|
Public Act 102-0098 |
HB1443 Enrolled | LRB102 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, CO 2 , 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. |