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Public Act 102-0671 | ||||
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AN ACT concerning government.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. "An Act concerning education", approved July | ||||
30, 2021, Public Act 102-209, is amended by adding Section 99 | ||||
as follows: | ||||
(P.A. 102-209, Sec. 99 new) | ||||
Sec. 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | ||||
becoming law. | ||||
Section 10. "An Act concerning education", approved August | ||||
27, 2021, Public Act 102-635, is amended by adding Section 99 | ||||
as follows: | ||||
(P.A. 102-635, Sec. 99 new) | ||||
Sec. 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | ||||
becoming law. | ||||
Section 15. The Regulatory Sunset Act is amended by | ||||
changing Section 4.32 as follows: | ||||
(5 ILCS 80/4.32) | ||||
Sec. 4.32. Acts repealed on January 1, 2022. The following |
Acts are repealed on January 1, 2022: | ||
The Boxing and Full-contact Martial Arts Act. | ||
The Cemetery Oversight Act. | ||
The Collateral Recovery Act. | ||
The Community Association Manager Licensing and | ||
Disciplinary Act. | ||
The Crematory Regulation Act. | ||
The Detection of Deception Examiners Act.
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The Home Inspector License Act.
| ||
The Illinois Health Information Exchange and Technology | ||
Act. | ||
The Medical Practice Act of 1987. | ||
The Registered Interior Designers Act.
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The Massage Licensing Act.
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The Petroleum Equipment Contractors Licensing Act.
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The Radiation Protection Act of 1990. | ||
The Real Estate Appraiser Licensing Act of 2002. | ||
The Water Well and Pump Installation Contractor's License | ||
Act. | ||
(Source: P.A. 100-920, eff. 8-17-18; 101-316, eff. 8-9-19; | ||
101-614, eff. 12-20-19; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.) | ||
Section 18. The State Budget Law of the Civil | ||
Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by changing Section | ||
50-5 as follows: |
(15 ILCS 20/50-5) | ||
Sec. 50-5. Governor to submit State budget. | ||
(a) The Governor shall, as soon as
possible and not later | ||
than the second
Wednesday in March in 2010 (March 10, 2010), | ||
the third
Wednesday in February in 2011, the fourth Wednesday | ||
in February in 2012 (February 22, 2012), the first Wednesday | ||
in March in 2013 (March 6, 2013), the fourth Wednesday in March | ||
in 2014 (March 26, 2014), the first Wednesday in February in | ||
2022 (February 2, 2022), and the third Wednesday in February | ||
of each year thereafter, except as otherwise provided in this | ||
Section, submit a
State budget, embracing therein the amounts | ||
recommended by the Governor to be
appropriated to the | ||
respective departments, offices, and institutions, and
for all | ||
other public purposes, the estimated revenues from taxation, | ||
and the
estimated revenues from sources other than taxation. | ||
Except with respect to the capital development provisions of | ||
the State budget, beginning with the revenue estimates | ||
prepared for fiscal year 2012, revenue estimates shall be | ||
based solely on: (i) revenue sources (including non-income | ||
resources), rates, and levels that exist as of the date of the | ||
submission of the State budget for the fiscal year and (ii) | ||
revenue sources (including non-income resources), rates, and | ||
levels that have been passed by the General Assembly as of the | ||
date of the submission of the State budget for the fiscal year | ||
and that are authorized to take effect in that fiscal year. | ||
Except with respect to the capital development provisions of |
the State budget, the Governor shall determine available | ||
revenue, deduct the cost of essential government services, | ||
including, but not limited to, pension payments and debt | ||
service, and assign a percentage of the remaining revenue to | ||
each statewide prioritized goal, as established in Section | ||
50-25 of this Law, taking into consideration the proposed | ||
goals set forth in the report of the Commission established | ||
under that Section. The Governor shall also demonstrate how | ||
spending priorities for the fiscal year fulfill those | ||
statewide goals. The amounts recommended by the
Governor for | ||
appropriation to the respective departments, offices and
| ||
institutions shall be formulated according to each | ||
department's, office's, and institution's ability to | ||
effectively deliver services that meet the established | ||
statewide goals. The amounts relating to particular functions
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and activities shall be further formulated in accordance with | ||
the object
classification specified in Section 13 of the State | ||
Finance Act. In addition, the amounts recommended by the | ||
Governor for appropriation shall take into account each State | ||
agency's effectiveness in achieving its prioritized goals for | ||
the previous fiscal year, as set forth in Section 50-25 of this | ||
Law, giving priority to agencies and programs that have | ||
demonstrated a focus on the prevention of waste and the | ||
maximum yield from resources. | ||
Beginning in fiscal year 2011, the Governor shall | ||
distribute written quarterly financial reports on operating |
funds, which may include general, State, or federal funds and | ||
may include funds related to agencies that have significant | ||
impacts on State operations, and budget statements on all | ||
appropriated funds to the General Assembly and the State | ||
Comptroller. The reports shall be submitted no later than 45 | ||
days after the last day of each quarter of the fiscal year and | ||
shall be posted on the Governor's Office of Management and | ||
Budget's website on the same day. The reports shall be | ||
prepared and presented for each State agency and on a | ||
statewide level in an executive summary format that may | ||
include, for the fiscal year to date, individual itemizations | ||
for each significant revenue type as well as itemizations of | ||
expenditures and obligations, by agency, with an appropriate | ||
level of detail. The reports shall include a calculation of | ||
the actual total budget surplus or deficit for the fiscal year | ||
to date. The Governor shall also present periodic budget | ||
addresses throughout the fiscal year at the invitation of the | ||
General Assembly. | ||
The Governor shall not propose expenditures and the | ||
General Assembly shall
not enact appropriations that exceed | ||
the resources estimated to be available,
as provided in this | ||
Section. Appropriations may be adjusted during the fiscal year | ||
by means of one or more supplemental appropriation bills if | ||
any State agency either fails to meet or exceeds the goals set | ||
forth in Section 50-25 of this Law. | ||
For the purposes of Article VIII, Section 2 of the 1970
|
Illinois Constitution, the State budget for the following | ||
funds shall be
prepared on the basis of revenue and | ||
expenditure measurement concepts that are
in concert with | ||
generally accepted accounting principles for governments: | ||
(1) General Revenue Fund. | ||
(2) Common School Fund. | ||
(3) Educational Assistance Fund. | ||
(4) Road Fund. | ||
(5) Motor Fuel Tax Fund. | ||
(6) Agricultural Premium Fund. | ||
These funds shall be known as the "budgeted funds". The | ||
revenue
estimates used in the State budget for the budgeted | ||
funds shall include the
estimated beginning fund balance, plus
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revenues estimated to be received during the budgeted year, | ||
plus the estimated
receipts due the State as of June 30 of the | ||
budgeted year that are expected to
be collected during the | ||
lapse period following the budgeted year, minus the
receipts | ||
collected during the first 2 months of the budgeted year that | ||
became
due to the State in the year before the budgeted year. | ||
Revenues shall also
include estimated federal reimbursements | ||
associated with the recognition of
Section 25 of the State | ||
Finance Act liabilities. For any budgeted fund
for which | ||
current year revenues are anticipated to exceed expenditures, | ||
the
surplus shall be considered to be a resource available for | ||
expenditure in the
budgeted fiscal year. | ||
Expenditure estimates for the budgeted funds included in |
the State budget
shall include the costs to be incurred by the | ||
State for the budgeted year,
to be paid in the next fiscal | ||
year, excluding costs paid in the budgeted year
which were | ||
carried over from the prior year, where the payment is | ||
authorized by
Section
25 of the State Finance Act. For any | ||
budgeted fund
for which expenditures are expected to exceed | ||
revenues in the current fiscal
year, the deficit shall be | ||
considered as a use of funds in the budgeted fiscal
year. | ||
Revenues and expenditures shall also include transfers | ||
between funds that are
based on revenues received or costs | ||
incurred during the budget year. | ||
Appropriations for expenditures shall also include all | ||
anticipated statutory continuing appropriation obligations | ||
that are expected to be incurred during the budgeted fiscal | ||
year. | ||
By
March 15 of each year, the
Commission on Government | ||
Forecasting and Accountability shall prepare
revenue and fund | ||
transfer estimates in accordance with the requirements of this
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Section and report those estimates to the General Assembly and | ||
the Governor. | ||
For all funds other than the budgeted funds, the proposed | ||
expenditures shall
not exceed funds estimated to be available | ||
for the fiscal year as shown in the
budget. Appropriation for a | ||
fiscal year shall not exceed funds estimated by
the General | ||
Assembly to be available during that year. | ||
(b) By February 24, 2010, the Governor must file a written |
report with the Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of the | ||
House of Representatives containing the following: | ||
(1) for fiscal year 2010, the revenues for all | ||
budgeted funds, both actual to date and estimated for the | ||
full fiscal year; | ||
(2) for fiscal year 2010, the expenditures for all | ||
budgeted funds, both actual to date and estimated for the | ||
full fiscal year; | ||
(3) for fiscal year 2011, the estimated revenues for | ||
all budgeted funds, including without limitation the | ||
affordable General Revenue Fund appropriations, for the | ||
full fiscal year; and | ||
(4) for fiscal year 2011, an estimate of the | ||
anticipated liabilities for all budgeted funds, including | ||
without limitation the affordable General Revenue Fund | ||
appropriations, debt service on bonds issued, and the | ||
State's contributions to the pension systems, for the full | ||
fiscal year. | ||
Between July 1 and August 31 of each fiscal year, the | ||
members of the General Assembly and members of the public may | ||
make written budget recommendations to the Governor. | ||
Beginning with budgets prepared for fiscal year 2013, the | ||
budgets submitted by the Governor and appropriations made by | ||
the General Assembly for all executive branch State agencies | ||
must adhere to a method of budgeting where each priority must | ||
be justified each year according to merit rather than |
according to the amount appropriated for the preceding year. | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-669, eff. 1-13-12; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; | ||
98-2, eff. 2-19-13; 98-626, eff. 2-5-14.) | ||
Section 20. The Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act | ||
is amended by changing Section 23 as follows: | ||
(20 ILCS 3305/23) | ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2032) | ||
Sec. 23. Access and Functional Needs Advisory Committee. | ||
(a) In this Section, "Advisory Committee" means the Access | ||
and Functional Needs Advisory Committee. | ||
(b) The Access and Functional Needs Advisory Committee is | ||
created. | ||
(c) The Advisory Committee shall: | ||
(1) Coordinate meetings occurring, at a minimum, 3 6 | ||
times each year, in addition to emergency meetings called | ||
by the chairperson of the Advisory Committee. | ||
(2) Research and provide recommendations for | ||
identifying and effectively responding to the needs of | ||
persons with access and functional needs before, during, | ||
and after a disaster using an intersectional lens for | ||
equity. | ||
(3) Provide recommendations to the Illinois Emergency | ||
Management Agency regarding how to ensure that persons | ||
with a disability are included in disaster strategies and |
emergency management plans, including updates and | ||
implementation of disaster strategies and emergency | ||
management plans. | ||
(4) Review and provide recommendations for the | ||
Illinois Emergency Management Agency, and all relevant | ||
State agencies that are involved in drafting and | ||
implementing the Illinois Emergency Operation Plan, to | ||
integrate access and functional needs into State and local | ||
emergency plans. | ||
(d) The Advisory Committee shall be composed of the | ||
Director of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency or his or | ||
her designee, the Attorney General or his or her designee, the | ||
Secretary of Human Services or his or her designee, the | ||
Director on Aging or his or her designee, and the Director of | ||
Public Health or his or her designee, together with the | ||
following members appointed by the Governor on or before | ||
January 1, 2022: | ||
(1) Two members, either from a municipal or | ||
county-level emergency agency or a local emergency | ||
management coordinator. | ||
(2) Nine members from the community of persons with a | ||
disability who represent persons with different types of | ||
disabilities, including, but not limited to, individuals | ||
with mobility and physical disabilities, hearing and | ||
visual disabilities, deafness or who are hard of hearing, | ||
blindness or who have low vision, mental health |
disabilities, and intellectual or developmental | ||
disabilities. Members appointed under this paragraph shall | ||
reflect a diversity of age, gender, race, and ethnic | ||
background. | ||
(3) Four members who represent first responders from | ||
different geographical regions around the State. | ||
(e) Of those members appointed by the Governor, the | ||
initial appointments of 6 members shall be for terms of 2 years | ||
and the initial appointments of 5 members shall be for terms of | ||
4 years. Thereafter, members shall be appointed for terms of 4 | ||
years. A member shall serve until his or her successor is | ||
appointed and qualified. If a vacancy occurs in the Advisory | ||
Committee membership, the vacancy shall be filled in the same | ||
manner as the original appointment for the remainder of the | ||
unexpired term. | ||
(f) After all the members are appointed, and annually | ||
thereafter, they shall elect a chairperson from among the | ||
members appointed under paragraph (2) of subsection (d). | ||
(g) The initial meeting of the Advisory Committee shall be | ||
convened by the Director of the Illinois Emergency Management | ||
Agency no later than February 1, 2022. | ||
(h) Advisory Committee members shall serve without | ||
compensation. | ||
(i) The Illinois Emergency Management Agency shall provide | ||
administrative support to the Advisory Committee. | ||
(j) The Advisory Committee shall prepare and deliver a |
report to the General Assembly, the Governor's Office, and the | ||
Illinois Emergency Management Agency by July 1, 2022, and | ||
annually thereafter. The report shall include the following: | ||
(1) Identification of core emergency management | ||
services that need to be updated or changed to ensure the | ||
needs of persons with a disability are met, and shall | ||
include disaster strategies in State and local emergency | ||
plans. | ||
(2) Any proposed changes in State policies, laws, | ||
rules, or regulations necessary to fulfill the purposes of | ||
this Act. | ||
(3) Recommendations on improving the accessibility and | ||
effectiveness of disaster and emergency communication. | ||
(4) Recommendations on comprehensive training for | ||
first responders and other frontline workers when working | ||
with persons with a disability during emergency situations | ||
or disasters, as defined in Section 4 of the Illinois | ||
Emergency Management Agency Act. | ||
(5) Any additional recommendations regarding emergency | ||
management and persons with a disability that the Advisory | ||
Committee deems necessary. | ||
(k) The annual report prepared and delivered under | ||
subsection (j) shall be annually considered by the Illinois | ||
Emergency Management Agency when developing new State and | ||
local emergency plans or updating existing State and local | ||
emergency plans. |
(l) The Advisory Committee is dissolved and this Section | ||
is repealed on January 1, 2032.
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(Source: P.A. 102-361, eff. 8-13-21.) | ||
Section 25. The Illinois Power Agency Act is amended by | ||
changing Section 1-130 as follows: | ||
(20 ILCS 3855/1-130) | ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2022)
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Sec. 1-130. Home rule preemption. | ||
(a) The authorization to impose any new taxes or fees | ||
specifically related to the generation of electricity by, the | ||
capacity to generate electricity by, or the emissions into the | ||
atmosphere by electric generating facilities after the | ||
effective date of this Act is an exclusive power and function | ||
of the State. A home rule unit may not levy any new taxes or | ||
fees specifically related to the generation of electricity by, | ||
the capacity to generate electricity by, or the emissions into | ||
the atmosphere by electric generating facilities after the | ||
effective date of this Act. This Section is a denial and | ||
limitation on home rule powers and functions under subsection | ||
(g) of Section 6 of Article VII of the Illinois Constitution. | ||
(b) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2023 2022 .
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(Source: P.A. 100-1157, eff. 12-19-18; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.) | ||
Section 30. The Illinois Future of Work Act is amended by |
changing Section 15 as follows: | ||
(20 ILCS 4103/15) | ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2024)
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Sec. 15. Membership; meetings.
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(a) The members of the Illinois Future of Work Task Force | ||
shall include and represent the diversity of the people of | ||
Illinois, and shall be composed of the following:
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(1) four members, including one representative of the | ||
business community and one representative of the labor | ||
community, appointed by the Senate President, one of whom | ||
shall serve as co-chair;
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(2) four members, including one representative of the | ||
business community and one representative of the labor | ||
community, appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate, | ||
one of whom shall serve as co-chair;
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(3) four members, including one representative of the | ||
business community and one representative of the labor | ||
community, appointed by the Speaker of the House of | ||
Representatives, one of whom shall serve as co-chair; | ||
(4) four members, including one representative of the | ||
business community and one representative of the labor | ||
community, appointed by the Minority Leader of the Speaker | ||
of the House of Representatives, one of whom shall serve | ||
as co-chair;
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(5) four members, one from each of the following: the |
business community, the labor community, the environmental | ||
community, and the education community that advocate for | ||
job growth, appointed by the Governor;
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(6) three members appointed by the Governor whose | ||
professional expertise is at the juncture of work and | ||
workers' rights;
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(7) the Director of Labor or his or her designee;
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(8) the Director of Commerce and Economic Opportunity | ||
or his or her designee;
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(9) the Director of Employment Security or his or her | ||
designee;
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(10) the Superintendent of the State Board of | ||
Education or his or her designee; | ||
(11) the Executive Director of the Illinois Community | ||
College Board or his or her designee; and | ||
(12) the Executive Director of the Board of Higher | ||
Education or his or her designee ; . | ||
(13) a representative of a labor organization | ||
recognized under the National Labor Relations Act | ||
representing auto workers, appointed by the Governor; | ||
(14) a representative from the University of Illinois | ||
School of Employment and Labor Relations, appointed by the | ||
Governor; | ||
(15) a representative of a professional teachers' | ||
organization located in a city having a population | ||
exceeding 500,000, appointed by the Governor; and |
(16) three members of the business community appointed | ||
jointly by the Minority Leader of the Senate and Minority | ||
Leader of the House. | ||
(b) Appointments for the Illinois Future of Work Task | ||
Force must be finalized by December 31 August 31 , 2021. The | ||
Illinois Future of Work Task Force shall hold one meeting per | ||
month for a total of 7 meetings, and the first meeting must be | ||
held within 30 days after appointments are finalized. | ||
(c) Members of the Illinois Future of Work Task Force | ||
shall serve without compensation.
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(d) The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity | ||
shall provide administrative support to the Task Force.
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(Source: P.A. 102-407, eff. 8-19-21; revised 8-25-21.) | ||
Section 35. The Local Journalism Task Force Act is amended | ||
by changing Section 10 as follows: | ||
(20 ILCS 4108/10) | ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2024)
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Sec. 10. Membership. The Task Force shall include consist | ||
of
the following 13 members:
one member of the House of
| ||
Representatives appointed by the Speaker of the House of
| ||
Representatives; one member of the House of Representatives | ||
appointed by the Minority Leader of the House of | ||
Representatives; one member of the Senate appointed by
the | ||
President of the Senate; one member of the Senate appointed by |
the Minority Leader of the Senate; and one member appointed by | ||
the
Governor . ; The Task Force shall also include the following | ||
members appointed by the Governor: one representative of the | ||
Chicago News Guild; one representative of the Chicago Chapter | ||
of the National Association of Broadcast Employees and | ||
Technicians; one representative of the Medill School of
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Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications at
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Northwestern University; one representative of the Public | ||
Affairs Reporting Program at the
University of
Illinois at | ||
Springfield; one representative of the School
of Journalism at | ||
Southern Illinois University Carbondale; one
representative of | ||
the Illinois Press Association; one representative of the
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Illinois Broadcasters Association; one representative of the | ||
Illinois
Legislative Correspondents Association; one | ||
representative of the Illinois Public Broadcasting Council; | ||
one representative of the Illinois News Broadcasters | ||
Association; one representative of the University of Illinois | ||
at Urbana-Champaign; and one representative of the
Illinois | ||
Municipal League. Appointments shall be made no later
than 30 | ||
days following the effective date of this Act.
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(Source: P.A. 102-569, eff. 1-1-22.)
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Section 40. The Kidney Disease Prevention and Education | ||
Task Force Act is amended by changing Sections 10-10 and 10-15 | ||
as follows: |
(20 ILCS 5160/10-10) | ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 1, 2022)
| ||
Sec. 10-10. Kidney Disease Prevention and Education Task | ||
Force. | ||
(a) There is hereby established the Kidney Disease | ||
Prevention and Education Task Force to work directly with | ||
educational institutions to create health education programs | ||
to increase awareness of and to examine chronic kidney | ||
disease, transplantations, living and deceased kidney | ||
donation, and the existing disparity in the rates of those | ||
afflicted between Caucasians and minorities. | ||
(b) The Task Force shall develop a sustainable plan to | ||
raise awareness about early detection, promote health equity, | ||
and reduce the burden of kidney disease throughout the State, | ||
which shall include an ongoing campaign that includes health | ||
education workshops and seminars, relevant research, and | ||
preventive screenings and that promotes social media campaigns | ||
and TV and radio commercials. | ||
(c) Membership of the Task Force shall be as follows: | ||
(1) one member of the Senate, appointed by the Senate | ||
President, who shall serve as Co-Chair; | ||
(2) one member of the House of Representatives, | ||
appointed by the Speaker of the House, who shall serve as | ||
Co-Chair; | ||
(3) one member of the House of Representatives, | ||
appointed by the Minority Leader of the House; |
(4) one member of the Senate, appointed by the Senate | ||
Minority Leader; | ||
(5) one member representing the Department of Public | ||
Health, appointed by the Governor; | ||
(6) one member representing the Department of | ||
Healthcare and Family Services, appointed by the Governor; | ||
(7) one member representing a medical center in a | ||
county with a population of more 3 million residents, | ||
appointed by the Co-Chairs; | ||
(8) one member representing a physician's association | ||
in a county with a population of more than 3 million | ||
residents, appointed by the Co-Chairs; | ||
(9) one member representing a not-for-profit organ | ||
procurement organization, appointed by the Co-Chairs; | ||
(10) one member representing a national nonprofit | ||
research kidney organization in the State of Illinois, | ||
appointed by the Co-Chairs; and | ||
(11) the Secretary of State or his or her designee ; . | ||
(12) one member who is a dialysis patient, appointed | ||
by the Co-Chairs; | ||
(13) one member who is a chronic kidney disease | ||
patient, appointed by the Co-Chairs; | ||
(14) one member who is a kidney transplant recipient, | ||
appointed by the Co-Chairs; | ||
(15) one member who is a representative of a program | ||
working to break down barriers to transplant care in the |
African American community through access to education, | ||
resources, and transplant care, appointed by the | ||
Co-Chairs; and | ||
(16) one member who is a representative of a | ||
nationwide, non-profit organization with membership for | ||
dialysis and pre-dialysis patients and their families, | ||
appointed by the Co-Chairs. | ||
(d) Members of the Task Force shall serve without | ||
compensation. | ||
(e) The Department of Public Health shall provide | ||
administrative support to the Task Force. | ||
(f) The Task Force shall submit its final report to the | ||
General Assembly on or before December 31, 2023 December 31, | ||
2021 and, upon the filing of its final report, is dissolved.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 101-649, eff. 7-7-20.) | ||
(20 ILCS 5160/10-15) | ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 1, 2022)
| ||
Sec. 10-15. Repeal. This Act is repealed on June 1, 2024 | ||
June 1, 2022 .
| ||
(Source: P.A. 101-649, eff. 7-7-20.) | ||
Section 45. The Illinois Procurement Code is amended by | ||
changing Sections 1-15.93, 30-30, and 45-57 as follows: | ||
(30 ILCS 500/1-15.93) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2022) | ||
Sec. 1-15.93. Single prime. "Single prime" means the | ||
design-bid-build procurement delivery method for a building | ||
construction project in which the Capital Development Board is | ||
the construction agency procuring 2 or more subdivisions of | ||
work enumerated in paragraphs (1) through (5) of subsection | ||
(a) of Section 30-30 of this Code under a single contract. This | ||
Section is repealed on January 1, 2024 2022 .
| ||
(Source: P.A. 101-369, eff. 12-15-19; 101-645, eff. 6-26-20.)
| ||
(30 ILCS 500/30-30)
| ||
Sec. 30-30. Design-bid-build construction. | ||
(a) The provisions of this subsection are operative | ||
through December 31, 2023 2021 . | ||
For
building construction contracts in excess of
$250,000, | ||
separate specifications may be prepared for all
equipment, | ||
labor, and materials in
connection with the following 5 | ||
subdivisions of the work to be
performed:
| ||
(1) plumbing;
| ||
(2) heating, piping, refrigeration, and automatic
| ||
temperature control systems,
including the testing and | ||
balancing of those systems;
| ||
(3) ventilating and distribution systems for
| ||
conditioned air, including the testing
and balancing of | ||
those systems;
| ||
(4) electric wiring; and
|
(5) general contract work.
| ||
The specifications may be so drawn as to permit separate | ||
and
independent bidding upon
each of the 5 subdivisions of | ||
work. All contracts awarded
for any part thereof may
award the | ||
5 subdivisions of work separately to responsible and
reliable | ||
persons, firms, or
corporations engaged in these classes of | ||
work. The contracts, at
the discretion of the
construction | ||
agency, may be assigned to the successful bidder on
the | ||
general contract work or
to the successful bidder on the | ||
subdivision of work designated by
the construction agency | ||
before
the bidding as the prime subdivision of work, provided | ||
that all
payments will be made directly
to the contractors for | ||
the 5 subdivisions of work upon compliance
with the conditions | ||
of the
contract.
| ||
Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act of | ||
the 101st General Assembly and through December 31, 2023 2020 , | ||
for single prime projects: (i) the bid of the successful low | ||
bidder shall identify the name of the subcontractor, if any, | ||
and the bid proposal costs for each of the 5 subdivisions of | ||
work set forth in this Section; (ii) the contract entered into | ||
with the successful bidder shall provide that no identified | ||
subcontractor may be terminated without the written consent of | ||
the Capital Development Board; (iii) the contract shall comply | ||
with the disadvantaged business practices of the Business | ||
Enterprise for Minorities, Women, and Persons with | ||
Disabilities Act and the equal employment practices of Section |
2-105 of the Illinois Human Rights Act; and (iv) the Capital | ||
Development Board shall submit an annual report to the General | ||
Assembly and Governor on the bidding, award, and performance | ||
of all single prime projects. | ||
For building construction projects with a total | ||
construction cost valued at $5,000,000 or less, the Capital | ||
Development Board shall not use the single prime procurement | ||
delivery method for more than 50% of the total number of | ||
projects bid for each fiscal year. Any project with a total | ||
construction cost valued greater than $5,000,000 may be bid | ||
using single prime at the discretion of the Executive Director | ||
of the Capital Development Board. | ||
(b) The provisions of this subsection are operative on and | ||
after January 1, 2024 2022 .
For building construction | ||
contracts in excess of $250,000, separate specifications shall | ||
be prepared for all equipment, labor, and materials in | ||
connection with the following 5 subdivisions of the work to be | ||
performed: | ||
(1) plumbing; | ||
(2) heating, piping, refrigeration, and automatic | ||
temperature control systems, including the testing and | ||
balancing of those systems; | ||
(3) ventilating and distribution systems for | ||
conditioned air, including the testing and balancing of | ||
those systems; | ||
(4) electric wiring; and |
(5) general contract work. | ||
The specifications must be so drawn as to permit separate | ||
and independent bidding upon each of the 5 subdivisions of | ||
work. All contracts awarded for any part thereof shall award | ||
the 5 subdivisions of work separately to responsible and | ||
reliable persons, firms, or corporations engaged in these | ||
classes of work. The contracts, at the discretion of the | ||
construction agency, may be assigned to the successful bidder | ||
on the general contract work or to the successful bidder on the | ||
subdivision of work designated by the construction agency | ||
before the bidding as the prime subdivision of work, provided | ||
that all payments will be made directly to the contractors for | ||
the 5 subdivisions of work upon compliance with the conditions | ||
of the contract. | ||
(Source: P.A. 100-391, eff. 8-25-17; 101-369, eff. 12-15-19; | ||
101-645, eff. 6-26-20.)
| ||
(30 ILCS 500/45-57) | ||
Sec. 45-57. Veterans. | ||
(a) Set-aside goal. It is the goal of the State to promote | ||
and encourage the continued economic development of small | ||
businesses owned and controlled by qualified veterans and that | ||
qualified service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses | ||
(referred to as SDVOSB) and veteran-owned small businesses | ||
(referred to as VOSB) participate in the State's procurement | ||
process as both prime contractors and subcontractors. Not less |
than 3% of the total dollar amount of State contracts, as | ||
defined by the Commission on Equity and Inclusion Director of | ||
Central Management Services , shall be established as a goal to | ||
be awarded to SDVOSB and VOSB. That
portion of a contract under | ||
which the contractor subcontracts
with a SDVOSB or VOSB may be | ||
counted toward the
goal of this subsection. The Commission on | ||
Equity and Inclusion Department of Central Management Services | ||
shall adopt rules to implement compliance with this subsection | ||
by all State agencies. | ||
(b) Fiscal year reports. By each November 1, each chief | ||
procurement officer shall report to the Commission on Equity | ||
and Inclusion Department of Central Management Services on all | ||
of the following for the immediately preceding fiscal year, | ||
and by each March 1 the Commission on Equity and Inclusion | ||
Department of Central Management Services shall compile and | ||
report that information to the General Assembly: | ||
(1) The total number of VOSB, and the number of | ||
SDVOSB, who submitted bids for contracts under this Code. | ||
(2) The total number of VOSB, and the number of | ||
SDVOSB, who entered into contracts with the State under | ||
this Code and the total value of those contracts. | ||
(b-5) The Commission on Equity and Inclusion Department of | ||
Central Management Services shall submit an annual report to | ||
the Governor and the General Assembly that shall include the | ||
following: | ||
(1) a year-by-year comparison of the number of |
certifications the State has issued to veteran-owned small | ||
businesses and service-disabled veteran-owned small | ||
businesses; | ||
(2) the obstacles, if any, the Commission on Equity | ||
and Inclusion Department of Central Management Services | ||
faces when certifying veteran-owned businesses and | ||
possible rules or changes to rules to address those | ||
issues; | ||
(3) a year-by-year comparison of awarded contracts to | ||
certified veteran-owned small businesses and | ||
service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses; and | ||
(4) any other information that the Commission on | ||
Equity and Inclusion Department of Central Management | ||
Services deems necessary to assist veteran-owned small | ||
businesses and service-disabled veteran-owned small | ||
businesses to become certified with the State. | ||
The Commission on Equity and Inclusion Department of | ||
Central Management Services shall conduct a minimum of 2 | ||
outreach events per year to ensure that veteran-owned small | ||
businesses and service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses | ||
know about the procurement opportunities and certification | ||
requirements with the State. The Commission on Equity and | ||
Inclusion Department of Central Management Services may | ||
receive appropriations for outreach. | ||
(c) Yearly review and recommendations. Each year, each | ||
chief procurement officer shall review the progress of all |
State agencies under its jurisdiction in meeting the goal | ||
described in subsection (a), with input from statewide | ||
veterans' service organizations and from the business | ||
community, including businesses owned by qualified veterans, | ||
and shall make recommendations to be included in the | ||
Commission on Equity and Inclusion's Department of Central | ||
Management Services' report to the General Assembly regarding | ||
continuation, increases, or decreases of the percentage goal. | ||
The recommendations shall be based upon the number of | ||
businesses that are owned by qualified veterans and on the | ||
continued need to encourage and promote businesses owned by | ||
qualified veterans. | ||
(d) Governor's recommendations. To assist the State in | ||
reaching the goal described in subsection (a), the Governor | ||
shall recommend to the General Assembly changes in programs to | ||
assist businesses owned by qualified veterans. | ||
(e) Definitions. As used in this Section: | ||
"Armed forces of the United States" means the United | ||
States Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, or | ||
service in active duty as defined under 38 U.S.C. Section 101. | ||
Service in the Merchant Marine that constitutes active duty | ||
under Section 401 of federal Public Act 95-202 shall also be | ||
considered service in the armed forces for purposes of this | ||
Section. | ||
"Certification" means a determination made by the Illinois | ||
Department of Veterans' Affairs and the Commission on Equity |
and Inclusion Department of Central Management Services that a | ||
business entity is a qualified service-disabled veteran-owned | ||
small business or a qualified veteran-owned small business for | ||
whatever purpose. A SDVOSB or VOSB owned and controlled by | ||
women, minorities, or persons with disabilities, as those | ||
terms are defined in Section 2 of the Business Enterprise for | ||
Minorities, Women, and Persons with Disabilities Act, may also | ||
select and designate whether that business is to be certified | ||
as a "women-owned business", "minority-owned business", or | ||
"business owned by a person with a disability", as defined in | ||
Section 2 of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women, | ||
and Persons with Disabilities Act. | ||
"Control" means the exclusive, ultimate, majority, or sole | ||
control of the business, including but not limited to capital | ||
investment and all other financial matters, property, | ||
acquisitions, contract negotiations, legal matters, | ||
officer-director-employee selection and comprehensive hiring, | ||
operation responsibilities, cost-control matters, income and | ||
dividend matters, financial transactions, and rights of other | ||
shareholders or joint partners. Control shall be real, | ||
substantial, and continuing, not pro forma. Control shall | ||
include the power to direct or cause the direction of the | ||
management and policies of the business and to make the | ||
day-to-day as well as major decisions in matters of policy, | ||
management, and operations. Control shall be exemplified by | ||
possessing the requisite knowledge and expertise to run the |
particular business, and control shall not include simple | ||
majority or absentee ownership. | ||
"Qualified service-disabled veteran" means a
veteran who | ||
has been found to have 10% or more service-connected | ||
disability by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs | ||
or the United States Department of Defense. | ||
"Qualified service-disabled veteran-owned small business" | ||
or "SDVOSB" means a small business (i) that is at least 51% | ||
owned by one or more qualified service-disabled veterans | ||
living in Illinois or, in the case of a corporation, at least | ||
51% of the stock of which is owned by one or more qualified | ||
service-disabled veterans living in Illinois; (ii) that has | ||
its home office in Illinois; and (iii) for which items (i) and | ||
(ii) are factually verified annually by the Commission on | ||
Equity and Inclusion Department of Central Management | ||
Services . | ||
"Qualified veteran-owned small business" or "VOSB" means a | ||
small business (i) that is at least 51% owned by one or more | ||
qualified veterans living in Illinois or, in the case of a | ||
corporation, at least 51% of the stock of which is owned by one | ||
or more qualified veterans living in Illinois; (ii) that has | ||
its home office in Illinois; and (iii) for which items (i) and | ||
(ii) are factually verified annually by the Commission on | ||
Equity and Inclusion Department of Central Management | ||
Services . | ||
"Service-connected disability" means a disability incurred |
in the line of duty in the active military, naval, or air | ||
service as described in 38 U.S.C. 101(16). | ||
"Small business" means a business that has annual gross | ||
sales of less than $75,000,000 as evidenced by the federal | ||
income tax return of the business. A firm with gross sales in | ||
excess of this cap may apply to the Commission on Equity and | ||
Inclusion Department of Central Management Services for | ||
certification for a particular contract if the firm can | ||
demonstrate that the contract would have significant impact on | ||
SDVOSB or VOSB as suppliers or subcontractors or in employment | ||
of veterans or service-disabled veterans. | ||
"State agency" has the meaning provided in Section | ||
1-15.100 of this Code. | ||
"Time of hostilities with a foreign country" means any | ||
period of time in the past, present, or future during which a | ||
declaration of war by the United States Congress has been or is | ||
in effect or during which an emergency condition has been or is | ||
in effect that is recognized by the issuance of a Presidential | ||
proclamation or a Presidential executive order and in which | ||
the armed forces expeditionary medal or other campaign service | ||
medals are awarded according to Presidential executive order. | ||
"Veteran" means a person who (i) has been a member of the | ||
armed forces of the United States or, while a citizen of the | ||
United States, was a member of the armed forces of allies of | ||
the United States in time of hostilities with a foreign | ||
country and (ii) has served under one or more of the following |
conditions: (a) the veteran served a total of at least 6 | ||
months; (b) the veteran served for the duration of hostilities | ||
regardless of the length of the engagement; (c) the veteran | ||
was discharged on the basis of hardship; or (d) the veteran was | ||
released from active duty because of a service connected | ||
disability and was discharged under honorable conditions. | ||
(f) Certification program. The Illinois Department of | ||
Veterans' Affairs and the Commission on Equity and Inclusion | ||
Department of Central Management Services shall work together | ||
to devise a certification procedure to assure that businesses | ||
taking advantage of this Section are legitimately classified | ||
as qualified service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses | ||
or qualified veteran-owned small businesses.
| ||
The Commission on Equity and Inclusion Department of | ||
Central Management Services shall: | ||
(1) compile and maintain a comprehensive list of | ||
certified veteran-owned small businesses and | ||
service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses; | ||
(2) assist veteran-owned small businesses and | ||
service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses in | ||
complying with the procedures for bidding on State | ||
contracts; | ||
(3) provide training for State agencies regarding the | ||
goal setting process and compliance with veteran-owned | ||
small business and service-disabled veteran-owned small | ||
business goals; and |
(4) implement and maintain an electronic portal on the | ||
Commission on Equity and Inclusion's Department's website | ||
for the purpose of completing and submitting veteran-owned | ||
small business and service-disabled veteran-owned small | ||
business certificates. | ||
The Commission on Equity and Inclusion Department of | ||
Central Management Services , in consultation with the | ||
Department of Veterans' Affairs, may develop programs and | ||
agreements to encourage cities, counties, towns, townships, | ||
and other certifying entities to adopt uniform certification | ||
procedures and certification recognition programs. | ||
(f-5) A business shall be certified by the Commission on | ||
Equity and Inclusion Department of Central Management Services | ||
as a service-disabled veteran-owned small business or a | ||
veteran-owned small business for purposes of this Section if | ||
the Commission on Equity and Inclusion Department of Central | ||
Management Services determines that the business has been | ||
certified as a service-disabled veteran-owned small business | ||
or a veteran-owned small business by the Vets First | ||
Verification Program of the United States Department of | ||
Veterans Affairs, and the business has provided to the | ||
Commission on Equity and Inclusion Department of Central | ||
Management Services the following: | ||
(1) documentation showing certification as a | ||
service-disabled veteran-owned small business or a | ||
veteran-owned small business by the Vets First |
Verification Program of the United States Department of | ||
Veterans Affairs; | ||
(2) proof that the business has its home office in | ||
Illinois; and | ||
(3) proof that the qualified veterans or qualified | ||
service-disabled veterans live in the State of Illinois. | ||
The policies of the Commission on Equity and Inclusion | ||
Department of Central Management Services regarding | ||
recognition of the Vets First Verification Program of the | ||
United States Department of Veterans Affairs shall be reviewed | ||
annually by the Commission on Equity and Inclusion Department | ||
of Central Management Services , and recognition of | ||
service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses and | ||
veteran-owned small businesses certified by the Vets First | ||
Verification Program of the United States Department of | ||
Veterans Affairs may be discontinued by the Commission on | ||
Equity and Inclusion Department of Central Management Services | ||
by rule upon a finding that the certification standards of the | ||
Vets First Verification Program of the United States | ||
Department of Veterans Affairs do not meet the certification | ||
requirements established by the Commission on Equity and | ||
Inclusion Department of Central Management Services . | ||
(g) Penalties. | ||
(1) Administrative penalties. The chief procurement | ||
officers appointed pursuant to Section 10-20 shall suspend | ||
any person who commits a violation of Section 17-10.3 or |
subsection (d) of Section 33E-6 of the Criminal Code of | ||
2012 relating to this Section from bidding on, or | ||
participating as a contractor, subcontractor, or supplier | ||
in, any State contract or project for a period of not less | ||
than 3 years, and, if the person is certified as a | ||
service-disabled veteran-owned small business or a | ||
veteran-owned small business, then the Commission on | ||
Equity and Inclusion Department shall revoke the | ||
business's certification for a period of not less than 3 | ||
years. An additional or subsequent violation shall extend | ||
the periods of suspension and revocation for a period of | ||
not less than 5 years. The suspension and revocation shall | ||
apply to the principals of the business and any subsequent | ||
business formed or financed by, or affiliated with, those | ||
principals. | ||
(2) Reports of violations. Each State agency shall | ||
report any alleged violation of Section 17-10.3 or | ||
subsection (d) of Section 33E-6 of the Criminal Code of | ||
2012 relating to this Section to the chief procurement | ||
officers appointed pursuant to Section 10-20. The chief | ||
procurement officers appointed pursuant to Section 10-20 | ||
shall subsequently report all such alleged violations to | ||
the Attorney General, who shall determine whether to bring | ||
a civil action against any person for the violation. | ||
(3) List of suspended persons. The chief procurement | ||
officers appointed pursuant to Section 10-20 shall monitor |
the status of all reported violations of Section 17-10.3 | ||
or subsection (d) of Section 33E-6 of the Criminal Code of | ||
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 relating to this Section | ||
and shall maintain and make available to all State | ||
agencies a central listing of all persons that committed | ||
violations resulting in suspension. | ||
(4) Use of suspended persons. During the period of a | ||
person's suspension under paragraph (1) of this | ||
subsection, a State agency shall not enter into any | ||
contract with that person or with any contractor using the | ||
services of that person as a subcontractor. | ||
(5) Duty to check list. Each State agency shall check | ||
the central listing provided by the chief procurement | ||
officers appointed pursuant to Section 10-20 under | ||
paragraph (3) of this subsection to verify that a person | ||
being awarded a contract by that State agency, or to be | ||
used as a subcontractor or supplier on a contract being | ||
awarded by that State agency, is not under suspension | ||
pursuant to paragraph (1) of this subsection. | ||
(h) On and after the effective date of this amendatory Act | ||
of the 102nd General Assembly, all powers, duties, rights, and | ||
responsibilities of the Department of Central Management | ||
Services with respect to the requirements of this Section are | ||
transferred to the Commission on Equity and Inclusion. | ||
All books, records, papers, documents, property (real and | ||
personal), contracts, causes of action, and pending business |
pertaining to the powers, duties, rights, and responsibilities | ||
transferred by this amendatory Act from the Department of | ||
Central Management Services to the Commission on Equity and | ||
Inclusion, including, but not limited to, material in | ||
electronic or magnetic format and necessary computer hardware | ||
and software, shall be transferred to the Commission on Equity | ||
and Inclusion. | ||
The powers, duties, rights, and responsibilities | ||
transferred from the Department of Central Management Services | ||
by this amendatory Act shall be vested in and shall be | ||
exercised by the Commission on Equity and Inclusion. | ||
Whenever reports or notices are now required to be made or | ||
given or papers or documents furnished or served by any person | ||
to or upon the Department of Central Management Services in | ||
connection with any of the powers, duties, rights, and | ||
responsibilities transferred by this amendatory Act, the same | ||
shall be made, given, furnished, or served in the same manner | ||
to or upon the Commission on Equity and Inclusion. | ||
This amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly does not | ||
affect any act done, ratified, or canceled or any right | ||
occurring or established or any action or proceeding had or | ||
commenced in an administrative, civil, or criminal cause by | ||
the Department of Central Management Services before this | ||
amendatory Act takes effect; such actions or proceedings may | ||
be prosecuted and continued by the Commission on Equity and | ||
Inclusion. |
Any rules of the Department of Central Management Services | ||
that relate to its powers, duties, rights, and | ||
responsibilities under this Section and are in full force on | ||
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General | ||
Assembly shall become the rules of the Commission on Equity | ||
and Inclusion. This amendatory Act does not affect the | ||
legality of any such rules in the Illinois Administrative | ||
Code.
Any proposed rules filed with the Secretary of State by | ||
the Department of Central Management Services that are pending | ||
in the rulemaking process on the effective date of this | ||
amendatory Act and pertain to the powers, duties, rights, and | ||
responsibilities transferred, shall be deemed to have been | ||
filed by the Commission on Equity and Inclusion. As soon as | ||
practicable hereafter, the Commission on Equity and Inclusion | ||
shall revise and clarify the rules transferred to it under | ||
this amendatory Act to reflect the reorganization of powers, | ||
duties, rights, and responsibilities affected by this | ||
amendatory Act, using the procedures for recodification of | ||
rules available under the Illinois Administrative Procedure | ||
Act, except that existing title, part, and section numbering | ||
for the affected rules may be retained. The Commission on | ||
Equity and Inclusion may propose and adopt under the Illinois | ||
Administrative Procedure Act such other rules of the | ||
Department of Central Management Services that will now be | ||
administered by the Commission on Equity and Inclusion. | ||
(Source: P.A. 102-166, eff. 7-26-21.) |
Section 50. The Commission on Equity and Inclusion Act is | ||
amended by changing Section 40-10 as follows: | ||
(30 ILCS 574/40-10) | ||
(This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a | ||
delayed effective date )
| ||
Sec. 40-10. Powers and duties. In addition to the other | ||
powers and duties which may be prescribed in this Act or | ||
elsewhere, the Commission shall have the following powers and | ||
duties:
| ||
(1) The Commission shall have a role in all State and | ||
university procurement by facilitating and streamlining | ||
communications between the Business Enterprise Council for | ||
Minorities, Women, and Persons with Disabilities, the | ||
purchasing entities, the Chief Procurement Officers, and | ||
others.
| ||
(2) The Commission may create a scoring evaluation for | ||
State agency directors, public university presidents and | ||
chancellors, and public community college presidents. The | ||
scoring shall be based on the following 3 principles: (i) | ||
increasing capacity; (ii) growing revenue; and (iii) | ||
enhancing credentials. These principles should be the | ||
foundation of the agency compliance plan required under | ||
Section 6 of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, | ||
Women, and Persons with Disabilities Act. |
(3) The Commission shall exercise the authority and | ||
duties provided to it under Section 5-7 of the Illinois | ||
Procurement Code.
| ||
(4) The Commission, working with State agencies, shall | ||
provide support for diversity in State hiring.
| ||
(5) The Commission shall oversee the implementation of | ||
diversity training of the State workforce.
| ||
(6) Each January, and as otherwise frequently as may | ||
be deemed necessary and appropriate by the Commission, the | ||
Commission shall propose and submit to the Governor and | ||
the General Assembly legislative changes to increase | ||
inclusion and diversity in State government.
| ||
(7) The Commission shall have oversight over the | ||
following entities:
| ||
(A) the Illinois African-American Family | ||
Commission;
| ||
(B) the Illinois Latino Family Commission;
| ||
(C) the Asian American Family Commission;
| ||
(D) the Illinois Muslim American Advisory Council;
| ||
(E) the Illinois African-American Fair Contracting | ||
Commission created under Executive Order 2018-07; and
| ||
(F) the Business Enterprise Council
for | ||
Minorities, Women, and Persons with Disabilities.
| ||
(8) The Commission shall adopt any rules necessary for | ||
the implementation and administration of the requirements | ||
of this Act.
|
(9) The Commission shall exercise the authority and | ||
duties provided to it under Section 45-57 of the Illinois | ||
Procurement Code. | ||
(Source: P.A. 101-657, eff. 1-1-22; 102-29, eff. 6-25-21.) | ||
Section 55. The Counties Code is amended by changing | ||
Sections 3-5010.8, 4-11001.5, 5-41065, and 5-43043 as follows: | ||
(55 ILCS 5/3-5010.8) | ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2022) | ||
Sec. 3-5010.8. Mechanics lien demand and referral pilot | ||
program. | ||
(a) Legislative findings. The General Assembly finds that | ||
expired mechanics liens on residential property, which cloud | ||
title to property, are a rapidly growing problem throughout | ||
the State. In order to address the increase in expired | ||
mechanics liens and, more specifically, those that have not | ||
been released by the lienholder, a recorder may establish a | ||
process to demand and refer mechanics liens that have been | ||
recorded but not litigated or released in accordance with the | ||
Mechanics Lien Act to an administrative law judge for | ||
resolution or demand that the lienholder commence suit or | ||
forfeit the lien. | ||
(b) Definitions. As used in this Section: | ||
"Demand to Commence Suit" means the written demand | ||
specified in Section 34 of the Mechanics Lien Act. |
"Mechanics lien" and "lien" are used interchangeably in | ||
this Section. | ||
"Notice of Expired Mechanics Lien" means the notice a | ||
recorder gives to a property owner under subsection (d) | ||
informing the property owner of an expired lien. | ||
"Notice of Referral" means the document referring a | ||
mechanics lien to a county's code hearing unit. | ||
"Recording" and "filing" are used interchangeably in this | ||
Section. | ||
"Referral" or "refer" means a recorder's referral of a | ||
mechanics lien to a county's code hearing unit to obtain a | ||
determination as to whether a recorded mechanics lien is | ||
valid. | ||
"Residential property" means real property improved with | ||
not less than one nor more than 4 residential dwelling units; a | ||
residential condominium unit, including, but not limited to, | ||
the common elements allocated to the exclusive use of the | ||
condominium unit that form an integral part of the condominium | ||
unit and any parking unit or units specified by the | ||
declaration to be allocated to a specific residential | ||
condominium unit; or a single tract of agriculture real estate | ||
consisting of 40 acres or less that is improved with a | ||
single-family residence. If a declaration of condominium | ||
ownership provides for individually owned and transferable | ||
parking units, "residential property" does not include the | ||
parking unit of a specified residential condominium unit |
unless the parking unit is included in the legal description | ||
of the property against which the mechanics lien is recorded. | ||
(c) Establishment of a mechanics lien demand and referral | ||
process. After a public hearing, a recorder in a county with a | ||
code hearing unit may adopt rules establishing a mechanics | ||
lien demand and referral process for residential property. A | ||
recorder shall provide public notice 90 days before the public | ||
hearing. The notice shall include a statement of the | ||
recorder's intent to create a mechanics lien demand and | ||
referral process and shall be published in a newspaper of | ||
general circulation in the county and, if feasible, be posted | ||
on the recorder's website and at the recorder's office or | ||
offices. | ||
(d) Notice of Expired Lien. If a recorder determines, | ||
after review by legal staff or counsel, that a mechanics lien | ||
recorded in the grantor's index or the grantee's index is an | ||
expired lien, the recorder shall serve a Notice of Expired | ||
Lien by certified mail to the last known address of the owner. | ||
The owner or legal representative of the owner of the | ||
residential property shall confirm in writing his or her | ||
belief that the lien is not involved in pending litigation | ||
and, if there is no pending litigation, as verified and | ||
confirmed by county court records, the owner may request that | ||
the recorder proceed with a referral or serve a Demand to | ||
Commence Suit. | ||
For the purposes of this Section, a recorder shall |
determine if a lien is an expired lien. A lien is expired if a | ||
suit to enforce the lien has not been commenced or a | ||
counterclaim has not been filed by the lienholder within 2 | ||
years after the completion date of the contract as specified | ||
in the recorded mechanics lien. The 2-year period shall be | ||
increased to the extent that an automatic stay under Section | ||
362(a) of the United States Bankruptcy Code stays a suit or | ||
counterclaim to foreclose the lien. If a work completion date | ||
is not specified in the recorded lien, then the work | ||
completion date is the date of recording of the mechanics | ||
lien. | ||
(e) Demand to Commence Suit. Upon receipt of an owner's | ||
confirmation that the lien is not involved in pending | ||
litigation and a request for the recorder to serve a Demand to | ||
Commence Suit, the recorder shall serve a Demand to Commence | ||
Suit on the lienholder of the expired lien as provided in | ||
Section 34 of the Mechanics Lien Act. A recorder may request | ||
that the Secretary of State assist in providing registered | ||
agent information or obtain information from the Secretary of | ||
State's registered business database when the recorder seeks | ||
to serve a Demand to Commence suit on the lienholder. Upon | ||
request, the Secretary of State, or his or her designee, shall | ||
provide the last known address or registered agent information | ||
for a lienholder who is incorporated or doing business in the | ||
State. The recorder must record a copy of the Demand to | ||
Commence suit in the grantor's index or the grantee's index |
identifying the mechanics lien and include the corresponding | ||
document number and the date of demand. The recorder may, at | ||
his or her discretion, notify the Secretary of State regarding | ||
a Demand to Commence suit determined to involve a company, | ||
corporation, or business registered with that office. | ||
When the lienholder commences a suit or files an answer | ||
within 30 days or the lienholder records a release of lien with | ||
the county recorder as required by subsection (a) of Section | ||
34 of the Mechanics Lien Act, then the demand and referral | ||
process is completed for the recorder for that property. If | ||
service under this Section is responded to consistent with | ||
Section 34 of the Mechanics Lien Act, the recorder may not | ||
proceed under subsection (f). If no response is received | ||
consistent with Section 34 of the Mechanics Lien Act, the | ||
recorder may proceed under subsection (f). | ||
(f) Referral. Upon receipt of an owner's confirmation that | ||
the lien is not involved in pending litigation and a request | ||
for the recorder to proceed with a referral, the recorder | ||
shall: (i) file the Notice of Referral with the county's code | ||
hearing unit; (ii) identify and notify the lienholder by | ||
telephone, if available, of the referral and send a copy of the | ||
Notice of Referral by certified mail to the lienholder using | ||
information included in the recorded mechanics lien or the | ||
last known address or registered agent received from the | ||
Secretary of State or obtained from the Secretary of State's | ||
registered business database; (iii) send a copy of the Notice |
of Referral by mail to the physical address of the property | ||
owner associated with the lien; and (iv) record a copy of the | ||
Notice of Referral in the grantor's index or the grantee's | ||
index identifying the mechanics lien and include the | ||
corresponding document number. The Notice of Referral shall | ||
clearly identify the person, persons, or entity believed to be | ||
the owner, assignee, successor, or beneficiary of the lien. | ||
The recorder may, at his or her discretion, notify the | ||
Secretary of State regarding a referral determined to involve | ||
a company, corporation, or business registered with that | ||
office. | ||
No earlier than 30 business days after the date the | ||
lienholder is required to respond to a Demand to Commence Suit | ||
under Section 34 of the Mechanics Lien Act, the code hearing | ||
unit shall schedule a hearing to occur at least 30 days after | ||
sending notice of the date of hearing. Notice of the hearing | ||
shall be provided by the county recorder, by and through his or | ||
her representative, to the filer, or the party represented by | ||
the filer, of the expired lien, the legal representative of | ||
the recorder of deeds who referred the case, and the last owner | ||
of record, as identified in the Notice of Referral. | ||
If the recorder shows by clear and convincing evidence | ||
that the lien in question is an expired lien, the | ||
administrative law judge shall rule the lien is forfeited | ||
under Section 34.5 of the Mechanics Lien Act and that the lien | ||
no longer affects the chain of title of the property in any |
way. The judgment shall be forwarded to all parties identified | ||
in this subsection. Upon receiving judgment of a forfeited | ||
lien, the recorder shall, within 5 business days, record a | ||
copy of the judgment in the grantor's index or the grantee's | ||
index. | ||
If the administrative law judge finds the lien is not | ||
expired, the recorder shall, no later than 5 business days | ||
after receiving notice of the decision of the administrative | ||
law judge, record a copy of the judgment in the grantor's index | ||
or the grantee's index. | ||
A decision by an administrative law judge is reviewable | ||
under the Administrative Review Law, and nothing in this | ||
Section precludes a property owner or lienholder from | ||
proceeding with a civil action to resolve questions concerning | ||
a mechanics lien. | ||
A lienholder or property owner may remove the action from | ||
the code hearing unit to the circuit court as provided in | ||
subsection (i). | ||
(g) Final administrative decision. The recorder's decision | ||
to refer a mechanics lien or serve a Demand to Commence Suit is | ||
a final administrative decision that is subject to review | ||
under the Administrative Review Law by the circuit court of | ||
the county where the real property is located. The standard of | ||
review by the circuit court shall be consistent with the | ||
Administrative Review Law. | ||
(h) Liability. A recorder and his or her employees or |
agents are not subject to personal liability by reason of any | ||
error or omission in the performance of any duty under this | ||
Section, except in the case of willful or wanton conduct. The | ||
recorder and his or her employees or agents are not liable for | ||
the decision to refer a lien or serve a Demand to Commence | ||
Suit, or failure to refer or serve a Demand to Commence Suit, | ||
of a lien under this Section. | ||
(i) Private actions; use of demand and referral process. | ||
Nothing in this Section precludes a private right of action by | ||
any party with an interest in the property affected by the | ||
mechanics lien or a decision by the code hearing unit. Nothing | ||
in this Section requires a person or entity who may have a | ||
mechanics lien recorded against his or her property to use the | ||
mechanics lien demand and referral process created by this | ||
Section. | ||
A lienholder or property owner may remove a matter in the | ||
referral process to the circuit court at any time prior to the | ||
final decision of the administrative law judge by delivering a | ||
certified notice of the suit filed in the circuit court to the | ||
administrative law judge. Upon receipt of the certified | ||
notice, the administrative law judge shall dismiss the matter | ||
without prejudice. If the matter is dismissed due to removal, | ||
then the demand and referral process is completed for the | ||
recorder for that property. If the circuit court dismisses the | ||
removed matter without deciding on whether the lien is expired | ||
and without prejudice, the recorder may reinstitute the demand |
and referral process under subsection (d). | ||
(j) Repeal. This Section is repealed on January 1, 2024 | ||
2022 .
| ||
(Source: P.A. 100-1061, eff. 1-1-19; 101-296, eff. 8-9-19.) | ||
(55 ILCS 5/4-11001.5) | ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2022) | ||
Sec. 4-11001.5. Lake County Children's Advocacy Center | ||
Pilot Program. | ||
(a) The Lake County Children's Advocacy Center Pilot | ||
Program is established. Under the Pilot Program, any grand | ||
juror or petit juror in Lake County may elect to have his or | ||
her juror fees earned under Section 4-11001 of this Code to be | ||
donated to the Lake County Children's Advocacy Center, a | ||
division of the Lake County State's Attorney's office. | ||
(b) On or before January 1, 2017, the Lake County board | ||
shall adopt, by ordinance or resolution, rules and policies | ||
governing and effectuating the ability of jurors to donate | ||
their juror fees to the Lake County Children's Advocacy Center | ||
beginning January 1, 2017 and ending December 31, 2018. At a | ||
minimum, the rules and policies must provide: | ||
(1) for a form that a juror may fill out to elect to | ||
donate his or her juror fees. The form must contain a | ||
statement, in at least 14-point bold type, that donation | ||
of juror fees is optional; | ||
(2) that all monies donated by jurors shall be |
transferred by the county to the Lake County Children's | ||
Advocacy Center at the same time a juror is paid under | ||
Section 4-11001 of this Code who did not elect to donate | ||
his or her juror fees; and | ||
(3) that all juror fees donated under this Section | ||
shall be used exclusively for the operation of Lake County | ||
Children's Advocacy Center. | ||
The Lake County board shall adopt an ordinance or | ||
resolution reestablishing the rules and policies previously | ||
adopted under this subsection allowing a juror to donate his | ||
or her juror fees to the Lake County Children's Advocacy | ||
Center through December 31, 2021. | ||
(c) The following information shall be reported to the | ||
General Assembly and the Governor by the Lake County board | ||
after each calendar year of the Pilot Program on or before | ||
March 31, 2018, March 31, 2019, July 1, 2020, and July 1, 2021: | ||
(1) the number of grand and petit jurors who earned | ||
fees under Section 4-11001 of this Code during the | ||
previous calendar year; | ||
(2) the number of grand and petit jurors who donated | ||
fees under this Section during the previous calendar year; | ||
(3) the amount of donated fees under this Section | ||
during the previous calendar year; | ||
(4) how the monies donated in the previous calendar | ||
year were used by the Lake County Children's Advocacy | ||
Center; and |
(5) how much cost there was incurred by Lake County | ||
and the Lake County State's Attorney's office in the | ||
previous calendar year in implementing the Pilot Program. | ||
(d) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2024 2022 .
| ||
(Source: P.A. 100-201, eff. 8-18-17; 101-612, eff. 12-20-19.) | ||
(55 ILCS 5/5-41065) | ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2022) | ||
Sec. 5-41065. Mechanics lien demand and referral | ||
adjudication. | ||
(a) Notwithstanding any other provision in this Division, | ||
a county's code hearing unit must adjudicate an expired | ||
mechanics lien referred to the unit under Section 3-5010.8. | ||
(b) If a county does not have an administrative law judge | ||
in its code hearing unit who is familiar with the areas of law | ||
relating to mechanics liens, one may be appointed no later | ||
than 3 months after the effective date of this amendatory Act | ||
of the 100th General Assembly to adjudicate all referrals | ||
concerning mechanics liens under Section 3-5010.8. | ||
(c) If an administrative law judge familiar with the areas | ||
of law relating to mechanics liens has not been appointed as | ||
provided subsection (b) when a mechanics lien is referred | ||
under Section 3-5010.8 to the code hearing unit, the case | ||
shall be removed to the proper circuit court with | ||
jurisdiction. | ||
(d) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2024 2022 .
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1061, eff. 1-1-19 .) | ||
(55 ILCS 5/5-43043) | ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2022) | ||
Sec. 5-43043. Mechanics lien demand and referral | ||
adjudication. | ||
(a) Notwithstanding any other provision in this Division, | ||
a county's code hearing unit must adjudicate an expired | ||
mechanics lien referred to the unit under Section 3-5010.8. | ||
(b) If a county does not have an administrative law judge | ||
in its code hearing unit who is familiar with the areas of law | ||
relating to mechanics liens, one may be appointed no later | ||
than 3 months after the effective date of this amendatory Act | ||
of the 100th General Assembly to adjudicate all referrals | ||
concerning mechanics liens under Section 3-5010.8. | ||
(c) If an administrative law judge familiar with the areas | ||
of law relating to mechanics liens has not been appointed as | ||
provided subsection (b) when a mechanics lien is referred | ||
under Section 3-5010.8 to the code hearing unit, the case | ||
shall be removed to the proper circuit court with | ||
jurisdiction. | ||
(d) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2024 2022 .
| ||
(Source: P.A. 100-1061, eff. 1-1-19 .) | ||
Section 60. The School Code is amended by changing | ||
Sections 2-3.187, 17-2A, and 22-90 as follows: |
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.187) | ||
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 102-209 ) | ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2023) | ||
Sec. 2-3.187. Inclusive American History Commission. | ||
(a) The Inclusive American History Commission is created | ||
to provide assistance to the State Board of Education in | ||
revising its social science learning standards under | ||
subsection (a-5) of Section 2-3.25 , including social science | ||
learning standards for students enrolled in pre-kindergarten . | ||
(b) The State Board of Education shall convene the | ||
Inclusive American History Commission to do all of the | ||
following: | ||
(1) Review available resources for use in school | ||
districts that reflect the racial and ethnic diversity of | ||
this State and country. The resources identified by the | ||
Commission may be posted on the State Board of Education's | ||
Internet website. | ||
(2) Provide guidance for each learning standard | ||
developed for educators on how to ensure that instruction | ||
and content are not biased to value specific cultures, | ||
time periods, and experiences over other cultures, time | ||
periods, and experiences. | ||
(3) Develop guidance, tools, and support for | ||
professional learning on how to locate and utilize | ||
resources for non-dominant cultural narratives and sources |
of historical information. | ||
(c) The Commission shall consist of all of the following | ||
members: | ||
(1) One Representative appointed by the Speaker of the | ||
House of Representatives. | ||
(2) One Representative appointed by the Minority | ||
Leader of the House of Representatives. | ||
(3) One Senator appointed by the President of the | ||
Senate. | ||
(4) One Senator appointed by the Minority Leader of | ||
the Senate. | ||
(5) Two members who are history scholars appointed by | ||
the State Superintendent of Education. | ||
(6) Eight members who are teachers at schools in this | ||
State recommended by professional teachers' organizations | ||
and appointed by the State Superintendent of Education. | ||
(7) One representative of the State Board of Education | ||
appointed by the State Superintendent of Education who | ||
shall serve as chairperson. | ||
(8) One member who represents a statewide organization | ||
that represents south suburban school districts appointed | ||
by the State Superintendent of Education. | ||
(9) One member who represents a west suburban school | ||
district appointed by the State Superintendent of | ||
Education. | ||
(10) One member who represents a school district |
organized under Article 34 appointed by the State | ||
Superintendent of Education. | ||
(11) One member who represents a statewide | ||
organization that represents school librarians appointed | ||
by the State Superintendent of Education. | ||
(12) One member who represents a statewide | ||
organization that represents principals appointed by the | ||
State Superintendent of Education. | ||
(13) One member who represents a statewide | ||
organization that represents superintendents appointed by | ||
the State Superintendent of Education. | ||
(14) One member who represents a statewide | ||
organization that represents school boards appointed by | ||
the State Superintendent of Education. | ||
Members appointed to the Commission must reflect the | ||
racial, ethnic, and geographic diversity of this State. | ||
(d) Members of the Commission shall serve without | ||
compensation but may be reimbursed for reasonable expenses | ||
from funds appropriated to the State Board of Education for | ||
that purpose, including travel, subject to the rules of the | ||
appropriate travel control board. | ||
(e) The State Board of Education shall provide | ||
administrative and other support to the Commission. | ||
(f) The Commission must submit a report about its work to | ||
the State Board of Education, the Governor, and the General | ||
Assembly on or before February 28, 2022 December 31, 2021 . The |
Commission is dissolved upon the submission of its report. | ||
(g) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2023.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 101-654, eff. 3-8-21.) | ||
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 102-209 ) | ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2023) | ||
Sec. 2-3.187. Inclusive American History Commission. | ||
(a) The Inclusive American History Commission is created | ||
to provide assistance to the State Board of Education in | ||
revising its social science learning standards under | ||
subsection (a-5) of Section 2-3.25 , including social science | ||
learning standards for students enrolled in pre-kindergarten . | ||
(b) The State Board of Education shall convene the | ||
Inclusive American History Commission to do all of the | ||
following: | ||
(1) Review available resources for use in school | ||
districts that reflect the racial and ethnic diversity of | ||
this State and country. The resources identified by the | ||
Commission may be posted on the State Board of Education's | ||
Internet website. | ||
(2) Provide guidance for each learning standard | ||
developed for educators on how to ensure that instruction | ||
and content are not biased to value specific cultures, | ||
time periods, and experiences over other cultures, time | ||
periods, and experiences. | ||
(3) Develop guidance, tools, and support for |
professional learning on how to locate and utilize | ||
resources for non-dominant cultural narratives and sources | ||
of historical information. | ||
(c) The Commission shall consist of all of the following | ||
members: | ||
(1) One Representative appointed by the Speaker of the | ||
House of Representatives. | ||
(2) One Representative appointed by the Minority | ||
Leader of the House of Representatives. | ||
(3) One Senator appointed by the President of the | ||
Senate. | ||
(4) One Senator appointed by the Minority Leader of | ||
the Senate. | ||
(5) Two members who are history scholars appointed by | ||
the State Superintendent of Education. | ||
(6) Eight members who are teachers at schools in this | ||
State recommended by professional teachers' organizations | ||
and appointed by the State Superintendent of Education. | ||
(7) One representative of the State Board of Education | ||
appointed by the State Superintendent of Education who | ||
shall serve as chairperson. | ||
(8) One member who represents an organization that | ||
represents south suburban school districts appointed by | ||
the State Superintendent of Education. | ||
(9) One member who represents a west suburban school | ||
district appointed by the State Superintendent of |
Education. | ||
(10) One member who represents a school district | ||
organized under Article 34 appointed by the State | ||
Superintendent of Education. | ||
(11) One member who represents a statewide | ||
organization that represents school librarians appointed | ||
by the State Superintendent of Education. | ||
(12) One member who represents a statewide | ||
organization that represents principals appointed by the | ||
State Superintendent of Education. | ||
(13) One member who represents a statewide | ||
organization that represents superintendents appointed by | ||
the State Superintendent of Education. | ||
(14) One member who represents a statewide | ||
organization that represents school boards appointed by | ||
the State Superintendent of Education. | ||
Members appointed to the Commission must reflect the | ||
racial, ethnic, and geographic diversity of this State. | ||
(d) Members of the Commission shall serve without | ||
compensation but may be reimbursed for reasonable expenses | ||
from funds appropriated to the State Board of Education for | ||
that purpose, including travel, subject to the rules of the | ||
appropriate travel control board. | ||
(e) The State Board of Education shall provide | ||
administrative and other support to the Commission. | ||
(f) The Commission must submit a report about its work to |
the State Board of Education, the Governor, and the General | ||
Assembly on or before February 28, 2022 December 31, 2021 . The | ||
Commission is dissolved upon the submission of its report. | ||
(g) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2023.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 101-654, eff. 3-8-21; 102-209, eff. 1-1-22.)
| ||
(105 ILCS 5/17-2A) (from Ch. 122, par. 17-2A)
| ||
Sec. 17-2A. Interfund transfers. | ||
(a) The school board of any district having a population | ||
of less than
500,000 inhabitants may, by proper resolution | ||
following a public hearing
set by the school board or the | ||
president of the school board
(that is preceded (i) by at least | ||
one published notice over the name of
the clerk
or secretary of | ||
the board, occurring at least 7 days and not more than 30
days
| ||
prior to the hearing, in a newspaper of general circulation | ||
within the
school
district and (ii) by posted notice over the | ||
name of the clerk or secretary of
the board, at least 48 hours | ||
before the hearing, at the principal office of the
school | ||
board or at the building where the hearing is to be held if a | ||
principal
office does not exist, with both notices setting | ||
forth the time, date, place,
and subject matter of the
| ||
hearing), transfer money from (1) the Educational Fund to the | ||
Operations
and
Maintenance Fund or the Transportation Fund, | ||
(2) the Operations and
Maintenance Fund to the Educational | ||
Fund or the Transportation Fund, (3) the
Transportation Fund | ||
to the Educational Fund or the Operations and Maintenance
|
Fund, or (4) the Tort Immunity Fund to the Operations and | ||
Maintenance Fund of said
district,
provided that, except | ||
during the period from July 1, 2003 through June 30, 2024 2021 , | ||
such transfer is made solely for the purpose of meeting | ||
one-time,
non-recurring expenses. Except during the period | ||
from July 1, 2003 through
June 30, 2024 2021 and except as | ||
otherwise provided in subsection (b) of this Section, any | ||
other permanent interfund transfers authorized
by any | ||
provision or judicial interpretation of this Code for which | ||
the
transferee fund is not precisely and specifically set | ||
forth in the provision of
this Code authorizing such transfer | ||
shall be made to the fund of the school
district most in need | ||
of the funds being transferred, as determined by
resolution of | ||
the school board. | ||
(b) (Blank).
| ||
(c) Notwithstanding subsection (a) of this Section or any | ||
other provision of this Code to the contrary, the school board | ||
of any school district (i) that is subject to the Property Tax | ||
Extension Limitation Law, (ii) that is an elementary district | ||
servicing students in grades K through 8, (iii) whose | ||
territory is in one county, (iv) that is eligible for Section | ||
7002 Federal Impact Aid, and (v) that has no more than $81,000 | ||
in funds remaining from refinancing bonds that were refinanced | ||
a minimum of 5 years prior to January 20, 2017 (the effective | ||
date of Public Act 99-926) may make a one-time transfer of the | ||
funds remaining from the refinancing bonds to the Operations |
and Maintenance Fund of the district by proper resolution | ||
following a public hearing set by the school board or the | ||
president of the school board, with notice as provided in | ||
subsection (a) of this Section, so long as the district meets | ||
the qualifications set forth in this subsection (c) on January | ||
20, 2017 (the effective date of Public Act 99-926). | ||
(d) Notwithstanding subsection (a) of this Section or any | ||
other provision of this Code to the contrary, the school board | ||
of any school district (i) that is subject to the Property Tax | ||
Extension Limitation Law, (ii) that is a community unit school | ||
district servicing students in grades K through 12, (iii) | ||
whose territory is in one county, (iv) that owns property | ||
designated by the United States as a Superfund site pursuant | ||
to the federal Comprehensive Environmental Response, | ||
Compensation and Liability Act of 1980 (42 U.S.C. 9601 et | ||
seq.), and (v) that has an excess accumulation of funds in its | ||
bond fund, including funds accumulated prior to July 1, 2000, | ||
may make a one-time transfer of those excess funds accumulated | ||
prior to July 1, 2000 to the Operations and Maintenance Fund of | ||
the district by proper resolution following a public hearing | ||
set by the school board or the president of the school board, | ||
with notice as provided in subsection (a) of this Section, so | ||
long as the district meets the qualifications set forth in | ||
this subsection (d) on August 4, 2017 (the effective date of | ||
Public Act 100-32). | ||
(Source: P.A. 100-32, eff. 8-4-17; 100-465, eff. 8-31-17; |
100-863, eff. 8-14-18; 101-643, eff. 6-18-20.)
| ||
(105 ILCS 5/22-90) | ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on February 1, 2023) | ||
Sec. 22-90. Whole Child Task Force. | ||
(a) The General Assembly makes all of the following | ||
findings: | ||
(1) The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed systemic | ||
inequities in American society. Students, educators, and | ||
families throughout this State have been deeply affected | ||
by the pandemic, and the impact of the pandemic will be | ||
felt for years to come. The negative consequences of the | ||
pandemic have impacted students and communities | ||
differently along the lines of race, income, language, and | ||
special needs. However, students in this State faced | ||
significant unmet physical health, mental health, and | ||
social and emotional needs even prior to the pandemic. | ||
(2) The path to recovery requires a commitment from | ||
adults in this State to address our students cultural, | ||
physical, emotional, and mental health needs and to | ||
provide them with stronger and increased systemic support | ||
and intervention. | ||
(3) It is well documented that trauma and toxic stress | ||
diminish a child's ability to thrive. Forms of childhood | ||
trauma and toxic stress include adverse childhood | ||
experiences, systemic racism, poverty, food and housing |
insecurity, and gender-based violence. The COVID-19 | ||
pandemic has exacerbated these issues and brought them | ||
into focus. | ||
(4) It is estimated that, overall, approximately 40% | ||
of children in this State have experienced at least one | ||
adverse childhood experience and approximately 10% have | ||
experienced 3 or more adverse childhood experiences. | ||
However, the number of adverse childhood experiences is | ||
higher for Black and Hispanic children who are growing up | ||
in poverty. The COVID-19 pandemic has amplified the number | ||
of students who have experienced childhood trauma. Also, | ||
the COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted preexisting | ||
inequities in school disciplinary practices that | ||
disproportionately impact Black and Brown students. | ||
Research shows, for example, that girls of color are | ||
disproportionately impacted by trauma, adversity, and | ||
abuse, and instead of receiving the care and | ||
trauma-informed support they may need, many Black girls in | ||
particular face disproportionately harsh disciplinary | ||
measures. | ||
(5) The cumulative effects of trauma and toxic stress | ||
adversely impact the physical health of students, as well | ||
as their ability to learn, form relationships, and | ||
self-regulate. If left unaddressed, these effects increase | ||
a student's risk for depression, alcoholism, anxiety, | ||
asthma, smoking, and suicide, all of which are risks that |
disproportionately affect Black youth and may lead to a | ||
host of medical diseases as an adult. Access to infant and | ||
early childhood mental health services is critical to | ||
ensure the social and emotional well-being of this State's | ||
youngest children, particularly those children who have | ||
experienced trauma. | ||
(6) Although this State enacted measures through | ||
Public Act 100-105 to address the high rate of early care | ||
and preschool expulsions of infants, toddlers, and | ||
preschoolers and the disproportionately higher rate of | ||
expulsion for Black and Hispanic children, a recent study | ||
found a wide variation in the awareness, understanding, | ||
and compliance with the law by providers of early | ||
childhood care. Further work is needed to implement the | ||
law, which includes providing training to early childhood | ||
care providers to increase their understanding of the law, | ||
increasing the availability and access to infant and early | ||
childhood mental health services, and building aligned | ||
data collection systems to better understand expulsion | ||
rates and to allow for accurate reporting as required by | ||
the law. | ||
(7) Many educators and schools in this State have | ||
embraced and implemented evidenced-based restorative | ||
justice and trauma-responsive and culturally relevant | ||
practices and interventions. However, the use of these | ||
interventions on students is often isolated or is |
implemented occasionally and only if the school has the | ||
appropriate leadership, resources, and partners available | ||
to engage seriously in this work. It would be malpractice | ||
to deny our students access to these practices and | ||
interventions, especially in the aftermath of a | ||
once-in-a-century pandemic. | ||
(b) The Whole Child Task Force is created for the purpose | ||
of establishing an equitable, inclusive, safe, and supportive | ||
environment in all schools for every student in this State. | ||
The task force shall have all of the following goals, which | ||
means key steps have to be taken to ensure that every child in | ||
every school in this State has access to teachers, social | ||
workers, school leaders, support personnel, and others who | ||
have been trained in evidenced-based interventions and | ||
restorative practices: | ||
(1) To create a common definition of a | ||
trauma-responsive school, a trauma-responsive district, | ||
and a trauma-responsive community. | ||
(2) To outline the training and resources required to | ||
create and sustain a system of support for | ||
trauma-responsive schools, districts, and communities and | ||
to identify this State's role in that work, including | ||
recommendations concerning options for redirecting | ||
resources from school resource officers to classroom-based | ||
support. | ||
(3) To identify or develop a process to conduct an |
analysis of the organizations that provide training in | ||
restorative practices, implicit bias, anti-racism, and | ||
trauma-responsive systems, mental health services, and | ||
social and emotional services to schools. | ||
(4) To provide recommendations concerning the key data | ||
to be collected and reported to ensure that this State has | ||
a full and accurate understanding of the progress toward | ||
ensuring that all schools, including programs and | ||
providers of care to pre-kindergarten children, employ | ||
restorative, anti-racist, and trauma-responsive | ||
strategies and practices. The data collected must include | ||
information relating to the availability of trauma | ||
responsive support structures in schools as well as | ||
disciplinary practices employed on students in person or | ||
through other means, including during remote or blended | ||
learning. It should also include information on the use | ||
of, and funding for, school resource officers and other | ||
similar police personnel in school programs. | ||
(5) To recommend an implementation timeline, including | ||
the key roles, responsibilities, and resources to advance | ||
this State toward a system in which every school, | ||
district, and community is progressing toward becoming | ||
trauma-responsive. | ||
(6) To seek input and feedback from stakeholders, | ||
including parents, students, and educators, who reflect | ||
the diversity of this State. |
(c) Members of the Whole Child Task Force shall be | ||
appointed by the State Superintendent of Education. Members of | ||
this task force must represent the diversity of this State and | ||
possess the expertise needed to perform the work required to | ||
meet the goals of the task force set forth under subsection | ||
(a). Members of the task force shall include all of the | ||
following: | ||
(1) One member of a statewide professional teachers' | ||
organization. | ||
(2) One member of another statewide professional | ||
teachers' organization. | ||
(3) One member who represents a school district | ||
serving a community with a population of 500,000 or more. | ||
(4) One member of a statewide organization | ||
representing social workers. | ||
(5) One member of an organization that has specific | ||
expertise in trauma-responsive school practices and | ||
experience in supporting schools in developing | ||
trauma-responsive and restorative practices. | ||
(6) One member of another organization that has | ||
specific expertise in trauma-responsive school practices | ||
and experience in supporting schools in developing | ||
trauma-responsive and restorative practices. | ||
(7) One member of a statewide organization that | ||
represents school administrators. | ||
(8) One member of a statewide policy organization that |
works to build a healthy public education system that | ||
prepares all students for a successful college, career, | ||
and civic life. | ||
(9) One member of a statewide organization that brings
| ||
teachers together to identify and address issues
critical | ||
to student success. | ||
(10) One member of the General Assembly recommended by | ||
the President of the Senate. | ||
(11) One member of the General Assembly recommended by | ||
the Speaker of the House of
Representatives. | ||
(12) One member of the General Assembly recommended by | ||
the Minority Leader of the Senate. | ||
(13) One member of the General Assembly recommended by | ||
the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives. | ||
(14) One member of a civil rights organization that | ||
works actively on issues regarding student support. | ||
(15) One administrator from a school district that has | ||
actively worked to develop a system of student support | ||
that uses a trauma-informed lens. | ||
(16) One educator from a school district that has | ||
actively worked to develop a system of student support | ||
that uses a trauma-informed lens. | ||
(17) One member of a youth-led organization. | ||
(18) One member of an organization that has | ||
demonstrated expertise in restorative practices. | ||
(19) One member of a coalition of mental health and |
school practitioners who assist schools in developing and | ||
implementing trauma-informed and restorative strategies | ||
and systems. | ||
(20) One member of an organization whose mission is to | ||
promote the safety, health, and economic success of | ||
children, youth, and families in this State. | ||
(21) One member who works or has worked as a | ||
restorative justice coach or disciplinarian. | ||
(22) One member who works or has worked as a social | ||
worker. | ||
(23) One member of the State Board of Education. | ||
(24) One member who represents a statewide principals' | ||
organization. | ||
(25) One member who represents a statewide | ||
organization of school boards. | ||
(26) One member who has expertise in pre-kindergarten | ||
education. | ||
(27) One member who represents a school social worker | ||
association. | ||
(28) One member who represents an organization that | ||
represents school districts in both the south suburbs and | ||
collar counties. | ||
(29) One member who is a licensed clinical | ||
psychologist who (A) has a doctor of philosophy in the | ||
field of clinical psychology and has an appointment at an | ||
independent free-standing children's hospital located in |
Chicago, (B) serves as associate professor at a medical | ||
school located in Chicago, and (C) serves as the clinical | ||
director of a coalition of voluntary collaboration of | ||
organizations that are committed to applying a trauma lens | ||
to their efforts on behalf of families and children in the | ||
State. | ||
(30) One member who represents a west suburban school | ||
district. | ||
(d) The Whole Child Task Force shall meet at the call of | ||
the State Superintendent of Education or his or her designee, | ||
who shall serve as as the chairperson. The State Board of | ||
Education shall provide administrative and other support to | ||
the task force. Members of the task force shall serve without | ||
compensation. | ||
(e) The Whole Child Task Force shall submit a report of its | ||
findings and recommendations to the General Assembly, the | ||
Illinois Legislative Black Caucus, the State Board of | ||
Education, and the Governor on or before March 15, 2022 | ||
February 1, 2022 . Upon submitting its report, the task force | ||
is dissolved. | ||
(f) This Section is repealed on February 1, 2023.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 101-654, eff. 3-8-21.) | ||
Section 65. The University of Illinois Hospital Act is | ||
amended by changing Section 8d as follows: |
(110 ILCS 330/8d) | ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021) | ||
Sec. 8d. N95 masks. Pursuant to and in accordance with | ||
applicable local, State, and federal policies, guidance and | ||
recommendations of public health and infection control | ||
authorities, and taking into consideration the limitations on | ||
access to N95 masks caused by disruptions in local, State, | ||
national, and international supply chains, the University of | ||
Illinois Hospital shall provide N95 masks to physicians | ||
licensed under the Medical Practice Act of 1987, registered | ||
nurses and advanced practice registered nurses licensed under | ||
the Nurse Licensing Act, and any other employees or | ||
contractual workers who provide direct patient care and who, | ||
pursuant to such policies, guidance, and recommendations, are | ||
recommended to have such a mask to safely provide such direct | ||
patient care within a hospital setting. Nothing in this | ||
Section shall be construed to impose any new duty or | ||
obligation on the University of Illinois Hospital or employee | ||
that is greater than that imposed under State and federal laws | ||
in effect on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the | ||
102nd General Assembly. | ||
This Section is repealed on July 1, 2022 December 31, | ||
2021 .
| ||
(Source: P.A. 102-4, eff. 4-27-21.) | ||
Section 66. If and only if House Bill 3666 of the 102nd |
General Assembly becomes law (as amended by Senate Amendment | ||
No. 6), the Energy Assistance Act is amended by changing | ||
Section 13 as follows:
| ||
(305 ILCS 20/13)
| ||
(Text of Section from P.A. 102-16) | ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2025) | ||
Sec. 13. Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund.
| ||
(a) The Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance
Fund is | ||
hereby created as a special fund in the State
Treasury. | ||
Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the | ||
Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund is not subject | ||
to sweeps, administrative charge-backs, or any other fiscal or | ||
budgetary maneuver that would in any way transfer any amounts | ||
from the Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund into | ||
any other fund of the State. The Supplemental Low-Income | ||
Energy Assistance Fund
is authorized to receive moneys from | ||
voluntary donations from individuals, foundations, | ||
corporations, and other sources, moneys received pursuant to | ||
Section 17, and, by statutory deposit, the moneys
collected | ||
pursuant to this Section. The Fund is also authorized to | ||
receive voluntary donations from individuals, foundations, | ||
corporations, and other sources. Subject to appropriation,
the | ||
Department shall use
moneys from the Supplemental Low-Income | ||
Energy Assistance Fund
for payments to electric or gas public | ||
utilities,
municipal electric or gas utilities, and electric |
cooperatives
on behalf of their customers who are participants | ||
in the
program authorized by Sections 4 and 18 of this Act, for | ||
the provision of
weatherization services and for
| ||
administration of the Supplemental Low-Income Energy
| ||
Assistance Fund. All other deposits outside of the Energy | ||
Assistance Charge as set forth in subsection (b) are not | ||
subject to the percentage restrictions related to | ||
administrative and weatherization expenses provided in this | ||
subsection. The yearly expenditures for weatherization may not | ||
exceed 10%
of the amount collected during the year pursuant to | ||
this Section, except when unspent funds from the Supplemental | ||
Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund are reallocated from a | ||
previous year; any unspent balance of the 10% weatherization | ||
allowance may be utilized for weatherization expenses in the | ||
year they are reallocated. The yearly administrative expenses | ||
of the
Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund may not | ||
exceed
13% of the amount collected during that year
pursuant | ||
to this Section, except when unspent funds from the | ||
Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund are reallocated | ||
from a previous year; any unspent balance of the 13% | ||
administrative allowance may be utilized for administrative | ||
expenses in the year they are reallocated. Of the 13% | ||
administrative allowance, no less than 8% shall be provided to | ||
Local Administrative Agencies for administrative expenses.
| ||
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 16-111
of | ||
the Public Utilities Act but subject to subsection (k) of this |
Section,
each public utility, electric
cooperative, as defined | ||
in Section 3.4 of the Electric Supplier Act,
and municipal | ||
utility, as referenced in Section 3-105 of the Public | ||
Utilities
Act, that is engaged in the delivery of electricity | ||
or the
distribution of natural gas within the State of | ||
Illinois
shall, effective January 1, 2021 2022 ,
assess each of
| ||
its customer accounts a monthly Energy Assistance Charge for
| ||
the Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund.
The | ||
delivering public utility, municipal electric or gas utility, | ||
or electric
or gas
cooperative for a self-assessing purchaser | ||
remains subject to the collection of
the
fee imposed by this | ||
Section.
The
monthly charge shall be as follows:
| ||
(1) Base Energy Assistance Charge per month on each
| ||
account for residential electrical service; | ||
(2) Base Energy Assistance Charge per month on each
| ||
account for residential gas service; | ||
(3) Ten times the Base Energy Assistance Charge per
| ||
month on each account for non-residential electric
service | ||
which had less than 10 megawatts of peak
demand during the | ||
previous calendar year; | ||
(4) Ten times the Base Energy Assistance Charge per
| ||
month on each account for non-residential gas
service | ||
which had distributed to it less than
4,000,000 therms of | ||
gas during the previous
calendar year; | ||
(5) Three hundred and seventy-five times the Base
| ||
Energy Assistance Charge per month on each account
for |
non-residential electric service which had 10
megawatts or | ||
greater of peak demand during the
previous calendar year; | ||
and | ||
(6) Three hundred and seventy-five times the Base
| ||
Energy Assistance Charge per month on each account
For | ||
non-residential gas service which had
4,000,000 or more | ||
therms of gas distributed to it
during the previous | ||
calendar year. | ||
The Base Energy Assistance Charge shall be $0.48
per month | ||
for the calendar year beginning January
1, 2022 and shall | ||
increase by $0.16 per month for
any calendar year, provided no | ||
less than 80% of the
previous State fiscal year's available
| ||
Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund
funding was | ||
exhausted. The maximum Base Energy
Assistance Charge shall not | ||
exceed $0.96 per month
for any calendar year.
| ||
The incremental change to such charges imposed by Public | ||
Act 99-933 and this amendatory Act of the 102nd General | ||
Assembly shall not (i) be used for any purpose other than to | ||
directly assist customers and (ii) be applicable to utilities | ||
serving less than 100,000 customers in Illinois on January 1, | ||
2021. The incremental change to such charges imposed by this | ||
amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly are intended to | ||
increase utilization of the Percentage of Income Payment Plan | ||
(PIPP or PIP Plan) and shall be applied such that PIP Plan | ||
enrollment is at least doubled, as compared to 2020 | ||
enrollment, by 2024. |
In addition, electric and gas utilities have committed, | ||
and shall contribute, a one-time payment of $22 million to the | ||
Fund, within 10 days after the effective date of the tariffs | ||
established pursuant to Sections 16-111.8 and 19-145 of the | ||
Public Utilities Act to be used for the Department's cost of | ||
implementing the programs described in Section 18 of this | ||
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, the Arrearage | ||
Reduction Program described in Section 18, and the programs | ||
described in Section 8-105 of the Public Utilities Act. If a | ||
utility elects not to file a rider within 90 days after the | ||
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General | ||
Assembly, then the contribution from such utility shall be | ||
made no later than February 1, 2010.
| ||
(c) For purposes of this Section:
| ||
(1) "residential electric service" means
electric | ||
utility service for household purposes delivered to a
| ||
dwelling of 2 or fewer units which is billed under a
| ||
residential rate, or electric utility service for | ||
household
purposes delivered to a dwelling unit or units | ||
which is billed
under a residential rate and is registered | ||
by a separate meter
for each dwelling unit;
| ||
(2) "residential gas service" means gas utility
| ||
service for household purposes distributed to a dwelling | ||
of
2 or fewer units which is billed under a residential | ||
rate,
or gas utility service for household purposes | ||
distributed to a
dwelling unit or units which is billed |
under a residential
rate and is registered by a separate | ||
meter for each dwelling
unit;
| ||
(3) "non-residential electric service" means
electric | ||
utility service which is not residential electric
service; | ||
and
| ||
(4) "non-residential gas service" means gas
utility | ||
service which is not residential gas service.
| ||
(d) Within 30 days after the effective date of this | ||
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, each public
| ||
utility engaged in the delivery of electricity or the
| ||
distribution of natural gas shall file with the Illinois
| ||
Commerce Commission tariffs incorporating the Energy
| ||
Assistance Charge in other charges stated in such tariffs, | ||
which shall become effective no later than the beginning of | ||
the first billing cycle following such filing.
| ||
(e) The Energy Assistance Charge assessed by
electric and | ||
gas public utilities shall be considered a charge
for public | ||
utility service.
| ||
(f) By the 20th day of the month following the month in | ||
which the charges
imposed by the Section were collected, each | ||
public
utility,
municipal utility, and electric cooperative | ||
shall remit to the
Department of Revenue all moneys received | ||
as payment of the
Energy Assistance Charge on a return | ||
prescribed and furnished by the
Department of Revenue showing | ||
such information as the Department of Revenue may
reasonably | ||
require; provided, however, that a utility offering an |
Arrearage Reduction Program or Supplemental Arrearage | ||
Reduction Program pursuant to Section 18 of this Act shall be | ||
entitled to net those amounts necessary to fund and recover | ||
the costs of such Programs as authorized by that Section that | ||
is no more than the incremental change in such Energy | ||
Assistance Charge authorized by Public Act 96-33. If a | ||
customer makes a partial payment, a public
utility, municipal
| ||
utility, or electric cooperative may elect either: (i) to | ||
apply
such partial payments first to amounts owed to the
| ||
utility or cooperative for its services and then to payment
| ||
for the Energy Assistance Charge or (ii) to apply such partial | ||
payments
on a pro-rata basis between amounts owed to the
| ||
utility or cooperative for its services and to payment for the
| ||
Energy Assistance Charge.
| ||
If any payment provided for in this Section exceeds the | ||
distributor's liabilities under this Act, as shown on an | ||
original return, the Department may authorize the distributor | ||
to credit such excess payment against liability subsequently | ||
to be remitted to the Department under this Act, in accordance | ||
with reasonable rules adopted by the Department. If the | ||
Department subsequently determines that all or any part of the | ||
credit taken was not actually due to the distributor, the | ||
distributor's discount shall be reduced by an amount equal to | ||
the difference between the discount as applied to the credit | ||
taken and that actually due, and that distributor shall be | ||
liable for penalties and interest on such difference. |
(g) The Department of Revenue shall deposit into the
| ||
Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund all moneys
| ||
remitted to it in accordance with subsection (f) of this
| ||
Section. The utilities shall coordinate with the Department to | ||
establish an equitable and practical methodology for | ||
implementing this subsection (g) beginning with the 2010 | ||
program year.
| ||
(h) On or before December 31, 2002, the Department shall
| ||
prepare a report for the General Assembly on the expenditure | ||
of funds
appropriated from the Low-Income Energy Assistance | ||
Block Grant Fund for the
program authorized under Section 4 of | ||
this Act.
| ||
(i) The Department of Revenue may establish such
rules as | ||
it deems necessary to implement this Section.
| ||
(j) The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity
| ||
may establish such rules as it deems necessary to implement
| ||
this Section.
| ||
(k) The charges imposed by this Section shall only apply | ||
to customers of
municipal electric or gas utilities and | ||
electric or gas cooperatives if
the municipal
electric or gas
| ||
utility or electric or gas cooperative makes an affirmative | ||
decision to
impose the
charge. If a municipal electric or gas | ||
utility or an electric
cooperative makes an affirmative | ||
decision to impose the charge provided by
this
Section, the | ||
municipal electric or gas utility or electric cooperative | ||
shall
inform the
Department of Revenue in writing of such |
decision when it begins to impose the
charge. If a municipal | ||
electric or gas utility or electric or gas
cooperative does | ||
not
assess
this charge, the Department may not use funds from | ||
the Supplemental Low-Income
Energy Assistance Fund to provide | ||
benefits to its customers under the program
authorized by | ||
Section 4 of this Act.
| ||
In its use of federal funds under this Act, the Department | ||
may not cause a
disproportionate share of those federal funds | ||
to benefit customers of systems
which do not assess the charge | ||
provided by this Section.
| ||
This Section is repealed on January 1, 2025
unless
renewed | ||
by action of the General Assembly.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 102-16, eff. 6-17-21; 10200HB3666sam006.)
| ||
(Text of Section from P.A. 102-176) | ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2025) | ||
Sec. 13. Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund.
| ||
(a) The Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance
Fund is | ||
hereby created as a special fund in the State
Treasury. The | ||
Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund
is authorized | ||
to receive moneys from voluntary donations from individuals, | ||
foundations, corporations, and other sources, moneys received | ||
pursuant to Section 17, and, by statutory deposit, the moneys
| ||
collected pursuant to this Section. The Fund is also | ||
authorized to receive voluntary donations from individuals, | ||
foundations, corporations, and other sources. Subject to |
appropriation,
the Department shall use
moneys from the | ||
Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund
for payments to | ||
electric or gas public utilities,
municipal electric or gas | ||
utilities, and electric cooperatives
on behalf of their | ||
customers who are participants in the
program authorized by | ||
Sections 4 and 18 of this Act, for the provision of
| ||
weatherization services and for
administration of the | ||
Supplemental Low-Income Energy
Assistance Fund. All other | ||
deposits outside of the Energy Assistance Charge as set forth | ||
in subsection (b) are not subject to the percentage | ||
restrictions related to administrative and weatherization | ||
expenses provided in this subsection. The yearly expenditures | ||
for weatherization may not exceed 10%
of the amount collected | ||
during the year pursuant to this Section, except when unspent | ||
funds from the Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund | ||
are reallocated from a previous year; any unspent balance of | ||
the 10% weatherization allowance may be utilized for | ||
weatherization expenses in the year they are reallocated. The | ||
yearly administrative expenses of the
Supplemental Low-Income | ||
Energy Assistance Fund may not exceed
13% of the amount | ||
collected during that year
pursuant to this Section, except | ||
when unspent funds from the Supplemental Low-Income Energy | ||
Assistance Fund are reallocated from a previous year; any | ||
unspent balance of the 13% administrative allowance may be | ||
utilized for administrative expenses in the year they are | ||
reallocated. Of the 13% administrative allowance, no less than |
8% shall be provided to Local Administrative Agencies for | ||
administrative expenses.
| ||
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 16-111
of | ||
the Public Utilities Act but subject to subsection (k) of this | ||
Section,
each public utility, electric
cooperative, as defined | ||
in Section 3.4 of the Electric Supplier Act,
and municipal | ||
utility, as referenced in Section 3-105 of the Public | ||
Utilities
Act, that is engaged in the delivery of electricity | ||
or the
distribution of natural gas within the State of | ||
Illinois
shall, effective January 1, 2021 2022 ,
assess each of
| ||
its customer accounts a monthly Energy Assistance Charge for
| ||
the Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund.
The | ||
delivering public utility, municipal electric or gas utility, | ||
or electric
or gas
cooperative for a self-assessing purchaser | ||
remains subject to the collection of
the
fee imposed by this | ||
Section.
The
monthly charge shall be as follows:
| ||
(1) Base Energy Assistance Charge per month on each
| ||
account for residential electrical service; | ||
(2) Base Energy Assistance Charge per month on each
| ||
account for residential gas service; | ||
(3) Ten times the Base Energy Assistance Charge per
| ||
month on each account for non-residential electric
service | ||
which had less than 10 megawatts of peak
demand during the | ||
previous calendar year; | ||
(4) Ten times the Base Energy Assistance Charge per
| ||
month on each account for non-residential gas
service |
which had distributed to it less than
4,000,000 therms of | ||
gas during the previous
calendar year; | ||
(5) Three hundred and seventy-five times the Base
| ||
Energy Assistance Charge per month on each account
for | ||
non-residential electric service which had 10
megawatts or | ||
greater of peak demand during the
previous calendar year; | ||
and | ||
(6) Three hundred and seventy-five times the Base
| ||
Energy Assistance Charge per month on each account
for | ||
non-residential gas service which had
4,000,000 or more | ||
therms of gas distributed to it
during the previous | ||
calendar year. | ||
The Base Energy Assistance Charge shall be $0.48
per month | ||
for the calendar year beginning January
1, 2022 and shall | ||
increase by $0.16 per month for
any calendar year, provided no | ||
less than 80% of the
previous State fiscal year's available
| ||
Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund
funding was | ||
exhausted. The maximum Base Energy
Assistance Charge shall not | ||
exceed $0.96 per month
for any calendar year.
| ||
The incremental change to such charges imposed by Public | ||
Act 99-933 and this amendatory Act of the 102nd General | ||
Assembly shall not (i) be used for any purpose other than to | ||
directly assist customers and (ii) be applicable to utilities | ||
serving less than 100,000 customers in Illinois on January 1, | ||
2021. The incremental change to such charges imposed by this | ||
amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly are intended to |
increase utilization of the Percentage of Income Payment Plan | ||
(PIPP or PIP Plan) and shall be applied such that PIP Plan | ||
enrollment is at least doubled, as compared to 2020 | ||
enrollment, by 2024. | ||
In addition, electric and gas utilities have committed, | ||
and shall contribute, a one-time payment of $22 million to the | ||
Fund, within 10 days after the effective date of the tariffs | ||
established pursuant to Sections 16-111.8 and 19-145 of the | ||
Public Utilities Act to be used for the Department's cost of | ||
implementing the programs described in Section 18 of this | ||
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, the Arrearage | ||
Reduction Program described in Section 18, and the programs | ||
described in Section 8-105 of the Public Utilities Act. If a | ||
utility elects not to file a rider within 90 days after the | ||
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General | ||
Assembly, then the contribution from such utility shall be | ||
made no later than February 1, 2010.
| ||
(c) For purposes of this Section:
| ||
(1) "residential electric service" means
electric | ||
utility service for household purposes delivered to a
| ||
dwelling of 2 or fewer units which is billed under a
| ||
residential rate, or electric utility service for | ||
household
purposes delivered to a dwelling unit or units | ||
which is billed
under a residential rate and is registered | ||
by a separate meter
for each dwelling unit;
| ||
(2) "residential gas service" means gas utility
|
service for household purposes distributed to a dwelling | ||
of
2 or fewer units which is billed under a residential | ||
rate,
or gas utility service for household purposes | ||
distributed to a
dwelling unit or units which is billed | ||
under a residential
rate and is registered by a separate | ||
meter for each dwelling
unit;
| ||
(3) "non-residential electric service" means
electric | ||
utility service which is not residential electric
service; | ||
and
| ||
(4) "non-residential gas service" means gas
utility | ||
service which is not residential gas service.
| ||
(d) Within 30 days after the effective date of this | ||
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, each public
| ||
utility engaged in the delivery of electricity or the
| ||
distribution of natural gas shall file with the Illinois
| ||
Commerce Commission tariffs incorporating the Energy
| ||
Assistance Charge in other charges stated in such tariffs, | ||
which shall become effective no later than the beginning of | ||
the first billing cycle following such filing.
| ||
(e) The Energy Assistance Charge assessed by
electric and | ||
gas public utilities shall be considered a charge
for public | ||
utility service.
| ||
(f) By the 20th day of the month following the month in | ||
which the charges
imposed by the Section were collected, each | ||
public
utility,
municipal utility, and electric cooperative | ||
shall remit to the
Department of Revenue all moneys received |
as payment of the
Energy Assistance Charge on a return | ||
prescribed and furnished by the
Department of Revenue showing | ||
such information as the Department of Revenue may
reasonably | ||
require; provided, however, that a utility offering an | ||
Arrearage Reduction Program or Supplemental Arrearage | ||
Reduction Program pursuant to Section 18 of this Act shall be | ||
entitled to net those amounts necessary to fund and recover | ||
the costs of such Programs as authorized by that Section that | ||
is no more than the incremental change in such Energy | ||
Assistance Charge authorized by Public Act 96-33. If a | ||
customer makes a partial payment, a public
utility, municipal
| ||
utility, or electric cooperative may elect either: (i) to | ||
apply
such partial payments first to amounts owed to the
| ||
utility or cooperative for its services and then to payment
| ||
for the Energy Assistance Charge or (ii) to apply such partial | ||
payments
on a pro-rata basis between amounts owed to the
| ||
utility or cooperative for its services and to payment for the
| ||
Energy Assistance Charge.
| ||
If any payment provided for in this Section exceeds the | ||
distributor's liabilities under this Act, as shown on an | ||
original return, the Department may authorize the distributor | ||
to credit such excess payment against liability subsequently | ||
to be remitted to the Department under this Act, in accordance | ||
with reasonable rules adopted by the Department. If the | ||
Department subsequently determines that all or any part of the | ||
credit taken was not actually due to the distributor, the |
distributor's discount shall be reduced by an amount equal to | ||
the difference between the discount as applied to the credit | ||
taken and that actually due, and that distributor shall be | ||
liable for penalties and interest on such difference. | ||
(g) The Department of Revenue shall deposit into the
| ||
Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund all moneys
| ||
remitted to it in accordance with subsection (f) of this
| ||
Section. The utilities shall coordinate with the Department to | ||
establish an equitable and practical methodology for | ||
implementing this subsection (g) beginning with the 2010 | ||
program year.
| ||
(h) On or before December 31, 2002, the Department shall
| ||
prepare a report for the General Assembly on the expenditure | ||
of funds
appropriated from the Low-Income Energy Assistance | ||
Block Grant Fund for the
program authorized under Section 4 of | ||
this Act.
| ||
(i) The Department of Revenue may establish such
rules as | ||
it deems necessary to implement this Section.
| ||
(j) The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity
| ||
may establish such rules as it deems necessary to implement
| ||
this Section.
| ||
(k) The charges imposed by this Section shall only apply | ||
to customers of
municipal electric or gas utilities and | ||
electric or gas cooperatives if
the municipal
electric or gas
| ||
utility or electric or gas cooperative makes an affirmative | ||
decision to
impose the
charge. If a municipal electric or gas |
utility or an electric
cooperative makes an affirmative | ||
decision to impose the charge provided by
this
Section, the | ||
municipal electric or gas utility or electric cooperative | ||
shall
inform the
Department of Revenue in writing of such | ||
decision when it begins to impose the
charge. If a municipal | ||
electric or gas utility or electric or gas
cooperative does | ||
not
assess
this charge, the Department may not use funds from | ||
the Supplemental Low-Income
Energy Assistance Fund to provide | ||
benefits to its customers under the program
authorized by | ||
Section 4 of this Act.
| ||
In its use of federal funds under this Act, the Department | ||
may not cause a
disproportionate share of those federal funds | ||
to benefit customers of systems
which do not assess the charge | ||
provided by this Section.
| ||
This Section is repealed on January 1, 2025
unless
renewed | ||
by action of the General Assembly.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 102-176, eff. 6-1-22.; 10200HB3666sam006.)
| ||
Section 70. The Intergenerational Poverty Act is amended | ||
by changing Sections 95-502 and 95-503 as follows: | ||
(305 ILCS 70/95-502)
| ||
Sec. 95-502. Strategic plan to address poverty and | ||
economic insecurity. | ||
(a) Plan required. No later than March 31, 2022 November | ||
30, 2021 , the Commission shall develop and adopt a strategic |
plan to address poverty and economic insecurity in this State. | ||
(b) Goals. The goals of the strategic plan shall be to: | ||
(1) Ensure that State programs and services targeting | ||
poverty and economic insecurity reflect the goal of | ||
helping individuals and families rise above poverty and | ||
achieve long-term economic stability rather than simply | ||
providing relief from deprivation. | ||
(2) Eliminate disparate rates of poverty, deep | ||
poverty, child poverty, and intergenerational poverty | ||
based on race, ethnicity, gender, age, sexual orientation | ||
or identity, English language proficiency, ability, and | ||
geographic location in a rural, urban, or suburban area. | ||
(3) Reduce deep poverty in this State by 50% by 2026. | ||
(4) Eliminate child poverty in this State by 2031. | ||
(5) Eliminate all poverty in this State by 2036. | ||
(c) Plan development. In developing the strategic plan, | ||
the Commission shall: | ||
(1) Collaborate with the workgroup, including sharing | ||
data and information identified under paragraphs (1) and | ||
(3) of subsection (a) of Section 95-303 and analyses of | ||
that data and information. | ||
(2) Review each program and service provided by the | ||
State that targets poverty and economic insecurity for | ||
purposes of: | ||
(i) determining which programs and services are | ||
the most effective and of the highest importance in |
reducing poverty and economic insecurity in this | ||
State; and | ||
(ii) providing an analysis of unmet needs, if any, | ||
among individuals, children, and families in deep | ||
poverty and intergenerational poverty for each program | ||
and service identified under subparagraph (i). | ||
(3) Study the feasibility of using public or private | ||
partnerships and social impact bonds, to improve | ||
innovation and cost-effectiveness in the development of | ||
programs and delivery of services that advance the goals | ||
of the strategic plan. | ||
(4) Hold at least 6 public hearings in different | ||
geographic regions of this State, including areas that | ||
have disparate rates of poverty and that have historically | ||
experienced economic insecurity, to collect information, | ||
take testimony, and solicit input and feedback from | ||
interested parties, including members of the public who | ||
have personal experiences with State programs and services | ||
targeting economic insecurity, poverty, deep poverty, | ||
child poverty, and intergenerational poverty and make the | ||
information publicly available. | ||
(5) To request and receive from a State agency or | ||
local governmental agency information relating to poverty | ||
in this State, including all of the following: | ||
(i) Reports. | ||
(ii) Audits. |
(iii) Data. | ||
(iv) Projections. | ||
(v) Statistics. | ||
(d) Subject areas. The strategic plan shall address all of | ||
the following: | ||
(1) Access to safe and affordable housing. | ||
(2) Access to adequate food and nutrition. | ||
(3) Access to affordable and quality health care. | ||
(4) Equal access to quality education and training. | ||
(5) Equal access to affordable, quality post-secondary | ||
education options. | ||
(6) Dependable and affordable transportation. | ||
(7) Access to quality and affordable child care. | ||
(8) Opportunities to engage in meaningful and | ||
sustainable work that pays a living wage and barriers to | ||
those opportunities experienced by low-income individuals | ||
in poverty. | ||
(9) Equal access to justice through a fair system of | ||
criminal justice that does not, in effect, criminalize | ||
poverty. | ||
(10) The availability of adequate income supports. | ||
(11) Retirement security. | ||
(e) Plan content. The strategic plan shall, at a minimum, | ||
contain policy and fiscal recommendations relating to all of | ||
the following: | ||
(1) Developing fact-based measures to evaluate the |
long-term effectiveness of existing and proposed programs | ||
and services targeting poverty and economic insecurity. | ||
(2) Increasing enrollment in programs and services | ||
targeting poverty and economic insecurity by reducing the | ||
complexity and difficulty of enrollment in order to | ||
maximize program effectiveness and increase positive | ||
outcomes. | ||
(3) Increasing the reach of programs and services | ||
targeting poverty and economic insecurity by ensuring that | ||
State agencies have adequate resources to maximize the | ||
public awareness of the programs and services, especially | ||
in historically disenfranchised communities. | ||
(4) Reducing the negative impacts of asset limits for | ||
eligibility on the effectiveness of State programs | ||
targeting poverty and economic insecurity by ensuring that | ||
eligibility limits do not: | ||
(i) create gaps in necessary service and benefit | ||
delivery or restrict access to benefits as individuals | ||
and families attempt to transition off assistance | ||
programs; or | ||
(ii) prevent beneficiaries from improving | ||
long-term outcomes and achieving long-term economic | ||
independence from the program. | ||
(5) Improving the ability of community-based | ||
organizations to participate in the development and | ||
implementation of State programs designed to address |
economic insecurity and poverty. | ||
(6) Improving the ability of individuals living in | ||
poverty, low-income individuals, and unemployed | ||
individuals to access critical job training and skills | ||
upgrade programs and find quality jobs that help children | ||
and families become economically secure and rise above | ||
poverty. | ||
(7) Improving communication and collaboration between | ||
State agencies and local governments on programs targeting | ||
poverty and economic insecurity. | ||
(8) Creating efficiencies in the administration and | ||
coordination of programs and services targeting poverty | ||
and economic insecurity. | ||
(9) Connecting low-income children, disconnected | ||
youth, and families of those children and youth to | ||
education, job training, and jobs in the communities in | ||
which those children and youth live. | ||
(10) Ensuring that the State's services and benefits | ||
programs, emergency programs, discretionary economic | ||
programs, and other policies are sufficiently funded to | ||
enable the State to mount effective responses to economic | ||
downturns and increases in economic insecurity and poverty | ||
rates. | ||
(11) Creating one or more State poverty measures. | ||
(12) Developing and implementing programs and policies | ||
that use the two-generation approach. |
(13) Using public or private partnerships and social | ||
impact bonds to improve innovation and cost-effectiveness | ||
in the development of programs and delivery of services | ||
that advance the goals of the strategic plan. | ||
(14) Identifying best practices for collecting data | ||
relevant to all of the following: | ||
(i) Reducing economic insecurity and poverty. | ||
(ii) Reducing the racial, ethnic, age, gender, | ||
sexual orientation, and sexual identity-based | ||
disparities in the rates of economic insecurity and | ||
poverty. | ||
(iii) Adequately measuring the effectiveness, | ||
efficiency, and impact of programs on the outcomes for | ||
individuals, families, and communities who receive | ||
benefits and services. | ||
(iv) Streamlining enrollment and eligibility for | ||
programs. | ||
(v) Improving long-term outcomes for individuals | ||
who are enrolled in service and benefit programs. | ||
(vi) Reducing reliance on public programs. | ||
(vii) Improving connections to work. | ||
(viii) Improving economic security. | ||
(ix) Improving retirement security. | ||
(x) Improving the State's understanding of the | ||
impact of extreme weather and natural disasters on | ||
economically vulnerable communities and improving |
those communities' resilience to and recovery from | ||
extreme weather and natural disasters. | ||
(xi) Improving access to living-wage employment. | ||
(xii) Improving access to employment-based | ||
benefits. | ||
(f) Other information. In addition to the plan content | ||
required under subsection (e), the strategic plan shall | ||
contain all of the following: | ||
(1) A suggested timeline for the stages of | ||
implementation of the recommendations in the plan. | ||
(2) Short-term, intermediate-term, and long-term | ||
benchmarks to measure the State's progress toward meeting | ||
the goals of the strategic plan. | ||
(3) A summary of the review and analysis conducted by | ||
the Commission under paragraph (1) of subsection (c). | ||
(g) Impact of recommendations. For each recommendation in | ||
the plan, the Commission shall identify in measurable terms | ||
the actual or potential impact the recommendation will have on | ||
poverty and economic insecurity in this State.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 101-636, eff. 6-10-20; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21.) | ||
(305 ILCS 70/95-503)
| ||
Sec. 95-503. Commission reports. | ||
(a) Interim report. No later than June 30, 2021, the | ||
Commission shall issue an interim report on the Commission's | ||
activities to the Governor and the General Assembly. |
(b) Report on strategic plan. Upon the Commission's | ||
adoption of the strategic plan, but no later than March 31, | ||
2022 November 30, 2021 , the Commission shall issue a report | ||
containing a summary of the Commission's activities and the | ||
contents of the strategic plan. The Commission shall submit | ||
the report to the Governor and each member of the General | ||
Assembly. | ||
(c) Annual reports. Beginning March 31, 2022 November 30, | ||
2022 , and each year thereafter, the Commission shall issue a | ||
report on the status of the implementation of the Commission's | ||
strategic plan. The report may contain any other | ||
recommendations of the Commission to address poverty and | ||
economic insecurity in this State.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 101-636, eff. 6-10-20.) | ||
Section 75. The Rare Disease Commission Act is amended by | ||
changing Sections 15 and 90 as follows: | ||
(410 ILCS 445/15)
| ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2023) | ||
Sec. 15. Study; recommendations. The Commission shall make | ||
recommendations to the General Assembly, in the form of an | ||
annual report through 2026 2023 , regarding: | ||
(1) the use of prescription drugs and innovative | ||
therapies for children and adults with rare diseases, and | ||
specific subpopulations of children or adults with rare |
diseases, as appropriate, together with recommendations on | ||
the ways in which this information should be used in | ||
specific State programs that (A) provide assistance or | ||
health care coverage to individuals with rare diseases or | ||
broader populations that include individuals with rare | ||
diseases, or (B) have responsibilities associated with | ||
promoting the quality of care for individuals with rare | ||
diseases or broader populations that include individuals | ||
with rare diseases; | ||
(2) legislation that could improve the care and | ||
treatment of adults or children with rare diseases;
| ||
(3) in coordination with the Genetic and Metabolic | ||
Diseases Advisory Committee, the screening of newborn | ||
children for the presence of genetic disorders; and | ||
(4) any other issues the Commission considers | ||
appropriate. | ||
The Commission shall submit its annual report to the | ||
General Assembly no later than December 31 of each year.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 101-606, eff. 12-13-19.) | ||
(410 ILCS 445/90)
| ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2023) | ||
Sec. 90. Repeal. This Act is repealed on January 1, 2027 | ||
2023 .
| ||
(Source: P.A. 101-606, eff. 12-13-19.) |
Section 80. The Farmer Equity Act is amended by changing | ||
Section 25 as follows: | ||
(505 ILCS 72/25) | ||
Sec. 25. Disparity study; report. | ||
(a) The Department shall conduct a study and use the data | ||
collected to determine economic and other disparities | ||
associated with farm ownership and farm operations in this | ||
State. The study shall focus primarily on identifying and | ||
comparing economic, land ownership, education, and other | ||
related differences between African American farmers and white | ||
farmers, but may include data collected in regards to farmers | ||
from other socially disadvantaged groups. The study shall | ||
collect, compare, and analyze data relating to disparities or | ||
differences in farm operations for the following areas: | ||
(1) Farm ownership and the size or acreage of the | ||
farmland owned compared to the number of farmers who are | ||
farm tenants. | ||
(2) The distribution of farm-related generated income | ||
and wealth. | ||
(3) The accessibility and availability to grants, | ||
loans, commodity subsidies, and other financial | ||
assistance. | ||
(4) Access to technical assistance programs and | ||
mechanization. | ||
(5) Participation in continuing education, outreach, |
or other agriculturally related services or programs. | ||
(6) Interest in farming by young or beginning farmers. | ||
(b) The Department shall submit a report of study to the | ||
Governor and General Assembly on or before December 31, 2022 | ||
January 1, 2022 . The report shall be made available on the | ||
Department's Internet website.
| ||
(c) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2024. | ||
(Source: P.A. 101-658, eff. 3-23-21.) | ||
Section 85. The Mechanics Lien Act is amended by changing | ||
Section 34.5 as follows: | ||
(770 ILCS 60/34.5) | ||
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2022) | ||
Sec. 34.5. Mechanics lien administrative adjudication. | ||
(a) Notwithstanding any other provision in this Act, a | ||
county's code hearing unit may adjudicate the validity of a | ||
mechanics lien under Section 3-5010.8 of the Counties Code. If | ||
the recorder shows by clear and convincing evidence that the | ||
lien being adjudicated is an expired lien, the administrative | ||
law judge shall rule the lien is forfeited under this Act and | ||
that the lien no longer affects the chain of title of the | ||
property in any way. | ||
(b) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2024 2022 .
| ||
(Source: P.A. 100-1061, eff. 1-1-19 .) |
Section 90. The Unemployment Insurance Act is amended by | ||
changing Sections 401, 403, 1502.4, 1505, and 1506.6 as | ||
follows: | ||
(820 ILCS 405/401) (from Ch. 48, par. 401) | ||
Sec. 401. Weekly Benefit Amount - Dependents' Allowances.
| ||
A. With respect to any week beginning in a benefit year | ||
beginning prior to January 4, 2004, an
individual's weekly | ||
benefit amount shall be an amount equal to the weekly
benefit | ||
amount as defined in the provisions of this Act as amended and | ||
in effect on November 18, 2011.
| ||
B. 1.
With respect to any benefit year beginning on or | ||
after January 4, 2004 and
before January 6, 2008, an | ||
individual's weekly benefit amount shall be 48% of
his or her | ||
prior average weekly wage, rounded (if not already a multiple | ||
of one
dollar) to the next higher dollar; provided, however, | ||
that the weekly benefit
amount cannot exceed the maximum | ||
weekly benefit amount and cannot be less than
$51. Except as | ||
otherwise provided in this Section, with respect to any | ||
benefit year beginning on or after January 6, 2008, an
| ||
individual's weekly benefit amount shall be 47% of his or her | ||
prior average
weekly wage, rounded (if not already a multiple | ||
of one dollar) to the next
higher dollar; provided, however, | ||
that the weekly benefit amount cannot exceed
the maximum | ||
weekly benefit amount and cannot be less than $51.
With | ||
respect to any benefit year beginning on or after July 3, 2022 |
in calendar year 2022 , an individual's weekly benefit amount | ||
shall be 42.4% of his or her prior average weekly wage, rounded | ||
(if not already a multiple of one dollar) to the next higher | ||
dollar; provided, however, that the weekly benefit amount | ||
cannot exceed the maximum weekly benefit amount and cannot be | ||
less than $51.
| ||
2. For the purposes of this subsection:
| ||
An
individual's "prior average weekly wage" means the | ||
total wages for insured
work paid to that individual during | ||
the 2 calendar quarters of his base
period in which such total | ||
wages were highest, divided by 26. If
the quotient is not | ||
already a multiple of one dollar, it shall be
rounded to the | ||
nearest dollar; however if the quotient is equally near
2 | ||
multiples of one dollar, it shall be rounded to the higher | ||
multiple of
one dollar.
| ||
"Determination date" means June 1 and December 1 of each | ||
calendar year except that, for the purposes
of this Act only, | ||
there shall be no June 1 determination date in any
year.
| ||
"Determination period" means, with respect to each June 1 | ||
determination
date, the 12 consecutive calendar months ending | ||
on the immediately preceding
December 31 and, with respect to | ||
each December 1 determination date, the
12 consecutive | ||
calendar months ending on the immediately preceding June 30.
| ||
"Benefit period" means the 12 consecutive calendar month | ||
period
beginning on the first day of the first calendar month | ||
immediately following
a determination date, except that, with |
respect to any calendar year
in which there is a June 1 | ||
determination date, "benefit period" shall mean
the 6 | ||
consecutive calendar month period beginning on the first day | ||
of the first
calendar month immediately following the | ||
preceding December 1 determination
date and the 6 consecutive | ||
calendar month period beginning on the first
day of the first | ||
calendar month immediately following the June 1 determination
| ||
date.
| ||
"Gross wages" means all the wages paid to individuals | ||
during the
determination period immediately preceding a | ||
determination date for
insured work, and reported to the | ||
Director by employers prior to the
first day of the third | ||
calendar month preceding that date.
| ||
"Covered employment" for any calendar month means the | ||
total number of
individuals, as determined by the Director, | ||
engaged in insured work at
mid-month.
| ||
"Average monthly covered employment" means one-twelfth of | ||
the sum of
the covered employment for the 12 months of a | ||
determination period.
| ||
"Statewide average annual wage" means the quotient, | ||
obtained by
dividing gross wages by average monthly covered | ||
employment for the same
determination period, rounded (if not | ||
already a multiple of one cent) to
the nearest cent.
| ||
"Statewide average weekly wage" means the quotient, | ||
obtained by
dividing the statewide average annual wage by 52, | ||
rounded (if not
already a multiple of one cent) to the nearest |
cent. Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the | ||
contrary, the statewide average weekly wage for any benefit | ||
period prior to calendar year 2012 shall be as determined by | ||
the provisions of this Act as amended and in effect on November | ||
18, 2011. Notwithstanding any
provisions of this Section to | ||
the contrary, the statewide average weekly
wage for the | ||
benefit period of calendar year 2012 shall be $856.55 and for | ||
each calendar year
thereafter, the
statewide average weekly | ||
wage shall be the statewide
average weekly wage, as determined | ||
in accordance with
this sentence, for the immediately | ||
preceding benefit
period plus (or minus) an amount equal to | ||
the percentage
change in the statewide average weekly wage, as | ||
computed
in accordance with the first sentence of this | ||
paragraph,
between the 2 immediately preceding benefit | ||
periods,
multiplied by the statewide average weekly wage, as
| ||
determined in accordance with this sentence, for the
| ||
immediately preceding benefit period.
However, for purposes of | ||
the
Workers'
Compensation Act, the statewide average weekly | ||
wage will be computed
using June 1 and December 1 | ||
determination dates of each calendar year and
such | ||
determination shall not be subject to the limitation of the | ||
statewide average weekly wage as
computed in accordance with | ||
the preceding sentence of this
paragraph.
| ||
With respect to any week beginning in a benefit year | ||
beginning prior to January 4, 2004, "maximum weekly benefit | ||
amount" with respect to each week beginning within a benefit |
period shall be as defined in the provisions of this Act as | ||
amended and in effect on November 18, 2011.
| ||
With respect to any benefit year beginning on or after | ||
January 4, 2004 and
before January 6, 2008, "maximum weekly | ||
benefit amount" with respect to each
week beginning within a | ||
benefit period means 48% of the statewide average
weekly wage, | ||
rounded (if not already a multiple of one dollar) to the next
| ||
higher dollar.
| ||
Except as otherwise provided in this Section, with respect | ||
to any benefit year beginning on or after January 6, 2008,
| ||
"maximum weekly benefit amount" with respect to each week | ||
beginning within a
benefit period means 47% of the statewide | ||
average weekly wage, rounded (if not
already a multiple of one | ||
dollar) to the next higher dollar.
| ||
With respect to any benefit year beginning on or after | ||
July 3, 2022 in calendar year 2022 , "maximum weekly benefit | ||
amount" with respect to each week beginning within a benefit | ||
period means 42.4% of the statewide average weekly wage, | ||
rounded (if not already a multiple of one dollar) to the next | ||
higher dollar. | ||
C. With respect to any week beginning in a benefit year | ||
beginning prior to January 4, 2004, an individual's | ||
eligibility for a dependent allowance with respect to a | ||
nonworking spouse or one or more dependent children shall be | ||
as defined by the provisions of this Act as amended and in | ||
effect on November 18, 2011.
|
With respect to any benefit year beginning on or after | ||
January 4, 2004 and
before January 6, 2008, an individual to | ||
whom benefits are payable with respect
to any week shall, in | ||
addition to those benefits, be paid, with respect to such
| ||
week, as follows: in the case of an individual with a | ||
nonworking spouse, 9% of
his or her prior average weekly wage, | ||
rounded (if not already a multiple of one
dollar) to the next | ||
higher dollar, provided, that the total amount payable to
the | ||
individual with respect to a week shall not exceed 57% of the | ||
statewide
average weekly wage, rounded (if not already a | ||
multiple of one dollar) to the
next higher dollar; and in the | ||
case of an individual with a dependent child or
dependent | ||
children, 17.2% of his or her prior average weekly wage, | ||
rounded (if
not already a multiple of one dollar) to the next | ||
higher dollar, provided that
the total amount payable to the | ||
individual with respect to a week shall not
exceed 65.2% of the | ||
statewide average weekly wage, rounded (if not already a
| ||
multiple of one dollar) to the next higher dollar.
| ||
With respect to any benefit year beginning on or after | ||
January 6, 2008 and before January 1, 2010, an
individual to | ||
whom benefits are payable with respect to any week shall, in
| ||
addition to those benefits, be paid, with respect to such | ||
week, as follows: in
the case of an individual with a | ||
nonworking spouse, 9% of his or her prior
average weekly wage, | ||
rounded (if not already a multiple of one dollar) to the
next | ||
higher dollar, provided, that the total amount payable
to the |
individual with respect to a week shall not exceed 56% of the | ||
statewide
average weekly wage, rounded (if not already a | ||
multiple of one dollar) to the
next higher dollar; and in the | ||
case of an individual with a dependent child or
dependent | ||
children, 18.2% of his or her prior average weekly wage, | ||
rounded (if
not already a multiple of one dollar) to the next | ||
higher dollar, provided that
the total amount payable to the | ||
individual with respect to a week
shall not exceed 65.2% of the | ||
statewide average weekly wage, rounded (if not
already a | ||
multiple of one dollar) to the next higher dollar. | ||
The additional
amount paid pursuant to this subsection in | ||
the case of an individual with a
dependent child or dependent | ||
children shall be referred to as the "dependent
child | ||
allowance", and the percentage rate by which an individual's | ||
prior average weekly wage is multiplied pursuant to this | ||
subsection to calculate the dependent child allowance shall be | ||
referred to as the "dependent child allowance rate". | ||
Except as otherwise provided in this Section, with respect | ||
to any benefit year beginning on or after January 1, 2010, an | ||
individual to whom benefits are payable with respect to any | ||
week shall, in addition to those benefits, be paid, with | ||
respect to such week, as follows: in the case of an individual | ||
with a nonworking spouse, the greater of (i) 9% of his or her | ||
prior average weekly wage, rounded (if not already a multiple | ||
of one dollar) to the next higher dollar, or (ii) $15, provided | ||
that the total amount payable to the individual with respect |
to a week shall not exceed 56% of the statewide average weekly | ||
wage, rounded (if not already a multiple of one dollar) to the | ||
next higher dollar; and in the case of an individual with a | ||
dependent child or dependent children, the greater of (i) the | ||
product of the dependent child allowance rate multiplied by | ||
his or her prior average weekly wage, rounded (if not already a | ||
multiple of one dollar) to the next higher dollar, or (ii) the | ||
lesser of $50 or 50% of his or her weekly benefit amount, | ||
rounded (if not already a multiple of one dollar) to the next | ||
higher dollar, provided that the total amount payable to the | ||
individual with respect to a week shall not exceed the product | ||
of the statewide average weekly wage multiplied by the sum of | ||
47% plus the dependent child allowance rate, rounded (if not | ||
already a multiple of one dollar) to the next higher dollar. | ||
With respect to any benefit year beginning on or after | ||
July 3, 2022 in calendar year 2022 , an individual to whom | ||
benefits are payable with respect to any week shall, in | ||
addition to those benefits, be paid, with respect to such | ||
week, as follows: in the case of an individual with a | ||
nonworking spouse, the greater of (i) 9% of his or her prior | ||
average weekly wage, rounded (if not already a multiple of one | ||
dollar) to the next higher dollar, or (ii) $15, provided that | ||
the total amount payable to the individual with respect to a | ||
week shall not exceed 51.4% of the statewide average weekly | ||
wage, rounded (if not already a multiple of one dollar) to the | ||
next higher dollar; and in the case of an individual with a |
dependent child or dependent children, the greater of (i) the | ||
product of the dependent child allowance rate multiplied by | ||
his or her prior average weekly wage, rounded (if not already a | ||
multiple of one dollar) to the next higher dollar, or (ii) the | ||
lesser of $50 or 50% of his or her weekly benefit amount, | ||
rounded (if not already a multiple of one dollar) to the next | ||
higher dollar, provided that the total amount payable to the | ||
individual with respect to a week shall not exceed the product | ||
of the statewide average weekly wage multiplied by the sum of | ||
42.4% plus the dependent child allowance rate, rounded (if not | ||
already a multiple of one dollar) to the next higher dollar. | ||
With respect to each benefit year beginning after calendar | ||
year 2012, the
dependent child allowance rate shall be the sum | ||
of the allowance adjustment
applicable pursuant to Section | ||
1400.1 to the calendar year in which the benefit
year begins, | ||
plus the dependent child
allowance rate with respect to each | ||
benefit year beginning in the immediately
preceding calendar | ||
year, except as otherwise provided in this subsection. The | ||
dependent
child allowance rate with respect to each benefit | ||
year beginning in calendar year 2010 shall be 17.9%.
The | ||
dependent child allowance rate with respect to each benefit | ||
year beginning in calendar year 2011 shall be 17.4%. The | ||
dependent child allowance rate with respect to each benefit | ||
year beginning in calendar year 2012 shall be 17.0% and, with | ||
respect to each benefit year beginning after calendar year | ||
2012, shall not be less than 17.0% or greater than 17.9%.
|
For the purposes of this subsection:
| ||
"Dependent" means a child or a nonworking spouse.
| ||
"Child" means a natural child, stepchild, or adopted child | ||
of an
individual claiming benefits under this Act or a child | ||
who is in the
custody of any such individual by court order, | ||
for whom the individual is
supplying and, for at least 90 | ||
consecutive days (or for the duration of
the parental | ||
relationship if it has existed for less than 90 days)
| ||
immediately preceding any week with respect to which the | ||
individual has
filed a claim, has supplied more than one-half | ||
the cost of support, or
has supplied at least 1/4 of the cost | ||
of support if the individual and
the other parent, together, | ||
are supplying and, during the aforesaid
period, have supplied | ||
more than one-half the cost of support, and are,
and were | ||
during the aforesaid period, members of the same household; | ||
and
who, on the first day of such week (a) is under 18 years of | ||
age, or (b)
is, and has been during the immediately preceding | ||
90 days, unable to
work because of illness or other | ||
disability: provided, that no person
who has been determined | ||
to be a child of an individual who has been
allowed benefits | ||
with respect to a week in the individual's benefit
year shall | ||
be deemed to be a child of the other parent, and no other
| ||
person shall be determined to be a child of such other parent, | ||
during
the remainder of that benefit year.
| ||
"Nonworking spouse" means the lawful husband or wife of an | ||
individual
claiming benefits under this Act, for whom more |
than one-half the cost
of support has been supplied by the | ||
individual for at least 90
consecutive days (or for the | ||
duration of the marital relationship if it
has existed for | ||
less than 90 days) immediately preceding any week with
respect | ||
to which the individual has filed a claim, but only if the
| ||
nonworking spouse is currently ineligible to receive benefits | ||
under this
Act by reason of the provisions of Section 500E.
| ||
An individual who was obligated by law to provide for the | ||
support of
a child or of a nonworking spouse for the aforesaid | ||
period of 90 consecutive
days, but was prevented by illness or | ||
injury from doing so, shall be deemed
to have provided more | ||
than one-half the cost of supporting the child or
nonworking | ||
spouse for that period.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 100-568, eff. 12-15-17; 101-423, eff. 1-1-20; | ||
101-633, eff. 6-5-20.)
| ||
(820 ILCS 405/403) (from Ch. 48, par. 403)
| ||
Sec. 403. Maximum total amount of benefits. | ||
A. With respect to
any benefit year beginning prior to | ||
September 30, 1979, any otherwise eligible
individual shall be | ||
entitled, during such benefit year, to a maximum
total amount | ||
of benefits as shall be determined in the manner set forth
in | ||
this Act as amended and in effect on November 9, 1977.
| ||
B. With respect to any benefit year beginning on or after | ||
September 30,
1979, except as otherwise provided in this | ||
Section, any otherwise eligible individual shall be entitled, |
during such benefit
year, to a maximum total amount of | ||
benefits equal to 26 times his or her weekly
benefit amount | ||
plus dependents' allowances, or to the total wages for insured
| ||
work paid to such individual during the individual's base | ||
period, whichever
amount is smaller. With respect to any | ||
benefit year beginning in calendar year 2012, any otherwise | ||
eligible individual shall be entitled, during such benefit | ||
year, to a maximum total amount of benefits equal to 25 times | ||
his or her weekly benefit amount plus dependents' allowances, | ||
or to the total wages for insured work paid to such individual | ||
during the individual's base period, whichever amount is | ||
smaller. With respect to any benefit year beginning on or | ||
after July 3, 2022 in calendar year 2022 , any otherwise | ||
eligible individual shall be entitled, during such benefit | ||
year, to a maximum total amount of benefits equal to 24 times | ||
his or her weekly benefit amount plus dependents' allowances, | ||
or to the total wages for insured work paid to such individual | ||
during the individual's base period, whichever amount is | ||
smaller.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 100-568, eff. 12-15-17; 101-423, eff. 1-1-20 .)
| ||
(820 ILCS 405/1502.4) | ||
Sec. 1502.4. Benefit charges; COVID-19. | ||
A. With respect to any benefits paid for a week of | ||
unemployment that begins on or after March 15, 2020, and | ||
before December 31, 2020, and is directly or indirectly |
attributable to COVID-19, notwithstanding any other provisions | ||
to the contrary an employer that is subject to the payment of | ||
contributions shall not be chargeable for any benefit charges. | ||
B. With respect to any regular benefits paid for a week of | ||
unemployment that begins on or after March 15, 2020, and | ||
before December 31, 2020, and is directly or indirectly | ||
attributable to COVID-19, notwithstanding any other provisions | ||
to the contrary except subsection E, a nonprofit organization | ||
that is subject to making payments in lieu of contributions | ||
shall be chargeable for 50% of the benefits paid. | ||
C. With respect to any benefits paid for a week of | ||
unemployment that begins on or after March 15, 2020, and | ||
before December 31, 2020, and is directly or indirectly | ||
attributable to COVID-19, notwithstanding any other provisions | ||
to the contrary except subsection E, the State and any local | ||
government that is subject to making payments in lieu of | ||
contributions shall be chargeable for 50% of the benefits | ||
paid, irrespective of whether the State or local government | ||
paid the individual who received the benefits wages for | ||
insured work during the individual's base period. | ||
D. Subsections A, B, and C shall only apply to the extent | ||
that the employer can show that the individual's unemployment | ||
for the week was directly or indirectly attributable to | ||
COVID-19. | ||
E. No employer shall be chargeable for the week of | ||
benefits paid to an individual under the provisions of |
subsection D-5 of Section 500 500D-1 .
| ||
(Source: P.A. 101-633, eff. 6-5-20.) | ||
(820 ILCS 405/1505) (from Ch. 48, par. 575)
| ||
Sec. 1505. Adjustment of state experience factor. The | ||
state experience
factor shall be adjusted in accordance with | ||
the following provisions:
| ||
A. For calendar years prior to 1988, the state experience | ||
factor shall be adjusted in accordance with the provisions of | ||
this Act as amended and in effect on November 18, 2011.
| ||
B. (Blank).
| ||
C. For calendar year 1988
and each calendar year | ||
thereafter, for which the state
experience factor is being | ||
determined.
| ||
1. For every $50,000,000 (or fraction thereof) by | ||
which
the adjusted trust fund balance falls below the | ||
target balance set forth in
this subsection,
the state | ||
experience factor for the succeeding year shall
be | ||
increased one percent absolute.
| ||
For every $50,000,000 (or fraction thereof) by which
| ||
the adjusted trust fund balance exceeds the target balance | ||
set forth in this
subsection, the
state experience factor | ||
for the succeeding year shall be
decreased by one percent | ||
absolute.
| ||
The target balance in each calendar year prior to 2003 | ||
is $750,000,000.
The
target balance in
calendar year 2003 |
is $920,000,000. The target balance in calendar year 2004 | ||
is
$960,000,000.
The target balance in calendar year 2005 | ||
and each calendar year thereafter
is
$1,000,000,000.
| ||
2. For the purposes of this subsection:
| ||
"Net trust fund balance" is the amount standing to the
| ||
credit of this State's account in the unemployment trust
| ||
fund as of June 30 of the calendar year immediately | ||
preceding
the year for which a state experience factor is | ||
being determined.
| ||
"Adjusted trust fund balance" is the net trust fund | ||
balance
minus the sum of the benefit reserves for fund | ||
building
for July 1, 1987 through June 30 of the year prior | ||
to the
year for which the state experience factor is being | ||
determined.
The adjusted trust fund balance shall not be | ||
less than
zero. If the preceding calculation results in a | ||
number
which is less than zero, the amount by which it is | ||
less
than zero shall reduce the sum of the benefit | ||
reserves
for fund building for subsequent years.
| ||
For the purpose of determining the state experience | ||
factor
for 1989 and for each calendar year thereafter, the | ||
following
"benefit reserves for fund building" shall apply | ||
for each
state experience factor calculation in which that | ||
12 month
period is applicable:
| ||
a. For the 12 month period ending on June 30, 1988, | ||
the
"benefit reserve for fund building" shall be | ||
8/104th of
the total benefits paid from January 1, |
1988 through June 30, 1988.
| ||
b. For the 12 month period ending on June 30, 1989, | ||
the
"benefit reserve for fund building" shall be the | ||
sum of:
| ||
i. 8/104ths of the total benefits paid from | ||
July 1,
1988 through December 31, 1988, plus
| ||
ii. 4/108ths of the total benefits paid from | ||
January
1, 1989 through June 30, 1989.
| ||
c. For the 12 month period ending on June 30, 1990, | ||
the
"benefit reserve for fund building" shall be | ||
4/108ths of
the total benefits paid from July 1, 1989 | ||
through December 31, 1989.
| ||
d. For 1992 and for each calendar year thereafter, | ||
the
"benefit reserve for fund building" for the 12 | ||
month period
ending on June 30, 1991 and for each | ||
subsequent 12 month
period shall be zero.
| ||
3. Notwithstanding the preceding provisions of this | ||
subsection,
for calendar years 1988 through 2003, the | ||
state experience factor shall not
be increased or | ||
decreased
by more than 15 percent absolute.
| ||
D. Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection C, the
| ||
adjusted state experience factor:
| ||
1. Shall be 111 percent for calendar year 1988;
| ||
2. Shall not be less than 75 percent nor greater than
| ||
135 percent for calendar years 1989 through 2003; and | ||
shall not
be less than 75% nor greater than 150% for |
calendar year 2004 and each
calendar year
thereafter, not | ||
counting any increase pursuant to subsection D-1, D-2, or | ||
D-3;
| ||
3. Shall not be decreased by more than 5 percent | ||
absolute for any
calendar year, beginning in calendar year | ||
1989 and through calendar year
1992, by more than 6% | ||
absolute for calendar years 1993
through 1995, by more | ||
than 10% absolute for calendar years
1999 through 2003 and | ||
by more than 12% absolute for calendar year 2004 and
each | ||
calendar year thereafter, from the adjusted state
| ||
experience factor of the calendar year preceding the | ||
calendar year for which
the adjusted state experience | ||
factor is being determined;
| ||
4. Shall not be increased by more than 15% absolute | ||
for calendar year
1993, by more than 14% absolute for | ||
calendar years 1994 and
1995, by more than 10% absolute | ||
for calendar years 1999
through 2003 and by more than 16% | ||
absolute for calendar year 2004 and each
calendar
year
| ||
thereafter, from the adjusted state experience factor for | ||
the calendar year
preceding the calendar year for which | ||
the adjusted state experience factor
is being determined;
| ||
5. Shall be 100% for calendar years 1996, 1997, and | ||
1998.
| ||
D-1. The adjusted state experience factor for each of | ||
calendar years 2013 through 2015 shall be increased by 5% | ||
absolute above the adjusted state experience factor as |
calculated without regard to this subsection. The adjusted | ||
state experience factor for each of calendar years 2016 | ||
through 2018 shall be increased by 6% absolute above the | ||
adjusted state experience factor as calculated without regard | ||
to this subsection. The increase in the adjusted state | ||
experience factor for calendar year 2018 pursuant to this | ||
subsection shall not be counted for purposes of applying | ||
paragraph 3 or 4 of subsection D to the calculation of the | ||
adjusted state experience factor for calendar year 2019. | ||
D-2. (Blank). | ||
D-3. The adjusted state experience factor for the portion | ||
of calendar year 2022 beginning July 3, 2022 shall be | ||
increased by 16% absolute above the adjusted state experience | ||
factor as calculated without regard to this subsection. The | ||
increase in the adjusted state experience factor for the | ||
portion of calendar year 2022 beginning July 3, 2022 pursuant | ||
to this subsection shall not be counted for purposes of | ||
applying paragraph 3 or 4 of subsection D to the calculation of | ||
the adjusted state experience factor for calendar year 2023. | ||
E. The amount standing to the credit of this State's | ||
account in the
unemployment trust fund as of June 30 shall be | ||
deemed to include as part
thereof (a) any amount receivable on | ||
that date from any Federal
governmental agency, or as a | ||
payment in lieu of contributions under the
provisions of | ||
Sections 1403 and 1405 B and paragraph 2 of Section 302C,
in | ||
reimbursement of benefits paid to individuals, and (b) amounts
|
credited by the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States | ||
to this
State's account in the unemployment trust fund | ||
pursuant to Section 903
of the Federal Social Security Act, as | ||
amended, including any such
amounts which have been | ||
appropriated by the General Assembly in
accordance with the | ||
provisions of Section 2100 B for expenses of
administration, | ||
except any amounts which have been obligated on or
before that | ||
date pursuant to such appropriation.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 100-568, eff. 12-15-17; 101-423, eff. 1-1-20; | ||
101-633, eff. 6-5-20.)
| ||
(820 ILCS 405/1506.6) | ||
Sec. 1506.6. Surcharge; specified period. For each | ||
employer whose contribution rate for calendar year 2022 is | ||
determined pursuant to Section 1500 or 1506.1, in addition to | ||
the contribution rate established pursuant to Section 1506.3, | ||
for the portion of calendar year 2022 beginning July 3, 2022, | ||
an additional surcharge of 0.325% shall be added to the | ||
contribution rate. The surcharge established by this Section | ||
shall be due at the same time as other contributions with | ||
respect to the quarter are due, as provided in Section 1400. | ||
Payments attributable to the surcharge established pursuant to | ||
this Section shall be contributions and deposited into the | ||
clearing account.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 100-568, eff. 12-15-17; 101-423, eff. 1-1-20; | ||
101-633, eff. 6-5-20.) |
Section 995. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act | ||
makes changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by | ||
text that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a | ||
Section represented by multiple versions), the use of that | ||
text does not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the | ||
changes made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any | ||
other Public Act.
| ||
Section 999. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | ||
becoming law, except that Section 66 takes effect upon | ||
becoming law or on the date House Bill 3666 of the 102nd | ||
General Assembly takes effect, whichever is later.
|