|
representative of an organization that advocates for people |
who are homeless; a representative of an organization that |
serves or advocates for persons with disabilities; a |
representative of an organization that advocates for |
immigrants; a representative of a municipal or county |
government; and 3 at-large members. The appointed members |
shall reflect the racial, gender, and geographic diversity of |
the State and shall include representation from regions of the |
State. |
The following officials shall serve as ex-officio members: |
the Secretary of Human Services or his or her designee; the |
State Superintendent of Education or his or her designee; the |
Director of Healthcare and Family Services or his or her |
designee; the Director of Children and Family Services or his |
or her designee; the Director of Aging or his or her designee; |
the Director of Natural Resources or his or her designee; and |
the Director of Agriculture or his or her designee. The |
African-American Family Commission and , the Latino Family |
Commission , and the Local Food, Farms, and Jobs Council shall |
each designate a liaison to serve ex-officio on the |
Commission.
|
Members shall serve without compensation and are |
responsible for the cost of all reasonable and necessary |
travel expenses connected to Commission business, as the State |
of Illinois will not reimburse Commission members for these |
costs.
|
|
Commission members shall be appointed within 60 days after |
the effective date of this Act. The Commission shall hold |
their initial meetings within 60 days after at least 50% of the |
members have been appointed.
|
The representative of the Office of the Governor and a |
representative of a food bank shall serve as co-chairs of the |
Commission.
|
At the first meeting of the Commission, the members shall |
select a 5-person Steering Committee that includes the |
co-chairs.
|
The Commission may establish committees that address |
specific issues or populations and may appoint individuals |
with relevant expertise who are not appointed members of the |
Commission to serve on committees as needed. |
The Office of the Governor, or a designee of the |
Governor's choosing, shall provide guidance to the Commission. |
Under the leadership of the Office of the Governor, subject to |
appropriation, the Department of Human Services shall also |
provide leadership to support the Commission. The Department |
of Human Services and the State of Illinois shall not incur any |
costs as a result of the creation of the Commission to End |
Hunger as the coordination of meetings, report preparation, |
and other related duties will be completed by a representative |
of a food bank that is serving as a co-chair of the Commission.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1119, eff. 7-20-10; 97-419, eff. 8-16-11.) |
|
Section 10. The State Finance Act is amended by changing |
Section 12-2 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 105/12-2) (from Ch. 127, par. 148-2)
|
Sec. 12-2. Travel Regulation Council; State travel |
reimbursement. |
(a) The chairmen of the travel control boards established
|
by Section 12-1, or their designees, shall together comprise |
the Travel
Regulation Council. The Travel Regulation Council |
shall be chaired by the
Director of Central Management |
Services, who shall be a nonvoting member of
the Council, |
unless he is otherwise qualified to vote by virtue of being
the |
designee of a voting member. No later than March 1, 1986, and |
at least
biennially thereafter, the Council shall adopt State |
Travel Regulations and
Reimbursement Rates which shall be |
applicable to all personnel subject to
the jurisdiction of the |
travel control boards established by Section 12-1.
An |
affirmative vote of a majority of the members of the Council |
shall be
required to adopt regulations and reimbursement |
rates. If the Council
fails to adopt regulations by March 1 of |
any odd-numbered year, the
Director of Central Management |
Services shall adopt emergency regulations
and reimbursement |
rates pursuant to the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. |
As soon as practicable after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, the Travel |
Regulation Council and the Higher Education Travel Control |
|
Board shall adopt amendments to their existing rules to ensure |
that reimbursement rates for public institutions of higher |
education, as defined in Section 1-13 of the Illinois |
Procurement Code, are set in accordance with the requirements |
of subsection (f) of this Section.
|
(b) Mileage for automobile travel shall be reimbursed at |
the allowance
rate in effect under regulations promulgated |
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 5707(b)(2).
In the event the rate set |
under federal regulations increases or decreases during the
|
course of the State's fiscal year, the effective date of the |
new rate shall be
the effective date of the change in the |
federal rate.
|
(c) Rates for reimbursement of expenses other than mileage |
shall not
exceed the actual cost of travel as determined by the |
United States
Internal Revenue Service.
|
(d) Reimbursements to travelers shall be made pursuant to |
the rates and
regulations applicable to the respective State |
agency as of the effective
date of this amendatory Act, until |
the State Travel Regulations and
Reimbursement Rates |
established by this Section are adopted and effective.
|
(e) Lodging in Cook County, Illinois and the District of |
Columbia shall be
reimbursed at the maximum lodging rate in |
effect under regulations promulgated
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. |
5701-5709. For purposes of this subsection (e), the
District |
of
Columbia shall include the cities and counties included in |
the per diem
locality of the
District of Columbia, as defined |
|
by the regulations in effect promulgated
pursuant to 5
U.S.C. |
5701-5709. Individual travel control boards may set a lodging
|
reimbursement rate
more restrictive than the rate set forth in |
the federal regulations.
|
(f) Notwithstanding any other law, travel reimbursement |
rates for lodging and mileage for automobile travel, as well |
as allowances for meals, shall be set for public institutions |
of higher education at the maximum rates established by the |
federal government for travel expenses, subsistence expenses, |
and mileage allowances under 5 U.S.C. Subchapter I and |
regulations promulgated thereunder. If a rate set under |
federal regulations increases or decreases in the course of |
the State's fiscal year, the effective date of the new rate |
shall be the effective date of the change in the federal rate. |
(Source: P.A. 96-240, eff. 1-1-10.)
|
Section 15. The Illinois Procurement Code is amended by |
changing Sections 1-13, 1-15.93, 15-25, 20-20, 20-30, 25-90, |
30-30, 33-5, 33-50, 50-35, and 55-25 as follows: |
(30 ILCS 500/1-13) |
Sec. 1-13. Applicability to public institutions of higher |
education. |
(a) This Code shall apply to public institutions of higher |
education, regardless of the source of the funds with which |
contracts are paid, except as provided in this Section. |
|
(b) Except as provided in this Section, this Code shall |
not apply to procurements made by or on behalf of public |
institutions of higher education for any of the following: |
(1) Memberships in professional, academic, research, |
or athletic organizations on behalf of a public |
institution of higher education, an employee of a public |
institution of higher education, or a student at a public |
institution of higher education. |
(2) Procurement expenditures for events or activities |
paid for exclusively by revenues generated by the event or |
activity, gifts or donations for the event or activity, |
private grants, or any combination thereof. |
(3) Procurement expenditures for events or activities |
for which the use of specific potential contractors is |
mandated or identified by the sponsor of the event or |
activity, provided that the sponsor is providing a |
majority of the funding for the event or activity. |
(4) Procurement expenditures necessary to provide |
athletic, artistic or musical services, performances, |
events, or productions by or for a public institution of |
higher education. |
(5) Procurement expenditures for periodicals, books, |
subscriptions, database licenses, and other publications |
procured for use by a university library or academic |
department, except for expenditures related to procuring |
textbooks for student use or materials for resale or |
|
rental. |
(6) Procurement expenditures for placement of students |
in externships, practicums, field experiences, and for |
medical residencies and rotations. |
(7) Contracts for programming and broadcast license |
rights for university-operated radio and television |
stations. |
(8) Procurement expenditures necessary to perform |
sponsored research and other sponsored activities under |
grants and contracts funded by the sponsor or by sources |
other than State appropriations. |
(9) Contracts with a foreign entity for research or |
educational activities, provided that the foreign entity |
either does not maintain an office in the United States or |
is the sole source of the service or product. |
(10) Procurement expenditures for any ongoing software |
license or maintenance agreement or competitively |
solicited software purchase, when the software, license, |
or maintenance agreement is available through only the |
software creator or its manufacturer and not a reseller. |
(11) Procurement expenditures incurred outside of the |
United States for the recruitment of international |
students. |
Notice of each contract with an annual value of more than |
$100,000 entered into by a public institution of higher |
education that is related to the procurement of goods and |
|
services identified in items (1) through (11) (9) of this |
subsection shall be published in the Procurement Bulletin |
within 14 calendar days after contract execution. The Chief |
Procurement Officer shall prescribe the form and content of |
the notice. Each public institution of higher education shall |
provide the Chief Procurement Officer, on a monthly basis, in |
the form and content prescribed by the Chief Procurement |
Officer, a report of contracts that are related to the |
procurement of goods and services identified in this |
subsection. At a minimum, this report shall include the name |
of the contractor, a description of the supply or service |
provided, the total amount of the contract, the term of the |
contract, and the exception to the Code utilized. A copy of any |
or all of these contracts shall be made available to the Chief |
Procurement Officer immediately upon request. The Chief |
Procurement Officer shall submit a report to the Governor and |
General Assembly no later than November 1 of each year that |
shall include, at a minimum, an annual summary of the monthly |
information reported to the Chief Procurement Officer. |
(b-5) Except as provided in this subsection, the |
provisions of this Code shall not apply to contracts for |
medical supplies or , and to contracts for medical services |
necessary for the delivery of care and treatment at medical, |
dental, or veterinary teaching facilities used utilized by |
Southern Illinois University or the University of Illinois or |
and at any university-operated health care center or |
|
dispensary that provides care, treatment, and medications for |
students, faculty , and staff. Furthermore, the provisions of |
this Code do not apply to the procurement by such a facility of |
any additional supplies or services that the operator of the |
facility deems necessary for the effective use and functioning |
of the medical supplies or services that are otherwise exempt |
from this Code under this subsection (b-5). However, other |
Other supplies and services needed for these teaching |
facilities shall be subject to the jurisdiction of the Chief |
Procurement Officer for Public Institutions of Higher |
Education who may establish expedited procurement procedures |
and may waive or modify certification, contract, hearing, |
process and registration requirements required by the Code. |
All procurements made under this subsection shall be |
documented and may require publication in the Illinois |
Procurement Bulletin. |
(b-10) Procurements made by or on behalf of the University |
of Illinois for investment services scheduled to expire June |
2022 may be entered into or renewed extended through June 2024 |
without being subject to the requirements of this Code. Notice |
of intent to renew a contract shall be published in the |
Illinois Public Higher Education Procurement Bulletin at least |
14 days prior to the execution of a renewal, and the University |
of Illinois shall hold a public hearing for interested parties |
to provide public comment. Any contract extended, renewed, or |
entered pursuant to this exception shall be published in on |
|
the Illinois Public Higher Education Procurement Bulletin |
Executive Ethics Commission's website within 5 days of |
contract execution. This subsection is inoperative on and |
after July 1, 2024. |
(c) Procurements made by or on behalf of public |
institutions of higher education for the fulfillment of a |
grant shall be made in accordance with the requirements of |
this Code to the extent practical. |
Upon the written request of a public institution of higher |
education, the Chief Procurement Officer may waive contract, |
registration, certification, and hearing requirements of this |
Code if, based on the item to be procured or the terms of a |
grant, compliance is impractical. The public institution of |
higher education shall provide the Chief Procurement Officer |
with specific reasons for the waiver, including the necessity |
of contracting with a particular potential contractor, and |
shall certify that an effort was made in good faith to comply |
with the provisions of this Code. The Chief Procurement |
Officer shall provide written justification for any waivers. |
By November 1 of each year, the Chief Procurement Officer |
shall file a report with the General Assembly identifying each |
contract approved with waivers and providing the justification |
given for any waivers for each of those contracts. Notice of |
each waiver made under this subsection shall be published in |
the Procurement Bulletin within 14 calendar days after |
contract execution. The Chief Procurement Officer shall |
|
prescribe the form and content of the notice. |
(d) Notwithstanding this Section, a waiver of the |
registration requirements of Section 20-160 does not permit a |
business entity and any affiliated entities or affiliated |
persons to make campaign contributions if otherwise prohibited |
by Section 50-37. The total amount of contracts awarded in |
accordance with this Section shall be included in determining |
the aggregate amount of contracts or pending bids of a |
business entity and any affiliated entities or affiliated |
persons. |
(e) Notwithstanding subsection (e) of Section 50-10.5 of |
this Code, the Chief Procurement Officer, with the approval of |
the Executive Ethics Commission, may permit a public |
institution of higher education to accept a bid or enter into a |
contract with a business that assisted the public institution |
of higher education in determining whether there is a need for |
a contract or assisted in reviewing, drafting, or preparing |
documents related to a bid or contract, provided that the bid |
or contract is essential to research administered by the |
public institution of higher education and it is in the best |
interest of the public institution of higher education to |
accept the bid or contract. For purposes of this subsection, |
"business" includes all individuals with whom a business is |
affiliated, including, but not limited to, any officer, agent, |
employee, consultant, independent contractor, director, |
partner, manager, or shareholder of a business. The Executive |
|
Ethics Commission may promulgate rules and regulations for the |
implementation and administration of the provisions of this |
subsection (e). |
(f) As used in this Section: |
"Grant" means non-appropriated funding provided by a |
federal or private entity to support a project or program |
administered by a public institution of higher education and |
any non-appropriated funding provided to a sub-recipient of |
the grant. |
"Public institution of higher education" means Chicago |
State University, Eastern Illinois University, Governors State |
University, Illinois State University, Northeastern Illinois |
University, Northern Illinois University, Southern Illinois |
University, University of Illinois, Western Illinois |
University, and, for purposes of this Code only, the Illinois |
Mathematics and Science Academy. |
(g) (Blank).
|
(h) The General Assembly finds and declares that: |
(1) Public Act 98-1076, which took effect on January |
1, 2015, changed the repeal date set for this Section from |
December 31, 2014 to December 31, 2016. |
(2) The Statute on Statutes sets forth general rules |
on the repeal of statutes and the construction of multiple |
amendments, but Section 1 of that Act also states that |
these rules will not be observed when the result would be |
"inconsistent with the manifest intent of the General |
|
Assembly or repugnant to the context of the statute". |
(3) This amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly |
manifests the intention of the General Assembly to remove |
the repeal of this Section. |
(4) This Section was originally enacted to protect, |
promote, and preserve the general welfare. Any |
construction of this Section that results in the repeal of |
this Section on December 31, 2014 would be inconsistent |
with the manifest intent of the General Assembly and |
repugnant to the context of this Code. |
It is hereby declared to have been the intent of the |
General Assembly that this Section not be subject to repeal on |
December 31, 2014. |
This Section shall be deemed to have been in continuous |
effect since December 20, 2011 (the effective date of Public |
Act 97-643), and it shall continue to be in effect |
henceforward until it is otherwise lawfully repealed. All |
previously enacted amendments to this Section taking effect on |
or after December 31, 2014, are hereby validated. |
All actions taken in reliance on or pursuant to this |
Section by any public institution of higher education, person, |
or entity are hereby validated. |
In order to ensure the continuing effectiveness of this |
Section, it is set forth in full and re-enacted by this |
amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly. This |
re-enactment is intended as a continuation of this Section. It |
|
is not intended to supersede any amendment to this Section |
that is enacted by the 100th General Assembly. |
In this amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly, the |
base text of the reenacted Section is set forth as amended by |
Public Act 98-1076. Striking and underscoring is used only to |
show changes being made to the base text. |
This Section applies to all procurements made on or before |
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 100th General |
Assembly. |
(Source: P.A. 101-640, eff. 6-12-20; 102-16, eff. 6-17-21; |
102-721, eff. 5-6-22.) |
(30 ILCS 500/1-15.93) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2024) |
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 or |
a public institution of higher education, as defined in |
Section 1-13 of this Code, 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, 2026 2024 .
|
(Source: P.A. 101-369, eff. 12-15-19; 101-645, eff. 6-26-20; |
102-671, eff. 11-30-21.) |
|
(30 ILCS 500/15-25) |
Sec. 15-25. Bulletin content. |
(a) Invitations for bids. Notice of each and every |
contract that is
offered, including renegotiated contracts and |
change orders,
shall be published in the Bulletin. The |
applicable chief procurement officer
may provide by rule an |
organized format for the publication of this
information, but |
in any case it must include at least the date first offered,
|
the date submission of offers is due, the location that offers |
are to be
submitted to, the purchasing State agency, the |
responsible State purchasing
officer, a brief purchase |
description, the method of source selection,
information of |
how to obtain a comprehensive purchase description and any
|
disclosure and contract forms, and encouragement to potential |
contractors to hire qualified veterans, as defined by Section |
45-67 of this Code, and qualified Illinois minorities, women, |
persons with disabilities, and residents discharged from any |
Illinois adult correctional center. |
(a-5) All businesses listed on the Illinois Unified |
Certification Program Disadvantaged Business Enterprise |
Directory, the Business Enterprise Program of the Department |
of Central Management Services, and any small business |
database created pursuant to Section 45-45 of this Code shall |
be furnished written instructions and information on how to |
register for the Illinois Procurement Bulletin. This |
information shall be provided to each business within 30 |
|
calendar days after the business's notice of certification or |
qualification. |
(b) Contracts let. Notice of each and every contract that |
is let, including renegotiated contracts and change orders, |
shall be issued electronically to those bidders submitting |
responses to the solicitations, inclusive of the unsuccessful |
bidders, immediately upon contract let. Failure of any chief |
procurement officer to give such notice shall result in |
tolling the time for filing a bid protest up to 7 calendar |
days. |
For purposes of this subsection (b), "contracts let" means |
a construction agency's act of advertising an invitation for |
bids for one or more construction projects. |
(b-5) Contracts awarded. Notice of each and every contract |
that is awarded, including renegotiated contracts and change |
orders, shall be issued electronically to the successful |
responsible bidder, offeror, or contractor and published in |
the Bulletin. The applicable chief procurement officer may |
provide by rule an organized format for the publication of |
this information, but in any case it must include at least all |
of the information specified in subsection (a) as well as the |
name of the successful responsible bidder, offeror, the |
contract price, the number of unsuccessful bidders or offerors |
and any other disclosure specified in any Section of this |
Code. This notice must be posted in the online electronic |
Bulletin prior to execution of the contract. |
|
For purposes of this subsection (b-5), "contract award" |
means the determination that a particular bidder or offeror |
has been selected from among other bidders or offerors to |
receive a contract, subject to the successful completion of |
final negotiations. "Contract award" is evidenced by the |
posting of a Notice of Award or a Notice of Intent to Award to |
the respective volume of the Illinois Procurement Bulletin. |
(c) Emergency purchase disclosure. Any chief procurement |
officer or State
purchasing officer exercising emergency |
purchase authority under
this Code shall publish a written |
description and reasons and the total cost,
if known, or an |
estimate if unknown and the name of the responsible chief
|
procurement officer and State purchasing officer, and the |
business or person
contracted with for all emergency purchases |
in
the Bulletin. The notice for an emergency procurement other |
than the extension of an emergency contract This notice must |
be posted in the online electronic Bulletin no later than 5 |
calendar days after the contract is awarded , and notice for |
the extension of an emergency contract must be posted in the |
online electronic Bulletin no later than 7 calendar days after |
the extension is executed .
Notice of a hearing to extend an |
emergency contract must be posted in the online electronic |
Procurement Bulletin no later than 14 calendar days prior to |
the hearing. |
(c-5) Business Enterprise Program report. Each purchasing |
agency shall, with the assistance of the applicable chief |
|
procurement officer, post in the online electronic Bulletin a |
copy of its annual report of utilization of businesses owned |
by minorities, women, and persons with disabilities as |
submitted to the Business Enterprise Council for Minorities, |
Women, and Persons with Disabilities pursuant to Section 6(c) |
of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women, and Persons |
with Disabilities Act within 10 calendar days after its |
submission of its report to the Council.
|
(c-10) Renewals. Notice of each contract renewal shall be |
posted in the Bulletin within 14 calendar days of the |
determination to execute a renewal of the contract. The notice |
shall include at least all of the information required in |
subsection (a) or (b), as applicable.
|
(c-15) Sole source procurements. Before entering into a |
sole source contract, a chief procurement officer exercising |
sole source procurement authority under this Code shall |
publish a written description of intent to enter into a sole |
source contract along with a description of the item to be |
procured and the intended sole source contractor. This notice |
must be posted in the online electronic Procurement Bulletin |
before a sole source contract is awarded and at least 14 |
calendar days before the hearing required by Section 20-25. |
(d) Other required disclosure. The applicable chief |
procurement officer
shall provide by rule for the organized |
publication of all other disclosure
required in other Sections |
of this Code in a timely manner. |
|
(e) The changes to subsections (b), (c), (c-5), (c-10), |
and (c-15) of this Section made by Public Act 96-795 apply to |
reports submitted, offers made, and notices on contracts |
executed on or after July 1, 2010 (the effective date of Public |
Act 96-795). The changes made to subsection (c) by this |
amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly apply only to |
emergency contract extensions executed on or after the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General |
Assembly.
|
(f) Each chief procurement officer shall, in consultation |
with the agencies under his or her jurisdiction, provide the |
Procurement Policy Board with the information and resources |
necessary, and in a manner, to effectuate the purpose of |
Public Act 96-1444. |
(Source: P.A. 100-43, eff. 8-9-17; 100-391, eff. 8-25-17; |
100-863, eff. 8-14-18.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-20)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 102-721 )
|
Sec. 20-20. Small purchases.
|
(a) Amount. Any individual procurement of supplies or
|
services not exceeding $100,000 and any procurement of
|
construction not exceeding
$100,000, or any individual |
procurement of professional or artistic services not exceeding |
$100,000 may be made without competitive source selection.
|
Procurements shall not be artificially
divided so as to |
|
constitute a small purchase under this Section. Any |
procurement of construction not exceeding $100,000 may be made |
by an alternative competitive source selection. The |
construction agency shall establish rules for an alternative |
competitive source selection process. This Section does not |
apply to construction-related professional services contracts |
awarded in accordance with the provisions of the |
Architectural, Engineering, and Land Surveying Qualifications |
Based Selection Act.
|
(b) Adjustment. Each July 1, the small purchase maximum
|
established in subsection (a)
shall be adjusted for inflation |
as determined by the Consumer
Price Index for All Urban |
Consumers as determined by the United States
Department of |
Labor and rounded to the nearest $100.
|
(c) Based upon rules proposed by the Board and rules |
promulgated by the
chief procurement officers, the small |
purchase maximum established in
subsection
(a) may be |
modified.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-43, eff. 8-9-17.)
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 102-721 )
|
Sec. 20-20. Small purchases.
|
(a) Amount. Any individual procurement of supplies or
|
services not exceeding $100,000 and any procurement of
|
construction not exceeding $250,000
$100,000 , or any |
individual procurement of professional or artistic services |
|
not exceeding $100,000 may be made without competitive source |
selection.
Procurements shall not be artificially
divided so |
as to constitute a small purchase under this Section. Any |
procurement of construction not exceeding $250,000 $100,000 |
may be made by an alternative competitive source selection. |
The construction agency shall establish rules for an |
alternative competitive source selection process. This Section |
does not apply to construction-related professional services |
contracts awarded in accordance with the provisions of the |
Architectural, Engineering, and Land Surveying Qualifications |
Based Selection Act.
|
(b) Adjustment. Each July 1, the small purchase maximum
|
established in subsection (a)
shall be adjusted for inflation |
as determined by the Consumer
Price Index for All Urban |
Consumers as determined by the United States
Department of |
Labor and rounded to the nearest $100.
|
(c) Based upon rules proposed by the Board and rules |
promulgated by the
chief procurement officers, the small |
purchase maximum established in
subsection
(a) may be |
modified.
|
(d) Certification. All small purchases with an annual |
value that exceeds $50,000 shall be accompanied by Standard |
Illinois Certifications in a form prescribed by each Chief |
Procurement Officer. |
(Source: P.A. 102-721, eff. 1-1-23.)
|
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-30)
|
Sec. 20-30. Emergency purchases.
|
(a) Conditions for use. In accordance with standards set |
by
rule, a purchasing
agency may make emergency procurements |
without competitive sealed
bidding or prior notice
when there |
exists a threat to public health or public safety, or
when |
immediate expenditure is
necessary for repairs to State |
property in order to protect
against further loss of or damage |
to
State property, to prevent or minimize serious disruption |
in critical State
services that affect health, safety, or |
collection of substantial State revenues, or to ensure the
|
integrity of State records; provided, however, that the term |
of the emergency purchase shall be limited to the time |
reasonably needed for a competitive procurement, not to exceed |
90 calendar days. A contract may be extended beyond 90 |
calendar days with the approval of if the chief procurement |
officer determines additional time is necessary and that the |
contract scope and duration are limited to the emergency . |
Prior to execution of the extension, the chief procurement |
officer shall receive must hold a public hearing and provide |
written justification for the extension all emergency |
contracts . The duration of the extension shall be limited to |
the scope of the emergency. Members of the public may present |
testimony. Emergency procurements shall be made
with as much |
competition
as is practicable under the circumstances, and |
agencies shall use utilize best efforts to include contractors |
|
certified under the Business Enterprise Program in the |
agencies' its emergency procurement process.
A written
|
description of the basis for the emergency and reasons for the
|
selection of the particular
contractor shall be included in |
the contract file.
|
(b) Notice. Notice of all emergency procurements shall be |
provided to the Procurement Policy Board and the Commission on |
Equity and Inclusion and published in the online electronic |
Bulletin no later than 5 calendar days after the contract is |
awarded. Notice of the extension of intent to extend an |
emergency contract shall be provided to the Procurement Policy |
Board and the Commission on Equity and Inclusion and published |
in the online electronic Bulletin no later than 7 calendar |
days after the extension is executed at least 14 calendar days |
before the public hearing . Notice shall include at least a |
description of the need for the emergency purchase and , the |
contractor , and if applicable, the date, time, and location of |
the public hearing . A copy of this notice and all documents |
provided at the hearing shall be included in the subsequent |
Procurement Bulletin. Before the next appropriate volume of |
the Illinois Procurement
Bulletin, the purchasing agency shall |
publish in the
Illinois Procurement Bulletin a copy of each |
written description
and reasons and the total cost
of each |
emergency procurement made during the previous month.
When |
only an estimate of the
total cost is known at the time of |
publication, the estimate shall
be identified as an estimate |
|
and
published. When the actual total cost is determined, it |
shall
also be published in like manner
before the 10th day of |
the next succeeding month.
|
(c) Statements. A chief procurement officer making a |
procurement
under this Section shall file statements
with the |
Procurement Policy Board, the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion, and the Auditor General within
10 calendar days
|
after the procurement setting
forth the amount expended, the |
name of the contractor involved,
and the conditions and
|
circumstances requiring the emergency procurement. When only |
an
estimate of the cost is
available within 10 calendar days |
after the procurement, the actual cost
shall be reported |
immediately
after it is determined. At the end of each fiscal |
quarter, the
Auditor General shall file with the
Legislative |
Audit Commission and the Governor a complete listing
of all |
emergency
procurements reported during that fiscal quarter. |
The Legislative
Audit Commission shall
review the emergency |
procurements so reported and, in its annual
reports, advise |
the General
Assembly of procurements that appear to constitute |
an abuse of
this Section.
|
(d) Quick purchases. The chief procurement officer may |
promulgate rules
extending the circumstances by which a |
purchasing agency may make purchases
under this Section, |
including but not limited to the procurement of items
|
available at a discount for a limited period of time.
|
(d-5) The chief procurement officer shall adopt rules |
|
regarding the use of contractors certified in the Business |
Enterprise Program in emergency and quick purchase |
procurements. |
(e) The changes to this Section made by this amendatory |
Act of the 102nd 96th General Assembly apply to procurements |
executed on or after its effective date.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-657, eff. 1-1-22; 102-29, eff. 6-25-21 .)
|
(30 ILCS 500/25-90) |
(This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a |
delayed effective date ) |
Sec. 25-90. Prohibited and authorized cybersecurity |
Cybersecurity prohibited products. State agencies are |
prohibited from purchasing any products that, due to |
cybersecurity risks, are prohibited for purchase by federal |
agencies pursuant to a United States Department of Homeland |
Security Binding Operational Directive. However, a State |
agency or public institution of higher education may purchase |
those offerings that are included in the Authorized Product |
List maintained by StateRAMP and that have been verified by |
StateRAMP as having an authorized security status.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-753, eff. 1-1-23.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/30-30)
|
Sec. 30-30. Design-bid-build construction. |
(a) The provisions of this subsection are operative |
|
through December 31, 2025 2023 . |
Except as provided in subsection (a-5), for 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.
|
Except as provided in subsection (a-5), the 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, 2025 2023 , |
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. |
(a-5) Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory
|
Act of the 102nd General Assembly and through December 31,
|
2025, for single prime projects in which a public institution
|
of higher education is a construction agency awarding
building |
construction contracts in excess of $250,000,
separate |
specifications may be prepared for all equipment,
labor, and |
materials in connection with the 5 subdivisions of
work |
enumerated in subsection (a). Any public institution of higher |
education contract awarded for any part thereof may
award 2 or |
more of the 5 subdivisions of work together or
separately to |
responsible and reliable persons, firms, or
corporations |
engaged in these classes of work if: (i) the
public |
institution of higher education has submitted to the
|
Procurement Policy Board and the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion a written notice that includes
the reasons for using |
the single prime method and an
explanation of why the use of |
that method is in the best
interest of the State and arranges |
to have the notice posted on the institution's online |
procurement webpage and its online
procurement bulletin at |
least 3 business days following submission to the Procurement |
Policy Board and the Commission on Equity and Inclusion; (ii) |
the
successful low bidder has prequalified with the public
|
institution of higher education; (iii) the bid of the
|
successful low bidder identifies the name of the
|
subcontractor, if any, and the bid proposal costs for each of
|
|
the 5 subdivisions of work set forth in subsection (a); (iv)
|
the contract entered into with the successful bidder provides
|
that no identified subcontractor may be terminated without the
|
written consent of the public institution of higher education;
|
and (v) the successful low bidder has prequalified with the |
University of Illinois or with the Capital Development Board. |
For building construction projects with a total
|
construction cost valued at $20,000,000 or less, public
|
institutions of higher education shall not use the single
|
prime delivery method for more than 50% of the total number of
|
projects bid for each fiscal year. Projects with a total
|
construction cost valued at $20,000,000 or more may be bid
|
using the single prime delivery method at the discretion of
|
the public institution of higher education.
With respect to |
any construction project described in this
subsection (a-5), |
the public institution of higher education shall: (i) specify |
in writing as a public record that the
project shall comply |
with 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 (ii) report annually to the Governor, General Assembly, |
Procurement Policy Board, and Auditor
General on the bidding, |
award, and performance of all single
prime projects. On and |
after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 102nd |
General Assembly, the public
institution of higher education |
may award in each fiscal year
single prime contracts with an |
|
aggregate total value of no
more than $100,000,000. The Board |
of Trustees of the
University of Illinois may award in each |
fiscal year single
prime contracts with an aggregate total |
value of not more than $300,000,000. |
(b) The provisions of this subsection are operative on and |
after January 1, 2026 2024 .
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. 101-369, eff. 12-15-19; 101-645, eff. 6-26-20; |
102-671, eff. 11-30-21.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/33-5)
|
Sec. 33-5. Definitions. In this Article:
|
"Construction management services" includes:
|
(1) services provided in the planning and |
pre-construction phases of a
construction project |
including, but not limited to, consulting with,
advising, |
assisting, and making recommendations to the Capital |
Development Board and
architect, engineer, or licensed |
land surveyor on all aspects
of planning for project |
construction; reviewing all plans and
specifications as |
they are being developed and making recommendations
with |
respect to construction feasibility, availability of |
material and
labor, time requirements for procurement and |
construction, and
projected costs; making, reviewing, and |
refining budget estimates based
on the Board's program and |
other available information; making
recommendations to the |
Board and the architect or engineer
regarding the division |
|
of work in the plans and specifications to
facilitate the |
bidding and awarding of contracts; soliciting the
interest |
of capable contractors and taking bids on the project;
|
analyzing the bids received; and preparing and maintaining |
a progress
schedule during the design phase of the project |
and preparation of a
proposed construction schedule; and
|
(2) services provided in the construction phase of the |
project
including, but not limited to, maintaining |
competent supervisory staff
to coordinate and provide |
general direction of the work and progress
of the |
contractors on the project; directing the work as it is |
being
performed for general conformance with working |
drawings and
specifications; establishing procedures for |
coordinating among the
Board, architect or engineer, |
contractors, and construction
manager with respect to all |
aspects of the project and
implementing those procedures; |
maintaining job site records
and making appropriate |
progress reports; implementing labor policy
in conformance |
with the requirements of the public owner; reviewing
the |
safety and equal opportunity programs of each contractor |
for
conformance with the public owner's policy and making
|
recommendations; reviewing and processing
all applications |
for payment by involved contractors and material
suppliers |
in accordance with the terms of the contract; making
|
recommendations and processing requests for changes in the |
work and
maintaining records of change orders; scheduling |
|
and conducting job
meetings to ensure orderly progress of |
the work; developing and
monitoring a project progress |
schedule, coordinating and expediting
the work of all |
contractors and providing periodic status reports to
the |
owner and the architect or engineer; and establishing and
|
maintaining a cost control system and conducting meetings |
to review
costs.
|
"Construction manager" means any individual, sole
|
proprietorship, firm, partnership, corporation, or other legal |
entity
providing construction management services for the |
Board and
prequalified by the State in accordance with 30 ILCS
|
500/33-10.
|
"Board" means the Capital Development Board or, to the |
extent that the services are to be procured for a public |
institution of higher education, the public institution of |
higher education .
|
(Source: P.A. 94-532, eff. 8-10-05.) |
(30 ILCS 500/33-50)
|
Sec. 33-50. Duties of construction manager; additional
|
requirements for persons performing construction work.
|
(a) Upon the award of a construction management services
|
contract, a construction manager must contract with the Board |
to
furnish his or her skill and judgment in cooperation with, |
and reliance
upon, the services of the project architect or |
engineer. The
construction manager must furnish business |
|
administration, management
of the construction process, and |
other specified services to the Board and must perform his or |
her obligations in an expeditious and
economical manner |
consistent with the interest of the Board. If
it is in the |
State's best interest, the construction manager may
provide or |
perform basic services for which reimbursement is provided
in |
the general conditions to the construction management services
|
contract.
|
(b) The actual construction work on the project must be |
awarded to
contractors under this Code. The Capital |
Development Board may further separate additional divisions of |
work under this Article. This subsection is
subject to the |
applicable provisions of the following Acts:
|
(1) the Prevailing Wage Act;
|
(2) the Public Construction Bond Act;
|
(3) the Public Works Employment Discrimination Act;
|
(4) the Public Works Preference Act (repealed on June |
16, 2010 by Public Act 96-929);
|
(5) the Employment of Illinois Workers on Public
Works |
Act;
|
(6) the Public Contract Fraud Act;
|
(7) (blank); and
|
(8) the Illinois Architecture Practice Act of 1989, |
the Professional
Engineering
Practice Act of 1989, the |
Illinois Professional Land Surveyor Act of 1989, and
the |
Structural
Engineering Practice Act of 1989.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 101-149, eff. 7-26-19.) |
(30 ILCS 500/50-35) |
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 102-721 ) |
Sec. 50-35. Financial disclosure and potential conflicts |
of interest. |
(a) All bids and offers from responsive bidders, offerors, |
vendors, or contractors with an annual value of
more than |
$50,000, and all submissions to a vendor portal, shall be |
accompanied by disclosure of the financial
interests of the |
bidder, offeror, potential contractor, or contractor and each |
subcontractor to be used. In addition, all subcontracts |
identified as provided by Section 20-120 of this Code with an |
annual value of
more than $50,000 shall be accompanied by |
disclosure of the financial
interests of each subcontractor. |
The financial disclosure of
each successful bidder, offeror, |
potential contractor, or contractor and its subcontractors |
shall be incorporated as a material term of the contract and |
shall become
part of the publicly available contract or |
procurement file
maintained by the appropriate chief |
procurement officer. Each disclosure under this Section shall |
be signed and made under penalty of perjury by an authorized |
officer or employee on behalf of the bidder, offeror, |
potential contractor, contractor, or subcontractor, and must |
be filed with the Procurement Policy Board and the Commission |
on Equity and Inclusion. |
|
(b) Disclosure shall include any
ownership or distributive |
income share that is in excess of 5%, or an amount
greater than |
60% of the annual salary of the Governor, of the disclosing |
entity
or its parent entity, whichever is less, unless the |
bidder, offeror, potential contractor, contractor, or |
subcontractor
(i) is a
publicly traded entity subject to |
Federal 10K reporting, in which case it may
submit its 10K
|
disclosure in place of the prescribed disclosure, or (ii) is a |
privately held
entity that is exempt from Federal 10k |
reporting but has more than 100
shareholders, in which case it |
may submit the information that Federal 10k
reporting |
companies are required to report under 17 CFR 229.401 and list |
the
names of any person or entity holding any ownership share |
that is in excess of
5% in place of the prescribed disclosure. |
The form of disclosure shall
be prescribed by the applicable |
chief procurement officer and must include at
least the names,
|
addresses, and dollar or proportionate share of ownership of |
each person
identified in this Section, their instrument of |
ownership or beneficial
relationship, and notice of any |
potential conflict of interest resulting from
the current |
ownership or beneficial relationship of each individual |
identified in
this Section having in addition any of the |
following relationships: |
(1) State employment, currently or in the previous 3 |
years, including
contractual employment of services. |
(2) State employment of spouse, father, mother, son, |
|
or daughter,
including
contractual employment for services |
in the previous 2 years. |
(3) Elective status; the holding of elective office of |
the State of
Illinois, the government of the United |
States, any unit of local government
authorized by the |
Constitution of the State of Illinois or the statutes of |
the
State of Illinois currently or in the previous 3 |
years. |
(4) Relationship to anyone holding elective office |
currently or in the
previous 2 years; spouse, father, |
mother, son, or daughter. |
(5) Appointive office; the holding of any appointive |
government office of
the State of Illinois, the United |
States of America, or any unit of local
government |
authorized by the Constitution of the State of Illinois or |
the
statutes of the State of Illinois, which office |
entitles the holder to
compensation in excess of expenses |
incurred in the discharge of that office
currently or in |
the previous 3 years. |
(6) Relationship to anyone holding appointive office |
currently or in the
previous 2 years; spouse, father, |
mother, son, or daughter. |
(7) Employment, currently or in the previous 3 years, |
as or by any
registered lobbyist of the State government. |
(8) Relationship to anyone who is or was a registered |
lobbyist in the
previous 2 years; spouse, father, mother, |
|
son, or daughter. |
(9) Compensated employment, currently or in the |
previous 3 years, by any
registered election or |
re-election committee registered with the Secretary of
|
State or any county clerk in the State of Illinois, or any |
political action
committee registered with either the |
Secretary of State or the Federal Board of
Elections. |
(10) Relationship to anyone; spouse, father, mother, |
son, or daughter; who
is or was a compensated employee in |
the last 2 years of any registered
election or re-election |
committee registered with the Secretary of State or any
|
county clerk in the State of Illinois, or any political |
action committee
registered with either the Secretary of |
State or the Federal Board of
Elections. |
(b-1) The disclosure required under this Section must also |
include the name and address of each lobbyist required to |
register under the Lobbyist Registration Act and other agent |
of the bidder, offeror, potential contractor, contractor, or |
subcontractor who is not identified under subsections (a) and |
(b) and who has communicated, is communicating, or may |
communicate with any State officer or employee concerning the |
bid or offer. The disclosure under this subsection is a |
continuing obligation and must be promptly supplemented for |
accuracy throughout the process and throughout the term of the |
contract if the bid or offer is successful. |
(b-2) The disclosure required under this Section must also |
|
include, for each of the persons identified in subsection (b) |
or (b-1), each of the following that occurred within the |
previous 10 years: suspension or debarment from contracting |
with any governmental entity; professional licensure |
discipline; bankruptcies; adverse civil judgments and |
administrative findings; and criminal felony convictions. The |
disclosure under this subsection is a continuing obligation |
and must be promptly supplemented for accuracy throughout the |
process and throughout the term of the contract if the bid or |
offer is successful. |
(c) The disclosure in subsection (b) is not intended to |
prohibit or prevent
any
contract. The disclosure is meant to |
fully and publicly disclose any potential
conflict to the |
chief procurement officers, State purchasing officers, their
|
designees, and executive officers so they may adequately |
discharge their duty
to protect the State. |
(d) When a potential for a conflict of interest is |
identified, discovered, or reasonably suspected, the chief |
procurement officer or State procurement officer shall send |
the contract to the Procurement Policy Board and the |
Commission on Equity and Inclusion. In accordance with the |
objectives of subsection (c), if the Procurement Policy Board |
or the Commission on Equity and Inclusion finds evidence of a |
potential conflict of interest not originally disclosed by the |
bidder, offeror, potential contractor, contractor, or |
subcontractor, the Board or the Commission on Equity and |
|
Inclusion shall provide written notice to the bidder, offeror, |
potential contractor, contractor, or subcontractor that is |
identified, discovered, or reasonably suspected of having a |
potential conflict of interest. The bidder, offeror, potential |
contractor, contractor, or subcontractor shall have 15 |
calendar days to respond in writing to the Board or the |
Commission on Equity and Inclusion, and a hearing before the |
Board or the Commission on Equity and Inclusion will be |
granted upon request by the bidder, offeror, potential |
contractor, contractor, or subcontractor, at a date and time |
to be determined by the Board or the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion, but which in no event shall occur later than 15 |
calendar days after the date of the request. Upon |
consideration, the Board or the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion shall recommend, in writing, whether to allow or |
void the contract, bid, offer, or subcontract weighing the |
best interest of the State of Illinois. All recommendations |
shall be submitted to the Executive Ethics Commission. The |
Executive Ethics Commission must hold a public hearing within |
30 calendar days after receiving the Board's or the Commission |
on Equity and Inclusion's recommendation if the Procurement |
Policy Board or the Commission on Equity and Inclusion makes a |
recommendation to (i) void a contract or (ii) void a bid or |
offer and the chief procurement officer selected or intends to |
award the contract to the bidder, offeror, or potential |
contractor. A chief procurement officer is prohibited from |
|
awarding a contract before a hearing if the Board or the |
Commission on Equity and Inclusion recommendation does not |
support a bid or offer. The recommendation and proceedings of |
any hearing, if applicable, shall be available to the public. |
(e) These thresholds and disclosure do not relieve the |
chief procurement
officer, the State purchasing officer, or
|
their designees from reasonable care and diligence for any |
contract, bid,
offer, or submission to a vendor portal. The |
chief procurement officer, the State purchasing officer, or
|
their designees shall be
responsible for using any reasonably |
known and publicly available information
to
discover any |
undisclosed potential conflict of interest and act to protect |
the
best interest of the State of Illinois. |
(f) Inadvertent or accidental failure to fully disclose |
shall render the
contract, bid, offer, proposal, subcontract, |
or relationship voidable by the chief procurement
officer if |
he or she deems it in
the best interest of the State of |
Illinois and, at his or her discretion, may
be cause for |
barring from future contracts, bids, offers, proposals, |
subcontracts, or
relationships with the State for a period of |
up to 2 years. |
(g) Intentional, willful, or material failure to disclose |
shall render the
contract, bid, offer, proposal, subcontract, |
or relationship voidable by the chief procurement
officer if |
he or she deems it in
the best interest of the State of |
Illinois and shall result in debarment from
future contracts, |
|
bids, offers, proposals, subcontracts, or relationships for a |
period of not less
than 2 years and not more than 10 years. |
Reinstatement after 2 years and
before 10 years must be |
reviewed and commented on in writing by the Governor
of the |
State of Illinois, or by an executive ethics board or |
commission he or
she
might designate. The comment shall be |
returned to the responsible chief
procurement officer who must
|
rule in writing whether and when to reinstate. |
(h) In addition, all disclosures shall note any other |
current or pending
contracts, bids, offers, proposals, |
subcontracts, leases, or other ongoing procurement |
relationships the bidder, offeror, potential contractor, |
contractor, or subcontractor has with any other unit of State
|
government and shall clearly identify the unit and the |
contract, offer, proposal,
lease, or other relationship. |
(i) The bidder, offeror, potential contractor, or |
contractor has a continuing obligation to supplement the |
disclosure required by this Section throughout the bidding |
process during the term of any contract, and during the vendor |
portal registration process. |
(Source: P.A. 101-657, eff. 1-1-22 .) |
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 102-721 ) |
Sec. 50-35. Financial disclosure and potential conflicts |
of interest. |
(a) All bids and offers from responsive bidders, offerors, |
|
vendors, or contractors with an annual value that exceeds the |
small purchase threshold established under subsection (a) of |
Section 20-20 of this Code, and all submissions to a vendor |
portal, shall be accompanied by disclosure of the financial
|
interests of the bidder, offeror, potential contractor, or |
contractor and each subcontractor to be used. In addition, all |
subcontracts identified as provided by Section 20-120 of this |
Code with an annual value that exceeds the small purchase |
threshold established under subsection (a) of Section 20-20 of |
this Code shall be accompanied by disclosure of the financial
|
interests of each subcontractor. The financial disclosure of
|
each successful bidder, offeror, potential contractor, or |
contractor and its subcontractors shall be incorporated as a |
material term of the contract and shall become
part of the |
publicly available contract or procurement file
maintained by |
the appropriate chief procurement officer. Each disclosure |
under this Section shall be signed and made under penalty of |
perjury by an authorized officer or employee on behalf of the |
bidder, offeror, potential contractor, contractor, or |
subcontractor, and must be filed with the Procurement Policy |
Board and the Commission on Equity and Inclusion. |
(b) Disclosure shall include any
ownership or distributive |
income share that is in excess of 5%, or an amount
greater than |
60% of the annual salary of the Governor, of the disclosing |
entity
or its parent entity, whichever is less, unless the |
bidder, offeror, potential contractor, contractor, or |
|
subcontractor
(i) is a
publicly traded entity subject to |
Federal 10K reporting, in which case it may
submit its 10K
|
disclosure in place of the prescribed disclosure, or (ii) is a |
privately held
entity that is exempt from Federal 10k |
reporting but has more than 100
shareholders, in which case it |
may submit the information that Federal 10k
reporting |
companies are required to report under 17 CFR 229.401 and list |
the
names of any person or entity holding any ownership share |
that is in excess of
5% in place of the prescribed disclosure. |
The form of disclosure shall
be prescribed by the applicable |
chief procurement officer and must include at
least the names,
|
addresses, and dollar or proportionate share of ownership of |
each person
identified in this Section, their instrument of |
ownership or beneficial
relationship, and notice of any |
potential conflict of interest resulting from
the current |
ownership or beneficial relationship of each individual |
identified in
this Section having in addition any of the |
following relationships: |
(1) State employment, currently or in the previous 3 |
years, including
contractual employment of services. |
(2) State employment of spouse, father, mother, son, |
or daughter,
including
contractual employment for services |
in the previous 2 years. |
(3) Elective status; the holding of elective office of |
the State of
Illinois, the government of the United |
States, any unit of local government
authorized by the |
|
Constitution of the State of Illinois or the statutes of |
the
State of Illinois currently or in the previous 3 |
years. |
(4) Relationship to anyone holding elective office |
currently or in the
previous 2 years; spouse, father, |
mother, son, or daughter. |
(5) Appointive office; the holding of any appointive |
government office of
the State of Illinois, the United |
States of America, or any unit of local
government |
authorized by the Constitution of the State of Illinois or |
the
statutes of the State of Illinois, which office |
entitles the holder to
compensation in excess of expenses |
incurred in the discharge of that office
currently or in |
the previous 3 years. |
(6) Relationship to anyone holding appointive office |
currently or in the
previous 2 years; spouse, father, |
mother, son, or daughter. |
(7) Employment, currently or in the previous 3 years, |
as or by any
registered lobbyist of the State government. |
(8) Relationship to anyone who is or was a registered |
lobbyist in the
previous 2 years; spouse, father, mother, |
son, or daughter. |
(9) Compensated employment, currently or in the |
previous 3 years, by any
registered election or |
re-election committee registered with the Secretary of
|
State or any county clerk in the State of Illinois, or any |
|
political action
committee registered with either the |
Secretary of State or the Federal Board of
Elections. |
(10) Relationship to anyone; spouse, father, mother, |
son, or daughter; who
is or was a compensated employee in |
the last 2 years of any registered
election or re-election |
committee registered with the Secretary of State or any
|
county clerk in the State of Illinois, or any political |
action committee
registered with either the Secretary of |
State or the Federal Board of
Elections. |
(b-1) The disclosure required under this Section must also |
include the name and address of each lobbyist required to |
register under the Lobbyist Registration Act and other agent |
of the bidder, offeror, potential contractor, contractor, or |
subcontractor who is not identified under subsections (a) and |
(b) and who has communicated, is communicating, or may |
communicate with any State officer or employee concerning the |
bid or offer. The disclosure under this subsection is a |
continuing obligation and must be promptly supplemented for |
accuracy throughout the process and throughout the term of the |
contract if the bid or offer is successful. |
(b-2) The disclosure required under this Section must also |
include, for each of the persons identified in subsection (b) |
or (b-1), each of the following that occurred within the |
previous 10 years: suspension or debarment from contracting |
with any governmental entity; professional licensure |
discipline; bankruptcies; adverse civil judgments and |
|
administrative findings; and criminal felony convictions. The |
disclosure under this subsection is a continuing obligation |
and must be promptly supplemented for accuracy throughout the |
process and throughout the term of the contract if the bid or |
offer is successful. |
(c) The disclosure in subsection (b) is not intended to |
prohibit or prevent
any
contract. The disclosure is meant to |
fully and publicly disclose any potential
conflict to the |
chief procurement officers, State purchasing officers, their
|
designees, and executive officers so they may adequately |
discharge their duty
to protect the State. |
(d) When a potential for a conflict of interest is |
identified, discovered, or reasonably suspected, the chief |
procurement officer or State procurement officer shall send |
the contract to the Procurement Policy Board and the |
Commission on Equity and Inclusion. In accordance with the |
objectives of subsection (c), if the Procurement Policy Board |
or the Commission on Equity and Inclusion finds evidence of a |
potential conflict of interest not originally disclosed by the |
bidder, offeror, potential contractor, contractor, or |
subcontractor, the Board or the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion shall provide written notice to the bidder, offeror, |
potential contractor, contractor, or subcontractor that is |
identified, discovered, or reasonably suspected of having a |
potential conflict of interest. The bidder, offeror, potential |
contractor, contractor, or subcontractor shall have 15 |
|
calendar days to respond in writing to the Board or the |
Commission on Equity and Inclusion, and a hearing before the |
Board or the Commission on Equity and Inclusion will be |
granted upon request by the bidder, offeror, potential |
contractor, contractor, or subcontractor, at a date and time |
to be determined by the Board or the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion, but which in no event shall occur later than 15 |
calendar days after the date of the request. Upon |
consideration, the Board or the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion shall recommend, in writing, whether to allow or |
void the contract, bid, offer, or subcontract weighing the |
best interest of the State of Illinois. All recommendations |
shall be submitted to the Executive Ethics Commission. Those |
recommendations made concerning conflicts identified in the |
course of a procurement for a public institution of higher |
education are, for procurements having a cumulative value |
under $5,000, valid and enforceable, for one calendar year |
after the initial recommendation was made, for all subsequent |
conflicts for that vendor with regard to the same public |
institution of higher education. The Executive Ethics |
Commission must hold a public hearing within 30 calendar days |
after receiving the Board's or the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion's recommendation if the Procurement Policy Board or |
the Commission on Equity and Inclusion makes a recommendation |
to (i) void a contract or (ii) void a bid or offer and the |
chief procurement officer selected or intends to award the |
|
contract to the bidder, offeror, or potential contractor. A |
chief procurement officer is prohibited from awarding a |
contract before a hearing if the Board or the Commission on |
Equity and Inclusion recommendation does not support a bid or |
offer. The recommendation and proceedings of any hearing, if |
applicable, shall be available to the public. |
(e) These thresholds and disclosure do not relieve the |
chief procurement
officer, the State purchasing officer, or
|
their designees from reasonable care and diligence for any |
contract, bid,
offer, or submission to a vendor portal. The |
chief procurement officer, the State purchasing officer, or
|
their designees shall be
responsible for using any reasonably |
known and publicly available information
to
discover any |
undisclosed potential conflict of interest and act to protect |
the
best interest of the State of Illinois. |
(f) Inadvertent or accidental failure to fully disclose |
shall render the
contract, bid, offer, proposal, subcontract, |
or relationship voidable by the chief procurement
officer if |
he or she deems it in
the best interest of the State of |
Illinois and, at his or her discretion, may
be cause for |
barring from future contracts, bids, offers, proposals, |
subcontracts, or
relationships with the State for a period of |
up to 2 years. |
(g) Intentional, willful, or material failure to disclose |
shall render the
contract, bid, offer, proposal, subcontract, |
or relationship voidable by the chief procurement
officer if |
|
he or she deems it in
the best interest of the State of |
Illinois and shall result in debarment from
future contracts, |
bids, offers, proposals, subcontracts, or relationships for a |
period of not less
than 2 years and not more than 10 years. |
Reinstatement after 2 years and
before 10 years must be |
reviewed and commented on in writing by the Governor
of the |
State of Illinois, or by an executive ethics board or |
commission he or
she
might designate. The comment shall be |
returned to the responsible chief
procurement officer who must
|
rule in writing whether and when to reinstate. |
(h) In addition, all disclosures shall note any other |
current or pending
contracts, bids, offers, proposals, |
subcontracts, leases, or other ongoing procurement |
relationships the bidder, offeror, potential contractor, |
contractor, or subcontractor has with any other unit of State
|
government and shall clearly identify the unit and the |
contract, offer, proposal,
lease, or other relationship. |
(i) The bidder, offeror, potential contractor, or |
contractor has a continuing obligation to supplement the |
disclosure required by this Section throughout the bidding |
process during the term of any contract, and during the vendor |
portal registration process. |
(j) If a bid or offer is received from a responsive bidder, |
offeror, vendor, contractor, or subcontractor with an annual |
value of more than $100,000 and the bidder, offeror, vendor, |
contractor, or subcontractor has an active contract with that |
|
same entity and already has submitted their financial |
disclosures and potential conflicts of interest within the |
last 12 months, the bidder, offeror, vendor, contractor, or |
subcontractor may submit a signed affidavit attesting that the |
original submission of its financial disclosures and potential |
conflicts of interests has not been altered or changed. The |
form and content of the affidavit shall be prescribed by the |
applicable chief procurement officer. |
(Source: P.A. 101-657, eff. 1-1-22; 102-721, eff. 1-1-23.) |
(30 ILCS 500/55-25) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2025) |
Sec. 55-25. State Procurement Task Force. |
(a) There is hereby created the State Procurement Task |
Force. |
(b) The task force shall survey the State procurement |
process and make recommendations to: (i) ensure that the |
process is equitable and efficient; (ii) provide departments |
with the flexibility needed to be successful; (iii) change the |
current structure of the procurement process; (iv) update the |
process to reflect modern procurement methods; (v) increase |
women-owned and minority-owned business participation; (vi) |
increase participation by Illinois vendors; and (vii) reduce |
costs and increase efficiency of State procurements. |
(c) The task force shall consist of the following members: |
(1) 4 members of the House of Representatives, |
|
appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives , |
one of whom shall serve as co-chair of the Task Force ; |
(2) 4 members of the Senate, appointed by the |
President of the Senate , one of whom shall serve as |
co-chair of the Task Force ; |
(3) 3 members of the House of Representatives, |
appointed by the Minority Leader of the House of |
Representatives; |
(4) 3 members of the Senate, appointed by the Minority |
Leader of the Senate; |
(5) 1 member representing State institutions of higher |
education, appointed by the President of the Senate; |
(6) 1 member representing State institutions of higher |
education, appointed by the Speaker of the House of |
Representatives; |
(7) 5 members representing vendors, with one each |
appointed by the Governor, the Speaker of the House of |
Representatives, the President of the Senate, the Minority |
Leader of the House of Representatives, and the Minority |
Leader of the Senate; |
(8) 5 members of the public representing women-owned |
and minority-owned businesses, with one each appointed by |
the Governor, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, |
the President of the Senate, the Minority Leader of the |
House of Representatives, and the Minority Leader of the |
Senate; |
|
(9) 1 member from the Department of Central Management |
Services, appointed by the Governor; |
(10) 1 member from the Department of Transportation, |
appointed by the Governor; |
(11) 1 member from the Department of Information and |
Technology, appointed by the Governor; |
(12) 1 Chief Procurement Officer, appointed by the |
Governor; and |
(13) the Chairperson of the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion , who shall serve as Chair of the Task Force . |
(d) Members of the task force shall serve without |
compensation for the duration of the task force. |
(e) As soon as practicable after all members have been |
appointed, the task force shall hold its first meeting. The |
task force shall hold at least 7 meetings. |
(f) The Procurement Policy Board Department of Central |
Management Services shall provide administrative and other |
support to the task force. |
(g) The task force shall from time to time submit reports |
of its findings and recommendations on its survey of State |
procurement processes to the Governor and the General |
Assembly. By February 1, 2023 November 1, 2022 , the task force |
shall submit a report to the Governor and General Assembly |
reporting findings and recommendations specifically including |
any proposed recommendations to: (i) alter the current |
structure and number of Chief Procurement Officers; (ii) enact |
|
or modify cure periods in the Procurement Code that allow a |
potentially successful vendor to correct technical |
deficiencies in the vendor's bid; (iii) enact measures that |
increase efficiency, modernization, or reduce costs within the |
procurement system; and (iv) increase women-owned and |
minority-owned business participation. On or before January 1, |
2024, the task force shall submit a report of its findings and |
recommendations on its survey of State procurement processes |
to the Governor and the General Assembly. |
(h) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2025.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-721, eff. 5-6-22.) |
Section 20. The Design-Build
Procurement Act is amended by |
changing Sections 5, 10, and 90 as follows: |
(30 ILCS 537/5) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2027)
|
Sec. 5. Legislative policy. It is the intent of the |
General Assembly
that
the State construction agency Capital |
Development Board be allowed to use the design-build delivery |
method
for public
projects if it is shown to be in the State's |
best interest for that particular
project. It shall be the |
policy of the State construction agency Capital Development |
Board in the
procurement of
design-build services to publicly |
announce all requirements for design-build
services and to |
procure these services on the basis of demonstrated competence
|
|
and qualifications and with due regard for the principles of |
competitive
selection.
|
The State construction agency Capital Development Board |
shall, prior to issuing requests for proposals,
promulgate
and |
publish procedures for the solicitation and award of contracts |
pursuant to
this Act.
|
The State construction agency Capital Development Board |
shall, for each public project or projects
permitted under
|
this Act, make a written determination, including a |
description as to the
particular advantages of the |
design-build procurement method, that it is in the
best |
interests of this State to enter into a design-build contract |
for the
project or projects. In making that determination, the |
following factors shall
be considered:
|
(1) The probability that the design-build procurement |
method will be in
the best interests of the State by |
providing a material savings of time or
cost over the |
design-bid-build or other delivery system.
|
(2) The type and size of the project and its |
suitability to the
design-build procurement method.
|
(3) The ability of the State construction agency to |
define and provide
comprehensive
scope and performance |
criteria for the project.
|
No State construction agency may use a design-build |
procurement method unless the agency determines in writing |
that the project will comply with the disadvantaged business |
|
and equal employment practices of the State as established in |
the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women, and Persons |
with Disabilities Act and Section 2-105 of the Illinois Human |
Rights Act.
|
The State construction agency Capital Development Board |
shall within 15 days after the initial
determination provide |
an advisory copy to the Procurement Policy Board and
maintain |
the full record of determination for 5 years.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-391, eff. 8-25-17 .) |
(30 ILCS 537/10) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2027)
|
Sec. 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
|
"State construction agency" means the Capital Development |
Board or, in the case of a design-build procurement for a |
public institution of higher education, the public institution |
of higher education .
|
"Delivery system" means the design and construction |
approach used to develop
and construct a project.
|
"Design-bid-build" means the traditional delivery system |
used on public
projects in this State that incorporates the |
Architectural, Engineering, and
Land Surveying Qualification |
Based Selection Act (30 ILCS 535/) and the
principles of |
competitive selection in the Illinois Procurement Code (30 |
ILCS
500/).
|
"Design-build" means a delivery system that provides |
|
responsibility within a
single contract for the furnishing of |
architecture, engineering, land surveying
and related services |
as required, and the labor, materials, equipment, and
other |
construction services for the project.
|
"Design-build contract" means a contract for a public |
project under this Act
between the State construction agency |
and a design-build entity to furnish
architecture,
|
engineering, land surveying, and related services as required, |
and to furnish
the labor, materials, equipment, and other |
construction services for the
project. The design-build |
contract may be conditioned upon subsequent
refinements in |
scope and price and may allow the State construction agency to
|
make
modifications in the project scope without invalidating |
the design-build
contract.
|
"Design-build entity" means any individual, sole |
proprietorship, firm,
partnership, joint venture, corporation, |
professional corporation, or other
entity that proposes to |
design and construct any public project under this Act.
A |
design-build entity and associated design-build professionals |
shall conduct themselves in accordance with the laws of this |
State and the related provisions of the Illinois |
Administrative Code, as referenced by the licensed design |
professionals Acts of this State.
|
"Design professional" means any individual, sole |
proprietorship, firm,
partnership, joint venture, corporation, |
professional corporation, or other
entity that offers services |
|
under the Illinois Architecture Practice Act of
1989 (225 ILCS |
305/), the Professional Engineering Practice Act of 1989 (225
|
ILCS 325/),
the Structural Engineering Licensing Act of 1989 |
(225 ILCS 340/), or the
Illinois Professional
Land Surveyor |
Act of 1989 (225 ILCS 330/).
|
"Evaluation criteria" means the requirements for the |
separate phases of the
selection process as defined in this |
Act and may include the specialized
experience, technical |
qualifications and competence, capacity to perform, past
|
performance, experience with similar projects, assignment of |
personnel to the
project, and other appropriate factors. Price |
may not be used as a factor in
the evaluation of Phase I |
proposals.
|
"Proposal" means the offer to enter into a design-build |
contract as submitted
by a design-build entity in accordance |
with this Act.
|
"Public institution of higher education" has the meaning |
ascribed in subsection (f) of Section 1-13 of the Illinois |
Procurement Code. |
"Request for proposal" means the document used by the |
State construction agency
to solicit
proposals for a |
design-build contract.
|
"Scope and performance criteria" means the requirements |
for the public
project, including but not limited to, the |
intended usage, capacity, size,
scope, quality and performance |
standards, life-cycle costs, and other
programmatic criteria |
|
that are expressed in performance-oriented and
quantifiable |
specifications and drawings that can be reasonably inferred |
and
are suited to allow a design-build entity to develop a |
proposal.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-716, eff. 12-13-05 .) |
(30 ILCS 537/90) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2027)
|
Sec. 90. Repealer. This Act is repealed on January 1, 2026 |
July 1, 2027 .
|
(Source: P.A. 102-1016, eff. 5-27-22.) |
Section 25. The Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women, |
and Persons with
Disabilities Act is amended by changing |
Sections 2 and 4 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 575/2)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2024) |
Sec. 2. Definitions.
|
(A) For the purpose of this Act, the following
terms shall |
have the following definitions:
|
(1) "Minority person" shall mean a person who is a |
citizen or lawful
permanent resident of the United States |
and who is any of the following:
|
(a) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person |
having origins in any of the original peoples of North |
|
and South America, including Central America, and who |
maintains tribal affiliation or community attachment). |
(b) Asian (a person having origins in any of the |
original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or |
the Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited |
to, Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, |
Pakistan, the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and |
Vietnam). |
(c) Black or African American (a person having |
origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa). |
(d) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, |
Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or |
other Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race). |
(e) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a |
person having origins in any of the original peoples |
of Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
|
(2) "Woman" shall mean a person who is a citizen or |
lawful permanent
resident of the United States and who is |
of the female gender.
|
(2.05) "Person with a disability" means a person who |
is a citizen or
lawful resident of the United States and is |
a person qualifying as a person with a disability under |
subdivision (2.1) of this subsection (A).
|
(2.1) "Person with a disability" means a person with a |
severe physical or mental disability that:
|
(a) results from:
|
|
specific learning disabilities, or
|
end stage renal failure disease; and
|
(b) substantially limits one or more of the |
person's major life activities.
|
Another disability or combination of disabilities may |
also be considered
as a severe disability for the purposes |
of item (a) of this
subdivision (2.1) if it is determined |
by an evaluation of
rehabilitation potential to
cause a |
comparable degree of substantial functional limitation |
similar to
the specific list of disabilities listed in |
item (a) of this
subdivision (2.1).
|
(3) "Minority-owned business" means a business which |
is at least
51% owned by one or more minority persons, or |
in the case of a
corporation, at least 51% of the stock in |
which is owned by one or
more minority persons; and the |
management and daily business operations of
which are |
controlled by one or more of the minority individuals who |
own it.
|
(4) "Women-owned business" means a business which is |
at least
51% owned by one or more women, or, in the case of |
a corporation, at
least 51% of the stock in which is owned |
by one or more women; and the
management and daily |
business operations of which are controlled by one or
more |
of the women who own it.
|
(4.1) "Business owned by a person with a disability" |
means a business
that is at least 51% owned by one or more |
|
persons with a disability
and the management and daily |
business operations of which
are controlled by one or more |
of the persons with disabilities who own it. A
|
not-for-profit agency for persons with disabilities that |
is exempt from
taxation under Section 501 of the Internal |
Revenue Code of 1986 is also
considered a "business owned |
by a person with a disability".
|
(4.2) "Council" means the Business Enterprise Council |
for Minorities, Women, and Persons with Disabilities |
created under Section 5 of this Act.
|
(4.3) "Commission" means, unless the context clearly |
indicates otherwise, the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion created under the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion Act. |
(5) "State contracts" means all contracts entered into |
by the State, any agency or department thereof, or any |
public institution of higher education, including |
community college districts, regardless of the source of |
the funds with which the contracts are paid, which are not |
subject to federal reimbursement. "State contracts" does |
not include contracts awarded by a retirement system, |
pension fund, or investment board subject to Section |
1-109.1 of the Illinois Pension Code. This definition |
shall control over any existing definition under this Act |
or applicable administrative rule.
|
"State construction contracts" means all State |
|
contracts entered
into by a State agency or public |
institution of higher education for the repair, |
remodeling,
renovation or
construction of a building or |
structure, or for the construction or
maintenance of a |
highway defined in Article 2 of the Illinois Highway
Code.
|
(6) "State agencies" shall mean all departments, |
officers, boards,
commissions, institutions and bodies |
politic and corporate of the State,
but does not include |
the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois,
the |
Board of Trustees of Southern Illinois University,
the |
Board of Trustees
of Chicago State University, the Board |
of Trustees of Eastern Illinois
University, the Board of |
Trustees of Governors State University, the Board of
|
Trustees of Illinois State University, the Board of |
Trustees of Northeastern
Illinois
University, the Board of |
Trustees of Northern Illinois University, the Board of
|
Trustees of Western Illinois University,
municipalities or |
other local governmental units, or other State |
constitutional
officers.
|
(7) "Public institutions of higher education" means |
the University of Illinois, Southern Illinois University, |
Chicago State University, Eastern Illinois University, |
Governors State University, Illinois State University, |
Northeastern Illinois University, Northern Illinois |
University, Western Illinois University, the public |
community colleges of the State, and any other public |
|
universities, colleges, and community colleges now or |
hereafter established or authorized by the General |
Assembly.
|
(8) "Certification" means a determination made by the |
Council
or by one delegated authority from the Council to |
make certifications, or by
a State agency with statutory |
authority to make such a certification, that a
business |
entity is a business owned by a
minority, woman, or person |
with a disability for whatever
purpose. A business owned |
and controlled by women shall be certified as a |
"woman-owned business". A business owned and controlled by |
women who are also minorities shall be certified as both a |
"women-owned business" and a "minority-owned business".
|
(9) "Control" means the exclusive or ultimate and sole |
control of the
business including, but not limited to, |
capital investment and all other
financial matters, |
property, acquisitions, contract negotiations, legal
|
matters, officer-director-employee selection and |
comprehensive hiring,
operating responsibilities, |
cost-control matters, income and dividend
matters, |
financial transactions and rights of other shareholders or |
joint
partners. Control shall be real, substantial and |
continuing, not pro forma.
Control shall include the power |
to direct or cause the direction of the
management and |
policies of the business and to make the day-to-day as |
well
as major decisions in matters of policy, management |
|
and operations.
Control shall be exemplified by possessing |
the requisite knowledge and
expertise to run the |
particular business and control shall not include
simple |
majority or absentee ownership.
|
(10) "Business" means a business that has annual gross |
sales of less than $150,000,000 $75,000,000 as evidenced |
by the federal income tax return of the business. A firm |
with gross sales in excess of this cap may apply to the |
Council for certification for a particular contract if the |
firm can demonstrate that the contract would have |
significant impact on businesses owned by minorities, |
women, or persons with disabilities as suppliers or |
subcontractors or in employment of minorities, women, or |
persons with disabilities. Firms with gross sales in |
excess of this cap
that are granted certification by the |
Council shall be
granted certification for the life of the |
contract,
including available renewals.
|
(11) "Utilization plan" means a form and additional |
documentations included in all bids or proposals that |
demonstrates a vendor's proposed utilization of vendors |
certified by the Business Enterprise Program to meet the |
targeted goal. The utilization plan shall demonstrate that |
the Vendor has either: (1) met the entire contract goal or |
(2) requested a full or partial waiver and made good faith |
efforts towards meeting the goal. |
(12) "Business Enterprise Program" means the Business |
|
Enterprise Program of the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion. |
(B) When a business is owned at least 51% by any |
combination of
minority persons, women, or persons with |
disabilities,
even though none of the 3 classes alone holds at |
least a 51% interest, the
ownership
requirement for purposes |
of this Act is considered to be met. The
certification |
category for the business is that of the class holding the
|
largest ownership
interest in the business. If 2 or more |
classes have equal ownership interests,
the certification |
category shall be determined by
the business.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-601, eff. 1-1-20; 101-657, eff. 1-1-22; |
102-29, eff. 6-25-21 .)
|
(30 ILCS 575/4) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.604)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2024)
|
Sec. 4. Award of State contracts.
|
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b), not less than |
30% of
the total dollar amount of State contracts, as defined |
by the Secretary of
the Council and approved by the Council, |
shall be established as an aspirational goal to
be awarded to |
businesses owned by minorities,
women, and persons with |
disabilities; provided, however, that
of the total amount of |
all
State contracts awarded to businesses owned by
minorities, |
women, and persons with disabilities pursuant to
this Section, |
contracts representing at least 16% shall be awarded to |
|
businesses owned by minorities, contracts representing at |
least 10% shall be awarded to women-owned businesses, and |
contracts representing at least 4% shall be awarded to |
businesses owned by persons with disabilities.
|
(a-5) In addition to the aspirational goals in awarding |
State contracts set under subsection (a), the Commission shall |
by rule further establish targeted efforts to encourage the |
participation of businesses owned by minorities, women, and |
persons with disabilities on State contracts. Such efforts |
shall include, but not be limited to, further concerted |
outreach efforts to businesses owned by minorities, women, and |
persons with disabilities. |
The above percentage relates to the total dollar amount of |
State
contracts during each State fiscal year, calculated by |
examining
independently each type of contract for each agency |
or public institutions of higher education which
lets such |
contracts. Only that percentage of arrangements which |
represents the participation of businesses owned by
|
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities on such |
contracts shall
be included. State contracts subject to the |
requirements of this Act shall include the requirement that |
only expenditures to businesses owned by minorities, women, |
and persons with disabilities that perform a commercially |
useful function may be counted toward the goals set forth by |
this Act. Contracts shall include a definition of |
"commercially useful function" that is consistent with 49 CFR |
|
26.55(c).
|
(b) Not less
than 20% of the total dollar amount of State |
construction contracts is
established as an aspirational goal |
to be awarded to businesses owned by minorities, women, and |
persons with disabilities; provided that, contracts |
representing at least 11% of the total dollar amount of State |
construction contracts shall be awarded to businesses owned by |
minorities; contracts representing at least 7% of the total |
dollar amount of State construction contracts shall be awarded |
to women-owned businesses; and contracts representing at least |
2% of the total dollar amount of State construction contracts |
shall be awarded to businesses owned by persons with |
disabilities.
|
(c) (Blank). |
(c-5) All goals established under this Section shall be |
contingent upon the results of the most recent disparity study |
conducted by the State. |
(d) Within one year after April 28, 2009 (the effective |
date of Public Act 96-8), the Department of Central Management |
Services shall conduct a social scientific study that measures |
the impact of discrimination on minority and women business |
development in Illinois. Within 18 months after April 28, 2009 |
(the effective date of Public Act 96-8), the Department shall |
issue a report of its findings and any recommendations on |
whether to adjust the goals for minority and women |
participation established in this Act. Copies of this report |
|
and the social scientific study shall be filed with the |
Governor and the General Assembly. |
By December 1, 2020, the Department of Central Management |
Services shall conduct a new social scientific study that |
measures the impact of discrimination on minority and women |
business development in Illinois. By June 1, 2022, the |
Department shall issue a report of its findings and any |
recommendations on whether to adjust the goals for minority |
and women participation established in this Act. Copies of |
this report and the social scientific study shall be filed |
with the Governor and the General Assembly. By December 1, |
2022, the Commission on Equity and Inclusion Business |
Enterprise Program shall develop a model for social scientific |
disparity study sourcing for local governmental units to adapt |
and implement to address regional disparities in public |
procurement. |
(e) All State contract solicitations that include Business |
Enterprise Program participation goals shall require bidders |
or offerors to include utilization plans. Utilization plans |
are due at the time of bid or offer submission. Failure to |
complete and include a utilization plan, including |
documentation demonstrating good faith efforts when requesting |
a waiver, shall render the bid or offer non-responsive. |
Except as permitted under this Act or as otherwise
|
mandated by federal regulation, a bidder or offeror whose bid |
or offer is accepted and who included in that bid a completed |
|
utilization plan but who fails to meet the goals set forth in |
the
plan shall be notified of the deficiency by the
|
contracting agency or public institution of higher education
|
and shall be given a period of 10 calendar days to cure the |
deficiency by contracting with additional
subcontractors who |
are certified by the Business Enterprise
Program or by |
increasing the work to be performed by
previously identified |
vendors certified by the Business
Enterprise Program. |
Deficiencies that may be cured include: (i) scrivener's |
errors, such as transposed numbers; (ii) information
submitted |
in an incorrect form or format; (iii) mistakes resulting from |
failure to follow instructions or to identify and
adequately |
document good faith efforts taken to comply with the |
utilization plan; or (iv) a proposal to use a
firm whose |
Business Enterprise Program certification has lapsed or is
not |
yet recognized. Cure is
not authorized if the bidder or |
offeror submits a blank
utilization plan, a utilization plan |
that shows lack of
reasonable effort to complete the form on |
time, or a
utilization plan that states the contract will be
|
self-performed, by a non-certified vendor, without showing
|
good faith efforts or a request for a waiver. All cure activity
|
shall address the deficiencies identified by the purchasing
|
agency and shall require clear documentation, including that
|
of good faith efforts, to address those deficiencies. Any
|
increase in cost to a contract for the addition of a
|
subcontractor to cure a bid's deficiency shall not affect the
|
|
bid price and shall not be used in the request for an exemption
|
under this Act, and, in no case, shall an identified
|
subcontractor with a Business Enterprise Program certification
|
made under this Act be terminated from a contract without
the |
written consent of the State agency or public institution
of |
higher education entering into the contract. The purchasing
|
agency or public institution of higher education shall make
|
the determination whether the cure is adequate. |
Vendors certified with the Business Enterprise
Program at |
the time and date submittals are due and who do not submit
a |
utilization plan or have utilization plan deficiencies shall |
have 10 business days
to submit a utilization plan or to |
correct the utilization plan deficiencies. Except as permitted |
under this Act or as otherwise mandated by federal law or |
regulation, in response those who submit bids or proposals for |
State contracts subject to the provisions of this Act, whose |
bids or proposals are successful but include a utilization |
plan that fails to demonstrate good faith efforts to meet the |
goals set forth in the solicitation of that deficiency and may |
allow the bidder or offeror a period not to exceed 10 calendar |
days from the date of notification to cure that deficiency in |
the bid or proposal. The deficiency in the bid or proposal may |
only be cured by contracting with additional subcontractors |
who are certified by the Business Enterprise Program at the |
time of bid submission. Any increase in cost to
a contract for |
the addition of a subcontractor to cure a bid's deficiency or |
|
to ensure diversity participation on the contract shall not |
affect the bid price,
shall not be used in the request for an |
exemption in this Act, and in no case shall an identified |
subcontractor with a certification made pursuant to this Act |
be terminated from the contract without the written consent of |
the State agency or public institution of higher education |
entering into the contract. Submission of a blank utilization |
plan renders a bid or offer non-responsive and is not curable. |
The Commission on Equity and Inclusion shall be notified of |
all bids or offers that fail to include a utilization plan or |
that include a utilization plan with deficiencies. |
(f) (Blank). |
(g) (Blank). |
(h) State agencies and public institutions of higher |
education shall notify the Commission on Equity and Inclusion |
of all non-responsive bids or proposals for State contracts. |
(Source: P.A. 101-170, eff. 1-1-20; 101-601, eff. 1-1-20; |
101-657, Article 1, Section 1-5, eff. 1-1-22; 101-657, Article |
40, Section 40-130, eff. 1-1-22; 102-29, eff. 6-25-21; |
102-558, eff. 8-20-21 .)
|
Section 30. The Local Food, Farms, and Jobs Act is amended |
by changing Sections 10 and 30 as follows: |
(30 ILCS 595/10)
|
Sec. 10. Procurement goals for local farm or food |
|
products. |
(a) In order to create, strengthen, and expand local farm |
and food economies throughout Illinois, it shall be the goal |
of this State that 20% of all food and food products purchased |
by State agencies and State-owned facilities, including, |
without limitation, facilities for persons with mental health |
and developmental disabilities, correctional facilities, and |
public universities, shall, by 2020, be local farm or food |
products.
|
(b) The State Local Food, Farms, and Jobs Council |
established under this Act shall support and encourage that |
10% of food and food products purchased by entities funded in |
part or in whole by State dollars, which spend more than |
$25,000 per year on food or food products for its students, |
residents, or clients, including, without limitation, public |
schools, child care facilities, after-school programs, and |
hospitals, shall, by 2020, be local farm or food products.
|
(c) To meet the goals set forth in this Section, when a |
State contract for purchase of food or food products is to be |
awarded to the lowest responsible bidder, an otherwise |
qualified bidder who will fulfill the contract through the use |
of local farm or food products may be given preference over |
other bidders, provided that the cost included in the bid of |
local farm or food products is not more than 10% greater than |
the cost included in a bid that is not for local farm or food |
products.
|
|
(d) All State agencies and State-owned facilities that |
purchase food and food products shall , with the assistance of |
the Local Food, Farms, and Jobs Council, develop a system for |
(i) identifying the percentage of local farm or food products |
purchased for fiscal year 2021 2011 as the baseline; and (ii) |
tracking and reporting local farm or food products purchases |
on an annual basis.
|
(e) On January 1, 2024 and each January 1 thereafter, |
those State agencies and State-owned facilities that
purchase |
food or food products shall publish in their respective |
procurement bulletins, in the form and format prescribed by |
the chief procurement officer, notice of their purchases of |
local farm or food products
in the immediately preceding |
fiscal year. |
(Source: P.A. 96-579, eff. 8-18-09.) |
(30 ILCS 595/30) |
Sec. 30. Farm-school database. The Department of |
Agriculture shall establish, and make available on its |
website, a geo-coded electronic database to facilitate the |
purchase of fresh produce and food products by schools. The |
database shall be developed jointly with the Local Food, |
Farms, and Jobs Council and , at a minimum, contain the |
information necessary for (i) schools to identify and contact |
agricultural producers that are interested in supplying |
schools in the State with fresh produce and food products and |
|
(ii) agricultural producers of fresh produce and food products |
to identify schools in the State that are interested in |
purchasing those products. The Department of Agriculture shall |
adopt rules necessary to implement this Section. The |
Department of Agriculture shall also solicit federal and State |
funding for the purpose of implementing this program. The |
requirement of the Department to establish, and make available |
on its website, this database shall become effective once the |
Department has secured all of the additional federal or State |
funding necessary to implement this program.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1095, eff. 1-1-11.) |
(30 ILCS 595/15 rep.) |
(30 ILCS 595/20 rep.) |
(30 ILCS 595/25 rep.) |
Section 35. The Local Food, Farms, and Jobs Act is amended |
by repealing Sections 15, 20, and 25. |
Section 40. The State Property Control Act is amended by |
changing Section 6.02 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 605/6.02) (from Ch. 127, par. 133b9.2)
|
Sec. 6.02.
Each responsible officer shall maintain a |
permanent record of
all items of property under his |
jurisdiction and control, provided the
administrator may |
exempt tangible personal property of nominal value or in
the |
|
nature of consumable supplies, or both; and provided further |
that
"textbooks" as defined in Section 18-17 of The School |
Code shall be
exempted by the administrator after those |
textbooks have been on loan
pursuant to that Section for a |
period of 5 years or more. The listing shall
include all |
property being acquired under agreements which are required by
|
the State Comptroller to be capitalized for inclusion in the |
statewide
financial statements. Each responsible officer shall |
submit a listing of the
permanent record at least annually to |
the administrator in such format as
the administrator shall |
require. The record may be submitted in either hard
copy or |
computer readable form. The administrator may require more |
frequent
submissions when in the opinion of the administrator |
the agency records are
not sufficiently reliable to justify |
annual submissions.
|
As used in this Section, "nominal value" means the value |
of an item is $2,500 $1,000 or less. For the purposes of this |
definition, the value of the item shall reflect its |
depreciated value, as determined by the administrator. The |
administrator may by rule set the threshold for "nominal |
value" at a higher amount. Nothing in this definition shall be |
construed as relieving responsible officers of the duty to |
reasonably ensure that State property is not subject to theft. |
(Source: P.A. 100-193, eff. 1-1-18 .)
|
Section 45. The Criminal Code of 2012 is amended by |
|
changing Section 33E-9 as follows:
|
(720 ILCS 5/33E-9) (from Ch. 38, par. 33E-9)
|
Sec. 33E-9. Change orders. Any change order authorized |
under this
Section shall be made in writing. Any person |
employed by and authorized
by any unit of State or local |
government to approve a change order to any
public contract |
who knowingly grants that approval without first obtaining
|
from the unit of State or local government on whose behalf the |
contract was
signed, or from a designee authorized by that |
unit of State or local
government, a determination in writing |
that (1) the circumstances said to
necessitate the change in |
performance were not reasonably foreseeable at
the time the |
contract was signed, or (2) the change is germane to the
|
original contract as signed, or (3) the change order is in the |
best
interest of the unit of State or local government and |
authorized by law,
commits a Class 4 felony. The written |
determination and the written change
order resulting from that |
determination shall be preserved in the
contract's file which |
shall be open to the public for inspection. This
Section shall |
only apply to a change order or series of change orders
which |
authorize or necessitate an increase or decrease in either the |
cost
of a public contract by a total of $25,000 $10,000 or more |
or the time of
completion by a total of 180 30 days or more.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-150; 87-618.)
|
|
Section 95. 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 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect January |
1, 2023. |