|
Agency and the Illinois Department of Public Health |
pursuant to the declared disaster. |
(b) Persons exempt from licensure under paragraph (1) of |
subsection (a) of this Section and persons operating under |
modified scope of practice provisions under paragraph (2) of |
subsection (a) of this Section shall be exempt from licensure |
or be subject to modified scope of practice only until the |
declared disaster has ended as provided by law. |
(c) The Director shall exercise these powers by way of |
proclamation.
|
Section 10. The Department of Public Health Act is amended |
by changing Sections 2 and 7 and by adding Section 2.1 as |
follows:
|
(20 ILCS 2305/2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 22)
|
Sec. 2. Powers.
|
(a) The State Department of Public Health has general |
supervision of
the interests of the health and lives of the |
people of the State. It has
supreme authority in matters of |
quarantine and isolation , and may declare and enforce
|
quarantine and isolation when none exists, and may modify or |
relax quarantine and isolation when it has
been established. |
The Department may adopt, promulgate, repeal and amend
rules |
and regulations and make such sanitary investigations and |
inspections
as it may from time to time deem necessary for the |
preservation and
improvement of the public health, consistent |
with law regulating the
following:
|
(1) Transportation of the remains of deceased persons.
|
(2) Sanitary practices relating to drinking water made
|
accessible to the
public for human consumption or for |
lavatory or culinary purposes.
|
(3) Sanitary practices relating to rest room |
facilities made
accessible
to the public or to persons |
handling food served to the public.
|
(4) Sanitary practices relating to disposal of human |
|
wastes in
or from all buildings and places where people |
live, work or assemble.
|
The provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure |
Act are hereby
expressly adopted and shall apply to all |
administrative rules and
procedures of the Department of Public |
Health under this Act, except that
Section 5-35 of the Illinois |
Administrative Procedure Act relating to
procedures for |
rule-making does not apply to the adoption of any rule
required |
by federal law in connection with which the Department is
|
precluded by law from exercising any discretion.
|
All local boards of health, health authorities and |
officers, police
officers, sheriffs and all other officers and |
employees of the state or any
locality shall enforce the rules |
and regulations so adopted and orders issued by the Department |
pursuant to this Section .
|
The Department of Public Health shall conduct a public |
information
campaign to inform Hispanic women of the high |
incidence of breast cancer
and the importance of mammograms and |
where to obtain a mammogram.
This requirement may be satisfied |
by translation into Spanish and
distribution of the breast |
cancer summaries required by Section 2310-345 of
the Department |
of Public Health Powers and Duties Law (20 ILCS
2310/2310-345).
|
The information provided by the Department of Public Health |
shall include (i)
a statement that mammography is the most |
accurate method for making an early
detection of breast cancer, |
however, no diagnostic tool is 100% effective and
(ii) |
instructions for performing breast
self-examination and a |
statement that it is
important to perform a breast |
self-examination monthly.
|
The Department of Public Health shall investigate the |
causes of
dangerously contagious or infectious diseases, |
especially when existing in
epidemic form, and take means to |
restrict and suppress the same, and
whenever such disease |
becomes, or threatens to become epidemic, in any
locality and |
the local board of health or local authorities neglect or
|
refuse to enforce efficient measures for its restriction or |
|
suppression or
to act with sufficient promptness or efficiency, |
or whenever the local
board of health or local authorities |
neglect or refuse to promptly enforce
efficient measures for |
the restriction or suppression of dangerously
contagious or |
infectious diseases, the Department of Public Health may
|
enforce such measures as it deems necessary to protect the |
public health,
and all necessary expenses so incurred shall be |
paid by the locality for
which services are rendered.
|
(b) Subject to the provisions of subsection (c), the |
Department may order
a person or group of persons to be |
quarantined or isolated or may order a place to be closed and |
made off
limits to the
public to prevent the probable spread of |
a dangerously contagious or infectious
disease, including |
non-compliant tuberculosis patients, until such time as the
|
condition can be corrected or the danger to the public health |
eliminated or
reduced in such a manner that no substantial |
danger to the public's health any
longer exists. Orders for |
isolation of a person or quarantine of a place to prevent the |
probable spread of a sexually transmissible disease shall be |
governed by the provisions of Section 7 of the Illinois |
Sexually Transmissible Disease Control Act and not this |
Section.
|
(c) Except as provided in this Section, no person or a |
group of persons may be ordered to be quarantined or isolated |
and no place may
be ordered to
be closed and made off limits to |
the public except with the consent of the
person or owner of |
the place or
upon the prior order of a court of competent |
jurisdiction. The Department may, however, order a person or a |
group of persons to be quarantined or isolated or may order a |
place to be closed and made off limits to the public on an |
immediate basis without prior consent or court order if, in the |
reasonable judgment of the Department, immediate action is |
required to protect the public from a dangerously contagious or |
infectious disease. In the event of an immediate order issued |
without prior consent or court order, the Department shall, as |
soon as practical, within 48 hours after issuing the order, |
|
obtain the consent of the person or owner or file a petition |
requesting a court order authorizing the isolation or |
quarantine or closure. When exigent circumstances exist that |
cause the court system to be unavailable or that make it |
impossible to obtain consent or file a petition within 48 hours |
after issuance of an immediate order, the Department must |
obtain consent or file a petition requesting a court order as |
soon as reasonably possible. To obtain a court order,
the |
Department, by clear and convincing evidence, must prove that |
the public's
health and
welfare are significantly endangered by |
a person or group of persons that has, that is suspected of |
having, that has been exposed to, or that is reasonably |
believed to have been exposed to
with a dangerously contagious
|
or infectious disease including non-compliant tuberculosis |
patients or
by a place where there is a significant amount of |
activity likely to spread a
dangerously contagious or |
infectious disease. The Department must also prove
that
all |
other
reasonable means of correcting the problem have been |
exhausted and no less
restrictive alternative exists. For |
purposes of this subsection, in determining whether no less |
restrictive alternative exists, the court shall consider |
evidence showing that, under the circumstances presented by the |
case in which an order is sought, quarantine or isolation is |
the measure provided for in a rule of the Department or in |
guidelines issued by the Centers for Disease Control and |
Prevention or the World Health Organization. Persons who are or |
are about to be ordered to be isolated or quarantined and |
owners of places that are or are about to be closed and made |
off limits to the public shall have the right to counsel. If a |
person or owner is indigent, the court shall appoint counsel |
for that person or owner. Persons who are ordered to be |
isolated or quarantined or who are owners of places that are |
ordered to be closed and made off limits to the public, shall |
be given a written notice of such order. The written notice |
shall additionally include the following: (1) notice of the |
right to counsel; (2) notice that if the person or owner is |
|
indigent, the court will appoint counsel for that person or |
owner; (3) notice of the reason for the order for isolation, |
quarantine, or closure; (4) notice of whether the order is an |
immediate order, and if so, the time frame for the Department |
to seek consent or to file a petition requesting a court order |
as set out in this subsection; and (5) notice of the |
anticipated duration of the isolation, quarantine, or closure.
|
(d) The Department may order physical examinations and |
tests and collect laboratory specimens as necessary for the |
diagnosis or treatment of individuals in order to prevent the |
probable spread of a dangerously contagious or infectious |
disease. Physical examinations, tests, or collection of |
laboratory specimens must not be such as are reasonably likely |
to lead to serious harm to the affected individual. To prevent |
the spread of a dangerously contagious or infectious disease, |
the Department may, pursuant to the provisions of subsection |
(c) of this Section, isolate or quarantine any person whose |
refusal of physical examination or testing or collection of |
laboratory specimens results in uncertainty regarding whether |
he or she has been exposed to or is infected with a dangerously |
contagious or infectious disease or otherwise poses a danger to |
the public's health. An individual may refuse to consent to a |
physical examination, test, or collection of laboratory |
specimens. An individual shall be given a written notice that |
shall include notice of the following: (i) that the individual |
may refuse to consent to physical examination, test, or |
collection of laboratory specimens; (ii) that if the individual |
consents to physical examination, tests, or collection of |
laboratory specimens, the results of that examination, test, or |
collection of laboratory specimens may subject the individual |
to isolation or quarantine pursuant to the provisions of |
subsection (c) of this Section; (iii) that if the individual |
refuses to consent to physical examination, tests, or |
collection of laboratory specimens and that refusal results in |
uncertainty regarding whether he or she has been exposed to or |
is infected with a dangerously contagious or infectious disease |
|
or otherwise poses a danger to the public's health, the |
individual may be subject to isolation or quarantine pursuant |
to the provisions of subsection (c) of this Section; and (iv) |
that if the individual refuses to consent to physical |
examinations, tests, or collection of laboratory specimens and |
becomes subject to isolation and quarantine as provided in this |
subsection (d), he or she shall have the right to counsel |
pursuant to the provisions of subsection (c) of this Section. |
To the extent feasible without endangering the public's health, |
the Department shall respect and accommodate the religious |
beliefs of individuals in implementing this subsection. |
(e) The Department may order the administration of |
vaccines, medications, or other treatments to persons as |
necessary in order to prevent the probable spread of a |
dangerously contagious or infectious disease. A vaccine, |
medication, or other treatment to be administered must not be |
such as is reasonably likely to lead to serious harm to the |
affected individual. To prevent the spread of a dangerously |
contagious or infectious disease, the Department may, pursuant |
to the provisions of subsection (c) of this Section, isolate or |
quarantine persons who are unable or unwilling to receive |
vaccines, medications, or other treatments pursuant to this |
Section. An individual may refuse to receive vaccines, |
medications, or other treatments. An individual shall be given |
a written notice that shall include notice of the following: |
(i) that the individual may refuse to consent to vaccines, |
medications, or other treatments; (ii) that if the individual |
refuses to receive vaccines, medications, or other treatments, |
the individual may be subject to isolation or quarantine |
pursuant to the provisions of subsection (c) of this Section; |
and (iii) that if the individual refuses to receive vaccines, |
medications, or other treatments and becomes subject to |
isolation or quarantine as provided in this subsection (e), he |
or she shall have the right to counsel pursuant to the |
provisions of subsection (c) of this Section. To the extent |
feasible without endangering the public's health, the |
|
Department shall respect and accommodate the religious beliefs |
of individuals in implementing this subsection. |
(f) The Department may order observation and monitoring of |
persons to prevent the probable spread of a dangerously |
contagious or infectious disease. To prevent the spread of a |
dangerously contagious or infectious disease, the Department |
may, pursuant to the provisions of subsection (c) of this |
Section, isolate or quarantine persons whose refusal to undergo |
observation and monitoring results in uncertainty regarding |
whether he or she has been exposed to or is infected with a |
dangerously contagious or infectious disease or otherwise |
poses a danger to the public's health. An individual may refuse |
to undergo observation and monitoring. An individual shall be |
given written notice that shall include notice of the |
following: (i) that the individual may refuse to undergo |
observation and monitoring; (ii) that if the individual |
consents to observation and monitoring, the results of that |
observation and monitoring may subject the individual to |
isolation or quarantine pursuant to the provisions of |
subsection (c) of this Section; (iii) that if the individual |
refuses to undergo observation and monitoring and that refusal |
results in uncertainty regarding whether he or she has been |
exposed to or is infected with a dangerously contagious or |
infectious disease or otherwise poses a danger to the public's |
health, the individual may be subject to isolation or |
quarantine pursuant to the provisions of subsection (c) of this |
Section; and (iv) that if the individual refuses to undergo |
observation and monitoring and becomes subject to isolation or |
quarantine as provided in this subsection (f), he or she shall |
have the right to counsel pursuant to the provisions of |
subsection (c) of this Section. |
(g) To prevent the spread of a dangerously contagious or |
infectious disease among humans, the Department may examine, |
test, disinfect, seize, or destroy animals or other related |
property believed to be sources of infection. An owner of such |
animal or other related property shall be given written notice |
|
regarding such examination, testing, disinfection, seizure, or |
destruction. When the Department determines that any animal or |
related property is infected with or has been exposed to a |
dangerously contagious or infectious disease, it may agree with |
the owner upon the value of the animal or of any related |
property that it may be found necessary to destroy, and in case |
such an agreement cannot be made, the animals or related |
property shall be appraised by 3 competent and disinterested |
appraisers, one to be selected by the Department, one by the |
claimant, and one by the 2 appraisers thus selected. The |
appraisers shall subscribe to an oath made in writing to fairly |
value the animals or related property in accordance with the |
requirements of this Act. The oath, together with the valuation |
fixed by the appraisers, shall be filed with the Department and |
preserved by it. Upon the appraisal being made, the owner or |
the Department shall immediately destroy the animals by "humane |
euthanasia" as that term is defined in Section 2.09 of the |
Humane Care for Animals Act. Dogs and cats, however, shall be |
euthanized pursuant to the provisions of the Humane Euthanasia |
in Animal Shelters Act. The owner or the Department shall |
additionally, dispose of the carcasses, and disinfect, change, |
or destroy the premises occupied by the animals, in accordance |
with rules prescribed by the Department governing such |
destruction and disinfection. Upon his or her failure so to do |
or to cooperate with the Department, the Department shall cause |
the animals or related property to be destroyed and disposed of |
in the same manner, and thereupon the owner shall forfeit all |
right to receive any compensation for the destruction of the |
animals or related property. All final administrative |
decisions of the Department hereunder shall be subject to |
judicial review pursuant to the provisions of the |
Administrative Review Law, and all amendments and |
modifications thereof, and the rules adopted pursuant thereto. |
The term "administrative decision" is defined as in Section |
3-101 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
|
(h) To prevent the spread of a dangerously contagious or |
|
infectious disease, the Department, local boards of health, and |
local public health authorities shall have emergency access to |
medical or health information or records or data upon the |
condition that the Department, local boards of health, and |
local public health authorities shall protect the privacy and |
confidentiality of any medical or health information or records |
or data obtained pursuant to this Section in accordance with |
federal and State law. Additionally, any such medical or health |
information or records or data shall be exempt from inspection |
and copying under the Freedom of Information Act. Other than a |
hearing for the purpose of this Act, any information, records, |
reports, statements, notes, memoranda, or other data in the |
possession of the Department, local boards of health, or local |
public health authorities shall not be admissible as evidence, |
nor discoverable in any action of any kind in any court or |
before any tribunal, board, agency, or person. The access to or |
disclosure of any of this information or data by the |
Department, a local board of health, or a local public |
authority shall not waive or have any effect upon its |
non-discoverability or non-admissibility. Any person, |
facility, institution, or agency that provides emergency |
access to health information and data under this subsection |
shall have immunity from any civil or criminal liability, or |
any other type of liability that might otherwise result by |
reason of these actions except in the event of willful and |
wanton misconduct. The privileged quality of communication |
between any professional person or any facility shall not |
constitute grounds for failure to provide emergency access. |
Nothing in this subsection shall prohibit the sharing of |
information as authorized in Section 2.1 of this Act. The |
disclosure of any of this information, records, reports, |
statements, notes, memoranda, or other data obtained in any |
activity under this Act, except that necessary for the purposes |
of this Act, is unlawful, and any person convicted of violating |
this provision is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
|
(i) (A) The Department, in order to prevent and control |
|
disease, injury, or disability among citizens of the State |
of Illinois, may develop and implement, in consultation |
with local public health authorities, a Statewide system |
for syndromic data collection through the access to |
interoperable networks, information exchanges, and |
databases. The Department may also develop a system for the |
reporting of comprehensive, integrated data to identify |
and address unusual occurrences of disease symptoms and |
other medical complexes affecting the public's health. |
(B) The Department may enter into contracts or |
agreements with individuals, corporations, hospitals, |
universities, not-for-profit corporations, governmental |
entities, or other organizations, whereby those |
individuals or entities agree to provide assistance in the |
compilation of the syndromic data collection and reporting |
system.
|
(C) The Department shall not release any syndromic data |
or information obtained pursuant to this subsection to any |
individuals or entities for purposes other than the |
protection of the public health. All access to data by the |
Department, reports made to the Department, the identity of |
or facts that would tend to lead to the identity of the |
individual who is the subject of the report, and the |
identity of or facts that would tend to lead to the |
identity of the author of the report shall be strictly |
confidential, are not subject to inspection or |
dissemination, and shall be used only for public health |
purposes by the Department, local public health |
authorities, or the Centers for Disease Control and |
Prevention. Entities or individuals submitting reports or |
providing access to the Department shall not be held liable |
for the release of information or confidential data to the |
Department in accordance with this subsection.
|
(D) Nothing in this subsection prohibits the sharing of |
information as authorized in Section 2.1 of this Act.
|
(j)
(d) This Section shall be considered supplemental to |
|
the existing
authority and powers of the Department and shall |
not be construed to
restrain or restrict the Department in |
protecting the public health under any
other provisions of the |
law.
|
(k)
(e) Any person who knowingly or maliciously |
disseminates any false
information or report concerning the |
existence of any dangerously contagious or
infectious disease |
in connection with the Department's power of quarantine,
|
isolation and closure or refuses to comply with a quarantine, |
isolation or
closure order is guilty
of a Class A misdemeanor.
|
(l)
(f) The Department of Public Health may establish and |
maintain a
chemical
and bacteriologic laboratory for the |
examination of water and wastes, and
for the diagnosis of |
diphtheria, typhoid fever, tuberculosis, malarial
fever and |
such other diseases as it deems necessary for the protection of
|
the public health.
|
As used in this Act, "locality" means any governmental |
agency which
exercises power pertaining to public health in an |
area less than the State.
|
The terms "sanitary investigations and inspections" and |
"sanitary
practices" as used in this Act shall not include or |
apply to "Public Water
Supplies" or "Sewage Works" as defined |
in the Environmental Protection Act. The Department may adopt |
rules that are reasonable and necessary to implement and |
effectuate this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
(20 ILCS 2305/2.1 new) |
Sec. 2.1. Information sharing. |
(a) Whenever a State or local law enforcement authority |
learns of a case of an illness, health condition, or unusual |
disease or symptom cluster, reportable pursuant to rules |
adopted by the Department or by a local board of health or |
local public health authority, or a suspicious event that may |
be the cause of or related to a public health emergency, as |
that term is defined in Section 4 of the Illinois Emergency |
|
Management Agency Act, it shall immediately notify the Illinois |
Emergency Management Agency and the Department or local board |
of health or local public health authority. |
(b) Whenever the Department or a local board of health or |
local public health authority learns of a case of an illness, |
health condition, or unusual disease or symptom cluster, |
reportable pursuant to rules adopted by the Department or by a |
local board of health or a local public health authority, or a |
suspicious event that it reasonably believes has the potential |
to be the cause of or related to a public health emergency, as |
that term is defined in Section 4 of the Illinois Emergency |
Management Agency Act, it shall immediately notify the Illinois |
Emergency Management Agency, the appropriate State and local |
law enforcement authorities, other appropriate State agencies, |
and federal health and law enforcement authorities and, after |
that notification, it shall provide law enforcement |
authorities with such other information as law enforcement |
authorities may request for the purpose of conducting a |
criminal investigation or a criminal prosecution of or arising |
out of that matter. No information containing the identity or |
tending to reveal the identity of any person may be redisclosed |
by law enforcement, except in a prosecution of that person for |
the commission of a crime.
|
(c) Sharing of information on reportable illnesses, health |
conditions, unusual disease or symptom clusters, or suspicious |
events between and among public health and law enforcement |
authorities shall be restricted to the information necessary |
for the treatment in response to, control of, investigation of, |
and prevention of a public health emergency, as that term is |
defined in Section 4 of the Illinois Emergency Management Act, |
or for criminal investigation or criminal prosecution of or |
arising out of that matter.
|
(d) The operation of the language of this Section is not |
dependent upon a declaration of disaster by the Governor |
pursuant to the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act.
|
|
(20 ILCS 2305/7) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 22.05)
|
Sec. 7. The Illinois Department of Public Health shall |
adopt rules
requiring that upon death of a person who had or is |
suspected of having an
infectious or communicable disease that |
could be transmitted through
contact with the person's body or |
bodily fluids, the body shall be labeled
"Infection Hazard", or |
with an equivalent term to inform persons having
subsequent |
contact with the body, including any funeral director or
|
embalmer, to take suitable precautions. Such rules shall |
require that the
label shall be prominently displayed on and |
affixed to the outer wrapping
or covering of the body if the |
body is wrapped or covered in any manner.
Responsibility for |
such labeling shall lie with the attending physician who
|
certifies death, or if the death occurs in a health care |
facility, with
such staff member as may be designated by the |
administrator of the facility. The Department may adopt rules |
providing for the safe disposal of human remains. To the extent |
feasible without endangering the public's health, the |
Department shall respect and accommodate the religious beliefs |
of individuals in implementing this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 85-1209.)
|
Section 15. The Department of Public Health Powers and |
Duties Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is |
amended by changing Sections 2310-5, 2310-35, and 2310-50.5 and |
by adding Sections 2310-610, 2310-615, 2310-620, and 2310-625 |
as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-5)
|
Sec. 2310-5. Definitions. In this Law:
|
"Department" means the Department of Public Health.
|
"Director" means the Director of Public Health. |
"Public health emergency" has the meaning set forth in |
Section 4 of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-35) (was 20 ILCS 2310/55.27)
|
Sec. 2310-35. Federal monies ; indirect cost |
reimbursements . To accept, receive, and
receipt for
federal |
monies, for
and in
behalf of the State, given by the federal |
government under any federal law
to the State for health |
purposes, surveys, or programs, and to adopt
necessary rules |
pertaining thereto pursuant to the Illinois Administrative
|
Procedure Act. To deposit indirect cost reimbursements |
received by the Department into the Public Health Special State |
Projects Fund, and to expend those funds, subject to |
appropriation, for public health purposes only.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-50.5)
|
Sec. 2310-50.5. Coordination concerning public health |
emergencies. To
coordinate with the Illinois Emergency |
Management Agency with
respect to planning for and responding |
to public health emergencies, as defined
in Section 4 of the |
Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act. The Department shall |
additionally cooperate with the Governor, other State agencies |
and local authorities, including local public health |
authorities, in the development of strategies and plans to |
protect the public health in the event of a public health |
emergency, as defined in Section 4 of the Illinois Emergency |
Management Agency Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-249, eff. 7-22-03.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-610 new) |
Sec. 2310-610. Rules; public health preparedness. The |
Department shall adopt and implement rules, contact lists, and |
response plans governing public health preparedness and |
response. |
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-615 new) |
Sec. 2310-615. Department coordination; public health |
preparedness. The Department shall require and coordinate |
|
development and implementation of public health preparedness |
and response plans by local health departments and facilities |
licensed by the Department. |
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-620 new) |
Sec. 2310-620. Cooperation; public health preparedness. |
The Department shall collaborate with relevant federal |
government authorities, State agencies, local authorities, |
including local public health authorities, elected officials |
from other states, and private sector organizations on public |
health preparedness and response. |
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-625 new)
|
Sec. 2310-625. Emergency Powers. |
(a) Upon proclamation of a disaster by the Governor, as |
provided for in the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act, |
the Director of Public Health shall have the following powers, |
which shall be exercised only in coordination with the Illinois |
Emergency Management Agency and the Department of Professional |
Regulation: |
(1) The power to suspend the requirements for temporary |
or permanent licensure or certification of persons who are |
licensed or certified in another state and are working |
under the direction of the Illinois Emergency Management |
Agency and the Illinois Department of Public Health |
pursuant to the declared disaster. |
(2) The power to modify the scope of practice |
restrictions under the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) |
Systems Act for any persons who are licensed under that Act |
for any person working under the direction of the Illinois |
Emergency Management Agency and the Illinois Department of |
Public Health pursuant to the declared disaster. |
(3) The power to modify the scope of practice |
restrictions under the Nursing Home Care Act for Certified |
Nursing Assistants for any person working under the |
direction of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency and |
|
the Illinois Department of Public Health pursuant to the |
declared disaster. |
(b) Persons exempt from licensure or certification under |
paragraph (1) of subsection (a) and persons operating under |
modified scope of practice provisions under paragraph (2) of |
subsection (a) and paragraph (3) of subsection (a) shall be |
exempt from licensure or certification or subject to modified |
scope of practice only until the declared disaster has ended as |
provided by law. |
(c) The Director shall exercise these powers by way of |
proclamation.
|
Section 20. The Illinois Clinical Laboratory and Blood Bank |
Act is amended by changing Section 7-102 as follows:
|
(210 ILCS 25/7-102) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 627-102)
|
Sec. 7-102. Reports of test results. The result of a test |
shall be reported
directly to the licensed physician or other |
authorized person who requested it.
No interpretation, |
diagnosis or prognosis or suggested treatment shall appear
on |
the laboratory report form except that a report made by a |
physician licensed
to practice medicine in Illinois, a dentist |
licensed in Illinois, or a
therapeutic optometrist may
include |
such information. Nothing in this Act prohibits the sharing of |
information as authorized in Section 2.1 of the Department of |
Public Health Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-322, eff. 1-1-98.)
|
Section 25. The Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems |
Act is amended by adding Section 3.255 as follows: |
(210 ILCS 50/3.255 new) |
Sec. 3.255. Emergency Medical Disaster Plan. The |
Department shall develop and implement an
Emergency Medical |
Disaster Plan to assist emergency medical services personnel |
and health care facilities in working together in a |
|
collaborative way and to provide support in situations where |
local medical resources are overwhelmed, including but not |
limited to public health emergencies, as that term is defined |
in Section 4 of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act. |
As part of the plan, the Department may designate lead |
hospitals in each Emergency Medical Services region |
established under this Act and may foster the creation and |
coordination of volunteer medical response teams that can be |
deployed to assist when a locality's capacity is overwhelmed. |
In developing an Emergency Medical Disaster Plan, the |
Department shall collaborate with the entities listed in |
Sections 2310-50.5 and 2310-620 of the Department of Public |
Health Powers and Duties Law of the Civil Administrative Code |
of Illinois. |
Section 30. The Hospital Licensing Act is amended by |
changing Section 10.4 as follows:
|
(210 ILCS 85/10.4) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 151.4)
|
Sec. 10.4. Medical staff privileges.
|
(a) Any hospital licensed under this Act or any hospital |
organized under the
University of Illinois Hospital Act shall, |
prior to the granting of any medical
staff privileges to an |
applicant, or renewing a current medical staff member's
|
privileges, request of the Director of Professional Regulation |
information
concerning the licensure status and any |
disciplinary action taken against the
applicant's or medical |
staff member's license, except : (1) for medical personnel who
|
enter a hospital to obtain organs and tissues for transplant |
from a deceased
donor in accordance with the Uniform Anatomical |
Gift Act ; or (2) for medical personnel who have been granted |
disaster privileges pursuant to the procedures and |
requirements established by rules adopted by the Department. |
Any hospital and any employees of the hospital or others |
involved in granting privileges that, in good faith, grants |
disaster privileges pursuant to this Section to respond to an |
|
emergency shall not, as a result of his, her, or its acts or |
omissions, be liable for civil damages for granting or denying |
disaster privileges except in the event of willful and wanton |
misconduct, as that term is defined in Section 10.2 of this |
Act. Individuals granted privileges who provide care in an |
emergency situation, in good faith and without direct |
compensation, shall not, as a result of his or her acts or |
omissions, except for acts or omissions involving willful and |
wanton misconduct, as that term is defined in Section 10.2 of |
this Act, on the part of the person, be liable for civil |
damages . The Director of
Professional Regulation shall |
transmit, in writing and in a timely fashion,
such information |
regarding the license of the applicant or the medical staff
|
member, including the record of imposition of any periods of
|
supervision or monitoring as a result of alcohol or
substance |
abuse, as provided by Section 23 of the Medical
Practice Act of |
1987, and such information as may have been
submitted to the |
Department indicating that the application
or medical staff |
member has been denied, or has surrendered,
medical staff |
privileges at a hospital licensed under this
Act, or any |
equivalent facility in another state or
territory of the United |
States. The Director of Professional Regulation
shall define by |
rule the period for timely response to such requests.
|
No transmittal of information by the Director of |
Professional Regulation,
under this Section shall be to other |
than the president, chief
operating officer, chief |
administrative officer, or chief of
the medical staff of a |
hospital licensed under this Act, a
hospital organized under |
the University of Illinois Hospital Act, or a hospital
operated |
by the United States, or any of its instrumentalities. The
|
information so transmitted shall be afforded the same status
as |
is information concerning medical studies by Part 21 of Article |
VIII of the
Code of Civil Procedure, as now or hereafter |
amended.
|
(b) All hospitals licensed under this Act, except county |
hospitals as
defined in subsection (c) of Section 15-1 of the |
|
Illinois Public Aid Code,
shall comply with, and the medical |
staff bylaws of these hospitals shall
include rules consistent |
with, the provisions of this Section in granting,
limiting, |
renewing, or denying medical staff membership and
clinical |
staff privileges. Hospitals that require medical staff members |
to
possess
faculty status with a specific institution of higher |
education are not required
to comply with subsection (1) below |
when the physician does not possess faculty
status.
|
(1) Minimum procedures for
pre-applicants and |
applicants for medical staff
membership shall include the |
following:
|
(A) Written procedures relating to the acceptance |
and processing of
pre-applicants or applicants for |
medical staff membership, which should be
contained in
|
medical staff bylaws.
|
(B) Written procedures to be followed in |
determining
a pre-applicant's or
an applicant's
|
qualifications for being granted medical staff |
membership and privileges.
|
(C) Written criteria to be followed in evaluating
a |
pre-applicant's or
an applicant's
qualifications.
|
(D) An evaluation of
a pre-applicant's or
an |
applicant's current health status and current
license |
status in Illinois.
|
(E) A written response to each
pre-applicant or
|
applicant that explains the reason or
reasons for any |
adverse decision (including all reasons based in whole |
or
in part on the applicant's medical qualifications or |
any other basis,
including economic factors).
|
(2) Minimum procedures with respect to medical staff |
and clinical
privilege determinations concerning current |
members of the medical staff shall
include the following:
|
(A) A written notice of an adverse decision.
|
(B) An explanation of the reasons for an adverse |
decision including all
reasons based on the quality of |
medical care or any other basis, including
economic |
|
factors.
|
(C) A statement of the medical staff member's right |
to request a fair
hearing on the adverse decision |
before a hearing panel whose membership is
mutually |
agreed upon by the medical staff and the hospital |
governing board. The
hearing panel shall have |
independent authority to recommend action to the
|
hospital governing board. Upon the request of the |
medical staff member or the
hospital governing board, |
the hearing panel shall make findings concerning the
|
nature of each basis for any adverse decision |
recommended to and accepted by
the hospital governing |
board.
|
(i) Nothing in this subparagraph (C) limits a |
hospital's or medical
staff's right to summarily |
suspend, without a prior hearing, a person's |
medical
staff membership or clinical privileges if |
the continuation of practice of a
medical staff |
member constitutes an immediate danger to the |
public, including
patients, visitors, and hospital |
employees and staff. A fair hearing shall be
|
commenced within 15 days after the suspension and |
completed without delay.
|
(ii) Nothing in this subparagraph (C) limits a |
medical staff's right
to permit, in the medical |
staff bylaws, summary suspension of membership or
|
clinical privileges in designated administrative |
circumstances as specifically
approved by the |
medical staff. This bylaw provision must |
specifically describe
both the administrative |
circumstance that can result in a summary |
suspension
and the length of the summary |
suspension. The opportunity for a fair hearing is
|
required for any administrative summary |
suspension. Any requested hearing must
be |
commenced within 15 days after the summary |
|
suspension and completed without
delay. Adverse |
decisions other than suspension or other |
restrictions on the
treatment or admission of |
patients may be imposed summarily and without a
|
hearing under designated administrative |
circumstances as specifically provided
for in the |
medical staff bylaws as approved by the medical |
staff.
|
(iii) If a hospital exercises its option to |
enter into an exclusive
contract and that contract |
results in the total or partial termination or
|
reduction of medical staff membership or clinical |
privileges of a current
medical staff member, the |
hospital shall provide the affected medical staff
|
member 60 days prior notice of the effect on his or |
her medical staff
membership or privileges. An |
affected medical staff member desiring a hearing
|
under subparagraph (C) of this paragraph (2) must |
request the hearing within 14
days after the date |
he or she is so notified. The requested hearing |
shall be
commenced and completed (with a report and |
recommendation to the affected
medical staff |
member, hospital governing board, and medical |
staff) within 30
days after the date of the medical |
staff member's request. If agreed upon by
both the |
medical staff and the hospital governing board, |
the medical staff
bylaws may provide for longer |
time periods.
|
(D) A statement of the member's right to inspect |
all pertinent
information in the hospital's possession |
with respect to the decision.
|
(E) A statement of the member's right to present |
witnesses and other
evidence at the hearing on the |
decision.
|
(F) A written notice and written explanation of the |
decision resulting
from the hearing.
|
|
(F-5) A written notice of a final adverse decision |
by a hospital
governing board.
|
(G) Notice given 15 days before implementation of |
an adverse medical
staff membership or clinical |
privileges decision based substantially on
economic |
factors. This notice shall be given after the medical |
staff member
exhausts all applicable procedures under |
this Section, including item (iii) of
subparagraph (C) |
of this paragraph (2), and under the medical staff |
bylaws in
order to allow sufficient time for the |
orderly provision of patient care.
|
(H) Nothing in this paragraph (2) of this |
subsection (b) limits a
medical staff member's right to |
waive, in writing, the rights provided in
|
subparagraphs (A) through (G) of this paragraph (2) of |
this subsection (b) upon
being granted the written |
exclusive right to provide particular services at a
|
hospital, either individually or as a member of a |
group. If an exclusive
contract is signed by a |
representative of a group of physicians, a waiver
|
contained in the contract shall apply to all members of |
the group unless stated
otherwise in the contract.
|
(3) Every adverse medical staff membership and |
clinical privilege decision
based substantially on |
economic factors shall be reported to the Hospital
|
Licensing Board before the decision takes effect. These |
reports shall not be
disclosed in any form that reveals the |
identity of any hospital or physician.
These reports shall |
be utilized to study the effects that hospital medical
|
staff membership and clinical privilege decisions based |
upon economic factors
have on access to care and the |
availability of physician services. The
Hospital Licensing |
Board shall submit an initial study to the Governor and the
|
General Assembly by January 1, 1996, and subsequent reports |
shall be submitted
periodically thereafter.
|
(4) As used in this Section:
|
|
"Adverse decision" means a decision reducing, |
restricting, suspending,
revoking, denying, or not |
renewing medical staff membership or clinical
privileges.
|
"Economic factor" means any information or reasons for |
decisions unrelated
to quality of care or professional |
competency.
|
"Pre-applicant" means a physician licensed to practice |
medicine in all
its
branches who requests an application |
for medical staff membership or
privileges.
|
"Privilege" means permission to provide
medical or |
other patient care services and permission to use hospital
|
resources, including equipment, facilities and personnel |
that are necessary to
effectively provide medical or other |
patient care services. This definition
shall not be |
construed to
require a hospital to acquire additional |
equipment, facilities, or personnel to
accommodate the |
granting of privileges.
|
(5) Any amendment to medical staff bylaws required |
because of
this amendatory Act of the 91st General Assembly |
shall be adopted on or
before July 1, 2001.
|
(c) All hospitals shall consult with the medical staff |
prior to closing
membership in the entire or any portion of the |
medical staff or a department.
If
the hospital closes |
membership in the medical staff, any portion of the medical
|
staff, or the department over the objections of the medical |
staff, then the
hospital
shall provide a detailed written |
explanation for the decision to the medical
staff
10 days prior |
to the effective date of any closure. No applications need to |
be
provided when membership in the medical staff or any |
relevant portion of the
medical staff is closed.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-14, eff. 7-1-97; 90-149, eff. 1-1-98; 90-655, |
eff.
7-30-98; 91-166, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
Section 35. The Health Care Professional Credentials Data |
Collection Act is amended by changing Section 15 as follows:
|
|
(410 ILCS 517/15)
|
Sec. 15.
Development and use of uniform health care and |
hospital
credentials forms.
|
(a) The Department, in consultation with the council, shall |
by rule
establish:
|
(1) a uniform health care credentials form that shall |
include the
credentials data commonly requested by health |
care entities
and health care plans for purposes of |
credentialing and shall minimize the
need for the |
collection of
additional credentials data;
|
(2) a uniform health care recredentials form that shall |
include the
credentials data commonly requested by health |
care entities and health care
plans for purposes of |
recredentialing and shall minimize the need for the
|
collection of additional credentials data;
|
(3) a uniform hospital credentials form that shall |
include the credentials
data commonly requested by |
hospitals for purposes of credentialing and
shall
minimize |
the need for the collection of additional credentials data;
|
(4) a uniform hospital recredentials form that shall |
include the
credentials data commonly requested by |
hospitals for purposes of
recredentialing and shall |
minimize the need for collection of additional
credentials |
data; and
|
(5) uniform updating forms.
|
(b) The uniform forms established in subsection (a) shall |
be coordinated to
reduce the need to provide redundant |
information.
Further, the forms shall be made available in both |
paper and electronic
formats.
|
(c) The Department, in consultation with the council, shall
|
establish by rule a date after which an electronic format may |
be
required by a health care entity, a health care plan, or a |
hospital, and a
health care professional may require acceptance |
of an electronic
format by a health care entity, a health care |
plan, or a hospital.
|
(d) Beginning January 1, 2002, each health care
entity or |
|
health
care plan that
employs, contracts with, or allows health |
care
professionals to provide medical or health care services |
and requires health
care professionals to be credentialed or |
recredentialed shall for
purposes of collecting credentials |
data only require:
|
(1) the uniform health care credentials form;
|
(2) the uniform health care recredentials form;
|
(3) the uniform updating forms; and
|
(4) any additional credentials data requested.
|
(e) Beginning January 1, 2002, each hospital that
employs,
|
contracts with, or
allows health care professionals to provide |
medical or
health care services and requires health care |
professionals to be credentialed
or recredentialed shall for |
purposes of collecting credentials
data only require:
|
(1) the uniform hospital credentials form;
|
(2) the uniform hospital recredentials form;
|
(3) the uniform updating forms; and
|
(4) any additional credentials data requested.
|
(f) Each health care entity and health care plan shall |
complete the process
of verifying a health care professional's |
credentials data
in a timely fashion and shall complete the |
process of credentialing or
recredentialing of the health care |
professional within 60 days after
submission of all credentials |
data and completion of verification of the
credentials data.
|
(g) Each health care professional shall provide any |
corrections, updates,
and modifications to his or her |
credentials data to ensure
that all credentials data on the |
health care professional remains current.
Such corrections, |
updates, and modifications shall be provided within
5 business |
days for State health care professional license revocation, |
federal
Drug
Enforcement Agency license revocation,
Medicare |
or Medicaid sanctions, revocation of hospital privileges, any |
lapse
in professional liability coverage required by a health |
care entity, health
care plan, or hospital,
or conviction of a |
felony, and within 45 days for any
other
change in the |
information from the date the health care professional knew of
|
|
the change. All updates shall be made on the uniform updating
|
forms developed by the Department.
|
(h) Any credentials data collected or obtained by the |
health care entity,
health care plan, or hospital shall be |
confidential, as provided by law,
and otherwise may not be |
redisclosed without written consent of the
health care |
professional, except that in any proceeding to challenge
|
credentialing or recredentialing, or in any judicial review, |
the claim
of confidentiality shall not be invoked to deny a |
health care professional,
health care entity,
health care plan, |
or hospital access to or use of credentials data. Nothing in
|
this Section prevents a health
care entity, health care plan, |
or hospital from disclosing any credentials data
to its |
officers, directors, employees, agents, subcontractors,
|
medical staff members, any committee of the health care entity, |
health care
plan, or hospital involved in the credentialing |
process, or
accreditation bodies or licensing agencies. |
However, any redisclosure of
credentials data contrary to this |
Section is prohibited.
|
(i) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to restrict the |
right of any
health care entity, health care plan or hospital |
to request additional
information necessary for credentialing |
or recredentialing.
|
(j) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to restrict in |
any way the
authority of any health care entity, health care |
plan or hospital to
approve, suspend or deny an application for |
hospital staff membership, clinical
privileges, or managed |
care network participation.
|
(k) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to prohibit |
delegation of
credentialing and recredentialing activities as |
long as the delegated
entity follows the requirements set forth |
in this Act.
|
(l) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to require any |
health care
entity or health care plan to credential or survey |
any health care
professional. |
(m) Nothing in this Act prohibits a hospital from granting |
|
disaster privileges pursuant to the provisions of Section 10.4 |
of the Hospital Licensing Act. When a hospital grants disaster |
privileges pursuant to Section 10.4 of the Hospital Licensing |
Act, that hospital is not required to collect credentials data |
pursuant to this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-602, eff. 8-16-99; 92-193, eff. 1-1-02.)
|
Section 40. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by |
changing Sections 1-105 and 12-215 as follows:
|
(625 ILCS 5/1-105) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 1-105)
|
Sec. 1-105. Authorized emergency vehicle. Emergency |
vehicles of municipal departments or public service
|
corporations as are designated or authorized by proper local |
authorities;
police vehicles; vehicles of the fire department; |
ambulances;
vehicles of the Illinois Emergency Management |
Agency; vehicles of the Illinois Department of Public Health;
|
and vehicles of the
Department of Nuclear Safety.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-138, eff. 7-24-01.)
|
(625 ILCS 5/12-215) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 12-215)
|
Sec. 12-215. Oscillating, rotating or flashing lights on |
motor vehicles. Except as otherwise provided in this Code:
|
(a) The use of red or white oscillating, rotating or |
flashing lights,
whether lighted or unlighted, is prohibited |
except on:
|
1. Law enforcement vehicles of State, Federal or
local |
authorities;
|
2. A vehicle operated by a police officer or county |
coroner
and designated or authorized by local authorities, |
in writing, as a law
enforcement vehicle; however, such |
designation or authorization must
be carried in the |
vehicle;
|
3. Vehicles of local fire departments and State or |
federal
firefighting vehicles;
|
4. Vehicles which are designed and used exclusively as |
|
ambulances
or rescue vehicles; furthermore, such lights |
shall not be lighted except
when responding to an emergency |
call for and while actually conveying the
sick or injured;
|
5. Tow trucks licensed in a state that requires such |
lights;
furthermore, such lights shall not be lighted on |
any such tow truck while the
tow truck is
operating in the |
State of Illinois;
|
6. Vehicles of the Illinois Emergency Management |
Agency, vehicles of the Illinois Department of Public |
Health, and vehicles of
the
Department of Nuclear Safety;
|
7. Vehicles operated by a local or county emergency |
management
services agency as defined in the Illinois |
Emergency
Management Agency Act; and
|
8. School buses operating alternately flashing head |
lamps as permitted
under Section 12-805 of this Code.
|
(b) The use of amber oscillating, rotating or flashing |
lights, whether
lighted or unlighted, is prohibited except on:
|
1. Second division vehicles designed and used for |
towing or hoisting
vehicles; furthermore, such lights |
shall not be lighted except as
required in
this paragraph |
1; such lights shall be lighted
when such vehicles are |
actually being
used at the scene of an accident or
|
disablement; if the towing vehicle is equipped with a flat |
bed that
supports all wheels of the vehicle being |
transported, the lights shall not be
lighted while the |
vehicle is engaged in towing on a highway; if the towing
|
vehicle is not equipped with a flat bed that supports all |
wheels of a vehicle
being transported, the lights shall be |
lighted while the
towing
vehicle is engaged in towing on a |
highway during all
times when the use
of headlights is |
required under Section 12-201 of this Code;
|
2. Motor vehicles or equipment of the State of |
Illinois, local authorities
and contractors; furthermore, |
such lights shall not be lighted except while
such vehicles |
are engaged in maintenance or construction operations |
within
the limits of construction projects;
|
|
3. Vehicles or equipment used by engineering or survey |
crews;
furthermore, such lights shall not be lighted except |
while such vehicles
are actually engaged in work on a |
highway;
|
4. Vehicles of public utilities, municipalities, or |
other
construction, maintenance or automotive service |
vehicles except that such
lights shall be lighted only as a |
means for indicating the presence of a
vehicular traffic |
hazard requiring unusual care in approaching, overtaking
|
or passing while such vehicles are engaged in maintenance, |
service or
construction on a highway;
|
5. Oversized vehicle or load; however, such lights |
shall only be lighted
when moving under permit issued by |
the Department under Section 15-301
of this Code;
|
6. The front and rear of motorized equipment owned and |
operated by the
State of Illinois or any political |
subdivision thereof, which is designed
and used for removal |
of snow and ice from highways;
|
7. Fleet safety vehicles registered in another state, |
furthermore, such
lights shall not be lighted except as |
provided for in Section 12-212 of
this Code;
|
8. Such other vehicles as may be authorized by local |
authorities;
|
9. Law enforcement vehicles of State or local |
authorities when used in
combination with red oscillating, |
rotating or flashing lights;
|
9.5. Propane delivery trucks;
|
10. Vehicles used for collecting or delivering mail for |
the
United States Postal Service provided that such lights |
shall not be lighted
except when such vehicles are actually |
being used for such purposes;
|
11. Any vehicle displaying a slow-moving vehicle |
emblem as
provided in Section 12-205.1;
|
12. All trucks equipped with self-compactors or |
roll-off hoists and
roll-on containers for garbage or |
refuse hauling. Such lights shall not be
lighted except |
|
when such vehicles are actually being used for such |
purposes;
|
13. Vehicles used by a security company, alarm |
responder, or control
agency;
|
14. Security vehicles of the Department of Human |
Services; however, the
lights shall not be lighted except |
when being used for security related
purposes under the |
direction of the superintendent of the facility where the
|
vehicle is located; and
|
15. Vehicles of union representatives, except that the |
lights shall be
lighted only while the vehicle is within |
the limits of a construction
project.
|
(c) The use of blue oscillating, rotating or flashing |
lights, whether
lighted or unlighted, is prohibited except on:
|
1. Rescue squad vehicles not owned by a fire department |
and
vehicles owned or fully operated by a:
|
voluntary firefighter;
|
paid firefighter;
|
part-paid firefighter;
|
call firefighter;
|
member of the board of trustees of a fire |
protection district;
|
paid or unpaid member of a rescue squad;
|
paid or unpaid member of a voluntary ambulance |
unit; or
|
paid or unpaid members of a local or county |
emergency management
services agency as defined in the |
Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act,
designated |
or authorized by local authorities, in writing, and |
carrying that
designation or authorization in the |
vehicle.
|
However, such lights are not to be lighted except when |
responding to a
bona fide emergency.
|
2. Police department vehicles in cities having a |
population of 500,000
or more inhabitants.
|
3. Law enforcement vehicles of State or local |
|
authorities when used in
combination with red oscillating, |
rotating or flashing lights.
|
4. Vehicles of local fire departments and State or |
federal
firefighting vehicles when used in combination |
with red oscillating,
rotating or flashing lights.
|
5. Vehicles which are designed and used exclusively as |
ambulances or
rescue vehicles when used in combination with |
red oscillating, rotating or
flashing lights; furthermore, |
such lights shall not be lighted except when
responding to |
an emergency call.
|
6. Vehicles that are equipped and used exclusively as |
organ transport
vehicles when used in combination with red |
oscillating, rotating, or flashing
lights; furthermore, |
these lights shall only be lighted when the transportation
|
is declared an emergency by a member of the transplant team |
or a
representative of the organ procurement organization.
|
7. Vehicles of the Illinois Emergency Management |
Agency , vehicles of the Illinois Department of Public |
Health, and vehicles of
the
Department of Nuclear Safety, |
when used in combination with red oscillating,
rotating, or |
flashing lights.
|
8. Vehicles operated by a local or county emergency |
management
services agency as defined in the Illinois |
Emergency Management Agency
Act, when used in combination |
with red oscillating, rotating, or
flashing lights.
|
(c-1) In addition to the blue oscillating, rotating, or |
flashing
lights permitted under subsection (c), and |
notwithstanding subsection
(a), a vehicle operated by a |
voluntary firefighter, a voluntary member
of a rescue squad, or |
a member of a voluntary ambulance unit may be
equipped with |
flashing white headlights and blue grill lights, which may
be |
used only in responding to an emergency call.
|
(c-2) In addition to the blue oscillating, rotating, or |
flashing
lights permitted under subsection (c), and |
notwithstanding subsection (a),
a vehicle operated by a paid or |
unpaid member of a local or county
emergency management |
|
services agency as defined in the Illinois Emergency
Management |
Agency Act, may be equipped with white oscillating, rotating,
|
or flashing lights to be used in combination with blue |
oscillating, rotating,
or flashing lights, if authorization by |
local authorities is in
writing and carried in the vehicle.
|
(d) The use of a combination of amber and white |
oscillating, rotating or
flashing lights, whether lighted or |
unlighted, is prohibited except motor
vehicles or equipment of |
the State of Illinois, local authorities, contractors,
and |
union representatives may be so equipped; furthermore, such |
lights shall
not be lighted on vehicles of the State of |
Illinois, local authorities, and
contractors except while such |
vehicles are engaged in highway maintenance or
construction |
operations within the limits of highway construction projects, |
and
shall not be lighted on the vehicles of union |
representatives except when those
vehicles are within the |
limits of a construction project.
|
(e) All oscillating, rotating or flashing lights referred |
to in this Section
shall be of sufficient intensity, when |
illuminated, to be visible at 500
feet in normal sunlight.
|
(f) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit a manufacturer |
of oscillating,
rotating or flashing lights or his |
representative from temporarily mounting
such lights on a |
vehicle for demonstration purposes only.
|
(g) Any person violating the provisions of subsections (a), |
(b), (c) or (d)
of this Section who without lawful authority |
stops or detains or attempts
to stop or detain another person |
shall be guilty of a Class 4 felony.
|
(h) Except as provided in subsection (g) above, any person |
violating the
provisions of subsections (a) or (c) of this |
Section shall be guilty of a
Class A misdemeanor.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-138, eff. 7-24-01; 92-407, eff.
8-17-01; |
92-651, eff. 7-11-02; 92-782, eff. 8-6-02; 92-820, eff. |
8-21-02;
92-872, eff. 6-1-03; 93-181, eff. 1-1-04.)
|
Section 45. The Communicable Disease Report Act is amended |
|
by changing Section 1 as follows:
|
(745 ILCS 45/1) (from Ch. 126, par. 21)
|
Sec. 1. Whenever any statute of this State or any ordinance |
or
resolution of a municipal corporation or political |
subdivision enacted
pursuant to statute or any rule of an |
administrative agency adopted
pursuant to statute requires |
medical practitioners or other persons to
report cases of |
injury, medical condition or procedure, communicable
disease, |
venereal disease, or sexually
transmitted disease to
any |
governmental agency or officer, such reports shall be |
confidential,
and any medical practitioner or other person |
making such report in good
faith shall be immune from suit for |
slander or libel based upon any
statements contained in such |
report.
|
The identity of any individual who makes a report or who is |
identified in a
report
of an injury, medical condition or |
procedure, communicable
disease, venereal disease, sexually |
transmitted disease, or food-borne
illness or an investigation
|
conducted pursuant to a report of an injury, medical condition |
or
procedure, communicable disease, venereal disease, sexually
|
transmitted disease, or food-borne illness shall be |
confidential and the
identity of any person making a report or |
named therein shall not be
disclosed publicly or in any action |
of any kind in any court or before any
tribunal, board or |
agency; provided that records and communications concerning
a |
venereal disease or sexually transmitted disease in any minor |
under 11
years of age shall be disclosed in accordance with the |
provisions
of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act, |
approved June 26, 1975,
as now or hereafter amended.
|
The confidentiality provisions of this Act do not apply to |
the results
of tests for diseases conducted pursuant to
|
subsections (g) and (g-5) of Section 5-5-3 and
subsection (a) |
of Section
3-15-2 of the Unified Code of Corrections. |
Nothing in this Act prohibits the sharing of information as |
authorized in Section 2.1 of the Department of Public Health |
|
Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-187, eff. 7-19-95; 89-381, eff. 8-18-95; |
89-477, eff.
6-18-96; 89-626, eff. 8-9-96.)
|
Section 50. The Workers' Compensation Act is amended by |
changing Section 11 as follows:
|
(820 ILCS 305/11) (from Ch. 48, par. 138.11)
|
Sec. 11. The compensation herein provided, together with |
the
provisions of this Act, shall be the measure of the |
responsibility of
any employer engaged in any of the |
enterprises or businesses enumerated
in Section 3 of this Act, |
or of any employer who is not engaged in any
such enterprises |
or businesses, but who has elected to provide and pay
|
compensation for accidental injuries sustained by any employee |
arising
out of and in the course of the employment according to |
the provisions
of this Act, and whose election to continue |
under this Act, has not been
nullified by any action of his |
employees as provided for in this Act.
|
Accidental injuries incurred while participating in |
voluntary recreational
programs including but not limited to |
athletic events, parties and picnics
do not arise out of and in |
the course of the employment even though the
employer pays some |
or all of the cost thereof. This exclusion shall not apply
in |
the event that the injured employee was ordered or assigned by |
his employer
to participate in the program.
|
Accidental injuries incurred while participating as a |
patient in a drug
or alcohol rehabilitation program do not |
arise out of and in the course
of employment even though the |
employer pays some or all of the costs thereof. |
Any injury to or disease or death of an employee arising |
from the administration of a vaccine, including without |
limitation smallpox vaccine, to prepare for, or as a response |
to, a threatened or potential bioterrorist incident to the |
employee as part of a voluntary inoculation program in |
connection with the person's employment or in connection with |
|
any governmental program or recommendation for the inoculation |
of workers in the employee's occupation, geographical area, or |
other category that includes the employee is deemed to arise |
out of and in the course of the employment for all purposes |
under this Act. This paragraph added by this amendatory Act of |
the 93rd General Assembly is declarative of existing law and is |
not a new enactment.
|
(Source: P.A. 81-1482.)
|
Section 55. The Workers' Occupational Diseases Act is |
amended by changing Section 1 as follows:
|
(820 ILCS 310/1) (from Ch. 48, par. 172.36)
|
Sec. 1. This Act shall be known and may be cited as the |
"Workers'
Occupational Diseases Act".
|
(a) The term "employer" as used in this Act shall be |
construed to
be:
|
1. The State and each county, city, town, township, |
incorporated
village, school district, body politic, or |
municipal corporation
therein.
|
2. Every person, firm, public or private corporation, |
including
hospitals, public service, eleemosynary, religious |
or charitable
corporations or associations, who has any person |
in service or under any
contract for hire, express or implied, |
oral or written.
|
3. Where an employer operating under and subject to the |
provisions
of this Act loans an employee to another such |
employer and such loaned
employee sustains a compensable |
occupational disease in the employment
of such borrowing |
employer and where such borrowing employer does not
provide or |
pay the benefits or payments due such employee, such loaning
|
employer shall be liable to provide or pay all benefits or |
payments due
such employee under this Act and as to such |
employee the liability of
such loaning and borrowing employers |
shall be joint and several,
provided that such loaning employer |
shall in the absence of agreement to
the contrary be entitled |
|
to receive from such borrowing employer full
reimbursement for |
all sums paid or incurred pursuant to this paragraph
together |
with reasonable attorneys' fees and expenses in any hearings
|
before the Industrial Commission or in any action to secure |
such
reimbursement. Where any benefit is provided or paid by |
such loaning
employer, the employee shall have the duty of |
rendering reasonable
co-operation in any hearings, trials or |
proceedings in the case,
including such proceedings for |
reimbursement.
|
Where an employee files an Application for Adjustment of |
Claim with
the Industrial Commission alleging that his or her |
claim is covered by
the provisions of the preceding paragraph, |
and joining both the alleged
loaning and borrowing employers, |
they and each of them, upon written
demand by the employee and |
within 7 days after receipt of such demand,
shall have the duty |
of filing with the Industrial Commission a written
admission or |
denial of the allegation that the claim is covered by the
|
provisions of the preceding paragraph and in default of such |
filing or
if any such denial be ultimately determined not to |
have been bona fide
then the provisions of Paragraph K of |
Section 19 of this Act shall
apply.
|
An employer whose business or enterprise or a substantial |
part
thereof consists of hiring, procuring or furnishing |
employees to or for
other employers operating under and subject |
to the provisions of this
Act for the performance of the work |
of such other employers and who pays
such employees their |
salary or wage notwithstanding that they are doing
the work of |
such other employers shall be deemed a loaning employer
within |
the meaning and provisions of this Section.
|
(b) The term "employee" as used in this Act, shall be |
construed to
mean:
|
1. Every person in the service of the State, county, city, |
town,
township, incorporated village or school district, body |
politic or
municipal corporation therein, whether by election, |
appointment or
contract of hire, express or implied, oral or |
written, including any
official of the State, or of any county, |
|
city, town, township,
incorporated village, school district, |
body politic or municipal
corporation therein and except any |
duly appointed member of the fire
department in any city whose |
population exceeds 500,000 according to the
last Federal or |
State census, and except any member of a fire insurance
patrol |
maintained by a board of underwriters in this State. One |
employed
by a contractor who has contracted with the State, or |
a county, city,
town, township, incorporated village, school |
district, body politic or
municipal corporation therein, |
through its representatives, shall not be
considered as an |
employee of the State, county, city, town, township,
|
incorporated village, school district, body politic or |
municipal
corporation which made the contract.
|
2. Every person in the service of another under any |
contract of
hire, express or implied, oral or written, who |
contracts an occupational
disease while working in the State of |
Illinois, or who contracts an
occupational disease while |
working outside of the State of Illinois but
where the contract |
of hire is made within the State of Illinois, and any
person |
whose employment is principally localized within the State of
|
Illinois, regardless of the place where the disease was |
contracted or
place where the contract of hire was made, |
including aliens, and minors
who, for the purpose of this Act, |
except Section 3 hereof, shall be
considered the same and have |
the same power to contract, receive
payments and give |
quittances therefor, as adult employees. An employee
or his or |
her dependents under this Act who shall have a cause of action
|
by reason of an occupational disease, disablement or death |
arising out
of and in the course of his or her employment may |
elect or pursue
his or her remedy in the State where the |
disease was contracted, or in the
State where the contract of |
hire is made, or in the State where the
employment is |
principally localized.
|
(c) "Commission" means the Industrial Commission created |
by the
Workers' Compensation Act, approved July 9, 1951, as |
amended.
|
|
(d) In this Act the term "Occupational Disease" means a |
disease
arising out of and in the course of the employment or |
which has become
aggravated and rendered disabling as a result |
of the exposure of the
employment. Such aggravation shall arise |
out of a risk peculiar to or
increased by the employment and |
not common to the general public.
|
A disease shall be deemed to arise out of the employment if |
there is
apparent to the rational mind, upon consideration of |
all the
circumstances, a causal connection between the |
conditions under which
the work is performed and the |
occupational disease. The disease need not
to have been |
foreseen or expected but after its contraction it must
appear |
to have had its origin or aggravation in a risk connected with
|
the employment and to have flowed from that source as a |
rational
consequence.
|
An employee shall be conclusively deemed to have been |
exposed to the
hazards of an occupational disease when, for any |
length of time however
short, he or she is employed in an |
occupation or process in which the
hazard of the disease |
exists; provided however, that in a claim of
exposure to atomic |
radiation, the fact of such exposure must be verified
by the |
records of the central registry of radiation exposure |
maintained
by the Department of Public Health or by some other |
recognized
governmental agency maintaining records of such |
exposures whenever and
to the extent that the records are on |
file with the Department of Public
Health or the agency. |
Any injury to or disease or death of an employee arising |
from the administration of a vaccine, including without |
limitation smallpox vaccine, to prepare for, or as a response |
to, a threatened or potential bioterrorist incident to the |
employee as part of a voluntary inoculation program in |
connection with the person's employment or in connection with |
any governmental program or recommendation for the inoculation |
of workers in the employee's occupation, geographical area, or |
other category that includes the employee is deemed to arise |
out of and in the course of the employment for all purposes |
|
under this Act. This paragraph added by this amendatory Act of |
the 93rd General Assembly is declarative of existing law and is |
not a new enactment.
|
The employer liable for the compensation in this Act |
provided shall
be the employer in whose employment the employee |
was last exposed to the
hazard of the occupational disease |
claimed upon regardless of the length
of time of such last |
exposure, except, in cases of silicosis or
asbestosis, the only |
employer liable shall be the last employer in whose
employment |
the employee was last exposed during a period of 60 days or
|
more after the effective date of this Act, to the hazard of |
such
occupational disease, and, in such cases, an exposure |
during a period of
less than 60 days, after the effective date |
of this Act, shall not be
deemed a last exposure. If a miner |
who is suffering or suffered from
pneumoconiosis was employed |
for 10 years or more in one or more coal
mines there shall, |
effective July 1, 1973 be a rebuttable presumption
that his or |
her pneumoconiosis arose out of such employment.
|
If a deceased miner was employed for 10 years or more in |
one or more
coal mines and died from a respirable disease there |
shall, effective
July 1, 1973, be a rebuttable presumption that |
his or her death was due
to pneumoconiosis.
|
The insurance carrier liable shall be the carrier whose |
policy was in
effect covering the employer liable on the last |
day of the exposure
rendering such employer liable in |
accordance with the provisions of this
Act.
|
(e) "Disablement" means an impairment or partial |
impairment,
temporary or permanent, in the function of the body |
or any of the
members of the body, or the event of becoming |
disabled from earning full
wages at the work in which the |
employee was engaged when last exposed to
the hazards of the |
occupational disease by the employer from whom he or
she claims |
compensation, or equal wages in other suitable employment;
and |
"disability" means the state of being so incapacitated.
|
(f) No compensation shall be payable for or on account of |
any
occupational disease unless disablement, as herein |
|
defined, occurs
within two years after the last day of the last |
exposure to the hazards
of the disease, except in cases of |
occupational disease caused by
berylliosis or by the inhalation |
of silica dust or asbestos dust and, in
such cases, within 3 |
years after the last day of the last exposure to
the hazards of |
such disease and except in the case of occupational
disease |
caused by exposure to radiological materials or equipment, and
|
in such case, within 25 years after the last day of last |
exposure to the
hazards of such disease.
|
(Source: P.A. 81-992.)
|
Section 60. The Illinois Administrative Procedure Act is |
amended by changing Section 5-45 as follows:
|
(5 ILCS 100/5-45) (from Ch. 127, par. 1005-45)
|
Sec. 5-45. Emergency rulemaking.
|
(a) "Emergency" means the existence of any situation that |
any agency
finds reasonably constitutes a threat to the public |
interest, safety, or
welfare.
|
(b) If any agency finds that an
emergency exists that |
requires adoption of a rule upon fewer days than
is required by |
Section 5-40 and states in writing its reasons for that
|
finding, the agency may adopt an emergency rule without prior |
notice or
hearing upon filing a notice of emergency rulemaking |
with the Secretary of
State under Section 5-70. The notice |
shall include the text of the
emergency rule and shall be |
published in the Illinois Register. Consent
orders or other |
court orders adopting settlements negotiated by an agency
may |
be adopted under this Section. Subject to applicable |
constitutional or
statutory provisions, an emergency rule |
becomes effective immediately upon
filing under Section 5-65 or |
at a stated date less than 10 days
thereafter. The agency's |
finding and a statement of the specific reasons
for the finding |
shall be filed with the rule. The agency shall take
reasonable |
and appropriate measures to make emergency rules known to the
|
persons who may be affected by them.
|
|
(c) An emergency rule may be effective for a period of not |
longer than
150 days, but the agency's authority to adopt an |
identical rule under Section
5-40 is not precluded. No |
emergency rule may be adopted more
than once in any 24 month |
period, except that this limitation on the number
of emergency |
rules that may be adopted in a 24 month period does not apply
|
to (i) emergency rules that make additions to and deletions |
from the Drug
Manual under Section 5-5.16 of the Illinois |
Public Aid Code or the
generic drug formulary under Section |
3.14 of the Illinois Food, Drug
and Cosmetic Act ,
or (ii) |
emergency rules adopted by the Pollution Control
Board before |
July 1, 1997 to implement portions of the Livestock Management
|
Facilities Act ; or (iii) emergency rules adopted by the |
Illinois Department of Public Health under subsections (a) |
through (i) of Section 2 of the Department of Public Health Act |
when necessary to protect the public's health . Two or more |
emergency rules having substantially the same
purpose and |
effect shall be deemed to be a single rule for purposes of this
|
Section.
|
(d) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely |
implementation
of the State's fiscal year 1999 budget, |
emergency rules to implement any
provision of Public Act 90-587 |
or 90-588
or any other budget initiative for fiscal year 1999 |
may be adopted in
accordance with this Section by the agency |
charged with administering that
provision or initiative, |
except that the 24-month limitation on the adoption
of |
emergency rules and the provisions of Sections 5-115 and 5-125 |
do not apply
to rules adopted under this subsection (d). The |
adoption of emergency rules
authorized by this subsection (d) |
shall be deemed to be necessary for the
public interest, |
safety, and welfare.
|
(e) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely |
implementation
of the State's fiscal year 2000 budget, |
emergency rules to implement any
provision of this amendatory |
Act of the 91st General Assembly
or any other budget initiative |
for fiscal year 2000 may be adopted in
accordance with this |
|
Section by the agency charged with administering that
provision |
or initiative, except that the 24-month limitation on the |
adoption
of emergency rules and the provisions of Sections |
5-115 and 5-125 do not apply
to rules adopted under this |
subsection (e). The adoption of emergency rules
authorized by |
this subsection (e) shall be deemed to be necessary for the
|
public interest, safety, and welfare.
|
(f) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely |
implementation
of the State's fiscal year 2001 budget, |
emergency rules to implement any
provision of this amendatory |
Act of the 91st General Assembly
or any other budget initiative |
for fiscal year 2001 may be adopted in
accordance with this |
Section by the agency charged with administering that
provision |
or initiative, except that the 24-month limitation on the |
adoption
of emergency rules and the provisions of Sections |
5-115 and 5-125 do not apply
to rules adopted under this |
subsection (f). The adoption of emergency rules
authorized by |
this subsection (f) shall be deemed to be necessary for the
|
public interest, safety, and welfare.
|
(g) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely |
implementation
of the State's fiscal year 2002 budget, |
emergency rules to implement any
provision of this amendatory |
Act of the 92nd General Assembly
or any other budget initiative |
for fiscal year 2002 may be adopted in
accordance with this |
Section by the agency charged with administering that
provision |
or initiative, except that the 24-month limitation on the |
adoption
of emergency rules and the provisions of Sections |
5-115 and 5-125 do not apply
to rules adopted under this |
subsection (g). The adoption of emergency rules
authorized by |
this subsection (g) shall be deemed to be necessary for the
|
public interest, safety, and welfare.
|
(h) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely |
implementation
of the State's fiscal year 2003 budget, |
emergency rules to implement any
provision of this amendatory |
Act of the 92nd General Assembly
or any other budget initiative |
for fiscal year 2003 may be adopted in
accordance with this |
|
Section by the agency charged with administering that
provision |
or initiative, except that the 24-month limitation on the |
adoption
of emergency rules and the provisions of Sections |
5-115 and 5-125 do not apply
to rules adopted under this |
subsection (h). The adoption of emergency rules
authorized by |
this subsection (h) shall be deemed to be necessary for the
|
public interest, safety, and welfare.
|
(i) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely |
implementation
of the State's fiscal year 2004 budget, |
emergency rules to implement any
provision of this amendatory |
Act of the 93rd General Assembly
or any other budget initiative |
for fiscal year 2004 may be adopted in
accordance with this |
Section by the agency charged with administering that
provision |
or initiative, except that the 24-month limitation on the |
adoption
of emergency rules and the provisions of Sections |
5-115 and 5-125 do not apply
to rules adopted under this |
subsection (i). The adoption of emergency rules
authorized by |
this subsection (i) shall be deemed to be necessary for the
|
public interest, safety, and welfare.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-10, eff. 6-11-01; 92-597, eff. 6-28-02; 93-20, |
eff.
6-20-03.)
|
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
|