| ||||
Public Act 102-0679 | ||||
| ||||
| ||||
AN ACT concerning safety.
| ||||
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| ||||
represented in the General Assembly:
| ||||
Section 5. The Reimagine Public Safety Act is amended by | ||||
changing Sections 35-10, 35-15, 35-20, 35-25, 35-30, 35-35, | ||||
and 35-40 as follows: | ||||
(430 ILCS 69/35-10)
| ||||
Sec. 35-10. Definitions. As used in this Act: | ||||
"Approved technical assistance and training provider" | ||||
means an organization that has experience in improving the | ||||
outcomes of local community-based organizations by providing | ||||
supportive services that address the gaps in their resources | ||||
and knowledge about content-based work or provide support and | ||||
knowledge about the administration and management of | ||||
organizations, or both. Approved technical assistance and | ||||
training providers as defined in this Act are intended to | ||||
assist community organizations with evaluating the need for | ||||
evidence-based evidenced-based violence prevention services, | ||||
promising violence prevention programs, starting up | ||||
programming, and strengthening the quality of existing | ||||
programming. | ||||
"Community" or "communities" "Communities" means, for | ||||
municipalities with a 1,000,000 or more population in |
Illinois, the 77 designated neighborhood areas defined by the | ||
University of Chicago Social Science Research Committee as | ||
amended in 1980. | ||
"Concentrated firearm violence" means the 10 17 most | ||
violent communities in Illinois municipalities with greater | ||
than 1,000,000 or more one million residents and the 10 most | ||
violent municipalities with less than 1,000,000 residents and | ||
greater than 35,000 25,000 residents with the most per capita | ||
fatal and nonfatal firearm-shot victims, excluding | ||
self-inflicted incidents, incidents from January 1, 2016 | ||
through December 31, 2020. | ||
"Criminal and juvenile justice-involved" means an | ||
individual who has been arrested, indicted, convicted, | ||
adjudicated delinquent, or otherwise detained by criminal or | ||
juvenile justice authorities for violation of Illinois | ||
criminal laws. | ||
"Evidence-based high-risk youth intervention services" | ||
means programs that have been proven to reduce involvement in | ||
the criminal or juvenile justice system, increase school | ||
attendance, and includes referrals of refer high-risk teens | ||
into therapeutic programs that address trauma recovery and | ||
other mental health improvements based on best practices in | ||
the youth intervention services field.
| ||
" Evidence-based Evidenced-based violence prevention | ||
services" means coordinated programming and services that may | ||
include, but are not limited to, effective emotional or trauma |
related therapies, housing, employment training, job | ||
placement, family engagement, or wrap-around support services | ||
that have been proven effective or are considered to be best | ||
practice for reducing violence within the field of violence | ||
intervention research and practice. | ||
"Evidence-based youth development programs" means | ||
after-school and summer programming that provides services to | ||
teens to increase their school attendance, school performance, | ||
reduce involvement in the criminal justice system, and develop | ||
nonacademic interests that build social emotional persistence | ||
and intelligence based on best practices in the field of youth | ||
development services for high-risk youth. | ||
"Options school" means a secondary school where 75% or | ||
more of attending students have either stopped attending or | ||
failed their secondary school courses since first attending | ||
ninth grade. | ||
" Violence Qualified violence prevention organization" | ||
means an organization that manages and employs qualified | ||
violence prevention professionals. | ||
" Violence Qualified violence prevention professional" | ||
means a community health worker who renders violence | ||
preventive services. | ||
"Social organization" means an organization of individuals | ||
who form the organization for the purposes of enjoyment, work, | ||
and other mutual interests.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 102-16, eff. 6-17-21; revised 7-16-21.) |
(430 ILCS 69/35-15)
| ||
Sec. 35-15. Findings. The Illinois General Assembly finds | ||
that: | ||
(1) Discrete neighborhoods in municipalities across | ||
Illinois are experiencing concentrated and perpetual firearm | ||
violence that is a public health epidemic. | ||
(2) Within neighborhoods experiencing this firearm | ||
violence epidemic, violence is concentrated among teens and | ||
young adults that have chronic exposure to the risk of | ||
violence and criminal legal system involvement and related | ||
trauma in small geographic areas where these young people live | ||
or congregate. | ||
(3) Firearm violence victimization and perpetration is | ||
highly concentrated in particular neighborhoods, particular | ||
blocks within these neighborhoods, and among a small number of | ||
individuals living in these areas. | ||
(4) People who are chronically exposed to the risk of | ||
firearm violence victimization are substantially more likely | ||
to be violently injured or violently injure another person. | ||
People who have been violently injured are substantially more | ||
likely to be violently reinjured. Chronic exposure to violence | ||
additionally leads individuals to engage in behavior, as part | ||
of a cycle of community violence, trauma, and retaliation that | ||
substantially increases their own risk of violent injury or | ||
reinjury. |
(5) Evidence-based programs that engage individuals at the | ||
highest risk of firearm violence and provide life | ||
stabilization, case management, and culturally competent group | ||
and individual therapy reduce firearm violence victimization | ||
and perpetration and can end Illinois' firearm violence | ||
epidemic. | ||
(6) A public health approach to ending Illinois' firearm | ||
violence epidemic requires targeted, integrated behavioral | ||
health services and economic opportunity that promotes | ||
self-sufficiency for victims of firearm violence and those | ||
with chronic exposure to the risk of firearm violence | ||
victimization. | ||
(7) A public health approach to ending Illinois' firearm | ||
violence epidemic further requires broader preventive | ||
investments in the census tracts and blocks that reduce risk | ||
factors for youth and families living in areas at the highest | ||
with extreme risk of firearm violence victimization. | ||
(8) A public health approach to ending Illinois' firearm | ||
violence epidemic requires empowering residents and | ||
community-based organizations within impacted neighborhoods to | ||
provide culturally competent care based on lived experience in | ||
these areas and long-term relationships of mutual interest | ||
that promote safety and stability. | ||
(9) A public health approach to ending Illinois' firearm | ||
violence epidemic further requires that preventive youth | ||
development services for youth in these neighborhoods be fully |
integrated with a team-based model of mental health care to | ||
address trauma recovery for those young people at the highest | ||
extreme risk of firearm violence victimization. | ||
(10) Community revitalization can be an effective violence | ||
prevention strategy, provided that revitalization is targeted | ||
to the highest risk geographies within communities and | ||
revitalization efforts are designed and led by individuals | ||
living and working in the impacted communities.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 102-16, eff. 6-17-21.) | ||
(430 ILCS 69/35-20)
| ||
Sec. 35-20. Office of Firearm Violence Prevention. | ||
(a) On or before October September 1, 2021, an Office of | ||
Firearm Violence Prevention is established within the Illinois | ||
Department of Human Services. The Assistant Secretary of | ||
Violence Prevention shall report his or her actions to the | ||
Secretary of Human Services and the Office of the Governor. | ||
The Office shall have the authority to coordinate and | ||
integrate all programs and services listed in this Act and | ||
other programs and services the Governor establishes by | ||
executive order to maximize an integrated approach to reducing | ||
Illinois' firearm violence epidemic and ultimately ending this | ||
public health crisis. | ||
(b) The Department of Human Services and the Office of | ||
Firearm Violence Prevention shall have grant making, | ||
operational, and procurement authority to distribute funds to |
qualified violence prevention organizations, youth development | ||
organizations, high-risk youth intervention organizations, | ||
approved technical assistance and training providers, and | ||
qualified evaluation and assessment organizations , and other | ||
entities necessary to execute the functions established in | ||
this Act and other programs and services the Governor | ||
establishes by executive order for the Department and the this | ||
Office. | ||
(c) The Assistant Secretary of Firearm Violence Prevention | ||
shall be appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent | ||
of the Senate. The Assistant Secretary of Firearm Violence | ||
Prevention shall report to the Secretary of Human Services and | ||
also report his or her actions to the Office of the Governor. | ||
(d) For Illinois municipalities with a 1,000,000 or more | ||
population, the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall | ||
determine the 10 17 most violent neighborhoods . When possible, | ||
this shall be determined by measuring as measured by the | ||
number of per capita fatal and nonfatal firearm-shot victims, | ||
excluding self-inflicted incidents , from January 1, 2016 | ||
through December 31, 2020. These 10 17 communities shall | ||
qualify for grants under this Act and coordination of other | ||
State services from the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention. | ||
The Office shall, after identifying the top 10 neighborhoods, | ||
identify an additional 7 eligible neighborhoods by considering | ||
the number of victims in rank order in addition to the per | ||
capita rate. If appropriate, and subject to appropriation, the |
Office shall have the authority to consider adding up to 5 | ||
additional eligible neighborhoods or clusters of contiguous | ||
neighborhoods utilizing the same data sets so as to maximize | ||
the potential impact for firearm violence reduction. For | ||
Illinois municipalities with less than 1,000,000 residents and | ||
more than 35,000 25,000 residents, the Office of Firearm | ||
Violence Prevention shall identify the 10 municipalities or | ||
contiguous geographic areas that have the greatest | ||
concentrated firearm violence victims . When possible, this | ||
shall be determined by measuring as measured by the number of | ||
fatal and nonfatal firearm-shot victims, excluding | ||
self-inflicted incidents , from January 1, 2016 through | ||
December 31, 2020 divided by the number of residents for each | ||
municipality or area. These 10 municipalities or contiguous | ||
geographic areas and up to 5 additional other municipalities | ||
or contiguous geographic areas identified by the Office of | ||
Firearm Violence Prevention shall qualify for grants under | ||
this Act and coordination of other State services from the | ||
Office of Firearm Violence Prevention. The Office of Firearm | ||
Violence Prevention shall consider factors listed in | ||
subsection (a) of Section 35-40 to determine up to 5 | ||
additional municipalities or contiguous geographic areas that | ||
qualify for grants under this Act. The Office of Firearm | ||
Violence Prevention may, subject to appropriation, identify up | ||
to 5 additional neighborhoods, municipalities, contiguous | ||
geographic areas, or other local government-identified |
boundary areas to receive funding under this Act after | ||
considering additional risk factors that contribute to | ||
community firearm violence. The data analysis to identify new | ||
eligible neighborhoods and municipalities shall be updated to | ||
reflect eligibility based on the most recently available 5 | ||
full years of data no more frequently than once every 3 years. | ||
(e) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall issue | ||
a report to the General Assembly no later than January 1 of | ||
each year that identifies communities within Illinois | ||
municipalities of 1,000,000 or more residents and | ||
municipalities with less than 1,000,000 residents and more | ||
than 35,000 25,000 residents that are experiencing | ||
concentrated firearm violence, explaining the investments that | ||
are being made to reduce concentrated firearm violence, and | ||
making further recommendations on how to end Illinois' firearm | ||
violence epidemic.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 102-16, eff. 6-17-21.) | ||
(430 ILCS 69/35-25)
| ||
Sec. 35-25. Integrated violence prevention and other | ||
services. | ||
(a) Subject to appropriation, for municipalities with | ||
1,000,000 or more residents, the Office of Firearm Violence | ||
Prevention shall make grants to qualified violence prevention | ||
organizations for evidence-based firearm violence prevention | ||
services. Approved technical assistance and training providers |
shall create learning communities for the exchange of | ||
information between community-based organizations in the same | ||
or similar fields. Firearm Evidence-based firearm violence | ||
prevention organizations services shall prioritize recruit | ||
individuals at the highest risk of firearm violence | ||
victimization and provide these individuals with | ||
evidence-based comprehensive services that reduce their | ||
exposure to chronic firearm violence. | ||
(b) Violence Qualified violence prevention organizations | ||
shall develop the following expertise in the geographic areas | ||
that they cover: | ||
(1) Analyzing and leveraging data to identify the | ||
individuals people who will most benefit from | ||
evidence-based firearm violence prevention services in | ||
their geographic areas. | ||
(2) Identifying the conflicts that are responsible for | ||
recurring violence. | ||
(3) Having relationships with individuals who are most | ||
able to reduce conflicts. | ||
(4) Addressing the stabilization and trauma recovery | ||
needs of individuals impacted by violence by providing | ||
direct services for their unmet needs or referring them to | ||
other qualified service providers.
| ||
(5) Having and building relationships with community | ||
members and community organizations that provide | ||
evidence-based violence prevention services and get |
referrals of people who will most benefit from | ||
evidence-based firearm violence prevention services in | ||
their geographic areas.
| ||
(6) Providing training and technical assistance to | ||
local law enforcement agencies to improve their | ||
effectiveness without having any role, requirement, or | ||
mandate to participate in the policing, enforcement, or | ||
prosecution of any crime. | ||
(c) Violence Qualified violence prevention organizations | ||
receiving grants under this Act shall coordinate services with | ||
other qualified violence prevention organizations in their | ||
area. | ||
(d) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall | ||
identify, for each separate eligible service area under this | ||
Act, an experienced violence prevention organization to serve | ||
as the name a Lead Qualified Violence Prevention Convener for | ||
that area each of the 17 neighborhoods and provide each with a | ||
grant of $50,000 up to $100,000 to these organizations this | ||
organization to coordinate monthly meetings between qualified | ||
violence prevention organizations and youth development | ||
organizations under this Act. The Lead Qualified Violence | ||
Prevention Convener may also receive , funding from the Office | ||
of Firearm Violence Prevention , for technical assistance or | ||
training through approved providers when needs are jointly | ||
identified. The Lead Qualified Violence Prevention Convener | ||
shall: |
(1) provide the convened organizations with summary | ||
notes on the meetings and summarize recommendations made | ||
at the monthly meetings to improve the effectiveness of | ||
evidence-based violence prevention services based on | ||
review of timely data on shootings and homicides in his or | ||
her relevant neighborhood; | ||
(2) attend monthly meetings where the cause of | ||
violence and other neighborhood disputes is discussed and | ||
strategize on how to resolve ongoing conflicts and execute | ||
on agreed plans; | ||
(3) (blank); provide qualitative review of other | ||
qualified violence prevention organizations in the Lead | ||
Qualified Violence Prevention Convener's neighborhood as | ||
required by the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention; | ||
(4) on behalf of the convened organizations, make | ||
consensus recommendations to the Office of Firearm | ||
Violence Prevention and local law enforcement on how to | ||
reduce violent conflict in his or her neighborhood; | ||
(5) meet on an emergency basis when conflicts that | ||
need immediate attention and resolution arise; | ||
(6) share knowledge and strategies of the community | ||
violence dynamic in monthly meetings with local youth | ||
development specialists receiving grants under this Act; | ||
(7) select when and where needed an approved Office of | ||
Violence Prevention-funded technical assistance and | ||
service training service provider to receive and contract |
with the provider for agreed upon services; and | ||
(8) after meeting with community residents and other | ||
community organizations that have expertise in housing, | ||
mental health, economic development, education, and social | ||
services, make consensus recommendations to the Office of | ||
Firearm Violence Prevention on how to target community | ||
revitalization resources available from federal and State | ||
funding sources. | ||
The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall compile | ||
recommendations from all Lead Qualified Violence Prevention | ||
Conveners and report to the General Assembly bi-annually on | ||
these funding recommendations. The Lead Qualified Violence | ||
Prevention Convener may also serve as a youth development | ||
provider. | ||
(e) The Illinois Office of Firearm Violence Prevention | ||
shall select , when possible and appropriate, no fewer than 2 | ||
and no more than 3 approved technical assistance and training | ||
providers to deliver technical assistance and training to the | ||
qualified violence prevention organizations that request to | ||
receive agree to contract with an approved technical | ||
assistance and training provider . Violence Qualified violence | ||
prevention organizations shall have complete authority to | ||
select among the approved technical assistance services | ||
providers funded by the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention. | ||
(f) Approved technical assistance and training providers | ||
may: |
(1) provide training and certification to qualified | ||
violence prevention professionals on how to perform | ||
violence prevention services and other professional | ||
development to qualified violence prevention | ||
professionals. | ||
(2) provide management training on how to manage | ||
qualified violence prevention professionals;
| ||
(3) provide training and assistance on how to develop | ||
memorandum of understanding for referral services or | ||
create approved provider lists for these referral | ||
services, or both; | ||
(4) share lessons learned among qualified violence | ||
prevention professionals and service providers in their | ||
network; and | ||
(5) provide technical assistance and training on human | ||
resources, grants management, capacity building, and | ||
fiscal management strategies. | ||
(g) Approved technical assistance and training providers | ||
shall: | ||
(1) provide additional services identified as | ||
necessary by the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention and | ||
qualified service providers in their network; and | ||
(2) receive a base vendor contract or grant of up to | ||
$250,000 plus negotiated service rates to provide group | ||
and individualized plus fees negotiated for services to | ||
from participating qualified violence prevention |
organizations. | ||
(h) (Blank). Fees negotiated for approved technical | ||
assistance and training providers shall not exceed 12% of | ||
awarded grant funds to a qualified violence prevention | ||
organization. | ||
(i) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall issue | ||
grants , when possible and appropriate, to no fewer than 2 | ||
qualified violence prevention organizations in each of the | ||
eligible service areas 17 neighborhoods served and no more | ||
than 6 organizations in the 17 neighborhoods served . When | ||
possible, grants Grants shall be for no less than $300,000 | ||
$400,000 per qualified violence prevention organization. The | ||
Office of Firearm Violence Prevention may establish grant | ||
award ranges to ensure grants will have the potential to | ||
reduce violence in each neighborhood. | ||
(j) No qualified violence prevention organization can | ||
serve more than 3 eligible service areas neighborhoods unless | ||
the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention is unable to | ||
identify qualified violence prevention organizations to | ||
provide adequate coverage. | ||
(k) No approved technical assistance and training provider | ||
shall provide evidence-based qualified violence prevention | ||
services in an eligible service area a neighborhood under this | ||
Act unless the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention is unable | ||
to identify qualified violence prevention organizations to | ||
provide adequate coverage.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-16, eff. 6-17-21.) | ||
(430 ILCS 69/35-30)
| ||
Sec. 35-30. Integrated youth services. | ||
(a) Subject to appropriation, for municipalities with | ||
1,000,000 or more residents, the Office of Firearm Violence | ||
Prevention shall make grants to qualified youth development | ||
organizations for evidence-based youth after-school and summer | ||
programming. Evidence-based youth development programs shall | ||
provide services to teens that increase their school | ||
attendance, school performance, reduce involvement in the | ||
criminal and juvenile justice systems system , and develop | ||
nonacademic interests that build social emotional persistence | ||
and intelligence. | ||
(b) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall | ||
identify municipal blocks where more than 35% of all fatal and | ||
nonfatal firearm-shot incidents take place and focus all youth | ||
development service grants to residents of these identified | ||
municipality blocks in the designated eligible service areas | ||
17 targeted neighborhoods . The Department of Human Services | ||
shall prioritize funding to youth Youth development service | ||
programs that shall be required to serve the following teens | ||
before expanding services to the broader community: | ||
(1) criminal and juvenile justice-involved youth; | ||
(2) students who are attending or have attended option | ||
schools; |
(3) family members of individuals working with | ||
qualified violence prevention organizations; and | ||
(4) youth living on the blocks where more than 35% of | ||
the violence takes place in a neighborhood. | ||
(c) Each program participant enrolled in a youth | ||
development program under this Act , when possible and | ||
appropriate, shall receive an individualized needs assessment | ||
to determine if the participant requires intensive youth | ||
services as provided for in Section 35-35 of this Act. The | ||
needs assessment should be the best available instrument that | ||
considers the physical and mental condition of each youth | ||
based on the youth's family ties, financial resources, past | ||
substance use, criminal justice involvement, and trauma | ||
related to chronic exposure to firearm violence behavioral | ||
health assessment to determine the participant's broader | ||
support and mental health needs. The Office of Firearm | ||
Violence Prevention shall determine best practices for | ||
referring program participants who are at the highest risk of | ||
violence and criminal justice involvement to be referred to a | ||
high-risk youth development intervention program established | ||
in Section 35-35. | ||
(d) Youth development prevention program participants | ||
shall receive services designed to empower participants with | ||
the social and emotional skills necessary to forge paths of | ||
healthy development and disengagement from high-risk | ||
behaviors. Within the context of engaging social, physical, |
and personal development activities, participants should build | ||
resilience and the skills associated with healthy social, | ||
emotional, and identity development. | ||
(e) Youth development providers shall develop the | ||
following expertise in the geographic areas they cover: | ||
(1) Knowledge of the teens and their social | ||
organization in the blocks they are designated to serve. | ||
(2) Youth development organizations receiving grants | ||
under this Act shall be required to coordinate services | ||
with other qualified youth development organizations in | ||
their neighborhood by sharing lessons learned in monthly | ||
meetings. | ||
(3) (Blank). Providing qualitative review of other | ||
youth development organizations in their neighborhood as | ||
required by the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention. | ||
(4) Meeting on an emergency basis when conflicts | ||
related to program participants that need immediate | ||
attention and resolution arise. | ||
(5) Sharing knowledge and strategies of the | ||
neighborhood violence dynamic in monthly meetings with | ||
local qualified violence prevention organizations | ||
receiving grants under this Act. | ||
(6) Selecting an approved technical assistance and | ||
service training service provider to receive and contract | ||
with them for agreed upon services. | ||
(f) The Illinois Office of Firearm Violence Prevention |
shall select , when possible and appropriate, no fewer than 2 | ||
and no more than 3 approved technical assistance and training | ||
providers to deliver technical assistance and training to the | ||
youth development organizations that request to receive agree | ||
to contract with an approved technical assistance and training | ||
provider . Youth development organizations must use an approved | ||
technical assistance and training provider but have complete | ||
authority to select among the approved technical assistance | ||
services providers funded by the Office of Firearm Violence | ||
Prevention. | ||
(g) Approved technical assistance and training providers | ||
may: | ||
(1) provide training to youth development workers on | ||
how to perform outreach services; | ||
(2) provide management training on how to manage youth | ||
development workers; | ||
(3) provide training and assistance on how to develop | ||
memorandum of understanding for referral services or | ||
create approved provider lists for these referral | ||
services, or both; | ||
(4) share lessons learned among youth development | ||
service providers in their network; and | ||
(5) provide technical assistance and training on human | ||
resources, grants management, capacity building, and | ||
fiscal management strategies. | ||
(h) Approved technical assistance and training providers |
shall: | ||
(1) provide additional services identified as | ||
necessary by the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention and | ||
youth development service providers in their network; and | ||
(2) receive an annual base grant of up to $250,000 | ||
plus negotiated service rates to provide group and | ||
individualized plus fees negotiated for services to from | ||
participating youth development service organizations. | ||
(i) (Blank). Fees negotiated for approved technical | ||
assistance and training providers shall not exceed 10% of | ||
awarded grant funds to a youth development services | ||
organization. | ||
(j) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall issue | ||
youth development services grants , when possible and | ||
appropriate, to no fewer than 4 youth services organizations | ||
in each of the eligible service areas 17 neighborhoods served | ||
and no more than 8 organizations in each of the 17 | ||
neighborhoods . When possible, grants shall be for no less than | ||
$300,000 per youth development organization. The Office of | ||
Firearm Violence Prevention may establish award ranges to | ||
ensure grants will have the potential to reduce violence in | ||
each neighborhood. Youth services grants shall be for no less | ||
than $400,000 per youth development organization. | ||
(k) No youth development organization can serve more than | ||
3 eligible service areas neighborhoods unless the Office of | ||
Firearm Violence Prevention is unable to identify youth |
development organizations to provide adequate coverage. | ||
(l) No approved technical assistance and training provider | ||
shall provide youth development services in any neighborhood | ||
under this Act.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 102-16, eff. 6-17-21.) | ||
(430 ILCS 69/35-35)
| ||
Sec. 35-35. Intensive youth intervention services. | ||
(a) Subject to appropriation, for municipalities with | ||
1,000,000 or more residents, the Office of Firearm Violence | ||
Prevention shall issue grants to qualified high-risk youth | ||
intervention organizations for evidence-based intervention | ||
services that reduce involvement in the criminal and juvenile | ||
justice system, increase school attendance, and refer | ||
high-risk teens into therapeutic programs that address trauma | ||
recovery and other mental health improvements. Each program | ||
participant enrolled in a high-risk youth intervention program | ||
under this Act shall receive a nationally recognized | ||
comprehensive mental health assessment delivered by a | ||
qualified mental health professional certified to provide | ||
services to Medicaid recipients. | ||
(b) High-risk youth Youth intervention program | ||
participants shall receive needed services as determined by | ||
the individualized assessment which may include, but is not | ||
limited to : | ||
(1) receive group-based emotional regulation therapy |
that helps them control their emotions and understand how | ||
trauma and stress impacts their thinking and behavior; and | ||
(2) have youth advocates that accompany them to their | ||
group therapy sessions, assist them with issues that | ||
prevent them from attending school, and address life | ||
skills development activities through weekly coaching . ; | ||
and | ||
(b-5) High-risk youth intervention service organizations | ||
shall (3) be required to have trained clinical staff managing | ||
the youth advocate interface with program participants. | ||
(c) Youth development service organizations shall be | ||
assigned to the youth intervention service providers for | ||
referrals by the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention. | ||
(d) The youth receiving intervention services who are | ||
evaluated to need trauma recovery and other behavioral health | ||
interventions and who have the greatest risk of firearm | ||
violence victimization shall be referred to the family systems | ||
intervention services established in Section 35-55. | ||
(e) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall issue | ||
high-risk youth intervention grants , when possible and | ||
appropriate, to no less than 2 youth intervention | ||
organizations and no more than 4 organizations in | ||
municipalities with 1,000,000 or more residents. | ||
(f) No high-risk youth intervention organization can serve | ||
more than 13 eligible service areas 10 neighborhoods . | ||
(g) The approved technical assistance and training |
providers for youth development programs provided in | ||
subsection (d) of Section 35-30 shall also provide technical | ||
assistance and training to the affiliated high-risk youth | ||
intervention service providers. | ||
(h) (Blank). The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention | ||
shall establish payment requirements from youth intervention | ||
service providers to the affiliated approved technical | ||
assistance and training providers.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 102-16, eff. 6-17-21.) | ||
(430 ILCS 69/35-40)
| ||
Sec. 35-40. Services for municipalities with less than | ||
1,000,000 residents. | ||
(a) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall | ||
identify the 10 municipalities or geographically contiguous | ||
areas in Illinois with less than 1,000,000 residents and more | ||
than 35,000 25,000 residents that have the largest | ||
concentration of fatal and nonfatal concentrated firearm -shot | ||
victims over the 5-year period considered for eligibility | ||
violence in the last 5 years . These areas shall qualify for | ||
grants under this Act. The Office of Firearm Violence | ||
Prevention may shall identify up to 5 additional | ||
municipalities or geographically contiguous areas with more | ||
than 25,000 residents and less than 1,000,000 residents that | ||
would benefit from evidence-based violence prevention | ||
services. In identifying the additional municipalities that |
qualify for funding under Section 35-40, the Office of Firearm | ||
Violence Prevention shall consider the following factors when | ||
possible : | ||
(1) the total number of fatal and nonfatal firearms | ||
victims , excluding self-inflicted incidents, in a | ||
potential municipality over the 5-year period considered | ||
for eligibility in the last 5 years ;
| ||
(2) the per capita rate of fatal and nonfatal firearms | ||
victims , excluding self-inflicted incidents, in a | ||
potential municipality over the 5-year period considered | ||
for eligibility in the last 5 years ;
and | ||
(3) the total potential firearms violence reduction | ||
benefit for the entire State of Illinois by serving the | ||
additional municipalities municipality compared to the | ||
total benefit of investing in all other municipalities | ||
identified for grants to municipalities with more than | ||
35,000 25,000 residents and less than 1,000,000 residents.
| ||
(b) Resources for each of these areas shall be distributed | ||
based on a formula to be developed by the Office of Firearm | ||
Violence Prevention that will maximize the total potential | ||
reduction in firearms victimization for all municipalities | ||
receiving grants under this Act. Resources for each of these | ||
areas shall be distributed based on maximizing the total | ||
potential reduction in firearms victimization for all | ||
municipalities receiving grants under this Act. The Office of | ||
Firearm Violence Prevention may establish a minimum grant |
amount for each municipality awarded grants under this Section | ||
to ensure grants will have the potential to reduce violence in | ||
each municipality. The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention | ||
shall maximize the potential for violence reduction throughout | ||
Illinois after determining the necessary minimum grant amounts | ||
to be effective in each municipality receiving grants under | ||
this Section. | ||
(c) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall create | ||
local advisory councils for each of the designated service | ||
areas 10 areas designated for the purpose of obtaining | ||
recommendations on how to distribute funds in these areas to | ||
reduce firearm violence incidents. Local advisory councils | ||
shall have a minimum consist of 5 members with the following | ||
expertise or experience: | ||
(1) a representative of a nonelected official in local | ||
government from the designated area; | ||
(2) a representative of an elected official at the | ||
local or state level for the area; | ||
(3) a representative with public health experience in | ||
firearm violence prevention or youth development; and | ||
(4) two residents of the subsection of each area with | ||
the most concentrated firearm violence incidents ; and . | ||
(5) additional members as determined by the individual | ||
local advisory council. | ||
(d) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall | ||
provide data to each local council on the characteristics of |
firearm violence in the designated area and other relevant | ||
information on the physical and demographic characteristics of | ||
the designated area. The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention | ||
shall also provide best available evidence on how to address | ||
the social determinants of health in the designated area in | ||
order to reduce firearm violence. | ||
(e) Each local advisory council shall make recommendations | ||
on how to allocate distributed resources for its area based on | ||
information provided to them by the Office of Firearm Violence | ||
Prevention , local law enforcement data, and other locally | ||
available data . | ||
(f) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall | ||
consider the recommendations and determine how to distribute | ||
funds through grants to community-based organizations and | ||
local governments. To the extent the Office of Firearm | ||
Violence Prevention does not follow a local advisory council's | ||
recommendation on allocation of funds, the Office of Firearm | ||
Violence Prevention shall explain in writing why a different | ||
allocation of resources is more likely to reduce firearm | ||
violence in the designated area. | ||
(g) Subject to appropriation, the Department of Human | ||
Services and the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall | ||
issue grants to local governmental agencies or and | ||
community-based organizations , or both, to maximize firearm | ||
violence reduction each year. When possible, initial grants | ||
Grants shall be named no later than April March 1, 2022 and |
renewed or competitively bid as appropriate in subsequent | ||
fiscal years . Grants in proceeding years shall be issued on or | ||
before July 15 of the relevant fiscal year.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 102-16, eff. 6-17-21.)
| ||
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | ||
becoming law.
|