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Public Act 094-0091 |
SB0661 Enrolled |
LRB094 04399 RCE 34428 b |
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AN ACT concerning finance.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, |
represented in the General Assembly:
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ARTICLE 1 |
Section 1-1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
FY2006 Budget
Implementation (Finance) Act.
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Section 1-5. Purpose. It is the purpose of this Act to |
make changes
in State programs that are necessary to implement |
the Governor's FY2006
budget recommendations concerning |
finance.
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ARTICLE 10 |
Section 10-5. The Department of Central Management |
Services Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is |
amended by changing Sections 405-20, 405-270, 405-293, and |
405-315 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 405/405-20) (was 20 ILCS 405/35.7)
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Sec. 405-20. Fiscal policy information to Governor; |
statistical research
planning.
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(a) The Department
shall be responsible for providing the |
Governor with timely,
comprehensive, and meaningful |
information pertinent to the formulation
and execution of |
fiscal policy. In performing this responsibility the
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Department shall have the power and duty to do the following:
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(1) Control the procurement, retention, installation,
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maintenance,
and operation, as specified by the Director, |
of electronic data
processing equipment used by State |
agencies in such a manner as to
achieve maximum economy and |
provide adequate assistance in the
development of |
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information suitable for management analysis.
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(2) Establish principles and standards of statistical
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reporting by
State agencies and priorities for completion |
of research by those
agencies in accordance with the |
requirements for management analysis as
specified by the |
Director.
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(3) Establish, through the Director, charges for
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statistical services
requested by State agencies and |
rendered by the Department.
The State agencies so charged |
shall reimburse the Department
by vouchers drawn against |
their respective appropriations for electronic
data |
processing. The Department is likewise empowered through |
the Director
to establish prices or charges for all |
statistical reports purchased by
agencies and individuals |
not connected with State government.
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(4) Instruct all State agencies as the Director may |
require to
report regularly to the Department, in the |
manner the
Director may
prescribe, their usage of |
electronic information devices,
the cost
incurred, the |
information produced, and the procedures followed in
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obtaining the information. All State agencies shall
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request of the
Director any statistical
services requiring |
the use of
electronic devices and shall conform to the |
priorities assigned by the
Director in using those |
electronic devices.
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(5) Examine the accounts and statistical data of any
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organization,
body, or agency receiving appropriations |
from the General
Assembly.
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(6) Install and operate a modern information system |
utilizing
equipment adequate to satisfy the requirements |
for analysis and review
as specified by the Director. |
Expenditures for statistical services
rendered shall be |
reimbursed by the recipients. The reimbursement
shall
be |
determined by the Director as amounts sufficient to
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reimburse the Statistical Services Revolving Fund for |
expenditures
incurred in rendering the services.
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(b) In addition to the other powers and duties listed in |
this Section,
the Department shall analyze the present and |
future aims, needs, and
requirements of statistical research |
and planning in order to provide
for the
formulation of overall |
policy relative to the use of electronic data
processing |
equipment by the State of Illinois. In making this analysis,
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the Department under the Director shall formulate a master plan |
for
statistical research, utilizing electronic equipment most
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advantageously, and advising whether electronic data |
processing
equipment should be leased or purchased by the |
State. The Department under
the Director shall prepare and |
submit interim reports of meaningful
developments and |
proposals for legislation to the Governor on or before
January |
30 each year. The Department under the Director shall engage in |
a
continuing analysis and evaluation of the master plan so |
developed, and
it shall be the responsibility of the Department |
to recommend from time to
time any needed amendments and |
modifications of any master plan enacted
by the General |
Assembly.
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(c) For the purposes of this Section, Section 405-245, and
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paragraph (4) of Section 405-10 only, "State
agencies" means |
all
departments, boards, commissions, and agencies of the State |
of Illinois
subject to the Governor.
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(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
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(20 ILCS 405/405-270) (was 20 ILCS 405/67.18)
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Sec. 405-270. Communications
Telecommunications services. |
To provide for and
co-ordinate communications
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telecommunications services
for State agencies and, when |
requested and when in the best interests of
the State, for |
units of federal or local governments and public and
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not-for-profit institutions of primary, secondary, and higher |
education.
The Department may make use of its satellite uplink |
available to interested
parties not associated with State |
government provided that State government
usage shall have |
first priority. For this purpose the Department shall have
the |
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power and duty to do all of the following:
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(1) Provide for and control the procurement, |
retention,
installation,
and maintenance of communications
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telecommunications equipment or services used by
State |
agencies in the interest of efficiency and economy.
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(2) Establish standards by January 1, 1989 for |
communications
services for State agencies which shall |
include a minimum of one
telecommunication device for the |
deaf installed and
operational within each State agency, to |
provide public access to agency
information for those |
persons who are hearing or speech impaired. The
Department |
shall consult the Department of Human
Services to develop |
standards and implementation for this
equipment.
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(3) Establish charges (i) for communication services |
for
State
agencies
and, when requested, for units of |
federal or local government and
public
and not-for-profit |
institutions of primary, secondary, or higher
education
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and (ii) for use of the Department's satellite uplink by |
parties not
associated
with State government. Entities |
charged for these services shall
reimburse
the Department |
by vouchers drawn against
their respective appropriations |
for telecommunications services .
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(4) Instruct all State agencies to report their usage |
of
communication
telecommunication services regularly to |
the Department in the
manner
the Director may prescribe.
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(5) Analyze the present and future aims and needs of |
all State
agencies in the area of communications
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telecommunications services and plan to serve
those aims |
and needs in the most effective and efficient
manner.
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(6) Provide services, including, but not limited to, |
telecommunications, video recording, satellite uplink, |
public information, and other communications services.
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(7)
(6) Establish the administrative organization
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within the Department
that is required to accomplish the |
purpose of this Section.
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The Department is authorized to
conduct a study for the |
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purpose of determining technical, engineering, and
management |
specifications for the networking, compatible connection, or
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shared use of existing and future public and private owned |
television
broadcast and reception facilities, including but |
not limited to
terrestrial microwave, fiber optic, and |
satellite, for broadcast and
reception of educational, |
governmental, and business programs, and to
implement those |
specifications.
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However, the Department may not control or interfere with |
the input
of content into the telecommunications systems by the |
several State
agencies or units of federal or local government, |
or public or
not-for-profit institutions of primary, |
secondary, and higher education, or
users of the Department's |
satellite uplink.
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As used in this Section, the term "State agencies" means |
all
departments, officers, commissions, boards, institutions, |
and bodies
politic and corporate of the State except the |
General Assembly,
legislative service agencies, and all |
officers of the General Assembly.
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(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
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(20 ILCS 405/405-293)
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Sec. 405-293. Professional Services. |
(a) The Department of Central Management Services (the |
"Department") is responsible for providing professional |
services for or on behalf of State agencies for all functions |
transferred to the Department by Executive Order No. 2003-10 |
(as modified by Section 5.5 of the Executive Reorganization |
Implementation Act) and may, with the approval of the Governor, |
provide additional services to or on behalf of State agencies. |
To the extent not compensated by direct fund transfers, the |
Department shall be reimbursed from each State agency receiving |
the benefit of these services. The reimbursement shall be |
determined by the Director of Central Management Services as |
the amount required to reimburse the Professional Services Fund |
for the Department's costs of rendering the professional |
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services on behalf of that State agency. |
(a-5) The Department of Central Management Services may |
provide professional services and other services as authorized |
by subsection (a) for or on behalf of other State entities with |
the approval of both the Director of Central Management |
Services and the appropriate official or governing body of the |
other State entity.
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(b) For the purposes of this Section, "State agency" means |
each State agency, department, board, and commission directly |
responsible to the Governor. "Professional services" means |
legal services, internal audit services, and other services as |
approved by the Governor. "Other State entity" means the |
Illinois State Board of Education and the Illinois State Toll |
Highway Authority.
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(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
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(20 ILCS 405/405-315) (was 20 ILCS 405/67.24)
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Sec. 405-315. Management of State buildings; security |
force; fees.
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(a) To manage, operate, maintain, and preserve from waste
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the State buildings, facilities, structures, grounds, or other |
real property transferred to the Department under Section |
405-415, including, without limitation, the State buildings
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listed below. The Department may rent portions of these
and |
other State buildings when in the judgment of the Director |
those leases
or subleases will be in the best interests of the |
State. The leases or
subleases shall not
exceed
5 years unless |
a greater term is specifically authorized.
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a. Peoria Regional Office Building
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5415 North University
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Peoria, Illinois 61614
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b. Springfield Regional Office Building
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4500 South 6th Street
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Springfield, Illinois 62703
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c. Champaign Regional Office Building
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2125 South 1st Street
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Champaign, Illinois 61820
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d. Illinois State Armory Building
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124 East Adams
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Springfield, Illinois 62706
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e. Marion Regional Office Building
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2209 West Main Street
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Marion, Illinois 62959
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f. Kenneth Hall Regional State Office
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Building
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#10 Collinsville Avenue
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East St. Louis, Illinois 62201
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g. Rockford Regional Office Building
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4402 North Main Street
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P.O. Box 915
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Rockford, Illinois 61105
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h. State of Illinois Building
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160 North LaSalle
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Chicago, Illinois 60601
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i. Office and Laboratory Building
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2121 West Taylor Street
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Chicago, Illinois 60602
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j. Central Computer Facility
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201 West Adams
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Springfield, Illinois 62706
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k. Elgin Office Building
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595 South State Street
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Elgin, Illinois 60120
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l. James R. Thompson Center
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Bounded by Lake, Clark, Randolph and
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LaSalle Streets
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Chicago, Illinois
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m. The following buildings located within the Chicago
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Medical Center District:
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1. Lawndale Day Care Center
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2929 West 19th Street
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2. Edwards Center
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2020 Roosevelt Road
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3. Illinois Center for
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Rehabilitation and Education
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1950 West Roosevelt Road and 1151 South Wood Street
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4. Department of Children and
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Family Services District Office
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1026 South Damen
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5. The William Heally School
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1731 West Taylor
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6. Administrative Office Building
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1100 South Paulina Street
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7. Metro Children and Adolescents Center
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1601 West Taylor Street
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n. E.J. "Zeke" Giorgi Center
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200 Wyman Street
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Rockford, Illinois
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o. Suburban North Facility
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9511 Harrison
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Des Plaines, Illinois
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p. The following buildings located within the Revenue
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Center in Springfield:
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1. State Property Control Warehouse
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11th & Ash
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2. Illinois State Museum Research & Collections
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Center
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1011 East Ash Street
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q. Effingham Regional Office Building
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401 Industrial Drive
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Effingham, Illinois
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r. The Communications Center
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120 West Jefferson
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Springfield, Illinois
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s. Portions or all of the basement and
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ground floor of the
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State of Illinois Building
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160 North LaSalle
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Chicago, Illinois 60601
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may be leased or subleased to persons, firms, partnerships, |
associations,
or individuals
for terms not to exceed 15 years |
when in the judgment of the Director those
leases or subleases |
will be in the best interests of the State.
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Portions or all of the commercial space, which includes the
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sub-basement, storage mezzanine, concourse, and ground
and |
second floors of the
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James R. Thompson Center
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Bounded by Lake, Clark, Randolph and LaSalle Streets
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Chicago, Illinois
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may be leased or subleased to persons, firms, partnerships, |
associations,
or individuals
for terms not to exceed 15 years |
subject to renewals when in the
judgment of the Director those
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leases or subleases will be in the best interests of the State.
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The Director is authorized to rent portions of the above |
described
facilities to persons, firms, partnerships, |
associations, or individuals
for
terms not to exceed 30 days |
when those leases or subleases will not
interfere
with State
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usage of the facility. This authority is meant to supplement |
and shall not
in any way be interpreted to restrict the |
Director's ability to make
portions of the State of Illinois |
Building and the James R. Thompson Center
available for |
long-term commercial leases or subleases.
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Provided however, that all rentals or fees charged to |
persons, firms,
partnerships, associations, or individuals for |
any lease or use of space in
the above described facilities |
made for terms not to exceed 30 days in
length shall be |
deposited in a special fund in the State treasury to be
known |
as the Special Events Revolving Fund.
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Notwithstanding the provisions above, the Department of |
Children and
Family Services and the Department of Human |
Services (as successor to
the Department of Rehabilitation |
Services and the Department of Mental Health
and Developmental |
Disabilities) shall determine
the allocation of space for |
direct recipient care in their respective
facilities. The |
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Department of Central Management Services shall consult
with |
the affected agency in the allocation and lease of surplus |
space in
these facilities. Potential lease arrangements shall |
not endanger the
direct recipient care responsibilities in |
these facilities.
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(b) To appoint, subject to the Personnel Code, persons
to |
be members of a police and security force. Members of the |
security force
shall be peace officers when performing duties |
pursuant to this Section
and as such shall have all of the |
powers possessed by policemen in cities
and sheriffs, including |
the power to make arrests on view or issue citations
for |
violations of State statutes or city or county ordinances, |
except
that in counties of more than 1,000,000 population, any |
powers
created by this subsection shall be exercised only (i) |
when necessary
to protect the property, personnel, or interests |
of the Department or any State agency for whom the Department
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manages, operates, or maintains property or (ii) when |
specifically
requested
by appropriate State or local
law |
enforcement officials, and except that within counties of |
1,000,000
or less
population, these powers shall be exercised |
only when necessary to
protect
the property, personnel, or |
interests of the State of Illinois
and only
while on property |
managed, operated, or maintained by the Department.
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Nothing in this subsection shall be construed so as to make |
it conflict
with any provisions of, or rules promulgated under, |
the Personnel
Code.
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(c) To charge reasonable fees for the lease, rental, use, |
or occupancy of
State
facilities managed,
operated, or |
maintained by the Department.
All
Except as provided in |
subsection (a) regarding amounts to be deposited into the |
Special Events Revolving Fund, all moneys
collected under this |
Section
subsection shall be deposited in a revolving
fund in |
the State treasury known as the Facilities Management Revolving
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Fund.
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(d) Provisions of this Section relating to the James R. |
Thompson Center
are subject to the provisions of Section 7.4 of |
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the State Property Control
Act.
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(Source: P.A. 92-302, eff. 8-9-01; 93-19, eff. 6-20-03; 93-839, |
eff. 7-30-04.)
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ARTICLE 13 |
Section 13-5. The Department of Professional Regulation |
Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by |
changing Section 2105-300 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 2105/2105-300) (was 20 ILCS 2105/61e)
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Sec. 2105-300. Professions Indirect Cost Fund; |
allocations;
analyses.
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(a) Appropriations for the direct and allocable indirect |
costs of licensing
and regulating each regulated profession, |
trade, or occupation , or industry are intended to
be payable |
from the fees and fines that are assessed and collected from |
that
profession, trade, or occupation, or industry, to the |
extent that those fees and fines are
sufficient. In any fiscal |
year in which the fees and fines generated by a
specific |
profession, trade, or occupation , or industry are insufficient |
to finance the
necessary direct and allocable indirect costs of |
licensing and regulating that
profession, trade, or
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occupation, or industry, the remainder of those costs shall be
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financed from appropriations payable from revenue sources |
other than fees and
fines. The direct and allocable indirect |
costs of the Department identified in
its cost allocation plans |
that are not attributable to the licensing and
regulation of a |
specific profession, trade, or occupation , or industry or group |
of
professions, trades, or occupations , or industries shall be |
financed from appropriations from
revenue sources other than |
fees and fines.
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(b) The Professions Indirect Cost Fund is hereby created as |
a special fund
in the State Treasury. The Fund may receive |
transfers of moneys authorized by
the Department from the cash |
balances in special
funds that receive revenues from the fees |
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and fines associated with the
licensing of regulated |
professions, trades, and occupations , and industries by the |
Department.
Moneys in the Fund shall be invested and earnings |
on the investments shall
be retained in the Fund.
Subject to |
appropriation, the Department shall use moneys in the Fund to |
pay
the ordinary and necessary allocable indirect expenses |
associated with each of
the regulated professions, trades, and
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occupations , and industries .
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(c) Before the beginning of each fiscal year, the |
Department shall prepare
a cost allocation analysis to be used |
in establishing the necessary
appropriation levels for each |
cost purpose and revenue source. At the
conclusion of each |
fiscal year, the Department shall prepare a cost allocation
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analysis reflecting the extent of the variation between how the |
costs were
actually financed in that year and the planned cost |
allocation for that year.
Variations between the planned and |
actual cost allocations for the prior fiscal
year shall be |
adjusted into the Department's planned cost allocation for the
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next fiscal year.
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Each cost allocation analysis shall separately identify |
the direct and
allocable indirect costs of each regulated |
profession, trade, or occupation , or industry and
the costs of |
the Department's general public health and safety purposes.
The |
analyses shall determine whether the direct and allocable |
indirect
costs of each regulated profession, trade, or
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occupation , or industry and the costs of the
Department's |
general public health and safety purposes are sufficiently
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financed from their respective funding sources. The Department |
shall prepare
the cost allocation analyses in consultation with |
the respective regulated
professions, trades, and occupations , |
and industries and shall make copies of the analyses
available |
to them in a timely fashion.
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(d) The Department may direct the State Comptroller and |
Treasurer to
transfer moneys from the special funds that |
receive fees and fines associated
with regulated professions, |
trades, and occupations , and industries into the Professions
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Indirect Cost Fund in accordance with the Department's cost |
allocation analysis
plan for the applicable fiscal year. For a |
given fiscal year, the Department
shall not direct the transfer |
of moneys under this subsection from a special
fund associated |
with a specific regulated profession, trade, or occupation , or |
industry (or
group of professions, trades, or occupations , or |
industries ) in an amount exceeding the
allocable indirect costs |
associated with that profession, trade, or occupation , or |
industry
(or group of professions, trades, or occupations , or |
industries ) as provided in the cost
allocation analysis for |
that fiscal year and adjusted for allocation variations
from |
the prior fiscal year. No direct costs identified in the cost |
allocation
plan shall be used as a basis for transfers into the |
Professions Indirect Cost
Fund or for expenditures from the |
Fund.
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(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
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Section 13-10. The State Finance Act is amended by changing |
Sections 6z-26 and 8f as follows:
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(30 ILCS 105/6z-26)
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Sec. 6z-26. The Financial Institution Fund. All moneys |
received by the
Department of Financial and Professional |
Regulation
Institutions under the Safety Deposit License Act, |
the
Foreign Exchange License Act, the Pawners Societies Act, |
the Sale of Exchange
Act, the Currency Exchange Act, the Sales |
Finance Agency Act, the Debt Management Service Act, the |
Consumer Installment Loan Act, the Illinois Development Credit
|
Corporation Act, the Title Insurance Act, and any other Act |
administered by the Department of Financial and Professional |
Regulation as the successor of the
Department of Financial |
Institutions now or in the future (unless an Act
specifically |
provides otherwise) shall be deposited in the Financial
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Institution Fund (hereinafter "Fund"), a special fund that is |
hereby created in
the State Treasury.
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Moneys in the Fund shall be used by the Department, subject |
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to appropriation,
for expenses incurred in administering the |
above named and referenced Acts.
|
The Comptroller and the State Treasurer shall transfer from |
the General
Revenue Fund to the Fund any monies received by the |
Department after June 30,
1993, under any of the above named |
and referenced Acts that have been deposited
in the General |
Revenue Fund.
|
As soon as possible after the end of each calendar year, |
the Comptroller
shall compare the balance in the Fund at the |
end of the calendar year with the
amount appropriated from the |
Fund for the fiscal year beginning on July 1 of
that calendar |
year. If the balance in the Fund exceeds the amount
|
appropriated, the Comptroller and the State Treasurer shall |
transfer from the
Fund to the General Revenue Fund an amount |
equal to the difference between the
balance in the Fund and the |
amount appropriated.
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Nothing in this Section shall be construed to prohibit |
appropriations from
the General Revenue Fund for expenses |
incurred in the administration of the
above named and |
referenced Acts.
|
Moneys in the Fund may be transferred to the Professions |
Indirect Cost Fund, as authorized under Section 2105-300 of the |
Department of Professional Regulation Law of the Civil |
Administrative Code of Illinois.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-545, eff. 1-1-98.)
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(30 ILCS 105/8f)
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Sec. 8f. Public Pension Regulation Fund. The Public Pension |
Regulation
Fund is created in the State Treasury. Except as |
otherwise provided in the
Illinois Pension Code, all money |
received by the Department of Financial and Professional |
Regulation, as successor to the Illinois Department of
|
Insurance , under the Illinois Pension Code shall be paid into |
the Fund. Moneys in the Fund may be transferred to the |
Professions Indirect Cost Fund, as authorized under Section |
2105-300 of the Department of Professional Regulation Law of |
|
the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois. The
State Treasurer |
promptly shall invest the money in the Fund, and all earnings
|
that accrue on the money in the Fund shall be credited to the |
Fund. No money
may be transferred from this Fund to any other |
fund. The General Assembly may
make appropriations from this |
Fund for the ordinary and contingent expenses of
the Public |
Pension Division of the Illinois Department of Insurance.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-507, eff. 8-22-97.)
|
Section 13-15. The Illinois Banking Act is amended by |
changing Section 48 as follows:
|
(205 ILCS 5/48) (from Ch. 17, par. 359)
|
Sec. 48. Commissioner's powers; duties. The Commissioner |
shall have the
powers and authority, and is charged with the |
duties and responsibilities
designated in this Act, and a State |
bank shall not be subject to any
other visitorial power other |
than as authorized by this Act, except those
vested in the |
courts, or upon prior consultation with the Commissioner, a
|
foreign bank regulator with an appropriate supervisory |
interest in the parent
or affiliate of a state bank. In the |
performance of the Commissioner's
duties:
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(1) The Commissioner shall call for statements from all |
State banks
as provided in Section 47 at least one time during |
each calendar quarter.
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(2) (a) The Commissioner, as often as the Commissioner |
shall deem
necessary or
proper, and no less frequently than 18 |
months following the preceding
examination, shall appoint a |
suitable person or
persons to make an examination of the |
affairs of every State bank,
except that for every eligible |
State bank, as defined by regulation, the
Commissioner in lieu |
of the examination may accept on an alternating basis the
|
examination made by the eligible State bank's appropriate |
federal banking
agency pursuant to Section 111 of the Federal |
Deposit Insurance Corporation
Improvement Act of 1991, |
provided the appropriate federal banking agency has
made such |
|
an examination. A person so appointed shall not be a |
stockholder or
officer or employee of
any bank which that |
person may be directed to examine, and shall have
powers to |
make a thorough examination into all the affairs of the bank |
and
in so doing to examine any of the officers or agents or |
employees thereof
on oath and shall make a full and detailed |
report of the condition of the
bank to the Commissioner. In |
making the examination the examiners shall
include an |
examination of the affairs of all the affiliates of the bank, |
as
defined in subsection (b) of Section 35.2 of this Act, or |
subsidiaries of the
bank as shall be
necessary to disclose |
fully the conditions of the subsidiaries or
affiliates, the |
relations
between the bank and the subsidiaries or affiliates |
and the effect of those
relations upon
the affairs of the bank, |
and in connection therewith shall have power to
examine any of |
the officers, directors, agents, or employees of the
|
subsidiaries or affiliates
on oath. After May 31, 1997, the |
Commissioner may enter into cooperative
agreements
with state |
regulatory authorities of other states to provide for |
examination of
State bank branches in those states, and the |
Commissioner may accept reports
of examinations of State bank |
branches from those state regulatory authorities.
These |
cooperative agreements may set forth the manner in which the |
other state
regulatory authorities may be compensated for |
examinations prepared for and
submitted to the Commissioner.
|
(b) After May 31, 1997, the Commissioner is authorized to |
examine, as often
as the Commissioner shall deem necessary or |
proper, branches of out-of-state
banks. The Commissioner may |
establish and may assess fees to be paid to the
Commissioner |
for examinations under this subsection (b). The fees shall be
|
borne by the out-of-state bank, unless the fees are borne by |
the state
regulatory authority that chartered the out-of-state |
bank, as determined by a
cooperative agreement between the |
Commissioner and the state regulatory
authority that chartered |
the out-of-state bank.
|
(2.5) Whenever any State bank, any subsidiary or affiliate |
|
of a State
bank, or after May 31, 1997, any branch of an |
out-of-state bank causes to
be performed, by contract or |
otherwise, any bank services
for itself, whether on or off its |
premises:
|
(a) that performance shall be subject to examination by |
the Commissioner
to the same extent as if services were |
being performed by the bank or, after
May 31, 1997, branch |
of the out-of-state bank itself
on its own premises; and
|
(b) the bank or, after May 31, 1997, branch of the |
out-of-state bank
shall notify the Commissioner of the |
existence of a service
relationship. The notification |
shall be submitted with the first statement
of condition |
(as required by Section 47 of this Act) due after the |
making
of the service contract or the performance of the |
service, whichever occurs
first. The Commissioner shall be |
notified of each subsequent contract in
the same manner.
|
For purposes of this subsection (2.5), the term "bank |
services" means
services such as sorting and posting of checks |
and deposits, computation
and posting of interest and other |
credits and charges, preparation and
mailing of checks, |
statements, notices, and similar items, or any other
clerical, |
bookkeeping, accounting, statistical, or similar functions
|
performed for a State bank, including but not limited to |
electronic data
processing related to those bank services.
|
(3) The expense of administering this Act, including the |
expense of
the examinations of State banks as provided in this |
Act, shall to the extent
of the amounts resulting from the fees |
provided for in paragraphs (a),
(a-2), and (b) of this |
subsection (3) be assessed against and borne by the
State |
banks:
|
(a) Each bank shall pay to the Commissioner a Call |
Report Fee which
shall be paid in quarterly installments |
equal
to one-fourth of the sum of the annual fixed fee of |
$800, plus a variable
fee based on the assets shown on the |
quarterly statement of condition
delivered to the |
Commissioner in accordance with Section 47 for the
|
|
preceding quarter according to the following schedule: 16¢ |
per $1,000 of
the first $5,000,000 of total assets, 15¢ per |
$1,000 of the next
$20,000,000 of total assets, 13¢ per |
$1,000 of the next $75,000,000 of
total assets, 9¢ per |
$1,000 of the next $400,000,000 of total assets, 7¢
per |
$1,000 of the next $500,000,000 of total assets, and 5¢ per |
$1,000 of
all assets in excess of $1,000,000,000, of the |
State bank. The Call Report
Fee shall be calculated by the |
Commissioner and billed to the banks for
remittance at the |
time of the quarterly statements of condition
provided for |
in Section 47. The Commissioner may require payment of the |
fees
provided in this Section by an electronic transfer of |
funds or an automatic
debit of an account of each of the |
State banks. In case more than one
examination of any
bank |
is deemed by the Commissioner to be necessary in any |
examination
frequency cycle specified in subsection 2(a) |
of this Section,
and is performed at his direction, the |
Commissioner may
assess a reasonable additional fee to |
recover the cost of the additional
examination; provided, |
however, that an examination conducted at the request
of |
the State Treasurer pursuant to the Uniform Disposition of |
Unclaimed
Property Act shall not be deemed to be an |
additional examination under this
Section.
In lieu
of the |
method and amounts set forth in this paragraph (a) for the |
calculation
of the Call Report Fee, the Commissioner may |
specify by
rule that the Call Report Fees provided by this |
Section may be assessed
semiannually or some other period |
and may provide in the rule the formula to
be
used for |
calculating and assessing the periodic Call Report Fees to |
be paid by
State
banks.
|
(a-1) If in the opinion of the Commissioner an |
emergency exists or
appears likely, the Commissioner may |
assign an examiner or examiners to
monitor the affairs of a |
State bank with whatever frequency he deems
appropriate, |
including but not limited to a daily basis. The reasonable
|
and necessary expenses of the Commissioner during the |
|
period of the monitoring
shall be borne by the subject |
bank. The Commissioner shall furnish the
State bank a |
statement of time and expenses if requested to do so within |
30
days of the conclusion of the monitoring period.
|
(a-2) On and after January 1, 1990, the reasonable and |
necessary
expenses of the Commissioner during examination |
of the performance of
electronic data processing services |
under subsection (2.5) shall be
borne by the banks for |
which the services are provided. An amount, based
upon a |
fee structure prescribed by the Commissioner, shall be paid |
by the
banks or, after May 31, 1997, branches of |
out-of-state banks receiving the
electronic data |
processing services along with the
Call Report Fee assessed |
under paragraph (a) of this
subsection (3).
|
(a-3) After May 31, 1997, the reasonable and necessary |
expenses of the
Commissioner during examination of the |
performance of electronic data
processing services under |
subsection (2.5) at or on behalf of branches of
|
out-of-state banks shall be borne by the out-of-state |
banks, unless those
expenses are borne by the state |
regulatory authorities that chartered the
out-of-state |
banks, as determined by cooperative agreements between the
|
Commissioner and the state regulatory authorities that |
chartered the
out-of-state banks.
|
(b) "Fiscal year" for purposes of this Section 48 is |
defined as a
period beginning July 1 of any year and ending |
June 30 of the next year.
The Commissioner shall receive |
for each fiscal year, commencing with the
fiscal year |
ending June 30, 1987, a contingent fee equal to the lesser |
of
the aggregate of the fees paid by all State banks under |
paragraph (a) of
subsection (3) for that year, or the |
amount, if any, whereby the aggregate
of the administration |
expenses, as defined in paragraph (c), for that
fiscal year |
exceeds the sum of the aggregate of the fees payable by all
|
State banks for that year under paragraph (a) of subsection |
(3),
plus any amounts transferred into the Bank and Trust |
|
Company Fund from the
State Pensions Fund for that year,
|
plus all
other amounts collected by the Commissioner for |
that year under any
other provision of this Act, plus the |
aggregate of all fees
collected for that year by the |
Commissioner under the Corporate Fiduciary
Act, excluding |
the receivership fees provided for in Section 5-10 of the
|
Corporate Fiduciary Act, and the Foreign Banking Office |
Act.
The aggregate amount of the contingent
fee thus |
arrived at for any fiscal year shall be apportioned |
amongst,
assessed upon, and paid by the State banks and |
foreign banking corporations,
respectively, in the same |
proportion
that the fee of each under paragraph (a) of |
subsection (3), respectively,
for that year bears to the |
aggregate for that year of the fees collected
under |
paragraph (a) of subsection (3). The aggregate amount of |
the
contingent fee, and the portion thereof to be assessed |
upon each State
bank and foreign banking corporation,
|
respectively, shall be determined by the Commissioner and |
shall be paid by
each, respectively, within 120 days of the |
close of the period for which
the contingent fee is |
computed and is payable, and the Commissioner shall
give 20 |
days advance notice of the amount of the contingent fee |
payable by
the State bank and of the date fixed by the |
Commissioner for payment of
the fee.
|
(c) The "administration expenses" for any fiscal year |
shall mean the
ordinary and contingent expenses for that |
year incident to making the
examinations provided for by, |
and for otherwise administering, this Act,
the Corporate |
Fiduciary Act, excluding the expenses paid from the
|
Corporate Fiduciary Receivership account in the Bank and |
Trust Company
Fund, the Foreign Banking Office Act,
the |
Electronic Fund Transfer Act,
and the Illinois Bank |
Examiners'
Education Foundation Act, including all |
salaries and other
compensation paid for personal services |
rendered for the State by
officers or employees of the |
State, including the Commissioner and the
Deputy |
|
Commissioners, all expenditures for telephone and |
telegraph
charges, postage and postal charges, office |
stationery, supplies and
services, and office furniture |
and equipment, including typewriters and
copying and |
duplicating machines and filing equipment, surety bond
|
premiums, and travel expenses of those officers and |
employees, employees,
expenditures or charges for the |
acquisition, enlargement or improvement
of, or for the use |
of, any office space, building, or structure, or
|
expenditures for the maintenance thereof or for furnishing |
heat, light,
or power with respect thereto, all to the |
extent that those expenditures
are directly incidental to |
such examinations or administration.
The Commissioner |
shall not be required by paragraphs (c) or (d-1) of this
|
subsection (3) to maintain in any fiscal year's budget |
appropriated reserves
for accrued vacation and accrued |
sick leave that is required to be paid to
employees of the |
Commissioner upon termination of their service with the
|
Commissioner in an amount that is more than is reasonably |
anticipated to be
necessary for any anticipated turnover in |
employees, whether due to normal
attrition or due to |
layoffs, terminations, or resignations.
|
(d) The aggregate of all fees collected by the |
Commissioner under
this Act, the Corporate Fiduciary Act,
|
or the Foreign Banking Office Act on
and after July 1, |
1979, shall be paid promptly after receipt of the same,
|
accompanied by a detailed statement thereof, into the State |
treasury and
shall be set apart in a special fund to be |
known as the "Bank and Trust
Company Fund", except as |
provided in paragraph (c) of subsection (11) of
this |
Section. All earnings received from investments of funds in |
the Bank
and
Trust Company Fund shall be deposited in the |
Bank and Trust Company Fund
and may be used for the same |
purposes as fees deposited in that Fund. The
amount from |
time to time deposited into the Bank and
Trust Company Fund |
shall be used to offset the ordinary administrative
|
|
expenses of the Commissioner of Banks and Real Estate as |
defined in
this Section. Nothing in this amendatory Act of |
1979 shall prevent
continuing the practice of paying |
expenses involving salaries, retirement,
social security, |
and State-paid insurance premiums of State officers by
|
appropriations from the General Revenue Fund. However, the |
General Revenue
Fund shall be reimbursed for those payments |
made on and after July 1, 1979,
by an annual transfer of |
funds from the Bank and Trust Company Fund. Moneys in the |
Bank and Trust Company Fund may be transferred to the |
Professions Indirect Cost Fund, as authorized under |
Section 2105-300 of the Department of Professional |
Regulation Law of the Civil Administrative Code of |
Illinois.
|
(d-1) Adequate funds shall be available in the Bank and |
Trust
Company Fund to permit the timely payment of |
administration expenses. In
each fiscal year the total |
administration expenses shall be deducted from
the total |
fees collected by the Commissioner and the remainder |
transferred
into the Cash Flow Reserve Account, unless the |
balance of the Cash Flow
Reserve Account prior to the |
transfer equals or exceeds
one-fourth of the total initial |
appropriations from the Bank and Trust
Company Fund for the |
subsequent year, in which case the remainder shall be
|
credited to State banks and foreign banking corporations
|
and applied against their fees for the subsequent
year. The |
amount credited to each State bank and foreign banking |
corporation
shall be in the same proportion as the
Call |
Report Fees paid by each for the year bear to the total |
Call Report
Fees collected for the year. If, after a |
transfer to the Cash Flow Reserve
Account is made or if no |
remainder is available for transfer, the balance
of the |
Cash Flow Reserve Account is less than one-fourth of the |
total
initial appropriations for the subsequent year and |
the amount transferred
is less than 5% of the total Call |
Report Fees for the year, additional
amounts needed to make |
|
the transfer equal to 5% of the total Call Report
Fees for |
the year shall be apportioned amongst, assessed upon, and
|
paid by the State banks and foreign banking corporations
in |
the same proportion that the Call Report Fees of each,
|
respectively, for the year bear to the total Call Report |
Fees collected for
the year. The additional amounts |
assessed shall be transferred into the
Cash Flow Reserve |
Account. For purposes of this paragraph (d-1), the
|
calculation of the fees collected by the Commissioner shall |
exclude the
receivership fees provided for in Section 5-10 |
of the Corporate Fiduciary Act.
|
(e) The Commissioner may upon request certify to any |
public record
in his keeping and shall have authority to |
levy a reasonable charge for
issuing certifications of any |
public record in his keeping.
|
(f) In addition to fees authorized elsewhere in this |
Act, the
Commissioner
may, in connection with a review, |
approval, or provision of a service, levy a
reasonable |
charge to recover the cost of the review, approval, or |
service.
|
(4) Nothing contained in this Act shall be construed to |
limit the
obligation relative to examinations and reports of |
any State bank, deposits
in which are to any extent insured by |
the United States or any agency
thereof, nor to limit in any |
way the powers of the Commissioner with
reference to |
examinations and reports of that bank.
|
(5) The nature and condition of the assets in or investment |
of any
bonus, pension, or profit sharing plan for officers or |
employees of every
State bank or, after May 31, 1997, branch of |
an out-of-state bank shall be
deemed to be included in the |
affairs of that State
bank or branch of an out-of-state bank |
subject to examination by the
Commissioner under the
provisions |
of subsection (2) of this Section, and if the Commissioner
|
shall find from an examination that the condition of or |
operation
of the investments or assets of the plan is unlawful, |
fraudulent, or
unsafe, or that any trustee has abused his |
|
trust, the Commissioner
shall, if the situation so found by the |
Commissioner shall not be
corrected to his satisfaction within |
60 days after the Commissioner has
given notice to the board of |
directors of the State bank or out-of-state
bank of his
|
findings, report the facts to the Attorney General who shall |
thereupon
institute proceedings against the State bank or |
out-of-state bank, the
board of directors
thereof, or the |
trustees under such plan as the nature of the case may require.
|
(6) The Commissioner shall have the power:
|
(a) To promulgate reasonable rules for the purpose of
|
administering the provisions of this Act.
|
(a-5) To impose conditions on any approval issued by |
the Commissioner
if he determines that the conditions are |
necessary or appropriate. These
conditions shall be |
imposed in writing and shall continue
in effect for the |
period prescribed by the Commissioner.
|
(b) To issue orders
against any person, if the |
Commissioner has
reasonable cause to believe that an unsafe |
or unsound banking practice
has occurred, is occurring, or |
is about to occur, if any person has violated,
is |
violating, or is about to violate any law, rule, or written
|
agreement with the Commissioner, or
for the purpose of |
administering the provisions of
this Act and any rule |
promulgated in accordance with this Act.
|
(b-1) To enter into agreements with a bank establishing |
a program to
correct the condition of the bank or its |
practices.
|
(c) To appoint hearing officers to execute any of the |
powers granted to
the Commissioner under this Section for |
the purpose of administering this
Act and any rule |
promulgated in accordance with this Act
and otherwise to |
authorize, in writing, an officer or employee of the Office
|
of
Banks and Real Estate to exercise his powers under this |
Act.
|
(d) To subpoena witnesses, to compel their attendance, |
to administer
an oath, to examine any person under oath, |
|
and to require the production of
any relevant books, |
papers, accounts, and documents in the course of and
|
pursuant to any investigation being conducted, or any |
action being taken,
by the Commissioner in respect of any |
matter relating to the duties imposed
upon, or the powers |
vested in, the Commissioner under the provisions of
this |
Act or any rule promulgated in accordance with this Act.
|
(e) To conduct hearings.
|
(7) Whenever, in the opinion of the Commissioner, any |
director,
officer, employee, or agent of a State bank
or any |
subsidiary or bank holding company of the bank
or, after May |
31, 1997, of any
branch of an out-of-state bank
or any |
subsidiary or bank holding company of the bank
shall have |
violated any law,
rule, or order relating to that bank
or any |
subsidiary or bank holding company of the bank, shall have
|
obstructed or impeded any examination or investigation by the |
Commissioner, shall have engaged in an unsafe or
unsound |
practice in conducting the business of that bank
or any |
subsidiary or bank holding company of the bank,
or shall have
|
violated any law or engaged or participated in any unsafe or |
unsound practice
in connection with any financial institution |
or other business entity such that
the character and fitness of |
the director, officer, employee, or agent does not
assure |
reasonable promise of safe and sound operation of the State |
bank, the
Commissioner
may issue an order of removal.
If, in |
the opinion of the Commissioner, any former director, officer,
|
employee,
or agent of a State bank
or any subsidiary or bank |
holding company of the bank, prior to the
termination of his or |
her service with
that bank
or any subsidiary or bank holding |
company of the bank, violated any law,
rule, or order relating |
to that
State bank
or any subsidiary or bank holding company of |
the bank, obstructed or impeded
any examination or |
investigation by the Commissioner, engaged in an unsafe or |
unsound practice in conducting the
business of that bank
or any |
subsidiary or bank holding company of the bank,
or violated any |
law or engaged or participated in any
unsafe or unsound |
|
practice in connection with any financial institution or
other |
business entity such that the character and fitness of the |
director,
officer, employee, or agent would not have assured |
reasonable promise of safe
and sound operation of the State |
bank, the Commissioner may issue an order
prohibiting that |
person from
further
service with a bank
or any subsidiary or |
bank holding company of the bank
as a director, officer, |
employee, or agent. An order
issued pursuant to this subsection |
shall be served upon the
director,
officer, employee, or agent. |
A copy of the order shall be sent to each
director of the bank |
affected by registered mail. The person affected by
the action |
may request a hearing before the State Banking Board within 10
|
days after receipt of the order. The hearing shall be held by
|
the Board within 30 days after the request has been received by |
the Board.
The Board shall make a determination approving, |
modifying, or disapproving
the order of the Commissioner as its |
final administrative decision. If a
hearing is held by the |
Board, the Board shall make its determination within
60 days |
from the conclusion of the hearing. Any person affected by a
|
decision of the Board under this subsection (7) of Section 48 |
of this Act
may have the decision reviewed only under and in |
accordance with the
Administrative Review Law and the rules |
adopted pursuant thereto. A copy of
the order shall also be |
served upon the bank of which he is a director,
officer, |
employee, or agent, whereupon he shall cease to be a director,
|
officer, employee, or agent of that bank. The Commissioner may
|
institute a civil action against the director, officer, or |
agent of the
State bank or, after May 31, 1997, of the branch |
of the out-of-state bank
against whom any order provided for by |
this subsection (7) of
this Section 48 has been issued, and |
against the State bank or, after May 31,
1997, out-of-state |
bank, to enforce
compliance with or to enjoin any violation of |
the terms of the order.
Any person who has been the subject of |
an order of removal
or
an order of prohibition issued by the |
Commissioner under
this subsection or Section 5-6 of the |
Corporate Fiduciary Act may not
thereafter serve as director, |
|
officer, employee, or agent of any State bank
or of any branch |
of any out-of-state bank,
or of any corporate fiduciary, as |
defined in Section 1-5.05 of the
Corporate
Fiduciary Act, or of |
any other entity that is subject to licensure or
regulation by |
the Commissioner or the Office of Banks and Real Estate unless
|
the Commissioner has granted prior approval in writing.
|
For purposes of this paragraph (7), "bank holding company" |
has the
meaning prescribed in Section 2 of the Illinois Bank |
Holding Company Act of
1957.
|
(8) The Commissioner may impose civil penalties of up to |
$10,000 against
any person for each violation of any provision |
of this Act, any rule
promulgated in accordance with this Act, |
any order of the Commissioner, or
any other action which in the |
Commissioner's discretion is an unsafe or
unsound banking |
practice.
|
(9) The Commissioner may impose civil penalties of up to |
$100
against any person for the first failure to comply with |
reporting
requirements set forth in the report of examination |
of the bank and up to
$200 for the second and subsequent |
failures to comply with those reporting
requirements.
|
(10) All final administrative decisions of the |
Commissioner hereunder
shall be subject to judicial review |
pursuant to the provisions of the
Administrative Review Law. |
For matters involving administrative review,
venue shall be in |
either Sangamon County or Cook County.
|
(11) The endowment fund for the Illinois Bank Examiners' |
Education
Foundation shall be administered as follows:
|
(a) (Blank).
|
(b) The Foundation is empowered to receive voluntary |
contributions,
gifts, grants, bequests, and donations on |
behalf of the Illinois Bank
Examiners' Education |
Foundation from national banks and other persons for
the |
purpose of funding the endowment of the Illinois Bank |
Examiners'
Education Foundation.
|
(c) The aggregate of all special educational fees |
collected by the
Commissioner and property received by the |
|
Commissioner on behalf of the
Illinois Bank Examiners' |
Education Foundation under this subsection
(11) on or after |
June 30, 1986, shall be either (i) promptly paid after
|
receipt of the same, accompanied by a detailed statement |
thereof, into the
State Treasury and shall be set apart in |
a special fund to be known as "The
Illinois Bank Examiners' |
Education Fund" to be invested by either the
Treasurer of |
the State of Illinois in the Public Treasurers' Investment
|
Pool or in any other investment he is authorized to make or |
by the Illinois
State Board of Investment as the board of |
trustees of the Illinois Bank
Examiners' Education |
Foundation may direct or (ii) deposited into an account
|
maintained in a commercial bank or corporate fiduciary in |
the name of the
Illinois Bank Examiners' Education |
Foundation pursuant to the order and
direction of the Board |
of Trustees of the Illinois Bank Examiners' Education
|
Foundation.
|
(12) (Blank).
|
(Source: P.A. 91-16, eff. 7-1-99; 92-20, eff. 7-1-01; 92-483, |
eff.
8-23-01; 92-651, eff. 7-11-02.)
|
Section 13-20. The Illinois Savings and Loan Act of 1985 is |
amended by changing Section 7-19.1 as follows:
|
(205 ILCS 105/7-19.1) (from Ch. 17, par. 3307-19.1)
|
Sec. 7-19.1. Savings and Residential Finance Regulatory |
Fund.
|
(a) The aggregate of all fees collected by the Commissioner |
under this Act
shall be paid promptly after receipt of the |
same, accompanied by a detailed
statement thereof, into the |
State treasury and shall be set apart in the
Savings and |
Residential Finance Regulatory Fund, a special fund hereby |
created
in the State treasury. The amounts deposited into the |
Fund shall be used for
the ordinary and contingent expenses of |
the Office of Banks and Real
Estate. Nothing in this Act shall |
prevent continuing the practice of paying
expenses involving |
|
salaries, retirement, social security, and State-paid
|
insurance of State officers by appropriation from the General |
Revenue Fund.
|
(b) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b-5), |
moneys
Moneys in the Savings and Residential Finance Regulatory |
Fund may not
be appropriated, assigned, or transferred to |
another State fund. The moneys in
the Fund shall be for the |
sole benefit of the institutions assessed.
|
(b-5) Moneys in the Savings and Residential Finance |
Regulatory Fund may be transferred to the Professions Indirect |
Cost Fund, as authorized under Section 2105-300 of the |
Department of Professional Regulation Law of the Civil |
Administrative Code of Illinois.
|
(c) All
earnings received from investments of funds in the |
Savings and Residential
Finance Regulatory Fund shall be |
deposited into the Savings and Residential
Finance Regulatory |
Fund and may be used for the same purposes as fees
deposited |
into that Fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-700, eff. 7-19-02.)
|
Section 13-25. The Illinois Credit Union Act is amended by |
changing Section 12 as follows: |
(205 ILCS 305/12) (from Ch. 17, par. 4413) |
Sec. 12. Regulatory fees.
|
(1) A credit union regulated by the Department shall pay a |
regulatory
fee to the Department based upon its total assets as |
shown by its Year-end
Call Report at the following rates:
|
|
TOTAL ASSETS | REGULATORY FEE |
|
$25,000 or less ............... | $100 |
|
Over $25,000 and not over
|
|
$100,000 ...................... | $100 plus $4 per |
| $1,000 of assets in excess of |
| $25,000 |
|
Over $100,000 and not over
|
|
$200,000 ...................... | $400 plus $3 per |
|
|
|
$1,000 of assets in excess of |
| $100,000 |
|
Over $200,000 and not over
|
|
$500,000 ...................... | $700 plus $2 per |
| $1,000 of assets in excess of |
| $200,000 |
|
Over $500,000 and not over
|
|
$1,000,000 .................... | $1,300 plus $1.40 |
| per $1,000 of assets in excess |
| of $500,000 |
|
Over $1,000,000 and not
|
|
over $5,000,000 ................ | $2,000 plus $0.50 |
| per $1,000 of assets in |
| excess of $1,000,000 |
|
Over $5,000,000 and not
|
|
over $30,000,000 .............. | $5,080 plus $0.44 |
| per $1,000 assets |
| in excess of $5,000,000 |
|
Over $30,000,000 and not
|
|
over $100,000,000 ............. | $16,192 plus $0.38 |
| per $1,000 of assets in |
| excess of $30,000,000 |
|
Over $100,000,000 and not
|
|
over $500,000,000 ............. | $42,862 plus $0.19 |
| per $1,000 of assets in |
| excess of $100,000,000 |
|
Over $500,000,000 ............. | $140,625 plus $0.075 |
| per $1,000 of assets in |
| excess of $500,000,000 |
|
(2) The Director shall review the regulatory fee schedule |
in subsection
(1) and the projected earnings on those fees on |
an annual
basis
and adjust the fee schedule no more than 5% |
annually
if necessary to defray the estimated administrative |
and operational expenses of
the Department as defined in |
subsection (5). The Director shall provide credit
unions with |
written notice of any adjustment made in the regulatory fee
|
|
schedule.
|
(3) Not later than March 1 of each calendar year, a credit |
union shall
pay to the Department a regulatory fee
for that |
calendar year in accordance with the regulatory fee schedule in
|
subsection (1), on the basis of assets as
of the Year-end Call |
Report of the preceding year. The regulatory fee shall
not be |
less than
$100 or more than $187,500, provided that the
|
regulatory fee cap of $187,500
shall be adjusted to incorporate |
the same percentage increase as the Director
makes in the |
regulatory fee schedule from time to time under subsection (2).
|
No regulatory
fee
shall be collected
from a credit union until |
it
has been in operation for one year.
|
(4) The aggregate of all fees collected by the Department |
under this
Act
shall be paid promptly after they are received,
|
accompanied by a detailed
statement thereof, into the State |
Treasury and shall be set apart in the
Credit Union Fund, a |
special fund hereby created in the State treasury.
The amount |
from time to time deposited in the Credit Union Fund and shall
|
be used to offset the ordinary administrative and operational |
expenses of
the Department under
this Act. All earnings |
received from investments of funds in the Credit
Union Fund |
shall be deposited into the Credit Union Fund and may be used |
for
the same purposes as fees deposited into that Fund.
Moneys |
in the Credit Union Fund may be transferred to the Professions |
Indirect Cost Fund, as authorized under Section 2105-300 of the |
Department of Professional Regulation Law of the Civil |
Administrative Code of Illinois.
|
(5) The administrative and operational expenses for any |
calendar
year shall mean the ordinary
and contingent expenses |
for that year incidental to making the examinations
provided |
for by, and for administering, this Act, including all salaries
|
and other compensation paid for personal services rendered for |
the State by
officers or employees of the State to enforce this |
Act; all expenditures
for telephone and telegraph charges, |
postage and postal charges, office
supplies and services, |
furniture and equipment, office space and
maintenance thereof, |
|
travel expenses and other necessary expenses; all to
the extent |
that such expenditures are directly incidental to such
|
examination or administration.
|
(6) When the aggregate of all fees collected by the |
Department under
this Act
and all earnings thereon for any |
calendar year exceeds 150% of the
total
administrative and |
operational
expenses under this Act for that year, such excess |
shall be credited to
credit unions and applied against their |
regulatory fees for
the subsequent year. The amount credited to |
a credit union shall be in the
same proportion as the fee paid |
by such credit union for the
calendar year in which the excess |
is produced bears to the aggregate of the
fees collected by the |
Department
under this Act for the same year.
|
(7) Examination fees for the year 2000 statutory |
examinations paid
pursuant to the examination fee schedule in |
effect at that time shall be
credited toward the regulatory fee |
to be assessed the credit union in calendar
year 2001.
|
(8) Nothing in this Act shall prohibit the General Assembly |
from
appropriating funds to the Department from the General |
Revenue Fund for the
purpose of administering this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-293, eff. 8-9-01; 93-32, eff. 7-1-03; 93-652, |
eff. 1-8-04.)
|
Section 13-30. The Pawnbroker Regulation Act is amended by |
changing Section 0.05 as follows:
|
(205 ILCS 510/0.05)
|
Sec. 0.05. Administration of Act.
|
(a) This Act shall be administered by the
Commissioner of |
Banks and Real Estate who shall have all of the following
|
powers and duties in administering this Act:
|
(1) To promulgate reasonable rules for the purpose of |
administering the
provisions of this Act.
|
(2) To issue orders for the purpose of administering |
the provisions of
this
Act and any rule promulgated in |
accordance with this Act.
|
|
(3) To appoint hearing officers and to hire employees |
or to contract with
appropriate persons to execute any of |
the powers granted to
the Commissioner under this Section |
for the purpose of administering this
Act and any rule |
promulgated in accordance with this Act.
|
(4) To subpoena witnesses, to compel their attendance, |
to administer an
oath, to examine any person under oath, |
and to require the production of any
relevant books, |
papers, accounts, and documents in the course of and |
pursuant
to any investigation being conducted, or any |
action being taken, by the
Commissioner in respect of any |
matter relating to the duties imposed upon, or
the powers |
vested in, the Commissioner under the provisions of this |
Act or any
rule promulgated in accordance with this Act.
|
(5) To conduct hearings.
|
(6) To impose civil penalties graduated up to $1,000 |
against any person
for each
violation of any provision of |
this Act, any rule promulgated in
accordance
with this Act, |
or any order of the Commissioner
based upon the seriousness |
of the violation.
|
(6.5) To initiate, through the Attorney General, |
injunction proceedings
whenever it appears to the |
Commissioner that any person, whether licensed under
this |
Act or not, is engaged or about to engage in an act or |
practice that
constitutes or will constitute a violation of |
this Act or any rule prescribed
under the authority of this |
Act. The Commissioner may, in his or her
discretion, |
through the Attorney General, apply for an injunction, and |
upon a
proper showing, any circuit court may enter a |
permanent or preliminary
injunction or a temporary |
restraining order without bond to enforce this Act in
|
addition to the penalties and other remedies provided for |
in this Act.
|
(7) To issue a cease and desist order and, for |
violations of
this Act, any order issued by the |
Commissioner pursuant to this Act, any
rule promulgated in |
|
accordance with this Act,
or any other applicable law in |
connection with the operation of a pawnshop,
to suspend a |
license issued under this Act for up to 30 days.
|
(8) To determine
compliance with applicable law and |
rules related to the operation of pawnshops
and to verify |
the accuracy of reports filed with the Commissioner, the
|
Commissioner, not more than one time every 2 years, may, |
but is not required
to, conduct a routine examination of a |
pawnshop, and in
addition, the Commissioner may examine the |
affairs of any pawnshop at any time if the Commissioner
has
|
reasonable cause to believe that unlawful or fraudulent |
activity is occurring,
or has occurred, therein.
|
(9) In response to a complaint, to address any |
inquiries to any pawnshop
in relation to its affairs, and |
it shall be the duty of the pawnshop to
promptly reply in |
writing to such inquiries. The Commissioner may also |
require
reports or information from any pawnshop at any |
time the Commissioner may deem
desirable.
|
(10) To revoke a license issued under this Act if the |
Commissioner
determines that (a) a licensee has been |
convicted of a felony in connection
with the operations of |
a pawnshop; (b) a licensee knowingly, recklessly, or
|
continuously violated this Act, a rule promulgated in
|
accordance with this Act, or any order of the Commissioner; |
(c) a fact or
condition exists that, if it had existed or |
had been known at the time of the
original application, |
would have justified license refusal; or (d) the licensee
|
knowingly submits materially false or misleading documents |
with the intent to
deceive the Commissioner or any other |
party.
|
(11) Following license revocation, to take possession |
and control of a
pawnshop for the purpose of examination, |
reorganization, or liquidation through
receivership and to |
appoint a receiver, which may be the Commissioner, a
|
pawnshop, or
another suitable person.
|
(b) After consultation with local law enforcement |
|
officers, the Attorney
General, and the industry, the |
Commissioner may by rule require that
pawnbrokers
operate video |
camera surveillance systems to record photographic
|
representations of customers and retain the tapes produced for |
up to 30 days.
|
(c) Pursuant to rule, the Commissioner shall issue licenses |
on an annual or
multi-year basis for operating a
pawnshop. Any |
person currently operating or
who has operated a pawnshop in |
this State during the 2 years preceding the
effective date of |
this amendatory Act of 1997 shall be issued a license upon
|
payment of the fee required under this Act. New applicants |
shall meet
standards for a license as established by the |
Commissioner.
Except with the prior written consent of the |
Commissioner, no individual,
either a new applicant or a person |
currently operating a pawnshop, may be
issued a license to |
operate a pawnshop if the individual has been convicted
of a |
felony or of any criminal offense relating to dishonesty or |
breach of
trust in connection with the operations of a |
pawnshop.
The Commissioner shall
establish license fees. The |
fees shall not exceed the amount reasonably
required for |
administration of this Act. It shall be unlawful to operate a
|
pawnshop without a license issued by the Commissioner.
|
(d) In addition to license fees, the Commissioner may, by |
rule, establish
fees in connection with a review, approval, or |
provision of a service, and levy
a reasonable charge to recover |
the cost of the review, approval, or service
(such as a change |
in control, change in location, or renewal of a license).
The |
Commissioner may also levy a reasonable charge to recover the |
cost of an
examination if the Commissioner determines that |
unlawful or fraudulent activity
has occurred. The Commissioner |
may require payment of the fees and charges
provided in this |
Act by certified check, money order, an electronic transfer of
|
funds, or an automatic debit of an account.
|
(e) The Pawnbroker Regulation Fund is established as a |
special
fund in the State treasury. Moneys collected under this |
Act shall be deposited
into the Fund and used for the |
|
administration of this Act.
In the event that General Revenue |
Funds are appropriated to the Office of the
Commissioner of |
Banks and Real Estate for the initial implementation of this
|
Act, the Governor may direct the repayment from the Pawnbroker |
Regulation
Fund to the General Revenue Fund of such advance in |
an amount not to exceed
$30,000. The Governor may direct this |
interfund transfer at such time as he
deems appropriate by |
giving appropriate written notice. Moneys in the Pawnbroker |
Regulation Fund may be transferred to the Professions Indirect |
Cost Fund, as authorized under Section 2105-300 of the |
Department of Professional Regulation Law of the Civil |
Administrative Code of Illinois.
|
(f) The Commissioner may, by rule, require all pawnshops to |
provide for
the expenses that would arise from the |
administration of the receivership of a
pawnshop under this Act |
through the assessment of fees, the requirement to
pledge |
surety bonds, or such other methods as determined by the |
Commissioner.
|
(g) All final administrative decisions of the Commissioner |
under
this Act shall be subject to judicial review pursuant to |
the provisions of the
Administrative Review Law. For matters |
involving administrative review, venue
shall be in
either |
Sangamon County or Cook County.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-215, eff. 8-2-01.)
|
Section 13-35. The Transmitters of Money Act is amended by |
changing Section 93 as follows:
|
(205 ILCS 657/93)
|
Sec. 93. Consumer Protection Fund.
|
(a) A special income-earning fund is hereby
created
in the |
State treasury, known as the TOMA Consumer Protection Fund.
|
(b) All moneys paid into the fund together with all |
accumulated
undistributed income thereon shall be held as a |
special fund in the State
treasury. The fund shall be used |
solely for the purpose of providing
restitution to consumers |
|
who
have suffered monetary loss arising out of a transaction |
regulated by this Act.
|
(c) The fund shall be applied only to restitution when |
restitution has been
ordered by the Director. Restitution shall |
not exceed the amount actually lost
by the consumer.
The
fund |
shall not be used for the payment of any attorney or other |
fees.
|
(d) The fund shall be
subrogated to the amount of the |
restitution, and the Director shall request the
Attorney |
General to engage in all reasonable collection steps to collect
|
restitution from the party responsible for the loss and |
reimburse the fund.
|
(e) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Section, |
the payment of
restitution from the fund shall be a matter of |
grace and not of right, and no
consumer shall have any vested |
rights in the fund as a beneficiary or
otherwise. Before |
seeking restitution from the fund, the consumer or
beneficiary |
seeking payment of restitution shall apply for restitution on a
|
form provided by the Director. The form shall include any |
information the
Director may reasonably require in order to |
determine that restitution is
appropriate.
|
(f) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, |
moneys in the TOMA Consumer Protection Fund may be transferred |
to the Professions Indirect Cost Fund, as authorized under |
Section 2105-300 of the Department of Professional Regulation |
Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-535, eff. 1-1-04.)
|
Section 13-40. The Illinois Insurance Code is amended by |
changing Sections 408.3 and 511.111 as follows:
|
(215 ILCS 5/408.3) (from Ch. 73, par. 1020.3)
|
Sec. 408.3. Insurance Financial Regulation Fund; uses. The |
monies
deposited into the Insurance Financial
Regulation Fund |
shall be used only for (i) payment of the expenses of the
|
Department, including related administrative expenses, |
|
incurred in
analyzing, investigating and examining the |
financial condition or control
of insurance companies and other |
entities licensed or seeking to be
licensed by the Department, |
including the collection, analysis and
distribution of |
information on insurance premiums, other income, costs and
|
expenses, and (ii) to pay internal costs and expenses of the |
Interstate
Insurance Receivership Commission allocated to this |
State and authorized and
admitted companies doing an insurance |
business in this State under Article X of
the Interstate |
Receivership Compact. All distributions and payments from the
|
Insurance Financial Regulation Fund shall be subject to |
appropriation as
otherwise provided by law for
payment of such |
expenses.
|
Sums appropriated under clause (ii) of the preceding |
paragraph shall be
deemed to satisfy, pro tanto, the |
obligations of insurers doing business in
this
State under |
Article X of the Interstate Insurance Receivership Compact.
|
Nothing in this Code shall prohibit the General Assembly |
from
appropriating funds from the General Revenue Fund to the |
Department for the
purpose of administering this Code.
|
No fees collected pursuant to Section 408 of this Code |
shall be used
for the regulation of pension funds or activities |
by the Department in the
performance of its duties under |
Article 22 of the Illinois Pension Code.
|
If at the end of a fiscal year the balance in the Insurance |
Financial
Regulation Fund which remains unexpended or |
unobligated exceeds the amount
of funds that the Director may |
certify is needed for the purposes
enumerated in this Section, |
then the General Assembly may appropriate that
excess amount |
for purposes other than those enumerated in this Section.
|
Moneys in the Insurance Financial Regulation Fund may be |
transferred to the Professions Indirect Cost Fund, as |
authorized under Section 2105-300 of the Department of |
Professional Regulation Law of the Civil Administrative Code of |
Illinois.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-247, eff. 1-1-96; 90-372, eff. 7-1-98.)
|
|
(215 ILCS 5/511.111) (from Ch. 73, par. 1065.58-111)
|
Sec. 511.111. Insurance Producer Administration Fund. All |
fees and fines
paid to and collected by the Director under this |
Article shall be paid promptly
after receipt thereof, together |
with a detailed statement of such fees,
into a special fund in |
the State Treasury to be known as the Insurance Producer
|
Administration Fund. The monies deposited into the Insurance |
Producer
Administration Fund shall be used only for payment of |
the expenses of the
Department and shall be appropriated as |
otherwise provided by law for the
payment of such expenses. |
Moneys in the Insurance Producers Administration Fund may be |
transferred to the Professions Indirect Cost Fund, as |
authorized under Section 2105-300 of the Department of |
Professional Regulation Law of the Civil Administrative Code of |
Illinois.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-887.)
|
Section 13-45. The Auction License Act is amended by |
changing Section 30-15 as follows:
|
(225 ILCS 407/30-15)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2010)
|
Sec. 30-15. Auction Regulation Administration Fund. A |
special fund to be
known as the
Auction Regulation |
Administration Fund is created in the State Treasury. All
fees |
received by the
OBRE under this Act shall be deposited into the |
Auction Regulation
Administration Fund. Subject
to |
appropriation, the moneys deposited into the Auction |
Regulation
Administration Fund shall be
used by the OBRE for |
the administration of this Act. Moneys in the Auction
|
Regulation
Administration Fund may be invested and reinvested |
in the same manner as
authorized for pension
funds in Article |
14 of the Illinois Pension Code. All earnings, interest, and
|
dividends received from
investment of funds in the Auction |
Regulation Administration Fund shall be
deposited into the
|
|
Auction Regulation Administration Fund and shall be used for |
the same purposes
as other moneys
deposited in the Auction |
Regulation Administration Fund.
|
This fund shall be created on July 1, 1999. The State |
Treasurer shall cause
a transfer of
$300,000 to the Auction |
Regulation Administration Fund from the Real Estate
License
|
Administration Fund on August 1, 1999. The State Treasurer |
shall cause a
transfer of $200,000 on
August 1, 2000 and a |
transfer of $100,000 on January 1, 2002 from the Auction
|
Regulation
Administration Fund to the Real Estate License |
Administration Fund, or if there
is a sufficient fund
balance |
in the Auction Regulation Administration Fund to properly |
administer
this Act, the OBRE
may recommend to the State |
Treasurer to cause a transfer from the Auction
Regulation
|
Administration Fund to the Real Estate License Administration |
Fund on a date
and in an amount
which is accelerated, but not |
less than set forth in this Section. In
addition
to the license |
fees
required under this Act, each initial applicant for |
licensure under this Act
shall pay to the OBRE an
additional |
$100 for deposit into the Auction Regulation Administration |
Fund for
a period of 2 years
or until such time the original |
transfer amount to the Auction Regulation
Administration Fund |
from
the Real Estate License Administration Fund is repaid.
|
Moneys in the Auction Regulation Administration Fund may be |
transferred to the Professions Indirect Cost Fund, as |
authorized under Section 2105-300 of the Department of |
Professional Regulation Law of the Civil Administrative Code of |
Illinois. |
Upon completion of any audit of the OBRE as prescribed by |
the Illinois State
Auditing Act,
which includes an audit of the |
Auction Regulation Administration Fund, the OBRE
shall make the
|
audit open to inspection by any interested party.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-603, eff. 8-16-99.)
|
Section 13-50. The Home Inspector License Act is amended by |
changing Section 25-5 as follows:
|
|
(225 ILCS 441/25-5)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2012)
|
Sec. 25-5. Home Inspector Administration Fund; surcharge.
|
(a) The Home Inspector Administration Fund is
created as a |
special fund in the State Treasury. All fees, fines, and
|
penalties received
by OBRE under this Act shall be deposited |
into the Home Inspector
Administration Fund.
All earnings |
attributable to investment of funds in the Home Inspector
|
Administration Fund shall be credited to the Home Inspector |
Administration
Fund.
Subject to appropriation, the moneys in |
the Home Inspector
Administration Fund shall be appropriated to |
OBRE for the expenses incurred by
OBRE and the
Board in the |
administration of this Act.
|
(b) The State Comptroller and State Treasurer shall
|
transfer $150,000 from the Real Estate License Administration |
Fund to the
Home Inspector Administration Fund on July 1, 2002.
|
The State Treasurer shall
transfer $50,000 from the Home |
Inspector Administration Fund to the Real Estate
License |
Administration Fund on July 1, 2003, July 1, 2004, and July 1, |
2005;
except that if there is a sufficient fund balance in the |
Home Inspector
Administration
Fund, the Commissioner may |
recommend the acceleration of any of these
repayment transfers |
to the State Comptroller and State Treasurer,
who may, in their |
discretion, accelerate the transfers in accordance with the
|
Commissioner's recommendation.
|
(c) Until a total of $150,000 has been transferred
to the |
Real Estate
License Administration Fund from the Home Inspector |
Administration Fund under
subsection (b),
each initial |
applicant for a license under this Act shall pay to OBRE a
|
surcharge of $150 in addition to the license fees otherwise |
required under this
Act.
|
(c-5) Moneys in the Home Inspection Administration Fund may |
be transferred to the Professions Indirect Cost Fund, as |
authorized under Section 2105-300 of the Department of |
Professional Regulation Law of the Civil Administrative Code of |
|
Illinois.
|
(d) Upon the completion of
any audit of OBRE, as prescribed |
by the Illinois State Auditing Act, that
includes an audit of |
the Home Inspector Administration Fund, OBRE shall make
the |
audit report open to inspection by any interested person.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-239, eff. 8-3-01.)
|
Section 13-55. The Real Estate License Act of 2000 is |
amended by changing Sections 25-25, 25-30, and 25-37 as |
follows:
|
(225 ILCS 454/25-25)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2010)
|
Sec. 25-25. Real Estate Research and Education Fund. A |
special fund to be known as the Real Estate Research and |
Education Fund is
created and shall be
held in trust in the |
State Treasury. Annually, on September 15th, the State
|
Treasurer shall cause a
transfer of $125,000 to the Real Estate |
Research and Education Fund from the
Real Estate License
|
Administration Fund. The Real Estate Research and Education |
Fund shall be
administered by
OBRE. Money deposited in the Real |
Estate Research and Education Fund may be
used for research and
|
education at state
institutions of higher education or other |
organizations for research and the
advancement of
education in |
the real estate industry.
Of the $125,000 annually transferred |
into the Real Estate Research and
Education Fund, $15,000
shall |
be used to fund a scholarship program for persons of minority |
racial
origin who wish to
pursue a course of study in the field |
of real estate. For the purposes of this
Section, "course of
|
study" means a course or courses that are part of a program of |
courses in the
field of real estate
designed to further an |
individual's knowledge or expertise in the field of real
|
estate. These courses
shall include without limitation courses |
that a salesperson licensed under this
Act must
complete to |
qualify for a real estate broker's license, courses required to
|
obtain the Graduate
Realtors Institute designation, and any |
|
other courses or programs offered by
accredited colleges,
|
universities, or other institutions of higher education in |
Illinois. The
scholarship program shall be
administered by OBRE |
or its designee.
Moneys in the Real Estate Research and |
Education Fund may be invested and
reinvested in the
same |
manner as funds in the Real Estate Recovery Fund and all |
earnings,
interest, and dividends
received from such |
investments shall be deposited in the Real Estate Research
and |
Education Fund
and may be used for the same purposes as moneys |
transferred to the Real Estate
Research and Education Fund. |
Moneys in the Real Estate Research and Education Fund may be |
transferred to the Professions Indirect Cost Fund as authorized |
under Section 2105-300 of the Department of Professional |
Regulation Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-245, eff. 12-31-99.)
|
(225 ILCS 454/25-30)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2010)
|
Sec. 25-30. Real Estate License Administration Fund; |
audit. A special fund to be known as the Real Estate License |
Administration Fund is
created in the State
Treasury. All fees |
received by OBRE under this Act shall be deposited in
the Real |
Estate License Administration Fund. The
moneys
deposited in the |
Real Estate License Administration Fund shall be appropriated
|
to OBRE for
expenses of OBRE and the Board in the |
administration of this Act and for the
administration of any
|
Act administered by OBRE providing revenue to this Fund.
Moneys |
in the Real Estate License Administration Fund may be invested |
and
reinvested in the
same manner as funds in the Real Estate |
Recovery Fund. All earnings received
from such
investment shall |
be deposited in the Real Estate License Administration Fund
and |
may be used for
the same purposes as fees deposited in the Real |
Estate License Administration
Fund.
Moneys in the Real Estate |
License Administration Fund may be transferred to the |
Professions Indirect Cost Fund as authorized under Section |
2105-300 of the Department of Professional Regulation Law of |
|
the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois. Upon the completion |
of any audit of OBRE, as prescribed by the Illinois State
|
Auditing Act, which
includes an audit of the Real Estate |
License Administration Fund, OBRE shall
make the audit open
to |
inspection by any interested person.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-245, eff. 12-31-99.)
|
(225 ILCS 454/25-37)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2010)
|
Sec. 25-37. Real Estate Audit Fund; audit of special |
accounts; audit of
fund.
|
(a) A special fund to be known as the Real Estate Audit |
Fund is created in
the State Treasury. The State Treasurer |
shall cause a transfer of $200,000
from the Real Estate License |
Administration Fund to the Real Estate Audit Fund
on January 1, |
2002. If, at any time, the balance in the Real Estate Audit |
Fund
is less than $25,000, the State Treasurer shall cause a |
transfer of $200,000
from the Real Estate License |
Administration Fund to the Real Estate Audit Fund.
The moneys |
held in the Real Estate Audit Fund shall be used exclusively by
|
OBRE to conduct audits of special accounts of moneys belonging |
to others held
by a broker.
|
(b) Upon receipt of a complaint or evidence by OBRE |
sufficient to cause OBRE
to reasonably believe that funds |
required to be maintained in a special account
by a broker have |
been misappropriated, the broker shall, within 30 days of
|
written notice, submit to an audit of all special accounts. |
Such audit shall
be performed by a licensed certified public |
accountant, shall result in a
written report by the accountant, |
and shall specifically refer to the escrow
and record-keeping |
requirements of this Act and the rules adopted under this
Act. |
If it is found, pursuant to an order issued by the |
Commissioner, that
moneys required to be maintained in a |
special account by a broker were
misappropriated, as further |
defined by rule, the broker shall reimburse OBRE,
in addition |
to any other discipline or civil penalty imposed, for the cost |
|
of
the audit performed pursuant to this Section. OBRE may file |
in circuit court
for a judgment to enforce the collection of |
the reimbursement of the cost of
such audit. Any reimbursement |
collected by OBRE shall be deposited into the
Real Estate Audit |
Fund.
|
(c) Moneys in the Real Estate Audit Fund may be invested |
and reinvested in
the same manner as funds in the Real Estate |
Recovery Fund. All earnings
received from such investment shall |
be deposited in the Real Estate Audit Fund
and may be used for |
the same purpose as other moneys deposited in the Real
Estate |
Audit Fund. Moneys in the Real Estate Audit Fund may be |
transferred to the Professions Indirect Cost Fund as authorized |
under Section 2105-300 of the Department of Professional |
Regulation Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois.
|
Upon completion of any audit of OBRE, prescribed by the
|
Illinois State Auditing Act, which includes an audit of the |
Real Estate Audit
Fund, OBRE shall make the audit open to |
inspection by any interested person.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-217, eff. 8-2-01.)
|
Section 13-60. The Real Estate Appraiser Licensing Act of |
2002 is amended by changing Section 25-5 as follows:
|
(225 ILCS 458/25-5)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2012)
|
Sec. 25-5. Appraisal Administration Fund; surcharge. The |
Appraisal
Administration Fund is created as a special fund in |
the State Treasury. All
fees, fines, and penalties received by |
OBRE
under this Act shall be deposited into the Appraisal |
Administration Fund.
All earnings attributable to investment |
of funds in the Appraisal
Administration Fund shall be credited |
to the Appraisal Administration
Fund. Subject to |
appropriation, the
moneys in the Appraisal Administration Fund |
shall be paid
to OBRE for the expenses incurred by
OBRE and the |
Board in the administration of this Act. Moneys in the |
Appraisal Administration Fund may be transferred to the |
|
Professions Indirect Cost Fund as authorized under Section |
2105-300 of the Department of Professional Regulation Law of |
the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois.
|
Upon the completion of any audit of OBRE, as prescribed by |
the Illinois State
Auditing Act, which shall include an audit |
of the Appraisal Administration
Fund, OBRE
shall make the audit |
report open to inspection by any interested person.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-180, eff. 7-1-02.)
|
ARTICLE 15 |
Section 15-5. The Department of Transportation Law of the
|
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by changing |
Section 2705-200 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 2705/2705-200) (was 20 ILCS 2705/49.16)
|
Sec. 2705-200. Master plan; reporting requirements.
|
(a) The Department has the power to develop and maintain a |
continuing,
comprehensive, and integrated planning process |
that shall develop and
periodically revise a statewide master |
plan for transportation to guide program
development and to |
foster efficient and economical transportation services in
|
ground, air, water, and
all other modes of transportation |
throughout the State. The Department
shall coordinate its |
transportation planning activities with those of other
State |
agencies and authorities and shall supervise and review any
|
transportation planning performed by other Executive agencies |
under the
direction of the Governor. The Department shall |
cooperate and participate
with federal, regional, interstate, |
State, and local agencies, in accordance
with Sections 5-301 |
and 7-301 of the Illinois Highway Code, and with
interested |
private individuals and organizations in the coordination of
|
plans and policies for development of the state's |
transportation system.
|
To meet the provisions of this Section, the Department |
shall publish and
deliver to the Governor and General Assembly |
|
by January 1, 1982 and every 2
years thereafter, its master |
plan for highway, waterway, aeronautic, mass
transportation, |
and railroad systems. The plan shall identify priority
|
subsystems or components of each system that are critical to |
the economic and
general welfare of this State regardless of |
public jurisdictional
responsibility or private ownership.
|
The master plan shall provide particular emphasis and |
detail of at least the 5-year
5 year
period in the immediate |
future.
|
Annual and 5-year, or longer,
5 year project programs for |
each State system in this Section
shall be published and |
furnished the General Assembly on the first Wednesday
in April |
of each year.
|
Identified needs included in the project programs shall be |
listed and
mapped in a distinctive fashion to clearly identify |
the priority status
of the projects: (1) projects to be |
committed for execution; (2) tentative
projects that are |
dependent upon funding or other constraints; and (3) needed
|
projects that are not programmed due to lack of funding or |
other constraints.
|
All projects shall be related to the priority systems of |
the master plan,
and the priority criteria identified. Cost and |
estimated completion dates
shall be included for work required |
to complete a useable segment or component
beyond the 5 year
|
period of the program.
|
(b) The Department shall publish and deliver to the |
Governor and General
Assembly on the first Wednesday in April |
of each year a 5-year , or longer, Highway
Improvement Program |
reporting
the number of fiscal years each project has been on |
previous 5-year
plans submitted by the Department.
|
(c) The Department shall publish and deliver to the |
Governor and the General
Assembly by November 1 of each year a |
For the Record report that shall include
the following:
|
(1) All the projects accomplished in the previous |
fiscal year
listed by each Illinois Department of |
Transportation District.
|
|
(2) The award cost and the beginning
dates of each |
listed project.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00; 91-357, eff. 7-29-99; 92-16, |
eff.
6-28-01.)
|
ARTICLE 20 |
Section 20-5. The State Finance Act is amended by changing |
Sections 5.595 (as added by Public Act 93-18), 6z-14, 6z-32, |
6z-40, 6z-63, 6z-64, 6z-65, 8.3, 8.33, 8g, and 15a as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.595, from P.A. 93-18)
|
Sec. 5.595. The Illinois
Senior Citizens and Disabled |
Persons Prescription Drug
Discount Program Fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-18, eff. 7-1-03.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/6z-14) (from Ch. 127, par. 142z-14)
|
Sec. 6z-14. The following items of income received by the |
Department of
Natural Resources from patents and
copyrights of |
the Illinois Scientific Surveys shall be deposited into the |
General Revenue Fund
may be retained by the
Department and |
covered in a special fund in the State Treasury to be known
as |
the Patent and Copyright Fund : funds received in connection |
with the
retention, receipt, assignment, license, sale or |
transfer of interests in,
rights to or income from discoveries, |
inventions, patents or copyrightable
works. All interest |
earned on monies in this Fund shall be deposited in the
General |
Revenue Fund. Pursuant to appropriation, all monies in the |
Patent and Copyright
Fund shall be used by the Department may |
use moneys appropriated for that purpose for patenting or |
copyrighting discoveries,
inventions or copyrightable works or |
supporting other programs of the
Illinois Scientific Surveys.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/6z-32)
|
Sec. 6z-32. Conservation 2000.
|
|
(a) The Conservation 2000 Fund and the Conservation 2000 |
Projects Fund are
created as special funds in the State |
Treasury. These funds
shall be used to establish a |
comprehensive program to protect Illinois' natural
resources |
through cooperative partnerships between State government and |
public
and private landowners. Moneys in these Funds may be
|
used, subject to appropriation, by the Environmental |
Protection Agency and the
Departments of Agriculture, Natural |
Resources, and
Transportation for purposes relating to natural |
resource protection,
recreation, tourism, and compatible |
agricultural and economic development
activities. Without |
limiting these general purposes, moneys in these Funds may
be |
used, subject to appropriation, for the following specific |
purposes:
|
(1) To foster sustainable agriculture practices and |
control soil erosion
and sedimentation, including grants |
to Soil and Water Conservation Districts
for conservation |
practice cost-share grants and for personnel, educational, |
and
administrative expenses.
|
(2) To establish and protect a system of ecosystems in |
public and private
ownership through conservation |
easements, incentives to public and private
landowners, |
including technical assistance and grants, and
land |
acquisition provided these mechanisms are all voluntary on |
the part of the
landowner and do not involve the use of |
eminent domain.
|
(3) To develop a systematic and long-term program to |
effectively measure
and monitor natural resources and |
ecological conditions through investments in
technology |
and involvement of scientific experts.
|
(4) To initiate strategies to enhance, use, and |
maintain Illinois' inland
lakes through education, |
technical assistance, research, and financial
incentives.
|
(5) To conduct an extensive review of existing Illinois |
water laws.
|
(b) The State Comptroller and State Treasurer shall |
|
automatically transfer
on the last day of each month, beginning |
on September 30, 1995 and ending on
June 30, 2009,
from the |
General Revenue Fund to the Conservation 2000 Fund,
an
amount |
equal to 1/10 of the amount set forth below in fiscal year 1996 |
and
an amount equal to 1/12 of the amount set forth below in |
each of the other
specified fiscal years:
|
|
Fiscal Year |
Amount |
|
1996 |
$ 3,500,000 |
|
1997 |
$ 9,000,000 |
|
1998 |
$10,000,000 |
|
1999 |
$11,000,000 |
|
2000 |
$12,500,000 |
|
2001 through 2004 |
$14,000,000 |
|
2005
| $7,000,000 |
|
2006
| $11,000,000
|
|
2007
2006 through 2009 ..................
| $14,000,000
|
|
(c) There shall be deposited into the Conservation 2000 |
Projects Fund such
bond proceeds and other moneys as may, from |
time to time, be provided by law.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/6z-40)
|
Sec. 6z-40. Provider Inquiry Trust Fund. The Provider |
Inquiry Trust Fund is created as a special fund in the State
|
treasury. Payments into the fund shall
consist of fees or other |
moneys owed by providers of services or their agents,
including |
other State agencies, for access to and utilization of Illinois
|
Department of Public Aid eligibility files to verify |
eligibility of clients,
bills for services, or other similar, |
related uses. Disbursements from the
fund shall consist of |
payments to the Department of Central Management Services
for |
communication
telecommunication and statistical services and |
for payments for
administrative expenses incurred by the |
Illinois Department of Public Aid in
the operation of the fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-21, eff. 7-1-95.)
|
|
(30 ILCS 105/6z-63)
|
Sec. 6z-63. The Professional Services Fund. |
(a) The Professional Services Fund is created as a |
revolving fund in the State treasury. The following moneys |
shall be deposited into the Fund: |
(1) amounts authorized for transfer to the Fund from |
the General Revenue Fund and other State funds (except for |
funds classified by the Comptroller as federal trust funds |
or State trust funds) pursuant to State law or Executive |
Order; |
(2) federal funds received by the Department of Central |
Management Services (the "Department") as a result of |
expenditures from the Fund; |
(3) interest earned on moneys in the Fund; and |
(4) receipts or inter-fund transfers resulting from |
billings issued by the Department to State agencies for the |
cost of professional services rendered by the Department |
that are not compensated through the specific fund |
transfers authorized by this Section. |
(b) Moneys in the Fund may be used by the Department for |
reimbursement or payment for: |
(1) providing professional services to State agencies |
or other State entities ; |
(2) rendering other services at the Governor's |
direction to State agencies at the Governor's direction or |
to other State entities upon agreement between the Director |
of Central Management Services and the appropriate |
official or governing body of the other State entity ; or |
(3) providing for payment of administrative and other |
expenses incurred by the Department in providing |
professional services. |
(c) State agencies or other State entities may direct the |
Comptroller to process inter-fund
transfers or make payment |
through the voucher and warrant process to the Professional |
Services Fund in satisfaction of billings issued under |
subsection (a) of this Section. |
|
(d) Reconciliation. For the fiscal year beginning on July |
1, 2004 only, the
The Director of Central Management Services |
(the "Director") shall order that each State agency's payments |
and transfers made to the Fund be reconciled with actual Fund |
costs for professional services provided by the Department on |
no less than an annual basis. The Director may require reports |
from State agencies as deemed necessary to perform this |
reconciliation. |
(e) The following amounts are authorized for transfer into |
the
Professional Services Fund for the fiscal year beginning |
July 1, 2004: |
General Revenue Fund ...........................$5,440,431 |
Road Fund ........................................$814,468 |
Motor Fuel Tax Fund ..............................$263,500 |
Child Support Administrative Fund ................$234,013 |
Professions Indirect Cost Fund ...................$276,800 |
Capital Development Board Revolving Fund .........$207,610 |
Bank & Trust Company Fund ........................$200,214 |
State Lottery Fund ...............................$193,691 |
Insurance Producer Administration Fund ...........$174,672 |
Insurance Financial Regulation Fund ..............$168,327 |
Illinois Clean Water Fund ........................$124,675 |
Clean Air Act (CAA) Permit Fund ...................$91,803 |
Statistical Services Revolving Fund ...............$90,959 |
Financial Institution Fund .......................$109,428 |
Horse Racing Fund .................................$71,127 |
Health Insurance Reserve Fund .....................$66,577 |
Solid Waste Management Fund .......................$61,081 |
Guardianship and Advocacy Fund .....................$1,068 |
Agricultural Premium Fund ............................$493 |
Wildlife and Fish Fund ...............................$247 |
Radiation Protection Fund .........................$33,277 |
Nuclear Safety Emergency Preparedness Fund ........$25,652 |
Tourism Promotion Fund ............................$6,814
|
All of these transfers shall be made on July 1, 2004, or as |
soon thereafter as practical. These transfers shall be made |
|
notwithstanding any other provision of State law to the |
contrary.
|
(e-5) Notwithstanding any other provision of State law to |
the contrary, on or after July 1, 2005 and through June 30, |
2006, in addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, at the direction of and upon notification from the |
Director of Central Management Services, the State Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer amounts |
into the Professional Services Fund from the designated funds |
not exceeding the following totals:
|
Food and Drug Safety Fund ..............................$3,249 |
Financial Institution Fund ............................$12,942 |
General Professions Dedicated Fund .....................$8,579 |
Illinois Department of Agriculture |
Laboratory
Services Revolving Fund ...................$1,963 |
Illinois Veterans' Rehabilitation Fund ................$11,275 |
State Boating Act Fund ................................$27,000 |
State Parks Fund ......................................$22,007 |
Agricultural Premium Fund .............................$59,483 |
Fire Prevention Fund ..................................$29,862 |
Mental Health Fund ....................................$78,213 |
Illinois State Pharmacy Disciplinary Fund ..............$2,744 |
Radiation Protection Fund .............................$16,034 |
Solid Waste Management Fund ...........................$37,669 |
Illinois Gaming Law Enforcement Fund ...................$7,260 |
Subtitle D Management Fund .............................$4,659 |
Illinois State Medical Disciplinary Fund ...............$8,602 |
Department of Children and |
Family Services Training Fund .........................$29,906 |
Facility Licensing Fund ................................$1,083 |
Youth Alcoholism and Substance |
Abuse Prevention Fund ..................................$2,783 |
Plugging and Restoration Fund ..........................$1,105 |
State Crime Laboratory Fund ............................$1,353 |
Motor Vehicle Theft Prevention Trust Fund ..............$9,190 |
Weights and Measures Fund ..............................$4,932 |
|
Solid Waste Management Revolving |
Loan Fund ..............................................$2,735 |
Illinois School Asbestos Abatement Fund ................$2,166 |
Violence Prevention Fund ...............................$5,176 |
Capital Development Board Revolving Fund ..............$14,777 |
DCFS Children's Services Fund ......................$1,256,594 |
State Police DUI Fund ..................................$1,434 |
Illinois Health Facilities Planning Fund ...............$3,191 |
Emergency Public Health Fund ...........................$7,996 |
Fair and Exposition Fund ...............................$3,732 |
Nursing Dedicated and Professional Fund ................$5,792 |
Optometric Licensing and Disciplinary Board Fund .......$1,032 |
Underground Resources Conservation Enforcement Fund ....$1,221 |
State Rail Freight Loan Repayment Fund .................$6,434 |
Drunk and Drugged Driving Prevention Fund ..............$5,473 |
Illinois Affordable Housing Trust Fund ...............$118,222 |
Community Water Supply Laboratory Fund ................$10,021 |
Used Tire Management Fund .............................$17,524 |
Natural Areas Acquisition Fund ........................$15,501 |
Open Space Lands Acquisition |
and Development Fund ..................................$49,105 |
Working Capital Revolving Fund .......................$126,344 |
State Garage Revolving Fund ...........................$92,513 |
Statistical Services Revolving Fund ..................$181,949 |
Paper and Printing Revolving Fund ......................$3,632 |
Air Transportation Revolving Fund ......................$1,969 |
Communications Revolving Fund ........................$304,278 |
Environmental Laboratory Certification Fund ............$1,357 |
Public Health Laboratory Services Revolving Fund .......$5,892 |
Provider Inquiry Trust Fund ............................$1,742 |
Lead Poisoning Screening, |
Prevention, and Abatement Fund .........................$8,200 |
Drug Treatment Fund ...................................$14,028 |
Feed Control Fund ......................................$2,472 |
Plumbing Licensure and Program Fund ....................$3,521 |
Insurance Premium Tax Refund Fund ......................$7,872 |
|
Tax Compliance and Administration Fund .................$5,416 |
Appraisal Administration Fund ..........................$2,924 |
Trauma Center Fund ....................................$40,139 |
Alternate Fuels Fund ...................................$1,467 |
Illinois State Fair Fund ..............................$13,844 |
State Asset Forfeiture Fund ............................$8,210 |
Federal Asset Forfeiture Fund ..........................$6,471 |
Department of Corrections Reimbursement |
and Education Fund ....................................$78,965 |
Health Facility Plan Review Fund .......................$3,444 |
LEADS Maintenance Fund .................................$6,075 |
State Offender DNA Identification |
System Fund ............................................$1,712 |
Illinois Historic Sites Fund ...........................$4,511 |
Public Pension Regulation Fund .........................$2,313 |
Workforce, Technology, and Economic |
Development Fund .......................................$5,357 |
Renewable Energy Resources Trust Fund .................$29,920 |
Energy Efficiency Trust Fund ...........................$8,368 |
Pesticide Control Fund .................................$6,687 |
Conservation 2000 Fund ................................$30,764 |
Wireless Carrier Reimbursement Fund ...................$91,024 |
International Tourism Fund ............................$13,057 |
Public Transportation Fund ...........................$701,837 |
Horse Racing Fund .....................................$18,589 |
Death Certificate Surcharge Fund .......................$1,901 |
State Police Wireless Service |
Emergency Fund .........................................$1,012 |
Downstate Public Transportation Fund .................$112,085 |
Motor Carrier Safety Inspection Fund ...................$6,543 |
State Police Whistleblower Reward |
and Protection Fund ....................................$1,894 |
Illinois Standardbred Breeders Fund ....................$4,412 |
Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders Fund ....................$6,635 |
Illinois Clean Water Fund .............................$17,579 |
Independent Academic Medical Center Fund ...............$5,611 |
|
Child Support Administrative Fund ....................$432,527 |
Corporate Headquarters Relocation |
Assistance Fund ........................................$4,047 |
Local Initiative Fund .................................$58,762 |
Tourism Promotion Fund ................................$88,072 |
Digital Divide Elimination Fund .......................$11,593 |
Presidential Library and Museum Operating Fund .........$4,624 |
Metro-East Public Transportation Fund .................$47,787 |
Medical Special Purposes Trust Fund ...................$11,779 |
Dram Shop Fund ........................................$11,317 |
Illinois State Dental Disciplinary Fund ................$1,986 |
Hazardous Waste Research Fund ..........................$1,333 |
Real Estate License Administration Fund ...............$10,886 |
Traffic and Criminal Conviction |
Surcharge Fund ........................................$44,798 |
Criminal Justice Information |
Systems Trust Fund .....................................$5,693 |
Design Professionals Administration |
and Investigation Fund .................................$2,036 |
State Surplus Property Revolving Fund ..................$6,829 |
Illinois Forestry Development Fund .....................$7,012 |
State Police Services Fund ............................$47,072 |
Youth Drug Abuse Prevention Fund .......................$1,299 |
Metabolic Screening and Treatment Fund ................$15,947 |
Insurance Producer Administration Fund ................$30,870 |
Coal Technology Development Assistance Fund ...........$43,692 |
Rail Freight Loan Repayment Fund .......................$1,016 |
Low-Level Radioactive Waste |
Facility
Development and Operation Fund ..............$1,989 |
Environmental Protection Permit and Inspection Fund ...$32,125 |
Park and Conservation Fund ............................$41,038 |
Local Tourism Fund ....................................$34,492 |
Illinois Capital Revolving Loan Fund ..................$10,624 |
Illinois Equity Fund ...................................$1,929 |
Large Business Attraction Fund .........................$5,554 |
Illinois Beach Marina Fund .............................$5,053 |
|
International and Promotional Fund .....................$1,466 |
Public Infrastructure Construction |
Loan Revolving Fund ....................................$3,111 |
Insurance Financial Regulation Fund ...................$42,575 |
Total
$4,975,487
|
(e-10) Notwithstanding any other provision of State law to |
the contrary and in addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on the first day of each calendar quarter |
of the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2005, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, the State Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer from each designated fund |
into the Professional Services Fund amounts equal to one-fourth |
of each of the following totals:
|
General Revenue Fund ...............................$4,440,000 |
Road Fund ..........................................$5,324,411 |
Total $9,764,411
|
(f) The term "professional services" means services |
rendered on behalf of State agencies and other State entities
|
pursuant to Section 405-293 of the Department of Central |
Management Services Law of the Civil Administrative Code of |
Illinois.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.) |
(30 ILCS 105/6z-64) |
Sec. 6z-64. The Workers' Compensation Revolving Fund. |
(a) The Workers' Compensation Revolving Fund is created as |
a revolving fund in the State treasury. The following moneys |
shall be deposited into the Fund: |
(1) amounts authorized for transfer to the Fund from |
the General Revenue Fund and other State funds (except for |
funds classified by the Comptroller as federal trust funds |
or State trust funds) pursuant to State law or Executive |
Order; |
(2) federal funds received by the Department of Central |
Management Services (the "Department") as a result of |
expenditures from the Fund; |
|
(3) interest earned on moneys in the Fund; |
(4) receipts or inter-fund transfers resulting from |
billings issued by the Department to State agencies and |
universities for the cost of workers' compensation |
services rendered by the Department that are not |
compensated through the specific fund transfers authorized |
by this Section, if any; |
(5) amounts received from a State agency or university |
for workers' compensation payments for temporary total |
disability, as provided in Section 405-105 of the |
Department of Central Management Services Law of the Civil |
Administrative Code of Illinois; and |
(6) amounts recovered through subrogation in workers' |
compensation and workers' occupational disease cases. |
(b) Moneys in the Fund may be used by the Department for |
reimbursement or payment for: |
(1) providing workers' compensation services to State |
agencies and State universities; or |
(2) providing for payment of administrative and other |
expenses incurred by the Department in providing workers' |
compensation services. |
(c) State agencies may direct the Comptroller to process |
inter-fund
transfers or make payment through the voucher and |
warrant process to the Workers' Compensation Revolving Fund in |
satisfaction of billings issued under subsection (a) of this |
Section. |
(d) Reconciliation. For the fiscal year beginning on July |
1, 2004 only, the
The Director of Central Management Services |
(the "Director") shall order that each State agency's payments |
and transfers made to the Fund be reconciled with actual Fund |
costs for workers' compensation services provided by the |
Department and attributable to the State agency and relevant |
fund on no less than an annual basis. The Director may require |
reports from State agencies as deemed necessary to perform this |
reconciliation. |
(d-5) Notwithstanding any other provision of State law to |
|
the contrary, on or after July 1, 2005 and until June 30, 2006, |
in addition to any other transfers that may be provided for by |
law, at the direction of and upon notification of the Director |
of Central Management Services, the State Comptroller shall |
direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer amounts into the |
Workers' Compensation Revolving Fund from the designated funds |
not exceeding the following totals: |
Mental Health Fund ................................$17,694,000 |
Statistical Services Revolving Fund ................$1,252,600 |
Department of Corrections Reimbursement |
and Education Fund .................................$1,198,600 |
Communications Revolving Fund ........................$535,400 |
Child Support Administrative Fund ....................$441,900 |
Health Insurance Reserve Fund ........................$238,900 |
Fire Prevention Fund .................................$234,100 |
Park and Conservation Fund ...........................$142,000 |
Motor Fuel Tax Fund ..................................$132,800 |
Illinois Workers' Compensation |
Commission Operations Fund ...........................$123,900 |
State Boating Act Fund ...............................$112,300 |
Public Utility Fund ..................................$106,500 |
State Lottery Fund ...................................$101,300 |
Traffic and Criminal Conviction |
Surcharge Fund ........................................$88,500 |
State Surplus Property Revolving Fund .................$82,700 |
Natural Areas Acquisition Fund ........................$65,600 |
Securities Audit and Enforcement Fund .................$65,200 |
Agricultural Premium Fund .............................$63,400 |
Capital Development Fund ..............................$57,500 |
State Gaming Fund .....................................$54,300 |
Underground Storage Tank Fund .........................$53,700 |
Illinois State Medical Disciplinary Fund ..............$53,000 |
Personal Property Tax Replacement Fund ................$53,000 |
General Professions Dedicated Fund ....................$51,900
|
Total $23,003,100
|
(d-10) Notwithstanding any other provision of State law to |
|
the contrary and in addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on the first day of each calendar quarter |
of the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2005, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, the State Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer from each designated fund |
into the Workers' Compensation Revolving Fund amounts equal to |
one-fourth of each of the following totals: |
General Revenue Fund ..............................$34,000,000 |
Road Fund .........................................$25,987,000 |
Total $59,987,000
|
(e) The term "workers' compensation services" means |
services, claims expenses, and related administrative costs |
incurred in performing the duties under
functions consolidated |
within the Department of Central Management Services under
|
Sections 405-105 and
Section 405-411 of the Department of |
Central Management Services Law of the Civil Administrative |
Code of Illinois.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/6z-65)
|
Sec. 6z-65. The Facilities Management Revolving Fund. |
(a) The Facilities Management Revolving Fund is created as |
a revolving fund in the State treasury. The following moneys |
shall be deposited into the Fund: |
(1) amounts authorized for transfer to the Fund from |
the General Revenue Fund and other State funds (except for |
funds classified by the Comptroller as federal trust funds |
or State trust funds) pursuant to State law or Executive |
Order; |
(2) federal funds received by the Department of Central |
Management Services (the "Department") as a result of |
expenditures from the Fund; |
(3) interest earned on moneys in the Fund; |
(4) receipts or inter-fund transfers resulting from |
billings issued by the Department to State agencies for the |
cost of facilities management services rendered by the |
|
Department that are not compensated through the specific |
fund transfers authorized by this Section , if any; and |
(5) fees from the lease, rental, use, or occupancy of |
State facilities managed, operated, or maintained by the |
Department. |
(b) Moneys in the Fund may be used by the Department for |
reimbursement or payment for: |
(1) the acquisition and operation of State facilities, |
including, without limitation, rental or installment |
payments and interest, personal services, utilities, |
maintenance, and remodeling; or |
(2) providing for payment of administrative and other |
expenses incurred by the Department in providing |
facilities management services. |
(c) State agencies may direct the Comptroller to process |
inter-fund
transfers or make payment through the voucher and |
warrant process to the Facilities Management Revolving Fund in |
satisfaction of billings issued under subsection (a) of this |
Section. |
(d) Reconciliation. For the fiscal year beginning July 1, |
2004 only, the
The Director of Central Management Services (the |
"Director") shall order that each State agency's payments and |
transfers made to the Fund be reconciled with actual Fund costs |
for facilities management services provided by the Department |
and attributable to the State agency and relevant fund on no |
less than an annual basis. The Director may require reports |
from State agencies as deemed necessary to perform this |
reconciliation. |
(e) The term "facilities management services" means |
services performed by the Department in providing for the |
acquisition, occupancy, management, and operation of State |
owned and leased buildings, facilities, structures, grounds, |
or the real property under management of the Department.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/8.3) (from Ch. 127, par. 144.3)
|
|
Sec. 8.3. Money in the Road Fund shall, if and when the |
State of
Illinois incurs any bonded indebtedness for the |
construction of
permanent highways, be set aside and used for |
the purpose of paying and
discharging annually the principal |
and interest on that bonded
indebtedness then due and payable, |
and for no other purpose. The
surplus, if any, in the Road Fund |
after the payment of principal and
interest on that bonded |
indebtedness then annually due shall be used as
follows:
|
first -- to pay the cost of administration of Chapters |
2 through 10 of
the Illinois Vehicle Code, except the cost |
of administration of Articles I and
II of Chapter 3 of that |
Code; and
|
secondly -- for expenses of the Department of |
Transportation for
construction, reconstruction, |
improvement, repair, maintenance,
operation, and |
administration of highways in accordance with the
|
provisions of laws relating thereto, or for any purpose |
related or
incident to and connected therewith, including |
the separation of grades
of those highways with railroads |
and with highways and including the
payment of awards made |
by the Illinois Workers' Compensation Commission under the |
terms of
the Workers' Compensation Act or Workers' |
Occupational Diseases Act for
injury or death of an |
employee of the Division of Highways in the
Department of |
Transportation; or for the acquisition of land and the
|
erection of buildings for highway purposes, including the |
acquisition of
highway right-of-way or for investigations |
to determine the reasonably
anticipated future highway |
needs; or for making of surveys, plans,
specifications and |
estimates for and in the construction and maintenance
of |
flight strips and of highways necessary to provide access |
to military
and naval reservations, to defense industries |
and defense-industry
sites, and to the sources of raw |
materials and for replacing existing
highways and highway |
connections shut off from general public use at
military |
and naval reservations and defense-industry sites, or for |
|
the
purchase of right-of-way, except that the State shall |
be reimbursed in
full for any expense incurred in building |
the flight strips; or for the
operating and maintaining of |
highway garages; or for patrolling and
policing the public |
highways and conserving the peace; or for the operating |
expenses of the Department relating to the administration |
of public transportation programs; or for any of
those |
purposes or any other purpose that may be provided by law.
|
Appropriations for any of those purposes are payable from |
the Road
Fund. Appropriations may also be made from the Road |
Fund for the
administrative expenses of any State agency that |
are related to motor
vehicles or arise from the use of motor |
vehicles.
|
Beginning with fiscal year 1980 and thereafter, no Road |
Fund monies
shall be appropriated to the following Departments |
or agencies of State
government for administration, grants, or |
operations; but this
limitation is not a restriction upon |
appropriating for those purposes any
Road Fund monies that are |
eligible for federal reimbursement;
|
1. Department of Public Health;
|
2. Department of Transportation, only with respect to |
subsidies for
one-half fare Student Transportation and |
Reduced Fare for Elderly;
|
3. Department of Central Management
Services, except |
for expenditures
incurred for group insurance premiums of |
appropriate personnel;
|
4. Judicial Systems and Agencies.
|
Beginning with fiscal year 1981 and thereafter, no Road |
Fund monies
shall be appropriated to the following Departments |
or agencies of State
government for administration, grants, or |
operations; but this
limitation is not a restriction upon |
appropriating for those purposes any
Road Fund monies that are |
eligible for federal reimbursement:
|
1. Department of State Police, except for expenditures |
with
respect to the Division of Operations;
|
2. Department of Transportation, only with respect to |
|
Intercity Rail
Subsidies and Rail Freight Services.
|
Beginning with fiscal year 1982 and thereafter, no Road |
Fund monies
shall be appropriated to the following Departments |
or agencies of State
government for administration, grants, or |
operations; but this
limitation is not a restriction upon |
appropriating for those purposes any
Road Fund monies that are |
eligible for federal reimbursement: Department
of Central |
Management Services, except for awards made by
the Illinois |
Workers' Compensation Commission under the terms of the |
Workers' Compensation Act
or Workers' Occupational Diseases |
Act for injury or death of an employee of
the Division of |
Highways in the Department of Transportation.
|
Beginning with fiscal year 1984 and thereafter, no Road |
Fund monies
shall be appropriated to the following Departments |
or agencies of State
government for administration, grants, or |
operations; but this
limitation is not a restriction upon |
appropriating for those purposes any
Road Fund monies that are |
eligible for federal reimbursement:
|
1. Department of State Police, except not more than 40% |
of the
funds appropriated for the Division of Operations;
|
2. State Officers.
|
Beginning with fiscal year 1984 and thereafter, no Road |
Fund monies
shall be appropriated to any Department or agency |
of State government
for administration, grants, or operations |
except as provided hereafter;
but this limitation is not a |
restriction upon appropriating for those
purposes any Road Fund |
monies that are eligible for federal
reimbursement. It shall |
not be lawful to circumvent the above
appropriation limitations |
by governmental reorganization or other
methods. |
Appropriations shall be made from the Road Fund only in
|
accordance with the provisions of this Section.
|
Money in the Road Fund shall, if and when the State of |
Illinois
incurs any bonded indebtedness for the construction of |
permanent
highways, be set aside and used for the purpose of |
paying and
discharging during each fiscal year the principal |
and interest on that
bonded indebtedness as it becomes due and |
|
payable as provided in the
Transportation Bond Act, and for no |
other
purpose. The surplus, if any, in the Road Fund after the |
payment of
principal and interest on that bonded indebtedness |
then annually due
shall be used as follows:
|
first -- to pay the cost of administration of Chapters |
2 through 10
of the Illinois Vehicle Code; and
|
secondly -- no Road Fund monies derived from fees, |
excises, or
license taxes relating to registration, |
operation and use of vehicles on
public highways or to |
fuels used for the propulsion of those vehicles,
shall be |
appropriated or expended other than for costs of |
administering
the laws imposing those fees, excises, and |
license taxes, statutory
refunds and adjustments allowed |
thereunder, administrative costs of the
Department of |
Transportation, including, but not limited to, the |
operating expenses of the Department relating to the |
administration of public transportation programs, payment |
of debts and liabilities incurred
in construction and |
reconstruction of public highways and bridges,
acquisition |
of rights-of-way for and the cost of construction,
|
reconstruction, maintenance, repair, and operation of |
public highways and
bridges under the direction and |
supervision of the State, political
subdivision, or |
municipality collecting those monies, and the costs for
|
patrolling and policing the public highways (by State, |
political
subdivision, or municipality collecting that |
money) for enforcement of
traffic laws. The separation of |
grades of such highways with railroads
and costs associated |
with protection of at-grade highway and railroad
crossing |
shall also be permissible.
|
Appropriations for any of such purposes are payable from |
the Road
Fund or the Grade Crossing Protection Fund as provided |
in Section 8 of
the Motor Fuel Tax Law.
|
Except as provided in this paragraph, beginning with fiscal |
year 1991 and
thereafter, no Road Fund monies
shall be |
appropriated to the Department of State Police for the purposes |
|
of
this Section in excess of its total fiscal year 1990 Road |
Fund
appropriations for those purposes unless otherwise |
provided in Section 5g of
this Act.
For fiscal years 2003,
|
2004, and 2005 , and 2006 only, no Road Fund monies shall
be |
appropriated to the
Department of State Police for the purposes |
of this Section in excess of
$97,310,000.
It shall not be |
lawful to circumvent this limitation on
appropriations by |
governmental reorganization or other methods unless
otherwise |
provided in Section 5g of this Act.
|
In fiscal year 1994, no Road Fund monies shall be |
appropriated
to the
Secretary of State for the purposes of this |
Section in excess of the total
fiscal year 1991 Road Fund |
appropriations to the Secretary of State for
those purposes, |
plus $9,800,000. It
shall not be
lawful to circumvent
this |
limitation on appropriations by governmental reorganization or |
other
method.
|
Beginning with fiscal year 1995 and thereafter, no Road |
Fund
monies
shall be appropriated to the Secretary of State for |
the purposes of this
Section in excess of the total fiscal year |
1994 Road Fund
appropriations to
the Secretary of State for |
those purposes. It shall not be lawful to
circumvent this |
limitation on appropriations by governmental reorganization
or |
other methods.
|
Beginning with fiscal year 2000, total Road Fund |
appropriations to the
Secretary of State for the purposes of |
this Section shall not exceed the
amounts specified for the |
following fiscal years:
|
|
Fiscal Year 2000 |
$80,500,000; |
|
Fiscal Year 2001 |
$80,500,000; |
|
Fiscal Year 2002 |
$80,500,000; |
|
Fiscal Year 2003 |
$130,500,000; |
|
Fiscal Year 2004 |
$130,500,000; |
|
Fiscal Year 2005 |
$130,500,000;
|
|
Fiscal Year 2006
| $130,500,000;
|
|
Fiscal Year 2007
2006 and |
$30,500,000. |
|
each year thereafter |
|
|
It shall not be lawful to circumvent this limitation on |
appropriations by
governmental reorganization or other |
methods.
|
No new program may be initiated in fiscal year 1991 and
|
thereafter that is not consistent with the limitations imposed |
by this
Section for fiscal year 1984 and thereafter, insofar as |
appropriation of
Road Fund monies is concerned.
|
Nothing in this Section prohibits transfers from the Road |
Fund to the
State Construction Account Fund under Section 5e of |
this Act; nor to the
General Revenue Fund, as authorized by |
this amendatory Act of
the 93rd
General Assembly.
|
The additional amounts authorized for expenditure in this |
Section by Public Acts 92-0600 ,
and 93-0025 , and 93-0839 shall |
be repaid to the Road Fund
from the General Revenue Fund in the |
next succeeding fiscal year that the
General Revenue Fund has a |
positive budgetary balance, as determined by
generally |
accepted accounting principles applicable to government.
|
The additional amounts authorized for expenditure by the |
Secretary of State
and
the Department of State Police in this |
Section by this amendatory Act of the
94th General Assembly and |
the 93rd General
Assembly shall be repaid to the Road Fund from |
the General Revenue Fund in the
next
succeeding fiscal year |
that the General Revenue Fund has a positive budgetary
balance,
|
as determined by generally accepted accounting principles |
applicable to
government.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-600, eff. 6-28-02; 93-25, eff. 6-20-03; |
93-721, eff. 1-1-05; 93-839, eff. 7-30-04; revised 10-25-04.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/8.33) (from Ch. 127, par. 144.33)
|
Sec. 8.33. Expenses incident to leasing or use of State |
facilities.
|
(a) All expenses incident to the leasing or use of
the |
State facilities listed in Section 405-315 of the
Department
of |
Central Management Services Law (20 ILCS 405/405-315) for lease |
or use terms not exceeding
30 days in length shall be payable |
from the Special Events Revolving Fund.
|
|
Expenses incident to the lease or use of the State |
facilities listed in
Section 405-315 of the Department of |
Central Management
Services
Law (20 ILCS 405/405-315) shall
|
include expenditures for additional commodities, equipment, |
furniture,
improvements, personal services or other expenses |
required by the
Department of Central Management Services to |
make such facilities available
to the public and State |
employees.
|
(b) The Special Events Revolving Fund shall cease to exist |
on October 1, 2005. Any balance in the Fund as of that date |
shall be transferred to the Facilities Management Revolving |
Fund. Any moneys that otherwise would be paid into the Fund on |
or after that date shall be deposited into the Facilities |
Management Revolving Fund. Any disbursements on or after that |
date that otherwise would be made from the Fund shall be made |
from the Facilities Management Revolving Fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/8g)
|
Sec. 8g. Fund transfers.
|
(a) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, as
soon as may be practical after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of
the 91st General Assembly, the |
State Comptroller shall direct and the State
Treasurer shall |
transfer the sum of $10,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund
|
to the Motor Vehicle License Plate Fund created by Senate Bill |
1028 of the 91st
General Assembly.
|
(b) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, as
soon as may be practical after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of
the 91st General Assembly, the |
State Comptroller shall direct and the State
Treasurer shall |
transfer the sum of $25,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund
|
to the Fund for Illinois' Future created by Senate Bill 1066 of |
the 91st
General Assembly.
|
(c) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law,
on August 30 of each fiscal year's license period, |
|
the Illinois Liquor Control
Commission shall direct and the |
State Comptroller and State Treasurer shall
transfer from the |
General Revenue Fund to the Youth Alcoholism and Substance
|
Abuse Prevention Fund an amount equal to the number of retail |
liquor licenses
issued for that fiscal year multiplied by $50.
|
(d) The payments to programs required under subsection (d) |
of Section 28.1
of the Horse Racing Act of 1975 shall be made, |
pursuant to appropriation, from
the special funds referred to |
in the statutes cited in that subsection, rather
than directly |
from the General Revenue Fund.
|
Beginning January 1, 2000, on the first day of each month, |
or as soon
as may be practical thereafter, the State |
Comptroller shall direct and the
State Treasurer shall transfer |
from the General Revenue Fund to each of the
special funds from |
which payments are to be made under Section 28.1(d) of the
|
Horse Racing Act of 1975 an amount equal to 1/12 of the annual |
amount required
for those payments from that special fund, |
which annual amount shall not exceed
the annual amount for |
those payments from that special fund for the calendar
year |
1998. The special funds to which transfers shall be made under |
this
subsection (d) include, but are not necessarily limited |
to, the Agricultural
Premium Fund; the Metropolitan Exposition |
Auditorium and Office Building Fund;
the Fair and Exposition |
Fund; the Standardbred Breeders Fund; the Thoroughbred
|
Breeders Fund; and the Illinois Veterans' Rehabilitation Fund.
|
(e) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law,
as soon as may be practical after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of
the 91st General Assembly, but |
in no event later than June 30, 2000, the State
Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of
|
$15,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Fund for |
Illinois' Future.
|
(f) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law,
as soon as may be practical after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of
the 91st General Assembly, but |
in no event later than June 30, 2000, the State
Comptroller |
|
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of
|
$70,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Long-Term Care |
Provider
Fund.
|
(f-1) In fiscal year 2002, in addition to any other |
transfers that may
be provided for by law, at the direction of |
and upon notification from the
Governor, the State Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall
transfer amounts not |
exceeding a total of $160,000,000 from the General
Revenue Fund |
to the Long-Term Care Provider Fund.
|
(g) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law,
on July 1, 2001, or as soon thereafter as may be |
practical, the State
Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of
$1,200,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Violence Prevention Fund.
|
(h) In each of fiscal years 2002 through 2004, but not
|
thereafter, in
addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, the State
Comptroller shall direct and the |
State Treasurer shall transfer $5,000,000
from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Tourism Promotion Fund.
|
(i) On or after July 1, 2001 and until May 1, 2002, in |
addition to any
other transfers that may be provided for by |
law, at the direction of and upon
notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the
State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts not exceeding a total of |
$80,000,000
from the General Revenue Fund to the Tobacco |
Settlement Recovery Fund.
Any amounts so transferred shall be |
re-transferred by the State Comptroller
and the State Treasurer |
from the Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund to the
General |
Revenue Fund at the direction of and upon notification from the
|
Governor, but in any event on or before June 30, 2002.
|
(i-1) On or after July 1, 2002 and until May 1, 2003, in |
addition to any
other transfers that may be provided for by |
law, at the direction of and upon
notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the
State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts not exceeding a total of |
$80,000,000
from the General Revenue Fund to the Tobacco |
|
Settlement Recovery Fund.
Any amounts so transferred shall be |
re-transferred by the State Comptroller
and the State Treasurer |
from the Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund to the
General |
Revenue Fund at the direction of and upon notification from the
|
Governor, but in any event on or before June 30, 2003.
|
(j) On or after July 1, 2001 and no later than June 30, |
2002, in addition to
any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, at the direction of and
upon notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the
State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts not to exceed the following |
sums into
the Statistical Services Revolving Fund:
|
|
From the General Revenue Fund ................. |
$8,450,000 |
|
From the Public Utility Fund .................. |
1,700,000 |
|
From the Transportation Regulatory Fund ....... |
2,650,000 |
|
From the Title III Social Security and |
|
|
Employment Fund .............................. |
3,700,000 |
|
From the Professions Indirect Cost Fund ....... |
4,050,000 |
|
From the Underground Storage Tank Fund ........ |
550,000 |
|
From the Agricultural Premium Fund ............ |
750,000 |
|
From the State Pensions Fund .................. |
200,000 |
|
From the Road Fund ............................ |
2,000,000 |
|
From the Health Facilities |
|
|
Planning Fund ................................ |
1,000,000 |
|
From the Savings and Residential Finance |
|
|
Regulatory Fund .............................. |
130,800 |
|
From the Appraisal Administration Fund ........ |
28,600 |
|
From the Pawnbroker Regulation Fund ........... |
3,600 |
|
From the Auction Regulation |
|
|
Administration Fund .......................... |
35,800 |
|
From the Bank and Trust Company Fund .......... |
634,800 |
|
From the Real Estate License |
|
|
Administration Fund .......................... |
313,600 |
|
(k) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law,
as soon as may be practical after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of
the 92nd General Assembly, the |
State Comptroller shall direct and the State
Treasurer shall |
|
transfer the sum of $2,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund
to |
the Teachers Health Insurance Security Fund.
|
(k-1) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by
law, on July 1, 2002, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, the State
Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of
$2,000,000 from |
the General Revenue Fund to the Teachers Health Insurance
|
Security Fund.
|
(k-2) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by
law, on July 1, 2003, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, the State
Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of
$2,000,000 from |
the General Revenue Fund to the Teachers Health Insurance
|
Security Fund.
|
(k-3) On or after July 1, 2002 and no later than June 30, |
2003, in
addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, at the
direction of and upon notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller
shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts not to exceed the
following |
sums into the Statistical Services Revolving Fund:
|
|
Appraisal Administration Fund ................. |
$150,000 |
|
General Revenue Fund .......................... |
10,440,000 |
|
Savings and Residential Finance |
|
|
Regulatory Fund ........................... |
200,000 |
|
State Pensions Fund ........................... |
100,000 |
|
Bank and Trust Company Fund ................... |
100,000 |
|
Professions Indirect Cost Fund ................ |
3,400,000 |
|
Public Utility Fund ........................... |
2,081,200 |
|
Real Estate License Administration Fund ....... |
150,000 |
|
Title III Social Security and |
|
|
Employment Fund ........................... |
1,000,000 |
|
Transportation Regulatory Fund ................ |
3,052,100 |
|
Underground Storage Tank Fund ................. |
50,000 |
|
(l) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on
July 1, 2002, or as soon as may be practical |
thereafter, the State Comptroller
shall direct and the State |
|
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $3,000,000 from
the General |
Revenue Fund to the Presidential Library and Museum Operating
|
Fund.
|
(m) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on
July 1, 2002 and on the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 93rd
General Assembly, or as soon |
thereafter as may be practical, the State Comptroller
shall |
direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of |
$1,200,000 from
the General Revenue Fund to the Violence |
Prevention Fund.
|
(n) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law,
on July 1,
2003, or as soon thereafter as may be |
practical, the State Comptroller shall
direct and the
State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $6,800,000 from the General |
Revenue
Fund to
the DHS Recoveries Trust Fund.
|
(o) On or after July 1, 2003, and no later than June 30, |
2004, in
addition to any
other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, at the direction of and upon
notification
from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer
shall
transfer amounts not to exceed the following |
sums into the Vehicle Inspection
Fund:
|
|
From the Underground Storage Tank Fund ....... |
$35,000,000. |
|
(p) On or after July 1, 2003 and until May 1, 2004, in |
addition to any
other
transfers that may be provided for by |
law, at the direction of and upon
notification from
the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall
transfer
amounts not exceeding a total of |
$80,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to
the
Tobacco |
Settlement Recovery Fund. Any amounts so transferred shall be
|
re-transferred
from the Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund to the |
General Revenue Fund at the
direction of and upon notification |
from the Governor, but in any event on or
before June
30, 2004.
|
(q) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on
July 1,
2003, or as soon as may be practical |
thereafter, the State Comptroller shall
direct and the
State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $5,000,000 from the General |
|
Revenue
Fund to
the Illinois Military Family Relief Fund.
|
(r) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on
July 1,
2003, or as soon as may be practical |
thereafter, the State Comptroller shall
direct and the
State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $1,922,000 from the General |
Revenue
Fund to
the Presidential Library and Museum Operating |
Fund.
|
(s) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on
or after
July 1, 2003, the State Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall
transfer the
sum of |
$4,800,000 from the Statewide Economic Development Fund to the |
General
Revenue Fund.
|
(t) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on
or after
July 1, 2003, the State Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall
transfer the
sum of |
$50,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Budget |
Stabilization
Fund.
|
(u) On or after July 1, 2004 and until May 1, 2005, in |
addition to any other transfers that may be provided for by |
law, at the direction of and upon notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts not exceeding a total of |
$80,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Tobacco |
Settlement Recovery Fund. Any amounts so transferred shall be |
retransferred by the State Comptroller and the State Treasurer |
from the Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund to the General |
Revenue Fund at the direction of and upon notification from the |
Governor, but in any event on or before June 30, 2005.
|
(v) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on July 1, 2004, or as soon thereafter as may be |
practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $1,200,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Violence Prevention Fund. |
(w) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on July 1, 2004, or as soon thereafter as may be |
practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
|
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $6,445,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Presidential Library and Museum Operating |
Fund.
|
(x) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on January 15, 2005, or as soon thereafter as may |
be practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer to the General Revenue Fund the |
following sums: |
From the State Crime Laboratory Fund, $200,000; |
From the State Police Wireless Service Emergency Fund, |
$200,000; |
From the State Offender DNA Identification System |
Fund, $800,000; and |
From the State Police Whistleblower Reward and |
Protection Fund, $500,000.
|
(y) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the |
contrary, in addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law on June 30, 2005, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, the State Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer the remaining balance from |
the designated funds into the General Revenue Fund and any |
future deposits that would otherwise be made into these funds |
must instead be made into the General Revenue Fund:
|
(1) the Keep Illinois Beautiful Fund;
|
(2) the
Metropolitan Fair and Exposition Authority |
Reconstruction Fund; |
(3) the
New Technology Recovery Fund; |
(4) the Illinois Rural Bond Bank Trust Fund; |
(5) the ISBE School Bus Driver Permit Fund; |
(6) the
Solid Waste Management Revolving Loan Fund; |
(7)
the State Postsecondary Review Program Fund; |
(8) the
Tourism Attraction Development Matching Grant |
Fund; |
(9) the
Patent and Copyright Fund; |
(10) the
Credit Enhancement Development Fund; |
(11) the
Community Mental Health and Developmental |
|
Disabilities Services Provider Participation Fee Trust |
Fund; |
(12) the
Nursing Home Grant Assistance Fund; |
(13) the
By-product Material Safety Fund; |
(14) the
Illinois Student Assistance Commission Higher |
EdNet Fund; |
(15) the
DORS State Project Fund; |
(16) the School Technology Revolving Fund; |
(17) the
Energy Assistance Contribution Fund; |
(18) the
Illinois Building Commission Revolving Fund; |
(19) the
Illinois Aquaculture Development Fund; |
(20) the
Homelessness Prevention Fund; |
(21) the
DCFS Refugee Assistance Fund; |
(22) the
Illinois Century Network Special Purposes |
Fund; and |
(23) the
Build Illinois Purposes Fund.
|
(z) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on July 1, 2005, or as soon as may be practical |
thereafter, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $1,200,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Violence Prevention Fund.
|
(aa) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on July 1, 2005, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, the State Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $9,000,000 from |
the General Revenue Fund to the Presidential Library and Museum |
Operating Fund.
|
(bb) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on July 1, 2005, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, the State Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $6,803,600 from |
the General Revenue Fund to the Securities Audit and |
Enforcement Fund.
|
(cc) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on or after July 1, 2005 and until May 1, |
2006, at the direction of and upon notification from the |
|
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts not exceeding a total of |
$80,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Tobacco |
Settlement Recovery Fund. Any amounts so transferred shall be |
re-transferred by the State Comptroller and the State Treasurer |
from the Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund to the General |
Revenue Fund at the direction of and upon notification from the |
Governor, but in any event on or before June 30, 2006.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-11, eff. 6-11-01; 92-505, eff. 12-20-01; |
92-600, eff. 6-28-02; 93-32, eff. 6-20-03; 93-648, eff. 1-8-04; |
93-839, eff. 7-30-04; 93-1067, eff. 1-15-05.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/15a) (from Ch. 127, par. 151a)
|
Sec. 15a. Contractual services. The item "contractual |
services",
when used in an appropriation act, means and |
includes:
|
(a) Expenditures incident to the current conduct and |
operation of an
office, department, board, commission, |
institution or agency for postage
and postal charges, |
surety bond premiums, publications, subscriptions,
office |
conveniences and services, exclusive of commodities as |
herein defined;
|
(b) Expenditures for rental of property or equipment, |
repair or
maintenance of property or equipment including |
related supplies, equipment,
materials, services, |
replacement fixtures and repair parts, utility
services, |
professional or technical services, moving expenses |
incident to a
new State employment, and transportation |
charges exclusive of "travel" as
herein defined;
|
(c) Expenditures for the rental of lodgings in |
Springfield, Illinois and
for the payment of utilities used |
in connection with such lodgings for all
elected State |
officials, who are required by Section 1, Article V of the
|
Constitution of the State of Illinois to reside at the seat |
of government
during their term of office;
|
(d) Expenditures pursuant to multi-year lease, |
|
lease-purchase or
installment purchase contracts for |
duplicating equipment authorized by
Section 5.1 of the |
Illinois Purchasing Act;
|
(e) Expenditures of $5,000 or less per project for |
improvements to
real property which, except for the |
operation of this Section, would be
classified as |
"permanent improvements" as defined in Section 21;
|
(f) Expenditures pursuant to multi-year lease, |
lease-purchase or
installment purchase contracts for land, |
permanent improvements or fixtures.
|
(g) Expenditures for facilities management, |
communication, information technology, and professional |
services provided by the Department of Central Management |
Services pursuant to the Department of Central Management |
Services Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois.
|
The item "contractual services" does not, however, include |
any expenditures
included in "operation of automotive |
equipment" as defined in Section 24.2.
|
The item "contractual services" does not include any |
expenditures for
professional, technical, or other services |
performed for a State agency
under a contract executed after |
July 1, 1992 by a person who was formerly employed by that |
agency
and has received any early retirement incentive under |
Section 14-108.3 or
16-133.3 of the Illinois Pension Code based |
on retirement before 1993,
unless the official or employee |
executing the contract on behalf of the agency
has certified |
that the person performing the services either (i) possesses
|
unique expertise, or (ii) is essential to
the operation of the |
agency. This certification must be filed with the
Office of the |
Auditor General prior to the execution of the contract, and
|
shall be made available by that Office for public inspection |
and copying.
The item "contractual services" does not include |
any expenditures for
professional, technical, or other |
services performed for a State agency
under a contract executed |
after the effective date of this amendatory
Act of the 92nd |
General Assembly by a person who has received any early
|
|
retirement incentive under Section 14-108.3 or 16-133.3 of the |
Illinois
Pension Code based on retirement in 2002 or later.
A |
contract not payable from the contractual services item because |
of this
paragraph shall not be payable from any other item of |
appropriation. For
the purposes of this paragraph, the term |
"agency" includes all offices,
boards, commissions, |
departments, agencies, and institutions of State
government.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99; 92-566, eff. 6-25-02.)
|
ARTICLE 26 |
Section 26-5. The Children and Family Services Act is |
amended by changing Section 22.2 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 505/22.2) (from Ch. 23, par. 5022.2)
|
Sec. 22.2. To provide training programs for the provision |
of foster
care and adoptive care services. Training provided to |
foster parents shall
include training and information on their |
right to be heard, to bring a
mandamus action, and to intervene |
in juvenile court as set forth under
subsection (2) of Section |
1-5 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and the
availability of |
the hotline established under Section 35.6 of this Act, that
|
foster parents may use to report incidents of misconduct or |
violation of rules
by Department employees, service providers, |
or contractors. Monies for such
training programs shall be |
derived from the Department of Children and Family
Services |
Training Fund, hereby created in the State Treasury. Deposits |
to this
fund shall consist of federal financial participation |
in foster care and
adoption care training programs, public and |
unsolicited private grants and
fees for such training, and |
royalties earned from the publication of
materials
owned by or |
licensed to the Department. In addition, with the approval of
|
the Governor,
the
Department may transfer amounts not exceeding |
$2,000,000 in each fiscal year
from the DCFS Children's |
Services Fund to the Department of Children and
Family Services |
Training Fund. Disbursements from the Department of Children
|
|
and Family Services Training Fund shall be made by the |
Department for foster
care and adoptive care training services |
in accordance with federal standards.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-712, eff. 7-1-00; 92-321, eff. 1-1-02.)
|
Section 26-10. The State Finance Act is amended by changing |
Section 8.27 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 105/8.27) (from Ch. 127, par. 144.27)
|
Sec. 8.27. All receipts from federal financial |
participation in the
Foster Care and Adoption Services program |
under Title IV-E of the federal
Social Security Act, including |
receipts
for related indirect costs, but excluding receipts |
from federal financial
participation in such Title IV-E Foster |
Care and Adoption Training program,
shall be deposited in the |
DCFS Children's Services Fund.
|
Eighty percent of the federal funds received by the |
Illinois Department
of Human Services under the Title IV-A |
Emergency Assistance program as
reimbursement for expenditures |
made from the Illinois Department of Children
and Family |
Services appropriations for the costs of services in behalf of
|
Department of Children and Family Services clients shall be |
deposited into
the DCFS Children's Services Fund.
|
All receipts from federal financial participation in the |
Child Welfare
Services program under Title IV-B of the federal |
Social Security Act,
including receipts for related indirect |
costs, shall be deposited into the
DCFS Children's Services |
Fund for those moneys received as reimbursement for
services |
provided on or after July 1, 1994.
|
In addition, as soon as may be practicable after the first |
day of November,
1994, the Department of Children and Family |
Services shall request the
Comptroller to order transferred and |
the Treasurer shall transfer the
unexpended balance of the |
Child Welfare Services Fund to the DCFS Children's
Services |
Fund. Upon completion of the transfer, the Child Welfare |
Services
Fund will be considered dissolved and any outstanding |
|
obligations or
liabilities of that fund will pass to the DCFS |
Children's Services Fund.
|
Monies in the Fund may be used by the Department, pursuant |
to
appropriation by the General Assembly, for the ordinary and |
contingent
expenses of the Department.
|
In fiscal year 1988 and in each fiscal year thereafter |
through fiscal
year 2000, the Comptroller
shall order |
transferred and the Treasurer shall transfer an amount of
|
$16,100,000 from the DCFS Children's Services Fund to the |
General Revenue
Fund in the following manner: As soon as may be |
practicable after the 15th
day of September, December, March |
and June, the Comptroller shall order
transferred and the |
Treasurer shall transfer, to the extent that funds are
|
available, 1/4 of $16,100,000, plus any cumulative |
deficiencies in such
transfers for prior transfer dates during |
such fiscal year. In no event
shall any such transfer reduce |
the available balance in the DCFS Children's
Services Fund |
below $350,000.
|
In accordance with subsection (q) of Section 5 of the |
Children and Family
Services Act, disbursements from |
individual children's accounts shall be
deposited into the DCFS |
Children's Services Fund.
|
Receipts from public and unsolicited private grants, fees |
for training, and royalties earned from the publication of |
materials owned by or licensed to the Department of Children |
and Family Services shall be deposited into the DCFS Children's |
Services Fund. |
As soon as may be practical after September 1, 2005, upon |
the request of the Department of Children and Family Services, |
the Comptroller shall order transferred and the Treasurer shall |
transfer the unexpended balance of the Department of Children |
and Family Services Training Fund into the DCFS Children's |
Services Fund. Upon completion of the transfer, the Department |
of Children and Family Services Training Fund is dissolved and |
any outstanding obligations or liabilities of that Fund pass to |
the DCFS Children's Services Fund.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 91-712, eff. 7-1-00.)
|
ARTICLE 27 |
Section 27-5. The Illinois Income Tax Act is amended by |
changing Section 901 as follows:
|
(35 ILCS 5/901) (from Ch. 120, par. 9-901)
|
Sec. 901. Collection Authority.
|
(a) In general.
|
The Department shall collect the taxes imposed by this Act. |
The Department
shall collect certified past due child support |
amounts under Section 2505-650
of the Department of Revenue Law |
(20 ILCS 2505/2505-650). Except as
provided in subsections (c) |
and (e) of this Section, money collected
pursuant to |
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act shall be
|
paid into the General Revenue Fund in the State treasury; money
|
collected pursuant to subsections (c) and (d) of Section 201 of |
this Act
shall be paid into the Personal Property Tax |
Replacement Fund, a special
fund in the State Treasury; and |
money collected under Section 2505-650 of the
Department of |
Revenue Law (20 ILCS 2505/2505-650) shall be paid
into the
|
Child Support Enforcement Trust Fund, a special fund outside |
the State
Treasury, or
to the State
Disbursement Unit |
established under Section 10-26 of the Illinois Public Aid
|
Code, as directed by the Department of Public
Aid.
|
(b) Local Governmental Distributive Fund.
|
Beginning August 1, 1969, and continuing through June 30, |
1994, the Treasurer
shall transfer each month from the General |
Revenue Fund to a special fund in
the State treasury, to be |
known as the "Local Government Distributive Fund", an
amount |
equal to 1/12 of the net revenue realized from the tax imposed |
by
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act during |
the preceding month.
Beginning July 1, 1994, and continuing |
through June 30, 1995, the Treasurer
shall transfer each month |
from the General Revenue Fund to the Local Government
|
|
Distributive Fund an amount equal to 1/11 of the net revenue |
realized from the
tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of |
Section 201 of this Act during the
preceding month. Beginning |
July 1, 1995, the Treasurer shall transfer each
month from the |
General Revenue Fund to the Local Government Distributive Fund
|
an amount equal to the net of (i) 1/10 of the net revenue |
realized from the
tax imposed by
subsections (a) and (b) of |
Section 201 of the Illinois Income Tax Act during
the preceding |
month
(ii) minus, beginning July 1, 2003 and ending June 30, |
2004, $6,666,666, and
beginning July 1,
2004,
zero. Net revenue |
realized for a month shall be defined as the
revenue from the |
tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this
|
Act which is deposited in the General Revenue Fund, the |
Educational Assistance
Fund and the Income Tax Surcharge Local |
Government Distributive Fund during the
month minus the amount |
paid out of the General Revenue Fund in State warrants
during |
that same month as refunds to taxpayers for overpayment of |
liability
under the tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of |
Section 201 of this Act.
|
(c) Deposits Into Income Tax Refund Fund.
|
(1) Beginning on January 1, 1989 and thereafter, the |
Department shall
deposit a percentage of the amounts |
collected pursuant to subsections (a)
and (b)(1), (2), and |
(3), of Section 201 of this Act into a fund in the State
|
treasury known as the Income Tax Refund Fund. The |
Department shall deposit 6%
of such amounts during the |
period beginning January 1, 1989 and ending on June
30, |
1989. Beginning with State fiscal year 1990 and for each |
fiscal year
thereafter, the percentage deposited into the |
Income Tax Refund Fund during a
fiscal year shall be the |
Annual Percentage. For fiscal years 1999 through
2001, the |
Annual Percentage shall be 7.1%.
For fiscal year 2003, the |
Annual Percentage shall be 8%.
For fiscal year 2004, the |
Annual Percentage shall be 11.7%. Upon the effective date |
of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, the |
Annual Percentage shall be 10% for fiscal year 2005. For |
|
fiscal year 2006, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.75%. For |
all other
fiscal years, the
Annual Percentage shall be |
calculated as a fraction, the numerator of which
shall be |
the amount of refunds approved for payment by the |
Department during
the preceding fiscal year as a result of |
overpayment of tax liability under
subsections (a) and |
(b)(1), (2), and (3) of Section 201 of this Act plus the
|
amount of such refunds remaining approved but unpaid at the |
end of the
preceding fiscal year, minus the amounts |
transferred into the Income Tax
Refund Fund from the |
Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund, and
the denominator of |
which shall be the amounts which will be collected pursuant
|
to subsections (a) and (b)(1), (2), and (3) of Section 201 |
of this Act during
the preceding fiscal year; except that |
in State fiscal year 2002, the Annual
Percentage shall in |
no event exceed 7.6%. The Director of Revenue shall
certify |
the Annual Percentage to the Comptroller on the last |
business day of
the fiscal year immediately preceding the |
fiscal year for which it is to be
effective.
|
(2) Beginning on January 1, 1989 and thereafter, the |
Department shall
deposit a percentage of the amounts |
collected pursuant to subsections (a)
and (b)(6), (7), and |
(8), (c) and (d) of Section 201
of this Act into a fund in |
the State treasury known as the Income Tax
Refund Fund. The |
Department shall deposit 18% of such amounts during the
|
period beginning January 1, 1989 and ending on June 30, |
1989. Beginning
with State fiscal year 1990 and for each |
fiscal year thereafter, the
percentage deposited into the |
Income Tax Refund Fund during a fiscal year
shall be the |
Annual Percentage. For fiscal years 1999, 2000, and 2001, |
the
Annual Percentage shall be 19%.
For fiscal year 2003, |
the Annual Percentage shall be 27%. For fiscal year
2004, |
the Annual Percentage shall be 32%.
Upon the effective date |
of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, the |
Annual Percentage shall be 24% for fiscal year 2005.
For |
fiscal year 2006, the Annual Percentage shall be 20%. For |
|
all other fiscal years, the Annual
Percentage shall be |
calculated
as a fraction, the numerator of which shall be |
the amount of refunds
approved for payment by the |
Department during the preceding fiscal year as
a result of |
overpayment of tax liability under subsections (a) and |
(b)(6),
(7), and (8), (c) and (d) of Section 201 of this |
Act plus the
amount of such refunds remaining approved but |
unpaid at the end of the
preceding fiscal year, and the |
denominator of
which shall be the amounts which will be |
collected pursuant to subsections (a)
and (b)(6), (7), and |
(8), (c) and (d) of Section 201 of this Act during the
|
preceding fiscal year; except that in State fiscal year |
2002, the Annual
Percentage shall in no event exceed 23%. |
The Director of Revenue shall
certify the Annual Percentage |
to the Comptroller on the last business day of
the fiscal |
year immediately preceding the fiscal year for which it is |
to be
effective.
|
(3) The Comptroller shall order transferred and the |
Treasurer shall
transfer from the Tobacco Settlement |
Recovery Fund to the Income Tax Refund
Fund (i) $35,000,000 |
in January, 2001, (ii) $35,000,000 in January, 2002, and
|
(iii) $35,000,000 in January, 2003.
|
(d) Expenditures from Income Tax Refund Fund.
|
(1) Beginning January 1, 1989, money in the Income Tax |
Refund Fund
shall be expended exclusively for the purpose |
of paying refunds resulting
from overpayment of tax |
liability under Section 201 of this Act, for paying
rebates |
under Section 208.1 in the event that the amounts in the |
Homeowners'
Tax Relief Fund are insufficient for that |
purpose,
and for
making transfers pursuant to this |
subsection (d).
|
(2) The Director shall order payment of refunds |
resulting from
overpayment of tax liability under Section |
201 of this Act from the
Income Tax Refund Fund only to the |
extent that amounts collected pursuant
to Section 201 of |
this Act and transfers pursuant to this subsection (d)
and |
|
item (3) of subsection (c) have been deposited and retained |
in the
Fund.
|
(3) As soon as possible after the end of each fiscal |
year, the Director
shall
order transferred and the State |
Treasurer and State Comptroller shall
transfer from the |
Income Tax Refund Fund to the Personal Property Tax
|
Replacement Fund an amount, certified by the Director to |
the Comptroller,
equal to the excess of the amount |
collected pursuant to subsections (c) and
(d) of Section |
201 of this Act deposited into the Income Tax Refund Fund
|
during the fiscal year over the amount of refunds resulting |
from
overpayment of tax liability under subsections (c) and |
(d) of Section 201
of this Act paid from the Income Tax |
Refund Fund during the fiscal year.
|
(4) As soon as possible after the end of each fiscal |
year, the Director shall
order transferred and the State |
Treasurer and State Comptroller shall
transfer from the |
Personal Property Tax Replacement Fund to the Income Tax
|
Refund Fund an amount, certified by the Director to the |
Comptroller, equal
to the excess of the amount of refunds |
resulting from overpayment of tax
liability under |
subsections (c) and (d) of Section 201 of this Act paid
|
from the Income Tax Refund Fund during the fiscal year over |
the amount
collected pursuant to subsections (c) and (d) of |
Section 201 of this Act
deposited into the Income Tax |
Refund Fund during the fiscal year.
|
(4.5) As soon as possible after the end of fiscal year |
1999 and of each
fiscal year
thereafter, the Director shall |
order transferred and the State Treasurer and
State |
Comptroller shall transfer from the Income Tax Refund Fund |
to the General
Revenue Fund any surplus remaining in the |
Income Tax Refund Fund as of the end
of such fiscal year; |
excluding for fiscal years 2000, 2001, and 2002
amounts |
attributable to transfers under item (3) of subsection (c) |
less refunds
resulting from the earned income tax credit.
|
(5) This Act shall constitute an irrevocable and |
|
continuing
appropriation from the Income Tax Refund Fund |
for the purpose of paying
refunds upon the order of the |
Director in accordance with the provisions of
this Section.
|
(e) Deposits into the Education Assistance Fund and the |
Income Tax
Surcharge Local Government Distributive Fund.
|
On July 1, 1991, and thereafter, of the amounts collected |
pursuant to
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act, |
minus deposits into the
Income Tax Refund Fund, the Department |
shall deposit 7.3% into the
Education Assistance Fund in the |
State Treasury. Beginning July 1, 1991,
and continuing through |
January 31, 1993, of the amounts collected pursuant to
|
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of the Illinois Income |
Tax Act, minus
deposits into the Income Tax Refund Fund, the |
Department shall deposit 3.0%
into the Income Tax Surcharge |
Local Government Distributive Fund in the State
Treasury. |
Beginning February 1, 1993 and continuing through June 30, |
1993, of
the amounts collected pursuant to subsections (a) and |
(b) of Section 201 of the
Illinois Income Tax Act, minus |
deposits into the Income Tax Refund Fund, the
Department shall |
deposit 4.4% into the Income Tax Surcharge Local Government
|
Distributive Fund in the State Treasury. Beginning July 1, |
1993, and
continuing through June 30, 1994, of the amounts |
collected under subsections
(a) and (b) of Section 201 of this |
Act, minus deposits into the Income Tax
Refund Fund, the |
Department shall deposit 1.475% into the Income Tax Surcharge
|
Local Government Distributive Fund in the State Treasury.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-11, eff. 6-11-01; 92-16, eff. 6-28-01; 92-600, |
eff. 6-28-02; 93-32, eff. 6-20-03; 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
ARTICLE 30 |
Section 30-5. The School Employee Benefit Act is amended by |
changing Section 20 as follows: |
(105 ILCS 55/20)
|
Sec. 20. Prescription drug benefits; program.
|
|
(a) Beginning July 1, 2005, the Department shall be |
responsible for administering the prescription drug benefit |
program established under this Act for employees, annuitants, |
and dependents on a non-insured basis. |
(b) For each program year, the Department shall set a date |
by which school districts must notify the Department of their |
election to participate in the prescription drug benefit |
program. The Department shall provide notification of the |
election date to school districts at least 45 days prior to the |
election date. |
(c) Any school district may apply to the Director to have |
employees, annuitants, and dependents be provided a |
prescription drug benefit program under this Act. To |
participate, a school district must agree to enroll all of its |
employees. A participating school district is not required to |
enroll a full-time employee who has waived coverage under the |
district's health plan. |
(d) The Director shall determine the insurance rates and |
premiums for those employees, annuitants, and dependents |
participating in the prescription drug benefit program. Rates |
and premiums may be based in part on age and eligibility for |
federal Medicare coverage. |
A school district must remit the entire cost of providing |
prescription drug coverage under this Section. |
(e) All revenues arising from the administration of the |
prescription drug benefit program shall be deposited into the |
Illinois Prescription Drug Discount Program Fund
general |
revenue funds . |
(f) The prescription drug benefit program shall be |
maintained on an ongoing, affordable basis, and the cost to |
school districts shall not exceed the State's actual program |
costs. The prescription drug benefit program may be changed by |
the State and is not intended to be a pension or retirement |
benefit subject to protection under Section 5 of Article XIII |
of the Illinois Constitution.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-1036, eff. 9-14-04.) |
|
ARTICLE 40 |
Section 40-5. The Senior Citizens and Disabled Persons |
Prescription Drug Discount
Program Act is amended by changing |
Sections 30 and 35 as follows:
|
(320 ILCS 55/30)
|
Sec. 30. Manufacturer rebate agreements.
|
(a) Taking into consideration the extent to which the State |
pays for
prescription
drugs under various State programs
and |
the provision of assistance to disabled persons or eligible |
seniors under
patient
assistance programs, prescription drug |
discount programs, or other offers for
free or
reduced price |
medicine, clinical research projects, limited supply |
distribution
programs,
compassionate use programs, or programs |
of research conducted by or for a drug
manufacturer, the |
Department, its agent, or the program
administrator shall |
negotiate and enter into rebate agreements with drug
|
manufacturers, as
defined in this Act, to effect prescription |
drug price discounts.
The Department or program administrator |
may establish a preferred drug list as
a
basis
for determining |
the discounts, administrative fees, or other fees or rebates
|
under this Section.
|
(b) Rebate payment procedures. All rebates negotiated |
under agreements
described in this Section shall be paid in |
accordance with
procedures
prescribed by the Department or the |
program administrator.
|
(c) Receipts from rebates
shall be used
to provide |
discounts for prescription drugs purchased by eligible seniors |
and
disabled persons and to cover the cost of administering the |
program,
including compensation to be paid to participating |
pharmacies by the Department
or program administrator under |
subsection (e) of Section 25. Any receipts to be
allocated to |
the Department shall be deposited into the Illinois
Senior |
Citizens and
Disabled Persons
Prescription Drug Discount |
|
Program Fund, a trust fund created outside the State Treasury |
with the State Treasurer acting as ex officio custodian. |
Disbursements from the Illinois Prescription Drug Discount |
Program Fund shall be made upon the direction of the Director |
of Central Management Services
a special fund hereby created in |
the
State treasury .
|
(Source: P.A. 93-18, eff. 7-1-03.)
|
(320 ILCS 55/35)
|
Sec. 35. Program eligibility.
|
(a) Any person may apply to the Department or its program |
administrator for
participation in the program in the form and |
manner required by the Department.
The
Department or its |
program administrator shall determine the eligibility of each
|
applicant
for the program within 30 days after the date of |
application. To participate in
the program
an eligible senior |
or disabled person whose application has been approved must
pay |
$25
upon enrollment and annually thereafter and shall receive a |
program
identification card.
The card may be presented to an |
authorized pharmacy to assist the pharmacy in
verifying
|
eligibility under the program. The Department shall deposit the |
enrollment fees
collected
into the Illinois
Senior Citizens and |
Disabled Persons Prescription Drug Discount
Program Fund.
The |
moneys collected by the Department for enrollment fees and |
deposited into
the Illinois
Senior
Citizens and Disabled |
Persons Prescription Drug Discount Program Fund must be
|
separately accounted for by the Department. If 2 or more |
persons are eligible
for any
benefit under this Act and are |
members of the same household, each
participating
household |
member shall apply to the Department and pay the fee required |
for the
purpose
of obtaining an identification card.
|
(b) Proceeds from annual enrollment fees shall be
used
by |
the Department to offset the administrative cost of this Act. |
The Department
may
reduce the annual enrollment fee by rule if |
the revenue from the enrollment
fees is in
excess of the costs |
to carry out the program.
|
|
(c) Any person who is eligible for pharmaceutical |
assistance under the
Senior
Citizens and Disabled Persons |
Property Tax Relief and Pharmaceutical Assistance
Act is
|
presumed to be eligible for this program. The enrollment fee |
under this Act is
not required for such persons. That person |
may purchase prescription
drugs
under this program that are not |
covered by the pharmaceutical assistance
program under
the |
Senior Citizens and Disabled Persons Property Tax Relief and |
Pharmaceutical
Assistance Act by using the identification card |
issued under the pharmaceutical
assistance
program.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-18, eff. 7-1-03.)
|
ARTICLE 55 |
Section 55-5. The Aquaculture Development Act is amended by |
changing Section 5.5 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 215/5.5)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2009)
|
Sec. 5.5. Aquaculture Cooperative.
|
(a) The Department of Agriculture shall make grants to an |
Aquaculture
Cooperative from the Illinois Aquaculture |
Development Fund, a special fund
created in the State Treasury. |
On July 1, 1999 and on each July 1 thereafter
through July 1, |
2004
2008 , the Comptroller shall order transferred and the |
Treasurer
shall transfer $1,000,000 from the General Revenue |
Fund into the Illinois
Aquaculture Development Fund. The |
Aquaculture Cooperative shall consist of any
individual or |
entity of the aquaculture industry in this State that seeks
|
membership pursuant to the Agricultural Co-Operative Act. The |
grants for the
Cooperative shall be distributed from the |
Illinois Aquaculture Development Fund
as provided by rule. At |
the beginning of each fiscal period, the Cooperative
shall |
prepare a budget plan for the next fiscal period, including the |
probable
cost of all programs, projects, and contracts. The |
Cooperative shall submit
the proposed budget to the Director |
|
for review and comment. The Director may
recommend programs and |
activities considered appropriate for the Cooperative.
The |
Cooperative shall keep minutes, books, and records that clearly |
reflect all
of the acts and transactions of the Cooperative and |
shall make this information
public. The financial books and |
records of the Cooperative shall be audited by
a certified |
public accountant at least once each fiscal year and at other |
times
as designated by the Director. The expense of the audit |
shall be the
responsibility of the Cooperative. Copies of the |
audit shall be provided to
all members of the Cooperative, to |
the Department, and to other requesting
members of the |
aquaculture industry.
|
(b) The grants to an Aquaculture Cooperative and the |
proceeds generated by
the Cooperative may be used for the |
following purposes:
|
(1) To buy aquatic organisms from members of the |
Cooperative.
|
(2) To buy aquatic organism food in bulk quantities for |
resale to the
members of the Cooperative.
|
(3) For transportation, hauling, and delivery |
equipment.
|
(4) For employee salaries, building leases, and other |
administrative
costs.
|
(5) To purchase equipment for use by the Cooperative |
members.
|
(6) Any other related costs.
|
(c) The Illinois Aquaculture Development Fund is abolished |
on July 1, 2005
August 31, 2004 . Any balance remaining in the |
Fund on that date shall be transferred to the General Revenue |
Fund.
|
(d) This Section is repealed on
June 30, 2009.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
Section 55-10. The Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is |
amended by changing Sections 605-55, 605-75, and 605-323 as |
|
follows:
|
(20 ILCS 605/605-55) (was 20 ILCS 605/46.21)
|
Sec. 605-55. Contracts and other acts to accomplish |
Department's
duties. To make and enter into contracts, |
including but not limited
to making grants and loans to units |
of local government, private
agencies as defined in the |
Illinois State Auditing Act, non-profit
corporations, |
educational institutions, and for-profit businesses as
|
authorized pursuant to appropriations by the General Assembly |
from the
Build Illinois Bond Fund, the Build Illinois Purposes |
Fund, the Fund for
Illinois' Future, the Capital Development |
Fund, and the General Revenue
Fund, and generally to do all |
things that, in its judgment, may be
necessary, proper, and |
expedient in accomplishing its duties.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-34, eff. 7-1-99; 91-239, eff. 1-1-00; 92-16, |
eff.
6-28-01.)
|
(20 ILCS 605/605-75)
|
Sec. 605-75. Keep Illinois Beautiful.
|
(a) There is created the Keep Illinois Beautiful Program
|
Advisory Board consisting of 7 members appointed by the |
Director of Commerce
and Economic Opportunity
Community |
Affairs . Of those 7, 4 shall be appointed from a
list
of at |
least 10 names submitted by the boards of directors from the |
various
certified community programs. Each certified community |
program may submit only
one recommendation to be considered by |
the Director. The
Director of
Commerce and Economic Opportunity
|
Community Affairs
or his or her designee shall be a member and |
serve as Chairman. The
Board shall meet at least annually at
|
the discretion of the Chairman and at such other times as the |
Chairman or any 4
members consider necessary. Four members |
shall constitute a quorum.
|
(b) The purpose of the Board shall be to assist local |
governments and
community organizations in:
|
(1) Educating the public about the need for recycling |
|
and reducing solid
waste.
|
(2) Promoting the establishment of recycling and |
programs that reduce
litter and other solid waste through |
re-use and diversion.
|
(3) Developing local markets for recycled products.
|
(4) Cooperating with other State agencies and with |
local governments
having environmental responsibilities.
|
(5) Seeking funding from governmental and |
non-governmental sources.
|
(6) Beautification projects.
|
(c) The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity
|
Community Affairs shall assist local
governments and
community |
organizations that plan to implement programs set forth in |
subsection
(b). The Department shall establish guidelines for |
the
certification
of local governments and community |
organizations.
|
The Department may encourage local governments
and |
community
organizations to apply for certification of programs |
by the Board. However,
the Department shall give equal |
consideration to
newly certified
programs and older certified |
programs.
|
(d) The Keep Illinois Beautiful Fund is created as a |
special fund in the
State
treasury. Moneys from any public or |
private source may be deposited into the
Keep Illinois |
Beautiful Fund. Moneys in the Keep Illinois Beautiful Fund |
shall
be appropriated only for the purposes of this Section.
|
Pursuant to action
by the Board, the Department of Commerce and |
Economic Opportunity
Community Affairs may authorize grants |
from moneys
appropriated from the Keep Illinois Beautiful Fund
|
for certified community
based programs for up to 50% of the |
cash needs of the program; provided, that
at least 50% of the |
needs of the program shall be contributed to the program in
|
cash, and not in kind, by local sources.
|
Moneys appropriated for certified community based programs |
in municipalities
of more than 1,000,000 population shall be |
itemized separately and may not be
disbursed to any other |
|
community.
|
(e) On the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
91st General
Assembly, the Lieutenant Governor shall transfer |
to the Department of Commerce
and Community Affairs (now |
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity) , and the |
Department shall receive, all assets and
property possessed by |
the Lieutenant Governor under this Section and all
liabilities |
and obligations for which the Lieutenant Governor was |
responsible
under this Section. Nothing in this subsection |
affects the validity of
certifications and grants issued under |
this Section before the effective date
of this amendatory Act |
of the 91st General Assembly.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00; 91-853, eff. 7-1-00; 92-490, |
eff.
8-23-01; revised 12-6-03.)
|
(20 ILCS 605/605-323) (was 20 ILCS 605/46.76)
|
Sec. 605-323. Energy assistance
Assistance Contribution |
Fund .
|
(a) The Department may accept gifts, grants, awards, |
matching contributions,
interest income, appropriations, and |
cost sharings from individuals,
businesses, governments, and |
other third-party sources, on terms that the
Director deems |
advisable, to assist eligible households, businesses,
|
industries, educational institutions, hospitals, health care |
facilities, and
not-for-profit entities to obtain and maintain |
reliable and efficient energy
related services, or to improve |
the efficiency of such services.
|
(b) (Blank).
The Energy Assistance Contribution Fund is |
created as a special fund
in the State Treasury, and all moneys |
received under this Section shall be
deposited into that Fund. |
Moneys in the Energy Assistance Contribution Fund
may be |
expended for purposes consistent with the conditions under |
which those
moneys are received, subject to appropriations made |
by the General Assembly for
those purposes.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-34, eff. 7-1-99; 92-16, eff. 6-28-01.)
|
|
Section 55-15. The Illinois Promotion Act is amended by |
changing Section 8a as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 665/8a) (from Ch. 127, par. 200-28a)
|
Sec. 8a. Tourism grants and loans ; fund .
|
(1) The Department is authorized to make grants and loans, |
subject to
appropriations by the General Assembly for this |
purpose from the Tourism
Promotion Fund or the Tourism |
Attraction Development Matching Grant Fund ,
to counties, |
municipalities, local promotion groups, not-for-profit
|
organizations, or
for-profit businesses for the development or |
improvement of tourism
attractions in Illinois. Individual |
grants and loans shall not
exceed
$1,000,000
and shall not |
exceed 50% of the entire amount of the actual expenditures for
|
the development or improvement of a tourist attraction. |
Agreements for
loans made by the Department pursuant to this |
subsection may contain
provisions regarding term, interest |
rate, security as may be required by
the Department and any |
other provisions the Department may require to
protect the |
State's interest.
|
(2) (Blank).
There is hereby created a special fund in the |
State Treasury to be
known as the Tourism Attraction |
Development Matching Grant Fund. The deposit
of monies into |
this fund shall be limited to the repayments of principal and
|
interest from loans made pursuant to subsection (1).
|
(Source: P.A. 91-683, eff. 1-26-00; 92-38, eff. 6-28-01.)
|
Section 55-20. The Technology Advancement and Development |
Act is amended by changing Section 1004 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 700/1004) (from Ch. 127, par. 3701-4)
|
Sec. 1004. Duties and powers. The Department of Commerce |
and
Economic Opportunity
Community Affairs shall establish and |
administer any of the programs
authorized under
this Act |
subject to the availability of funds appropriated by the |
General
Assembly. The Department may
make awards from
general |
|
revenue fund appropriations, federal reimbursement funds, and
|
the
Technology
Cooperation Fund, and the New Technology |
Recovery Fund as provided under the
provisions of this
Act. The |
Department, in addition to those powers granted under the Civil
|
Administrative Code of Illinois, is granted the following |
powers to
help administer the provisions of this Act:
|
(a) To provide financial assistance as direct or |
participation grants,
loans or qualified security investments |
to, or on behalf of, eligible
applicants. Loans, grants and |
investments shall be made for the purpose of
increasing |
research and development, commercializing technology, adopting
|
advanced production and processing techniques, and promoting |
job creation and
retention within Illinois;
|
(b) To enter into agreements, accept funds or grants, and |
engage in
cooperation with agencies of the federal government, |
local units of
government, universities, research foundations |
or institutions, regional
economic development corporations or |
other organizations for the purposes of
this Act;
|
(c) To enter into contracts, agreements,
and
memoranda of |
understanding; and to
provide funds for participation |
agreements or to make any other agreements
or contracts or to |
invest, grant, or loan funds to any participating
intermediary |
organizations including, not-for-profit entities,
for-profit |
entities, State agencies or authorities, government owned and
|
contract operated facilities, institutions of higher |
education, other
public or private development corporations, |
or other
entities necessary or desirable to further the purpose |
of this
Act. Any such
agreement
or contract by an intermediary
|
organization to deliver programs authorized under this Act may |
include terms
and provisions
including, but not limited to
|
organization and development of documentation, review and |
approval of projects,
servicing and disbursement of funds and |
other related activities;
|
(d) To fix, determine, charge and collect any premiums, |
fees, charges,
costs and expenses, including without |
limitation, any application fees,
commitment fees, program |
|
fees, financing charges, or publication fees in
connection with |
the Department's activities under this Act;
|
(e) To establish forms for applications, notifications, |
contracts, or
any other agreements, and to promulgate |
procedures, rules or regulations
deemed necessary and |
appropriate;
|
(f) To establish and regulate the terms and conditions of |
the
Department's agreements and to consent, subject to the |
provisions of any
agreement with another party, to the |
modification or restructuring of any
agreement to which the |
Department is a party;
|
(g) To require that recipients of financial assistance |
shall at all
times keep proper books of record and account in |
accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles |
consistently applied, with such books open
for reasonable |
Department inspection and audits, including, without
|
limitation, the making of copies thereof;
|
(h) To require applicants or grantees receiving funds under |
this Act to
permit the Department to: (i) inspect and audit any |
books, records or
papers related to the project in the custody |
or control of the applicant,
including the making of copies or |
extracts thereof, and (ii) inspect or
appraise any of the |
applicant's or grantee's business assets;
|
(i) To require applicants or grantees, upon written request |
by the
Department, to issue any necessary authorization to the |
appropriate
federal, State or local authority for the release |
of information concerning
a business or business project |
financed under the provisions of this Act,
with the information |
requested to include, but not be limited to, financial
reports, |
returns, or records relating to that business or business |
project;
|
(i-5) To provide staffing, administration, and related |
support
required to manage the programs authorized under this |
Act and to pay for
staffing and administration from the New |
Technology Recovery Fund as
appropriated by
the General |
Assembly.
Administrative responsibilities may include, but are |
|
not limited to, research
and identification of the needs of |
commerce and industry in this State; design
of
comprehensive |
statewide plans and programs; direction, management, and |
control
of specific
projects;
and
communication and |
cooperation with entities about technology
commercialization |
and business modernization;
|
(j) To take whatever actions are necessary or appropriate |
to protect the
State's interest in the event of bankruptcy, |
default, foreclosure or
noncompliance with the terms and |
conditions of financial assistance or
participation required |
under this Act, including the power to sell,
dispose, lease or |
rent, upon terms and conditions determined by the
Director to |
be appropriate, real or personal property which the Department
|
may receive as a result thereof; and
|
(k) Exercise such other powers as are necessary to carry |
out the
purposes of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-476, eff. 8-11-99; revised 12-6-03.)
|
Section 55-25. The Energy Conservation and Coal |
Development Act is amended by changing Section 9 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 1105/9) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 7409)
|
Sec. 9. The Illinois Industrial Coal Utilization Program. |
The
Department shall administer the Illinois
Industrial Coal |
Utilization Program, referred to
as the "program". The purpose |
of the program is to increase
the environmentally sound use of |
Illinois coal by qualified applicants.
To that end, the |
Department shall
operate
a revolving loan program to partially |
finance new coal burning facilities
sited in Illinois or |
conversion of existing boilers located in Illinois to
coal use, |
referred to as "industrial coal projects".
|
The Department, with the advice and recommendation of the
|
Illinois Coal Development Board, shall make below market rate
|
loans available to fund a portion of each qualifying industrial
|
coal project. The applicant must demonstrate that it
is able to |
obtain additional financing
from other sources to fund the |
|
remainder of the project
and that the project would not occur |
without the
Department's participation. The Department
may, in |
part, rely on the financial evaluation completed by the
|
provider of the additional funding, as well as its own |
evaluation.
|
The Department shall have the following powers:
|
(1) To accept grants, loans, or appropriations
from the |
federal government or the State, or any agency or
|
instrumentality of either, to be used for any purposes of the
|
program, including operating and administrative expenses
|
associated with the program and the making of direct loans of |
those funds
with respect to projects. The Department may enter |
into any agreement with
the federal government or the State, or |
any agency or instrumentality
of either, in connection with |
those grants,
loans, or appropriations.
|
(2) To make loans from appropriations from the Build |
Illinois Purposes
Fund or the Build Illinois Bond Fund
and to |
accept guarantees from individuals, partnerships, joint |
ventures,
corporations, and governmental agencies. Any loan or |
series
of loans shall be limited to an amount not to exceed the |
lesser of
$4,000,000 or 60% of the total project cost.
|
(3) To establish interest rates, terms of repayment, and |
other terms
and conditions regarding loans made under this Act |
as the Department
shall determine necessary or appropriate to |
protect the public interest and
carry out the purposes of this |
Act.
|
(4) To receive, evaluate, and establish time schedules for |
the
determination of, and determine applications for financial |
aid for
the development, construction, acquisition, or |
improvement of, an industrial
coal project from any qualifying |
applicant and negotiate
terms and conditions on which the coal |
project may be developed,
constructed, improved, owned, or used |
by or leased to the applicant
or its successor in interest. The |
Department shall prescribe the form of
application. The form |
shall contain, without being limited
to, the following:
|
(i) a general description of the industrial coal |
|
project and of the
developer, user, or tenant for which the |
industrial project is to be
established;
|
(ii) plans, equipment lists, and other documents
that |
may be required to show the type, structure, and general |
character
of the project;
|
(iii) a general description of the expected use of
|
Illinois coal resulting from the project;
|
(iv) cost estimates of developing, constructing,
|
acquiring, or improving the industrial project;
|
(v) a general description of the financing plan
for the |
industrial coal project; and
|
(vi) a general description and statement of value of |
any
property and its improvements provided or to be |
provided for the
project by other sources.
|
Nothing in this Section shall be deemed to preclude the |
Department,
before the filing of any formal application, from |
conducting preliminary
discussions and investigations with |
respect to the subject matter of any
prospective applications.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-348, eff. 1-1-98.)
|
Section 55-30. The Disabled Persons Rehabilitation Act is |
amended by changing Section 5 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 2405/5) (from Ch. 23, par. 3436)
|
Sec. 5. The Department is authorized to receive such gifts |
or
donations, either from public or private sources, as may be |
offered
unconditionally or under such conditions related to the |
comprehensive
rehabilitation services, habilitation and |
rehabilitation of
persons with one or more disabilities, as in |
the judgment of the
Department are proper and consistent with |
the provisions of this Act. All
moneys so received shall be |
deposited in the State treasury in a fund to be
known as the |
"DORS State Project Fund".
|
(Source: P.A. 86-607.)
|
Section 55-35. The Department of Transportation Law of the
|
|
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by changing |
Sections 2705-275 and 2705-305 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 2705/2705-275) (was 20 ILCS 2705/49.25j)
|
Sec. 2705-275. Grants for airport facilities. The |
Department
may make grants to municipalities
and airport |
authorities for
the renovation, construction, and development |
of airport facilities.
The grants may be
made from funds |
appropriated for that purpose from the Build
Illinois Bond
Fund |
or the Build Illinois Purposes Fund .
|
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
(20 ILCS 2705/2705-305)
|
Sec. 2705-305. Grants for mass transportation.
|
(a) For the purpose of mass
transportation grants and |
contracts, the following definitions apply:
|
"Carrier" means any corporation, authority, partnership,
|
association, person, or district authorized to provide mass
|
transportation within the State.
|
"District" means all of the following:
|
(i) Any district created pursuant to the Local Mass |
Transit
District Act.
|
(ii) The Authority created pursuant to the |
Metropolitan Transit
Authority Act.
|
(iii) Any authority, commission, or other entity that |
by
virtue of an
interstate compact approved by Congress is |
authorized to provide mass
transportation.
|
(iv) The Authority created pursuant to the Regional
|
Transportation Authority Act.
|
"Facilities" comprise all real and personal property used |
in or appurtenant
to a mass transportation system, including |
parking lots.
|
"Mass transportation" means transportation provided within |
the State of
Illinois by rail, bus, or other conveyance and |
available to the general public
on a regular and continuing |
basis, including the transportation of handicapped
or elderly |
|
persons as provided more specifically in Section 2705-310.
|
"Unit of local government" means any city, village, |
incorporated town, or
county.
|
(b) Grants may be made to units of local government,
|
districts, and carriers for
the acquisition, construction, |
extension, reconstruction, and improvement
of mass |
transportation facilities. Grants shall be made upon the
terms
|
and conditions that in the judgment of the Secretary are |
necessary
to
ensure their proper and effective utilization.
|
(c) The Department shall make grants under this Law
in a |
manner
designed, so far as is consistent with the maintenance |
and development
of a sound mass transportation system within |
the State, to: (i)
maximize
federal funds for the assistance of |
mass transportation in Illinois
under the Federal Transit Act |
and other
federal Acts; (ii) facilitate the movement of persons |
who because
of age,
economic circumstance, or physical |
infirmity are unable to drive; (iii)
contribute to an improved |
environment through the reduction of air,
water, and noise |
pollution; and (iv) reduce traffic congestion.
|
(d) The Secretary shall establish procedures for making
|
application
for mass transportation grants. The procedures |
shall provide for
public
notice of all applications and give |
reasonable opportunity for the
submission of comments and |
objections by interested parties. The
procedures shall be |
designed with a view to facilitating simultaneous
application |
for a grant to the Department and to the federal government.
|
(e) Grants may be made for mass transportation projects as
|
follows:
|
(1) In an amount not to exceed 100% of the nonfederal |
share of
projects
for which a federal grant is made.
|
(2) In an amount not to exceed 100% of the net project |
cost
for projects
for which a federal grant is not made.
|
(3) In an amount not to exceed five-sixths of the net |
project
cost for
projects essential for the maintenance of |
a sound transportation system and
eligible for federal |
assistance for which a federal grant application has
been |
|
made but a federal grant has been delayed. If and when a |
federal
grant is made, the amount in excess of the |
nonfederal share shall be
promptly returned to the |
Department.
|
In no event shall the Department make a grant that, |
together
with any
federal funds or funds from any other source, |
is in excess of 100% of the
net project cost.
|
(f) Regardless of whether any funds are available under a
|
federal grant,
the Department shall not make a mass |
transportation grant unless the Secretary
finds that the |
recipient has entered into an agreement with the Department
in |
which the recipient agrees not to engage in school bus |
operations
exclusively for the transportation of students and |
school personnel in
competition with private school bus |
operators where those private
school bus
operators are able to |
provide adequate transportation, at reasonable rates,
in |
conformance with applicable safety standards, provided that |
this
requirement shall not apply to a recipient that operates a |
school
system
in the area to be served and operates a separate |
and exclusive school bus
program for the school system.
|
(g) Grants may be made for mass transportation purposes |
with
funds
appropriated from the Build Illinois Bond Fund or |
the Build Illinois
Purposes Fund consistent with the
specific |
purposes for which those funds are appropriated by the
General
|
Assembly. Grants under this subsection (g) are not subject to |
any
limitations or conditions imposed upon grants by any other |
provision of
this Section, except that the Secretary may impose |
the terms and
conditions that in his or her judgment are |
necessary to ensure
the proper and
effective utilization of the |
grants under this subsection.
|
(h) The Department may let contracts for mass |
transportation
purposes
and facilities for the purpose of |
reducing urban congestion funded in whole
or in part with bonds |
described in subdivision (b)(1) of
Section 4 of the
General |
Obligation Bond Act, not to exceed $75,000,000 in bonds.
|
(i) The Department may make grants to carriers, districts, |
|
and
units of local government for the purpose of reimbursing
|
them for providing reduced
fares for mass transportation |
services for students, handicapped persons
and the elderly. |
Grants shall be made upon the terms and
conditions that in
the |
judgment of the Secretary are necessary to ensure their proper |
and
effective utilization.
|
(j) The Department may make grants to carriers, districts, |
and units of local government for costs of providing ADA |
paratransit service.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-774, eff. 8-14-98;
91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
Section 55-40. The Illinois Finance Authority Act is |
amended by changing Sections 801-40 and 805-15 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 3501/801-40)
|
Sec. 801-40. In addition to the powers otherwise authorized |
by law and in
addition to the foregoing general corporate |
powers, the Authority shall also
have the following additional |
specific powers to be exercised in furtherance of
the purposes |
of this Act.
|
(a) The Authority shall have power (i) to accept grants, |
loans or
appropriations from the federal government or the |
State, or any agency or
instrumentality thereof, to be used for |
the operating expenses of the
Authority,
or for any purposes of |
the Authority, including the making of direct loans of
such |
funds with respect to projects, and (ii) to enter into any |
agreement with
the federal government or the State, or any |
agency or instrumentality thereof,
in relationship to such |
grants, loans or appropriations.
|
(b) The Authority shall have power to procure and enter |
into contracts for
any
type of insurance and indemnity |
agreements covering loss or damage to property
from any cause, |
including loss of use and occupancy, or covering any other
|
insurable risk.
|
(c) The Authority shall have the continuing power to issue |
bonds for its
corporate purposes. Bonds may be issued by the |
|
Authority in one or more series
and may provide for the payment |
of any interest deemed necessary on such bonds,
of the costs of |
issuance of such bonds, of any premium on any insurance, or of
|
the cost of any guarantees, letters of credit or other similar |
documents, may
provide for the funding of the reserves deemed |
necessary in connection with
such bonds, and may provide for |
the refunding or advance refunding of any bonds
or
for accounts |
deemed necessary in connection with any purpose of the |
Authority.
The bonds may bear interest payable at any time or |
times and at any rate or
rates, notwithstanding any other |
provision of law to the contrary, and such
rate or rates may be |
established by an index or formula which may be
implemented or
|
established by persons appointed or retained therefor by the |
Authority, or may
bear no interest or may bear interest payable |
at maturity or upon redemption
prior to maturity, may bear such |
date or dates, may be payable at such time or
times and at such |
place or places, may mature at any time or times not later
than |
40 years from the date of issuance, may be sold at public or |
private sale
at such time or times and at such price or prices, |
may be secured by such
pledges, reserves, guarantees, letters |
of credit, insurance contracts or other
similar credit support |
or liquidity instruments, may be executed in such
manner, may |
be subject to redemption prior to maturity, may provide for the
|
registration of the bonds, and may be subject to such other |
terms and
conditions all as may
be provided by the resolution |
or indenture authorizing the issuance of such
bonds. The holder |
or holders of any bonds issued by the Authority may bring
suits |
at law or proceedings in equity to compel the performance and |
observance
by any person or by the Authority or any of its |
agents or employees of any
contract or covenant made with the |
holders of such bonds and to compel such
person or the |
Authority and any of its agents or employees to perform any
|
duties
required to be performed for the benefit of the holders |
of any such bonds by
the provision of the resolution |
authorizing their issuance, and to enjoin such
person or the |
Authority and any of its agents or employees from taking any
|
|
action in conflict with any such contract or covenant.
|
Notwithstanding the form and tenor of any such bonds and in the |
absence of any
express recital on the face thereof that it is |
non-negotiable, all such bonds
shall be negotiable |
instruments. Pending the preparation and execution of any
such |
bonds, temporary bonds may be issued as provided by the |
resolution.
The bonds shall be sold by the Authority in such |
manner as it shall determine.
The bonds may be secured as |
provided in the authorizing resolution by the
receipts, |
revenues, income and other available funds of the Authority and |
by
any amounts derived by the Authority from the loan agreement |
or lease agreement
with respect to the project or projects; and |
bonds may be issued as general
obligations of the Authority |
payable from such revenues, funds and obligations
of the |
Authority as the bond resolution shall provide, or may be |
issued as
limited obligations with a claim for payment solely |
from such revenues, funds
and obligations as the bond |
resolution shall provide. The Authority may grant a
specific |
pledge or assignment of and lien on or security interest in |
such
rights, revenues, income, or amounts and may grant a |
specific pledge or
assignment of and lien on or security |
interest in any reserves, funds or
accounts established in the |
resolution authorizing the issuance of bonds. Any
such pledge, |
assignment, lien or security interest for the benefit of the
|
holders of the Authority's bonds shall be valid and binding |
from the time the
bonds are issued without any physical |
delivery or further act, and shall be
valid and binding as |
against and prior to the claims of all other parties
having |
claims against the Authority or any other person irrespective |
of whether
the
other parties have notice of the pledge, |
assignment, lien or security interest.
As evidence of such |
pledge, assignment, lien and security interest, the
Authority |
may execute and deliver a mortgage, trust agreement, indenture |
or
security agreement or an assignment thereof.
A remedy for |
any breach or default of the terms of any such agreement by the
|
Authority may be by mandamus proceedings in any court of |
|
competent jurisdiction
to compel the performance and |
compliance therewith, but the agreement may
prescribe by whom |
or on whose behalf such action may be instituted.
It is |
expressly understood that the Authority may, but need not, |
acquire title
to any project with respect to which it exercises |
its authority.
|
(d) With respect to the powers granted by this Act, the |
Authority may adopt
rules and regulations prescribing the |
procedures by which persons may apply for
assistance under this |
Act. Nothing herein shall be deemed to preclude the
Authority, |
prior to the filing of any formal application, from conducting
|
preliminary discussions and investigations with respect to the |
subject matter
of any prospective application.
|
(e) The Authority shall have power to acquire by purchase, |
lease, gift or
otherwise any property or rights therein from |
any person useful for its
purposes, whether improved for the |
purposes of any prospective project, or
unimproved. The |
Authority may also accept any donation of funds for its
|
purposes from any such source. The Authority shall have no |
independent power of
condemnation but may acquire any property |
or rights therein obtained upon
condemnation by any other |
authority, governmental entity or unit of local
government with |
such power.
|
(f) The Authority shall have power to develop, construct |
and improve either
under its own direction, or through |
collaboration with any approved applicant,
or to acquire |
through purchase or otherwise, any project, using for such
|
purpose the proceeds derived from the sale of its bonds or from |
governmental
loans or
grants, and to hold title in the name of |
the Authority to such projects.
|
(g) The Authority shall have power to lease pursuant to a |
lease agreement
any
project so developed and constructed or |
acquired to the approved tenant on such
terms and conditions as |
may be appropriate to further the purposes of this Act
and to |
maintain the credit of the Authority. Any such lease may |
provide for
either the Authority or the approved tenant to |
|
assume initially, in whole or in
part, the costs of |
maintenance, repair and improvements during the leasehold
|
period. In no case, however, shall the total rentals from any |
project during
any initial leasehold period or the total loan |
repayments to be made pursuant
to any loan agreement, be less |
than an amount necessary to return over such
lease
or loan |
period (1) all costs incurred in connection with the |
development,
construction, acquisition or improvement of the |
project and for repair,
maintenance and improvements thereto |
during the period of the lease or loan;
provided, however, that |
the rentals or loan repayments need not include costs
met |
through the use of funds other than those obtained by the |
Authority through
the issuance of its bonds or governmental |
loans; (2) a reasonable percentage
additive to be agreed upon |
by the Authority and the borrower or tenant to cover
a properly |
allocable portion of the Authority's general expenses, |
including,
but not limited to, administrative expenses, |
salaries and general insurance,
and
(3) an amount sufficient to |
pay when due all principal of, interest and
premium, if
any on, |
any bonds issued by the Authority with respect to the project. |
The
portion of total rentals payable under clause (3) of this |
subsection (g) shall
be deposited in such special accounts, |
including all sinking funds, acquisition
or construction |
funds, debt service and other funds as provided by any
|
resolution, mortgage or trust agreement of the Authority |
pursuant to which any
bond is issued.
|
(h) The Authority has the power, upon the termination of |
any leasehold
period
of any project, to sell or lease for a |
further term or terms such project on
such terms and conditions |
as the Authority shall deem reasonable and consistent
with the |
purposes of the Act. The net proceeds from all such sales and |
the
revenues or income from such leases shall be used to |
satisfy any indebtedness
of
the Authority with respect to such |
project and any balance may be used to pay
any expenses of the |
Authority or be used for the further development,
construction, |
acquisition or improvement of projects.
In the event any |
|
project is vacated by a tenant prior to the termination of the
|
initial leasehold period, the Authority shall sell or lease the |
facilities of
the project on the most advantageous terms |
available. The net proceeds of any
such disposition shall be |
treated in the same manner as the proceeds from sales
or the |
revenues or income from leases subsequent to the termination of |
any
initial leasehold period.
|
(i) The Authority shall have the power to make loans to |
persons to finance a
project, to enter into loan agreements |
with respect thereto, and to accept
guarantees from persons of |
its loans or the resultant evidences of obligations
of the |
Authority.
|
(j) The Authority may fix, determine, charge and collect |
any premiums, fees,
charges, costs and expenses, including, |
without limitation, any application
fees, commitment fees, |
program fees, financing charges or publication fees from
any |
person in connection with its activities under this Act.
|
(k) In addition to the funds established as provided |
herein, the Authority
shall have the power to create and |
establish such reserve funds and accounts as
may be necessary |
or desirable to accomplish its purposes under this Act and to
|
deposit its available monies into the funds and accounts.
|
(l) At the request of the governing body of any unit of |
local government,
the
Authority is authorized to market such |
local government's revenue bond
offerings by preparing bond |
issues for sale, advertising for sealed bids,
receiving bids
at |
its offices, making the award to the bidder that offers the |
most favorable
terms or arranging for negotiated placements or |
underwritings of such
securities. The Authority may, at its |
discretion, offer for concurrent sale the
revenue bonds of |
several local governments. Sales by the Authority of revenue
|
bonds under this Section shall in no way imply State guarantee |
of such debt
issue. The Authority may require such financial |
information from participating
local governments as it deems |
necessary in order to carry out the purposes of
this subsection |
(1).
|
|
(m) The Authority may make grants to any county to which |
Division 5-37 of
the
Counties Code is applicable to assist in |
the financing of capital development,
construction and |
renovation of new or existing facilities for hospitals and
|
health care facilities under that Act. Such grants may only be |
made from funds
appropriated for such purposes from the Build |
Illinois Bond Fund or the Build
Illinois Purposes Fund .
|
(n) The Authority may establish an urban development action |
grant program
for
the purpose of assisting municipalities in |
Illinois which are experiencing
severe economic distress to |
help stimulate economic development activities
needed to aid in |
economic recovery. The Authority shall determine the types of
|
activities and projects for which the urban development action |
grants may be
used, provided that such projects and activities |
are broadly defined to include
all reasonable projects and |
activities the primary objectives of which are the
development |
of viable urban communities, including decent housing and a
|
suitable living environment, and expansion of economic |
opportunity, principally
for
persons of low and moderate |
incomes. The Authority shall enter into grant
agreements from |
monies appropriated for such purposes from the Build Illinois
|
Bond Fund or the Build Illinois Purposes Fund . The Authority |
shall monitor the
use of the grants, and shall provide for |
audits of the funds as well as
recovery by the Authority of any |
funds determined to have been spent in
violation of this
|
subsection (n) or any rule or regulation promulgated hereunder. |
The Authority
shall provide technical assistance with regard to |
the effective use of the
urban development action grants. The |
Authority shall file an annual report to
the
General Assembly |
concerning the progress of the grant program.
|
(o) The Authority may establish a Housing Partnership |
Program whereby the
Authority provides zero-interest loans to |
municipalities for the purpose of
assisting in the financing of |
projects for the rehabilitation of affordable
multi-family |
housing for low and moderate income residents. The Authority |
may
provide such loans only upon a municipality's providing |
|
evidence that it has
obtained private funding for the |
rehabilitation project. The Authority shall
provide 3 State |
dollars for every 7 dollars obtained by the municipality from
|
sources other than the State of Illinois. The loans shall be |
made from monies
appropriated for such purpose from the Build |
Illinois Bond Fund or the Build
Illinois Purposes Fund . The |
total amount of loans available under the Housing
Partnership |
Program shall not exceed $30,000,000. State loan monies under |
this
subsection shall be used only for the acquisition and |
rehabilitation of
existing
buildings containing 4 or more |
dwelling units. The terms of any loan made by
the municipality |
under this subsection shall require repayment of the loan to
|
the municipality upon any sale or other transfer of the |
project.
|
(p) The Authority may award grants to universities and |
research
institutions,
research consortiums and other |
not-for-profit entities for the purposes of:
remodeling or |
otherwise physically altering existing laboratory or research
|
facilities, expansion or physical additions to existing |
laboratory or research
facilities, construction of new |
laboratory or research facilities or
acquisition of modern |
equipment to support laboratory or research operations
|
provided that
such grants (i) be used solely in support of |
project and equipment acquisitions
which enhance technology |
transfer, and (ii) not constitute more than 60 percent
of the |
total project or acquisition cost.
|
(q) Grants may be awarded by the Authority to units of |
local government for
the
purpose of developing the appropriate |
infrastructure or defraying other costs
to
the local government |
in support of laboratory or research facilities provided
that |
such grants may not exceed 40% of the cost to the unit of local
|
government.
|
(r) The Authority may establish a Direct Loan Program to |
make loans to
individuals, partnerships or corporations for the |
purpose of an industrial
project, as defined in
Section 801-10 |
of this Act. For the purposes of such program
and not by way of |
|
limitation on any other program of the Authority, the
Authority |
shall have the power to issue bonds, notes, or other evidences |
of
indebtedness including commercial paper for purposes of |
providing a fund of
capital from which it may make such loans. |
The Authority shall have the power
to use any appropriations |
from the State made especially for the Authority's
Direct Loan |
Program for additional capital to make such loans or for the
|
purposes of reserve funds or pledged funds which secure the |
Authority's
obligations of repayment of any bond, note or other |
form of indebtedness
established for the purpose of providing |
capital for which it intends to make
such loans under the |
Direct Loan Program. For the purpose of obtaining such
capital, |
the Authority may also enter into agreements with financial
|
institutions and other persons for the purpose of selling loans |
and developing
a secondary market for such loans.
Loans made |
under the Direct Loan Program may be in an amount not to exceed
|
$300,000 and shall be made for a portion of an industrial |
project which does
not exceed 50% of the total project. No loan |
may be made by the Authority
unless
approved by the affirmative |
vote of at least 8 members of the board. The
Authority shall |
establish procedures and publish rules which shall provide for
|
the submission, review, and analysis of each direct loan |
application and which
shall preserve the ability of each board |
member to reach an individual business
judgment regarding the |
propriety of making each direct loan. The collective
discretion |
of the board to approve or disapprove each loan shall be
|
unencumbered.
The Authority may establish and collect such fees |
and charges, determine and
enforce such terms and conditions, |
and charge such interest rates as it
determines to be necessary |
and appropriate to the successful administration of
the Direct |
Loan Program. The Authority may require such interests in |
collateral
and such guarantees as it determines are necessary |
to project the Authority's
interest in the repayment of the |
principal and interest of each loan made under
the Direct Loan |
Program.
|
(s) The Authority may guarantee private loans to third |
|
parties up to a
specified dollar amount in order to promote |
economic development in this State.
|
(t) The Authority may adopt rules and regulations as may be |
necessary or
advisable to implement the powers conferred by |
this Act.
|
(u) The Authority shall have the power to issue bonds, |
notes or other
evidences
of indebtedness, which may be used to |
make loans to units of local government
which are authorized to |
enter into loan agreements and other documents and to
issue |
bonds, notes and other evidences of indebtedness for the |
purpose of
financing the protection of storm sewer outfalls, |
the construction of adequate
storm sewer outfalls, and the |
provision for flood protection of sanitary sewage
treatment |
plans, in counties that have established a stormwater |
management
planning committee in accordance with
Section |
5-1062 of the Counties Code. Any
such loan shall be made by the |
Authority pursuant to the provisions of
Section
820-5 to 820-60 |
of this Act. The unit of local government shall pay back to the
|
Authority the principal amount of the loan, plus annual |
interest as determined
by the Authority. The Authority shall |
have the power, subject to appropriations
by the General |
Assembly, to subsidize or buy down a portion of the interest on
|
such loans, up to 4% per annum.
|
(v) The Authority may accept security interests as provided |
in
Sections 11-3
and 11-3.3 of the Illinois Public Aid Code.
|
(w) Moral Obligation. In the event that the Authority |
determines that monies
of the Authority will not be sufficient |
for the payment of the principal of and
interest on its bonds |
during the next State fiscal year, the Chairperson, as
soon as |
practicable, shall certify to the Governor the amount required |
by the
Authority to enable it to pay such principal of and |
interest on the bonds. The
Governor shall submit the amount so |
certified to the General Assembly as soon
as
practicable, but |
no later than the end of the current State fiscal year. This
|
subsection shall apply only to any bonds or notes as to which |
the Authority
shall have determined, in the resolution |
|
authorizing the issuance of the bonds
or notes, that this |
subsection shall apply. Whenever the Authority makes such a
|
determination, that fact shall be plainly stated on the face of |
the bonds or
notes and that fact shall also be reported to the |
Governor. In the event of a
withdrawal of moneys from a reserve |
fund established with respect to any issue
or issues of bonds |
of the Authority to pay principal or interest on those
bonds,
|
the Chairperson of the Authority, as soon as practicable, shall |
certify to the
Governor the amount required to restore the |
reserve fund to the level required
in the resolution or |
indenture securing those bonds. The Governor shall submit
the |
amount so certified to the General Assembly as soon as |
practicable, but no
later than the end of the current State |
fiscal year. The Authority shall obtain
written approval from |
the Governor for any bonds and notes to be issued under
this |
Section.
In addition to any other bonds authorized to be issued |
under
Sections 825-60, 825-65(e), 830-25 and 845-5, the |
principal amount of Authority
bonds outstanding
issued under |
this
Section 801-40(w) or under 20 ILCS 3850/1-80 or 30 ILCS |
360/2-6(c), which have
been
assumed by the Authority, shall not |
exceed $150,000,000.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-205, eff. 1-1-04.)
|
(20 ILCS 3501/805-15)
|
Sec. 805-15. Industrial Project Insurance Fund. There is |
created the
Industrial Project Insurance Fund, hereafter |
referred to in
Sections 805-15
through 805-50 of this Act as |
the "Fund". The Treasurer shall have custody of
the
Fund, which |
shall be held outside of the State treasury, except that |
custody
may
be transferred to and held by any bank, trust |
company or other fiduciary with
whom the Authority executes a |
trust agreement as authorized by paragraph (h) of
Section |
805-20 of this Act. Any portion of the Fund against which a |
charge has
been made, shall be held for the benefit of the |
holders of the loans or bonds
insured under
Section 805-20 of |
this Act.
There shall be deposited in the Fund such amounts, |
|
including but not limited
to:
|
(a) All receipts of bond and loan insurance premiums;
|
(b) All proceeds of assets of whatever nature received by |
the Authority as a
result of default or delinquency with |
respect to insured loans or bonds with
respect to which |
payments from the Fund have been made, including proceeds from
|
the sale, disposal, lease or rental of real or personal |
property which the
Authority may receive under the provisions |
of
this Article but excluding the proceeds of insurance |
hereunder;
|
(c) All receipts from any applicable contract or agreement |
entered into by
the Authority under paragraph (b) of Section |
805-20 of this Act;
|
(d) Any State appropriations, transfers of appropriations, |
or transfers of
general obligation bond proceeds or other |
monies made available to the Fund.
Amounts in the Fund shall be |
used in accordance with the provisions of
this Article to |
satisfy any valid insurance claim payable
therefrom and may be |
used for any other purpose determined by the Authority in
|
accordance with insurance contract or contracts with financial |
institutions
entered into pursuant to this Act, including |
without limitation protecting the
interest of the Authority in |
industrial projects during periods of loan
delinquency or upon |
loan default through the purchase of industrial projects in
|
foreclosure proceedings or in lieu of foreclosure or through |
any other means.
Such amounts may also be used to pay |
administrative costs and expenses
reasonably allocable to the |
activities in connection with the Fund and to pay
taxes, |
maintenance, insurance, security and any other costs and |
expenses of
bidding for, acquiring, owning, carrying and |
disposing of industrial projects
which were financed with the |
proceeds of insured bonds or loans. In the case of
a default in |
payment with respect to any loan, mortgage or other agreement |
so
insured, the amount of the default shall immediately, and at |
all times during
the continuance of such default, and to the |
extent provided in any applicable
agreement, constitute a |
|
charge on the Fund.
Any amounts in the Fund not currently |
needed to meet the obligations of the
Fund may be invested as |
provided by law in obligations designated by the
Authority,
and |
all income from such investments shall become part of the Fund. |
In making
such investments, the Authority shall act with the |
care, skill, diligence and
prudence under the circumstances of |
a prudent person acting in a like capacity
in the conduct of an |
enterprise of like character and with like aims. It shall
|
diversify such investments of the Authority so as to minimize |
the risk of large
losses, unless under the circumstances it is |
clearly not prudent to do so.
Any amounts in the Fund not |
needed to meet the obligations of the Fund may be
transferred |
to the Credit Enhancement Development Fund of the Authority
|
pursuant
to resolution of the members of the Authority.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-205, eff. 1-1-04.)
|
Section 55-45. The Illinois Building Commission Act is |
amended by changing Section 50 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 3918/50)
|
Sec. 50. The Illinois Building Commission Fees
Revolving |
Fund . The Illinois
Building Commission Revolving Fund is |
created in the State treasury. The
Illinois Building Commission |
may establish fees,
each of which may not
exceed $250, for |
services provided in
fulfilling its mandate under this Act, |
except that
for dispute resolution between the Illinois |
Department of Public Health and a
health
care
provider, the |
Commission may establish fees to be paid by the health care
|
provider,
which may not exceed $10,000.
All fees collected by |
the Commission
shall be deposited into the General Revenue Fund
|
Illinois Building Commission Revolving Fund . The
Commission |
may also accept donations or moneys from any other source for
|
deposit into this fund . The Illinois Building Commission
All |
interest accrued on the fees, donations, and other
deposits to |
the Illinois Building Commission Revolving Fund shall be |
deposited
into the fund. All moneys in the Illinois Building |
|
Commission Revolving Fund
may be used , subject to appropriation |
by the General Assembly, may expend moneys to carry out
the |
activities of the Act, including the expenses of the Illinois |
Building
Commission, a clearinghouse on State building |
requirements, or other purposes
consistent with this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-581, eff. 8-14-99; 92-803, eff. 8-16-02.)
|
Section 55-50. The State Finance Act is amended by changing |
Section 8c as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 105/8c) (from Ch. 127, par. 144c)
|
Sec. 8c. Appropriations for projects and activities |
authorized by The
Build Illinois Act are payable from the Build |
Illinois Purposes Fund, but
may be obligated and expended only |
with the written approval of the
Governor in such amounts, at |
such times, and for such purposes as
contemplated in such |
appropriations and in The Build Illinois Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-372, eff. 7-1-98.)
|
Section 55-55. The Natural Heritage Fund Act is amended by |
changing Section 4 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 150/4) (from Ch. 105, par. 734)
|
Sec. 4. The Natural Heritage Fund and the Natural Heritage |
Endowment
Trust Fund. There is established the Natural Heritage |
Fund. The moneys in
this fund shall be used, pursuant to |
appropriation, exclusively by the
Department for the |
preservation and maintenance of natural heritage lands held
in |
the public trust. The Natural Heritage Fund shall be financed |
through
transfers of investment income earned by the Natural |
Heritage Endowment Trust
Fund created herebelow.
|
The Natural Heritage Endowment Trust Fund (Trust Fund) is |
created as a
trust fund in the State treasury. The Trust Fund |
shall be established
in the form of an irrevocable trust in a |
depository bank with capital in
surplus of at least $50,000,000 |
and approved by the State Treasurer. The Trust
Fund shall be |
|
financed by a combination of private donations and by
|
appropriations by the General Assembly from the Build Illinois |
Purposes Fund .
The Department may accept from all sources, |
contributions, grants, gifts,
bequeaths, legacies of money and |
securities to be deposited into the Trust
Fund. All deposits |
shall become part of the Trust Fund corpus. Moneys in the
Trust |
Fund, are not subject to appropriation and shall be used solely |
to
provide financing to the Natural Heritage Fund.
|
All gifts, grants, assets, funds, or moneys received by the |
Department
under this Act shall be deposited and held in the |
Trust Fund by the State
Treasurer as ex officio custodian |
separate and apart from all public
moneys or funds of this |
State and shall be administered by the Director
exclusively for |
the purposes set forth in this Act. All moneys in the
Trust |
Fund shall be invested and reinvested by the State Treasurer. |
All
interest accruing from these investments shall be deposited |
in the Trust Fund.
|
The Governor shall request and the General Assembly may |
appropriate funds
from the Build Illinois Purposes Fund to the |
Trust Fund up to an amount not to
exceed a total of $2,500,000. |
Subject to appropriation, the Department shall
pay into the |
Trust Fund at the end of each fiscal year the sum of $500,000 |
and
such sum equal to the amount by which private contributions |
for the year exceed
$500,000. Once the corpus of the Trust Fund |
has reached $5,000,000, any
obligation of the State to provide |
State funds to the Trust Fund shall cease;
however, additional |
private funds donated specifically to the Trust Fund shall
be |
applied to the Trust Fund corpus.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-1197.)
|
Section 55-60. The Build Illinois Bond Act is amended by |
changing Section 2 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 425/2) (from Ch. 127, par. 2802)
|
Sec. 2. Authorization for Bonds. The State of Illinois is
|
authorized to issue, sell and provide for the retirement of |
|
limited
obligation bonds, notes and other evidences of |
indebtedness of the State of
Illinois in the total principal |
amount of $3,805,509,000
herein called "Bonds". Such |
authorized amount of Bonds shall
be reduced from time to time |
by amounts, if any, which are equal to the
moneys received by |
the Department of Revenue in any fiscal year pursuant to
|
Section 3-1001 of the "Illinois Vehicle Code", as amended, in |
excess of the
Annual Specified Amount (as defined in Section 3 |
of the "Retailers'
Occupation Tax Act", as amended) and |
transferred at the end of such fiscal
year from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Build Illinois Purposes Fund (now |
abolished) as
provided in Section 3-1001 of said Code; |
provided, however, that no such
reduction shall affect the |
validity or enforceability of any Bonds issued
prior to such |
reduction. Such amount of authorized Bonds
shall be exclusive |
of any refunding Bonds issued pursuant to Section 15 of
this |
Act and exclusive of any Bonds issued pursuant to this Section |
which
are redeemed, purchased, advance refunded, or defeased in |
accordance with
paragraph (f) of Section 4 of this Act. Bonds |
shall be issued for the
categories and specific purposes |
expressed in Section 4 of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-39, eff. 6-15-99; 91-53, eff. 6-30-99; 91-709, |
eff.
5-17-00; 92-9, eff. 6-11-01; 92-598, 6-28-02.)
|
Section 55-65. The Build Illinois Act is amended by |
changing Sections 8-3, 9-3, 9-4.2, 9-5.2, and 10-3 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 750/8-3) (from Ch. 127, par. 2708-3)
|
Sec. 8-3. Powers of the Department. The Department has the |
power to:
|
(a) provide business development public infrastructure |
loans or grants
from appropriations from the Build Illinois |
Bond Fund, the Build Illinois
Purposes Fund, the Fund for |
Illinois' Future, and the Public Infrastructure
Construction |
Loan Fund to local governments to provide or improve a |
community's
public infrastructure so as to create or retain |
|
private sector jobs pursuant to
the provisions of this
Article;
|
(b) provide affordable financing of public infrastructure |
loans and grants
to, or on behalf of, local governments, local |
public entities, medical
facilities, and public health clinics |
from appropriations from the Public
Infrastructure |
Construction Loan Fund for the purpose of assisting with the
|
financing, or application and access to financing, of a |
community's public
infrastructure necessary to health, safety, |
and economic development;
|
(c) enter into agreements, accept funds or grants,
and |
engage in cooperation with agencies of the federal
government, |
or state or local governments to carry out the
purposes of this |
Article, and to use funds appropriated pursuant
to this Article |
to participate in federal infrastructure loan and
grant |
programs upon such terms and conditions as may be
established |
by the federal government;
|
(d) establish application, notification, contract,
and |
other procedures, rules, or regulations deemed necessary
and |
appropriate to carry out the provisions of this Article;
|
(e) coordinate assistance under this program with
|
activities of the Illinois Finance Authority in
order to |
maximize the effectiveness and efficiency of State
development |
programs;
|
(f) coordinate assistance under the Affordable Financing |
of Public
Infrastructure Loan and Grant Program with the |
activities of the
Illinois Finance Authority, Illinois Finance |
Authority, Illinois
Finance Authority, Illinois Housing |
Development Authority, Illinois
Environmental Protection |
Agency, and other federal and State programs and
entities |
providing financing assistance to communities for public |
health,
safety, and economic development infrastructure;
|
(f-5) provide staff, administration, and related support |
required to
manage the programs authorized under this Article |
and pay for the staffing,
administration, and related support |
from the Public Infrastructure Construction
Loan Revolving |
Fund;
|
|
(g) exercise such other powers as are necessary or |
incidental to the
foregoing.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-205 (Sections 890-10, 890-34, and 890-43), |
eff. 1-1-04;
revised 10-3-03.)
|
(30 ILCS 750/9-3) (from Ch. 127, par. 2709-3)
|
Sec. 9-3. Powers and duties. The Department
has the power:
|
(a) To make loans or equity investments to small
|
businesses, and to make loans or grants or investments to or |
through
financial intermediaries. The loans and investments |
shall be made from
appropriations from the
Build Illinois Bond |
Fund,
Build Illinois Purposes Fund, Illinois Capital Revolving |
Loan Fund or
Illinois Equity Revolving Fund for the purpose of |
promoting the creation
or retention of jobs within small |
businesses or to modernize or maintain
competitiveness of firms |
in Illinois. The grants shall be made from
appropriations from |
the Build Illinois Bond Fund , Build Illinois
Purposes
Fund, or |
Illinois Capital Revolving Loan Fund
for the purpose of |
technical assistance.
|
(b) To make loans to or investments in businesses that
have
|
received federal Phase I
Small Business Innovation Research |
grants as a bridge while awaiting
federal Phase II Small |
Business Innovation Research grant funds.
|
(c) To enter into interagency agreements, accept funds or
|
grants, and engage in cooperation with agencies of the
federal |
government, local units of government, universities, research
|
foundations, political subdivisions of the State, financial |
intermediaries,
and regional
economic development corporations |
or organizations for the
purposes of carrying out this Article.
|
(d) To enter into contracts, financial intermediary
|
agreements, or
any other agreements or contracts with financial |
intermediaries
necessary or desirable to further the purposes |
of this Article.
Any such agreement or contract may include, |
without limitation,
terms and provisions including, but not |
limited to loan
documentation, review and approval procedures, |
organization
and servicing rights, and default conditions.
|
|
(e) To fix, determine, charge and collect any
premiums, |
fees, charges, costs and expenses, including
without |
limitation, any application fees, commitment fees,
program |
fees, financing charges, collection fees, training fees, or
|
publication fees in
connection with its activities under this |
Article and to accept from any
source any gifts,
donations, or |
contributions of money, property, labor, or other
things of |
value to be held, used, and applied to carry out the purposes |
of this
Article. All fees, charges, collections, gifts, |
donations, or other
contributions shall be deposited into the |
Illinois Capital Revolving Loan
Fund.
|
(f) To establish application, notification,
contract, and |
other forms, procedures, rules or regulations
deemed necessary |
and appropriate.
|
(g) To consent, subject to the provisions of
any contract |
with another person, whenever it deems it
necessary or |
desirable in the fulfillment of the purposes of
this Article, |
to the modification or restructuring of any
financial |
intermediary agreement, loan
agreement or any equity |
investment agreement to which the Department is a
party.
|
(h) To take whatever actions are necessary or
appropriate |
to protect the State's interest in the event of
bankruptcy, |
default, foreclosure, or noncompliance with the
terms and |
conditions of financial assistance or participation
provided |
hereunder or to otherwise protect or affect the State's |
interest,
including the power to sell, dispose,
lease or rent, |
upon terms and conditions determined by the
Director to be |
appropriate, real or personal property which
the Department may |
receive as a result thereof.
|
(i) To deposit any "Qualified Securities" which have been |
received by
the Department as the result of any financial |
intermediary agreement,
loan, or
equity investment
agreement |
executed in the carrying out of this Act, with the Office of |
the
State Treasurer and held by that office until agreement to |
transfer such
qualified security shall be certified by the |
Director of the Department of
Commerce and Economic Opportunity
|
|
Community Affairs .
|
(j) To assist small businesses that seek to
apply for |
public or private capital in
preparing the application and to |
supply them with grant information, plans,
reports, |
assistance, or advice on development finance and to assist |
financial
intermediaries and participating lenders to build |
capacity to make debt or
equity investments through |
conferences, workshops, seminars, publications,
or
any other |
media.
|
(k) To provide for staff, administration, and related |
support required to
manage the programs authorized under this |
Article and pay for staffing and
administration from the |
Illinois Capital Revolving Loan Fund, as appropriated
by
the |
General Assembly. Administration responsibilities may include, |
but are not
limited to, research and identification of credit |
disadvantaged groups; design
of comprehensive statewide |
capital access plans and programs addressing capital
gap and |
capital marketplace structure and information barriers; |
direction,
management, and control of specific projects; and |
communicate and cooperation
with public development finance |
organizations and private debt and equity
sources.
|
(l) To exercise such other powers as are necessary
or |
incidental to the foregoing.
|
(Source: P.A. 88-422; revised 12-6-03.)
|
(30 ILCS 750/9-4.2) (from Ch. 127, par. 2709-4.2)
|
Sec. 9-4.2. Illinois Capital Revolving Loan Fund.
|
(a) There is hereby created the Illinois Capital
Revolving |
Loan Fund, hereafter referred to in this Article as the
|
"Capital Fund" to be held as a separate fund within the State
|
Treasury.
|
The purpose of the Capital Fund is to finance intermediary |
agreements,
administration, technical assistance agreements,
|
loans, grants, or investments in Illinois. In addition, funds |
may be
used
for a one time transfer in fiscal year 1994, not to |
exceed the amounts
appropriated, to the Public Infrastructure |
|
Construction Loan Revolving Fund for
grants and loans pursuant |
to the Public Infrastructure Loan and Grant Program
Act. |
Investments, administration,
grants, and financial aid shall |
be used for the purposes set for in this
Article. Loan |
financing will be in the
form of
loan agreements pursuant to |
the terms and conditions set
forth in this Article. All loans |
shall be conditioned on the
project receiving financing from |
participating lenders or other investors.
Loan
proceeds shall |
be available for project costs, except for
debt refinancing.
|
(b) There shall be deposited in the Capital Fund
such |
amounts, including but not limited to:
|
(i) All receipts, including dividends, principal and |
interest
payments and royalties, from any applicable loan, |
intermediary, or technical
assistance agreement
made from |
the Capital Fund or from direct appropriations from the |
Build
Illinois Bond Fund or the Build Illinois Purposes |
Fund (now abolished) by
the General Assembly entered into |
by the Department;
|
(ii) All proceeds of assets of whatever nature
received |
by the Department as a result of default or delinquency
|
with respect to loan agreements made from the Capital
Fund |
or from direct appropriations by the General Assembly,
|
including proceeds from the sale, disposal, lease or rental
|
of real or personal property which the Department may |
receive
as a result thereof;
|
(iii) Any appropriations, grants or gifts made to
the |
Capital Fund;
|
(iv) Any income received from interest on investments
|
of moneys in the Capital Fund;
|
(v) All moneys resulting from the collection of |
premiums, fees, charges,
costs, and expenses described in |
subsection (e) of Section 9-3.
|
(c) The Treasurer may invest moneys in the Capital
Fund in |
securities constituting obligations of the United
States |
Government, or in obligations the principal of and
interest on |
which are guaranteed by the United States Government,
in |
|
obligations the principal of and interest on which
are |
guaranteed by the United States Government, or in certificates
|
of deposit of any State or national bank which are
fully |
secured by obligations guaranteed as to principal and
interest |
by the United States Government.
|
(Source: P.A. 88-422.)
|
(30 ILCS 750/9-5.2) (from Ch. 127, par. 2709-5.2)
|
Sec. 9-5.2. Illinois Equity Investment Revolving
Fund.
|
(a) There is created the Illinois Equity Investment |
Revolving
Fund, hereafter referred to in this Article as the |
"Equity
Fund" to be held as a separate fund within the State |
Treasury.
The purpose of the Equity Fund is to make equity |
investments in
Illinois. All financing will be done in |
conjunction with
participating lenders or other investors. |
Investment proceeds
may be directed to working capital expenses |
associated with
the introduction of new technical products or |
services of individual business
projects or may be used for |
equity finance pools operated by intermediaries.
|
(b) There shall be deposited in the Equity Fund
such |
amounts, including but not limited to:
|
(i) All receipts including dividends, principal and |
interest
payments, royalties, or other return on |
investment from any
applicable loan made from the Equity |
Fund, from direct
appropriations by the General Assembly |
from the Build Illinois
Fund or the Build Illinois Purposes |
Fund (now abolished) , or from intermediary agreements
made |
from
the Equity Fund entered into by the
Department;
|
(ii) All proceeds of assets of whatever nature
received |
by the Department as a result of default or delinquency
|
with respect to loan agreements made from the Equity
Fund, |
or from direct appropriations by the General Assembly
|
including proceeds from the sale, disposal, lease or rental
|
of real or personal property which the Department may |
receive
as a result thereof;
|
(iii) any appropriations, grants or gifts made to
the |
|
Equity Fund;
|
(iv) any income received from interest on investments
|
of moneys in the Equity Fund.
|
(c) The Treasurer may invest moneys in the Equity
Fund in |
securities constituting direct obligations of the
United |
States Government, or in obligations the principal of
and |
interest on which are guaranteed by the United States
|
Government, or in certificates of deposit of any State or
|
national bank which are fully secured by obligations guaranteed
|
as to principal and interest by the United States Government.
|
(Source: P.A. 88-422.)
|
(30 ILCS 750/10-3) (from Ch. 127, par. 2710-3)
|
Sec. 10-3. Powers and Duties. The Department has the power |
to:
|
(a) Provide loans from the Build Illinois Bond Fund, the |
Build Illinois
Purposes Fund, the Fund for Illinois' Future, or |
the Large Business
Attraction Fund to a business undertaking a |
project and accept mortgages or
other evidences of indebtedness |
or security of such business.
|
(b) Provide grants from the Build Illinois Bond Fund, the |
Build Illinois
Purposes Fund, the Fund for Illinois' Future, or |
the Large Business
Attraction Fund to or for the direct
benefit |
of a business undertaking a project. Any such grant shall (i) |
be
made and used only for the purpose of assisting the |
financing of the
business for the project in order to reduce |
the cost of financing to the
business, (ii) be made only if a |
participating lender, or other funding
source including the |
applicant, also provides a portion of the financing
with |
respect to the project, and only if the Department determines, |
on the
basis of all the information available to it, that the |
project would not be
undertaken in Illinois unless the grant is |
provided, (iii) provide no more
than 25% of the total dollar |
amount of any single project cost and be
approved for amounts |
from the Fund not to exceed $500,000 for any single
project, |
unless waived by the Director upon a finding that such waiver |
|
is
appropriate to accomplish the purpose of this Article, (iv) |
be made only
after the Department has determined that the grant |
will cause a project to
be undertaken which has the potential |
to create substantial employment in
relation to the amount of |
the grant, and (v) be made with a business that
has certified |
the project is a new plant start-up or expansion and is not a
|
relocation of an existing business from another site in |
Illinois unless
that relocation results in substantial |
employment growth.
|
(c) Enter into agreements, accept funds or grants and |
cooperate with
agencies of the federal government, local units |
of government and local
regional economic development |
corporations or organizations for the purposes of
carrying out |
this Article.
|
(d) Enter into contracts, letters of credit or any other |
agreements or
contracts with financial institutions necessary |
or desirable to carry out the
purposes of this Article. Any |
such agreement or contract may include, without
limitation, |
terms and provisions relating to a specific project such as |
loan
documentation, review and approval procedures, |
organization and servicing
rights, default conditions and |
other program aspects.
|
(e) Fix, determine, charge and collect any premiums, fees, |
charges, costs
and expenses, including application fees, |
commitment fees, program fees,
financing charges or |
publication fees in connection with its activities under
this |
Article.
|
(f) Establish application, notification, contract and |
other procedures,
rules or regulations deemed necessary and |
appropriate.
|
(g) Subject to the provisions of any contract with another |
person and
consent to the modification or restructuring of any |
loan agreement to which the
Department is a party.
|
(h) Take any actions which are necessary or appropriate to |
protect the
State's interest in the event of bankruptcy, |
default, foreclosure or
noncompliance with the terms and |
|
conditions of financial assistance or
participation provided |
under this Article, including the power to sell,
dispose, lease |
or rent, upon terms and conditions determined by the Director |
to
be appropriate, real or personal property which the |
Department may receive as a
result thereof.
|
(i) Acquire and accept by gift, grant, purchase or |
otherwise, but not by
condemnation, fee simple title, or such |
lesser interest as may be desired, in
land, and to improve or |
arrange for the improvement of such land for industrial
or |
commercial site development purposes, and to lease or convey |
such land, or
interest in land, so acquired and so improved, |
including sale and conveyance
subject to a mortgage, for such |
price, upon such terms and at such time as the
Department may |
determine, provided that prior to exercising its authority |
under
this subsection, the Director shall find that other means |
of financing and
developing any such project are not reasonably |
available and that such action
is consistent with the purposes |
and policies of this Article.
|
(j) Provide grants from the Build Illinois Bond Fund or |
Build Illinois
Purposes Fund to municipalities and counties to |
demolish abandoned buildings
pursuant to Section 11-31-1 of the |
Illinois Municipal Code or Section 5-1080 of
the Counties Code, |
for the purpose of making unimproved land available for
|
purchase by businesses for economic development. Such grants |
shall be provided
only when: (1) the owner of property on which |
the abandoned building is
situated has entered into a contract |
to sell such property; (2) the Department
has determined that |
the grant will be used to cause a project to be undertaken
|
which will result in the creation of employment; (3) the |
business which has
entered into a contract to purchase the |
property has certified that it will use
the property for a |
project which is a new plant start-up or expansion or a new
|
venture opportunity and is not a relocation of an existing |
business from
another site within the State unless that |
relocation results in substantial
employment growth. If a |
municipality or county receives grants under this
paragraph, it |
|
shall file a notice of lien against the owner or owners of such
|
demolished buildings to recover the costs and expenses incurred |
in the
demolition of such buildings pursuant to Section 11-31-1 |
of the Illinois
Municipal Code or Section 5-1080 of the |
Counties Code. All such costs and
expenses recovered by the |
county or municipality shall be paid to the
Department for |
deposit in the Build Illinois Purposes Account. Priority shall
|
be given to enterprise zones or those areas with high |
unemployment whose tax
base is adversely impacted by the |
closing of existing factories.
|
(k) Exercise such other powers as are necessary or |
incidental to the
foregoing.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-34, eff. 7-1-99 .)
|
Section 55-70. The Cigarette Tax Act is amended by changing |
Sections 2 and 29 as follows:
|
(35 ILCS 130/2) (from Ch. 120, par. 453.2)
|
Sec. 2. Tax imposed; rate; collection, payment, and |
distribution;
discount. |
(a) A tax is imposed upon any person engaged in business as |
a
retailer of cigarettes in this State at the rate of 5 1/2 |
mills per
cigarette sold, or otherwise disposed of in the |
course of such business in
this State. In addition to any other |
tax imposed by this Act, a tax is
imposed upon any person |
engaged in business as a retailer of cigarettes in
this State |
at a rate of 1/2 mill per cigarette sold or otherwise disposed
|
of in the course of such business in this State on and after |
January 1,
1947, and shall be paid into the Metropolitan Fair |
and Exposition Authority
Reconstruction Fund or as otherwise |
provided in Section 29 . On and after December 1, 1985, in |
addition to any
other tax imposed by this Act, a tax is imposed |
upon any person engaged in
business as a retailer of cigarettes |
in this State at a rate of 4 mills per
cigarette sold or |
otherwise disposed of in the course of such business in
this |
State. Of the additional tax imposed by this amendatory Act of |
|
1985,
$9,000,000 of the moneys received by the Department of |
Revenue pursuant to
this Act shall be paid each month into the |
Common School Fund. On and after
the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1989, in addition to any other tax
imposed by |
this Act, a tax is imposed upon any person engaged in business |
as a
retailer of cigarettes at the rate of 5 mills per |
cigarette sold or
otherwise disposed of in the course of such |
business in this State.
On and after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1993, in addition
to any other tax imposed by |
this Act, a tax is imposed upon any person engaged
in business |
as a retailer of cigarettes at the rate of 7 mills per |
cigarette
sold or otherwise disposed of in the course of such |
business in this State.
On and after December 15, 1997, in |
addition
to any other tax imposed by this Act, a tax is imposed |
upon any person engaged
in business as a retailer of cigarettes |
at the rate of 7 mills per cigarette
sold or otherwise disposed |
of in the course of such business of this State.
All of the |
moneys received by the Department of Revenue pursuant to this |
Act
and the Cigarette Use Tax Act from the additional taxes |
imposed by this
amendatory Act of 1997, shall be paid each |
month into the Common School Fund.
On and after July 1, 2002, |
in addition to any other tax imposed by this Act,
a tax is |
imposed upon any person engaged in business as a retailer of
|
cigarettes at the rate of 20.0 mills per cigarette sold or |
otherwise disposed
of
in the course of such business in this |
State.
The payment of such taxes shall be evidenced by a stamp |
affixed to
each original package of cigarettes, or an |
authorized substitute for such stamp
imprinted on each original |
package of such cigarettes underneath the sealed
transparent |
outside wrapper of such original package, as hereinafter |
provided.
However, such taxes are not imposed upon any activity |
in such business in
interstate commerce or otherwise, which |
activity may not under
the Constitution and statutes of the |
United States be made the subject of
taxation by this State.
|
Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
the 92nd General
Assembly,
all of the moneys received by the |
|
Department of Revenue pursuant to this Act
and the Cigarette |
Use Tax Act, other than the moneys that are dedicated to the
|
Metropolitan Fair and Exposition Authority Reconstruction Fund |
and the Common
School Fund, shall be distributed each month as |
follows: first, there shall be
paid into the General Revenue |
Fund an amount which, when added to the amount
paid into the |
Common School Fund for that month, equals $33,300,000, except |
that in the month of August of 2004, this amount shall equal |
$83,300,000; then, from
the moneys remaining, if any amounts |
required to be paid into the General
Revenue Fund in previous |
months remain unpaid, those amounts shall be paid into
the |
General Revenue Fund;
then, beginning on April 1, 2003, from |
the moneys remaining, $5,000,000 per
month shall be paid into |
the School Infrastructure Fund; then, if any amounts
required |
to be paid into the School Infrastructure Fund in previous |
months
remain unpaid, those amounts shall be paid into the |
School Infrastructure
Fund;
then the moneys remaining, if any, |
shall be paid into the Long-Term Care
Provider Fund.
To the |
extent that more than $25,000,000 has been paid into the |
General
Revenue Fund and Common School Fund per month for the |
period of July 1, 1993
through the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1994 from combined
receipts
of the Cigarette |
Tax Act and the Cigarette Use Tax Act, notwithstanding the
|
distribution provided in this Section, the Department of |
Revenue is hereby
directed to adjust the distribution provided |
in this Section to increase the
next monthly payments to the |
Long Term Care Provider Fund by the amount paid to
the General |
Revenue Fund and Common School Fund in excess of $25,000,000 |
per
month and to decrease the next monthly payments to the |
General Revenue Fund and
Common School Fund by that same excess |
amount.
|
When any tax imposed herein terminates or has terminated, |
distributors
who have bought stamps while such tax was in |
effect and who therefore paid
such tax, but who can show, to |
the Department's satisfaction, that they
sold the cigarettes to |
which they affixed such stamps after such tax had
terminated |
|
and did not recover the tax or its equivalent from purchasers,
|
shall be allowed by the Department to take credit for such |
absorbed tax
against subsequent tax stamp purchases from the |
Department by such
distributor.
|
The impact of the tax levied by this Act is imposed upon |
the retailer
and shall be prepaid or pre-collected by the |
distributor for the purpose of
convenience and facility only, |
and the amount of the tax shall be added to
the price of the |
cigarettes sold by such distributor. Collection of the tax
|
shall be evidenced by a stamp or stamps affixed to each |
original package of
cigarettes, as hereinafter provided.
|
Each distributor shall collect the tax from the retailer at |
or before
the time of the sale, shall affix the stamps as |
hereinafter required, and
shall remit the tax collected from |
retailers to the Department, as
hereinafter provided. Any |
distributor who fails to properly collect and pay
the tax |
imposed by this Act shall be liable for the tax. Any |
distributor having
cigarettes to which stamps have been affixed |
in his possession for sale on the
effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1989 shall not be required to pay the
|
additional tax imposed by this amendatory Act of 1989 on such |
stamped
cigarettes. Any distributor having cigarettes to which |
stamps have been affixed
in his or her possession for sale at |
12:01 a.m. on the effective date of this
amendatory Act of |
1993, is required to pay the additional tax imposed by this
|
amendatory Act of 1993 on such stamped cigarettes. This |
payment, less the
discount provided in subsection (b), shall be |
due when the distributor first
makes a purchase of cigarette |
tax stamps after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of |
1993, or on the first due date of a return under this Act
after |
the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1993, whichever |
occurs
first. Any distributor having cigarettes to which stamps |
have been affixed
in his possession for sale on December 15, |
1997
shall not be required to pay the additional tax imposed by |
this amendatory Act
of 1997 on such stamped cigarettes.
|
Any distributor having cigarettes to which stamps have been |
|
affixed in his
or her
possession for sale on July 1, 2002 shall |
not be required to pay the additional
tax imposed by this |
amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly on those
stamped
|
cigarettes.
|
The amount of the Cigarette Tax imposed by this Act shall |
be separately
stated, apart from the price of the goods, by |
both distributors and
retailers, in all advertisements, bills |
and sales invoices.
|
(b) The distributor shall be required to collect the taxes |
provided
under paragraph (a) hereof, and, to cover the costs of |
such collection,
shall be allowed a discount during any year |
commencing July 1st and ending
the following June 30th in |
accordance with the schedule set out
hereinbelow, which |
discount shall be allowed at the time of purchase of the
stamps |
when purchase is required by this Act, or at the time when the |
tax
is remitted to the Department without the purchase of |
stamps from the
Department when that method of paying the tax |
is required or authorized by
this Act. Prior to December 1, |
1985, a discount equal to 1 2/3% of
the amount of the tax up to |
and including the first $700,000 paid hereunder by
such |
distributor to the Department during any such year; 1 1/3% of |
the next
$700,000 of tax or any part thereof, paid hereunder by |
such distributor to the
Department during any such year; 1% of |
the next $700,000 of tax, or any part
thereof, paid hereunder |
by such distributor to the Department during any such
year, and |
2/3 of 1% of the amount of any additional tax paid hereunder by |
such
distributor to the Department during any such year shall |
apply. On and after
December 1, 1985, a discount equal to 1.75% |
of the amount of the tax payable
under this Act up to and |
including the first $3,000,000 paid hereunder by such
|
distributor to the Department during any such year and 1.5% of |
the amount of
any additional tax paid hereunder by such |
distributor to the Department during
any such year shall apply.
|
Two or more distributors that use a common means of |
affixing revenue tax
stamps or that are owned or controlled by |
the same interests shall be
treated as a single distributor for |
|
the purpose of computing the discount.
|
(c) The taxes herein imposed are in addition to all other |
occupation or
privilege taxes imposed by the State of Illinois, |
or by any political
subdivision thereof, or by any municipal |
corporation.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-536, eff. 6-6-02; 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(35 ILCS 130/29) (from Ch. 120, par. 453.29)
|
Sec. 29. All moneys received by the Department from the |
one-half mill
tax imposed by the Sixty-fourth General Assembly |
and all interest and
penalties, received in connection |
therewith under the provisions of this
Act shall be paid into |
the Metropolitan Fair and Exposition Authority
Reconstruction |
Fund. All other moneys received by the Department under this
|
Act shall be paid into the General Revenue Fund in the State |
treasury.
After there has been paid into the Metropolitan Fair |
and Exposition
Authority Reconstruction Fund sufficient money |
to pay in full both
principal and interest, all of the |
outstanding bonds issued pursuant to the
"Fair and Exposition |
Authority Reconstruction Act", the State Treasurer and
|
Comptroller shall transfer to the General Revenue Fund the |
balance of
moneys remaining in the Metropolitan Fair and |
Exposition Authority
Reconstruction Fund except for $2,500,000 |
which shall remain in the
Metropolitan Fair and Exposition |
Authority Reconstruction Fund and which
may be appropriated by |
the General Assembly for the corporate purposes of
the |
Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority. All monies |
received by the
Department in fiscal year 1978 and thereafter |
from the one-half mill tax
imposed by the Sixty-fourth General |
Assembly, and all interest and
penalties received in connection |
therewith under the provisions of this
Act, shall be paid into |
the General Revenue Fund, except that the
Department shall pay |
the first $4,800,000 received in fiscal years
1979 through 2001 |
from that one-half
mill tax into the
Metropolitan Fair and |
Exposition Authority Reconstruction Fund
which monies may be |
appropriated by the General Assembly for the corporate
purposes |
|
of the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority.
|
In fiscal year 2002 and fiscal year 2003, the first |
$4,800,000 from the
one-half mill tax
shall be
paid into the |
Statewide Economic Development Fund.
|
All moneys received by the Department in fiscal year 2006 |
and thereafter from the one-half mill tax imposed by the 64th |
General Assembly and all interest and penalties received in |
connection with that tax under the provisions of this Act shall |
be paid into the General Revenue Fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-208, eff. 8-2-01; 93-22, eff. 6-20-03.)
|
Section 55-75. The Civic Center Code is amended by changing |
Section 240-20 as follows:
|
(70 ILCS 200/240-20)
|
Sec. 240-20. State office building. The Authority may make
|
expenditures for the planning, acquisition,
development and |
construction of a State
office building in Rockford, Illinois. |
Such expenditures may be made from
funds appropriated for such |
purposes from the Build Illinois Bond Fund or
the Build |
Illinois Purposes Fund, created by the 84th General Assembly .
|
(Source: P.A. 90-328, eff. 1-1-98.)
|
Section 55-80. The Metropolitan Pier and Exposition |
Authority Act is amended by changing Section 10 as follows:
|
(70 ILCS 210/10) (from Ch. 85, par. 1230)
|
Sec. 10. The Authority shall have the continuing power to |
borrow
money for the purpose of carrying out and performing its |
duties and
exercising its powers under this Act.
|
For the purpose of evidencing the obligation of the |
Authority to
repay any money borrowed as aforesaid, the |
Authority may, pursuant to
ordinance adopted by the Board, from |
time to time issue and dispose of
its revenue bonds and notes |
(herein collectively referred to as bonds), and
may also from |
time to time issue and dispose of its revenue bonds to refund
|
|
any bonds at maturity or pursuant to redemption provisions or |
at any time
before maturity as provided for in Section 10.1. |
All such bonds shall be
payable solely from any one or more of |
the following sources: the revenues
or income to be derived |
from the fairs, expositions, meetings, and
conventions and |
other authorized activities of the
Authority; funds, if any, |
received and to be received by
the Authority from the Fair and |
Exposition Fund, as allocated by the
Department of Agriculture |
of this State; from the Metropolitan
Fair and Exposition |
Authority Reconstruction Fund; from the
Metropolitan Fair and |
Exposition Authority Improvement Bond
Fund pursuant to |
appropriation by the General Assembly; from the McCormick
Place |
Expansion Project Fund pursuant to appropriation by the
General |
Assembly; from any revenues or funds pledged or provided for |
such
purposes by any governmental agency; from any revenues of |
the Authority
from taxes it is authorized to impose; from the |
proceeds of refunding bonds
issued for that purpose; or from |
any other lawful source derived. Such
bonds may bear such date |
or dates, may mature at such time or times not
exceeding 40 |
years from their respective dates, may bear interest at
such
|
rate or rates payable at such times, may be in such form, may |
carry such
registration privileges, may be executed in such |
manner, may be payable at
such place or places, may be made |
subject to redemption in such manner and
upon such terms, with |
or without premium as is stated on the face thereof,
may be |
executed in such manner and may contain such terms and |
covenants,
all as may be provided in the ordinance adopted by |
the Board providing for
such bonds. In case any officer whose |
signature appears on any bond ceases
(after attaching his |
signature) to hold office, his signature shall
nevertheless be |
valid and effective for all purposes. The holder or holders
of |
any bonds or interest coupons appertaining thereto issued by |
the
Authority or any trustee on behalf of the holders may bring
|
civil actions to compel the performance and observance by the |
Authority
or any of its officers, agents or employees of any |
contract or covenant
made by the Authority with the holders of |
|
such bonds or interest coupons
and to compel the Authority and |
any of its officers, agents or employees
to perform any duties |
required to be performed for the benefit of the
holders of any |
such bonds or interest coupons by the provisions of the
|
ordinance authorizing their issuance and to enjoin the |
Authority and any of
its officers, agents or employees from |
taking any action in conflict
with any such contract or |
covenant.
|
Notwithstanding the form and tenor of any such bonds and in |
the
absence of any express recital on the face thereof that it |
is
non-negotiable, all such bonds shall be negotiable |
instruments under the
Uniform Commercial Code.
|
The bonds shall be sold by the corporate authorities of the |
Authority
in such manner as the corporate authorities shall |
determine.
|
From and after the issuance of any bonds as herein provided |
it shall
be the duty of the corporate authorities of the |
Authority to fix and
establish rates, charges, rents and fees |
for the use of its grounds,
buildings, and facilities that will |
be sufficient at all times,
together with other revenues of the |
Authority available for that purpose,
to pay:
|
(a) The cost of maintaining, repairing, regulating and |
operating the
grounds, buildings, and facilities; and
|
(b) The bonds and interest thereon as they shall become |
due, and all
sinking fund requirements and other |
requirements provided by the ordinance
authorizing the |
issuance of the bonds or as provided by any trust agreement
|
executed to secure payment thereof.
|
The Authority may provide that bonds issued under this Act
|
shall be payable from and secured by an assignment and pledge |
of and grant
of a lien on and a security interest in unexpended |
bond proceeds, the
proceeds of any refunding bonds, reserves or |
sinking funds and earnings
thereon, or all or any part of the |
moneys, funds, income and revenues of
the Authority from any |
source derived, including, without limitation, any
revenues of |
the Authority from taxes it is authorized to impose, the net
|
|
revenues of the Authority from its operations, payments from |
the
Metropolitan Fair and Exposition Authority Improvement |
Bond
Fund or from the McCormick Place Expansion Project Fund to |
the Authority or
upon its direction to any trustee or trustees |
under any trust agreement
securing such bonds, payments from |
any governmental agency, or any
combination of the foregoing. |
In no event shall a lien or security interest
upon the physical |
facilities of the Authority be created by any such lien,
pledge |
or security interest. The Authority may execute and deliver a |
trust
agreement or agreements to secure the payment of such |
bonds and for the
purpose of setting forth covenants and |
undertakings of the Authority in
connection with issuance |
thereof. Such pledge, assignment and grant of a
lien and |
security interest shall be effective immediately without any
|
further filing or action and shall be effective with respect to |
all persons
regardless of whether any such person shall have |
notice of such pledge,
assignment, lien or security interest.
|
In connection with the issuance of its bonds, the Authority |
may enter into
arrangements to provide additional security and |
liquidity for the bonds.
These may include, without limitation, |
municipal bond insurance, letters of
credit, lines of credit by |
which the Authority may borrow funds to pay or
redeem its bonds |
and purchase or remarketing arrangements for assuring the
|
ability of owners of the Authority's bonds to sell or to have |
redeemed their
bonds. The Authority may enter into contracts |
and may agree to pay fees to
persons providing such |
arrangements, including from bond proceeds. No
such |
arrangement or contract shall be considered a bond or note for
|
purposes of any limitation on the issuance of bonds or notes by |
the Authority.
|
The ordinance of the Board authorizing the issuance of its |
bonds may
provide that interest rates may vary from time to |
time depending upon
criteria established by the Board, which |
may include, without limitation, a
variation in interest rates |
as may be necessary to cause bonds to be
remarketable from time |
to time at a price equal to their principal amount,
and may |
|
provide for appointment of a national banking association, |
bank,
trust company, investment banker or other financial |
institution to serve as
a remarketing agent in that connection. |
The ordinance of the board
authorizing the issuance of its |
bonds may provide that alternative interest
rates or provisions |
will apply during such times as the bonds are held by a
person |
providing a letter of credit or other credit enhancement |
arrangement
for those bonds.
|
To secure the payment of any or all of such bonds and for |
the purpose of
setting forth the covenants and undertakings of |
the Authority in connection
with the issuance thereof and the |
issuance of any additional bonds payable
from moneys, funds, |
revenue and income of the Authority to be derived from
any |
source, the Authority may execute and deliver a trust
agreement |
or agreements; provided that no lien upon any real property
of |
the Authority shall be created thereby.
|
A remedy for any breach or default of the terms of any such |
trust
agreement by the Authority may be by mandamus proceedings |
in the circuit
court to compel performance and compliance |
therewith, but the trust
agreement may prescribe by whom or on |
whose behalf such action may be
instituted.
|
In connection with the issuance of its bonds under this |
Act, the
Authority may enter into contracts that it determines |
necessary or
appropriate to permit it to manage payment or |
interest rate risk. These
contracts may include, but are not |
limited to, interest rate exchange
agreements; contracts |
providing for payment or receipt of funds based on
levels of or |
changes in interest rates; contracts to exchange cash flows or
|
series of payments; and contracts incorporating interest rate |
caps,
collars, floors, or locks.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-208, eff. 8-2-01.)
|
Section 55-85. The Fair and Exposition Authority |
Reconstruction Act is amended by changing Sections 3 and 8 as |
follows:
|
|
(70 ILCS 215/3) (from Ch. 85, par. 1250.3)
|
Sec. 3. The Metropolitan Pier and Exposition
Authority is |
authorized to borrow money and issue bonds in a
total amount |
not to exceed $40,000,000 for the purpose of
reconstructing the |
convention hall and exposition building
known as McCormick |
Place. Such bonds shall be payable solely
from funds received |
by the Authority from appropriations, if
any, to be made to |
said Authority from time to time by future
General Assemblies |
of the State of Illinois from the Metropolitan
Fair and |
Exposition Authority Reconstruction Fund .
|
(Source: P.A 87-895.)
|
(70 ILCS 215/8) (from Ch. 85, par. 1250.8)
|
Sec. 8. Appropriations
From moneys required to be paid into |
the Metropolitan Fair and
Exposition Authority Reconstruction |
Fund in the State Treasury pursuant
to Sections 2 and 29 of the |
Cigarette Tax Act, appropriations may be made
from time to time |
by the General Assembly to the Metropolitan Pier and
Exposition |
Authority for the payment of principal and interest of bonds of
|
the Authority issued under the provisions of this Act and for |
any other
lawful purpose of the Authority. Any and all of the |
funds so received shall
be kept separate and apart from any and |
all other funds of the Authority.
After there has been paid |
into the Metropolitan Fair and Exposition
Authority |
Reconstruction Fund in the State Treasury sufficient money,
|
pursuant to this Section and Sections 2 and 29 of the Cigarette |
Tax Act, to
retire all bonds payable from that Fund, the taxes |
derived from Section 28
of the Illinois Horse Racing Act of |
1975 which were required to be paid
into that Fund pursuant to |
that Act shall thereafter be paid into the
Metropolitan |
Exposition, Auditorium and Office Building Fund in the
State |
Treasury.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-895.)
|
Section 55-90. The Soil and Water Conservation District Act |
is amended by changing Section 6 as follows:
|
|
(70 ILCS 405/6) (from Ch. 5, par. 111)
|
Sec. 6. Powers and duties. In addition to the powers and |
duties otherwise
conferred upon the Department, it shall have |
the following powers and
duties:
|
(1) To offer such assistance as may be appropriate to the |
directors
of soil and water conservation districts, organized |
as provided
hereinafter, in the carrying out of any of the |
powers and programs.
|
(2) To keep the directors of each of said several districts |
informed
of the activities and experience of other such |
districts, and to
facilitate an interchange of advice and |
experience between such
districts and cooperation between |
them.
|
(3) To coordinate the programs of the several districts so |
far as
this may be done by advice and consultation.
|
(4) To seek the cooperation and assistance of the United |
States and
of agencies of this State, in the work of such |
districts.
|
(5) To disseminate information throughout the State |
concerning the
formation of such districts, and to assist in |
the formation of such
districts in areas where their |
organization is desirable.
|
(6) To consider, review, and express its opinion concerning |
any
rules, regulations, ordinances or other action of the board |
of directors
of any district and to advise such board of |
directors accordingly.
|
(7) To prepare and submit to the Director of
the Department |
an annual budget.
|
(8) To develop and coordinate a comprehensive State erosion |
and sediment
control program, including guidelines to be used |
by districts in implementing
this program. In developing this |
program, the Department may consult with
and request technical |
assistance from local, State and federal agencies,
and may |
consult and advise with technically qualified persons and with |
the
soil and water conservation districts. The guidelines |
|
developed may be
revised from time to time as necessary.
|
(9) To promote among its members the management of marginal |
agricultural
and other rural lands for forestry, consistent |
with the goals and purposes
of the "Illinois Forestry |
Development Act".
|
Nothing in this Act shall authorize the Department or any |
district to
regulate
or control point source discharges to |
waters.
|
(10) To make grants subject to annual appropriation from |
the Build
Illinois Purposes Fund, the Build Illinois Bond Fund |
or any other sources,
including the federal government, to Soil |
and Water Conservation Districts
and the Soil Conservation |
Service.
|
(11) To provide payment for outstanding health care costs |
of Soil and
Water
Conservation District employees incurred |
between January 1, 1996 and December
31, 1996
that were |
eligible
for
reimbursement from the District's insurance |
carrier, Midcontinent Medical
Benefit Trust, but have not been |
paid to date by Midcontinent. All
claims
shall be filed with
|
the Department on or before January 30, 1998 to be considered |
for payment
under the provisions of this amendatory Act of |
1997. The Department shall
approve or reject claims
based upon |
documentation and in accordance with established procedures. |
The
authority granted under this item (11) expires on
September |
1, 1998.
|
Nothing in this Act shall authorize the Department in any |
district to
regulate or curtail point source discharges to |
waters.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-565, eff. 1-2-98.)
|
Section 55-95. The School Code is amended by changing |
Section 2-3.120 as follows:
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.120)
|
Sec. 2-3.120. Non-Public school students' access to |
technology.
|
|
(a) The General Assembly finds and declares that the |
Constitution of the
State of Illinois provides that a |
"fundamental goal of the People of the
State is the educational |
development of all persons to the limit of their
capacities", |
and that the educational development of every school student
|
serves the public purposes of the State. In order to enable |
Illinois students
to leave school with the basic skills and |
knowledge that will enable them to
find and hold jobs and |
otherwise function as productive members of society
in the 21st |
Century, all students must have access to the vast educational
|
resources provided by computers. The provisions of this Section |
are in the
public interest, for the public benefit, and serve a |
secular public purpose.
|
(b) The State Board of Education shall provide non-public |
schools with ports
to the Board's statewide educational |
network, provided that this access does
not diminish the |
services available to public schools and students. The State
|
Board of Education shall charge for this access in an amount |
necessary to
offset its cost. Amounts received by the State |
Board of Education under this
Section shall be deposited in the |
General Revenue Fund
School Technology Revolving Fund as |
described
in Section 2-3.121 . The statewide network may be used |
only for secular
educational purposes.
|
(c) For purposes of this Section, a non-public school |
means: (i) any
non-profit, non-public college; or (ii) any |
non-profit, non-home-based,
non-public elementary or secondary |
school that is in compliance with Title
VI of the Civil Rights |
Act of 1964 and attendance at which satisfies the
requirements |
of Section 26-1 of the School Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-463, eff. 8-17-97; 90-566, eff. 1-2-98; |
90-655, eff.
7-30-98.)
|
Section 55-100. The Chicago State University Law is amended |
by changing Section 5-75 as follows:
|
(110 ILCS 660/5-75)
|
|
Sec. 5-75. Engineering facilities. The Board is authorized |
to construct
engineering facilities with funds appropriated |
for that purpose from the Build
Illinois Bond Fund or the Build |
Illinois Purposes Fund .
|
(Source: P.A. 89-4, eff. 1-1-96.)
|
Section 55-105. The Eastern Illinois University Law is |
amended by changing Section 10-75 as follows:
|
(110 ILCS 665/10-75)
|
Sec. 10-75. Engineering facilities. The Board is |
authorized to construct
engineering facilities with funds |
appropriated for that purpose from the Build
Illinois Bond Fund |
or the Build Illinois Purposes Fund .
|
(Source: P.A. 89-4, eff. 1-1-96.)
|
Section 55-110. The Governors State University Law is |
amended by changing Section 15-75 as follows:
|
(110 ILCS 670/15-75)
|
Sec. 15-75. Engineering facilities. The Board is |
authorized to construct
engineering facilities with funds |
appropriated for that purpose from the Build
Illinois Bond Fund |
or the Build Illinois Purposes Fund .
|
(Source: P.A. 89-4, eff. 1-1-96.)
|
Section 55-115. The Illinois State University Law is |
amended by changing Section 20-75 as follows:
|
(110 ILCS 675/20-75)
|
Sec. 20-75. Engineering facilities. The Board is |
authorized to construct
engineering facilities with funds |
appropriated for that purpose from the Build
Illinois Bond Fund |
or the Build Illinois Purposes Fund .
|
(Source: P.A. 89-4, eff. 1-1-96.)
|
|
Section 55-120. The Northeastern Illinois University Law |
is amended by changing Section 25-75 as follows:
|
(110 ILCS 680/25-75)
|
Sec. 25-75. Engineering facilities. The Board is |
authorized to construct
engineering facilities with funds |
appropriated for that purpose from the Build
Illinois Bond Fund |
or the Build Illinois Purposes Fund .
|
(Source: P.A. 89-4, eff. 1-1-96.)
|
Section 55-125. The Northern Illinois University Law is |
amended by changing Section 30-75 as follows:
|
(110 ILCS 685/30-75)
|
Sec. 30-75. Engineering facilities. The Board is |
authorized to construct
engineering facilities with funds |
appropriated for that purpose from the Build
Illinois Bond Fund |
or the Build Illinois Purposes Fund .
|
(Source: P.A. 89-4, eff. 1-1-96.)
|
Section 55-130. The Western Illinois University Law is |
amended by changing Section 35-75 as follows:
|
(110 ILCS 690/35-75)
|
Sec. 35-75. Engineering facilities. The Board is |
authorized to construct
engineering facilities with funds |
appropriated for that purpose from the Build
Illinois Bond Fund |
or the Build Illinois Purposes Fund .
|
(Source: P.A. 89-4, eff. 1-1-96.)
|
Section 55-135. The Illinois Horse Racing Act of 1975 is |
amended by changing Section 28 as follows:
|
(230 ILCS 5/28) (from Ch. 8, par. 37-28)
|
Sec. 28. Except as provided in subsection (g) of Section 27 |
of this Act,
moneys collected shall be distributed according to |
|
the provisions of this
Section 28.
|
(a) Thirty
per cent of the total of all monies received
by |
the State as privilege taxes shall be paid into the |
Metropolitan Fair
and Exposition Authority Reconstruction Fund |
in the State treasury until
such Fund contains sufficient money |
to pay in full, both principal and
interest, all of the |
outstanding bonds issued pursuant to the Fair and
Exposition |
Authority Reconstruction Act, approved July 31, 1967, as
|
amended, and thereafter shall be paid into the Metropolitan |
Exposition
Auditorium and Office Building Fund in the State |
Treasury.
|
(b) In addition, 4.5%
Four and one-half per cent of the |
total of all monies received
by the State as privilege taxes |
shall be paid into the State treasury
into a special Fund to be |
known as the Metropolitan Exposition,
Auditorium, and Office |
Building Fund.
|
(c) Fifty per cent of the total of all monies received by |
the State
as privilege taxes under the provisions of this Act |
shall be paid into
the Agricultural Premium Fund.
|
(d) Seven per cent of the total of all monies received by |
the State
as privilege taxes shall be paid into the Fair and |
Exposition Fund in
the State treasury; provided, however, that |
when all bonds issued prior to
July 1, 1984 by the Metropolitan |
Fair and Exposition Authority shall have
been paid or payment |
shall have been provided for upon a refunding of those
bonds, |
thereafter 1/12 of $1,665,662 of such monies shall be paid each
|
month into the Build Illinois Fund, and the remainder into the |
Fair and
Exposition Fund. All excess monies shall be allocated |
to the Department of
Agriculture for distribution to county |
fairs for premiums and
rehabilitation as set forth in the |
Agricultural Fair Act.
|
(e) The monies provided for in Section 30 shall be paid |
into the
Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders Fund.
|
(f) The monies provided for in Section 31 shall be paid |
into the
Illinois Standardbred Breeders Fund.
|
(g) Until January 1, 2000, that part representing
1/2 of |
|
the total breakage in Thoroughbred,
Harness, Appaloosa, |
Arabian, and Quarter Horse racing in the State shall
be paid |
into the Illinois Race Track Improvement Fund as established
in |
Section 32.
|
(h) All other monies received by the Board under this Act |
shall be
paid into the General Revenue Fund of the State.
|
(i) The salaries of the Board members, secretary, stewards,
|
directors of mutuels, veterinarians, representatives, |
accountants,
clerks, stenographers, inspectors and other |
employees of the Board, and
all expenses of the Board incident |
to the administration of this Act,
including, but not limited |
to, all expenses and salaries incident to the
taking of saliva |
and urine samples in accordance with the rules and
regulations |
of the Board shall be paid out of the Agricultural Premium
|
Fund.
|
(j) The Agricultural Premium Fund shall also be used:
|
(1) for the expenses of operating the Illinois State |
Fair and the
DuQuoin State Fair, including the
payment of |
prize money or premiums;
|
(2) for the distribution to county fairs, vocational |
agriculture
section fairs, agricultural societies, and |
agricultural extension clubs
in accordance with the |
Agricultural Fair Act, as
amended;
|
(3) for payment of prize monies and premiums awarded |
and for
expenses incurred in connection with the |
International Livestock
Exposition and the Mid-Continent |
Livestock Exposition held in Illinois,
which premiums, and |
awards must be approved, and paid by the Illinois
|
Department of Agriculture;
|
(4) for personal service of county agricultural |
advisors and county
home advisors;
|
(5) for distribution to agricultural home economic |
extension
councils in accordance with "An Act in relation |
to additional support
and finance for the Agricultural and |
Home Economic Extension Councils in
the several counties in |
this State and making an appropriation
therefor", approved |
|
July 24, 1967, as amended;
|
(6) for research on equine disease, including a |
development center
therefor;
|
(7) for training scholarships for study on equine |
diseases to
students at the University of Illinois College |
of Veterinary Medicine;
|
(8) for the rehabilitation, repair and maintenance of
|
the Illinois and DuQuoin State Fair Grounds and
the |
structures and facilities thereon and the construction of |
permanent
improvements on such Fair Grounds, including |
such structures, facilities and
property located on such
|
State Fair Grounds which are under the custody and control |
of the
Department of Agriculture;
|
(9) for the expenses of the Department of Agriculture |
under Section
5-530 of the Departments of State Government |
Law (20 ILCS
5/5-530);
|
(10) for the expenses of the Department of Commerce and |
Economic Opportunity
Community
Affairs under Sections
|
605-620, 605-625, and
605-630 of the Department of Commerce |
and Economic Opportunity
Community Affairs Law (20 ILCS
|
605/605-620, 605/605-625, and 605/605-630);
|
(11) for remodeling, expanding, and reconstructing |
facilities
destroyed by fire of any Fair and Exposition |
Authority in counties with
a population of 1,000,000 or |
more inhabitants;
|
(12) for the purpose of assisting in the care and |
general
rehabilitation of disabled veterans of any war and |
their surviving
spouses and orphans;
|
(13) for expenses of the Department of State Police for |
duties
performed under this Act;
|
(14) for the Department of Agriculture for soil surveys |
and soil and water
conservation purposes;
|
(15) for the Department of Agriculture for grants to |
the City of Chicago
for conducting the Chicagofest.
|
(k) To the extent that monies paid by the Board to the |
Agricultural
Premium Fund are in the opinion of the Governor in |
|
excess of the amount
necessary for the purposes herein stated, |
the Governor shall notify the
Comptroller and the State |
Treasurer of such fact, who, upon receipt of
such notification, |
shall transfer such excess monies from the
Agricultural Premium |
Fund to the General Revenue Fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-40, eff. 1-1-00; 91-239, eff. 1-1-00; 92-16, |
eff.
6-28-01; revised 12-6-03.)
|
Section 55-140. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
changing Section 12-5 as follows: |
(305 ILCS 5/12-5) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-5)
|
Sec. 12-5. Appropriations; uses; federal grants; report to
|
General Assembly. From the sums appropriated by the General |
Assembly,
the Illinois Department shall order for payment by |
warrant from the State
Treasury grants for public aid under |
Articles III, IV, and V,
including
grants for funeral and |
burial expenses, and all costs of administration of
the |
Illinois Department and the County Departments relating |
thereto. Moneys
appropriated to the Illinois Department for |
public aid under Article VI may
be used, with the consent of |
the Governor, to co-operate
with federal, State, and local |
agencies in the development of work
projects designed to |
provide suitable employment for persons receiving
public aid |
under Article VI. The Illinois Department, with the consent
of |
the Governor, may be the agent of the State for the receipt and
|
disbursement of federal funds or commodities for public aid |
purposes
under Article VI and for related purposes in which the
|
co-operation of the Illinois Department is sought by the |
federal
government, and, in connection therewith, may make |
necessary
expenditures from moneys appropriated for public aid |
under any Article
of this Code and for administration. The |
Illinois Department, with the
consent of the Governor, may be |
the agent of the State for the receipt and
disbursement of |
federal funds pursuant to the Immigration Reform and
Control |
Act of 1986 and may make necessary expenditures from monies
|
|
appropriated to it for operations, administration, and grants, |
including
payment to the Health Insurance Reserve Fund for |
group insurance costs at
the rate certified by the Department |
of Central Management Services. All
amounts received by the |
Illinois Department pursuant to the Immigration Reform
and |
Control Act of 1986 shall be deposited in the Immigration |
Reform and
Control Fund. All amounts received into the |
Immigration Reform and Control
Fund as reimbursement for |
expenditures from the General Revenue Fund shall be
transferred |
to the General Revenue Fund.
|
All grants received by the Illinois Department for programs |
funded by the
Federal Social Services Block Grant shall be |
deposited in the Social Services
Block Grant Fund. All funds |
received into the Social Services Block Grant Fund
as |
reimbursement for expenditures from the General Revenue Fund |
shall be
transferred to the General Revenue Fund. All funds |
received into the Social
Services Block Grant fund for |
reimbursement for expenditure out of the Local
Initiative Fund |
shall be transferred into the Local Initiative Fund. Any other
|
federal funds received into the Social Services Block Grant |
Fund shall be
transferred to the Special Purposes Trust Fund. |
All federal funds received by
the Illinois Department as |
reimbursement for Employment and Training Programs
for |
expenditures made by the Illinois Department from grants, |
gifts, or
legacies as provided in Section 12-4.18 or made by an |
entity other than the
Illinois Department shall be deposited |
into the Employment and Training Fund,
except that federal |
funds received as reimbursement as a result of the
|
appropriation made for the costs of providing adult education |
to public
assistance recipients under the "Adult Education, |
Public Assistance Fund" shall
be deposited into the General |
Revenue Fund; provided, however, that all funds,
except those |
that are specified in an interagency agreement between the
|
Illinois Community College Board and the Illinois Department, |
that are received
by the Illinois Department as reimbursement |
under Title IV-A of the Social
Security Act for
expenditures |
|
that are made by the Illinois Community College Board or any
|
public community college of this State shall be credited to a |
special account
that the State Treasurer shall establish and |
maintain within the Employment and
Training Fund for the |
purpose of segregating the reimbursements received for
|
expenditures made by those entities. As reimbursements are |
deposited into the
Employment and Training Fund, the Illinois |
Department shall certify to the
State Comptroller and State |
Treasurer the amount that is to be credited to the
special |
account established within that Fund as a reimbursement for
|
expenditures under Title IV-A of the Social Security Act made |
by the Illinois Community College
Board or any of the public |
community colleges. All amounts credited to the
special account |
established and maintained within the Employment and Training
|
Fund as provided in this Section shall be held for transfer to |
the TANF
Opportunities Fund as provided in subsection (d) of |
Section 12-10.3, and shall
not be transferred to any other fund |
or used for any other purpose.
|
Any or all federal funds received as reimbursement for food |
and shelter
assistance under the Emergency Food and Shelter |
Program authorized by
Section 12-4.5 may be deposited, with the |
consent of the Governor, into the
Homelessness Prevention Fund.
|
Eighty percent of the federal financial participation |
funds received by the
Illinois Department under the Title IV-A |
Emergency Assistance program as
reimbursement for expenditures |
made from the Illinois Department of Children
and Family |
Services appropriations for the costs of providing services in
|
behalf of Department of Children and Family Services clients |
shall be deposited
into the DCFS Children's Services
Fund.
|
All federal funds, except those covered by the foregoing 3
|
paragraphs, received as reimbursement for expenditures from |
the General Revenue
Fund shall be deposited in the General |
Revenue Fund for administrative and
distributive expenditures |
properly chargeable by federal law or regulation to
aid |
programs established under Articles III through XII and Titles |
IV, XVI, XIX
and XX of the Federal Social Security Act. Any |
|
other federal funds received by
the Illinois Department under |
Sections 12-4.6, 12-4.18 and
12-4.19 that are required by |
Section 12-10 of this Code to be paid into the
Special Purposes |
Trust Fund shall be deposited into the Special Purposes Trust
|
Fund. Any other federal funds received by the Illinois |
Department pursuant to
the Child Support Enforcement Program |
established by Title IV-D of the Social
Security Act shall be |
deposited in the Child Support Enforcement Trust Fund
as |
required under Section 12-10.2 of this Code. Any other federal |
funds
received by the Illinois Department for medical |
assistance program expenditures
made under Title XIX of the |
Social Security Act and Article V of this Code that
are |
required by
Section 5-4.21 of this Code to be paid into the |
Medicaid Developmentally
Disabled Provider Participation Fee |
Trust Fund shall be deposited into the
Medicaid Developmentally |
Disabled Provider Participation Fee Trust Fund. Any
other |
federal funds received by the Illinois Department for medical
|
assistance program expenditures made under Title XIX of the |
Social
Security Act and Article V of this Code that are |
required by
Section 5-4.31 of this Code to be paid into the |
Medicaid Long Term Care
Provider Participation Fee Trust Fund |
shall be deposited into the Medicaid
Long Term Care Provider |
Participation Fee Trust Fund. Any other federal funds
received |
by the Illinois
Department for hospital inpatient, hospital |
ambulatory care, and
disproportionate share hospital |
expenditures made under Title XIX of the
Social Security Act |
and Article V of this Code that are
required by Section 14-2 of |
this Code to be paid into the Hospital Services
Trust Fund |
shall be deposited into the Hospital Services
Trust Fund. Any |
other federal funds received by the Illinois Department for
|
expenditures made under Title XIX of the Social Security Act |
and Articles
V and VI of this Code that are required by Section |
15-2 of this Code
to be paid into the County Provider Trust |
Fund shall be deposited
into the County Provider Trust Fund. |
Any other federal funds received
by the Illinois Department for |
hospital
inpatient, hospital ambulatory care, and |
|
disproportionate share hospital
expenditures made under Title |
XIX of the Social Security Act and Article V of
this Code that |
are required by Section 5A-8 of this Code to be paid into the
|
Hospital Provider Fund shall be deposited into the Hospital |
Provider Fund. Any
other federal funds received by the Illinois |
Department for medical
assistance program expenditures made |
under Title XIX of the Social Security
Act and Article V of |
this Code that are required by Section 5B-8 of this
Code to be |
paid into the Long-Term Care Provider Fund shall be deposited
|
into the Long-Term Care Provider Fund. Any other federal funds |
received by
the Illinois Department for medical assistance |
program expenditures made
under Title XIX of the Social |
Security Act and Article V of this Code that
are required by |
Section 5C-7 of this Code to be paid into the
Developmentally |
Disabled Care Provider Fund shall be deposited into the
|
Developmentally Disabled Care Provider Fund. Any other federal |
funds received
by the Illinois Department for trauma center
|
adjustment payments that are required by Section 5-5.03 of this |
Code and made
under Title XIX of the Social Security Act and |
Article V of this Code shall be
deposited into the Trauma |
Center Fund. Any other federal funds received by
the Illinois |
Department as reimbursement for expenses for early |
intervention
services paid from the Early Intervention |
Services Revolving Fund shall be
deposited into that Fund.
|
The Illinois Department shall report to the General |
Assembly at the
end of each fiscal quarter the amount of all |
funds received and paid into
the Social Service Block Grant |
Fund and the Local Initiative Fund and the
expenditures and |
transfers of such funds for services, programs and other
|
purposes authorized by law. Such report shall be filed with the |
Speaker,
Minority Leader and Clerk of the House, with the |
President, Minority Leader
and Secretary of the Senate, with |
the Chairmen of the House and Senate
Appropriations Committees, |
the House Human Resources Committee and the
Senate Public |
Health, Welfare and Corrections Committee, or the successor
|
standing Committees of each as provided by the rules of the |
|
House and
Senate, respectively, with the Legislative Research |
Unit and with the State
Government Report Distribution Center |
for the General Assembly as is
required under paragraph (t) of |
Section 7 of the State Library Act
shall be deemed sufficient |
to comply with this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-111, eff. 1-1-02; 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
Section 55-145. The Nursing Home Grant Assistance Act is |
amended by changing Sections 20 and 55 as follows:
|
(305 ILCS 40/20) (from Ch. 23, par. 7100-20)
|
Sec. 20. Nursing Home Grant Assistance Program
Fund .
|
(a) (Blank).
There is created in the State Treasury the |
Nursing Home Grant
Assistance Fund. Interest earned on the Fund |
shall be credited to the Fund.
|
(b) The Fund is created for the purpose of receiving moneys
|
in accordance with Section 15, Section 30 and Section 35 of
|
this Act, and disbursing monies for payment of:
|
( 1) grants to eligible individuals under this Act;
|
(2) administrative expenses incurred by the Department |
in
performing the activities authorized by this Act;
|
( 3) refunds to distribution agents as provided for |
under this
Act; and
|
( 4) transfers to the General Revenue Fund of any |
amounts of
Nursing Home Grant Assistance payments returned |
to the
Department by distribution agents.
|
The Department shall deposit all moneys received under
this |
Act in the Nursing Home Grant Assistance Fund.
|
The Department, subject to appropriation, may use up to |
2.5% of the
moneys received under this Act for the costs of |
administering and
enforcing the program.
|
(c) Within 30 days after the end of the quarterly period in |
which the
distribution agent is required to file the |
certification and
make the payment required by this Act, and |
after verification
with the Illinois Department of Public Aid |
of the licensing
status of the distribution agent, the Director |
|
shall order
the payment to be made from appropriations made for |
the purposes
of this Act.
|
(d) Disbursements from this Fund shall be by warrants drawn
|
by the State Comptroller upon receipt of vouchers duly
executed |
and certified by the Department. The Department
shall prepare |
and certify to the State Comptroller the
disbursement of the |
grants to qualified distributing agents
for payment to the |
eligible individuals certified to the
Department by the |
qualified distributing agents.
|
The amount to be paid per calendar quarter to a qualified |
distribution
agent shall not exceed, for each
eligible |
individual, $500 multiplied by a
fraction equal to the number |
of days that the eligible individual's nursing
home care was |
not paid for, in whole or in part, by a federal, State, or
|
combined federal-State medical care program, divided by the |
number of
calendar days in the quarter. Any amount the |
qualified
distribution agent owes to the Department under |
Section 30 shall be
deducted from the amount of the payment to |
the qualified distribution agent.
|
If the amount appropriated or available in the Fund is |
insufficient to
meet all or part of any quarterly payment |
certification, the payment
certified to each qualified |
distributing agent shall be uniformly reduced
by an amount |
which will permit a payment to be made to each
qualified |
distributing agent. Within 10 days after receipt
by the State |
Comptroller of the disbursement certification to
the qualified |
distributing agents, the State Comptroller
shall cause the |
warrants to be drawn for the respective amounts
in accordance |
with the directions contained in that
certification.
|
(e) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, as |
soon as is
practicable after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1994, the
Department shall order that |
payments be made, subject to appropriation, to the
appropriate |
distribution agents for grants to persons who were eligible
|
individuals during the fourth quarter of fiscal year 1993 to |
the extent that
those individuals did not receive a
grant for |
|
that quarter or the fourth quarter of fiscal year 1992. An |
eligible
individual, or a person acting on behalf of an |
eligible individual, must apply
on or before December 31, 1994 |
for a grant under this subsection (e). The
amount to
be
paid to |
each distribution agent under this subsection shall be |
calculated as
provided in subsection (d). Distribution agents |
shall distribute the grants to
eligible individuals as required |
in Section 30. For the purpose of determining
grants under this |
subsection (e), a nursing home that is a distribution agent
|
under this Act shall file with the Department, on or before |
September 30, 1994,
a certification disclosing the information |
required under Section 15 with
respect to the fourth quarter of |
fiscal year 1993.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99.)
|
(305 ILCS 40/55)
|
Sec. 55. Supplemental Grants. For each quarter for which an |
eligible
individual receives a Nursing Home Grant Assistance |
payment under this Act such
eligible individual shall qualify |
to receive a Supplemental Nursing Home Grant
Assistance |
payment. For each quarter for which an eligible individual
|
qualifies to receive a Supplemental Nursing Home Grant |
Assistance payment the
amount of a Supplemental Nursing Home |
Grant Assistance payment shall be equal
to
the difference |
between the Supplemental Base Amount for that quarter minus the
|
Nursing Home Grant Assistance payment for that quarter. For |
each such quarter,
the Supplemental Base Amount is equal to |
$500 multiplied by a fraction equal to
the amount of days that |
the eligible individual's nursing home care was not
paid for, |
in whole or in part, by a federal, State, or combined |
federal-State
medical care program, divided by the number of |
calendar days in the quarter.
For each such quarter, the |
Nursing Home Grant Assistance payment is the amount
of the |
grant paid and received by an eligible individual for that |
quarter.
Subject to appropriation, Supplemental Nursing Home |
Grant Assistance payments
shall be made from the Nursing Home |
|
Grant Assistance Fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 88-140.)
|
Section 55-150. The Homelessness Prevention Act is amended |
by changing Section 4 as follows:
|
(310 ILCS 70/4) (from Ch. 67 1/2, par. 1304)
|
Sec. 4. Homelessness Prevention and Assistance Program.
|
(a) The Department shall establish a family homelessness |
prevention and
assistance program to stabilize families in |
their existing homes, to shorten
the
amount of time that |
families stay in emergency shelters, and to assist families
|
with securing affordable transitional or permanent housing.
|
The Department shall make grants, from funds
appropriated to it |
from the Homelessness Prevention Fund , to develop and
implement |
homelessness prevention and assistance projects under this |
Act.
|
(b) To fund this program,
there is created in the State |
Treasury a fund to be known as the
Homelessness Prevention |
Fund.
Moneys in the Fund, subject to appropriation, may be |
expended for the
purposes of this Act. Grants may be made from |
funds
appropriated for the purposes of this Act and from any
|
federal funds or
funds from other sources which are made |
available for the purposes of this
Act. Grants shall be made |
under this Act only to the
extent that
funds are available.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-388, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
Section 55-155. The Environmental Protection Act is |
amended by changing Section 22.15 as follows:
|
(415 ILCS 5/22.15) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.15)
|
Sec. 22.15. Solid Waste Management Fund; fees.
|
(a) There is hereby created within the State Treasury a
|
special fund to be known as the "Solid Waste Management Fund", |
to be
constituted from the fees collected by the State pursuant |
to this Section
and from repayments of loans made from the Fund |
|
for solid waste projects.
Moneys received by the Department of |
Commerce and Economic Opportunity
Community Affairs
in |
repayment of loans made pursuant to the Illinois Solid Waste |
Management
Act shall be deposited into the General Revenue Fund
|
Solid Waste Management Revolving Loan Fund .
|
(b) The Agency shall assess and collect a
fee in the amount |
set forth herein from the owner or operator of each sanitary
|
landfill permitted or required to be permitted by the Agency to |
dispose of
solid waste if the sanitary landfill is located off |
the site where such waste
was produced and if such sanitary |
landfill is owned, controlled, and operated
by a person other |
than the generator of such waste. The Agency shall deposit
all |
fees collected into the Solid Waste Management Fund. If a site |
is
contiguous to one or more landfills owned or operated by the |
same person, the
volumes permanently disposed of by each |
landfill shall be combined for purposes
of determining the fee |
under this subsection.
|
(1) If more than 150,000 cubic yards of non-hazardous |
solid waste is
permanently disposed of at a site in a |
calendar year, the owner or operator
shall either pay a fee |
of 95 cents per cubic yard or,
alternatively, the owner or |
operator may weigh the quantity of the solid waste
|
permanently disposed of with a device for which |
certification has been obtained
under the Weights and |
Measures Act and pay a fee of $2.00 per
ton of solid waste |
permanently disposed of. In no case shall the fee collected
|
or paid by the owner or operator under this paragraph |
exceed $1.55 per cubic yard or $3.27 per ton.
|
(2) If more than 100,000 cubic yards but not more than |
150,000 cubic
yards of non-hazardous waste is permanently |
disposed of at a site in a calendar
year, the owner or |
operator shall pay a fee of $52,630.
|
(3) If more than 50,000 cubic yards but not more than |
100,000 cubic
yards of non-hazardous solid waste is |
permanently disposed of at a site
in a calendar year, the |
owner or operator shall pay a fee of $23,790.
|
|
(4) If more than 10,000 cubic yards but not more than |
50,000 cubic
yards of non-hazardous solid waste is |
permanently disposed of at a site
in a calendar year, the |
owner or operator shall pay a fee of $7,260.
|
(5) If not more than 10,000 cubic yards of |
non-hazardous solid waste is
permanently disposed of at a |
site in a calendar year, the owner or operator
shall pay a |
fee of $1050.
|
(c) (Blank.)
|
(d) The Agency shall establish rules relating to the |
collection of the
fees authorized by this Section. Such rules |
shall include, but not be
limited to:
|
(1) necessary records identifying the quantities of |
solid waste received
or disposed;
|
(2) the form and submission of reports to accompany the |
payment of fees
to the Agency;
|
(3) the time and manner of payment of fees to the |
Agency, which payments
shall not be more often than |
quarterly; and
|
(4) procedures setting forth criteria establishing |
when an owner or
operator may measure by weight or volume |
during any given quarter or other
fee payment period.
|
(e) Pursuant to appropriation, all monies in the Solid |
Waste Management
Fund shall be used by the Agency and the |
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity
Community
|
Affairs for the purposes set forth in this Section and in the |
Illinois
Solid Waste Management Act, including for the costs of |
fee collection and
administration.
|
(f) The Agency is authorized to enter into such agreements |
and to
promulgate such rules as are necessary to carry out its |
duties under this
Section and the Illinois Solid Waste |
Management Act.
|
(g) On the first day of January, April, July, and October |
of each year,
beginning on July 1, 1996, the State Comptroller |
and Treasurer shall
transfer $500,000 from the Solid Waste |
Management Fund to the Hazardous Waste
Fund. Moneys transferred |
|
under this subsection (g) shall be used only for the
purposes |
set forth in item (1) of subsection (d) of Section 22.2.
|
(h) The Agency is authorized to provide financial |
assistance to units of
local government for the performance of |
inspecting, investigating and
enforcement activities pursuant |
to Section 4(r) at nonhazardous solid
waste disposal sites.
|
(i) The Agency is authorized to support the operations of |
an industrial
materials exchange service, and to conduct |
household waste collection and
disposal programs.
|
(j) A unit of local government, as defined in the Local |
Solid Waste Disposal
Act, in which a solid waste disposal |
facility is located may establish a fee,
tax, or surcharge with |
regard to the permanent disposal of solid waste.
All fees, |
taxes, and surcharges collected under this subsection shall be
|
utilized for solid waste management purposes, including |
long-term monitoring
and maintenance of landfills, planning, |
implementation, inspection, enforcement
and other activities |
consistent with the Solid Waste Management Act and the
Local |
Solid Waste Disposal Act, or for any other environment-related |
purpose,
including but not limited to an environment-related |
public works project, but
not for the construction of a new |
pollution control facility other than a
household hazardous |
waste facility. However, the total fee, tax or surcharge
|
imposed by all units of local government under this subsection |
(j) upon the
solid waste disposal facility shall not exceed:
|
(1) 60¢ per cubic yard if more than 150,000 cubic yards |
of non-hazardous
solid waste is permanently disposed of at |
the site in a calendar year, unless
the owner or operator |
weighs the quantity of the solid waste received with a
|
device for which certification has been obtained under the |
Weights and Measures
Act, in which case the fee shall not |
exceed $1.27 per ton of solid waste
permanently disposed |
of.
|
(2) $33,350 if more than 100,000
cubic yards, but not |
more than 150,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous waste
is |
permanently disposed of at the site in a calendar year.
|
|
(3) $15,500 if more than 50,000 cubic
yards, but not |
more than 100,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous solid waste |
is
permanently disposed of at the site in a calendar year.
|
(4) $4,650 if more than 10,000 cubic
yards, but not |
more than 50,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous solid waste
|
is permanently disposed of at the site in a calendar year.
|
(5) $$650 if not more than 10,000 cubic
yards of |
non-hazardous solid waste is permanently disposed of at the |
site in
a calendar year.
|
The corporate authorities of the unit of local government
|
may use proceeds from the fee, tax, or surcharge to reimburse a |
highway
commissioner whose road district lies wholly or |
partially within the
corporate limits of the unit of local |
government for expenses incurred in
the removal of |
nonhazardous, nonfluid municipal waste that has been dumped
on |
public property in violation of a State law or local ordinance.
|
A county or Municipal Joint Action Agency that imposes a |
fee, tax, or
surcharge under this subsection may use the |
proceeds thereof to reimburse a
municipality that lies wholly |
or partially within its boundaries for expenses
incurred in the |
removal of nonhazardous, nonfluid municipal waste that has been
|
dumped on public property in violation of a State law or local |
ordinance.
|
If the fees are to be used to conduct a local sanitary |
landfill
inspection or enforcement program, the unit of local |
government must enter
into a written delegation agreement with |
the Agency pursuant to subsection
(r) of Section 4. The unit of |
local government and the Agency shall enter
into such a written |
delegation agreement within 60 days after the
establishment of |
such fees. At least annually,
the Agency shall conduct an audit |
of the expenditures made by units of local
government from the |
funds granted by the Agency to the units of local
government |
for purposes of local sanitary landfill inspection and |
enforcement
programs, to ensure that the funds have been |
expended for the prescribed
purposes under the grant.
|
The fees, taxes or surcharges collected under this |
|
subsection (j) shall
be placed by the unit of local government |
in a separate fund, and the
interest received on the moneys in |
the fund shall be credited to the fund. The
monies in the fund |
may be accumulated over a period of years to be
expended in |
accordance with this subsection.
|
A unit of local government, as defined in the Local Solid |
Waste Disposal
Act, shall prepare and distribute to the Agency, |
in April of each year, a
report that details spending plans for |
monies collected in accordance with
this subsection. The report |
will at a minimum include the following:
|
(1) The total monies collected pursuant to this |
subsection.
|
(2) The most current balance of monies collected |
pursuant to this
subsection.
|
(3) An itemized accounting of all monies expended for |
the previous year
pursuant to this subsection.
|
(4) An estimation of monies to be collected for the |
following 3
years pursuant to this subsection.
|
(5) A narrative detailing the general direction and |
scope of future
expenditures for one, 2 and 3 years.
|
The exemptions granted under Sections 22.16 and 22.16a, and |
under
subsections (c) and (k) of this Section, shall be |
applicable to any fee,
tax or surcharge imposed under this |
subsection (j); except that the fee,
tax or surcharge |
authorized to be imposed under this subsection (j) may be
made |
applicable by a unit of local government to the permanent |
disposal of
solid waste after December 31, 1986, under any |
contract lawfully executed
before June 1, 1986 under which more |
than 150,000 cubic yards (or 50,000 tons)
of solid waste is to |
be permanently disposed of, even though the waste is
exempt |
from the fee imposed by the State under subsection (b) of this |
Section
pursuant to an exemption granted under Section 22.16.
|
(k) In accordance with the findings and purposes of the |
Illinois Solid
Waste Management Act, beginning January 1, 1989 |
the fee under subsection
(b) and the fee, tax or surcharge |
under subsection (j) shall not apply to:
|
|
(1) Waste which is hazardous waste; or
|
(2) Waste which is pollution control waste; or
|
(3) Waste from recycling, reclamation or reuse |
processes which have been
approved by the Agency as being |
designed to remove any contaminant from
wastes so as to |
render such wastes reusable, provided that the process
|
renders at least 50% of the waste reusable; or
|
(4) Non-hazardous solid waste that is received at a |
sanitary landfill
and composted or recycled through a |
process permitted by the Agency; or
|
(5) Any landfill which is permitted by the Agency to |
receive only
demolition or construction debris or |
landscape waste.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-574, eff. 6-26-02; 93-32, eff. 7-1-03; revised |
12-6-03.)
|
Section 55-160. The Illinois Solid Waste Management Act is |
amended by changing Section 6 as follows:
|
(415 ILCS 20/6) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7056)
|
Sec. 6. The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity
|
Community Affairs shall be the lead agency for implementation |
of this Act and
shall have the following powers:
|
(a) To provide technical and educational assistance for |
applications of
technologies and practices which will minimize |
the land disposal of
non-hazardous solid waste; economic |
feasibility of implementation of solid
waste management |
alternatives; analysis of markets for recyclable materials
and |
energy products; application of the Geographic Information
|
System to provide analysis of natural resource, land use, and |
environmental
impacts; evaluation of financing and ownership |
options; and evaluation of
plans prepared by units of local |
government pursuant to Section 22.15 of
the Environmental |
Protection Act.
|
(b) To provide technical assistance in siting pollution |
control
facilities, defined as any waste storage site, sanitary |
|
landfill, waste
disposal site, waste transfer station or waste |
incinerator.
|
(c) To provide loans or recycling and composting grants to |
businesses and
not-for-profit and governmental organizations |
for the purposes of increasing
the quantity of materials |
recycled or composted in Illinois; developing and
implementing
|
innovative recycling methods and technologies; developing and |
expanding
markets for recyclable materials; and increasing the |
self-sufficiency of
the recycling industry in Illinois. The |
Department shall work with and
coordinate its activities with |
existing for-profit and not-for-profit
collection and |
recycling systems to encourage orderly growth in the supply
of |
and markets for recycled materials and to assist existing |
collection and
recycling efforts.
|
The Department shall develop a public education program |
concerning the
importance of both composting and recycling in |
order to preserve landfill
space in Illinois.
|
(d) To establish guidelines and funding criteria for the |
solicitation of
projects under this Act, and to receive and |
evaluate applications for
loans or grants for solid waste |
management projects based upon such
guidelines and criteria. |
Funds may be loaned with or without interest.
Loan repayments |
shall be deposited into the Solid Waste Management
Revolving |
Loan Fund.
|
(e) To support and coordinate solid waste research in |
Illinois, and to
approve the annual solid waste research agenda |
prepared by the University of
Illinois.
|
(f) To provide loans or grants for research, development |
and
demonstration of innovative technologies and practices, |
including but not
limited to pilot programs for collection and |
disposal of household wastes.
|
(g) To promulgate such rules and regulations as are |
necessary to carry
out the purposes of subsections (c), (d) and |
(f) of this Section.
|
(h) To cooperate with the Environmental Protection Agency |
for the
purposes specified herein.
|
|
There is hereby created the Solid Waste Management |
Revolving Loan Fund,
a special fund in the State Treasury, |
hereinafter referred to as the
"Fund". The Department is |
authorized to accept any and all grants,
repayments of
interest |
and principal on loans, matching funds,
reimbursements, |
appropriations, income derived from investments, or other
|
things of value from the federal or state governments or from |
any
institution, person, partnership, joint venture, |
corporation, public or
private , for deposit in the Fund. Any |
moneys collected as a result of
foreclosures of loans or other |
financing agreements, or the violation of
any terms thereof, |
shall also be deposited in the Fund .
|
The Department is authorized to use moneys available for |
that purpose
deposited in the Fund , subject
to appropriation, |
expressly for the purpose of implementing a revolving
loan |
program according to procedures established pursuant to this |
Act.
Those moneys
Moneys in the Fund shall be used by the |
Department for the purpose of
financing additional projects and |
for the Department's administrative
expenses related thereto.
|
(Source: P.A. 88-681, eff. 12-22-94; 89-445, eff. 2-7-96; |
revised 12-6-03.)
|
Section 55-165. The Uranium and Thorium Mill Tailings |
Control Act is amended by changing Sections 15 and 40 as |
follows:
|
(420 ILCS 42/15)
|
Sec. 15. Storage fees.
|
(a) Beginning January 1, 1994, an annual fee shall be |
imposed on the
owner or operator of any property that has been |
used in whole or in part
for the milling of source material and |
is being used for the storage or
disposal of by-product |
material, equal
to $2 per cubic foot of by-product material |
being stored or disposed
of by the facility.
After a facility |
is cleaned up in accordance with the
Department's radiological |
soil clean-up criteria, no fee shall be due, imposed
upon, or |
|
collected from an owner.
No fee shall be imposed upon any |
by-product
material moved to a facility in contemplation of the |
subsequent removal of the
by-product material pursuant to law |
or upon any by-product material moved to
a facility in |
contemplation of processing the material through a physical
|
separation facility. No fees shall be collected from any State,
|
county, municipal, or local governmental agency.
In connection |
with settling litigation
regarding the amount of the fee to be |
imposed, the Director may enter into an
agreement with the |
owner or operator of any facility specifying that the fee
to be |
imposed shall not exceed $26,000,000 in any calendar year.
The |
fees
assessed under this Section are separate and distinct from |
any license fees
imposed under Section 11 of the Radiation |
Protection Act of 1990.
|
The fee shall be due on June 1 of each year or at such other
|
times in such installments as the Director may provide by rule. |
To facilitate
the expeditious removal of by-product material, |
rules establishing
payment dates or schedules may be adopted as |
emergency rules under
Section 5-45 of the Administrative |
Procedure Act. The fee shall be
collected and administered by |
the Department, and shall be deposited into the
General Revenue |
Fund
By-product Material Safety Fund, which is created as an |
interest bearing
special fund in the State Treasury.
Amounts in |
the By-product Material Safety Fund not currently required to |
meet
the obligations of the Fund shall be invested as provided |
by law and all
interest earned from investments shall be |
retained in the Fund .
|
(b) Moneys in the By-product Material Safety Fund
may be |
expended by the
Department , subject to appropriation, for only
|
the following purposes but
and only as the moneys relate to
|
by-product material attributable to the owner or operator who |
pays the fees under subsection (a)
moneys
into the Fund :
|
(1) the costs of monitoring, inspecting, and otherwise |
regulating the
storage and disposal of by-product |
material, wherever located;
|
(2) the costs of undertaking any maintenance,
|
|
decommissioning activities, cleanup, responses to |
radiation emergencies, or
remedial action that would |
otherwise be required of the owner or
operator by law or |
under a license amendment or condition in connection with |
by-product materials;
|
(3) the costs that would otherwise be required of the |
owner or operator,
by law or under a license amendment or |
condition, incurred by the State
arising from the |
transportation of
the by-product material from a storage or |
unlicensed disposal location to a
licensed permanent |
disposal facility; and
|
(4) reimbursement to the owner or operator of any |
facility used
for
the storage or disposal of by-product |
material
for costs incurred by the owner or operator in
|
connection with the decontamination or decommissioning of |
the storage or
disposal facility or other properties |
contaminated with by-product
material. However, the amount |
of the reimbursements paid to the owner or
operator of a |
by-product material storage or disposal facility shall not
|
be reduced for any amounts recovered by the owner or |
operator pursuant to
Title X of the federal Energy Policy |
Act of 1992 and shall not
exceed the amount of money paid |
into the Fund by that owner or operator under subsection |
(a) plus
the interest accrued in the Fund attributable to |
amounts paid by that owner or
operator.
|
An owner or operator who incurs costs in connection with |
the
decontamination or decommissioning of the storage or |
disposal facility or other
properties contaminated with |
by-product material is entitled to have
those costs promptly |
reimbursed from the Fund as provided in this Section.
In the |
event the owner or operator has incurred reimbursable costs for |
which
there are not adequate moneys in the Fund with which to |
provide reimbursement,
the Director shall reduce the amount of |
any fee payable in the future imposed
under this Act by the |
amount of the reimbursable expenses incurred by the owner
or |
operator.
An owner or
operator of a facility shall submit |
|
requests for reimbursement to the Director
in a form reasonably |
required by the Director. Upon receipt of a request,
the |
Director shall give written notice approving or disapproving |
each of the
owner's or operator's request for reimbursement |
within 60 days. The Director
shall approve requests for |
reimbursement unless the Director finds that the
amount
is |
excessive, erroneous, or otherwise inconsistent with paragraph |
(4) of this
subsection or with any license or license |
amendments issued in connection with
that owner's or operator's |
decontamination or decommissioning plan. If the
Director |
disapproves a
reimbursement request, the Director shall set |
forth in writing to the owner or
operator the reasons for |
disapproval. The owner or operator may resubmit to
the |
Department a disapproved reimbursement request with additional |
information
as may be required. Disapproval of a reimbursement |
request shall constitute
final action for purposes of the |
Administrative Review Law unless the owner or
operator |
resubmits the denied request within 35 days.
To the extent |
there are funds available in the Fund , the Director shall |
prepare and certify to the
Comptroller
the disbursement of the |
approved sums from the By-Product Material Safety Fund
to the |
owners or operators or, if there are insufficient funds |
available, the
Director shall off-set future fees otherwise |
payable by the owner or operator
by the amount of the approved |
reimbursable expenses.
|
(c) To the extent that costs identified in parts (1), (2), |
and (3) of
subsections (b)
are recovered by the Department |
under the Radiation Protection Act of 1990
or its rules, the |
Department shall not use money under this Section
in
the |
By-product Material Safety Fund to cover these costs.
|
(d) (Blank).
The provisions directing the expenditures |
from the By-product
Material Safety Fund provided for in this |
Section shall constitute an
irrevocable
and continuing |
appropriation to the Department of Nuclear Safety solely for |
the
purposes as provided in this Section. The State Treasurer |
and State
Comptroller are
hereby authorized and directed to pay |
|
expenditures or record in their
records any offset approved by |
the Director as provided in this
Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-39, eff. 6-30-97.)
|
(420 ILCS 42/40)
|
Sec. 40. Violations and penalties.
|
(a) Any person who violates Section 20 shall be subject to |
a civil penalty
not to exceed $10,000 per day of violation.
|
(b) Any person failing to pay the fees provided for in |
Section 15 shall be
subject to a civil penalty not to exceed 4 |
times the amount of the fees not paid.
|
(c) Violations of this Act shall be prosecuted by the |
Attorney General at the
request of the Department. Civil |
penalties under this Act are recoverable in an
action brought |
by the Attorney General on behalf of the State in the
circuit |
court of the county in which the facility is located. All |
amounts
collected from fines under this Section shall be |
deposited in the
General Revenue Fund
By-product Material |
Safety Fund . It shall also be the duty of the Attorney
General |
upon the request of the Department to bring an action for an
|
injunction against any person violating any of the provisions |
of this Act.
The Court may assess all or a portion of the cost |
of actions brought under
this subsection, including but not |
limited to attorney, expert witness, and
consultant fees, to |
the owner or operator of the source material milling
facility |
or to any other person responsible for the violation or |
contamination.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-1024.)
|
Section 55-170. The Open Space Lands Acquisition and |
Development Act is amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
|
(525 ILCS 35/3) (from Ch. 85, par. 2103)
|
Sec. 3. From appropriations made from the Capital |
Development Fund,
Build Illinois Purposes Fund, Build Illinois |
Bond Fund or other
available or designated funds for such
|
|
purposes, the Department shall make grants to local governments |
as
financial assistance, on a reimbursement basis, for the |
capital
development and improvement of park, recreation or |
conservation
areas, marinas and shorelines, including planning |
and engineering costs, and for the
acquisition of open space |
lands, including
acquisition of easements and other property |
interests less than fee simple
ownership if the Department |
determines that such property
interests are sufficient to carry |
out the purposes of this Act, subject to
the conditions and |
limitations set forth in this Act.
|
No more than 10% of the amount so appropriated for any |
fiscal year may
be committed or expended on any one project |
described in an application
under this Act.
|
Any grant under this Act to a local government shall be |
conditioned upon
the state providing assistance on a 50/50 |
matching basis for the acquisition
of open space lands and for |
capital development
and improvement proposals.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1308.)
|
Section 55-175. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by |
changing Section 3-1001 as follows:
|
(625 ILCS 5/3-1001) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 3-1001)
|
Sec. 3-1001. A tax is hereby imposed on the privilege of |
using, in this
State, any motor vehicle as defined in Section |
1-146 of this Code acquired by
gift, transfer, or purchase, and |
having a year model designation preceding the
year of |
application for title by 5 or fewer years prior to October 1, |
1985 and
10 or fewer years on and after October 1, 1985 and |
prior to January 1, 1988.
On and after January 1, 1988, the tax |
shall apply to all motor vehicles without
regard to model year. |
Except that the tax shall not apply
|
(i) if the use of the motor vehicle is otherwise taxed |
under the Use Tax
Act;
|
(ii) if the motor vehicle is bought and used by a
|
governmental agency or a society, association, foundation |
|
or institution
organized and operated exclusively for |
charitable, religious or
educational purposes;
|
(iii) if the use of the motor vehicle is not subject to |
the Use Tax Act by
reason of subsection (a), (b), (c), (d), |
(e) or (f) of Section 3-55 of that Act
dealing with the |
prevention of actual or likely multistate taxation;
|
(iv) to implements of husbandry;
|
(v) when a junking certificate is issued pursuant to |
Section 3-117(a)
of this Code;
|
(vi) when a vehicle is subject to the replacement |
vehicle tax imposed
by Section 3-2001 of this Act;
|
(vii) when the transfer is a gift to a beneficiary in |
the
administration of an estate and the beneficiary is a |
surviving spouse.
|
Prior to January 1, 1988, the rate of tax shall be 5% of |
the selling
price for each purchase of a motor vehicle covered |
by Section 3-1001 of
this Code. Except as hereinafter provided, |
beginning January 1, 1988, the
rate of tax shall be as follows |
for transactions in which the selling price
of the motor |
vehicle is less than $15,000:
|
|
Number of Years Transpired After |
Applicable Tax |
|
Model Year of Motor Vehicle |
|
|
1 or less |
$390 |
|
2 |
290 |
|
3 |
215 |
|
4 |
165 |
|
5 |
115 |
|
6 |
90 |
|
7 |
80 |
|
8 |
65 |
|
9 |
50 |
|
10 |
40 |
|
over 10 |
25 |
|
Except as hereinafter provided, beginning January 1, 1988, the |
rate of
tax shall be as follows for transactions in which the |
selling price of the
motor vehicle is $15,000 or more:
|
|
|
Selling Price |
Applicable Tax |
|
$15,000 - $19,999 |
$ 750 |
|
$20,000 - $24,999 |
$1,000 |
|
$25,000 - $29,999 |
$1,250 |
|
$30,000 and over |
$1,500 |
|
For the following transactions, the tax rate shall be $15 for |
each
motor vehicle acquired in such transaction:
|
(i) when the transferee or purchaser is the spouse, |
mother, father,
brother, sister or child of the transferor;
|
(ii) when the transfer is a gift to a beneficiary in |
the administration
of an estate and the beneficiary is not |
a surviving spouse;
|
(iii) when a motor vehicle which has once been |
subjected to the Illinois
retailers' occupation tax or use |
tax is transferred in connection with the
organization, |
reorganization, dissolution or partial liquidation of an
|
incorporated or unincorporated business wherein the |
beneficial ownership
is not changed.
|
A claim that the transaction is taxable under subparagraph |
(i) shall be
supported by such proof of family relationship as |
provided by rules of the
Department.
|
For a transaction in which a motorcycle, motor driven cycle |
or motorized
pedalcycle is acquired the tax rate shall be $25.
|
On and after October 1, 1985, 1/12 of $5,000,000 of the |
moneys received
by the Department of Revenue pursuant to this |
Section shall be paid each
month into the Build Illinois Fund |
and the remainder into the General
Revenue Fund.
|
At the end of any fiscal year in which the moneys received |
by the
Department of Revenue pursuant to this Section exceeds |
the Annual Specified
Amount, as defined in Section 3 of the |
Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, the
State Comptroller shall |
direct the State Treasurer to transfer such
excess amount from |
the General Revenue Fund to the
Build Illinois Purposes Fund.
|
The tax imposed by this Section shall be abated and no |
longer imposed
when the amount deposited to secure the bonds |
issued pursuant to the Build
Illinois Bond Act is sufficient to |
|
provide for the payment of the principal
of, and interest and |
premium, if any, on the bonds, as certified to the
State |
Comptroller and the Director of Revenue by the Director of the
|
Governor's Office of Management and Budget
Bureau of the |
Budget .
|
(Source: P.A. 90-89, eff. 1-1-98; revised 10-15-03 .)
|
(20 ILCS 700/4005 rep.)
|
Section 55-180. The Technology Advancement and Development |
Act is amended by repealing Section 4005.
|
(20 ILCS 1705/18.1 rep.)
|
Section 55-185. The Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Administrative Act is amended by repealing |
Section 18.1.
|
(20 ILCS 3501/825-15 rep.)
|
Section 55-190. The Illinois Finance Authority Act is |
amended by repealing Section 825-15.
|
(20 ILCS 3921/25 rep.)
|
Section 55-200. The Illinois Century Network Act is amended |
by repealing Section 25.
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.33 rep.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.110 rep.) |
(30 ILCS 105/5.161 rep.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.219 rep.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.222 rep.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.225 rep.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.265 rep.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.272 rep.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.303 rep.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.319 rep.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.341 rep.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.373 rep.)
|
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.444 rep.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.469 rep.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.494 rep.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.513 rep.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.517 rep.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.570 rep., from P.A. 92-691)
|
(30 ILCS 105/8.29 rep.)
|
Section 55-205. The State Finance Act is amended by |
repealing Sections 5.33, 5.110, 5.161, 5.219, 5.222, 5.225, |
5.265, 5.272, 5.303, 5.319, 5.341, 5.373, 5.444, 5.469, 5.494, |
5.513, 5.517, 5.570 (as added by Public Act 92-691), and 8.29.
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.121 rep.)
|
Section 55-210. The School Code is amended by repealing |
Section 2-3.121.
|
(110 ILCS 947/72 rep.)
|
Section 55-215. The Higher Education Student Assistance |
Act is amended by repealing Section 72. |
ARTICLE 65 |
Section 65-5. The State Finance Act is amended by changing |
Section 8.12 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 105/8.12)
(from Ch. 127, par. 144.12)
|
Sec. 8.12. State Pensions Fund.
|
(a) The moneys in the State Pensions Fund shall be used |
exclusively
for the administration of the Uniform Disposition |
of Unclaimed Property Act and
for the payment of or repayment |
to the General Revenue Fund a portion of
the required State |
contributions to the
designated retirement systems.
|
"Designated retirement systems" means:
|
(1) the State Employees' Retirement System of |
Illinois;
|
(2) the Teachers' Retirement System of the State of |
|
Illinois;
|
(3) the State Universities Retirement System;
|
(4) the Judges Retirement System of Illinois; and
|
(5) the General Assembly Retirement System.
|
(b) Each year the General Assembly may make appropriations |
from
the State Pensions Fund for the administration of the |
Uniform Disposition of
Unclaimed Property Act.
|
Each month, the Commissioner of the Office of Banks and |
Real Estate shall
certify to the State Treasurer the actual |
expenditures that the Office of
Banks and Real Estate incurred |
conducting unclaimed property examinations under
the Uniform |
Disposition of Unclaimed Property Act during the immediately
|
preceding month. Within a reasonable
time following the |
acceptance of such certification by the State Treasurer, the
|
State Treasurer shall pay from its appropriation from the State |
Pensions Fund
to the Bank and Trust Company Fund and the |
Savings and Residential Finance
Regulatory Fund an amount equal |
to the expenditures incurred by each Fund for
that month.
|
Each month, the Director of Financial Institutions shall
|
certify to the State Treasurer the actual expenditures that the |
Department of
Financial Institutions incurred conducting |
unclaimed property examinations
under the Uniform Disposition |
of Unclaimed Property Act during the immediately
preceding |
month. Within a reasonable time following the acceptance of |
such
certification by the State Treasurer, the State Treasurer |
shall pay from its
appropriation from the State Pensions Fund
|
to the Financial Institutions Fund and the Credit Union Fund
an |
amount equal to the expenditures incurred by each Fund for
that |
month.
|
(c) As soon as possible after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, the General |
Assembly shall appropriate from the State Pensions Fund (1) to |
the State Universities Retirement System the amount certified |
under Section 15-165 during the prior year, (2) to the Judges |
Retirement System of Illinois the amount certified under |
Section 18-140 during the prior year, and (3) to the General |
|
Assembly Retirement System the amount certified under Section |
2-134 during the prior year as part of the required
State |
contributions to each of those designated retirement systems; |
except that amounts appropriated under this subsection (c) in |
State fiscal year 2005 shall not reduce the amount in the State |
Pensions Fund below $5,000,000. If the amount in the State |
Pensions Fund does not exceed the sum of the amounts certified |
in Sections 15-165, 18-140, and 2-134 by at least $5,000,000, |
the amount paid to each designated retirement system under this |
subsection shall be reduced in proportion to the amount |
certified by each of those designated retirement systems. For |
each State fiscal year beginning with State fiscal year 2006, |
the General Assembly shall appropriate a total amount
equal to |
the balance in the State Pensions Fund at the close of business |
on
June 30 of the preceding fiscal year, less $5,000,000, as |
part of the required
State contributions to the designated |
retirement systems. The amount of the
appropriation to |
designated retirement systems shall constitute a portion
of the |
total appropriation under this subsection for that fiscal year |
which is
the same as that retirement system's portion of the |
total actuarial reserve
deficiency of the systems, as most |
recently determined by the
Governor's Office of Management and |
Budget.
|
(c-5) For fiscal year 2006 and thereafter, the General |
Assembly shall appropriate from the State Pensions Fund to the |
State Universities Retirement System the amount estimated to be |
available during the fiscal year in the State Pensions Fund; |
provided, however, that the amounts appropriated under this |
subsection (c-5) shall not reduce the amount in the State |
Pensions Fund below $5,000,000.
|
(d) The
Governor's Office of Management and Budget shall |
determine the individual and total
reserve deficiencies of the |
designated retirement systems. For this purpose,
the
|
Governor's Office of Management and Budget shall utilize the |
latest available audit and actuarial
reports of each of the |
retirement systems and the relevant reports and
statistics of |
|
the Public Employee Pension Fund Division of the Department of
|
Insurance.
|
(d-1) As soon as practicable after the effective date of |
this
amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, the |
Comptroller shall
direct and the Treasurer shall transfer from |
the State Pensions Fund to
the General Revenue Fund, as funds |
become available, a sum equal to the
amounts that would have |
been paid
from the State Pensions Fund to the Teachers' |
Retirement System of the State
of Illinois,
the State |
Universities Retirement System, the Judges Retirement
System |
of Illinois, the
General Assembly Retirement System, and the |
State Employees'
Retirement System
of Illinois
after the |
effective date of this
amendatory Act during the remainder of |
fiscal year 2004 to the
designated retirement systems from the |
appropriations provided for in
this Section if the transfers |
provided in Section 6z-61 had not
occurred. The transfers |
described in this subsection (d-1) are to
partially repay the |
General Revenue Fund for the costs associated with
the bonds |
used to fund the moneys transferred to the designated
|
retirement systems under Section 6z-61.
|
(e) The changes to this Section made by this amendatory Act |
of 1994 shall
first apply to distributions from the Fund for |
State fiscal year 1996.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-665, eff. 3-5-04; 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
ARTICLE 70 |
Section 70-5. The Pretrial Services Act is amended by |
changing Section 33 as follows:
|
(725 ILCS 185/33) (from Ch. 38, par. 333)
|
Sec. 33. The Supreme Court shall pay from funds |
appropriated to it for this purpose
100% of all approved costs |
for pretrial services, including pretrial
services officers, |
necessary support personnel, travel costs reasonably
related |
to the delivery of pretrial services, space costs, equipment,
|
|
telecommunications, postage, commodities, printing and |
contractual
services. Costs shall be reimbursed monthly, based |
on a plan and budget
approved by the Supreme Court. No
|
department may be reimbursed for costs which exceed or are not |
provided for
in the approved plan and budget.
For State fiscal |
years 2004 ,
and 2005 , and 2006 only, the Mandatory Arbitration |
Fund may be used
to
reimburse approved costs for pretrial |
services.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03; 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
Section 70-10. The Probation and Probation Officers Act is |
amended by changing Section 15.1 as follows:
|
(730 ILCS 110/15) (from Ch. 38, par. 204-7)
|
Sec. 15. (1) The Supreme Court of Illinois may establish a |
Division of
Probation Services whose purpose shall be the |
development, establishment,
promulgation, and enforcement of |
uniform standards for probation services in
this State, and to |
otherwise carry out the intent of this Act. The Division
may:
|
(a) establish qualifications for chief probation |
officers and other
probation and court services personnel |
as to hiring, promotion, and training.
|
(b) make available, on a timely basis, lists of those |
applicants whose
qualifications meet the regulations |
referred to herein, including on said
lists all candidates |
found qualified.
|
(c) establish a means of verifying the conditions for |
reimbursement
under this Act and develop criteria for |
approved costs for reimbursement.
|
(d) develop standards and approve employee |
compensation schedules for
probation and court services |
departments.
|
(e) employ sufficient personnel in the Division to |
carry out the
functions of the Division.
|
(f) establish a system of training and establish |
standards for personnel
orientation and training.
|
|
(g) develop standards for a system of record keeping |
for cases and
programs, gather statistics, establish a |
system of uniform forms, and
develop research for planning |
of Probation
Services.
|
(h) develop standards to assure adequate support |
personnel, office
space, equipment and supplies, travel |
expenses, and other essential items
necessary for |
Probation and Court Services
Departments to carry out their
|
duties.
|
(i) review and approve annual plans submitted by
|
Probation and Court
Services Departments.
|
(j) monitor and evaluate all programs operated by
|
Probation and Court
Services Departments, and may include |
in the program evaluation criteria
such factors as the |
percentage of Probation sentences for felons convicted
of |
Probationable offenses.
|
(k) seek the cooperation of local and State government |
and private
agencies to improve the quality of probation |
and
court services.
|
(l) where appropriate, establish programs and |
corresponding standards
designed to generally improve the |
quality of
probation and court services
and reduce the rate |
of adult or juvenile offenders committed to the
Department |
of Corrections.
|
(m) establish such other standards and regulations and |
do all acts
necessary to carry out the intent and purposes |
of this Act.
|
The Division shall establish a model list of structured |
intermediate
sanctions that may be imposed by a probation |
agency for violations of terms and
conditions of a sentence of |
probation, conditional discharge, or supervision.
|
The State of Illinois shall provide for the costs of |
personnel, travel,
equipment, telecommunications, postage, |
commodities, printing, space,
contractual services and other |
related costs necessary to carry out the
intent of this Act.
|
(2) (a) The chief judge of each circuit shall provide
|
|
full-time probation services for all counties
within the |
circuit, in a
manner consistent with the annual probation plan,
|
the standards, policies,
and regulations established by the |
Supreme Court. A
probation district of
two or more counties |
within a circuit may be created for the purposes of
providing |
full-time probation services. Every
county or group of
counties |
within a circuit shall maintain a
probation department which |
shall
be under the authority of the Chief Judge of the circuit |
or some other
judge designated by the Chief Judge. The Chief |
Judge, through the
Probation and Court Services Department |
shall
submit annual plans to the
Division for probation and |
related services.
|
(b) The Chief Judge of each circuit shall appoint the Chief
|
Probation
Officer and all other probation officers for his
or |
her circuit from lists
of qualified applicants supplied by the |
Supreme Court. Candidates for chief
managing officer and other |
probation officer
positions must apply with both
the Chief |
Judge of the circuit and the Supreme Court.
|
(3) A Probation and Court Service Department
shall apply to |
the
Supreme Court for funds for basic services, and may apply |
for funds for new
and expanded programs or Individualized |
Services and Programs. Costs shall
be reimbursed monthly based |
on a plan and budget approved by the Supreme
Court. No |
Department may be reimbursed for costs which exceed or are not
|
provided for in the approved annual plan and budget. After the |
effective
date of this amendatory Act of 1985, each county must |
provide basic
services in accordance with the annual plan and |
standards created by the
division. No department may receive |
funds for new or expanded programs or
individualized services |
and programs unless they are in compliance with
standards as |
enumerated in paragraph (h) of subsection (1) of this Section,
|
the annual plan, and standards for basic services.
|
(4) The Division shall reimburse the county or counties for
|
probation
services as follows:
|
(a) 100% of the salary of all chief managing officers |
designated as such
by the Chief Judge and the division.
|
|
(b) 100% of the salary for all probation
officer and |
supervisor
positions approved for reimbursement by the |
division after April 1, 1984,
to meet workload standards |
and to implement intensive sanction and
probation
|
supervision
programs and other basic services as defined in |
this Act.
|
(c) 100% of the salary for all secure detention |
personnel and non-secure
group home personnel approved for |
reimbursement after December 1, 1990.
For all such |
positions approved for reimbursement
before
December 1, |
1990, the counties shall be reimbursed $1,250 per month |
beginning
July 1, 1995, and an additional $250 per month |
beginning each July 1st
thereafter until the positions |
receive 100% salary reimbursement.
Allocation of such |
positions will be based on comparative need considering
|
capacity, staff/resident ratio, physical plant and |
program.
|
(d) $1,000 per month for salaries for the remaining
|
probation officer
positions engaged in basic services and |
new or expanded services. All such
positions shall be |
approved by the division in accordance with this Act and
|
division standards.
|
(e) 100% of the travel expenses in accordance with |
Division standards
for all Probation positions approved |
under
paragraph (b) of subsection 4
of this Section.
|
(f) If the amount of funds reimbursed to the county |
under paragraphs
(a) through (e) of subsection 4 of this |
Section on an annual basis is less
than the amount the |
county had received during the 12 month period
immediately |
prior to the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1985,
|
then the Division shall reimburse the amount of the |
difference to the
county. The effect of paragraph (b) of |
subsection 7 of this Section shall
be considered in |
implementing this supplemental reimbursement provision.
|
(5) The Division shall provide funds beginning on April 1, |
1987 for the
counties to provide Individualized Services and |
|
Programs as provided in
Section 16 of this Act.
|
(6) A Probation and Court Services Department
in order to |
be eligible
for the reimbursement must submit to the Supreme |
Court an application
containing such information and in such a |
form and by such dates as the
Supreme Court may require. |
Departments to be eligible for funding must
satisfy the |
following conditions:
|
(a) The Department shall have on file with the Supreme
|
Court an annual Probation plan for continuing,
improved, |
and
new Probation and Court Services Programs
approved by |
the Supreme Court or its
designee. This plan shall indicate |
the manner in which
Probation and Court
Services will be |
delivered and improved, consistent with the minimum
|
standards and regulations for Probation and Court
|
Services, as established
by the Supreme Court. In counties |
with more than one
Probation and Court
Services Department |
eligible to receive funds, all Departments within that
|
county must submit plans which are approved by the Supreme |
Court.
|
(b) The annual probation plan shall seek to
generally |
improve the
quality of probation services and to reduce the
|
commitment of adult and
juvenile offenders to the |
Department of Corrections and shall require, when
|
appropriate, coordination with the Department of |
Corrections and the
Department of Children and Family |
Services in the development and use of
community resources, |
information systems, case review and permanency
planning |
systems to avoid the duplication of services.
|
(c) The Department shall be in compliance with |
standards developed by the
Supreme Court for basic, new and |
expanded services, training, personnel
hiring and |
promotion.
|
(d) The Department shall in its annual plan indicate |
the manner in which
it will support the rights of crime |
victims and in which manner it will
implement Article I, |
Section 8.1 of the Illinois Constitution and in what
manner |
|
it will coordinate crime victims' support services with |
other criminal
justice agencies within its jurisdiction, |
including but not limited to, the
State's Attorney, the |
Sheriff and any municipal police department.
|
(7) No statement shall be verified by the Supreme Court or |
its
designee or vouchered by the Comptroller unless each of the |
following
conditions have been met:
|
(a) The probation officer is a full-time
employee |
appointed by the Chief
Judge to provide probation services.
|
(b) The probation officer, in order to be
eligible for |
State
reimbursement, is receiving a salary of at least |
$17,000 per year.
|
(c) The probation officer is appointed or
was |
reappointed in accordance
with minimum qualifications or |
criteria established by the Supreme
Court; however, all |
probation officers appointed
prior to January 1, 1978,
|
shall be exempted from the minimum requirements |
established by the Supreme
Court. Payments shall be made to |
counties employing these exempted
probation officers as |
long as they are employed
in the position held on the
|
effective date of this amendatory Act of 1985. Promotions |
shall be
governed by minimum qualifications established by |
the Supreme Court.
|
(d) The Department has an established compensation |
schedule approved by
the Supreme Court. The compensation |
schedule shall include salary ranges
with necessary |
increments to compensate each employee. The increments
|
shall, within the salary ranges, be based on such factors |
as bona fide
occupational qualifications, performance, and |
length of service. Each
position in the Department shall be |
placed on the compensation schedule
according to job duties |
and responsibilities of such position. The policy
and |
procedures of the compensation schedule shall be made |
available to each
employee.
|
(8) In order to obtain full reimbursement of all approved |
costs, each
Department must continue to employ at least the |
|
same number of
probation
officers and probation managers as |
were
authorized for employment for the
fiscal year which |
includes January 1, 1985. This number shall be designated
as |
the base amount of the Department. No positions approved by the |
Division
under paragraph (b) of subsection 4 will be included |
in the base amount.
In the event that the Department employs |
fewer
Probation officers and
Probation managers than the base |
amount for a
period of 90 days, funding
received by the |
Department under subsection 4 of this
Section may be reduced on |
a monthly basis by the amount of the current
salaries of any |
positions below the base amount.
|
(9) Before the 15th day of each month, the treasurer of any |
county which
has a Probation and Court Services Department, or
|
the treasurer of the most
populous county, in the case of a |
Probation or
Court Services Department
funded by more than one |
county, shall submit an itemized statement of all
approved |
costs incurred in the delivery of Basic
Probation and Court
|
Services under this Act to the Supreme Court.
The treasurer may |
also submit an itemized statement of all approved costs
|
incurred in the delivery of new and expanded
Probation and |
Court Services
as well as Individualized Services and Programs. |
The Supreme Court or
its designee shall verify compliance with |
this Section and shall examine
and audit the monthly statement |
and, upon finding them to be correct, shall
forward them to the |
Comptroller for payment to the county treasurer. In the
case of |
payment to a treasurer of a county which is the most populous |
of
counties sharing the salary and expenses of a
Probation and |
Court Services
Department, the treasurer shall divide the money |
between the counties in a
manner that reflects each county's |
share of the cost incurred by the
Department.
|
(10) The county treasurer must certify that funds received |
under this
Section shall be used solely to maintain and improve
|
Probation and Court
Services. The county or circuit shall |
remain in compliance with all
standards, policies and |
regulations established by the Supreme Court.
If at any time |
the Supreme Court determines that a county or circuit is not
in |
|
compliance, the Supreme Court shall immediately notify the |
Chief Judge,
county board chairman and the Director of Court |
Services Chief
Probation Officer. If after 90 days of written
|
notice the noncompliance
still exists, the Supreme Court shall |
be required to reduce the amount of
monthly reimbursement by |
10%. An additional 10% reduction of monthly
reimbursement shall |
occur for each consecutive month of noncompliance.
Except as |
provided in subsection 5 of Section 15, funding to counties |
shall
commence on April 1, 1986. Funds received under this Act |
shall be used to
provide for Probation Department expenses
|
including those required under
Section 13 of this Act. For |
State fiscal years 2004 ,
and 2005 , and 2006 only, the Mandatory
|
Arbitration Fund may be used to provide for Probation |
Department expenses,
including those required under Section 13 |
of this Act.
|
(11) The respective counties shall be responsible for |
capital and space
costs, fringe benefits, clerical costs, |
equipment, telecommunications,
postage, commodities and |
printing.
|
(12) For purposes of this Act only, probation officers |
shall be
considered
peace officers. In the
exercise of their |
official duties, probation
officers, sheriffs, and police
|
officers may, anywhere within the State, arrest any probationer |
who is in
violation of any of the conditions of his or her |
probation, conditional
discharge, or supervision, and it shall |
be the
duty of the officer making the arrest to take the |
probationer
before the
Court having jurisdiction over the |
probationer for further order.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03; 93-576, eff. 1-1-04; 93-839, |
eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(730 ILCS 110/15.1) (from Ch. 38, par. 204-7.1) |
Sec. 15.1. Probation and Court Services Fund.
|
(a) The county treasurer in each county shall establish a
|
probation and court services fund consisting of fees collected |
pursuant to
subsection (i) of Section 5-6-3 and subsection (i) |
|
of Section 5-6-3.1
of the Unified Code of Corrections, |
subsection (10) of Section 5-615
and
subsection (5) of Section |
5-715 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, and
paragraph 14.3 of |
subsection (b) of Section 110-10 of the Code of Criminal
|
Procedure of 1963.
The
county treasurer shall disburse monies |
from the fund only at the direction
of the chief judge of the |
circuit court in such circuit where the county is
located. The |
county treasurer of each county shall, on or before January
10 |
of each year, submit an annual report to the Supreme Court.
|
(b) Monies in the probation and court services fund shall |
be
appropriated by the county board to be used within the |
county or
jurisdiction where
collected in accordance
with |
policies and guidelines approved by the Supreme Court for the |
costs
of operating the probation and court services department |
or departments;
however, except as provided in subparagraph |
(g), monies
in the probation and court services fund shall not |
be used for the payment
of salaries of probation and court |
services personnel.
|
(c) Monies expended from the probation and court services |
fund shall
be used to supplement, not supplant, county |
appropriations for probation
and court services.
|
(d) Interest earned on monies deposited in a probation and |
court
services fund may be used by the county for its ordinary |
and contingent
expenditures.
|
(e) The county board may appropriate moneys from the |
probation and court
services fund, upon the direction of the |
chief judge, to support programs that
are part of the continuum |
of juvenile delinquency intervention programs which
are or may |
be developed within the county. The grants from the probation |
and
court services fund shall be for no more than one year and |
may be used for any
expenses attributable to the program |
including administration and oversight of
the program by the |
probation department.
|
(f) The county board may appropriate moneys from the |
probation and court
services fund, upon the direction of the |
chief judge, to support practices
endorsed or required under |
|
the Sex Offender Management Board Act, including but
not |
limited to sex offender evaluation, treatment, and monitoring |
programs that
are or may be developed within the county.
|
(g) For the State Fiscal Years
Year 2005 and 2006 only, the |
Administrative Office of the Illinois Courts may permit a |
county or circuit to use its probation and court services fund |
for the payment of salaries of probation officers and other |
court services personnel whose salaries are reimbursed under |
this Act if the State's FY2005 or FY2006 appropriation to the |
Supreme Court for reimbursement to counties for probation |
salaries and services is less than the amount appropriated to |
the Supreme Court for these
purposes for State Fiscal Year |
2004. The Administrative Office of the Illinois Courts shall |
take into account each county's or circuit's probation fee |
collections and expenditures
any annual surplus or deficit that |
any county or
circuit has in its probation and court services |
fund and any amounts already obligated from such fund when |
apportioning the total reimbursement for each county or |
circuit.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-329, eff. 8-9-01; 93-616, eff. 1-1-04; 93-839, |
eff. 7-30-04.)
|
Section 70-15. The Code of Civil Procedure is amended by |
changing Section 2-1009A as follows:
|
(735 ILCS 5/2-1009A) (from Ch. 110, par. 2-1009A)
|
Sec. 2-1009A. Filing Fees. In each county authorized by the |
Supreme
Court to utilize mandatory arbitration, the clerk of |
the
circuit court shall charge and collect, in addition to any |
other fees, an
arbitration fee of $8, except in counties with |
3,000,000 or more inhabitants
the fee shall be $10, at the time |
of filing the first pleading, paper
or
other appearance filed |
by each party in all civil cases, but no additional
fee shall |
be required if more than one party is represented in a single
|
pleading, paper or other appearance. Arbitration fees received |
by the
clerk of the circuit court pursuant to this Section |
|
shall be remitted within
one month after receipt to the State |
Treasurer for deposit into the
Mandatory Arbitration Fund, a |
special fund in the State treasury for the
purpose of funding |
mandatory arbitration programs and such other alternative
|
dispute resolution programs as may be authorized by circuit |
court rule for
operation in counties that have implemented |
mandatory arbitration, with a
separate account
being |
maintained for each county.
Notwithstanding any other |
provision of this Section to the contrary, and for
State fiscal
|
years 2004 ,
and 2005 , and 2006 only, the Mandatory Arbitration |
Fund may be used
for any
other purpose authorized by the |
Supreme Court.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03; 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
ARTICLE 80 |
Section 80-5. The State Finance Act is amended by adding |
Section 8.44 as follows: |
(30 ILCS 105/8.44 new) |
Sec. 8.44. Special fund transfers. |
(a) In order to maintain the integrity of special funds and
|
improve stability in the General Revenue Fund, the following
|
transfers are authorized from the designated funds into the
|
General Revenue Fund: |
Aeronautics Fund ......................................$2,186
|
.Aggregate Operations Regulatory Fund .................$32,750
|
.Agrichemical Incident Response Trust Fund ...........$419,830
|
.Agricultural Master Fund .............................$17,827
|
.Air Transportation Revolving Fund ...................$181,478
|
.Airport Land Loan Revolving Fund ..................$1,669,970
|
.Alternate Fuels Fund ..............................$1,056,833
|
.Alternative Compliance Market Account Fund ...........$53,120
|
.Appraisal Administration Fund .......................$250,000
|
.Armory Rental Fund ..................................$111,538
|
.Assisted Living and Shared Housing Regulatory Fund ...$24,493
|
|
.Bank and Trust Company Fund .......................$3,800,000
|
.Capital Development Board Revolving Fund ............$453,054
|
.Care Provider Fund for Persons
|
with a Developmental Disability ...................$2,378,270
|
.Charter Schools Revolving Loan Fund .................$650,721
|
.Child Support Administrative Fund .................$1,117,266
|
.Coal Mining Regulatory Fund .........................$127,583
|
.Communications Revolving Fund ....................$12,999,839
|
.Community Health Center Care Fund ...................$104,480
|
.Community Water Supply Laboratory Fund ..............$716,232
|
.Continuing Legal Education Trust Fund ................$23,419
|
.Corporate Franchise Tax Refund Fund .................$500,000
|
.Court of Claims Administration and Grant Fund ........$24,949
|
.Criminal Justice Information Projects Fund ...........$18,212
|
.DCFS Special Purposes Trust Fund .....................$77,835
|
.Death Certificate Surcharge Fund ..................$1,134,341
|
.Department of Business Services
|
Special Operations Fund ...........................$2,000,000
|
.Department of Children and Family Services
|
Training Fund .....................................$1,408,106
|
.Department of Corrections
|
Reimbursement and Education Fund ..................$2,208,323
|
.Department of Insurance State Trust Fund .............$18,009
|
.Department of Labor Special State Trust Fund ........$359,895
|
.Department on Aging State Projects Fund ..............$10,059
|
.Design Professionals Administration
|
and Investigation Fund ...............................$51,701
|
.DHS Recoveries Trust Fund .........................$1,591,834
|
.DHS State Projects Fund ..............................$89,917
|
.Division of Corporations
|
Registered Limited Liability Partnership Fund .......$150,000
|
.DNR Special Projects Fund ...........................$301,649
|
.Dram Shop Fund ......................................$110,554
|
.Drivers Education Fund ...............................$30,152
|
.Drug Rebate Fund .................................$17,315,821
|
.Drug Traffic Prevention Fund .........................$22,123
|
|
.Drug Treatment Fund .................................$160,030
|
.Drunk and Drugged Driving Prevention Fund ............$51,220
|
.Drycleaner Environmental Response Trust Fund ......$1,137,971
|
.DuQuoin State Fair Harness Racing Trust Fund ..........$3,368
|
.Early Intervention Services Revolving Fund ........$1,044,935
|
.Economic Research and Information Fund ...............$49,005
|
.Educational Labor Relations Board
|
Fair Share Trust Fund ................................$40,933
|
.Efficiency Initiatives Revolving Fund .............$6,178,298
|
.Emergency Planning and Training Fund .................$28,845
|
.Emergency Public Health Fund ........................$139,997
|
.Emergency Response Reimbursement Fund ................$15,873
|
.EMS Assistance Fund ..................................$40,923
|
.Energy Assistance Contribution Fund ..................$89,692
|
.Energy Efficiency Trust Fund ......................$1,300,938
|
.Environmental Laboratory Certification Fund ..........$62,039
|
.Environmental Protection Permit and Inspection Fund .$180,571
|
.Environmental Protection Trust Fund ...............$2,228,031
|
.EPA Court Trust Fund ................................$338,646
|
.EPA Special State Projects Trust Fund ...............$284,263
|
.Explosives Regulatory Fund ...........................$23,125
|
.Facilities Management Revolving Fund ..............$4,803,971
|
.Facility Licensing Fund ..............................$22,958
|
.Family Care Fund .....................................$22,585
|
.Federal Asset Forfeiture Fund .........................$1,871
|
.Feed Control Fund ...................................$478,234
|
.Fertilizer Control Fund .............................$207,398
|
.Financial Institution Fund ........................$2,448,690
|
.Firearm Owner's Notification Fund .....................$3,960
|
.Food and Drug Safety Fund ...........................$421,401
|
.General Professions Dedicated Fund ................$3,975,808
|
.Good Samaritan Energy Trust Fund ......................$7,191
|
.Governor's Grant Fund .................................$1,592
|
.Group Workers' Compensation Pool Insolvency Fund ....$136,547
|
.Guardianship and Advocacy Fund .......................$27,289
|
.Hazardous Waste Occupational Licensing Fund ..........$14,939
|
|
.Hazardous Waste Research Fund .......................$125,209
|
.Health Facility Plan Review Fund ....................$165,972
|
.Hearing Instrument Dispenser
|
Examining and Disciplinary Fund .....................$102,842
|
.Home Inspector Administration Fund ..................$244,503
|
.IEMA State Projects Fund .................................$13
|
.Illinois Beach Marina Fund ..........................$177,801
|
.Illinois Capital Revolving Loan Fund ..............$4,024,106
|
.Illinois Clean Water Fund .........................$1,835,796
|
.Illinois Community College Board
|
Contracts and Grants Fund .................................$9
|
.Illinois Department of Agriculture
|
Laboratory Services Revolving Fund ..................$174,795
|
.Illinois Equity Fund ................................$119,193
|
.Illinois Executive Mansion Trust Fund ................$56,154
|
.Illinois Forestry Development Fund ................$1,389,096
|
.Illinois Future Teacher Corps Scholarship Fund ........$4,836
|
.Illinois Gaming Law Enforcement Fund ................$650,646
|
.Illinois Habitat Endowment Trust Fund .............$3,641,262
|
.Illinois Health Facilities Planning Fund .............$23,066
|
.Illinois Historic Sites Fund ........................$134,366
|
.Illinois National Guard Armory Construction Fund .....$31,469
|
.Illinois Rural Rehabilitation Fund ....................$8,190
|
.Illinois School Asbestos Abatement Fund .............$183,191
|
.Illinois State Fair Fund .............................$50,176
|
.Illinois State Podiatric Disciplinary Fund ..........$317,239
|
.Illinois Student Assistance Commission
|
Contracts and Grants Fund .............................$5,589
|
.Illinois Tourism Tax Fund ...........................$647,749
|
.Illinois Underground Utility Facilities
|
Damage Prevention Fund ................................$2,175
|
.Illinois Veterans' Rehabilitation Fund ..............$218,940
|
.Industrial Hygiene Regulatory and Enforcement Fund ....$3,564
|
.Innovations in Long-Term Care
|
Quality Demonstration Grants Fund ...................$565,494
|
.Insurance Financial Regulation Fund .................$800,000
|
|
.ISAC Accounts Receivable Fund ........................$26,374
|
.ISBE GED Testing Fund ...............................$146,196
|
.ISBE Teacher Certificate Institute Fund .............$122,117
|
.J.J. Wolf Memorial for Conservation Investigation Fund .$8,137
|
.Kaskaskia Commons Permanent Fund .....................$79,813
|
.Land Reclamation Fund ................................$30,582
|
.Large Business Attraction Fund ......................$340,777
|
.Lawyers' Assistance Program Fund ....................$198,207
|
.LEADS Maintenance Fund ...............................$76,981
|
.Lieutenant Governor's Grant Fund ........................$188
|
.Livestock Management Facilities Fund .................$47,800
|
.Local Initiative Fund .............................$1,940,646
|
.Local Tourism Fund ..................................$132,876
|
.Long Term Care Monitor/Receiver Fund ................$427,850
|
.Monetary Award Program Reserve Fund .................$879,700
|
.McCormick Place Expansion Project Fund ....................$0
|
.Medicaid Buy-In Program Revolving Fund ..............$318,894
|
.Medicaid Fraud and Abuse Prevention Fund .............$60,306
|
.Medical Special Purposes Trust Fund .................$930,668
|
.Military Affairs Trust Fund ..........................$68,468
|
.Motor Carrier Safety Inspection Fund ................$147,477
|
.Motor Fuel and Petroleum Standards Fund ..............$19,673
|
.Motor Vehicle Review Board Fund .....................$250,000
|
.Motor Vehicle Theft Prevention Trust Fund .........$1,415,361
|
.Narcotics Profit Forfeiture Fund .....................$39,379
|
.Natural Heritage Endowment Trust Fund ...............$557,264
|
.Natural Heritage Fund .................................$3,336
|
.Natural Resources Information Fund ...................$64,596
|
.Natural Resources Restoration Trust Fund .............$63,002
|
.Off-Highway Vehicle Trails Fund .....................$244,815
|
.Oil Spill Response Fund .............................$167,547
|
.Paper and Printing Revolving Fund ....................$48,476
|
.Park and Conservation Fund ........................$3,050,154
|
.Pawnbroker Regulation Fund ...........................$94,131
|
.Pesticide Control Fund ..............................$420,223
|
.Petroleum Resources Revolving Fund ...................$85,540
|
|
.Police Training Board Services Fund ...................$1,540
|
.Pollution Control Board Fund .........................$23,004
|
.Pollution Control Board Trust Fund ..................$410,651
|
.Post Transplant Maintenance and Retention Fund .......$75,100
|
.Presidential Library and Museum Operating Fund ......$727,250
|
.Professional Regulation Evidence Fund .................$2,817
|
.Professional Services Fund ...........................$46,222
|
.Provider Inquiry Trust Fund .........................$207,098
|
.Public Aid Recoveries Trust Fund ..................$7,610,631
|
.Public Health Laboratory Services Revolving Fund .....$92,276
|
.Public Health Special State Projects Fund ...........$816,202
|
.Public Health Water Permit Fund ......................$17,624
|
.Public Infrastructure Construction
|
Loan Revolving Fund ..................................$63,802
|
.Public Pension Regulation Fund ......................$222,433
|
.Racing Board Fingerprint License Fund ................$16,835
|
.Radiation Protection Fund ...........................$212,010
|
.Real Estate License Administration Fund ...........$1,500,000
|
.Regulatory Evaluation and Basic Enforcement Fund .....$64,221
|
.Regulatory Fund ......................................$55,246
|
.Renewable Energy Resources Trust Fund ................$14,033
|
.Response Contractors Indemnification Fund ...............$126
|
.Rural/Downstate Health Access Fund ....................$4,644
|
.Savings and Residential Finance Regulatory Fund ...$5,200,000
|
.School District Emergency Financial Assistance Fund .$2,130,848
|
.School Technology Revolving Loan Fund ................$19,158
|
.Second Injury Fund ..................................$151,493
|
.Secretary of State Interagency Grant Fund ............$40,900
|
.Secretary of State Special License Plate Fund .......$520,200
|
.Secretary of State Special Services Fund ..........$2,500,000
|
.Securities Audit and Enforcement Fund .............$3,400,000
|
.Securities Investors Education Fund .................$100,000
|
.Self-Insurers Administration Fund ...................$286,964
|
.Sex Offender Registration Fund ........................$7,647
|
.Sexual Assault Services Fund .........................$12,210
|
.Small Business Environmental Assistance Fund .........$13,686
|
|
.Snowmobile Trail Establishment Fund ...................$3,124
|
.Solid Waste Management Fund .......................$6,587,173
|
.Sports Facilities Tax Trust Fund ..................$1,112,590
|
.State Appellate Defender Special State Projects Fund .$23,820
|
.State Asset Forfeiture Fund ..........................$71,988
|
.State Boating Act Fund ..............................$401,824
|
.State College and University Trust Fund .............$139,439
|
.State Crime Laboratory Fund ..........................$44,965
|
.State Fair Promotional Activities Fund ................$8,734
|
.State Garage Revolving Fund .........................$639,662
|
.State Offender DNA Identification System Fund ........$81,740
|
.State Off-Set Claims Fund .........................$1,487,926
|
.State Parks Fund ..................................$1,045,889
|
.State Police Motor Vehicle Theft Prevention Fund ....$164,843
|
.State Police Vehicle Fund ............................$22,899
|
.State Police Whistleblower Reward and Protection Fund .$199,699
|
.State Rail Freight Loan Repayment Fund ............$1,147,727
|
.State Surplus Property Revolving Fund ...............$388,284
|
.State Whistleblower Reward and Protection Fund ........$1,592
|
.State's Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor's County Fund .$70,101
|
.Statewide Grand Jury Prosecution Fund .................$7,645
|
.Statistical Services Revolving Fund ...............$4,847,783
|
.Subtitle D Management Fund ..........................$169,744
|
.Tanning Facility Permit Fund .........................$64,571
|
.Tax Compliance and Administration Fund ..............$429,377
|
.Tax Recovery Fund ...................................$113,591
|
.Teacher Certificate Fee Revolving Fund ..............$982,399
|
.Toxic Pollution Prevention Fund ......................$28,534
|
.Underground Resources Conservation Enforcement Fund .$294,251
|
.University Grant Fund ................................$23,881
|
.Used Tire Management Fund .........................$1,918,500
|
.Watershed Park Fund ..................................$19,786
|
.Weights and Measures Fund .........................$1,078,121
|
.Workers' Compensation Benefit Trust Fund ............$266,574
|
.Workers' Compensation Revolving Fund ................$520,285
|
.Working Capital Revolving Fund ....................$1,404,868
|
|
.Youth Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Prevention Fund .$29,995
|
.Youth Drug Abuse Prevention Fund .......................$4,091 |
All of these transfers shall be made in equal quarterly |
installments with the first made on the effective date
of this |
amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly, or as soon
|
thereafter as practical, and with the remaining transfers to be |
made on October 1, January 1, and April 1, or as soon |
thereafter as practical. These transfers shall be made
|
notwithstanding any other provision of State law to the
|
contrary. |
(b) On and after the effective date of this amendatory Act
|
of the 94th General Assembly through June 30, 2006, when any of
|
the funds listed in subsection (a) have insufficient cash from
|
which the State Comptroller may make expenditures properly
|
supported by appropriations from the fund, then the State
|
Treasurer and State Comptroller shall transfer from the General
|
Revenue Fund to the fund only such amount as is immediately
|
necessary to satisfy outstanding expenditure obligations on a
|
timely basis, subject to the provisions of the State Prompt
|
Payment Act. Any amounts transferred from the General Revenue
|
Fund to a fund pursuant to this subsection (b) from time to
|
time shall be re-transferred by the State Comptroller and the
|
State Treasurer from the receiving fund into the General
|
Revenue Fund as soon as and to the extent that deposits are
|
made into or receipts are collected by the receiving fund. In
|
all events, the full amounts of all transfers from the General
|
Revenue Fund to receiving funds shall be re-transferred to the
|
General Revenue Fund no later than June 30, 2006. |
(c) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, on July 1, |
2005, or as soon thereafter as may be practical, the State |
Comptroller and the State Treasurer shall transfer $5,000,000 |
from the Communications Revolving Fund to the Hospital Basic |
Services Prevention Fund.
|
ARTICLE 85 |
|
Section 85-5. The State Finance Act is amended by changing |
Section 8h as follows: |
(30 ILCS 105/8h)
|
Sec. 8h. Transfers to General Revenue Fund. |
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b), notwithstanding |
any other
State law to the contrary, the Governor
may, through |
June 30, 2007, from time to time direct the State Treasurer and |
Comptroller to transfer
a specified sum from any fund held by |
the State Treasurer to the General
Revenue Fund in order to |
help defray the State's operating costs for the
fiscal year. |
The total transfer under this Section from any fund in any
|
fiscal year shall not exceed the lesser of (i) 8% of the |
revenues to be deposited
into the fund during that fiscal year |
or (ii) an amount that leaves a remaining fund balance of 25% |
of the July 1 fund balance of that fiscal year. In fiscal year |
2005 only, prior to calculating the July 1, 2004 final |
balances, the Governor may calculate and direct the State |
Treasurer with the Comptroller to transfer additional amounts |
determined by applying the formula authorized in Public Act |
93-839 to the funds balances on July 1, 2003.
No transfer may |
be made from a fund under this Section that would have the
|
effect of reducing the available balance in the fund to an |
amount less than
the amount remaining unexpended and unreserved |
from the total appropriation
from that fund estimated to be |
expended for that fiscal year. This Section does not apply to |
any
funds that are restricted by federal law to a specific use, |
to any funds in
the Motor Fuel Tax Fund, the Hospital Provider |
Fund, the Medicaid Provider Relief Fund, or the Reviewing Court |
Alternative Dispute Resolution Fund, the Foreign Language |
Interpreter Fund, the Lawyers' Assistance Program Fund, the |
Supreme Court Federal Projects Fund, the Supreme Court Special |
State Projects Fund, or the Low-Level Radioactive Waste |
Facility Development and Operation Fund, or to any
funds to |
which subsection (f) of Section 20-40 of the Nursing and |
Advanced Practice Nursing Act applies. Notwithstanding any
|
|
other provision of this Section, for fiscal year 2004,
the |
total transfer under this Section from the Road Fund or the |
State
Construction Account Fund shall not exceed the lesser of |
(i) 5% of the revenues to be deposited
into the fund during |
that fiscal year or (ii) 25% of the beginning balance in the |
fund.
For fiscal year 2005 through fiscal year 2007, no amounts |
may be transferred under this Section from the Road Fund, the |
State Construction Account Fund, the Criminal Justice |
Information Systems Trust Fund, the Wireless Service Emergency |
Fund, or the Mandatory Arbitration Fund.
|
In determining the available balance in a fund, the |
Governor
may include receipts, transfers into the fund, and |
other
resources anticipated to be available in the fund in that |
fiscal year.
|
The State Treasurer and Comptroller shall transfer the |
amounts designated
under this Section as soon as may be |
practicable after receiving the direction
to transfer from the |
Governor.
|
(b) This Section does not apply to any fund established |
under the Community Senior Services and Resources Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-32, eff. 6-20-03; 93-659, eff. 2-3-04; 93-674, |
eff. 6-10-04; 93-714, eff. 7-12-04; 93-801, eff. 7-22-04; |
93-839, eff. 7-30-04; 93-1054, eff. 11-18-04; 93-1067, eff. |
1-15-05.)
|
Section 85-10. The Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management |
Act is amended by changing Section 13 as follows:
|
(420 ILCS 20/13) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-13)
|
Sec. 13. Waste fees.
|
(a) The Department shall collect a fee from each generator |
of low-level
radioactive wastes in this State. Except as |
provided in subsections (b), (c),
and (d), the amount of the |
fee shall be $50.00 or the following amount,
whichever is |
greater:
|
(1) $1 per cubic foot of waste shipped for storage, |
|
treatment or disposal
if storage of the waste for shipment |
occurred prior to September 7, 1984;
|
(2) $2 per cubic foot of waste stored for shipment if |
storage of the
waste occurs on or after September 7, 1984, |
but prior to October 1, 1985;
|
(3) $3 per cubic foot of waste stored for shipment if |
storage of the
waste occurs on or after October 1, 1985;
|
(4) $2 per cubic foot of waste shipped for storage, |
treatment or
disposal if storage of the waste for shipment |
occurs on or after September
7, 1984 but prior to October |
1, 1985, provided that no fee has been collected
previously |
for storage of the waste;
|
(5) $3 per cubic foot of waste shipped for storage, |
treatment or
disposal if storage of the waste for shipment |
occurs on or after October
1, 1985, provided that no fees |
have been collected previously for storage
of the waste.
|
Such fees shall be collected annually or as determined by |
the Department and
shall be deposited in the low-level |
radioactive waste funds as provided in
Section 14 of this Act. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, no
fee under |
this
Section shall be collected from a generator for waste |
generated incident to
manufacturing before December 31, 1980, |
and shipped for disposal outside
of this State before December |
31, 1992, as part of a site reclamation
leading to license |
termination.
|
(b) Each nuclear power reactor in this State for which an |
operating
license has been issued by the Nuclear Regulatory |
Commission shall not be
subject to the fee required by |
subsection (a) with respect to (1) waste
stored for shipment if |
storage of the waste occurs on or after January
1, 1986; and |
(2) waste shipped for storage, treatment or disposal if storage
|
of the waste for shipment occurs on or after January 1, 1986. |
In lieu of
the fee, each reactor shall be required to pay an |
annual fee as provided in
this subsection for the
treatment, |
storage and disposal of low-level radioactive waste. Beginning
|
with State fiscal year 1986 and through State fiscal year 1997, |
|
fees shall be
due and payable on January 1st of each year.
For |
State fiscal year 1998 and all subsequent State fiscal years, |
fees shall
be due and payable on July 1 of each fiscal year. |
The fee due on July 1,
1997 shall be payable on that date, or |
within 10 days after the effective date
of this amendatory Act |
of 1997, whichever is later.
|
The owner of any nuclear power reactor that has an |
operating license
issued by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission |
for any portion of State fiscal
year 1998 shall continue to pay |
an annual fee of $90,000 for the treatment,
storage, and |
disposal of low-level radioactive waste through State fiscal |
year
2002. The fee shall be due and
payable on July 1 of each |
fiscal year.
The fee due on July 1, 1998 shall be
payable on |
that date, or within 10 days after the effective date of this
|
amendatory Act of 1998, whichever is later.
If the balance in |
the Low-Level Radioactive Waste Facility Development and
|
Operation Fund falls below $500,000, as of the end of any |
fiscal year after
fiscal year 2002, the Department is |
authorized to assess by rule, after notice
and a hearing, an |
additional annual fee to be paid by the owners of nuclear
power
|
reactors for which operating licenses have been issued by the |
Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, except that no additional |
annual fee shall be assessed because of the fund balance at the |
end of fiscal year 2005 or the end of fiscal year 2006 . The |
additional annual fee shall be payable on the date
or dates |
specified by rule and shall not exceed $30,000 per operating |
reactor
per year.
|
(c) In each of State fiscal years 1988, 1989 and 1990, in |
addition to
the fee imposed in subsections (b) and (d), the |
owner of each nuclear power
reactor in this State for which an |
operating license has been issued by the
Nuclear Regulatory |
Commission shall pay a fee of $408,000. If an
operating license |
is issued during one of those 3 fiscal years, the owner
shall |
pay a prorated amount of the fee equal to $1,117.80 multiplied |
by the
number of days in the fiscal year during which the |
nuclear power reactor
was licensed.
|
|
The fee shall be due and payable as follows: in fiscal year |
1988,
$204,000 shall be paid on October 1, 1987 and $102,000 |
shall be paid on each
of January 1, 1988 and April 1, 1988; in |
fiscal year 1989, $102,000 shall
be paid on each of July 1, |
1988, October 1, 1988, January 1, 1989 and April
1, 1989; and |
in fiscal year 1990, $102,000 shall be paid on each of July 1,
|
1989, October 1, 1989, January 1, 1990 and April 1, 1990. If |
the
operating license is issued during one of the 3 fiscal |
years, the owner
shall be subject to those payment dates, and |
their corresponding amounts,
on which the owner possesses an |
operating license and, on June 30 of the fiscal
year of |
issuance of the license, whatever amount of the prorated fee |
remains
outstanding.
|
All of the amounts collected by the Department under this |
subsection (c)
shall be deposited into the Low-Level |
Radioactive Waste Facility
Development and Operation Fund |
created under subsection (a) of Section 14 of
this
Act and |
expended, subject to appropriation, for
the purposes provided |
in that subsection.
|
(d) In addition to the fees imposed in subsections (b) and |
(c), the
owners of nuclear power reactors in this State for |
which operating licenses
have been issued by the Nuclear |
Regulatory Commission shall pay the
following fees for each |
such nuclear power reactor: for State fiscal year
1989, |
$325,000 payable on October 1, 1988, $162,500 payable on |
January 1,
1989, and $162,500 payable on April 1, 1989; for |
State fiscal year 1990,
$162,500 payable on July 1, $300,000 |
payable on October 1, $300,000 payable
on January 1 and |
$300,000 payable on April 1; for State fiscal year 1991,
either |
(1) $150,000 payable on July 1, $650,000 payable on September |
1,
$675,000 payable on January 1, and $275,000 payable on April |
1, or (2)
$150,000 on July 1, $130,000 on the first day of each |
month from August
through December, $225,000 on the first day |
of each month from January
through March and $92,000 on the |
first day of each month from April through
June; for State |
fiscal year 1992, $260,000 payable on July 1, $900,000
payable |
|
on September 1, $300,000 payable on October 1, $150,000 payable |
on
January 1, and $100,000 payable on April 1; for State fiscal |
year 1993,
$100,000 payable on July 1, $230,000 payable on |
August 1 or within 10 days
after July 31, 1992, whichever is |
later, and $355,000 payable on October 1; for
State fiscal year |
1994, $100,000 payable on July 1, $75,000 payable on October
1 |
and $75,000 payable on April 1; for State fiscal year 1995, |
$100,000 payable
on July 1, $75,000 payable on October 1, and |
$75,000 payable on April 1,
for State fiscal year 1996, |
$100,000 payable on July 1, $75,000 payable on
October 1, and |
$75,000 payable on April 1. The owner of any nuclear
power |
reactor that has an operating license issued by the Nuclear |
Regulatory
Commission for any portion of State fiscal year 1998 |
shall pay an annual fee of
$30,000 through State fiscal year |
2003.
For State fiscal year 2004 and subsequent fiscal years, |
the owner of any
nuclear power reactor that has an operating |
license issued by the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission shall pay |
an annual fee of $30,000 per reactor, provided
that the fee
|
shall not apply to a nuclear power reactor with regard to which |
the owner
notified the Nuclear Regulatory Commission during |
State fiscal year 1998 that
the nuclear power reactor |
permanently ceased operations.
The fee shall be due and payable |
on
July 1 of each fiscal year.
The fee due on July 1, 1998 shall |
be
payable on that date, or within 10 days after the effective |
date of this
amendatory Act of 1998, whichever is later.
The |
fee
due on July 1, 1997 shall be payable on that date or within |
10 days after the
effective date of this amendatory Act of |
1997, whichever is later. If the
payments under this
subsection |
for fiscal year 1993 due on January 1, 1993, or on April 1, |
1993, or
both, were due before the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 87th
General Assembly, then those |
payments are waived and need not be made.
|
All of the amounts collected by the Department under this |
subsection (d)
shall be deposited into the Low-Level |
Radioactive Waste Facility
Development and Operation Fund |
created pursuant to subsection (a) of Section
14 of this
Act |
|
and expended, subject to appropriation, for the purposes |
provided in that
subsection.
|
All payments made by licensees under this subsection (d) |
for fiscal year
1992 that are not appropriated and obligated by |
the Department above
$1,750,000 per reactor in fiscal year |
1992, shall be credited to the licensees
making the payments to |
reduce the per reactor fees required under this
subsection (d) |
for fiscal year 1993.
|
(e) The Department shall promulgate rules and regulations |
establishing
standards for the collection of the fees |
authorized by this Section. The
regulations shall include, but |
need not be limited to:
|
(1) the records necessary to identify the amounts of |
low-level
radioactive wastes produced;
|
(2) the form and submission of reports to accompany the |
payment of fees
to the Department; and
|
(3) the time and manner of payment of fees to the |
Department, which
payments shall not be more frequent than |
quarterly.
|
(f) Any operating agreement entered into under subsection |
(b) of
Section 5 of this Act between the Department and any |
disposal facility
contractor
shall, subject to the provisions |
of this Act, authorize the contractor to
impose upon and |
collect from persons using the disposal facility fees
designed |
and
set at levels reasonably calculated to produce sufficient |
revenues (1) to
pay all costs and expenses properly incurred or |
accrued in connection
with, and properly allocated to, |
performance of the contractor's obligations
under the |
operating agreement, and (2) to provide reasonable and
|
appropriate compensation or profit to the contractor under the
|
operating
agreement. For purposes of this subsection (f), the |
term "costs and expenses"
may include, without limitation, (i) |
direct and indirect costs and expenses
for labor, services, |
equipment, materials, insurance and other risk
management |
costs, interest and other financing charges, and taxes or fees
|
in lieu of taxes; (ii) payments to or required by the United |
|
States, the
State of Illinois or any agency or department |
thereof, the Central Midwest
Interstate Low-Level Radioactive |
Waste Compact, and subject
to the
provisions of this Act, any |
unit of local government; (iii)
amortization of capitalized |
costs with respect to the disposal facility and
its
|
development, including any capitalized reserves; and (iv) |
payments with
respect
to reserves, accounts, escrows or trust |
funds required by law or otherwise
provided for under the |
operating agreement.
|
(g) (Blank).
|
(h) (Blank).
|
(i) (Blank).
|
(j) (Blank).
|
(j-5) Prior to commencement of facility operations, the |
Department shall
adopt rules providing for the establishment |
and collection of fees and charges
with respect to the use of |
the disposal facility as provided in subsection (f)
of this |
Section.
|
(k) The regional disposal facility shall be subject to ad |
valorem real
estate taxes lawfully imposed by units of local |
government and school districts
with jurisdiction over the |
facility. No other local government tax, surtax,
fee or other |
charge on activities at the regional disposal facility shall be
|
allowed except as authorized by the Department.
|
(l) The Department shall have the power, in the event that |
acceptance of
waste for disposal at the regional disposal |
facility is suspended, delayed
or interrupted, to impose |
emergency fees on the generators of low-level
radioactive |
waste. Generators shall pay emergency fees within 30 days of
|
receipt of notice of the emergency fees. The Department shall |
deposit all of
the receipts of any fees collected under this |
subsection into the Low-Level
Radioactive Waste Facility |
Development and Operation Fund created under
subsection (b) of |
Section 14. Emergency fees may be used to mitigate the
impacts |
of the suspension or interruption of acceptance of waste for |
disposal.
The requirements for rulemaking in the Illinois |
|
Administrative Procedure Act
shall not apply to the imposition |
of emergency fees under this subsection.
|
(m) The Department shall promulgate any other rules and |
regulations as
may be necessary to implement this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-276, eff. 8-7-01; 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
ARTICLE 90 |
Section 90-5. The Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is |
amended by changing Section 605-707 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 605/605-707) (was 20 ILCS 605/46.6d)
|
Sec. 605-707. International Tourism Program.
|
(a) The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity
|
Community Affairs must establish a
program for international |
tourism. The Department shall develop and
implement the program |
on January 1, 2000 by rule. As part of the program, the
|
Department may work in cooperation with local convention and |
tourism bureaus
in Illinois in the coordination of |
international tourism efforts at the State
and local level. The
|
Department may (i)
work in cooperation with local convention |
and tourism bureaus for efficient use
of their international |
tourism marketing
resources, (ii) promote
Illinois in |
international meetings and tourism markets, (iii) work with
|
convention and tourism bureaus throughout the State to increase |
the number of
international tourists to Illinois, (iv) provide |
training,
research, technical support, and grants to certified |
convention and
tourism bureaus, (v) provide staff, |
administration, and related support
required to manage the |
programs under this Section, and (vi) provide grants
for the |
development of or the enhancement of
international tourism
|
attractions.
|
(b) The Department shall make grants for expenses related |
to international
tourism and pay for the staffing,
|
administration, and related support from the International
|
|
Tourism Fund, a special fund created in the State Treasury. Of |
the amounts
deposited into the Fund in fiscal year 2000 after |
January 1, 2000, 55% shall be
used for grants to convention and |
tourism bureaus in Chicago (other than the
City of Chicago's |
Office of Tourism) and 45% shall be used for development of
|
international tourism in areas outside of Chicago. Of the |
amounts
deposited into the Fund in fiscal year 2001 and |
thereafter, 55% shall be used
for grants to convention and |
tourism bureaus in Chicago, and of that amount not
less than
|
27.5% shall be used
for
grants to convention and tourism |
bureaus in Chicago other than the
City of Chicago's Office of |
Tourism, and 45%
shall be
used for administrative expenses and |
grants authorized under this Section and
development of |
international tourism in areas outside of Chicago, of which not
|
less than $1,000,000
shall be used annually to make grants to |
convention and tourism bureaus in
cities other than Chicago |
that demonstrate their international tourism appeal
and |
request to develop or expand their international tourism |
marketing
program, and may also be used to provide grants under |
item (vi) of subsection
(a) of
this Section. Amounts |
appropriated to the State Comptroller for administrative |
expenses and grants authorized by the Illinois Global |
Partnership Act are payable from the International Tourism |
Fund.
|
(c) A convention and tourism bureau is eligible to receive |
grant moneys
under this Section if the bureau is certified to |
receive funds under Title 14
of the Illinois Administrative |
Code, Section 550.35. To be eligible for a
grant, a convention |
and tourism bureau must provide matching funds equal to the
|
grant amount. In certain
circumstances as determined by the |
Director of Commerce and Economic Opportunity
Community |
Affairs ,
however, the City of
Chicago's
Office of Tourism or |
any other convention and tourism bureau
may provide
matching |
funds equal to no less than 50% of the grant amount to be
|
eligible to
receive
the grant.
One-half of this 50% may be |
provided through in-kind contributions.
Grants received by the |
|
City of Chicago's Office of Tourism and by convention
and |
tourism bureaus in Chicago may be expended for the general |
purposes of
promoting conventions and tourism.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-604, eff. 8-16-99; 91-683, eff. 1-26-00; |
92-38, eff. 6-28-01; revised 12-6-03.)
|
Section 90-10. The Illinois Horse Racing Act of 1975 is |
amended by changing Section 28 as follows:
|
(230 ILCS 5/28) (from Ch. 8, par. 37-28)
|
Sec. 28. Except as provided in subsection (g) of Section 27 |
of this Act,
moneys collected shall be distributed according to |
the provisions of this
Section 28.
|
(a) Thirty
per cent of the total of all monies received
by |
the State as privilege taxes shall be paid into the |
Metropolitan Fair
and Exposition Authority Reconstruction Fund |
in the State treasury until
such Fund contains sufficient money |
to pay in full, both principal and
interest, all of the |
outstanding bonds issued pursuant to the Fair and
Exposition |
Authority Reconstruction Act, approved July 31, 1967, as
|
amended, and thereafter shall be paid into the Metropolitan |
Exposition
Auditorium and Office Building Fund in the State |
Treasury.
|
(b) Four and one-half per cent of the total of all monies |
received
by the State as privilege taxes shall be paid into the |
State treasury
into a special Fund to be known as the |
Metropolitan Exposition,
Auditorium, and Office Building Fund.
|
(c) Fifty per cent of the total of all monies received by |
the State
as privilege taxes under the provisions of this Act |
shall be paid into
the Agricultural Premium Fund.
|
(d) Seven per cent of the total of all monies received by |
the State
as privilege taxes shall be paid into the Fair and |
Exposition Fund in
the State treasury; provided, however, that |
when all bonds issued prior to
July 1, 1984 by the Metropolitan |
Fair and Exposition Authority shall have
been paid or payment |
shall have been provided for upon a refunding of those
bonds, |
|
thereafter 1/12 of $1,665,662 of such monies shall be paid each
|
month into the Build Illinois Fund, and the remainder into the |
Fair and
Exposition Fund. All excess monies shall be allocated |
to the Department of
Agriculture for distribution to county |
fairs for premiums and
rehabilitation as set forth in the |
Agricultural Fair Act.
|
(e) The monies provided for in Section 30 shall be paid |
into the
Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders Fund.
|
(f) The monies provided for in Section 31 shall be paid |
into the
Illinois Standardbred Breeders Fund.
|
(g) Until January 1, 2000, that part representing
1/2 of |
the total breakage in Thoroughbred,
Harness, Appaloosa, |
Arabian, and Quarter Horse racing in the State shall
be paid |
into the Illinois Race Track Improvement Fund as established
in |
Section 32.
|
(h) All other monies received by the Board under this Act |
shall be
paid into the General Revenue Fund of the State.
|
(i) The salaries of the Board members, secretary, stewards,
|
directors of mutuels, veterinarians, representatives, |
accountants,
clerks, stenographers, inspectors and other |
employees of the Board, and
all expenses of the Board incident |
to the administration of this Act,
including, but not limited |
to, all expenses and salaries incident to the
taking of saliva |
and urine samples in accordance with the rules and
regulations |
of the Board shall be paid out of the Agricultural Premium
|
Fund.
|
(j) The Agricultural Premium Fund shall also be used:
|
(1) for the expenses of operating the Illinois State |
Fair and the
DuQuoin State Fair, including the
payment of |
prize money or premiums;
|
(2) for the distribution to county fairs, vocational |
agriculture
section fairs, agricultural societies, and |
agricultural extension clubs
in accordance with the |
Agricultural Fair Act, as
amended;
|
(3) for payment of prize monies and premiums awarded |
and for
expenses incurred in connection with the |
|
International Livestock
Exposition and the Mid-Continent |
Livestock Exposition held in Illinois,
which premiums, and |
awards must be approved, and paid by the Illinois
|
Department of Agriculture;
|
(4) for personal service of county agricultural |
advisors and county
home advisors;
|
(5) for distribution to agricultural home economic |
extension
councils in accordance with "An Act in relation |
to additional support
and finance for the Agricultural and |
Home Economic Extension Councils in
the several counties in |
this State and making an appropriation
therefor", approved |
July 24, 1967, as amended;
|
(6) for research on equine disease, including a |
development center
therefor;
|
(7) for training scholarships for study on equine |
diseases to
students at the University of Illinois College |
of Veterinary Medicine;
|
(8) for the rehabilitation, repair and maintenance of
|
the Illinois and DuQuoin State Fair Grounds and
the |
structures and facilities thereon and the construction of |
permanent
improvements on such Fair Grounds, including |
such structures, facilities and
property located on such
|
State Fair Grounds which are under the custody and control |
of the
Department of Agriculture;
|
(9) for the expenses of the Department of Agriculture |
under Section
5-530 of the Departments of State Government |
Law (20 ILCS
5/5-530);
|
(10) for the expenses of the Department of Commerce and |
Economic Opportunity
Community
Affairs under Sections
|
605-620, 605-625, and
605-630 of the Department of Commerce |
and Economic Opportunity
Community Affairs Law (20 ILCS
|
605/605-620, 605/605-625, and 605/605-630);
|
(11) for remodeling, expanding, and reconstructing |
facilities
destroyed by fire of any Fair and Exposition |
Authority in counties with
a population of 1,000,000 or |
more inhabitants;
|
|
(12) for the purpose of assisting in the care and |
general
rehabilitation of disabled veterans of any war and |
their surviving
spouses and orphans;
|
(13) for expenses of the Department of State Police for |
duties
performed under this Act;
|
(14) for the Department of Agriculture for soil surveys |
and soil and water
conservation purposes;
|
(15) for the Department of Agriculture for grants to |
the City of Chicago
for conducting the Chicagofest ;
. |
(16) for the State Comptroller for grants and operating |
expenses authorized by the Illinois Global Partnership |
Act.
|
(k) To the extent that monies paid by the Board to the |
Agricultural
Premium Fund are in the opinion of the Governor in |
excess of the amount
necessary for the purposes herein stated, |
the Governor shall notify the
Comptroller and the State |
Treasurer of such fact, who, upon receipt of
such notification, |
shall transfer such excess monies from the
Agricultural Premium |
Fund to the General Revenue Fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-40, eff. 1-1-00; 91-239, eff. 1-1-00; 92-16, |
eff.
6-28-01; revised 12-6-03.)
|
ARTICLE 999 |
Section 999-997. Severability. The provisions of this Act |
are severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
|
Section 999-999. Effective date. This Act takes effect July |
1, 2005. |