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Public Act 103-0850 | ||||
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AN ACT concerning State government. | ||||
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, | ||||
represented in the General Assembly: | ||||
Section 5. The Children and Family Services Act is amended | ||||
by adding Section 7.3b as follows: | ||||
(20 ILCS 505/7.3b new) | ||||
Sec. 7.3b. Case plan requirements for hair-related needs | ||||
of youth in care. | ||||
(a) Purposes. Hair plays an important role in fostering | ||||
youths' connection to their race, culture, and identity. | ||||
Haircare promotes positive messages of self-worth, comfort, | ||||
and affection. Because these messages typically are developed | ||||
through interactions with family and community members, it is | ||||
necessary to establish a framework to ensure that youth in | ||||
care are not deprived of these messages and that caregivers | ||||
and appropriate child care facility staff are adequately | ||||
prepared to provide culturally competent haircare for youth. | ||||
(b) Definitions. As used in this Section: | ||||
(1) "Haircare" means all care related to the | ||||
maintenance of hair, including, but not limited to, the | ||||
daily maintenance routine, cutting, styling, or dying of | ||||
hair. | ||||
(2) "Culture" means the norms, traditions, and |
experiences of a person's community that inform that | ||
person's daily life and long-term goals. | ||
(3) "Identity" means the memories, experiences, | ||
relationships, and values that create one's sense of self. | ||
This amalgamation creates a steady sense of who one is | ||
over time, even as new facets are developed and | ||
incorporated into one's identity. | ||
(c) Haircare plan. Every case plan shall include a | ||
Haircare Plan for each youth in care that is developed in | ||
consultation with the youth based upon the youth's | ||
developmental abilities, as well as with the youth's parents | ||
or caregivers or appropriate child care facility staff if not | ||
contrary to the youth's wishes, and that outlines any training | ||
or resources required by the caregiver or appropriate child | ||
care facility staff to meet the haircare needs of the youth. At | ||
a minimum, the Haircare Plan must address: | ||
(1) necessary haircare steps to be taken to preserve | ||
the youth's desired connection to the youth's race, | ||
culture, gender, religion, and identity; | ||
(2) necessary steps to be taken specific to the | ||
youth's haircare needs during emergency and health | ||
situations; and | ||
(3) the desires of the youth as they pertain to the | ||
youth's haircare. | ||
A youth's Haircare Plan must be reviewed at the same time | ||
as the case plan review required under Section 6a as well as |
during monthly visits to ensure compliance with the Haircare | ||
Plan and identify any needed changes. | ||
(d) By June 1, 2025, the Department shall develop training | ||
and resources to make available for caregivers and appropriate | ||
child care facility staff to provide culturally competent | ||
haircare to youth in care. | ||
(e) By June 1, 2025, the Department must adopt rules to | ||
facilitate the implementation of this Section. | ||
Section 10. The Foster Parent Law is amended by changing | ||
Sections 1-15 and 1-20 as follows: | ||
(20 ILCS 520/1-15) | ||
Sec. 1-15. Foster parent rights. A foster parent's rights | ||
include, but are not limited to, the following: | ||
(1) The right to be treated with dignity, respect, and | ||
consideration as a professional member of the child | ||
welfare team. | ||
(2) The right to be given standardized pre-service | ||
training and appropriate ongoing training to meet mutually | ||
assessed needs and improve the foster parent's skills. | ||
(3) The right to be informed as to how to contact the | ||
appropriate child placement agency in order to receive | ||
information and assistance to access supportive services | ||
for children in the foster parent's care. | ||
(4) The right to receive timely financial |
reimbursement commensurate with the care needs of the | ||
child as specified in the service plan. | ||
(5) The right to be provided a clear, written | ||
understanding of a placement agency's plan concerning the | ||
placement of a child in the foster parent's home. Inherent | ||
in this right is the foster parent's responsibility to | ||
support activities that will promote the child's right to | ||
relationships with the child's own family and cultural | ||
heritage. | ||
(6) The right to be provided a fair, timely, and | ||
impartial investigation of complaints concerning the | ||
foster parent's licensure, to be provided the opportunity | ||
to have a person of the foster parent's choosing present | ||
during the investigation, and to be provided due process | ||
during the investigation; the right to be provided the | ||
opportunity to request and receive mediation or an | ||
administrative review of decisions that affect licensing | ||
parameters, or both mediation and an administrative | ||
review; and the right to have decisions concerning a | ||
licensing corrective action plan specifically explained | ||
and tied to the licensing standards violated. | ||
(7) The right, at any time during which a child is | ||
placed with the foster parent, to receive additional or | ||
necessary information that is relevant to the care of the | ||
child. | ||
(7.5) The right to be given information concerning a |
child (i) from the Department as required under subsection | ||
(u) of Section 5 of the Children and Family Services Act | ||
and (ii) from a child welfare agency as required under | ||
subsection (c-5) of Section 7.4 of the Child Care Act of | ||
1969. | ||
(8) The right to be notified of scheduled meetings and | ||
staffings concerning the foster child in order to actively | ||
participate in the case planning and decision-making | ||
process regarding the child, including individual service | ||
planning meetings, administrative case reviews, | ||
interdisciplinary staffings, and individual educational | ||
planning meetings; the right to be informed of decisions | ||
made by the courts or the child welfare agency concerning | ||
the child; the right to provide input concerning the plan | ||
of services for the child and to have that input given full | ||
consideration in the same manner as information presented | ||
by any other professional on the team; and the right to | ||
communicate with other professionals who work with the | ||
foster child within the context of the team, including | ||
therapists, physicians, attending health care | ||
professionals, and teachers. | ||
(9) The right to be given, in a timely and consistent | ||
manner, any information a caseworker has regarding the | ||
child and the child's family which is pertinent to the | ||
care and needs of the child and to the making of a | ||
permanency plan for the child. Disclosure of information |
concerning the child's family shall be limited to that | ||
information that is essential for understanding the needs | ||
of and providing care to the child in order to protect the | ||
rights of the child's family. When a positive relationship | ||
exists between the foster parent and the child's family, | ||
the child's family may consent to disclosure of additional | ||
information. | ||
(10) The right to be given reasonable written notice | ||
of (i) any change in a child's case plan, (ii) plans to | ||
terminate the placement of the child with the foster | ||
parent, and (iii) the reasons for the change or | ||
termination in placement. The notice shall be waived only | ||
in cases of a court order or when the child is determined | ||
to be at imminent risk of harm. | ||
(11) The right to be notified in a timely and complete | ||
manner of all court hearings, including notice of the date | ||
and time of the court hearing, the name of the judge or | ||
hearing officer hearing the case, the location of the | ||
hearing, and the court docket number of the case; and the | ||
right to intervene in court proceedings or to seek | ||
mandamus under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. | ||
(12) The right to be considered as a placement option | ||
when a foster child who was formerly placed with the | ||
foster parent is to be re-entered into foster care, if | ||
that placement is consistent with the best interest of the | ||
child and other children in the foster parent's home. |
(13) The right to have timely access to the child | ||
placement agency's existing appeals process and the right | ||
to be free from acts of harassment and retaliation by any | ||
other party when exercising the right to appeal. | ||
(14) The right to be informed of the Foster Parent | ||
Hotline established under Section 35.6 of the Children and | ||
Family Services Act and all of the rights accorded to | ||
foster parents concerning reports of misconduct by | ||
Department employees, service providers, or contractors, | ||
confidential handling of those reports, and investigation | ||
by the Inspector General appointed under Section 35.5 of | ||
the Children and Family Services Act. | ||
(15) The right to timely training necessary to meet | ||
the haircare needs of the children placed in the foster | ||
parent's care. | ||
(Source: P.A. 103-22, eff. 8-8-23.) | ||
(20 ILCS 520/1-20) | ||
Sec. 1-20. Foster parent responsibilities. A foster | ||
parent's responsibilities include, but are not limited to, the | ||
following: | ||
(1) The responsibility to openly communicate and share | ||
information about the child with other members of the | ||
child welfare team. | ||
(2) The responsibility to respect the confidentiality | ||
of information concerning foster children and their |
families and act appropriately within applicable | ||
confidentiality laws and regulations. | ||
(3) The responsibility to advocate for children in the | ||
foster parent's care. | ||
(4) The responsibility to treat children in the foster | ||
parent's care and the children's families with dignity, | ||
respect, and consideration. | ||
(5) The responsibility to recognize the foster | ||
parent's own individual and familial strengths and | ||
limitations when deciding whether to accept a child into | ||
care; and the responsibility to recognize the foster | ||
parent's own support needs and utilize appropriate | ||
supports in providing care for foster children. | ||
(6) The responsibility to be aware of the benefits of | ||
relying on and affiliating with other foster parents and | ||
foster parent associations in improving the quality of | ||
care and service to children and families. | ||
(7) The responsibility to assess the foster parent's | ||
ongoing individual training needs and take action to meet | ||
those needs. | ||
(8) The responsibility to develop and assist in | ||
implementing strategies to prevent placement disruptions, | ||
recognizing the traumatic impact of placement disruptions | ||
on a foster child and all members of the foster family; and | ||
the responsibility to provide emotional support for the | ||
foster children and members of the foster family if |
preventive strategies fail and placement disruptions | ||
occur. | ||
(9) The responsibility to know the impact foster | ||
parenting has on individuals and family relationships; and | ||
the responsibility to endeavor to minimize, as much as | ||
possible, any stress that results from foster parenting. | ||
(10) The responsibility to know the rewards and | ||
benefits to children, parents, families, and society that | ||
come from foster parenting and to promote the foster | ||
parenting experience in a positive way. | ||
(11) The responsibility to know the roles, rights, and | ||
responsibilities of foster parents, other professionals in | ||
the child welfare system, the foster child, and the foster | ||
child's own family. | ||
(12) The responsibility to know and, as necessary, | ||
fulfill the foster parent's responsibility to serve as a | ||
mandated reporter of suspected child abuse or neglect | ||
under the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act; and | ||
the responsibility to know the child welfare agency's | ||
policy regarding allegations that foster parents have | ||
committed child abuse or neglect and applicable | ||
administrative rules and procedures governing | ||
investigations of those allegations. | ||
(13) The responsibility to know and receive training | ||
regarding the purpose of administrative case reviews, | ||
client service plans, and court processes, as well as any |
filing or time requirements associated with those | ||
proceedings; and the responsibility to actively | ||
participate in the foster parent's designated role in | ||
these proceedings. | ||
(14) The responsibility to know the child welfare | ||
agency's appeal procedure for foster parents and the | ||
rights of foster parents under the procedure. | ||
(15) The responsibility to know and understand the | ||
importance of maintaining accurate and relevant records | ||
regarding the child's history and progress; and the | ||
responsibility to be aware of and follow the procedures | ||
and regulations of the child welfare agency with which the | ||
foster parent is licensed or affiliated. | ||
(16) The responsibility to share information, through | ||
the child welfare team, with the subsequent caregiver | ||
(whether the child's parent or another substitute | ||
caregiver) regarding the child's adjustment in the foster | ||
parent's home. | ||
(17) The responsibility to provide care and services | ||
that are respectful of and responsive to the child's | ||
cultural needs and are supportive of the relationship | ||
between the child and the child's own family; the | ||
responsibility to recognize the increased importance of | ||
maintaining a child's cultural identity when the race or | ||
culture of the foster family differs from that of the | ||
foster child; the responsibility to provide haircare that |
preserves the child's desired connection to the child's | ||
race, culture, gender, religion, and identity; and the | ||
responsibility to take action to address these issues. | ||
(Source: P.A. 103-22, eff. 8-8-23.) | ||
Section 15. The Foster Children's Bill of Rights Act is | ||
amended by changing Section 5 as follows: | ||
(20 ILCS 521/5) | ||
Sec. 5. Foster Children's Bill of Rights. It is the policy | ||
of this State that every child and adult in the care of the | ||
Department of Children and Family Services who is placed in | ||
foster care shall have the following rights: | ||
(1) To live in a safe, healthy, and comfortable home | ||
where they are treated with respect. | ||
(2) To be free from physical, sexual, emotional, or | ||
other abuse, or corporal punishment. | ||
(3) To receive adequate and healthy food, adequate | ||
clothing, and, for youth in group homes, residential | ||
treatment facilities, and foster homes, an allowance. | ||
(4) To receive medical, dental, vision, and mental | ||
health services. | ||
(5) To be free of the administration of medication or | ||
chemical substances, unless authorized by a physician. | ||
(6) To contact family members, unless prohibited by | ||
court order, and social workers, attorneys, foster youth |
advocates and supporters, Court Appointed Special | ||
Advocates (CASAs), and probation officers. | ||
(7) To visit and contact siblings, unless prohibited | ||
by court order. | ||
(8) To contact the Advocacy Office for Children and | ||
Families established under the Children and Family | ||
Services Act or the Department of Children and Family | ||
Services' Office of the Inspector General regarding | ||
violations of rights, to speak to representatives of these | ||
offices confidentially, and to be free from threats or | ||
punishment for making complaints. | ||
(9) To make and receive confidential telephone calls | ||
and send and receive unopened mail, unless prohibited by | ||
court order. | ||
(10) To attend religious services and activities of | ||
their choice. | ||
(11) To maintain an emancipation bank account and | ||
manage personal income, consistent with the child's age | ||
and developmental level, unless prohibited by the case | ||
plan. | ||
(12) To not be locked in a room, building, or facility | ||
premises, unless placed in a secure child care facility | ||
licensed by the Department of Children and Family Services | ||
under the Child Care Act of 1969 and placed pursuant to | ||
Section 2-27.1 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. | ||
(13) To attend school and participate in |
extracurricular, cultural, and personal enrichment | ||
activities, consistent with the child's age and | ||
developmental level, with minimal disruptions to school | ||
attendance and educational stability. | ||
(14) To work and develop job skills at an | ||
age-appropriate level, consistent with State law. | ||
(15) To have social contacts with people outside of | ||
the foster care system, including teachers, church | ||
members, mentors, and friends. | ||
(16) If they meet age requirements, to attend services | ||
and programs operated by the Department of Children and | ||
Family Services or any other appropriate State agency that | ||
aim to help current and former foster youth achieve | ||
self-sufficiency prior to and after leaving foster care. | ||
(17) To attend court hearings and speak to the judge. | ||
(18) To have storage space for private use. | ||
(19) To be involved in the development of their own | ||
case plan and plan for permanent placement. | ||
(20) To review their own case plan and plan for | ||
permanent placement, if they are 12 years of age or older | ||
and in a permanent placement, and to receive information | ||
about their out-of-home placement and case plan, including | ||
being told of changes to the case plan. | ||
(21) To be free from unreasonable searches of personal | ||
belongings. | ||
(22) To the confidentiality of all juvenile court |
records consistent with existing law. | ||
(23) To have fair and equal access to all available | ||
services, placement, care, treatment, and benefits, and to | ||
not be subjected to discrimination or harassment on the | ||
basis of actual or perceived race, ethnic group | ||
identification, ancestry, national origin, color, | ||
religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, mental | ||
or physical disability, or HIV status. | ||
(24) To have caregivers and child welfare personnel | ||
who have received sensitivity training and instruction on | ||
matters concerning race, ethnicity, national origin, | ||
color, ancestry, religion, mental and physical disability, | ||
and HIV status. | ||
(25) To have caregivers and child welfare personnel | ||
who have received instruction on cultural competency and | ||
sensitivity relating to, and best practices for, providing | ||
adequate care to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender | ||
youth in out-of-home care. | ||
(26) At 16 years of age or older, to have access to | ||
existing information regarding the educational options | ||
available, including, but not limited to, the coursework | ||
necessary for vocational and postsecondary educational | ||
programs, and information regarding financial aid for | ||
postsecondary education. | ||
(27) To have access to age-appropriate, medically | ||
accurate information about reproductive health care, the |
prevention of unplanned pregnancy, and the prevention and | ||
treatment of sexually transmitted infections at 12 years | ||
of age or older. | ||
(28) To receive a copy of this Act from and have it | ||
fully explained by the Department of Children and Family | ||
Services when the child or adult is placed in the care of | ||
the Department of Children and Family Services. | ||
(29) To be placed in the least restrictive and most | ||
family-like setting available and in close proximity to | ||
their parent's home consistent with their health, safety, | ||
best interests, and special needs. | ||
(30) To participate in an age and developmentally | ||
appropriate intake process immediately after placement in | ||
the custody or guardianship of the Department. During the | ||
intake process, the Department shall provide the youth | ||
with a document describing inappropriate acts of | ||
affection, discipline, and punishment by guardians, foster | ||
parents, foster siblings, or any other adult responsible | ||
for the youth's welfare. The Department shall review and | ||
discuss the document with the child. The Department must | ||
document completion of the intake process in the child's | ||
records as well as giving a copy of the document to the | ||
child. | ||
(31) To participate in appropriate intervention and | ||
counseling services after removal from the home of origin | ||
in order to assess whether the youth is exhibiting signs |
of traumatic stress, special needs, or mental illness. | ||
(32) To receive a home visit by an assigned child | ||
welfare specialist, per existing Department policies and | ||
procedures, on a monthly basis or more frequently as | ||
needed. In addition to what existing policies and | ||
procedures outline, home visits shall be used to assess | ||
the youth's well-being and emotional health following | ||
placement, to determine the youth's relationship with the | ||
youth's guardian or foster parent or with any other adult | ||
responsible for the youth's welfare or living in or | ||
frequenting the home environment, and to determine what | ||
forms of discipline, if any, the youth's guardian or | ||
foster parent or any other person in the home environment | ||
uses to correct the youth. | ||
(33) To be enrolled in an independent living services | ||
program prior to transitioning out of foster care where | ||
the youth will receive classes and instruction, | ||
appropriate to the youth's age and developmental capacity, | ||
on independent living and self-sufficiency in the areas of | ||
employment, finances, meals, and housing as well as help | ||
in developing life skills and long-term goals. | ||
(34) To be assessed by a third-party entity or agency | ||
prior to enrollment in any independent living services | ||
program in order to determine the youth's readiness for a | ||
transition out of foster care based on the youth's | ||
individual needs, emotional development, and ability, |
regardless of age, to make a successful transition to | ||
adulthood. | ||
(35) To haircare that preserves the child's desired | ||
connection to the child's race, culture, gender, religion, | ||
and identity and to have a corresponding haircare plan | ||
established in accordance with Section 7.3b of the | ||
Children and Family Services Act. The Department must | ||
provide, in a timely and consistent manner, training for | ||
all caregivers and child welfare personnel on how to meet | ||
the haircare needs of children. | ||
(Source: P.A. 102-810, eff. 1-1-23; 103-22, eff. 8-8-23.) |