used at any time
        to provide licensed child care or other similar social
        service care on the premises;
        (3) using cannabis:
            (A) in a school bus, unless permitted for a
        qualifying patient or caregiver pursuant to the
        Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act;
            (B) on the grounds of any preschool or primary or
        secondary school, unless permitted for a qualifying
        patient or caregiver pursuant to the Compassionate Use
        of Medical Cannabis Program Act;
            (C) in any correctional facility;
            (D) in any motor vehicle;
            (E) in a private residence that is used at any time
        to provide licensed child care or other similar social
        service care on the premises;
            (F) in any public place; or
            (G) knowingly in close physical proximity to
        anyone under 21 years of age who is not a registered
        medical cannabis patient under the Compassionate Use
        of Medical Cannabis Program Act;
        (4) smoking cannabis in any place where smoking is
    prohibited under the Smoke Free Illinois Act;
        (5) operating, navigating, or being in actual physical
    control of any motor vehicle, aircraft, watercraft, or
    snowmobile while using or under the influence of cannabis
    in violation of Section 11-501 or 11-502.1 of the Illinois
    Vehicle Code, Section 5-16 of the Boat Registration and
    Safety Act, or Section 5-7 of the Snowmobile Registration
    and Safety Act;
        (6) facilitating the use of cannabis by any person who
    is not allowed to use cannabis under this Act or the
    Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act;
        (7) transferring cannabis to any person contrary to
    this Act or the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
    Program Act;
        (8) the use of cannabis by a law enforcement officer,
    corrections officer, probation officer, or firefighter
    while on duty; nothing in this Act prevents a public
    employer of law enforcement officers, corrections
    officers, probation officers, paramedics, or firefighters
    from prohibiting or taking disciplinary action for the
    consumption, possession, sales, purchase, or delivery of
    cannabis or cannabis-infused substances while on or off
    duty, unless provided for in the employer's policies.
    However, an employer may not take adverse employment
    action against an employee based solely on the lawful
    possession or consumption of cannabis or cannabis-infused
    substances by members of the employee's household. To the
    extent that this Section conflicts with any applicable
    collective bargaining agreement, the provisions of the
    collective bargaining agreement shall prevail. Further,
    nothing in this Act shall be construed to limit in any way
    the right to collectively bargain over the subject matters
    contained in this Act; or
        (9) the use of cannabis by a person who has a school
    bus permit or a Commercial Driver's License while on duty.
    As used in this Section, "public place" means any place
where a person could reasonably be expected to be observed by
others. "Public place" includes all parts of buildings owned
in whole or in part, or leased, by the State or a unit of local
government. "Public place" includes all areas in a park,
recreation area, wildlife area, or playground owned in whole
or in part, leased, or managed by the State or a unit of local
government. "Public place" does not include a private
residence unless the private residence is used to provide
licensed child care, foster care, or other similar social
service care on the premises.
    (b) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to prevent the
arrest or prosecution of a person for reckless driving or
driving under the influence of cannabis, operating a
watercraft under the influence of cannabis, or operating a
snowmobile under the influence of cannabis if probable cause
exists.
    (c) Nothing in this Act shall prevent a private business
from restricting or prohibiting the use of cannabis on its
property, including areas where motor vehicles are parked.
    (d) Nothing in this Act shall require an individual or
business entity to violate the provisions of federal law,
including colleges or universities that must abide by the
Drug-Free Schools and Communities Act Amendments of 1989, that
require campuses to be drug free.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/10-40)
    Sec. 10-40. Restore, Reinvest, and Renew Program.
    (a) The General Assembly finds that in order to address
the disparities described below, aggressive approaches and
targeted resources to support local design and control of
community-based responses to these outcomes are required. To
carry out this intent, the Restore, Reinvest, and Renew (R3)
Program is created for the following purposes:
        (1) to directly address the impact of economic
    disinvestment, violence, and the historical overuse of
    criminal justice responses to community and individual
    needs by providing resources to support local design and
    control of community-based responses to these impacts;
        (2) to substantially reduce both the total amount of
    gun violence and concentrated poverty in this State;
        (3) to protect communities from gun violence through
    targeted investments and intervention programs, including
    economic growth and improving family violence prevention,
    community trauma treatment rates, gun injury victim
    services, and public health prevention activities;
        (4) to promote employment infrastructure and capacity
    building related to the social determinants of health in
    the eligible community areas.
    (b) In this Section, "Authority" means the Illinois
Criminal Justice Information Authority in coordination with
the Justice, Equity, and Opportunity Initiative of the
Lieutenant Governor's Office.
    (c) Eligibility of R3 Areas. Within 180 days after the
effective date of this Act, the Authority shall identify as
eligible, areas in this State by way of historically
recognized geographic boundaries, to be designated by the
Restore, Reinvest, and Renew Program Board as R3 Areas and
therefore eligible to apply for R3 funding. Local groups
within R3 Areas will be eligible to apply for State funding
through the Restore, Reinvest, and Renew Program Board.
Qualifications for designation as an R3 Area are as follows:
        (1) Based on an analysis of data, communities in this
    State that are high need, underserved, disproportionately
    impacted by historical economic disinvestment, and ravaged
    by violence as indicated by the highest rates of gun
    injury, unemployment, child poverty rates, and commitments
    to and returns from the Illinois Department of
    Corrections.
        (2) The Authority shall send to the Legislative Audit
    Commission and make publicly available its analysis and
    identification of eligible R3 Areas and shall recalculate
    the eligibility data every 4 years. On an annual basis,
    the Authority shall analyze data and indicate if data
    covering any R3 Area or portion of an Area has, for 4
    consecutive years, substantially deviated from the average
    of statewide data on which the original calculation was
    made to determine the Areas, including disinvestment,
    violence, gun injury, unemployment, child poverty rates,
    or commitments to or returns from the Illinois Department
    of Corrections.
    (d) The Restore, Reinvest, and Renew Program Board shall
encourage collaborative partnerships within each R3 Area to
minimize multiple partnerships per Area.
    (e) The Restore, Reinvest, and Renew Program Board is
created and shall reflect the diversity of the State of
Illinois, including geographic, racial, and ethnic diversity.
Using the data provided by the Authority, the Restore,
Reinvest, and Renew Program Board shall be responsible for
designating the R3 Area boundaries and for the selection and
oversight of R3 Area grantees. The Restore, Reinvest, and
Renew Program Board ex officio members shall, within 4 months
after the effective date of this Act, convene the Board to
appoint a full Restore, Reinvest, and Renew Program Board and
oversee, provide guidance to, and develop an administrative
structure for the R3 Program.
            (1) The ex officio members are:
                (A) The Lieutenant Governor, or his or her
            designee, who shall serve as chair.
                (B) The Attorney General, or his or her
            designee.
                (C) The Director of Commerce and Economic
            Opportunity, or his or her designee.
                (D) The Director of Public Health, or his or
            her designee.
                (E) The Director of Corrections, or his or her
            designee.
                (F) The Director of Juvenile Justice, or his
            or her designee.
                (G) The Director of Children and Family
            Services, or his or her designee.
                (H) The Executive Director of the Illinois
            Criminal Justice Information Authority, or his or
            her designee.
                (I) The Director of Employment Security, or
            his or her designee.
                (J) The Secretary of Human Services, or his or
            her designee.
                (K) A member of the Senate, designated by the
            President of the Senate.
                (L) A member of the House of Representatives,
            designated by the Speaker of the House of
            Representatives.
                (M) A member of the Senate, designated by the
            Minority Leader of the Senate.
                (N) A member of the House of Representatives,
            designated by the Minority Leader of the House of
            Representatives.
        (2) Within 90 days after the R3 Areas have been
    designated by the Restore, Reinvest, and Renew Program
    Board, the following members shall be appointed to the
    Board by the R3 board chair:
            (A) Eight public officials of municipal geographic
        jurisdictions in the State that include an R3 Area, or
        their designees;
            (B) Four community-based providers or community
        development organization representatives who provide
        services to treat violence and address the social
        determinants of health, or promote community
        investment, including, but not limited to, services
        such as job placement and training, educational
        services, workforce development programming, and
        wealth building. The community-based organization
        representatives shall work primarily in jurisdictions
        that include an R3 Area and no more than 2
        representatives shall work primarily in Cook County.
        At least one of the community-based providers shall
        have expertise in providing services to an immigrant
        population;
            (C) Two experts in the field of violence
        reduction;
            (D) One male who has previously been incarcerated
        and is over the age of 24 at the time of appointment;
            (E) One female who has previously been
        incarcerated and is over the age of 24 at the time of
        appointment;
            (F) Two individuals who have previously been
        incarcerated and are between the ages of 17 and 24 at
        the time of appointment; and .
            (G) Eight individuals who live or work in an R3
        Area.
        As used in this paragraph (2), "an individual who has
    been previously incarcerated" means a person who has been
    convicted of or pled guilty to one or more felonies, who
    was sentenced to a term of imprisonment, and who has
    completed his or her sentence. Board members shall serve
    without compensation and may be reimbursed for reasonable
    expenses incurred in the performance of their duties from
    funds appropriated for that purpose. Once all its members
    have been appointed as outlined in items (A) through (F)
    of this paragraph (2), the Board may exercise any power,
    perform any function, take any action, or do anything in
    furtherance of its purposes and goals upon the appointment
    of a quorum of its members. The Board terms of the non-ex
    officio and General Assembly Board members shall end 4
    years from the date of appointment. The R3 board chair may
    remove an individual appointed to the Board who does not
    regularly attend Board meetings, based on criteria
    approved by the Board.
    (f) Within 12 months after the effective date of this Act,
the Board shall:
        (1) develop a process to solicit applications from
    eligible R3 Areas;
        (2) develop a standard template for both planning and
    implementation activities to be submitted by R3 Areas to
    the State;
        (3) identify resources sufficient to support the full
    administration and evaluation of the R3 Program, including
    building and sustaining core program capacity at the
    community and State levels;
        (4) review R3 Area grant applications and proposed
    agreements and approve the distribution of resources;
        (5) develop a performance measurement system that
    focuses on positive outcomes;
        (6) develop a process to support ongoing monitoring
    and evaluation of R3 programs; and
        (7) deliver an annual report to the General Assembly
    and to the Governor to be posted on the Governor's Office
    and General Assembly websites and provide to the public an
    annual report on its progress.
    (g) R3 Area grants.
        (1) Grant funds shall be awarded by the Illinois
    Criminal Justice Information Authority, in coordination
    with the R3 board, based on the likelihood that the plan
    will achieve the outcomes outlined in subsection (a) and
    consistent with the requirements of the Grant
    Accountability and Transparency Act. The R3 Program shall
    also facilitate the provision of training and technical
    assistance for capacity building within and among R3
    Areas.
        (2) R3 Program Board grants shall be used to address
    economic development, violence prevention services,
    re-entry services, youth development, and civil legal aid.
        (3) The Restore, Reinvest, and Renew Program Board and
    the R3 Area grantees shall, within a period of no more than
    120 days from the completion of planning activities
    described in this Section, finalize an agreement on the
    plan for implementation. Implementation activities may:
            (A) have a basis in evidence or best practice
        research or have evaluations demonstrating the
        capacity to address the purpose of the program in
        subsection (a);
            (B) collect data from the inception of planning
        activities through implementation, with data
        collection technical assistance when needed, including
        cost data and data related to identified meaningful
        short-term, mid-term, and long-term goals and metrics;
            (C) report data to the Restore, Reinvest, and
        Renew Program Board biannually; and
            (D) report information as requested by the R3
        Program Board.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/15-15)
    Sec. 15-15. Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License.
    (a) Any medical cannabis dispensing organization holding a
valid registration under the Compassionate Use of Medical
Cannabis Program Act as of the effective date of this Act may,
within 60 days of the effective date of this Act, apply to the
Department for an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License to serve purchasers at any medical
cannabis dispensing location in operation on the effective
date of this Act, pursuant to this Section.
    (b) A medical cannabis dispensing organization seeking
issuance of an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License to serve purchasers at any medical
cannabis dispensing location in operation as of the effective
date of this Act shall submit an application on forms provided
by the Department. The application must be submitted by the
same person or entity that holds the medical cannabis
dispensing organization registration and include the
following:
        (1) Payment of a nonrefundable fee of $30,000 to be
    deposited into the Cannabis Regulation Fund;
        (2) Proof of registration as a medical cannabis
    dispensing organization that is in good standing;
        (3) Certification that the applicant will comply with
    the requirements contained in the Compassionate Use of
    Medical Cannabis Program Act except as provided in this
    Act;
        (4) The legal name of the dispensing organization;
        (5) The physical address of the dispensing
    organization;
        (6) The name, address, social security number, and
    date of birth of each principal officer and board member
    of the dispensing organization, each of whom must be at
    least 21 years of age;
        (7) A nonrefundable Cannabis Business Development Fee
    equal to 3% of the dispensing organization's total sales
    between June 1, 2018 to June 1, 2019, or $100,000,
    whichever is less, to be deposited into the Cannabis
    Business Development Fund; and
        (8) Identification of one of the following Social
    Equity Inclusion Plans to be completed by March 31, 2021:
            (A) Make a contribution of 3% of total sales from
        June 1, 2018 to June 1, 2019, or $100,000, whichever is
        less, to the Cannabis Business Development Fund. This
        is in addition to the fee required by item (7) of this
        subsection (b);
            (B) Make a grant of 3% of total sales from June 1,
        2018 to June 1, 2019, or $100,000, whichever is less,
        to a cannabis industry training or education program
        at an Illinois community college as defined in the
        Public Community College Act;
            (C) Make a donation of $100,000 or more to a
        program that provides job training services to persons
        recently incarcerated or that operates in a
        Disproportionately Impacted Area;
            (D) Participate as a host in a cannabis business
        establishment incubator program approved by the
        Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, and
        in which an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
        Organization License holder agrees to provide a loan
        of at least $100,000 and mentorship to incubate, for
        at least a year, a Social Equity Applicant intending
        to seek a license or a licensee that qualifies as a
        Social Equity Applicant. As used in this Section,
        "incubate" means providing direct financial assistance
        and training necessary to engage in licensed cannabis
        industry activity similar to that of the host
        licensee. The Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
        Organization License holder or the same entity holding
        any other licenses issued pursuant to this Act shall
        not take an ownership stake of greater than 10% in any
        business receiving incubation services to comply with
        this subsection. If an Early Approval Adult Use
        Dispensing Organization License holder fails to find a
        business to incubate to comply with this subsection
        before its Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
        Organization License expires, it may opt to meet the
        requirement of this subsection by completing another
        item from this subsection; or
            (E) Participate in a sponsorship program for at
        least 2 years approved by the Department of Commerce
        and Economic Opportunity in which an Early Approval
        Adult Use Dispensing Organization License holder
        agrees to provide an interest-free loan of at least
        $200,000 to a Social Equity Applicant. The sponsor
        shall not take an ownership stake in any cannabis
        business establishment receiving sponsorship services
        to comply with this subsection.
    (b-5) Beginning 90 days after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, an Early
Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization licensee whose
license was issued pursuant to this Section may apply to
relocate within the same geographic district where its
existing associated medical cannabis dispensing organization
dispensary licensed under the Compassionate Use of Medical
Cannabis Act is authorized to operate. A request to relocate
under this subsection is subject to approval by the
Department. An Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
Organization's application to relocate its license under this
subsection shall be deemed approved 30 days following the
submission of a complete application to relocate, unless
sooner approved or denied in writing by the Department. If an
application to relocate is denied, the Department shall
provide, in writing, the specific reason for denial.
    An Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization may
request to relocate under this subsection if:
        (1) its existing location is within the boundaries of
    a unit of local government that prohibits the sale of
    adult use cannabis; or
        (2) the Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
    Organization has obtained the approval of the municipality
    or, if outside the boundaries of a municipality in an
    unincorporated area of the county, the approval of the
    county where the existing license is located to move to
    another location within that unit of local government.
    At no time may an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
Organization dispensary licensed under this Section operate in
a separate facility from its associated medical cannabis
dispensing organization dispensary licensed under the
Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Act. The relocation of
an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
under this subsection shall be subject to Sections 55-25 and
55-28 of this Act.
    (c) The license fee required by paragraph (1) of
subsection (b) of this Section shall be in addition to any
license fee required for the renewal of a registered medical
cannabis dispensing organization license.
    (d) Applicants must submit all required information,
including the requirements in subsection (b) of this Section,
to the Department. Failure by an applicant to submit all
required information may result in the application being
disqualified.
    (e) If the Department receives an application that fails
to provide the required elements contained in subsection (b),
the Department shall issue a deficiency notice to the
applicant. The applicant shall have 10 calendar days from the
date of the deficiency notice to submit complete information.
Applications that are still incomplete after this opportunity
to cure may be disqualified.
    (f) If an applicant meets all the requirements of
subsection (b) of this Section, the Department shall issue the
Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
within 14 days of receiving a completed application unless:
        (1) The licensee or a principal officer is delinquent
    in filing any required tax returns or paying any amounts
    owed to the State of Illinois;
        (2) The Secretary of Financial and Professional
    Regulation determines there is reason, based on documented
    compliance violations, the licensee is not entitled to an
    Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License;
    or
        (3) Any principal officer fails to register and remain
    in compliance with this Act or the Compassionate Use of
    Medical Cannabis Program Act.
    (g) A registered medical cannabis dispensing organization
that obtains an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License may begin selling cannabis,
cannabis-infused products, paraphernalia, and related items to
purchasers under the rules of this Act no sooner than January
1, 2020.
    (h) A dispensing organization holding a medical cannabis
dispensing organization license issued under the Compassionate
Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act must maintain an adequate
supply of cannabis and cannabis-infused products for purchase
by qualifying patients, caregivers, provisional patients, and
Opioid Alternative Pilot Program participants. For the
purposes of this subsection, "adequate supply" means a monthly
inventory level that is comparable in type and quantity to
those medical cannabis products provided to patients and
caregivers on an average monthly basis for the 6 months before
the effective date of this Act.
    (i) If there is a shortage of cannabis or cannabis-infused
products, a dispensing organization holding both a dispensing
organization license under the Compassionate Use of Medical
Cannabis Program Act and this Act shall prioritize serving
qualifying patients, caregivers, provisional patients, and
Opioid Alternative Pilot Program participants before serving
purchasers.
    (j) Notwithstanding any law or rule to the contrary, a
person that holds a medical cannabis dispensing organization
license issued under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
Program Act and an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License may permit purchasers into a limited
access area as that term is defined in administrative rules
made under the authority in the Compassionate Use of Medical
Cannabis Program Act.
    (k) An Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization
License is valid until March 31, 2021. A dispensing
organization that obtains an Early Approval Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License shall receive written or
electronic notice 90 days before the expiration of the license
that the license will expire, and that informs the license
holder that it may apply to renew its Early Approval Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License on forms provided by the
Department. The Department shall renew the Early Approval
Adult Use Dispensing Organization License within 60 days of
the renewal application being deemed complete if:
        (1) the dispensing organization submits an application
    and the required nonrefundable renewal fee of $30,000, to
    be deposited into the Cannabis Regulation Fund;
        (2) the Department has not suspended or permanently
    revoked the Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
    Organization License or a medical cannabis dispensing
    organization license on the same premises for violations
    of this Act, the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
    Program Act, or rules adopted pursuant to those Acts;
        (3) the dispensing organization has completed a Social
    Equity Inclusion Plan as provided by parts (A), (B), and
    (C) of paragraph (8) of subsection (b) of this Section or
    has made substantial progress toward completing a Social
    Equity Inclusion Plan as provided by parts (D) and (E) of
    paragraph (8) of subsection (b) of this Section; and
        (4) the dispensing organization is in compliance with
    this Act and rules.
    (l) The Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization
License renewed pursuant to subsection (k) of this Section
shall expire March 31, 2022. The Early Approval Adult Use
Dispensing Organization Licensee shall receive written or
electronic notice 90 days before the expiration of the license
that the license will expire, and that informs the license
holder that it may apply for an Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License on forms provided by the Department. The
Department shall grant an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
License within 60 days of an application being deemed complete
if the applicant has met all of the criteria in Section 15-36.
    (m) If a dispensing organization fails to submit an
application for renewal of an Early Approval Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License or for an Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License before the expiration dates provided in
subsections (k) and (l) of this Section, the dispensing
organization shall cease serving purchasers and cease all
operations until it receives a renewal or an Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License, as the case may be.
    (n) A dispensing organization agent who holds a valid
dispensing organization agent identification card issued under
the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act and is
an officer, director, manager, or employee of the dispensing
organization licensed under this Section may engage in all
activities authorized by this Article to be performed by a
dispensing organization agent.
    (o) If the Department suspends, permanently revokes, or
otherwise disciplines the Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License of a dispensing organization that also
holds a medical cannabis dispensing organization license
issued under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program
Act, the Department may consider the suspension, permanent
revocation, or other discipline of the medical cannabis
dispensing organization license.
    (p) All fees collected pursuant to this Section shall be
deposited into the Cannabis Regulation Fund, unless otherwise
specified.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/15-25)
    Sec. 15-25. Awarding of Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization Licenses prior to January 1, 2021.
    (a) The Department shall issue up to 75 Conditional Adult
Use Dispensing Organization Licenses before May 1, 2020.
    (b) The Department shall make the application for a
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
available no later than October 1, 2019 and shall accept
applications no later than January 1, 2020.
    (c) To ensure the geographic dispersion of Conditional
Adult Use Dispensing Organization License holders, the
following number of licenses shall be awarded in each BLS
Region as determined by each region's percentage of the
State's population:
        (1) Bloomington: 1
        (2) Cape Girardeau: 1
        (3) Carbondale-Marion: 1
        (4) Champaign-Urbana: 1
        (5) Chicago-Naperville-Elgin: 47
        (6) Danville: 1
        (7) Davenport-Moline-Rock Island: 1
        (8) Decatur: 1
        (9) Kankakee: 1
        (10) Peoria: 3
        (11) Rockford: 2
        (12) St. Louis: 4
        (13) Springfield: 1
        (14) Northwest Illinois nonmetropolitan: 3
        (15) West Central Illinois nonmetropolitan: 3
        (16) East Central Illinois nonmetropolitan: 2
        (17) South Illinois nonmetropolitan: 2
    (d) An applicant seeking issuance of a Conditional Adult
Use Dispensing Organization License shall submit an
application on forms provided by the Department. An applicant
must meet the following requirements:
        (1) Payment of a nonrefundable application fee of
    $5,000 for each license for which the applicant is
    applying, which shall be deposited into the Cannabis
    Regulation Fund;
        (2) Certification that the applicant will comply with
    the requirements contained in this Act;
        (3) The legal name of the proposed dispensing
    organization;
        (4) A statement that the dispensing organization
    agrees to respond to the Department's supplemental
    requests for information;
        (5) From each principal officer, a statement
    indicating whether that person:
            (A) has previously held or currently holds an
        ownership interest in a cannabis business
        establishment in Illinois; or
            (B) has held an ownership interest in a dispensing
        organization or its equivalent in another state or
        territory of the United States that had the dispensing
        organization registration or license suspended,
        revoked, placed on probationary status, or subjected
        to other disciplinary action;
        (6) Disclosure of whether any principal officer has
    ever filed for bankruptcy or defaulted on spousal support
    or child support obligation;
        (7) A resume for each principal officer, including
    whether that person has an academic degree, certification,
    or relevant experience with a cannabis business
    establishment or in a related industry;
        (8) A description of the training and education that
    will be provided to dispensing organization agents;
        (9) A copy of the proposed operating bylaws;
        (10) A copy of the proposed business plan that
    complies with the requirements in this Act, including, at
    a minimum, the following:
            (A) A description of services to be offered; and
            (B) A description of the process of dispensing
        cannabis;
        (11) A copy of the proposed security plan that
    complies with the requirements in this Article, including:
            (A) The process or controls that will be
        implemented to monitor the dispensary, secure the
        premises, agents, and currency, and prevent the
        diversion, theft, or loss of cannabis; and
            (B) The process to ensure that access to the
        restricted access areas is restricted to, registered
        agents, service professionals, transporting
        organization agents, Department inspectors, and
        security personnel;
        (12) A proposed inventory control plan that complies
    with this Section;
        (13) A proposed floor plan, a square footage estimate,
    and a description of proposed security devices, including,
    without limitation, cameras, motion detectors, servers,
    video storage capabilities, and alarm service providers;
        (14) The name, address, social security number, and
    date of birth of each principal officer and board member
    of the dispensing organization; each of those individuals
    shall be at least 21 years of age;
        (15) Evidence of the applicant's status as a Social
    Equity Applicant, if applicable, and whether a Social
    Equity Applicant plans to apply for a loan or grant issued
    by the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity;
        (16) The address, telephone number, and email address
    of the applicant's principal place of business, if
    applicable. A post office box is not permitted;
        (17) Written summaries of any information regarding
    instances in which a business or not-for-profit that a
    prospective board member previously managed or served on
    were fined or censured, or any instances in which a
    business or not-for-profit that a prospective board member
    previously managed or served on had its registration
    suspended or revoked in any administrative or judicial
    proceeding;
        (18) A plan for community engagement;
        (19) Procedures to ensure accurate recordkeeping and
    security measures that are in accordance with this Article
    and Department rules;
        (20) The estimated volume of cannabis it plans to
    store at the dispensary;
        (21) A description of the features that will provide
    accessibility to purchasers as required by the Americans
    with Disabilities Act;
        (22) A detailed description of air treatment systems
    that will be installed to reduce odors;
        (23) A reasonable assurance that the issuance of a
    license will not have a detrimental impact on the
    community in which the applicant wishes to locate;
        (24) The dated signature of each principal officer;
        (25) A description of the enclosed, locked facility
    where cannabis will be stored by the dispensing
    organization;
        (26) Signed statements from each dispensing
    organization agent stating that he or she will not divert
    cannabis;
        (27) The number of licenses it is applying for in each
    BLS Region;
        (28) A diversity plan that includes a narrative of at
    least 2,500 words that establishes a goal of diversity in
    ownership, management, employment, and contracting to
    ensure that diverse participants and groups are afforded
    equality of opportunity;
        (29) A contract with a private security contractor
    agency that is licensed under Section 10-5 of the Private
    Detective, Private Alarm, Private Security, Fingerprint
    Vendor, and Locksmith Act of 2004 in order for the
    dispensary to have adequate security at its facility; and
        (30) Other information deemed necessary by the
    Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer to conduct
    the disparity and availability study referenced in
    subsection (e) of Section 5-45.
    (e) An applicant who receives a Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License under this Section has 180
days from the date of award to identify a physical location for
the dispensing organization retail storefront. Before a
conditional licensee receives an authorization to build out
the dispensing organization from the Department, the
Department shall inspect the physical space selected by the
conditional licensee. The Department shall verify the site is
suitable for public access, the layout promotes the safe
dispensing of cannabis, the location is sufficient in size,
power allocation, lighting, parking, handicapped accessible
parking spaces, accessible entry and exits as required by the
Americans with Disabilities Act, product handling, and
storage. The applicant shall also provide a statement of
reasonable assurance that the issuance of a license will not
have a detrimental impact on the community. The applicant
shall also provide evidence that the location is not within
1,500 feet of an existing dispensing organization, unless the
applicant is a Social Equity Applicant or Social Equity
Justice Involved Applicant located or seeking to locate within
1,500 feet of a dispensing organization licensed under Section
15-15 or Section 15-20. If an applicant is unable to find a
suitable physical address in the opinion of the Department
within 180 days of the issuance of the Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License, the Department may extend the
period for finding a physical address another 180 days if the
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License holder
demonstrates concrete attempts to secure a location and a
hardship. If the Department denies the extension or the
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License holder
is unable to find a location or become operational within 360
days of being awarded a conditional license, the Department
shall rescind the conditional license and award it to the next
highest scoring applicant in the BLS Region for which the
license was assigned, provided the applicant receiving the
license: (i) confirms a continued interest in operating a
dispensing organization; (ii) can provide evidence that the
applicant continues to meet all requirements for holding a
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License set
forth in this Act; and (iii) has not otherwise become
ineligible to be awarded a dispensing organization license. If
the new awardee is unable to accept the Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License, the Department shall award
the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License to
the next highest scoring applicant in the same manner. The new
awardee shall be subject to the same required deadlines as
provided in this subsection.
    (e-5) If, within 180 days of being awarded a Conditional
Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, a dispensing
organization is unable to find a location within the BLS
Region in which it was awarded a Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License because no jurisdiction within
the BLS Region allows for the operation of an Adult Use
Dispensing Organization, the Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation may authorize the Conditional Adult
Use Dispensing Organization License holder to transfer its
license to a BLS Region specified by the Department.
    (f) A dispensing organization that is awarded a
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License pursuant
to the criteria in Section 15-30 shall not purchase, possess,
sell, or dispense cannabis or cannabis-infused products until
the person has received an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
License issued by the Department pursuant to Section 15-36 of
this Act.
    (g) The Department shall conduct a background check of the
prospective organization agents in order to carry out this
Article. The Department of State Police shall charge the
applicant a fee for conducting the criminal history record
check, which shall be deposited into the State Police Services
Fund and shall not exceed the actual cost of the record check.
Each person applying as a dispensing organization agent shall
submit a full set of fingerprints to the Department of State
Police for the purpose of obtaining a State and federal
criminal records check. These fingerprints shall be checked
against the fingerprint records now and hereafter, to the
extent allowed by law, filed in the Department of State Police
and Federal Bureau of Identification criminal history records
databases. The Department of State Police shall furnish,
following positive identification, all Illinois conviction
information to the Department.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/15-30)
    Sec. 15-30. Selection criteria for conditional licenses
awarded under Section 15-25.
    (a) Applicants for a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License must submit all required information,
including the information required in Section 15-25, to the
Department. Failure by an applicant to submit all required
information may result in the application being disqualified.
    (b) If the Department receives an application that fails
to provide the required elements contained in this Section,
the Department shall issue a deficiency notice to the
applicant. The applicant shall have 10 calendar days from the
date of the deficiency notice to resubmit the incomplete
information. Applications that are still incomplete after this
opportunity to cure will not be scored and will be
disqualified.
    (c) The Department will award up to 250 points to complete
applications based on the sufficiency of the applicant's
responses to required information. Applicants will be awarded
points based on a determination that the application
satisfactorily includes the following elements:
        (1) Suitability of Employee Training Plan (15 points).
            The plan includes an employee training plan that
        demonstrates that employees will understand the rules
        and laws to be followed by dispensary employees, have
        knowledge of any security measures and operating
        procedures of the dispensary, and are able to advise
        purchasers on how to safely consume cannabis and use
        individual products offered by the dispensary.
        (2) Security and Recordkeeping (65 points).
            (A) The security plan accounts for the prevention
        of the theft or diversion of cannabis. The security
        plan demonstrates safety procedures for dispensing
        organization agents and purchasers, and safe delivery
        and storage of cannabis and currency. It demonstrates
        compliance with all security requirements in this Act
        and rules.
            (B) A plan for recordkeeping, tracking, and
        monitoring inventory, quality control, and other
        policies and procedures that will promote standard
        recordkeeping and discourage unlawful activity. This
        plan includes the applicant's strategy to communicate
        with the Department and the Department of State Police
        on the destruction and disposal of cannabis. The plan
        must also demonstrate compliance with this Act and
        rules.
            (C) The security plan shall also detail which
        private security contractor licensed under Section
        10-5 of the Private Detective, Private Alarm, Private
        Security, Fingerprint Vendor, and Locksmith Act of
        2004 the dispensary will contract with in order to
        provide adequate security at its facility.
        (3) Applicant's Business Plan, Financials, Operating
    and Floor Plan (65 points).
            (A) The business plan shall describe, at a
        minimum, how the dispensing organization will be
        managed on a long-term basis. This shall include a
        description of the dispensing organization's
        point-of-sale system, purchases and denials of sale,
        confidentiality, and products and services to be
        offered. It will demonstrate compliance with this Act
        and rules.
            (B) The operating plan shall include, at a
        minimum, best practices for day-to-day dispensary
        operation and staffing. The operating plan may also
        include information about employment practices,
        including information about the percentage of
        full-time employees who will be provided a living
        wage.
            (C) The proposed floor plan is suitable for public
        access, the layout promotes safe dispensing of
        cannabis, is compliant with the Americans with
        Disabilities Act and the Environmental Barriers Act,
        and facilitates safe product handling and storage.
        (4) Knowledge and Experience (30 points).
            (A) The applicant's principal officers must
        demonstrate experience and qualifications in business
        management or experience with the cannabis industry.
        This includes ensuring optimal safety and accuracy in
        the dispensing and sale of cannabis.
            (B) The applicant's principal officers must
        demonstrate knowledge of various cannabis product
        strains or varieties and describe the types and
        quantities of products planned to be sold. This
        includes confirmation of whether the dispensing
        organization plans to sell cannabis paraphernalia or
        edibles.
            (C) Knowledge and experience may be demonstrated
        through experience in other comparable industries that
        reflect on the applicant's ability to operate a
        cannabis business establishment.
        (5) Status as a Social Equity Applicant (50 points).
            The applicant meets the qualifications for a
        Social Equity Applicant as set forth in this Act.
        (6) Labor and employment practices (5 points): The
    applicant may describe plans to provide a safe, healthy,
    and economically beneficial working environment for its
    agents, including, but not limited to, codes of conduct,
    health care benefits, educational benefits, retirement
    benefits, living wage standards, and entering a labor
    peace agreement with employees.
        (7) Environmental Plan (5 points): The applicant may
    demonstrate an environmental plan of action to minimize
    the carbon footprint, environmental impact, and resource
    needs for the dispensary, which may include, without
    limitation, recycling cannabis product packaging.
        (8) Illinois owner (5 points): The applicant is 51% or
    more owned and controlled by an Illinois resident, who can
    prove residency in each of the past 5 years with tax
    records or 2 of the following:
            (A) a signed lease agreement that includes the
        applicant's name;
            (B) a property deed that includes the applicant's
        name;
            (C) school records;
            (D) a voter registration card;
            (E) an Illinois driver's license, an Illinois
        Identification Card, or an Illinois Person with a
        Disability Identification Card;
            (F) a paycheck stub;
            (G) a utility bill; or
            (H) any other proof of residency or other
        information necessary to establish residence as
        provided by rule.
        (9) Status as veteran (5 points): The applicant is 51%
    or more controlled and owned by an individual or
    individuals who meet the qualifications of a veteran as
    defined by Section 45-57 of the Illinois Procurement Code.
        (10) A diversity plan (5 points): that includes a
    narrative of not more than 2,500 words that establishes a
    goal of diversity in ownership, management, employment,
    and contracting to ensure that diverse participants and
    groups are afforded equality of opportunity.
    (d) The Department may also award up to 2 bonus points for
a plan to engage with the community. The applicant may
demonstrate a desire to engage with its community by
participating in one or more of, but not limited to, the
following actions: (i) establishment of an incubator program
designed to increase participation in the cannabis industry by
persons who would qualify as Social Equity Applicants; (ii)
providing financial assistance to substance abuse treatment
centers; (iii) educating children and teens about the
potential harms of cannabis use; or (iv) other measures
demonstrating a commitment to the applicant's community. Bonus
points will only be awarded if the Department receives
applications that receive an equal score for a particular
region.
    (e) The Department may verify information contained in
each application and accompanying documentation to assess the
applicant's veracity and fitness to operate a dispensing
organization.
    (f) The Department may, in its discretion, refuse to issue
an authorization to any applicant:
        (1) Who is unqualified to perform the duties required
    of the applicant;
        (2) Who fails to disclose or states falsely any
    information called for in the application;
        (3) Who has been found guilty of a violation of this
    Act, who has had any disciplinary order entered against it
    by the Department, who has entered into a disciplinary or
    nondisciplinary agreement with the Department, or whose
    medical cannabis dispensing organization, medical cannabis
    cultivation organization, or Early Approval Adult Use
    Dispensing Organization License, or Early Approval Adult
    Use Dispensing Organization License at a secondary site,
    or Early Approval Cultivation Center License was
    suspended, restricted, revoked, or denied for just cause,
    or the applicant's cannabis business establishment license
    was suspended, restricted, revoked, or denied in any other
    state; or
        (4) Who has engaged in a pattern or practice of unfair
    or illegal practices, methods, or activities in the
    conduct of owning a cannabis business establishment or
    other business.
    (g) The Department shall deny the license if any principal
officer, board member, or person having a financial or voting
interest of 5% or greater in the licensee is delinquent in
filing any required tax returns or paying any amounts owed to
the State of Illinois.
    (h) The Department shall verify an applicant's compliance
with the requirements of this Article and rules before issuing
a dispensing organization license.
    (i) Should the applicant be awarded a license, the
information and plans provided in the application, including
any plans submitted for bonus points, shall become a condition
of the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses
and any Adult Use Dispensing Organization License issued to
the holder of the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License, except as otherwise provided by this Act
or rule. Dispensing organizations have a duty to disclose any
material changes to the application. The Department shall
review all material changes disclosed by the dispensing
organization, and may re-evaluate its prior decision regarding
the awarding of a license, including, but not limited to,
suspending or permanently revoking a license. Failure to
comply with the conditions or requirements in the application
may subject the dispensing organization to discipline, up to
and including suspension or permanent revocation of its
authorization or license by the Department.
    (j) If an applicant has not begun operating as a
dispensing organization within one year of the issuance of the
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, the
Department may permanently revoke the Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License and award it to the next
highest scoring applicant in the BLS Region if a suitable
applicant indicates a continued interest in the license or
begin a new selection process to award a Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License.
    (k) The Department shall deny an application if granting
that application would result in a single person or entity
having a direct or indirect financial interest in more than 10
Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses,
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses, or
Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses. Any entity that is
awarded a license that results in a single person or entity
having a direct or indirect financial interest in more than 10
licenses shall forfeit the most recently issued license and
suffer a penalty to be determined by the Department, unless
the entity declines the license at the time it is awarded.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/15-30.20 new)
    Sec. 15-30.20. Tied Applicant Lottery; additional
requirements; timing.
    (a) If awarding a license in a Tied Applicant Lottery
would result in a Tied Applicant possessing more than 10 Early
Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses, Early
Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses at a
secondary site, Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
Licenses, Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses, or any
combination thereof, the Tied Applicant must choose which
license to abandon pursuant to subsection (d) of Section 15-36
and notify the Department in writing within 5 business days
after the date that the Tied Applicant Lottery is conducted.
    (b) The Department shall publish the certified results of
a Tied Applicant Lottery within 2 business days after the Tied
Applicant Lottery is conducted.
 
    (410 ILCS 705/15-35)
    Sec. 15-35. Qualifying Applicant Lottery for Conditional
Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses License after
January 1, 2021.
    (a) In addition to any of the licenses issued under
Section in Sections 15-15, Section 15-20, or Section 15-25,
Section 15-30.20, or Section 15-35.10 of this Act, within 10
business days after the resulting final scores for all scored
applications pursuant to Sections 15-25 and 15-30 are
released, by December 21, 2021, the Department shall issue up
to 55 110 Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
Licenses by lot, pursuant to the application process adopted
under this Section. In order to be eligible to be awarded a
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License by lot
under this Section, a Dispensary Applicant must be a
Qualifying Applicant.
    The licenses issued under this Section shall be awarded in
each BLS Region in the following amounts:
        (1) Bloomington: 1.
        (2) Cape Girardeau: 1.
        (3) Carbondale-Marion: 1.
        (4) Champaign-Urbana: 1.
        (5) Chicago-Naperville-Elgin: 36.
        (6) Danville: 1.
        (7) Davenport-Moline-Rock Island: 1.
        (8) Decatur: 1.
        (9) Kankakee: 1.
        (10) Peoria: 2.
        (11) Rockford: 1.
        (12) St. Louis: 3.
        (13) Springfield: 1.
        (14) Northwest Illinois nonmetropolitan: 1.
        (15) West Central Illinois nonmetropolitan: 1.
        (16) East Central Illinois nonmetropolitan: 1.
        (17) South Illinois nonmetropolitan: 1.
    (a-5) Prior to issuing such licenses under subsection (a),
the Department may adopt rules through emergency rulemaking in
accordance with subsection (kk) (gg) of Section 5-45 of the
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. The General Assembly
finds that the adoption of rules to regulate cannabis use is
deemed an emergency and necessary for the public interest,
safety, and welfare. Such rules may:
        (1) Modify or change the BLS Regions as they apply to
    this Article or modify or raise the number of Adult
    Conditional Use Dispensing Organization Licenses assigned
    to each region based on the following factors:
            (A) Purchaser wait times;
            (B) Travel time to the nearest dispensary for
        potential purchasers;
            (C) Percentage of cannabis sales occurring in
        Illinois not in the regulated market using data from
        the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
        Administration, National Survey on Drug Use and
        Health, Illinois Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance
        System, and tourism data from the Illinois Office of
        Tourism to ascertain total cannabis consumption in
        Illinois compared to the amount of sales in licensed
        dispensing organizations;
            (D) Whether there is an adequate supply of
        cannabis and cannabis-infused products to serve
        registered medical cannabis patients;
            (E) Population increases or shifts;
            (F) Density of dispensing organizations in a
        region;
            (G) The Department's capacity to appropriately
        regulate additional licenses;
            (H) The findings and recommendations from the
        disparity and availability study commissioned by the
        Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer in
        subsection (e) of Section 5-45 to reduce or eliminate
        any identified barriers to entry in the cannabis
        industry; and
            (I) Any other criteria the Department deems
        relevant.
        (2) Modify or change the licensing application process
    to reduce or eliminate the barriers identified in the
    disparity and availability study commissioned by the
    Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer and make
    modifications to remedy evidence of discrimination.
    (b) The Department shall distribute the available licenses
established under this Section subject to the following: After
January 1, 2022, the Department may by rule modify or raise the
number of Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses assigned
to each region, and modify or change the licensing application
process to reduce or eliminate barriers based on the criteria
in subsection (a). At no time shall the Department issue more
than 500 Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses.
        (1) The drawing by lot for all available licenses
    issued under this Section shall occur on the same day when
    practicable.
        (2) Within each BLS Region, the first Qualifying
    Applicant drawn will have the first right to an available
    license. The second Qualifying Applicant drawn will have
    the second right to an available license. The same pattern
    will continue for each subsequent Qualifying Applicant
    drawn.
        (3) The process for distributing available licenses
    under this Section shall be recorded by the Department in
    a format selected by the Department.
        (4) A Dispensary Applicant is prohibited from becoming
    a Qualifying Applicant if a principal officer resigns
    after the resulting final scores for all scored
    applications pursuant to Sections 15-25 and 15-30 are
    released.
        (5) No Qualifying Applicant may be awarded more than 2
    Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses at
    the conclusion of a lottery conducted under this Section.
        (6) No individual may be listed as a principal officer
    of more than 2 Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
    Organization Licenses awarded under this Section.
        (7) If, upon being selected for an available license
    established under this Section, a Qualifying Applicant
    exceeds the limits under paragraph (5) or (6), the
    Qualifying Applicant must choose which license to abandon
    and notify the Department in writing within 5 business
    days. If the Qualifying Applicant does not notify the
    Department as required, the Department shall refuse to
    issue the Qualifying Applicant all available licenses
    established under this Section obtained by lot in all BLS
    Regions.
        (8) If, upon being selected for an available license
    established under this Section, a Qualifying Applicant has
    a principal officer who is a principal officer in more
    than 10 Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization
    Licenses, Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
    Licenses, Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses, or
    any combination thereof, the licensees and the Qualifying
    Applicant listing that principal officer must choose which
    license to abandon pursuant to subsection (d) of Section
    15-36 and notify the Department in writing within 5
    business days. If the Qualifying Applicant or licensees do
    not notify the Department as required, the Department
    shall refuse to issue the Qualifying Applicant all
    available licenses established under this Section obtained
    by lot in all BLS Regions.
        (9) All available licenses that have been abandoned
    under paragraph (7) or (8) shall be distributed to the
    next Qualifying Applicant drawn by lot.
    Any and all rights conferred or obtained under this
Section shall be limited to the provisions of this Section.
    (c) An applicant who receives a Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License under this Section has 180
days from the date it is awarded to identify a physical
location for the dispensing organization's retail storefront.
The applicant shall provide evidence that the location is not
within 1,500 feet of an existing dispensing organization,
unless the applicant is a Social Equity Applicant or Social
Equity Justice Involved Applicant located or seeking to locate
within 1,500 feet of a dispensing organization licensed under
Section 15-15 or Section 15-20. If an applicant is unable to
find a suitable physical address in the opinion of the
Department within 180 days from the issuance of the
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, the
Department may extend the period for finding a physical
address another 180 days if the Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License holder demonstrates a concrete
attempt to secure a location and a hardship. If the Department
denies the extension or the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License holder is unable to find a location or
become operational within 360 days of being awarded a
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License under
this Section, the Department shall rescind the Conditional
Adult Use Dispensing Organization License and award it
pursuant to subsection (b), provided the applicant receiving
the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License: (i)
confirms a continued interest in operating a dispensing
organization; (ii) can provide evidence that the applicant
continues to meet all requirements for holding a Conditional
Adult Use Dispensing Organization License set forth in this
Act; and (iii) has not otherwise become ineligible to be
awarded a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
License. If the new awardee is unable to accept the
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, the
Department shall award the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License pursuant to subsection (b). The new
awardee shall be subject to the same required deadlines as
provided in this subsection.
    (d) If, within 180 days of being awarded a Conditional
Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, a dispensing
organization is unable to find a location within the BLS
Region in which it was awarded a Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License because no jurisdiction within
the BLS Region allows for the operation of an Adult Use
Dispensing Organization, the Department may authorize the
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License holder
to transfer its Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
License to a BLS Region specified by the Department.
    (e) A dispensing organization that is awarded a
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License under
this Section shall not purchase, possess, sell, or dispense
cannabis or cannabis-infused products until the dispensing
organization has received an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
License issued by the Department pursuant to Section 15-36.
    (f) The Department shall conduct a background check of the
prospective dispensing organization agents in order to carry
out this Article. The Illinois State Police shall charge the
applicant a fee for conducting the criminal history record
check, which shall be deposited into the State Police Services
Fund and shall not exceed the actual cost of the record check.
Each person applying as a dispensing organization agent shall
submit a full set of fingerprints to the Illinois State Police
for the purpose of obtaining a State and federal criminal
records check. These fingerprints shall be checked against the
fingerprint records now and hereafter, to the extent allowed
by law, filed with the Illinois State Police and the Federal
Bureau of Investigation criminal history records databases.
The Illinois State Police shall furnish, following positive
identification, all Illinois conviction information to the
Department.
    (g) The Department may verify information contained in
each application and accompanying documentation to assess the
applicant's veracity and fitness to operate a dispensing
organization.
    (h) The Department may, in its discretion, refuse to issue
authorization to an applicant who meets any of the following
criteria:
        (1) An applicant who is unqualified to perform the
    duties required of the applicant.
        (2) An applicant who fails to disclose or states
    falsely any information called for in the application.
        (3) An applicant who has been found guilty of a
    violation of this Act, who has had any disciplinary order
    entered against the applicant by the Department, who has
    entered into a disciplinary or nondisciplinary agreement
    with the Department, whose medical cannabis dispensing
    organization, medical cannabis cultivation organization,
    Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License,
    Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
    at a secondary site, Early Approval Cultivation Center
    License, Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
    License, or Adult Use Dispensing Organization License was
    suspended, restricted, revoked, or denied for just cause,
    or whose cannabis business establishment license was
    suspended, restricted, revoked, or denied in any other
    state.
        (4) An applicant who has engaged in a pattern or
    practice of unfair or illegal practices, methods, or
    activities in the conduct of owning a cannabis business
    establishment or other business.
    (i) The Department shall deny issuance of a license under
this Section if any principal officer, board member, or person
having a financial or voting interest of 5% or greater in the
licensee is delinquent in filing any required tax return or
paying any amount owed to the State of Illinois.
    (j) The Department shall verify an applicant's compliance
with the requirements of this Article and rules adopted under
this Article before issuing a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License under this Section.
    (k) If an applicant is awarded a Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License under this Section, the
information and plans provided in the application, including
any plans submitted for bonus points, shall become a condition
of the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
and any Adult Use Dispensing Organization License issued to
the holder of the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License, except as otherwise provided by this Act
or by rule. A dispensing organization has a duty to disclose
any material changes to the application. The Department shall
review all material changes disclosed by the dispensing
organization and may reevaluate its prior decision regarding
the awarding of a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License, including, but not limited to,
suspending or permanently revoking a Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License. Failure to comply with the
conditions or requirements in the application may subject the
dispensing organization to discipline up to and including
suspension or permanent revocation of its authorization or
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License by the
Department.
    (l) If an applicant has not begun operating as a
dispensing organization within one year after the issuance of
the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
under this Section, the Department may permanently revoke the
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License and
award it to the next highest scoring applicant in the BLS
Region if a suitable applicant indicates a continued interest
in the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
or may begin a new selection process to award a Conditional
Adult Use Dispensing Organization License.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/15-35.10 new)
    Sec. 15-35.10. Social Equity Justice Involved Lottery for
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses.
    (a) In addition to any of the licenses issued under
Section 15-15, Section 15-20, Section 15-25, Section 15-30.20,
or Section 15-35, within 10 business days after the resulting
final scores for all scored applications pursuant to Sections
15-25 and 15-30 are released, the Department shall issue up to
55 Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses by
lot, pursuant to the application process adopted under this
Section. In order to be eligible to be awarded a Conditional
Adult Use Dispensing Organization License by lot, a Dispensary
Applicant must be a Qualifying Social Equity Justice Involved
Applicant.
    The licenses issued under this Section shall be awarded in
each BLS Region in the following amounts:
        (1) Bloomington: 1.
        (2) Cape Girardeau: 1.
        (3) Carbondale-Marion: 1.
        (4) Champaign-Urbana: 1.
        (5) Chicago-Naperville-Elgin: 36.
        (6) Danville: 1.
        (7) Davenport-Moline-Rock Island: 1.
        (8) Decatur: 1.
        (9) Kankakee: 1.
        (10) Peoria: 2.
        (11) Rockford: 1.
        (12) St. Louis: 3.
        (13) Springfield: 1.
        (14) Northwest Illinois nonmetropolitan: 1.
        (15) West Central Illinois nonmetropolitan: 1.
        (16) East Central Illinois nonmetropolitan: 1.
        (17) South Illinois nonmetropolitan: 1.
    (a-5) Prior to issuing licenses under subsection (a), the
Department may adopt rules through emergency rulemaking in
accordance with subsection (kk) of Section 5-45 of the
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. The General Assembly
finds that the adoption of rules to regulate cannabis use is
deemed an emergency and necessary for the public interest,
safety, and welfare.
    (b) The Department shall distribute the available licenses
established under this Section subject to the following:
        (1) The drawing by lot for all available licenses
    established under this Section shall occur on the same day
    when practicable.
        (2) Within each BLS Region, the first Qualifying
    Social Equity Justice Involved Applicant drawn will have
    the first right to an available license. The second
    Qualifying Social Equity Justice Involved Applicant drawn
    will have the second right to an available license. The
    same pattern will continue for each subsequent applicant
    drawn.
        (3) The process for distributing available licenses
    under this Section shall be recorded by the Department in
    a format selected by the Department.
        (4) A Dispensary Applicant is prohibited from becoming
    a Qualifying Social Equity Justice Involved Applicant if a
    principal officer resigns after the resulting final scores
    for all scored applications pursuant to Sections 15-25 and
    15-30 are released.
        (5) No Qualifying Social Equity Justice Involved
    Applicant may be awarded more than 2 Conditional Adult Use
    Dispensing Organization Licenses at the conclusion of a
    lottery conducted under this Section.
        (6) No individual may be listed as a principal officer
    of more than 2 Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
    Organization Licenses awarded under this Section.
        (7) If, upon being selected for an available license
    established under this Section, a Qualifying Social Equity
    Justice Involved Applicant exceeds the limits under
    paragraph (5) or (6), the Qualifying Social Equity Justice
    Involved Applicant must choose which license to abandon
    and notify the Department in writing within 5 business
    days on forms prescribed by the Department. If the
    Qualifying Social Equity Justice Involved Applicant does
    not notify the Department as required, the Department
    shall refuse to issue the Qualifying Social Equity Justice
    Involved Applicant all available licenses established
    under this Section obtained by lot in all BLS Regions.
        (8) If, upon being selected for an available license
    established under this Section, a Qualifying Social Equity
    Justice Involved Applicant has a principal officer who is
    a principal officer in more than 10 Early Approval Adult
    Use Dispensing Organization Licenses, Conditional Adult
    Use Dispensing Organization Licenses, Adult Use Dispensing
    Organization Licenses, or any combination thereof, the
    licensees and the Qualifying Social Equity Justice
    Involved Applicant listing that principal officer must
    choose which license to abandon pursuant to subsection (d)
    of Section 15-36 and notify the Department in writing
    within 5 business days on forms prescribed by the
    Department. If the Dispensary Applicant or licensees do
    not notify the Department as required, the Department
    shall refuse to issue the Qualifying Social Equity Justice
    Involved Applicant all available licenses established
    under this Section obtained by lot in all BLS Regions.
        (9) All available licenses that have been abandoned
    under paragraph (7) or (8) shall be distributed to the
    next Qualifying Social Equity Justice Involved Applicant
    drawn by lot.
    Any and all rights conferred or obtained under this
subsection shall be limited to the provisions of this
subsection.
    (c) An applicant who receives a Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License under this Section has 180
days from the date of the award to identify a physical location
for the dispensing organization's retail storefront. The
applicant shall provide evidence that the location is not
within 1,500 feet of an existing dispensing organization,
unless the applicant is a Social Equity Applicant or Social
Equity Justice Involved Applicant located or seeking to locate
within 1,500 feet of a dispensing organization licensed under
Section 15-15 or Section 15-20. If an applicant is unable to
find a suitable physical address in the opinion of the
Department within 180 days from the issuance of the
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, the
Department may extend the period for finding a physical
address another 180 days if the Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License holder demonstrates a concrete
attempt to secure a location and a hardship. If the Department
denies the extension or the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License holder is unable to find a location or
become operational within 360 days of being awarded a
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License under
this Section, the Department shall rescind the Conditional
Adult Use Dispensing Organization License and award it
pursuant to subsection (b) and notify the new awardee at the
email address provided in the awardee's application, provided
the applicant receiving the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License: (i) confirms a continued interest in
operating a dispensing organization; (ii) can provide evidence
that the applicant continues to meet all requirements for
holding a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
License set forth in this Act; and (iii) has not otherwise
become ineligible to be awarded a Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License. If the new awardee is unable
to accept the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
License, the Department shall award the Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License pursuant to subsection (b).
The new awardee shall be subject to the same required
deadlines as provided in this subsection.
    (d) If, within 180 days of being awarded a Conditional
Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, a dispensing
organization is unable to find a location within the BLS
Region in which it was awarded a Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License under this Section because no
jurisdiction within the BLS Region allows for the operation of
an Adult Use Dispensing Organization, the Department may
authorize the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
License holder to transfer its Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License to a BLS Region specified by
the Department.
    (e) A dispensing organization that is awarded a
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License under
this Section shall not purchase, possess, sell, or dispense
cannabis or cannabis-infused products until the dispensing
organization has received an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
License issued by the Department pursuant to Section 15-36.
    (f) The Department shall conduct a background check of the
prospective dispensing organization agents in order to carry
out this Article. The Illinois State Police shall charge the
applicant a fee for conducting the criminal history record
check, which shall be deposited into the State Police Services
Fund and shall not exceed the actual cost of the record check.
Each person applying as a dispensing organization agent shall
submit a full set of fingerprints to the Illinois State Police
for the purpose of obtaining a State and federal criminal
records check. These fingerprints shall be checked against the
fingerprint records now and hereafter, to the extent allowed
by law, filed with the Illinois State Police and the Federal
Bureau of Investigation criminal history records databases.
The Illinois State Police shall furnish, following positive
identification, all Illinois conviction information to the
Department.
    (g) The Department may verify information contained in
each application and accompanying documentation to assess the
applicant's veracity and fitness to operate a dispensing
organization.
    (h) The Department may, in its discretion, refuse to issue
an authorization to an applicant who meets any of the
following criteria:
        (1) An applicant who is unqualified to perform the
    duties required of the applicant.
        (2) An applicant who fails to disclose or states
    falsely any information called for in the application.
        (3) An applicant who has been found guilty of a
    violation of this Act, who has had any disciplinary order
    entered against the applicant by the Department, who has
    entered into a disciplinary or nondisciplinary agreement
    with the Department, whose medical cannabis dispensing
    organization, medical cannabis cultivation organization,
    Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License,
    Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
    at a secondary site, Early Approval Cultivation Center
    License, Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
    License, or Adult Use Dispensing Organization License was
    suspended, restricted, revoked, or denied for just cause,
    or whose cannabis business establishment license was
    suspended, restricted, revoked, or denied in any other
    state.
        (4) An applicant who has engaged in a pattern or
    practice of unfair or illegal practices, methods, or
    activities in the conduct of owning a cannabis business
    establishment or other business.
    (i) The Department shall deny the license if any principal
officer, board member, or person having a financial or voting
interest of 5% or greater in the licensee is delinquent in
filing any required tax return or paying any amount owed to the
State of Illinois.
    (j) The Department shall verify an applicant's compliance
with the requirements of this Article and rules adopted under
this Article before issuing a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License.
    (k) If an applicant is awarded a Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License under this Section, the
information and plans provided in the application, including
any plans submitted for bonus points, shall become a condition
of the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
and any Adult Use Dispensing Organization License issued to
the holder of the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License, except as otherwise provided by this Act
or by rule. Dispensing organizations have a duty to disclose
any material changes to the application. The Department shall
review all material changes disclosed by the dispensing
organization and may reevaluate its prior decision regarding
the awarding of a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License, including, but not limited to,
suspending or permanently revoking a Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License. Failure to comply with the
conditions or requirements in the application may subject the
dispensing organization to discipline up to and including
suspension or permanent revocation of its authorization or
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License by the
Department.
    (l) If an applicant has not begun operating as a
dispensing organization within one year after the issuance of
the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
under this Section, the Department may permanently revoke the
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License and
award it to the next highest scoring applicant in the BLS
Region if a suitable applicant indicates a continued interest
in the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
or may begin a new selection process to award a Conditional
Adult Use Dispensing Organization License.
 
    (410 ILCS 705/15-35.20 new)
    Sec. 15-35.20. Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization Licenses on or after January 1, 2022.
    (a) In addition to any of the licenses issued under
Section 15-15, Section 15-20, Section 15-25, Section 15-35, or
Section 15-35.10, by January 1, 2022, the Department may
publish an application to issue additional Conditional Adult
Use Dispensing Organization Licenses, pursuant to the
application process adopted under this Section. The Department
may adopt rules to issue any Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization Licenses under this Section. Such rules may:
        (1) Modify or change the BLS Regions as they apply to
    this Article or modify or raise the number of Adult
    Conditional Use Dispensing Organization Licenses assigned
    to each BLS Region based on the following factors:
            (A) Purchaser wait times.
            (B) Travel time to the nearest dispensary for
        potential purchasers.
            (C) Percentage of cannabis sales occurring in
        Illinois not in the regulated market using data from
        the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
        Administration, National Survey on Drug Use and
        Health, Illinois Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance
        System, and tourism data from the Illinois Office of
        Tourism to ascertain total cannabis consumption in
        Illinois compared to the amount of sales in licensed
        dispensing organizations.
            (D) Whether there is an adequate supply of
        cannabis and cannabis-infused products to serve
        registered medical cannabis patients.
            (E) Population increases or shifts.
            (F) Density of dispensing organizations in a
        region.
            (G) The Department's capacity to appropriately
        regulate additional licenses.
            (H) The findings and recommendations from the
        disparity and availability study commissioned by the
        Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer in
        subsection (e) of Section 5-45 to reduce or eliminate
        any identified barriers to entry in the cannabis
        industry.
            (I) Any other criteria the Department deems
        relevant.
        (2) Modify or change the licensing application process
    to reduce or eliminate the barriers identified in the
    disparity and availability study commissioned by the
    Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer and make
    modifications to remedy evidence of discrimination.
    (b) At no time shall the Department issue more than 500
Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses.
    (c) The Department shall issue at least 50 additional
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses on or
before December 21, 2022.
 
    (410 ILCS 705/15-40)
    Sec. 15-40. Dispensing organization agent identification
card; agent training.
    (a) The Department shall:
        (1) verify the information contained in an application
    or renewal for a dispensing organization agent
    identification card submitted under this Article, and
    approve or deny an application or renewal, within 30 days
    of receiving a completed application or renewal
    application and all supporting documentation required by
    rule;
        (2) issue a dispensing organization agent
    identification card to a qualifying agent within 15
    business days of approving the application or renewal;
        (3) enter the registry identification number of the
    dispensing organization where the agent works;
        (4) within one year from the effective date of this
    Act, allow for an electronic application process and
    provide a confirmation by electronic or other methods that
    an application has been submitted; and
        (5) collect a $100 nonrefundable fee from the
    applicant to be deposited into the Cannabis Regulation
    Fund.
    (b) A dispensing organization agent must keep his or her
identification card visible at all times when in the
dispensary.
    (c) The dispensing organization agent identification cards
shall contain the following:
        (1) the name of the cardholder;
        (2) the date of issuance and expiration date of the
    dispensing organization agent identification cards;
        (3) a random 10-digit alphanumeric identification
    number containing at least 4 numbers and at least 4
    letters that is unique to the cardholder; and
        (4) a photograph of the cardholder.
    (d) The dispensing organization agent identification cards
shall be immediately returned to the dispensing organization
upon termination of employment.
    (e) The Department shall not issue an agent identification
card if the applicant is delinquent in filing any required tax
returns or paying any amounts owed to the State of Illinois.
    (f) Any card lost by a dispensing organization agent shall
be reported to the Department of State Police and the
Department immediately upon discovery of the loss.
    (g) An applicant shall be denied a dispensing organization
agent identification card renewal if he or she fails to
complete the training provided for in this Section.
    (h) A dispensing organization agent shall only be required
to hold one card for the same employer regardless of what type
of dispensing organization license the employer holds.
    (i) Cannabis retail sales training requirements.
        (1) Within 90 days of September 1, 2019, or 90 days of
    employment, whichever is later, all owners, managers,
    employees, and agents involved in the handling or sale of
    cannabis or cannabis-infused product employed by an adult
    use dispensing organization or medical cannabis dispensing
    organization as defined in Section 10 of the Compassionate
    Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act shall attend and
    successfully complete a Responsible Vendor Program.
        (2) Each owner, manager, employee, and agent of an
    adult use dispensing organization or medical cannabis
    dispensing organization shall successfully complete the
    program annually.
        (3) Responsible Vendor Program Training modules shall
    include at least 2 hours of instruction time approved by
    the Department including:
            (i) Health and safety concerns of cannabis use,
        including the responsible use of cannabis, its
        physical effects, onset of physiological effects,
        recognizing signs of impairment, and appropriate
        responses in the event of overconsumption.
            (ii) Training on laws and regulations on driving
        while under the influence and operating a watercraft
        or snowmobile while under the influence.
            (iii) Sales to minors prohibition. Training shall
        cover all relevant Illinois laws and rules.
            (iv) Quantity limitations on sales to purchasers.
        Training shall cover all relevant Illinois laws and
        rules.
            (v) Acceptable forms of identification. Training
        shall include:
                (I) How to check identification; and
                (II) Common mistakes made in verification;
            (vi) Safe storage of cannabis;
            (vii) Compliance with all inventory tracking
        system regulations;
            (viii) Waste handling, management, and disposal;
            (ix) Health and safety standards;
            (x) Maintenance of records;
            (xi) Security and surveillance requirements;
            (xii) Permitting inspections by State and local
        licensing and enforcement authorities;
            (xiii) Privacy issues;
            (xiv) Packaging and labeling requirement for sales
        to purchasers; and
            (xv) Other areas as determined by rule.
    (j) Blank.
    (k) Upon the successful completion of the Responsible
Vendor Program, the provider shall deliver proof of completion
either through mail or electronic communication to the
dispensing organization, which shall retain a copy of the
certificate.
    (l) The license of a dispensing organization or medical
cannabis dispensing organization whose owners, managers,
employees, or agents fail to comply with this Section may be
suspended or permanently revoked under Section 15-145 or may
face other disciplinary action.
    (m) The regulation of dispensing organization and medical
cannabis dispensing employer and employee training is an
exclusive function of the State, and regulation by a unit of
local government, including a home rule unit, is prohibited.
This subsection (m) is a denial and limitation of home rule
powers and functions under subsection (h) of Section 6 of
Article VII of the Illinois Constitution.
    (n) Persons seeking Department approval to offer the
training required by paragraph (3) of subsection (i) may apply
for such approval between August 1 and August 15 of each
odd-numbered year in a manner prescribed by the Department.
    (o) Persons seeking Department approval to offer the
training required by paragraph (3) of subsection (i) shall
submit a nonrefundable application fee of $2,000 to be
deposited into the Cannabis Regulation Fund or a fee as may be
set by rule. Any changes made to the training module shall be
approved by the Department.
    (p) The Department shall not unreasonably deny approval of
a training module that meets all the requirements of paragraph
(3) of subsection (i). A denial of approval shall include a
detailed description of the reasons for the denial.
    (q) Any person approved to provide the training required
by paragraph (3) of subsection (i) shall submit an application
for re-approval between August 1 and August 15 of each
odd-numbered year and include a nonrefundable application fee
of $2,000 to be deposited into the Cannabis Regulation Fund or
a fee as may be set by rule.
    (r) All persons applying to become or renewing their
registrations to be agents, including agents-in-charge and
principal officers, shall disclose any disciplinary action
taken against them that may have occurred in Illinois, another
state, or another country in relation to their employment at a
cannabis business establishment or at any cannabis cultivation
center, processor, infuser, dispensary, or other cannabis
business establishment.
    (s) An agent applicant may begin employment at a
dispensing organization while the agent applicant's
identification card application is pending. Upon approval, the
Department shall issue the agent's identification card to the
agent. If denied, the dispensing organization and the agent
applicant shall be notified and the agent applicant must cease
all activity at the dispensing organization immediately.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/15-70)
    Sec. 15-70. Operational requirements; prohibitions.
    (a) A dispensing organization shall operate in accordance
with the representations made in its application and license
materials. It shall be in compliance with this Act and rules.
    (b) A dispensing organization must include the legal name
of the dispensary on the packaging of any cannabis product it
sells.
    (c) All cannabis, cannabis-infused products, and cannabis
seeds must be obtained from an Illinois registered adult use
cultivation center, craft grower, infuser, or another
dispensary.
    (d) Dispensing organizations are prohibited from selling
any product containing alcohol except tinctures, which must be
limited to containers that are no larger than 100 milliliters.
    (e) A dispensing organization shall inspect and count
product received from a transporting organization, adult use
cultivation center, craft grower, infuser organization, or
other dispensing organization before dispensing it.
    (f) A dispensing organization may only accept cannabis
deliveries into a restricted access area. Deliveries may not
be accepted through the public or limited access areas unless
otherwise approved by the Department.
    (g) A dispensing organization shall maintain compliance
with State and local building, fire, and zoning requirements
or regulations.
    (h) A dispensing organization shall submit a list to the
Department of the names of all service professionals that will
work at the dispensary. The list shall include a description
of the type of business or service provided. Changes to the
service professional list shall be promptly provided. No
service professional shall work in the dispensary until the
name is provided to the Department on the service professional
list.
    (i) A dispensing organization's license allows for a
dispensary to be operated only at a single location.
    (j) A dispensary may operate between 6 a.m. and 10 p.m.
local time.
    (k) A dispensing organization must keep all lighting
outside and inside the dispensary in good working order and
wattage sufficient for security cameras.
    (l) A dispensing organization must keep all air treatment
systems that will be installed to reduce odors in good working
order.
    (m) A dispensing organization must contract with a private
security contractor that is licensed under Section 10-5 of the
Private Detective, Private Alarm, Private Security,
Fingerprint Vendor, and Locksmith Act of 2004 to provide
on-site security at all hours of the dispensary's operation.
    (n) A dispensing organization shall ensure that any
building or equipment used by a dispensing organization for
the storage or sale of cannabis is maintained in a clean and
sanitary condition.
    (o) The dispensary shall be free from infestation by
insects, rodents, or pests.
    (p) A dispensing organization shall not:
        (1) Produce or manufacture cannabis;
        (2) Accept a cannabis product from an adult use
    cultivation center, craft grower, infuser, dispensing
    organization, or transporting organization unless it is
    pre-packaged and labeled in accordance with this Act and
    any rules that may be adopted pursuant to this Act;
        (3) Obtain cannabis or cannabis-infused products from
    outside the State of Illinois;
        (4) Sell cannabis or cannabis-infused products to a
    purchaser unless the dispensing organization is licensed
    under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program
    Act, and the individual is registered under the
    Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program or the
    purchaser has been verified to be 21 years of age or older;
        (5) Enter into an exclusive agreement with any adult
    use cultivation center, craft grower, or infuser.
    Dispensaries shall provide consumers an assortment of
    products from various cannabis business establishment
    licensees such that the inventory available for sale at
    any dispensary from any single cultivation center, craft
    grower, processor, transporter, or infuser entity shall
    not be more than 40% of the total inventory available for
    sale. For the purpose of this subsection, a cultivation
    center, craft grower, processor, or infuser shall be
    considered part of the same entity if the licensees share
    at least one principal officer. The Department may request
    that a dispensary diversify its products as needed or
    otherwise discipline a dispensing organization for
    violating this requirement;
        (6) Refuse to conduct business with an adult use
    cultivation center, craft grower, transporting
    organization, or infuser that has the ability to properly
    deliver the product and is permitted by the Department of
    Agriculture, on the same terms as other adult use
    cultivation centers, craft growers, infusers, or
    transporters with whom it is dealing;
        (7) Operate drive-through windows;
        (8) Allow for the dispensing of cannabis or
    cannabis-infused products in vending machines;
        (9) Transport cannabis to residences or other
    locations where purchasers may be for delivery;
        (10) Enter into agreements to allow persons who are
    not dispensing organization agents to deliver cannabis or
    to transport cannabis to purchasers;
        (11) Operate a dispensary if its video surveillance
    equipment is inoperative;
        (12) Operate a dispensary if the point-of-sale
    equipment is inoperative;
        (13) Operate a dispensary if the State's cannabis
    electronic verification system is inoperative;
        (14) Have fewer than 2 people working at the
    dispensary at any time while the dispensary is open;
        (15) Be located within 1,500 feet of the property line
    of a pre-existing dispensing organization, unless the
    applicant is a Social Equity Applicant or Social Equity
    Justice Involved Applicant located or seeking to locate
    within 1,500 feet of a dispensing organization licensed
    under Section 15-15 or Section 15-20;
        (16) Sell clones or any other live plant material;
        (17) Sell cannabis, cannabis concentrate, or
    cannabis-infused products in combination or bundled with
    each other or any other items for one price, and each item
    of cannabis, concentrate, or cannabis-infused product must
    be separately identified by quantity and price on the
    receipt;
        (18) Violate any other requirements or prohibitions
    set by Department rules.
    (q) It is unlawful for any person having an Early Approval
Adult Use Cannabis Dispensing Organization License, a
Conditional Adult Use Cannabis Dispensing Organization, an
Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, or a medical
cannabis dispensing organization license issued under the
Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act or any
officer, associate, member, representative, or agent of such
licensee to accept, receive, or borrow money or anything else
of value or accept or receive credit (other than merchandising
credit in the ordinary course of business for a period not to
exceed 30 days) directly or indirectly from any adult use
cultivation center, craft grower, infuser, or transporting
organization in exchange for preferential placement on the
dispensing organization's shelves, display cases, or website.
This includes anything received or borrowed or from any
stockholders, officers, agents, or persons connected with an
adult use cultivation center, craft grower, infuser, or
transporting organization.
    (r) It is unlawful for any person having an Early Approval
Adult Use Cannabis Dispensing Organization License, a
Conditional Adult Use Cannabis Dispensing Organization, an
Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, or a medical
cannabis dispensing organization license issued under the
Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program to enter into
any contract with any person licensed to cultivate, process,
or transport cannabis whereby such dispensing organization
agrees not to sell any cannabis cultivated, processed,
transported, manufactured, or distributed by any other
cultivator, transporter, or infuser, and any provision in any
contract violative of this Section shall render the whole of
such contract void and no action shall be brought thereon in
any court.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/15-85)
    Sec. 15-85. Dispensing cannabis.
    (a) Before a dispensing organization agent dispenses
cannabis to a purchaser, the agent shall:
        (1) Verify the age of the purchaser by checking a
    government-issued identification card by use of an
    electronic reader or electronic scanning device to scan a
    purchaser's government-issued identification, if
    applicable, to determine the purchaser's age and the
    validity of the identification;
        (2) Verify the validity of the government-issued
    identification card by use of an electronic reader or
    electronic scanning device to scan a purchaser's
    government-issued identification, if applicable, to
    determine the purchaser's age and the validity of the
    identification;
        (3) Offer any appropriate purchaser education or
    support materials;
        (4) Enter the following information into the State's
    cannabis electronic verification system:
            (i) The dispensing organization agent's
        identification number, or if the agent's card
        application is pending the Department's approval, a
        temporary and unique identifier until the agent's card
        application is approved or denied by the Department;
            (ii) The dispensing organization's identification
        number;
            (iii) The amount, type (including strain, if
        applicable) of cannabis or cannabis-infused product
        dispensed;
            (iv) The date and time the cannabis was dispensed.
    (b) A dispensing organization shall refuse to sell
cannabis or cannabis-infused products to any person unless the
person produces a valid identification showing that the person
is 21 years of age or older. A medical cannabis dispensing
organization may sell cannabis or cannabis-infused products to
a person who is under 21 years of age if the sale complies with
the provisions of the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
Program Act and rules.
    (c) For the purposes of this Section, valid identification
must:
        (1) Be valid and unexpired;
        (2) Contain a photograph and the date of birth of the
    person.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/15-135)
    Sec. 15-135. Investigations.
    (a) Dispensing organizations are subject to random and
unannounced dispensary inspections and cannabis testing by the
Department, the Department of State Police, and local law
enforcement, or as provided by rule.
    (b) The Department and its authorized representatives may
enter any place, including a vehicle, in which cannabis is
held, stored, dispensed, sold, produced, delivered,
transported, manufactured, or disposed of and inspect, in a
reasonable manner, the place and all pertinent equipment,
containers and labeling, and all things including records,
files, financial data, sales data, shipping data, pricing
data, personnel data, research, papers, processes, controls,
and facility, and inventory any stock of cannabis and obtain
samples of any cannabis or cannabis-infused product, any
labels or containers for cannabis, or paraphernalia.
    (c) The Department may conduct an investigation of an
applicant, application, dispensing organization, principal
officer, dispensary agent, third party vendor, or any other
party associated with a dispensing organization for an alleged
violation of this Act or rules or to determine qualifications
to be granted a registration by the Department.
    (d) The Department may require an applicant or holder of
any license issued pursuant to this Article to produce
documents, records, or any other material pertinent to the
investigation of an application or alleged violations of this
Act or rules. Failure to provide the required material may be
grounds for denial or discipline.
    (e) Every person charged with preparation, obtaining, or
keeping records, logs, reports, or other documents in
connection with this Act and rules and every person in charge,
or having custody, of those documents shall, upon request by
the Department, make the documents immediately available for
inspection and copying by the Department, the Department's
authorized representative, or others authorized by law to
review the documents.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/20-30)
    Sec. 20-30. Cultivation center requirements; prohibitions.
    (a) The operating documents of a cultivation center shall
include procedures for the oversight of the cultivation center
a cannabis plant monitoring system including a physical
inventory recorded weekly, accurate recordkeeping, and a
staffing plan.
    (b) A cultivation center shall implement a security plan
reviewed by the Department of State Police that includes, but
is not limited to: facility access controls, perimeter
intrusion detection systems, personnel identification systems,
24-hour surveillance system to monitor the interior and
exterior of the cultivation center facility and accessibility
to authorized law enforcement, the Department of Public Health
where processing takes place, and the Department of
Agriculture in real time.
    (c) All cultivation of cannabis by a cultivation center
must take place in an enclosed, locked facility at the
physical address provided to the Department of Agriculture
during the licensing process. The cultivation center location
shall only be accessed by the agents working for the
cultivation center, the Department of Agriculture staff
performing inspections, the Department of Public Health staff
performing inspections, local and State law enforcement or
other emergency personnel, contractors working on jobs
unrelated to cannabis, such as installing or maintaining
security devices or performing electrical wiring, transporting
organization agents as provided in this Act, individuals in a
mentoring or educational program approved by the State, or
other individuals as provided by rule.
    (d) A cultivation center may not sell or distribute any
cannabis or cannabis-infused products to any person other than
a dispensing organization, craft grower, infuser organization,
transporter, or as otherwise authorized by rule.
    (e) A cultivation center may not either directly or
indirectly discriminate in price between different dispensing
organizations, craft growers, or infuser organizations that
are purchasing a like grade, strain, brand, and quality of
cannabis or cannabis-infused product. Nothing in this
subsection (e) prevents a cultivation centers from pricing
cannabis differently based on differences in the cost of
manufacturing or processing, the quantities sold, such as
volume discounts, or the way the products are delivered.
    (f) All cannabis harvested by a cultivation center and
intended for distribution to a dispensing organization must be
entered into a data collection system, packaged and labeled
under Section 55-21, and placed into a cannabis container for
transport. All cannabis harvested by a cultivation center and
intended for distribution to a craft grower or infuser
organization must be packaged in a labeled cannabis container
and entered into a data collection system before transport.
    (g) Cultivation centers are subject to random inspections
by the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Public
Health, local safety or health inspectors, and the Department
of State Police, or as provided by rule.
    (h) A cultivation center agent shall notify local law
enforcement, the Department of State Police, and the
Department of Agriculture within 24 hours of the discovery of
any loss or theft. Notification shall be made by phone or in
person, or by written or electronic communication.
    (i) A cultivation center shall comply with all State and
any applicable federal rules and regulations regarding the use
of pesticides on cannabis plants.
    (j) No person or entity shall hold any legal, equitable,
ownership, or beneficial interest, directly or indirectly, of
more than 3 cultivation centers licensed under this Article.
Further, no person or entity that is employed by, an agent of,
has a contract to receive payment in any form from a
cultivation center, is a principal officer of a cultivation
center, or entity controlled by or affiliated with a principal
officer of a cultivation shall hold any legal, equitable,
ownership, or beneficial interest, directly or indirectly, in
a cultivation that would result in the person or entity owning
or controlling in combination with any cultivation center,
principal officer of a cultivation center, or entity
controlled or affiliated with a principal officer of a
cultivation center by which he, she, or it is employed, is an
agent of, or participates in the management of, more than 3
cultivation center licenses.
    (k) A cultivation center may not contain more than 210,000
square feet of canopy space for plants in the flowering stage
for cultivation of adult use cannabis as provided in this Act.
    (l) A cultivation center may process cannabis, cannabis
concentrates, and cannabis-infused products.
    (m) Beginning July 1, 2020, a cultivation center shall not
transport cannabis or cannabis-infused products to a craft
grower, dispensing organization, infuser organization, or
laboratory licensed under this Act, unless it has obtained a
transporting organization license.
    (n) It is unlawful for any person having a cultivation
center license or any officer, associate, member,
representative, or agent of such licensee to offer or deliver
money, or anything else of value, directly or indirectly to
any person having an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License, a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License, an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
License, or a medical cannabis dispensing organization license
issued under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program
Act, or to any person connected with or in any way
representing, or to any member of the family of, such person
holding an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization
License, a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
License, an Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, or a
medical cannabis dispensing organization license issued under
the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act, or to
any stockholders in any corporation engaged in the retail sale
of cannabis, or to any officer, manager, agent, or
representative of the Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License, a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License, an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
License, or a medical cannabis dispensing organization license
issued under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program
Act to obtain preferential placement within the dispensing
organization, including, without limitation, on shelves and in
display cases where purchasers can view products, or on the
dispensing organization's website.
    (o) A cultivation center must comply with any other
requirements or prohibitions set by administrative rule of the
Department of Agriculture.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/20-55 new)
    Sec. 20-55. Disclosure of ownership and control.
    (a) Each Adult Use Cultivation Center applicant and
license holder shall file and maintain a Table of
Organization, Ownership, and Control with the Department. The
Table of Organization, Ownership, and Control shall contain
the information required by this Section in sufficient detail
to identify all owners, directors, and principal officers, and
the title of each principal officer or business entity that,
through direct or indirect means, manages, owns, or controls
the applicant or license holder.
    (b) The Table of Organization, Ownership, and Control
shall identify the following information:
        (1) The management structure, ownership, and control
    of the applicant or license holder including the name of
    each principal officer or business entity, the office or
    position held, and the percentage ownership interest, if
    any. If the business entity has a parent company, the name
    of each owner, board member, and officer of the parent
    company and his or her percentage ownership interest in
    the parent company and the Adult Use Cultivation Center.
        (2) If the applicant or licensee is a business entity
    with publicly traded stock, the identification of
    ownership shall be provided as required in subsection (c).
    (c) If a business entity identified in subsection (b) is a
publicly traded company, the following information shall be
provided in the Table of Organization, Ownership, and Control:
        (1) The name and percentage of ownership interest of
    each individual or business entity with ownership of more
    than 5% of the voting shares of the entity, to the extent
    such information is known or contained in 13D or 13G
    Securities and Exchange Commission filings.
        (2) To the extent known, the names and percentage of
    interest of ownership of persons who are relatives of one
    another and who together exercise control over or own more
    than 10% of the voting shares of the entity.
    (d) An Adult Use Cultivation Center with a parent company
or companies, or partially owned or controlled by another
entity must disclose to the Department the relationship and
all owners, board members, officers, or individuals with
control or management of those entities. An Adult Use
Cultivation Center shall not shield its ownership or control
from the Department.
    (e) All principal officers must submit a complete online
application with the Department within 14 days of the Adult
Use Cultivation Center being licensed by the Department or
within 14 days of Department notice of approval as a new
principal officer.
    (f) A principal officer may not allow his or her
registration to expire.
    (g) An Adult Use Cultivation Center separating with a
principal officer must do so under this Act. The principal
officer must communicate the separation to the Department
within 5 business days.
    (h) A principal officer not in compliance with the
requirements of this Act shall be removed from his or her
position with the Adult Use Cultivation Center or shall
otherwise terminate his or her affiliation. Failure to do so
may subject the Adult Use Cultivation Center to discipline,
suspension, or revocation of its license by the Department.
    (i) It is the responsibility of the Adult Use Cultivation
Center and its principal officers to promptly notify the
Department of any change of the principal place of business
address, hours of operation, change in ownership or control,
or a change of the Adult Use Cultivation Center's primary or
secondary contact information. Any changes must be made to the
Department in writing.
 
    (410 ILCS 705/25-5)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2026)
    Sec. 25-5. Administration.
    (a) The Department shall establish and administer the
Program in coordination with the Illinois Community College
Board. The Department may issue up to 8 Program licenses to
applicants that meet the requirements outlined in this Article
by September 1, 2020.
    (b) Beginning with the 2021-2022 academic year, and
subject to subsection (h) of Section 2-12 of the Public
Community College Act, community colleges awarded Program
licenses may offer qualifying students a Career in Cannabis
Certificate, which includes, but is not limited to, courses
that allow participating students to work with, study, and
grow live cannabis plants so as to prepare students for a
career in the legal cannabis industry, and to instruct
participating students on the best business practices,
professional responsibility, and legal compliance of the
cannabis business industry.
    (c) The Board may issue rules pertaining to the provisions
in this Act.
    (d) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act,
students shall be at least 18 years old in order to enroll in a
licensee's Career in Cannabis Certificate's prescribed course
of study.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/25-30)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2026)
    Sec. 25-30. Inspection rights.
    (a) A licensee's enclosed, locked facilities are subject
to random inspections by the Department, and the Department of
State Police, or as provided by rule.
    (b) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to give the
Department, or the Department of State Police, or any other
entity identified by rule under subsection (a) a right of
inspection or access to any location on the licensee's
premises beyond the facilities licensed under this Article.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/25-35)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2026)
    Sec. 25-35. Community College Cannabis Vocational Training
Pilot Program faculty participant agent identification card.
    (a) The Department shall:
        (1) establish by rule the information required in an
    initial application or renewal application for an agent
    identification card submitted under this Article and the
    nonrefundable fee to accompany the initial application or
    renewal application;
        (2) verify the information contained in an initial
    application or renewal application for an agent
    identification card submitted under this Article, and
    approve or deny an application within 30 days of receiving
    a completed initial application or renewal application and
    all supporting documentation required by rule;
        (3) issue an agent identification card to a qualifying
    agent within 15 business days of approving the initial
    application or renewal application;
        (4) enter the license number of the community college
    where the agent works; and
        (5) allow for an electronic initial application and
    renewal application process, and provide a confirmation by
    electronic or other methods that an application has been
    submitted. Each Department may by rule require prospective
    agents to file their applications by electronic means and
    to provide notices to the agents by electronic means.
    (b) An agent must keep his or her identification card
visible at all times when in the enclosed, locked facility, or
facilities for which he or she is an agent.
    (c) The agent identification cards shall contain the
following:
        (1) the name of the cardholder;
        (2) the date of issuance and expiration date of the
    identification card;
        (3) a random 10-digit alphanumeric identification
    number containing at least 4 numbers and at least 4
    letters that is unique to the holder;
        (4) a photograph of the cardholder; and
        (5) the legal name of the community college employing
    the agent.
    (d) An agent identification card shall be immediately
returned to the community college of the agent upon
termination of his or her employment.
    (e) Any agent identification card lost shall be reported
to the Department of State Police and the Department of
Agriculture immediately upon discovery of the loss.
    (f) An agent applicant may begin employment at a Community
College Cannabis Vocational Training Pilot Program while the
agent applicant's identification card application is pending.
Upon approval, the Department shall issue the agent's
identification card to the agent. If denied, the Community
College Cannabis Vocational Training Pilot Program and the
agent applicant shall be notified and the agent applicant must
cease all activity at the Community College Cannabis
Vocational Training Pilot Program immediately.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/30-5)
    Sec. 30-5. Issuance of licenses.
    (a) The Department of Agriculture shall issue up to 40
craft grower licenses by July 1, 2020. Any person or entity
awarded a license pursuant to this subsection shall only hold
one craft grower license and may not sell that license until
after December 21, 2021.
    (b) By December 21, 2021, the Department of Agriculture
shall issue up to 60 additional craft grower licenses. Any
person or entity awarded a license pursuant to this subsection
shall not hold more than 2 craft grower licenses. The person or
entity awarded a license pursuant to this subsection or
subsection (a) of this Section may sell its craft grower
license subject to the restrictions of this Act or as
determined by administrative rule. Prior to issuing such
licenses, the Department may adopt rules through emergency
rulemaking in accordance with subsection (kk) (gg) of Section
5-45 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, to modify
or raise the number of craft grower licenses and modify or
change the licensing application process to reduce or
eliminate barriers. The General Assembly finds that the
adoption of rules to regulate cannabis use is deemed an
emergency and necessary for the public interest, safety, and
welfare. In determining whether to exercise the authority
granted by this subsection, the Department of Agriculture must
consider the following factors:
        (1) the percentage of cannabis sales occurring in
    Illinois not in the regulated market using data from the
    Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration,
    National Survey on Drug Use and Health, Illinois
    Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, and tourism
    data from the Illinois Office of Tourism to ascertain
    total cannabis consumption in Illinois compared to the
    amount of sales in licensed dispensing organizations;
        (2) whether there is an adequate supply of cannabis
    and cannabis-infused products to serve registered medical
    cannabis patients;
        (3) whether there is an adequate supply of cannabis
    and cannabis-infused products to serve purchasers;
        (4) whether there is an oversupply of cannabis in
    Illinois leading to trafficking of cannabis to states
    where the sale of cannabis is not permitted by law;
        (5) population increases or shifts;
        (6) the density of craft growers in any area of the
    State;
        (7) perceived security risks of increasing the number
    or location of craft growers;
        (8) the past safety record of craft growers;
        (9) the Department of Agriculture's capacity to
    appropriately regulate additional licensees;
        (10) (blank) the findings and recommendations from the
    disparity and availability study commissioned by the
    Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer to reduce
    or eliminate any identified barriers to entry in the
    cannabis industry; and
        (11) any other criteria the Department of Agriculture
    deems relevant.
    (c) After January 1, 2022, the Department of Agriculture
may by rule modify or raise the number of craft grower licenses
and modify or change the licensing application process to
reduce or eliminate barriers based on the criteria in
subsection (b). At no time may the number of craft grower
licenses exceed 150. Any person or entity awarded a license
pursuant to this subsection shall not hold more than 3 craft
grower licenses. A person or entity awarded a license pursuant
to this subsection or subsection (a) or subsection (b) of this
Section may sell its craft grower license or licenses subject
to the restrictions of this Act or as determined by
administrative rule.
    (d) Upon the completion of the disparity and availability
study pertaining to craft growers by the Cannabis Regulation
Oversight Officer pursuant to subsection (e) of Section 5-45,
the Department may modify or change the licensing application
process to reduce or eliminate barriers from and remedy
evidence of discrimination identified in the disparity and
availability study.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/30-30)
    Sec. 30-30. Craft grower requirements; prohibitions.
    (a) The operating documents of a craft grower shall
include procedures for the oversight of the craft grower, a
cannabis plant monitoring system including a physical
inventory recorded weekly, accurate recordkeeping, and a
staffing plan.
    (b) A craft grower shall implement a security plan
reviewed by the Department of State Police that includes, but
is not limited to: facility access controls, perimeter
intrusion detection systems, personnel identification systems,
and a 24-hour surveillance system to monitor the interior and
exterior of the craft grower facility and that is accessible
to authorized law enforcement and the Department of
Agriculture in real time.
    (c) All cultivation of cannabis by a craft grower must
take place in an enclosed, locked facility at the physical
address provided to the Department of Agriculture during the
licensing process. The craft grower location shall only be
accessed by the agents working for the craft grower, the
Department of Agriculture staff performing inspections, the
Department of Public Health staff performing inspections,
State and local law enforcement or other emergency personnel,
contractors working on jobs unrelated to cannabis, such as
installing or maintaining security devices or performing
electrical wiring, transporting organization agents as
provided in this Act, or participants in the incubator
program, individuals in a mentoring or educational program
approved by the State, or other individuals as provided by
rule. However, if a craft grower shares a premises with an
infuser or dispensing organization, agents from those other
licensees may access the craft grower portion of the premises
if that is the location of common bathrooms, lunchrooms,
locker rooms, or other areas of the building where work or
cultivation of cannabis is not performed. At no time may an
infuser or dispensing organization agent perform work at a
craft grower without being a registered agent of the craft
grower.
    (d) A craft grower may not sell or distribute any cannabis
to any person other than a cultivation center, a craft grower,
an infuser organization, a dispensing organization, or as
otherwise authorized by rule.
    (e) A craft grower may not be located in an area zoned for
residential use.
    (f) A craft grower may not either directly or indirectly
discriminate in price between different cannabis business
establishments that are purchasing a like grade, strain,
brand, and quality of cannabis or cannabis-infused product.
Nothing in this subsection (f) prevents a craft grower from
pricing cannabis differently based on differences in the cost
of manufacturing or processing, the quantities sold, such as
volume discounts, or the way the products are delivered.
    (g) All cannabis harvested by a craft grower and intended
for distribution to a dispensing organization must be entered
into a data collection system, packaged and labeled under
Section 55-21, and, if distribution is to a dispensing
organization that does not share a premises with the
dispensing organization receiving the cannabis, placed into a
cannabis container for transport. All cannabis harvested by a
craft grower and intended for distribution to a cultivation
center, to an infuser organization, or to a craft grower with
which it does not share a premises, must be packaged in a
labeled cannabis container and entered into a data collection
system before transport.
    (h) Craft growers are subject to random inspections by the
Department of Agriculture, local safety or health inspectors,
and the Department of State Police, or as provided by rule.
    (i) A craft grower agent shall notify local law
enforcement, the Department of State Police, and the
Department of Agriculture within 24 hours of the discovery of
any loss or theft. Notification shall be made by phone, in
person, or written or electronic communication.
    (j) A craft grower shall comply with all State and any
applicable federal rules and regulations regarding the use of
pesticides.
    (k) A craft grower or craft grower agent shall not
transport cannabis or cannabis-infused products to any other
cannabis business establishment without a transport
organization license unless:
        (i) If the craft grower is located in a county with a
    population of 3,000,000 or more, the cannabis business
    establishment receiving the cannabis is within 2,000 feet
    of the property line of the craft grower;
        (ii) If the craft grower is located in a county with a
    population of more than 700,000 but fewer than 3,000,000,
    the cannabis business establishment receiving the cannabis
    is within 2 miles of the craft grower; or
        (iii) If the craft grower is located in a county with a
    population of fewer than 700,000, the cannabis business
    establishment receiving the cannabis is within 15 miles of
    the craft grower.
    (l) A craft grower may enter into a contract with a
transporting organization to transport cannabis to a
cultivation center, a craft grower, an infuser organization, a
dispensing organization, or a laboratory.
    (m) No person or entity shall hold any legal, equitable,
ownership, or beneficial interest, directly or indirectly, of
more than 3 craft grower licenses. Further, no person or
entity that is employed by, an agent of, or has a contract to
receive payment from or participate in the management of a
craft grower, is a principal officer of a craft grower, or
entity controlled by or affiliated with a principal officer of
a craft grower shall hold any legal, equitable, ownership, or
beneficial interest, directly or indirectly, in a craft grower
license that would result in the person or entity owning or
controlling in combination with any craft grower, principal
officer of a craft grower, or entity controlled or affiliated
with a principal officer of a craft grower by which he, she, or
it is employed, is an agent of, or participates in the
management of more than 3 craft grower licenses.
    (n) It is unlawful for any person having a craft grower
license or any officer, associate, member, representative, or
agent of the licensee to offer or deliver money, or anything
else of value, directly or indirectly, to any person having an
Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, a
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, an
Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, or a medical
cannabis dispensing organization license issued under the
Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act, or to any
person connected with or in any way representing, or to any
member of the family of, the person holding an Early Approval
Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, a Conditional Adult
Use Dispensing Organization License, an Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License, or a medical cannabis dispensing
organization license issued under the Compassionate Use of
Medical Cannabis Program Act, or to any stockholders in any
corporation engaged in the retail sale of cannabis, or to any
officer, manager, agent, or representative of the Early
Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, a
Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, an
Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, or a medical
cannabis dispensing organization license issued under the
Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act to obtain
preferential placement within the dispensing organization,
including, without limitation, on shelves and in display cases
where purchasers can view products, or on the dispensing
organization's website.
    (o) A craft grower shall not be located within 1,500 feet
of another craft grower or a cultivation center.
    (p) A craft grower may process cannabis, cannabis
concentrates, and cannabis-infused products.
    (q) A craft grower must comply with any other requirements
or prohibitions set by administrative rule of the Department
of Agriculture.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/30-55 new)
    Sec. 30-55. Disclosure of ownership and control.
    (a) Each craft grower applicant and licensee shall file
and maintain a Table of Organization, Ownership, and Control
with the Department. The Table of Organization, Ownership, and
Control shall contain the information required by this Section
in sufficient detail to identify all owners, directors, and
principal officers, and the title of each principal officer or
business entity that, through direct or indirect means,
manages, owns, or controls the applicant or licensee.
    (b) The Table of Organization, Ownership and Control shall
identify the following information:
        (1) The management structure, ownership, and control
    of the applicant or license holder including the name of
    each principal officer or business entity, the office or
    position held, and the percentage ownership interest, if
    any. If the business entity has a parent company, the name
    of each owner, board member, and officer of the parent
    company and his or her percentage ownership interest in
    the parent company and the craft grower.
        (2) If the applicant or licensee is a business entity
    with publicly traded stock, the identification of
    ownership shall be provided as required in subsection (c).
    (c) If a business entity identified in subsection (b) is a
publicly traded company, the following information shall be
provided in the Table of Organization, Ownership, and Control:
        (1) The name and percentage of ownership interest of
    each individual or business entity with ownership of more
    than 5% of the voting shares of the entity, to the extent
    such information is known or contained in 13D or 13G
    Securities and Exchange Commission filings.
        (2) To the extent known, the names and percentage of
    interest of ownership of persons who are relatives of one
    another and who together exercise control over or own more
    than 10% of the voting shares of the entity.
    (d) A craft grower with a parent company or companies, or
partially owned or controlled by another entity must disclose
to the Department the relationship and all owners, board
members, officers, or individuals with control or management
of those entities. A craft grower shall not shield its
ownership or control from the Department.
    (e) All principal officers must submit a complete online
application with the Department within 14 days of the craft
grower being licensed by the Department or within 14 days of
Department notice of approval as a new principal officer.
    (f) A principal officer may not allow his or her
registration to expire.
    (g) A craft grower separating with a principal officer
must do so under this Act. The principal officer must
communicate the separation to the Department within 5 business
days.
    (h) A principal officer not in compliance with the
requirements of this Act shall be removed from his or her
position with the craft grower or shall otherwise terminate
his or her affiliation. Failure to do so may subject the craft
grower to discipline, suspension, or revocation of its license
by the Department.
    (i) It is the responsibility of the craft grower and its
principal officers to promptly notify the Department of any
change of the principal place of business address, hours of
operation, change in ownership or control, or a change of the
craft grower's primary or secondary contact information. Any
changes must be made to the Department in writing.
 
    (410 ILCS 705/35-5)
    Sec. 35-5. Issuance of licenses.
    (a) The Department of Agriculture shall issue up to 40
infuser licenses through a process provided for in this
Article no later than July 1, 2020.
    (b) The Department of Agriculture shall make the
application for infuser licenses available on January 7, 2020,
or if that date falls on a weekend or holiday, the business day
immediately succeeding the weekend or holiday and every
January 7 or succeeding business day thereafter, and shall
receive such applications no later than March 15, 2020, or, if
that date falls on a weekend or holiday, the business day
immediately succeeding the weekend or holiday and every March
15 or succeeding business day thereafter.
    (c) By December 21, 2021, the Department of Agriculture
may issue up to 60 additional infuser licenses. Prior to
issuing such licenses, the Department may adopt rules through
emergency rulemaking in accordance with subsection (kk) (gg)
of Section 5-45 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act,
to modify or raise the number of infuser licenses and modify or
change the licensing application process to reduce or
eliminate barriers. The General Assembly finds that the
adoption of rules to regulate cannabis use is deemed an
emergency and necessary for the public interest, safety, and
welfare.
    In determining whether to exercise the authority granted
by this subsection, the Department of Agriculture must
consider the following factors:
        (1) the percentage of cannabis sales occurring in
    Illinois not in the regulated market using data from the
    Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration,
    National Survey on Drug Use and Health, Illinois
    Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, and tourism
    data from the Illinois Office of Tourism to ascertain
    total cannabis consumption in Illinois compared to the
    amount of sales in licensed dispensing organizations;
        (2) whether there is an adequate supply of cannabis
    and cannabis-infused products to serve registered medical
    cannabis patients;
        (3) whether there is an adequate supply of cannabis
    and cannabis-infused products to serve purchasers;
        (4) whether there is an oversupply of cannabis in
    Illinois leading to trafficking of cannabis to any other
    state;
        (5) population increases or shifts;
        (6) changes to federal law;
        (7) perceived security risks of increasing the number
    or location of infuser organizations;
        (8) the past security records of infuser
    organizations;
        (9) the Department of Agriculture's capacity to
    appropriately regulate additional licenses;
        (10) (blank) the findings and recommendations from the
    disparity and availability study commissioned by the
    Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer to reduce
    or eliminate any identified barriers to entry in the
    cannabis industry; and
        (11) any other criteria the Department of Agriculture
    deems relevant.
    (d) After January 1, 2022, the Department of Agriculture
may by rule modify or raise the number of infuser licenses, and
modify or change the licensing application process to reduce
or eliminate barriers based on the criteria in subsection (c).
    (e) Upon the completion of the disparity and availability
study pertaining to infusers by the Cannabis Regulation
Oversight Officer pursuant to subsection (e) of Section 5-45,
the Department of Agriculture may modify or change the
licensing application process to reduce or eliminate barriers
and remedy evidence of discrimination identified in the study.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/35-25)
    Sec. 35-25. Infuser organization requirements;
prohibitions.
    (a) The operating documents of an infuser shall include
procedures for the oversight of the infuser, an inventory
monitoring system including a physical inventory recorded
weekly, accurate recordkeeping, and a staffing plan.
    (b) An infuser shall implement a security plan reviewed by
the Department of State Police that includes, but is not
limited to: facility access controls, perimeter intrusion
detection systems, personnel identification systems, and a
24-hour surveillance system to monitor the interior and
exterior of the infuser facility and that is accessible to
authorized law enforcement, the Department of Public Health,
and the Department of Agriculture in real time.
    (c) All processing of cannabis by an infuser must take
place in an enclosed, locked facility at the physical address
provided to the Department of Agriculture during the licensing
process. The infuser location shall only be accessed by the
agents working for the infuser, the Department of Agriculture
staff performing inspections, the Department of Public Health
staff performing inspections, State and local law enforcement
or other emergency personnel, contractors working on jobs
unrelated to cannabis, such as installing or maintaining
security devices or performing electrical wiring, transporting
organization agents as provided in this Act, participants in
the incubator program, individuals in a mentoring or
educational program approved by the State, local safety or
health inspectors, or other individuals as provided by rule.
However, if an infuser shares a premises with a craft grower or
dispensing organization, agents from these other licensees may
access the infuser portion of the premises if that is the
location of common bathrooms, lunchrooms, locker rooms, or
other areas of the building where processing of cannabis is
not performed. At no time may a craft grower or dispensing
organization agent perform work at an infuser without being a
registered agent of the infuser.
    (d) An infuser may not sell or distribute any cannabis to
any person other than a dispensing organization, or as
otherwise authorized by rule.
    (e) An infuser may not either directly or indirectly
discriminate in price between different cannabis business
establishments that are purchasing a like grade, strain,
brand, and quality of cannabis or cannabis-infused product.
Nothing in this subsection (e) prevents an infuser from
pricing cannabis differently based on differences in the cost
of manufacturing or processing, the quantities sold, such
volume discounts, or the way the products are delivered.
    (f) All cannabis infused by an infuser and intended for
distribution to a dispensing organization must be entered into
a data collection system, packaged and labeled under Section
55-21, and, if distribution is to a dispensing organization
that does not share a premises with the infuser, placed into a
cannabis container for transport. All cannabis produced by an
infuser and intended for distribution to a cultivation center,
infuser organization, or craft grower with which it does not
share a premises, must be packaged in a labeled cannabis
container and entered into a data collection system before
transport.
    (g) Infusers are subject to random inspections by the
Department of Agriculture, the Department of Public Health,
the Department of State Police, and local law enforcement, or
as provided by rule.
    (h) An infuser agent shall notify local law enforcement,
the Department of State Police, and the Department of
Agriculture within 24 hours of the discovery of any loss or
theft. Notification shall be made by phone, in person, or by
written or electronic communication.
    (i) An infuser organization may not be located in an area
zoned for residential use.
    (j) An infuser or infuser agent shall not transport
cannabis or cannabis-infused products to any other cannabis
business establishment without a transport organization
license unless:
        (i) If the infuser is located in a county with a
    population of 3,000,000 or more, the cannabis business
    establishment receiving the cannabis or cannabis-infused
    product is within 2,000 feet of the property line of the
    infuser;
        (ii) If the infuser is located in a county with a
    population of more than 700,000 but fewer than 3,000,000,
    the cannabis business establishment receiving the cannabis
    or cannabis-infused product is within 2 miles of the
    infuser; or
        (iii) If the infuser is located in a county with a
    population of fewer than 700,000, the cannabis business
    establishment receiving the cannabis or cannabis-infused
    product is within 15 miles of the infuser.
    (k) An infuser may enter into a contract with a
transporting organization to transport cannabis to a
dispensing organization or a laboratory.
    (l) An infuser organization may share premises with a
craft grower or a dispensing organization, or both, provided
each licensee stores currency and cannabis or cannabis-infused
products in a separate secured vault to which the other
licensee does not have access or all licensees sharing a vault
share more than 50% of the same ownership.
    (m) It is unlawful for any person or entity having an
infuser organization license or any officer, associate,
member, representative or agent of such licensee to offer or
deliver money, or anything else of value, directly or
indirectly to any person having an Early Approval Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License, a Conditional Adult Use
Dispensing Organization License, an Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License, or a medical cannabis dispensing
organization license issued under the Compassionate Use of
Medical Cannabis Program Act, or to any person connected with
or in any way representing, or to any member of the family of,
such person holding an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License, a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License, an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
License, or a medical cannabis dispensing organization license
issued under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program
Act, or to any stockholders in any corporation engaged the
retail sales of cannabis, or to any officer, manager, agent,
or representative of the Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License, a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
Organization License, an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
License, or a medical cannabis dispensing organization license
issued under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program
Act to obtain preferential placement within the dispensing
organization, including, without limitation, on shelves and in
display cases where purchasers can view products, or on the
dispensing organization's website.
    (n) At no time shall an infuser organization or an infuser
agent perform the extraction of cannabis concentrate from
cannabis flower.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/35-30)
    Sec. 35-30. Infuser agent identification card.
    (a) The Department of Agriculture shall:
        (1) establish by rule the information required in an
    initial application or renewal application for an agent
    identification card submitted under this Act and the
    nonrefundable fee to accompany the initial application or
    renewal application;
        (2) verify the information contained in an initial
    application or renewal application for an agent
    identification card submitted under this Act, and approve
    or deny an application within 30 days of receiving a
    completed initial application or renewal application and
    all supporting documentation required by rule;
        (3) issue an agent identification card to a qualifying
    agent within 15 business days of approving the initial
    application or renewal application;
        (4) enter the license number of the infuser where the
    agent works; and
        (5) allow for an electronic initial application and
    renewal application process, and provide a confirmation by
    electronic or other methods that an application has been
    submitted. The Department of Agriculture may by rule
    require prospective agents to file their applications by
    electronic means and provide notices to the agents by
    electronic means.
    (b) An agent must keep his or her identification card
visible at all times when on the property of a cannabis
business establishment including the cannabis business
establishment for which he or she is an agent.
    (c) The agent identification cards shall contain the
following:
        (1) the name of the cardholder;
        (2) the date of issuance and expiration date of the
    identification card;
        (3) a random 10-digit alphanumeric identification
    number containing at least 4 numbers and at least 4
    letters that is unique to the holder;
        (4) a photograph of the cardholder; and
        (5) the legal name of the infuser organization
    employing the agent.
    (d) An agent identification card shall be immediately
returned to the infuser organization of the agent upon
termination of his or her employment.
    (e) Any agent identification card lost by a transporting
agent shall be reported to the Department of State Police and
the Department of Agriculture immediately upon discovery of
the loss.
    (f) An agent applicant may begin employment at an infuser
organization while the agent applicant's identification card
application is pending. Upon approval, the Department shall
issue the agent's identification card to the agent. If denied,
the infuser organization and the agent applicant shall be
notified and the agent applicant must cease all activity at
the infuser organization immediately.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/35-45 new)
    Sec. 35-45. Disclosure of ownership and control.
    (a) Each infuser organization applicant and licensee shall
file and maintain a Table of Organization, Ownership and
Control with the Department. The Table of Organization,
Ownership and Control shall contain the information required
by this Section in sufficient detail to identify all owners,
directors, and principal officers, and the title of each
principal officer or business entity that, through direct or
indirect means, manages, owns, or controls the applicant or
licensee.
    (b) The Table of Organization, Ownership, and Control
shall identify the following information:
        (1) The management structure, ownership, and control
    of the applicant or license holder including the name of
    each principal officer or business entity, the office or
    position held, and the percentage ownership interest, if
    any. If the business entity has a parent company, the name
    of each owner, board member, and officer of the parent
    company and his or her percentage ownership interest in
    the parent company and the infuser organization.
        (2) If the applicant or licensee is a business entity
    with publicly traded stock, the identification of
    ownership shall be provided as required in subsection (c).
    (c) If a business entity identified in subsection (b) is a
publicly traded company, the following information shall be
provided in the Table of Organization, Ownership, and Control:
        (1) The name and percentage of ownership interest of
    each individual or business entity with ownership of more
    than 5% of the voting shares of the entity, to the extent
    such information is known or contained in 13D or 13G
    Securities and Exchange Commission filings.
        (2) To the extent known, the names and percentage of
    interest of ownership of persons who are relatives of one
    another and who together exercise control over or own more
    than 10% of the voting shares of the entity.
    (d) An infuser organization with a parent company or
companies, or partially owned or controlled by another entity
must disclose to the Department the relationship and all
owners, board members, officers, or individuals with control
or management of those entities. An infuser organization shall
not shield its ownership or control from the Department.
    (e) All principal officers must submit a complete online
application with the Department within 14 days of the infuser
organization being licensed by the Department or within 14
days of Department notice of approval as a new principal
officer.
    (f) A principal officer may not allow his or her
registration to expire.
    (g) An infuser organization separating with a principal
officer must do so under this Act. The principal officer must
communicate the separation to the Department within 5 business
days.
    (h) A principal officer not in compliance with the
requirements of this Act shall be removed from his or her
position with the infuser organization or shall otherwise
terminate his or her affiliation. Failure to do so may subject
the infuser organization to discipline, suspension, or
revocation of its license by the Department.
    (i) It is the responsibility of the infuser organization
and its principal officers to promptly notify the Department
of any change of the principal place of business address,
hours of operation, change in ownership or control, or a
change of the infuser organization's primary or secondary
contact information. Any changes must be made to the
Department in writing.
 
    (410 ILCS 705/40-25)
    Sec. 40-25. Transporting organization requirements;
prohibitions.
    (a) The operating documents of a transporting organization
shall include procedures for the oversight of the transporter,
an inventory monitoring system including a physical inventory
recorded weekly, accurate recordkeeping, and a staffing plan.
    (b) A transporting organization may not transport cannabis
or cannabis-infused products to any person other than a
cultivation center, a craft grower, an infuser organization, a
dispensing organization, a testing facility, or as otherwise
authorized by rule.
    (c) All cannabis transported by a transporting
organization must be entered into a data collection system and
placed into a cannabis container for transport.
    (d) Transporters are subject to random inspections by the
Department of Agriculture, the Department of Public Health,
and the Department of State Police, or as provided by rule.
    (e) A transporting organization agent shall notify local
law enforcement, the Department of State Police, and the
Department of Agriculture within 24 hours of the discovery of
any loss or theft. Notification shall be made by phone, in
person, or by written or electronic communication.
    (f) No person under the age of 21 years shall be in a
commercial vehicle or trailer transporting cannabis goods.
    (g) No person or individual who is not a transporting
organization agent shall be in a vehicle while transporting
cannabis goods.
    (h) Transporters may not use commercial motor vehicles
with a weight rating of over 10,001 pounds.
    (i) It is unlawful for any person to offer or deliver
money, or anything else of value, directly or indirectly, to
any of the following persons to obtain preferential placement
within the dispensing organization, including, without
limitation, on shelves and in display cases where purchasers
can view products, or on the dispensing organization's
website:
        (1) a person having a transporting organization
    license, or any officer, associate, member,
    representative, or agent of the licensee;
        (2) a person having an Early Applicant Adult Use
    Dispensing Organization License, an Adult Use Dispensing
    Organization License, or a medical cannabis dispensing
    organization license issued under the Compassionate Use of
    Medical Cannabis Program Act;
        (3) a person connected with or in any way
    representing, or a member of the family of, a person
    holding an Early Applicant Adult Use Dispensing
    Organization License, an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
    License, or a medical cannabis dispensing organization
    license issued under the Compassionate Use of Medical
    Cannabis Program Act; or
        (4) a stockholder, officer, manager, agent, or
    representative of a corporation engaged in the retail sale
    of cannabis, an Early Applicant Adult Use Dispensing
    Organization License, an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
    License, or a medical cannabis dispensing organization
    license issued under the Compassionate Use of Medical
    Cannabis Program Act.
    (j) A transporting organization agent must keep his or her
identification card visible at all times when on the property
of a cannabis business establishment and during the
transporting of cannabis when acting under his or her duties
as a transportation organization agent. During these times,
the transporting organization agent must also provide the
identification card upon request of any law enforcement
officer engaged in his or her official duties.
    (k) A copy of the transporting organization's registration
and a manifest for the delivery shall be present in any vehicle
transporting cannabis.
    (l) Cannabis shall be transported so it is not visible or
recognizable from outside the vehicle.
    (m) A vehicle transporting cannabis must not bear any
markings to indicate the vehicle contains cannabis or bear the
name or logo of the cannabis business establishment.
    (n) Cannabis must be transported in an enclosed, locked
storage compartment that is secured or affixed to the vehicle.
    (o) The Department of Agriculture may, by rule, impose any
other requirements or prohibitions on the transportation of
cannabis.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/40-30)
    Sec. 40-30. Transporting agent identification card.
    (a) The Department of Agriculture shall:
        (1) establish by rule the information required in an
    initial application or renewal application for an agent
    identification card submitted under this Act and the
    nonrefundable fee to accompany the initial application or
    renewal application;
        (2) verify the information contained in an initial
    application or renewal application for an agent
    identification card submitted under this Act and approve
    or deny an application within 30 days of receiving a
    completed initial application or renewal application and
    all supporting documentation required by rule;
        (3) issue an agent identification card to a qualifying
    agent within 15 business days of approving the initial
    application or renewal application;
        (4) enter the license number of the transporting
    organization where the agent works; and
        (5) allow for an electronic initial application and
    renewal application process, and provide a confirmation by
    electronic or other methods that an application has been
    submitted. The Department of Agriculture may by rule
    require prospective agents to file their applications by
    electronic means and provide notices to the agents by
    electronic means.
    (b) An agent must keep his or her identification card
visible at all times when on the property of a cannabis
business establishment, including the cannabis business
establishment for which he or she is an agent.
    (c) The agent identification cards shall contain the
following:
        (1) the name of the cardholder;
        (2) the date of issuance and expiration date of the
    identification card;
        (3) a random 10-digit alphanumeric identification
    number containing at least 4 numbers and at least 4
    letters that is unique to the holder;
        (4) a photograph of the cardholder; and
        (5) the legal name of the transporting organization
    employing the agent.
    (d) An agent identification card shall be immediately
returned to the transporting organization of the agent upon
termination of his or her employment.
    (e) Any agent identification card lost by a transporting
agent shall be reported to the Department of State Police and
the Department of Agriculture immediately upon discovery of
the loss.
    (f) An application for an agent identification card shall
be denied if the applicant is delinquent in filing any
required tax returns or paying any amounts owed to the State of
Illinois.
    (g) An agent applicant may begin employment at a
transporting organization while the agent applicant's
identification card application is pending. Upon approval, the
Department shall issue the agent's identification card to the
agent. If denied, the transporting organization and the agent
applicant shall be notified and the agent applicant must cease
all activity at the transporting organization immediately.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/40-45 new)
    Sec. 40-45. Disclosure of ownership and control.
    (a) Each transporting organization applicant and licensee
shall file and maintain a Table of Organization, Ownership,
and Control with the Department. The Table of Organization,
Ownership, and Control shall contain the information required
by this Section in sufficient detail to identify all owners,
directors, and principal officers, and the title of each
principal officer or business entity that, through direct or
indirect means, manages, owns, or controls the applicant or
licensee.
    (b) The Table of Organization, Ownership, and Control
shall identify the following information:
        (1) The management structure, ownership, and control
    of the applicant or license holder including the name of
    each principal officer or business entity, the office or
    position held, and the percentage ownership interest, if
    any. If the business entity has a parent company, the name
    of each owner, board member, and officer of the parent
    company and his or her percentage ownership interest in
    the parent company and the transporting organization.
        (2) If the applicant or licensee is a business entity
    with publicly traded stock, the identification of
    ownership shall be provided as required in subsection (c).
    (c) If a business entity identified in subsection (b) is a
publicly traded company, the following information shall be
provided in the Table of Organization, Ownership, and Control:
        (1) The name and percentage of ownership interest of
    each individual or business entity with ownership of more
    than 5% of the voting shares of the entity, to the extent
    such information is known or contained in 13D or 13G
    Securities and Exchange Commission filings.
        (2) To the extent known, the names and percentage of
    interest of ownership of persons who are relatives of one
    another and who together exercise control over or own more
    than 10% of the voting shares of the entity.
    (d) A transporting organization with a parent company or
companies, or partially owned or controlled by another entity
must disclose to the Department the relationship and all
owners, board members, officers, or individuals with control
or management of those entities. A transporting organization
shall not shield its ownership or control from the Department.
    (e) All principal officers must submit a complete online
application with the Department within 14 days of the
transporting organization being licensed by the Department or
within 14 days of Department notice of approval as a new
principal officer.
    (f) A principal officer may not allow his or her
registration to expire.
    (g) A transporting organization separating with a
principal officer must do so under this Act. The principal
officer must communicate the separation to the Department
within 5 business days.
    (h) A principal officer not in compliance with the
requirements of this Act shall be removed from his or her
position with the transporting organization or shall otherwise
terminate his or her affiliation. Failure to do so may subject
the transporting organization to discipline, suspension, or
revocation of its license by the Department.
    (i) It is the responsibility of the transporting
organization and its principal officers to promptly notify the
Department of any change of the principal place of business
address, hours of operation, change in ownership or control,
or a change of the transporting organization's primary or
secondary contact information. Any changes must be made to the
Department in writing.
 
    (410 ILCS 705/55-21)
    Sec. 55-21. Cannabis product packaging and labeling.
    (a) Each cannabis product produced for sale shall be
registered with the Department of Agriculture on forms
provided by the Department of Agriculture. Each product
registration shall include a label and the required
registration fee at the rate established by the Department of
Agriculture for a comparable medical cannabis product, or as
established by rule. The registration fee is for the name of
the product offered for sale and one fee shall be sufficient
for all package sizes.
    (b) All harvested cannabis intended for distribution to a
cannabis enterprise must be packaged in a sealed, labeled
container.
    (c) Any product containing cannabis shall be sold packaged
in a sealed, odor-proof, and child-resistant cannabis
container consistent with current standards, including the
Consumer Product Safety Commission standards referenced by the
Poison Prevention Act unless the sale is between or among a
craft grower, infuser, or cultivation center.
    (d) All cannabis-infused products shall be individually
wrapped or packaged at the original point of preparation. The
packaging of the cannabis-infused product shall conform to the
labeling requirements of the Illinois Food, Drug and Cosmetic
Act, in addition to the other requirements set forth in this
Section.
    (e) Each cannabis product shall be labeled before sale and
each label shall be securely affixed to the package and shall
state in legible English and any languages required by the
Department of Agriculture:
        (1) the name and post office box of the registered
    cultivation center or craft grower where the item was
    manufactured;
        (2) the common or usual name of the item and the
    registered name of the cannabis product that was
    registered with the Department of Agriculture under
    subsection (a);
        (3) a unique serial number that will match the product
    with a cultivation center or craft grower batch and lot
    number to facilitate any warnings or recalls the
    Department of Agriculture, cultivation center, or craft
    grower deems appropriate;
        (4) the date of final testing and packaging, if
    sampled, and the identification of the independent testing
    laboratory;
        (5) the date of harvest and "use by" date;
        (6) the quantity (in ounces or grams) of cannabis
    contained in the product;
        (7) a pass/fail rating based on the laboratory's
    microbiological, mycotoxins, and pesticide and solvent
    residue analyses, if sampled;
        (8) content list.
            (A) A list of the following, including the minimum
        and maximum percentage content by weight for
        subdivisions (e)(8)(A)(i) through (iv):
                (i) delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC);
                (ii) tetrahydrocannabinolic acid (THCA);
                (iii) cannabidiol (CBD);
                (iv) cannabidiolic acid (CBDA); and
                (v) all other ingredients of the item,
            including any colors, artificial flavors, and
            preservatives, listed in descending order by
            predominance of weight shown with common or usual
            names.
            (B) The acceptable tolerances for the minimum
        percentage printed on the label for any of
        subdivisions (e)(8)(A)(i) through (iv) shall not be
        below 85% or above 115% of the labeled amount.
    (f) Packaging must not contain information that:
        (1) is false or misleading;
        (2) promotes excessive consumption;
        (3) depicts a person under 21 years of age consuming
    cannabis;
        (4) includes the image of a cannabis leaf;
        (5) includes any image designed or likely to appeal to
    minors, including cartoons, toys, animals, or children, or
    any other likeness to images, characters, or phrases that
    are popularly used to advertise to children, or any
    packaging or labeling that bears reasonable resemblance to
    any product available for consumption as a commercially
    available candy, or that promotes consumption of cannabis;
        (6) contains any seal, flag, crest, coat of arms, or
    other insignia likely to mislead the purchaser to believe
    that the product has been endorsed, made, or used by the
    State of Illinois or any of its representatives except
    where authorized by this Act.
    (g) Cannabis products produced by concentrating or
extracting ingredients from the cannabis plant shall contain
the following information, where applicable:
        (1) If solvents were used to create the concentrate or
    extract, a statement that discloses the type of extraction
    method, including any solvents or gases used to create the
    concentrate or extract; and
        (2) Any other chemicals or compounds used to produce
    or were added to the concentrate or extract.
    (h) All cannabis products must contain warning statements
established for purchasers, of a size that is legible and
readily visible to a consumer inspecting a package, which may
not be covered or obscured in any way. The Department of Public
Health shall define and update appropriate health warnings for
packages including specific labeling or warning requirements
for specific cannabis products.
    (i) Unless modified by rule to strengthen or respond to
new evidence and science, the following warnings shall apply
to all cannabis products unless modified by rule: "This
product contains cannabis and is intended for use by adults 21
and over. Its use can impair cognition and may be habit
forming. This product should not be used by pregnant or
breastfeeding women. It is unlawful to sell or provide this
item to any individual, and it may not be transported outside
the State of Illinois. It is illegal to operate a motor vehicle
while under the influence of cannabis. Possession or use of
this product may carry significant legal penalties in some
jurisdictions and under federal law.".
    (j) Warnings for each of the following product types must
be present on labels when offered for sale to a purchaser:
        (1) Cannabis that may be smoked must contain a
    statement that "Smoking is hazardous to your health.".
        (2) Cannabis-infused products (other than those
    intended for topical application) must contain a statement
    "CAUTION: This product contains cannabis, and intoxication
    following use may be delayed 2 or more hours. This product
    was produced in a facility that cultivates cannabis, and
    that may also process common food allergens.".
        (3) Cannabis-infused products intended for topical
    application must contain a statement "DO NOT EAT" in bold,
    capital letters.
    (k) Each cannabis-infused product intended for consumption
must be individually packaged, must include the total
milligram content of THC and CBD, and may not include more than
a total of 100 milligrams of THC per package. A package may
contain multiple servings of 10 milligrams of THC, indicated
by scoring, wrapping, or by other indicators designating
individual serving sizes. The Department of Agriculture may
change the total amount of THC allowed for each package, or the
total amount of THC allowed for each serving size, by rule.
    (l) No individual other than the purchaser may alter or
destroy any labeling affixed to the primary packaging of
cannabis or cannabis-infused products.
    (m) For each commercial weighing and measuring device used
at a facility, the cultivation center or craft grower must:
        (1) Ensure that the commercial device is licensed
    under the Weights and Measures Act and the associated
    administrative rules (8 Ill. Adm. Code 600);
        (2) Maintain documentation of the licensure of the
    commercial device; and
        (3) Provide a copy of the license of the commercial
    device to the Department of Agriculture for review upon
    request.
    (n) It is the responsibility of the Department to ensure
that packaging and labeling requirements, including product
warnings, are enforced at all times for products provided to
purchasers. Product registration requirements and container
requirements may be modified by rule by the Department of
Agriculture.
    (o) Labeling, including warning labels, may be modified by
rule by the Department of Agriculture.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/55-28)
    Sec. 55-28. Restricted cannabis zones.
    (a) As used in this Section:
    "Legal voter" means a person:
        (1) who is duly registered to vote in a municipality
    with a population of over 500,000;
        (2) whose name appears on a poll list compiled by the
    city board of election commissioners since the last
    preceding election, regardless of whether the election was
    a primary, general, or special election;
        (3) who, at the relevant time, is a resident of the
    address at which he or she is registered to vote; and
        (4) whose address, at the relevant time, is located in
    the precinct where such person seeks to file a notice of
    intent to initiate a petition process, circulate a
    petition, or sign a petition under this Section.
    As used in the definition of "legal voter", "relevant
time" means any time that:
        (i) a notice of intent is filed, pursuant to
    subsection (c) of this Section, to initiate the petition
    process under this Section;
        (ii) the petition is circulated for signature in the
    applicable precinct; or
        (iii) the petition is signed by registered voters in
    the applicable precinct.
    "Petition" means the petition described in this Section.
    "Precinct" means the smallest constituent territory within
a municipality with a population of over 500,000 in which
electors vote as a unit at the same polling place in any
election governed by the Election Code.
    "Restricted cannabis zone" means a precinct within which
home cultivation, one or more types of cannabis business
establishments, or both has been prohibited pursuant to an
ordinance initiated by a petition under this Section.
    (b) The legal voters of any precinct within a municipality
with a population of over 500,000 may petition their local
alderman, using a petition form made available online by the
city clerk, to introduce an ordinance establishing the
precinct as a restricted zone. Such petition shall specify
whether it seeks an ordinance to prohibit, within the
precinct: (i) home cultivation; (ii) one or more types of
cannabis business establishments; or (iii) home cultivation
and one or more types of cannabis business establishments.
    Upon receiving a petition containing the signatures of at
least 25% of the registered voters of the precinct, and
concluding that the petition is legally sufficient following
the posting and review process in subsection (c) of this
Section, the city clerk shall notify the local alderman of the
ward in which the precinct is located. Upon being notified,
that alderman, following an assessment of relevant factors
within the precinct, including but not limited to, its
geography, density and character, the prevalence of
residentially zoned property, current licensed cannabis
business establishments in the precinct, the current amount of
home cultivation in the precinct, and the prevailing viewpoint
with regard to the issue raised in the petition, may introduce
an ordinance to the municipality's governing body creating a
restricted cannabis zone in that precinct.
    (c) A person seeking to initiate the petition process
described in this Section shall first submit to the city clerk
notice of intent to do so, on a form made available online by
the city clerk. That notice shall include a description of the
potentially affected area and the scope of the restriction
sought. The city clerk shall publicly post the submitted
notice online.
    To be legally sufficient, a petition must contain the
requisite number of valid signatures and all such signatures
must be obtained within 90 days of the date that the city clerk
publicly posts the notice of intent. Upon receipt, the city
clerk shall post the petition on the municipality's website
for a 30-day comment period. The city clerk is authorized to
take all necessary and appropriate steps to verify the legal
sufficiency of a submitted petition. Following the petition
review and comment period, the city clerk shall publicly post
online the status of the petition as accepted or rejected, and
if rejected, the reasons therefor. If the city clerk rejects a
petition as legally insufficient, a minimum of 12 months must
elapse from the time the city clerk posts the rejection notice
before a new notice of intent for that same precinct may be
submitted.
    (c-5) Within 3 days after receiving an application for
zoning approval to locate a cannabis business establishment
within a municipality with a population of over 500,000, the
municipality shall post a public notice of the filing on its
website and notify the alderman of the ward in which the
proposed cannabis business establishment is to be located of
the filing. No action shall be taken on the zoning application
for 7 business days following the notice of the filing for
zoning approval.
    If a notice of intent to initiate the petition process to
prohibit the type of cannabis business establishment proposed
in the precinct of the proposed cannabis business
establishment is filed prior to the filing of the application
or within the 7-day period after the filing of the
application, the municipality shall not approve the
application for at least 90 days after the city clerk publicly
posts the notice of intent to initiate the petition process.
If a petition is filed within the 90-day petition-gathering
period described in subsection (c), the municipality shall not
approve the application for an additional 90 days after the
city clerk's receipt of the petition; provided that if the
city clerk rejects a petition as legally insufficient, the
municipality may approve the application prior to the end of
the 90 days. If a petition is not submitted within the 90-day
petition-gathering period described in subsection (c), the
municipality may approve the application unless the approval
is otherwise stayed pursuant to this subsection by a separate
notice of intent to initiate the petition process filed timely
within the 7-day period.
    If no legally sufficient petition is timely filed, a
minimum of 12 months must elapse before a new notice of intent
for that same precinct may be submitted.
    (d) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, the
municipality may enact an ordinance creating a restricted
cannabis zone. The ordinance shall:
        (1) identify the applicable precinct boundaries as of
    the date of the petition;
        (2) state whether the ordinance prohibits within the
    defined boundaries of the precinct, and in what
    combination: (A) one or more types of cannabis business
    establishments; or (B) home cultivation;
        (3) be in effect for 4 years, unless repealed earlier;
    and
        (4) once in effect, be subject to renewal by ordinance
    at the expiration of the 4-year period without the need
    for another supporting petition.
    (e) An Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization
License permitted to relocate under subsection (b-5) of
Section 15-15 shall not relocate to a restricted cannabis
zone.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    (410 ILCS 705/55-30)
    Sec. 55-30. Confidentiality.
    (a) Information provided by the cannabis business
establishment licensees or applicants to the Department of
Agriculture, the Department of Public Health, the Department
of Financial and Professional Regulation, the Department of
Commerce and Economic Opportunity, or other agency shall be
limited to information necessary for the purposes of
administering this Act. The information is subject to the
provisions and limitations contained in the Freedom of
Information Act and may be disclosed in accordance with
Section 55-65.
    (b) The following information received and records kept by
the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Public
Health, the Department of State Police, and the Department of
Financial and Professional Regulation for purposes of
administering this Article are subject to all applicable
federal privacy laws, are confidential and exempt from
disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act, except as
provided in this Act, and not subject to disclosure to any
individual or public or private entity, except to the
Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, the
Department of Agriculture, the Department of Public Health,
and the Department of State Police as necessary to perform
official duties under this Article and to the Attorney General
as necessary to enforce the provisions of this Act. The
following information received and kept by the Department of
Financial and Professional Regulation or the Department of
Agriculture may be disclosed to the Department of Public
Health, the Department of Agriculture, the Department of
Revenue, the Department of State Police, or the Attorney
General upon proper request:
        (1) Applications and renewals, their contents, and
    supporting information submitted by or on behalf of
    dispensing organizations, cannabis business
    establishments, or Community College Cannabis Vocational
    Program licensees, in compliance with this Article,
    including their physical addresses; however, this does not
    preclude the release of ownership information about
    cannabis business establishment licenses, or information
    submitted with an application required to be disclosed
    pursuant to subsection (f);
        (2) Any plans, procedures, policies, or other records
    relating to cannabis business establishment dispensing
    organization security; and
        (3) Information otherwise exempt from disclosure by
    State or federal law.
    Illinois or national criminal history record information,
or the nonexistence or lack of such information, may not be
disclosed by the Department of Financial and Professional
Regulation or the Department of Agriculture, except as
necessary to the Attorney General to enforce this Act.
    (c) The name and address of a dispensing organization
licensed under this Act shall be subject to disclosure under
the Freedom of Information Act. The name and cannabis business
establishment address of the person or entity holding each
cannabis business establishment license shall be subject to
disclosure.
    (d) All information collected by the Department of
Financial and Professional Regulation or the Department of
Agriculture in the course of an examination, inspection, or
investigation of a licensee or applicant, including, but not
limited to, any complaint against a licensee or applicant
filed with the Department of Financial and Professional
Regulation or the Department of Agriculture and information
collected to investigate any such complaint, shall be
maintained for the confidential use of the Department of
Financial and Professional Regulation or the Department of
Agriculture and shall not be disclosed, except as otherwise
provided in this Act. A formal complaint against a licensee by
the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation or the
Department of Agriculture or any disciplinary order issued by
the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation or the
Department of Agriculture against a licensee or applicant
shall be a public record, except as otherwise provided by law.
Complaints from consumers or members of the general public
received regarding a specific, named licensee or complaints
regarding conduct by unlicensed entities shall be subject to
disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act.
    (e) The Department of Agriculture, the Department of State
Police, and the Department of Financial and Professional
Regulation shall not share or disclose any Illinois or
national criminal history record information, or the
nonexistence or lack of such information, to any person or
entity not expressly authorized by this Act.
    (f) Each Department responsible for licensure under this
Act shall publish on the Department's website a list of the
ownership information of cannabis business establishment
licensees under the Department's jurisdiction. The list shall
include, but is not limited to: the name of the person or
entity holding each cannabis business establishment license;
and the address at which the entity is operating under this
Act. This list shall be published and updated monthly.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
    Section 15. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by
changing Sections 11-502.1 and 11-502.15 as follows:
 
    (625 ILCS 5/11-502.1)
    Sec. 11-502.1. Possession of medical cannabis in a motor
vehicle.
    (a) No driver, who is a medical cannabis cardholder, may
use medical cannabis within the passenger area of any motor
vehicle upon a highway in this State.
    (b) No driver, who is a medical cannabis cardholder, a
medical cannabis designated caregiver, medical cannabis
cultivation center agent, or dispensing organization agent may
possess medical cannabis within any area of any motor vehicle
upon a highway in this State except in a secured, sealed or
resealable, odor-proof, and child-resistant medical cannabis
container that is inaccessible.
    (c) No passenger, who is a medical cannabis card holder, a
medical cannabis designated caregiver, or medical cannabis
dispensing organization agent may possess medical cannabis
within any passenger area of any motor vehicle upon a highway
in this State except in a secured, sealed or resealable,
odor-proof, and child-resistant medical cannabis container
that is inaccessible.
    (d) Any person who violates subsections (a) through (c) of
this Section:
        (1) commits a Class A misdemeanor;
        (2) shall be subject to revocation of his or her
    medical cannabis card for a period of 2 years from the end
    of the sentence imposed; and
        (3) (4) shall be subject to revocation of his or her
    status as a medical cannabis caregiver, medical cannabis
    cultivation center agent, or medical cannabis dispensing
    organization agent for a period of 2 years from the end of
    the sentence imposed.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; revised 8-6-19.)
 
    (625 ILCS 5/11-502.15)
    Sec. 11-502.15. Possession of adult use cannabis in a
motor vehicle.
    (a) No driver may use cannabis within the passenger area
of any motor vehicle upon a highway in this State.
    (b) No driver may possess cannabis within any area of any
motor vehicle upon a highway in this State except in a secured,
sealed or resealable, odor-proof, child-resistant cannabis
container that is inaccessible.
    (c) No passenger may possess cannabis within any passenger
area of any motor vehicle upon a highway in this State except
in a secured, sealed or resealable, odor-proof,
child-resistant cannabis container that is inaccessible.
    (d) Any person who knowingly violates subsection (a), (b),
or (c) of this Section commits a Class A misdemeanor.
(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
    Section 97. Severability. The provisions of this Act are
severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.