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Public Act 094-1105 |
SB1856 Enrolled |
LRB094 05848 LJB 35902 b |
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AN ACT concerning education.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, |
represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Building Authority Act is amended by |
changing Sections 3, 4, 5, and 9 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 3110/3) (from Ch. 127, par. 213.3)
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Sec. 3. Duties. The Authority shall make thorough and |
continuous studies and
investigations of the following |
building needs of the State of Illinois as they
may from time |
to time develop:
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(a) Office structures, recreational facilities, fixed |
equipment of any
kind, electric, gas, steam, water and sewer |
utilities, motor parking
facilities, hospitals, penitentiaries |
and facilities of every kind and
character, other than movable |
equipment, considered by the Authority
necessary or convenient |
for the efficient operation of any unit which is
used by any |
officer, department, board, commission or other agency of the
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State.
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(b) Buildings and other facilities intended for use as |
classrooms,
laboratories, libraries, student residence halls, |
instructional and
administrative facilities for students, |
faculty, officers, and employees,
and motor vehicle parking |
facilities and fixed equipment for any
institution or unit |
under the control of the Board of Trustees of the
University of |
Illinois, the Board of Trustees of Southern Illinois |
University,
the Board of Trustees of Chicago State University, |
the Board of Trustees of
Eastern Illinois University, the Board |
of Trustees of Governors State
University, the Board of |
Trustees of Illinois State University, the Board of
Trustees of |
Northeastern Illinois University, the Board of Trustees of |
Northern
Illinois University, the Board of Trustees of Western |
Illinois University, the
School Building Commission or any |
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public community college district board.
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(c) School sites, buildings and fixed equipment to meet the |
needs of
school districts unable to provide such facilities |
because of lack of funds
and constitutional bond limitations, |
whenever any General Assembly has
declared the acquisition of |
sites, construction of buildings and
installation of fixed |
equipment for such school districts to be in the
public |
interest, and allocations of said declarations shall be made as
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provided in Section 5 of this Act.
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Whenever the General Assembly declares by law that it is in |
the public
interest for the Authority to acquire any real |
estate, construct, complete
and remodel buildings, and install |
fixed equipment in buildings and other
facilities for public |
community college districts , or for school districts that
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qualify under Article 35 of The School Code, as amended or as |
may hereafter be
amended , the amount of any declaration to be |
allocated to any public community
college district shall be |
determined by the Illinois Community College Board ,
and the |
amount of any declaration to be allocated to any School |
District
qualifying under Article 35 of The School Code shall |
be determined by the
School Building Commission , unless |
otherwise provided by law.
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(Source: P.A. 89-4, eff. 1-1-96.)
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(20 ILCS 3110/4) (from Ch. 127, par. 213.4)
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Sec. 4. Any department, board, commission, agency or |
officer of this State
or the Board of Trustees of the |
University of Illinois, the Board of Trustees
of Southern |
Illinois University, the Board of Trustees of Chicago State
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University, the Board of Trustees of Eastern Illinois |
University, the Board of
Trustees of Governors State |
University, the Board of Trustees of Illinois State
University, |
the Board of Trustees of Northeastern Illinois University, the
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Board of Trustees of Northern Illinois University, the Board of |
Trustees of
Western Illinois University, the School Building |
Commission, or any public
community college district board , may |
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transfer jurisdiction of or title to
any property under its or |
his control to the Authority when such transfer
is approved in |
writing by the Governor as being advantageous to the State.
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(Source: P.A. 89-4, eff. 1-1-96.)
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(20 ILCS 3110/5) (from Ch. 127, par. 213.5)
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Sec. 5. Powers. To accomplish projects of the kind listed |
in Section 3
above, the Authority shall possess the following |
powers:
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(a) Acquire by purchase or otherwise (including the power |
of
condemnation in the manner provided for the exercise of the |
right of eminent
domain under Article VII of the Code of Civil |
Procedure, as amended),
construct, complete, remodel and |
install fixed equipment in any and all
buildings and other |
facilities as the General Assembly by law declares
to be in the |
public interest.
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Whenever the General Assembly has by law declared it to be |
in the
public interest for the Authority to acquire any real |
estate, construct,
complete, remodel and install fixed |
equipment in buildings and other
facilities for public |
community college districts, the Director of the
Department of |
Central Management Services shall, when requested by any such
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public community college district board, enter into a lease by |
and on behalf of
and for the use of such public community |
college district board to the extent
appropriations have been |
made by the General Assembly to pay the rents under
the terms |
of such lease.
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In the course of such activities, acquire property of any |
and every
kind and description, whether real, personal or |
mixed, by gift, purchase
or otherwise. It may also acquire real |
estate of the State of Illinois
controlled by any officer, |
department, board, commission, or other
agency of the State , or |
the Board of Trustees of the University of
Illinois, the Board |
of Trustees of Southern Illinois University,
the Board of |
Trustees of Chicago State University, the Board of Trustees of
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Eastern Illinois University, the Board of Trustees of Governors |
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State
University, the Board of Trustees of Illinois State |
University, the Board of
Trustees of Northeastern Illinois |
University, the Board of Trustees of Northern
Illinois |
University, the Board of Trustees of Western Illinois |
University, the
School Building Commission or any public |
community college district
board, the jurisdiction of which is |
transferred by such officer,
department, board, commission, or |
other agency , or the Board of Trustees
of Southern Illinois |
University,
the Board of Trustees of Chicago State University, |
the Board of Trustees of
Eastern Illinois University, the Board |
of Trustees of Governors State
University, the Board of |
Trustees of Illinois State University, the Board of
Trustees of |
Northeastern Illinois University, the Board of Trustees of |
Northern
Illinois University, the Board of Trustees of Western |
Illinois University, or
the School Building Commission or any |
public community college district board ,
to the Authority. The |
Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois, the
Board of |
Trustees of Southern Illinois University, the Board of Trustees |
of
Chicago State University, the Board of Trustees of Eastern |
Illinois University,
the Board of Trustees of Governors State |
University, the Board of Trustees of
Illinois State University, |
the Board of Trustees of Northeastern Illinois
University, the |
Board of Trustees of Northern Illinois University, the Board of
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Trustees of Western Illinois University, or the School Building
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Commission and any public community college district board, |
respectively, shall
prepare plans and specifications for and |
have supervision over any
project to be undertaken by the |
Authority for their use. Before any
other particular |
construction is undertaken, plans and specifications
shall be |
approved by the lessee provided for under (b) below, except as
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indicated above.
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(b) Execute leases of facilities and sites to, and charge |
for the
use of any such facilities and sites by, any officer, |
department, board,
commission or other agency of the State of |
Illinois, or the Director of
the Department of Central |
Management Services when the Director
is requested to, by
and |
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on behalf of, or for the use of, any officer, department, |
board,
commission or other agency of the State of Illinois, or |
by the Board of
Trustees of the University of Illinois, the |
Board of Trustees of
Southern Illinois University,
the Board of |
Trustees of Chicago State University, the Board of Trustees of
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Eastern Illinois University, the Board of Trustees of Governors |
State
University, the Board of Trustees of Illinois State |
University, the Board of
Trustees of Northeastern Illinois |
University, the Board of Trustees of Northern
Illinois |
University, the Board of Trustees of Western Illinois |
University, or
the School Building Commission or any public |
community college district board.
Such leases may be entered |
into contemporaneously with any financing to be done
by the |
Authority and payments under the terms of the lease shall begin |
at any
time after execution of any such lease.
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(c) In the event of non-payment of rents reserved in such |
leases,
maintain and operate such facilities and sites or |
execute leases thereof
to others for any suitable purposes. |
Such leases to the officers,
departments, boards, commissions, |
other agencies, the respective Boards of
Trustees, , or the |
School Building Commission or any public community college
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district board shall contain the provision that rents under |
such leases
shall be payable solely from appropriations to be |
made by the General
Assembly for the payment of such rent and |
any revenues derived from the
operation of the leased premises.
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(d) Borrow money and issue and sell bonds in such amount or |
amounts
as the Authority may determine for the purpose of |
acquiring,
constructing, completing or remodeling, or putting |
fixed equipment in
any such facility; refund and refinance the |
same from time to time as
often as advantageous and in the |
public interest to do so; and pledge
any and all income of such |
Authority, and any revenues derived from such
facilities, or |
any combination thereof, to secure the payment of such
bonds |
and to redeem such bonds. All such bonds are subject to the
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provisions of Section 6 of this Act.
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In addition to the permanent financing authorized by |
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Sections 5 and 6
of this Act, the Illinois Building Authority |
may borrow money and issue
interim notes in evidence thereof |
for any of the projects, or to perform
any of the duties |
authorized under this Act, and in addition may borrow
money and |
issue interim notes for planning, architectural and
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engineering, acquisition of land, and purchase of fixed |
equipment as
follows:
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1. Whenever the Authority considers it advisable and in |
the
interests of the Authority to borrow funds temporarily |
for any of the
purposes enumerated in this Section, the |
Authority may from time to
time, and pursuant to |
appropriate resolution, issue interim notes to
evidence |
such borrowings including funds for the payment of interest |
on
such borrowings and funds for all necessary and |
incidental expenses in
connection with any of the purposes |
provided for by this Section and
this Act until the date of |
the permanent financing. Any resolution
authorizing the |
issuance of such notes shall describe the project to be
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undertaken and shall specify the principal amount, rate of |
interest (not
exceeding
the maximum rate authorized by the |
Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the
time of the |
making of the contract,) and maturity date, but not to |
exceed 5
years
from date of issue, and such other terms as |
may be specified in such
resolution; however, time of |
payment of any such notes may be extended
for a period of |
not exceeding 3 years from the maturity date thereof.
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The Authority may provide for the registration of the |
notes in the
name of the owner either as to principal |
alone, or as to both principal
and interest, on such terms |
and conditions as the Authority may
determine by the |
resolution authorizing their issue. The notes shall be
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issued from time to time by the Authority as funds are |
borrowed, in the
manner the Authority may determine. |
Interest on the notes may be made
payable semiannually, |
annually or at maturity. The notes may be made
redeemable, |
prior to maturity, at the option of the Authority, in the
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manner and upon the terms fixed by the resolution |
authorizing their
issuance. The notes may be executed in |
the name of the Authority by the
Chairman of the Authority |
or by any other officer or officers of the
Authority as the |
Authority by resolution may direct, shall be attested
by |
the Secretary or such other officer or officers of the |
Authority as
the Authority may by resolution direct, and be |
sealed with the
Authority's corporate seal. All such notes |
and the interest thereon may
be secured by a pledge of any |
income and revenue derived by the
Authority from the |
project to be undertaken with the proceeds of the
notes and |
shall be payable solely from such income and revenue and |
from
the proceeds to be derived from the sale of any |
revenue bonds for
permanent financing authorized to be |
issued under Sections 5 and 6 of
this Act, and from the |
property acquired with the proceeds of the notes.
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Contemporaneously with the issue of revenue bonds as |
provided by this
Act, all interim notes, even though they |
may not then have matured,
shall be paid, both principal |
and interest to date of payment, from the
funds derived |
from the sale of revenue bonds for the permanent financing
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and such interim notes shall be surrendered and canceled.
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2. The Authority, in order further to secure the |
payment of the
interim notes, is, in addition to the |
foregoing, authorized and
empowered to make any other or |
additional covenants, terms and
conditions not |
inconsistent with the provisions of subparagraph (a) of
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this Section, and do any and all acts and things as may be |
necessary or
convenient or desirable in order to secure |
payment of its interim notes,
or in the discretion of the |
Authority, as will tend to make the interim
notes more |
acceptable to lenders, notwithstanding that the covenants,
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acts or things may not be enumerated herein; however, |
nothing contained
in this subparagraph shall authorize the |
Authority to secure the payment
of the interim notes out of |
property or facilities, other than the
facilities acquired |
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with the proceeds of the interim notes, and any net
income |
and revenue derived from the facilities and the proceeds of
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revenue bonds as hereinabove provided.
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(e) Convey property, without charge, to the State or to the
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appropriate corporate agency of the State or to any public |
community college
district board if and when all debts which |
have been secured by the
income from such property have been |
paid.
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(f) Enter into contracts regarding any matter connected |
with any
corporate purpose within the objects and purposes of |
this Act.
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(g) Employ agents and employees necessary to carry out the |
duties
and purposes of the Authority.
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(h) Adopt all necessary by-laws, rules and regulations for |
the
conduct of the business and affairs of the Authority, and |
for the
management and use of facilities and sites acquired |
under the powers
granted by this Act.
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(i) Have and use a common seal and alter the same at |
pleasure.
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The Interim notes shall constitute State debt of the State |
of
Illinois within the meaning of any of the provisions of the |
Constitution
and statutes of the State of Illinois.
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No member, officer, agent or employee of the Authority, nor |
any other
person who executes interim notes, shall be liable |
personally by reason
of the issuance thereof.
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With respect to instruments for the payment of money issued |
under this
Section either before, on, or after the effective |
date of this amendatory
Act of 1989, it is and always has been |
the intention of the General
Assembly (i) that the Omnibus Bond |
Acts are and always have been
supplementary grants of power to |
issue instruments in accordance with the
Omnibus Bond Acts, |
regardless of any provision of this Act that may appear
to be |
or to have been more restrictive than those Acts, (ii) that the
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provisions of this Section are not a limitation on the |
supplementary
authority granted by the Omnibus Bond Acts, and |
(iii) that instruments
issued under this Section within the |
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supplementary authority granted
by the Omnibus Bond Acts are |
not invalid because of any provision of
this Act that may |
appear to be or to have been more restrictive than
those Acts.
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(Source: P.A. 89-4, eff. 1-1-96.)
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(20 ILCS 3110/9) (from Ch. 127, par. 213.9)
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Sec. 9. Limitation on disbursements. The Authority shall |
keep account
of the gross total income derived from each |
separate project or any combination
thereof undertaken |
pursuant to this Act. Disbursements from a given account
in The |
Public Building Fund shall be ordered by the Authority only for |
the
payment of
(1) the principal of and interest on the bonds |
issued for each project,
or combination thereof, and (2) any |
other purposes set forth in the
resolution authorizing the |
issuance of such bonds.
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An accurate record shall be kept of the rental payments |
under each
lease entered into by the Authority and any officer, |
department, board,
commission or other agency of the State of |
Illinois, the Director of the
Department of Central Management |
Services, the Board of Trustees of the
University of Illinois, |
the Board of Trustees of Southern Illinois University,
the |
Board of Trustees of Chicago State University, the Board of |
Trustees of
Eastern Illinois University, the Board of Trustees |
of Governors State
University, the Board of Trustees of |
Illinois State University, the Board of
Trustees of |
Northeastern Illinois University, the Board of Trustees of |
Northern
Illinois University, the Board of Trustees of Western |
Illinois University, the
School Building Commission, or any |
public community
college district board, and when the rentals |
applicable to each project
or facility, or any combination |
thereof, constructed, completed, remodeled,
maintained
and |
equipped, have been paid in (1) amounts sufficient to amortize |
and pay
the principal of and interest upon the total principal |
amount
of bonds of the Authority issued to pay the cost of each |
project or facility,
including maintenance and operation |
expenses and that proportion of the
administrative expense of |
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the Authority as provided for by each lease, or
(2) amounts |
which when invested in direct obligations of the United
States |
of America are, together with earnings thereon, sufficient to |
amortize
and pay the principal of and interest upon the total |
principal amount
of bonds of the Authority issued to pay the |
cost of each project
or facility, including maintenance and |
operation expenses and that proportion
of the administrative |
expense of the Authority as provided for by each lease,
the |
property shall be conveyed without charge to the lessee.
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(Source: P.A. 89-4, eff. 1-1-96.)
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Section 10. The State Finance Act is amended by changing |
Section 8a as follows:
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(30 ILCS 105/8a)
(from Ch. 127, par. 144a)
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Sec. 8a. Common School Fund; transfers to Common School |
Fund and Education
Assistance Fund.
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(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this
Section |
and except as otherwise provided in this subsection (a) with
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respect to amounts transferred from the General Revenue Fund to |
the Common
School Fund for distribution therefrom for the |
benefit of the Teachers'
Retirement System of the State of |
Illinois and the Public School Teachers'
Pension and Retirement |
Fund of Chicago:
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(1) With respect to all school districts, for each |
fiscal year other
than fiscal year 1994, on or before the |
eleventh and
twenty-first days of each of the months of |
August through the following July,
at a time or times |
designated by the Governor, the State Treasurer
and the |
State Comptroller shall transfer from the General Revenue
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Fund to the Common School Fund and Education Assistance |
Fund, as
appropriate, 1/24 or so much thereof as may be
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necessary of the amount appropriated to the State Board of |
Education for
distribution to all school districts from |
such Common School Fund and
Education Assistance Fund, for |
the
fiscal year, including interest on the School Fund |
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proportionate for that
distribution for such year.
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(2) With respect to all school districts, but for |
fiscal year 1994 only,
on the 11th day of August, 1993 and |
on or before the 11th and
21st days of each of the months |
of October, 1993 through July, 1994 at a time
or times |
designated by the Governor, the State Treasurer and the |
State
Comptroller shall transfer from the General Revenue |
Fund to the Common School
Fund 1/24 or so much thereof as |
may be necessary of the amount appropriated to
the State |
Board of Education for distribution to all school districts |
from such
Common School Fund, for fiscal year 1994, |
including interest on the School Fund
proportionate for |
that distribution for such year; and on or before the 21st
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day of August, 1993 at a time or times designated by the |
Governor, the State
Treasurer and the State Comptroller |
shall transfer from the General Revenue
Fund to the Common |
School Fund 3/24 or so much thereof as may be necessary of
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the amount appropriated to the State Board of Education for |
distribution to all
school districts from the Common School |
Fund, for fiscal year 1994, including
interest |
proportionate for that distribution on the School Fund for |
such fiscal
year.
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The amounts of the payments made in July of each year: (i) |
shall be
considered an outstanding liability as of the 30th day |
of June immediately
preceding those July payments, within the |
meaning of Section 25 of this Act;
(ii) shall be payable from |
the appropriation for the fiscal year that ended on
that 30th |
day of June; and (iii) shall be considered payments for claims
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covering the school year that commenced during the immediately |
preceding
calendar year.
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Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions of this |
subsection, as soon
as may be after the 10th and 20th days of |
each of the months of August
through May, 1/24, and on or as |
soon as may be after the 10th and 20th days of June, 1/12 of the |
annual amount appropriated to the
State Board of Education for |
distribution and payment during that fiscal year
from the |
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Common School Fund to and for the benefit of the Teachers' |
Retirement
System of the State of Illinois (until the end of |
State fiscal year 1995)
and the Public School Teachers' Pension |
and Retirement Fund of Chicago as
provided by the Illinois |
Pension Code and Section 18-7 of the School Code, or
so much |
thereof as may be necessary, shall be transferred by the State
|
Treasurer and the State Comptroller from the General Revenue |
Fund to the Common
School Fund to permit semi-monthly payments |
from the Common School Fund to and
for the benefit of such |
teacher retirement systems as required by Section 18-7
of the |
School Code.
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Notwithstanding the other provisions of this Section, on or |
as soon as
may be after the 15th day of each month, beginning |
in July of 1995, 1/12
of the annual amount appropriated for |
that fiscal year from the Common School
Fund to the Teachers' |
Retirement System of the State of Illinois (other than
amounts |
appropriated under Section 1.1 of the State Pension Funds |
Continuing
Appropriation Act), or so much thereof as may be |
necessary, shall be
transferred by the State Treasurer and the |
State Comptroller from the General
Revenue Fund to the Common |
School Fund to permit monthly payments from the
Common School |
Fund to that retirement system in accordance with Section |
16-158
of the Illinois Pension Code and Section 18-7 of the |
School Code, except that
such transfers in fiscal year 2004 |
from the General Revenue Fund
to the Common School Fund for the |
benefit of the Teachers' Retirement System of
the State of |
Illinois shall be reduced in the aggregate by the State
|
Comptroller and
State Treasurer to adjust for the amount |
transferred to the Teachers'
Retirement System of the State of |
Illinois pursuant to subsection (a) of
Section 6z-61.
Amounts
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appropriated to the Teachers' Retirement System of the State of |
Illinois under
Section 1.1 of the State Pension Funds |
Continuing Appropriation Act shall be
transferred by the State |
Treasurer and the State Comptroller from the General
Revenue |
Fund to the Common School Fund as necessary to provide for the |
payment
of vouchers drawn against those appropriations.
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The Governor may notify the State Treasurer and the State |
Comptroller to
transfer, at a time designated by the Governor, |
such additional amount as
may be necessary to effect advance |
distribution to school districts of amounts
that otherwise |
would be payable in the next month pursuant to Sections 18-8.05
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18-8
through 18-9
18-10 of the School Code. The State Treasurer |
and the State Comptroller
shall thereupon transfer such |
additional amount. The aggregate amount
transferred from the |
General Revenue Fund to the Common School Fund in the
eleven |
months beginning August 1 of any fiscal year shall not be in |
excess
of the amount necessary for payment of claims certified |
by the State
Superintendent of Education pursuant to the |
appropriation of the Common
School Fund for that fiscal year. |
Notwithstanding the provisions of the
first paragraph in this |
section, no transfer to effect an advance
distribution shall be |
made in any month except on notification, as provided
above, by |
the Governor.
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The State Comptroller and State Treasurer shall transfer |
from the General
Revenue Fund to the Common School Fund and the |
Education Assistance Fund
such amounts as may be required to
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honor the vouchers presented by the State Board of Education |
pursuant to
Sections 18-3, 18-4.3, 18-5, 18-6 and 18-7 of the |
School Code.
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The State Comptroller shall report all transfers provided |
for in this Act
to the President of the Senate, Minority Leader |
of the Senate, Speaker of
the House, and Minority Leader of the |
House.
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(b) On or before the 11th and 21st days of each of the |
months of June,
1982 through July, 1983, at a time or times |
designated by the Governor,
the State Treasurer and the State |
Comptroller shall transfer from the General
Revenue Fund to the |
Common School Fund 1/24 or so much thereof as may be
necessary |
of the amount appropriated to the State Board of Education for
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distribution from such Common School Fund, for that same fiscal |
year, including
interest on the School Fund for such year. The |
amounts of the payments
in the months of July, 1982 and July, |
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1983 shall be considered an outstanding
liability as of the |
30th day of June immediately preceding such July payment,
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within the meaning of Section 25 of this Act, and shall be |
payable from
the appropriation for the fiscal year which ended |
on such 30th day of June,
and such July payments shall be |
considered payments for claims covering
school years 1981-1982 |
and 1982-1983 respectively.
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In the event the Governor makes notification to effect |
advanced distribution
under the provisions of subsection (a) of |
this Section, the aggregate amount
transferred from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Common School Fund in the
12 months |
beginning August 1, 1981 or the 12 months beginning August 1,
|
1982 shall not be in excess of the amount necessary for payment |
of claims
certified by the State Superintendent of Education |
pursuant to the
appropriation of the Common School Fund for the |
fiscal years commencing on
the first of July of the years 1981 |
and 1982.
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(Source: P.A. 93-665, eff. 3-5-04.)
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Section 15. The Illinois Pension Code is amended by |
changing Sections 17-130, 17-154, and 17-156.1 as follows:
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(40 ILCS 5/17-130) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 17-130)
|
Sec. 17-130. Participants' contributions by payroll |
deductions.
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(a) There shall be deducted from the salary of each teacher |
7.50% of his salary for service or disability retirement |
pension and
0.5% of salary for the annual increase in base |
pension.
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In addition, there shall be deducted from the salary of |
each teacher
1% of his salary for survivors' and children's |
pensions.
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(b) An Employer and any employer of eligible contributors |
as defined in
Section 17-106 is authorized to make the |
necessary deductions from the salaries
of its teachers. Such |
amounts shall be included as a part of the Fund. An
Employer |
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and any employer of eligible contributors as defined in Section |
17-106
shall formulate such rules and regulations as may be |
necessary to give effect
to the provisions of this Section.
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(c) All persons employed as teachers shall, by such |
employment,
accept the provisions of this Article and of |
Sections 34-83 to 34-85b
34-87 ,
inclusive, of "The School |
Code", approved March 18, 1961, as amended,
and thereupon |
become contributors to the Fund in accordance with the
terms |
thereof. The provisions of this Article and of those Sections
|
shall become a part of the contract of employment.
|
(d) A person who (i) was a member before July 1, 1998, (ii) |
retires with
more than 34 years of creditable service, and |
(iii) does not elect to qualify
for the augmented rate under |
Section 17-119.1 shall be entitled, at the time of
retirement, |
to receive a partial refund of contributions made under this
|
Section for service occurring after the later of June 30, 1998 |
or attainment of
34 years of creditable service, in an amount |
equal to 1.00% of the salary upon
which those contributions |
were based.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-566, eff. 1-2-98; 90-582, eff. 5-27-98.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/17-154) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 17-154)
|
Sec. 17-154. Retired teachers supplementary payments. All |
persons who were
on June 30, 1975, entitled to a service |
retirement
pension or disability retirement pension, under |
this Fund or any
fund of
which this Fund is a continuation, and |
who meet the conditions
prescribed
hereinafter, shall receive |
supplementary payments as follows:
|
(1) In the case of any such retired person, who attained or |
shall attain
after June 30, 1975, the age of 60 years, who was |
in receipt of a service
retirement pension, the payment |
pursuant to this section shall be an amount
equal to the |
difference between (a) his annual service retirement pension
|
from the Fund plus any annual payment received under the
|
provisions of
Section 34-87 (now repealed) of "The School |
Code", approved March 18, 1961, as amended,
if the total of |
|
such amounts is less than $4500 per year, and (b) an amount
|
equal to $100 for each year of validated teaching service |
forming the basis
of the service retirement pension up to a |
maximum of 45 years of such
service;
|
(2) In the case of any such retired person, who was in |
receipt on June
30, 1975, of a disability retirement pension, |
the payment shall be equal
to the difference between (a) his |
total annual disability retirement pension
and (b) an amount |
equal to $100 for each year of validated teaching service
|
forming the basis of the disability retirement pension.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-566, eff. 1-2-98.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/17-156.1) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 17-156.1)
|
Sec. 17-156.1. Increases to retired members. A teacher who |
retired
prior to September 1, 1959 on service retirement |
pension who was at
least 55 years of age at date of retirement |
and had at least 20 years of
validated service shall be |
entitled to receive benefits under this Section.
|
These benefits shall be in an amount equal to 1-1/2% of the |
total of
(1) the initial service retirement pension plus (2) |
any emeritus payment
payable under Sections 34-86 and 34-87 |
(now repealed) of the School Code, multiplied by the number of |
full years on
pension. This payment shall begin in January of |
1970. An additional
1-1/2% shall be added in January of each |
year thereafter. Beginning
January 1, 1972 the rate of increase |
in the service retirement pension
each year shall be 2%. |
Beginning January 1, 1979, the rate of increase in
the service |
retirement pension each year shall be 3%.
Beginning January 1, |
1990, all automatic annual increases payable under
this Section |
shall be calculated as a percentage of the total pension
|
payable at the time of the increase, including all increases |
previously
granted under this Article, notwithstanding Section |
17-157.
|
A pensioner who otherwise qualifies for the aforesaid |
benefit shall
make a one-time payment of 1% of the final |
monthly average salary
multiplied by the number of completed |
|
years of service forming the basis
of his service retirement |
pension or, if the pension was not computed according
to |
average salary as defined in Section 17-116, 1% of the monthly
|
base pension multiplied by each complete year of service |
forming the
basis of his service retirement pension. Unless the |
pensioner rejects
the benefits of this Section, such sum shall |
be deducted from the
pensioner's December 1969 pension check |
and shall not be refundable.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-655, eff. 7-30-98.)
|
Section 20. The School Code is amended by changing Sections |
2-3.12, 2-3.62, 5-1, 5-17, 7-14, 7A-11, 11A-12, 11B-11, 11D-9, |
14C-1, 14C-8, 15-31, 18-8.05, 18-11, 18-12, 34-56, 34-73, and |
34-74 as follows:
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.12) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.12)
|
Sec. 2-3.12. School building code. To prepare for school |
boards with the
advice of the Department of Public Health, the |
Capital Development Board, and
the State Fire Marshal a school |
building code that will conserve the health and
safety and |
general welfare of the pupils and school personnel and others |
who
use public school facilities.
|
The document known as "Efficient and Adequate Standards for |
the Construction
of Schools" applies only to temporary school |
facilities, new school buildings,
and additions to existing |
schools whose construction contracts are awarded
after July 1, |
1965. On or before July 1, 1967, each school board shall have
|
its school district buildings that were constructed prior to |
January 1, 1955,
surveyed by an architect or engineer licensed |
in the State of Illinois as to
minimum standards necessary to |
conserve the health and safety of the pupils
enrolled in the |
school buildings of the district. Buildings constructed
|
between January 1, 1955 and July 1, 1965, not owned by the |
State of Illinois,
shall be surveyed by an architect or |
engineer licensed in the State of Illinois
beginning 10 years |
after acceptance of the completed building by the school
board. |
|
Buildings constructed between January 1, 1955 and July 1, 1955 |
and
previously exempt under the provisions of Section 35-27 |
(now repealed) shall be surveyed prior
to July 1, 1977 by an |
architect or engineer licensed in the State of Illinois.
The |
architect or engineer, using the document known as "Building |
Specifications
for Health and Safety in Public Schools" as a |
guide, shall make a report of the
findings of the survey to the |
school board, giving priority in that report to
fire safety |
problems and recommendations thereon if any such problems |
exist.
The school board of each district so surveyed and |
receiving a
report of needed recommendations to be made to |
improve standards of safety
and health of the pupils enrolled |
has until July 1, 1970, or in case of
buildings not owned by |
the State of Illinois and completed between January
1, 1955 and |
July 1, 1965 or in the case of buildings previously exempt |
under
the provisions of Section 35-27 has a period of 3 years |
after the survey is
commenced, to effectuate those |
recommendations, giving first attention to the
recommendations |
in the survey report having priority status, and is authorized
|
to levy the tax provided for in Section 17-2.11, according to |
the provisions of
that Section, to make such improvements. |
School boards unable to effectuate
those recommendations prior |
to July 1, 1970, on July 1, 1980 in the case of
buildings |
previously exempt under the provisions of Section 35-27, may |
petition
the State Superintendent of Education upon the |
recommendation of the Regional
Superintendent for an extension |
of time. The extension of time may be granted
by the State |
Superintendent of Education for a period of one year, but may |
be
extended from year to year provided substantial progress, in |
the opinion of the
State Superintendent of Education, is being |
made toward compliance.
However, for fire protection issues, |
only one one-year extension may be
made, and no other provision |
of this Code or an applicable code may
supersede this |
requirement.
For routine inspections, fire officials shall
|
provide written notice to the principal of the school to |
schedule
a mutually agreed upon time for the fire safety check. |
|
However, no more than
2 routine inspections may be made in a |
calendar year.
|
Within 2 years after the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of 1983,
and every 10 years thereafter, or at such other |
times as the State Board of
Education deems necessary or the |
regional superintendent so orders, each school
board subject to |
the provisions of this Section shall again survey its school
|
buildings and effectuate any recommendations in accordance |
with the procedures
set forth herein. An architect or engineer |
licensed in the State of Illinois is
required to conduct the |
surveys under the provisions of this Section and shall
make a |
report of the findings of the survey titled "safety survey |
report" to
the school board. The school board shall approve the |
safety survey report,
including any recommendations to |
effectuate compliance with the code, and
submit it to the |
Regional Superintendent. The Regional Superintendent shall
|
render a decision regarding approval or denial and submit the |
safety survey
report to the State Superintendent of Education. |
The State Superintendent of
Education shall approve or deny the |
report including recommendations to
effectuate compliance with |
the code and, if approved, issue a certificate of
approval. |
Upon receipt of the certificate of approval, the Regional
|
Superintendent shall issue an order to effect any approved |
recommendations
included in the report. Items in the report |
shall be prioritized. Urgent
items shall be considered as those |
items related to life safety problems that
present an immediate |
hazard to the safety of students. Required items shall be
|
considered as those items that are necessary for a safe |
environment but present
less of an immediate hazard to the |
safety of students. Urgent and required
items shall reference a |
specific rule in the code authorized by this Section
that is |
currently being violated or will be violated within the next 12 |
months
if the violation is not remedied. The school board of |
each district so
surveyed and receiving a report of needed |
recommendations to be made to
maintain standards of safety and |
health of the pupils enrolled shall effectuate
the correction |
|
of urgent items as soon as achievable to ensure the safety of
|
the students, but in no case more than one year after the date |
of the State
Superintendent of Education's approval of the |
recommendation.
Required items shall be corrected in a timely |
manner, but in
no case more than 5 years from the date of the |
State Superintendent
of
Education's approval of the |
recommendation. Once each year the school
board shall submit a |
report of progress on completion of any
recommendations to |
effectuate compliance with the code. For each year that the
|
school board does not effectuate any or all approved |
recommendations, it shall
petition the Regional Superintendent |
and the State Superintendent of Education
detailing what work |
was completed in the previous year and a work plan for
|
completion of the remaining work. If in the judgement of the |
Regional
Superintendent and the State Superintendent of |
Education substantial progress
has been made and just cause has |
been shown by the school board, the petition
for a one year |
extension of time may be approved.
|
As soon as practicable, but not later than 2 years after |
the effective date
of this amendatory Act of 1992, the State |
Board of Education shall combine
the document known as |
"Efficient and Adequate Standards for the Construction of
|
Schools" with the document known as "Building Specifications |
for Health and
Safety in Public Schools" together with any |
modifications or additions that may
be deemed necessary. The |
combined document shall be known as the "Health/Life
Safety |
Code for Public Schools" and shall be the governing code for |
all
facilities that house public school students or are |
otherwise used for public
school purposes, whether such |
facilities are permanent or temporary and
whether they are |
owned, leased, rented, or otherwise used by the district.
|
Facilities owned by a school district but that are not used to |
house public
school students or are not used for public school |
purposes shall be
governed by separate provisions within the |
code authorized by this Section.
|
The 10 year survey cycle specified in this Section shall |
|
continue to
apply based upon the standards contained in the |
"Health/Life Safety Code
for Public Schools", which shall |
specify building standards for buildings that
are constructed |
prior to the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1992 and
|
for buildings that are constructed after that date.
|
The "Health/Life Safety Code for Public Schools" shall be |
the governing code
for public schools; however, the provisions |
of this Section shall not preclude
inspection of school |
premises and buildings pursuant to Section 9 of the Fire
|
Investigation Act, provided that the provisions of the |
"Health/Life Safety Code
for Public Schools", or such |
predecessor document authorized by this Section as
may be |
applicable are used, and provided that those inspections are |
coordinated
with the Regional Superintendent having |
jurisdiction over the public school
facility.
Nothing in this |
Section shall be construed to prohibit a local fire
department, |
fire protection district, or the Office of the State Fire |
Marshal
from
conducting a fire safety check in a public school. |
Upon being notified by a
fire official that corrective action |
must be taken
to resolve a violation, the school board shall |
take corrective action within
one year. However, violations |
that present imminent danger must be
addressed immediately.
|
Any agency having jurisdiction beyond the scope of the |
applicable
document authorized by this Section may issue a |
lawful order to a school board
to effectuate recommendations, |
and the school board receiving the order shall
certify to the |
Regional Superintendent and the State Superintendent of
|
Education when it has complied with the order.
|
The State Board of Education is authorized to adopt any |
rules that are
necessary relating to the administration and |
enforcement of the provisions of
this Section. The code |
authorized by this Section shall apply only to those
school |
districts having a population of less than 500,000 inhabitants.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-593, eff. 1-1-03.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.62) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.62)
|
|
Sec. 2-3.62. Educational Service Centers.
|
(a) A regional network of educational service centers shall |
be established
by the State Board of Education to coordinate |
and combine existing services in
a manner which is practical |
and efficient and to provide new services to
schools as |
provided in this Section. Services to be made available by such
|
centers shall include the planning, implementation and |
evaluation of:
|
(1) (blank);
|
(2) computer technology education including the |
evaluation, use and
application of state-of-the-art |
technology in computer software as provided
in Section |
2-3.43 ;
|
(3) mathematics, science and reading resources for |
teachers including
continuing education, inservice |
training and staff development.
|
The centers may provide training, technical assistance, |
coordination and
planning in other program areas such as school |
improvement, school
accountability, career guidance, early |
childhood education, alcohol/drug
education and prevention, |
family life - sex education, electronic transmission
of data |
from school districts to the State, alternative education and |
regional
special education, and telecommunications systems |
that provide distance
learning. Such telecommunications |
systems may be obtained through the
Department of Central |
Management Services pursuant to Section 405-270 of the
|
Department of Central Management Services Law (20 ILCS |
405/405-270). The programs and services of educational
service |
centers may be offered to private school teachers and private |
school
students within each service center area provided public |
schools have already
been afforded adequate access to such |
programs and services.
|
The State Board of Education shall promulgate rules and |
regulations necessary
to implement this Section. The rules |
shall include detailed standards which
delineate the scope and |
specific content of programs to be provided by each
Educational |
|
Service Center, as well as the specific planning, |
implementation
and evaluation services to be provided by each |
Center relative to its programs.
The Board shall also provide |
the standards by which it will evaluate the
programs provided |
by each Center.
|
(b) Centers serving Class 1 county school units shall be |
governed by an
11-member board, 3 members of which shall be |
public school teachers
nominated by the local bargaining |
representatives to the appropriate regional
superintendent for |
appointment and no more than 3 members of which shall be
from |
each of the following categories, including but not limited to
|
superintendents, regional superintendents, school board |
members
and a representative of an institution of higher |
education. The members of
the board shall be appointed by the |
regional superintendents whose school
districts are served by |
the educational service center.
The composition of the board |
will reflect the revisions of this
amendatory Act of 1989 as |
the terms of office of current members expire.
|
(c) The centers shall be of sufficient size and number to |
assure delivery
of services to all local school districts in |
the State.
|
(d) From monies appropriated for this program the State |
Board of
Education shall provide grants to qualifying |
Educational Service Centers
applying for such grants in |
accordance with rules and regulations
promulgated by the State |
Board of Education to implement this Section.
|
(e) The governing authority of each of the 18 regional |
educational service
centers shall appoint a family life - sex |
education advisory board
consisting of 2 parents, 2 teachers, 2 |
school administrators, 2 school
board members, 2 health care |
professionals, one library system
representative, and the |
director of the regional educational service center
who shall |
serve as chairperson of the advisory board so appointed. |
Members
of the family life - sex education advisory boards |
shall serve without
compensation. Each of the advisory boards |
appointed pursuant to this
subsection shall develop a plan for |
|
regional teacher-parent family life - sex
education training |
sessions and shall file a written report of such plan
with the |
governing board of their regional educational service center. |
The
directors of each of the regional educational service
|
centers shall thereupon meet, review each of the reports |
submitted by the
advisory boards and combine those reports into |
a single written report which
they shall file with the Citizens |
Council on School Problems prior to the
end of the regular |
school term of the 1987-1988 school year.
|
(f) The 14 educational service centers serving Class I |
county school units
shall be disbanded on the first Monday of |
August, 1995, and their statutory
responsibilities and |
programs shall be assumed by the regional offices of
education, |
subject to rules and regulations developed by
the
State Board |
of Education. The regional superintendents of schools elected |
by
the voters residing in all Class I counties shall serve as |
the chief
administrators for these programs and services. By |
rule of the State Board of
Education, the 10 educational |
service regions of
lowest
population shall provide such |
services under cooperative agreements with larger
regions.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-21, eff. 7-1-03.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/5-1) (from Ch. 122, par. 5-1)
|
Sec. 5-1. County school units.
|
(a) The territory in each county, exclusive of
any school |
district governed by any special act which requires the |
district
to appoint its own school treasurer, shall constitute |
a county school unit.
County school units of less than |
2,000,000 inhabitants shall be known as
Class I county school |
units and the office of township trustees, where
existing on |
July 1, 1962, in such units shall be abolished on that date and
|
all books and records of such former township trustees shall be |
forthwith
thereafter transferred to the county board of school |
trustees. County
school units of 2,000,000 or more inhabitants |
shall be known as Class II
county school units and shall retain |
the office of township trustees
unless otherwise provided in |
|
subsection (b) or (c).
|
(b) Notwithstanding subsections (a) and (c), the
school |
board of any elementary school district having a fall, 1989
|
aggregate enrollment of at least 2,500 but less than 6,500 |
pupils and
having boundaries that are coterminous with the |
boundaries of a high school
district, and the school board of |
any high school district having a fall,
1989 aggregate |
enrollment of at least 2,500 but less than 6,500 pupils and
|
having boundaries that are coterminous with the boundaries of |
an elementary
school district, may, whenever the territory of |
such school district forms
a part of a Class II county school
|
unit, by proper resolution withdraw such school district from |
the
jurisdiction and authority of the trustees of schools of |
the township in
which such school district is located and from |
the jurisdiction and
authority of the township treasurer in |
such Class II county school unit;
provided that the school |
board of any such school district shall, upon the
adoption and |
passage of such resolution, thereupon elect or appoint its own
|
school treasurer as provided in Section 8-1. Upon the adoption |
and passage
of such resolution and the election or appointment |
by the school board of
its own school treasurer: (1) the |
trustees of schools in such township
shall no longer have or |
exercise any powers and duties with respect to the
school |
district governed by such school board or with respect to the |
school
business, operations or assets of such school district; |
and (2) all books
and
records of the township trustees relating |
to the school business and
affairs of such school district |
shall be transferred and delivered to the
school board of such |
school district. Upon the effective date of this
amendatory Act |
of 1993, the legal title to, and all right, title
and interest
|
formerly held by the township trustees in any school buildings |
and
school sites
used and occupied by the school board of such |
school district for school
purposes, that legal title, right, |
title and interest thereafter having
been transferred to and |
vested in the regional
board
of school trustees under P.A. |
87-473 until the abolition of that regional
board of school |
|
trustees by P.A. 87-969, shall be deemed transferred by
|
operation of law to and shall vest in the school board of that |
school
district.
|
(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a), the |
offices of
township treasurer and trustee of schools of any |
township located in a Class
II county school unit shall be |
abolished as provided in this subsection
if all of the |
following conditions are met:
|
(1) During the same 30 day period, each school board of |
each
elementary and unit school district that is subject to |
the jurisdiction and
authority of the township treasurer |
and trustees of schools of the township
in which those |
offices are sought to be abolished gives written notice by
|
certified mail, return receipt requested to the township |
treasurer and
trustees of schools of that township of the |
date of a meeting of the school
board, to be held not more |
than 90 nor less than 60 days after the date
when the |
notice is given, at which meeting the school board is to |
consider
and vote upon the question of whether there shall |
be submitted to the
electors of the school district a |
proposition to abolish the offices of
township treasurer |
and trustee of schools of that township. None of the
|
notices given under this paragraph to the township |
treasurer and trustees
of schools of a township shall be |
deemed sufficient or in compliance with
the requirements of |
this paragraph unless all of those notices are given
within |
the same 30 day period.
|
(2) Each school board of each elementary and unit |
school district that
is subject to the jurisdiction and |
authority of the township treasurer and
trustees of schools |
of the township in which those offices are sought to
be |
abolished, by the affirmative vote of at least 5 members of |
the school
board at a school board meeting of which notice |
is given as required by
paragraph (1) of this subsection, |
adopts a resolution requiring the
secretary of the school |
board to certify to the proper election authorities
for |
|
submission to the electors of the school district at the |
next
consolidated election in accordance with the general
|
election law a
proposition to abolish the offices of |
township treasurer and trustee of
schools of that township. |
None of the resolutions adopted under this
paragraph by any |
elementary or unit school districts that are subject to
the |
jurisdiction and authority of the township treasurer and |
trustees of
schools of the township in which those offices |
are sought to be abolished
shall be deemed in compliance |
with the requirements of this paragraph or
sufficient to |
authorize submission of the proposition to abolish those
|
offices to a referendum of the electors in any such school |
district unless
all of the school boards of all of the |
elementary and unit school districts
that are subject to |
the jurisdiction and authority of the township
treasurer |
and trustees of schools of that township adopt such a |
resolution
in accordance with the provisions of this |
paragraph.
|
(3) The school boards of all of the elementary and unit |
school
districts that are subject to the jurisdiction and |
authority of the
township treasurer and trustees of schools |
of the township in which those
offices are sought to be |
abolished submit a proposition to abolish the
offices of |
township treasurer and trustee of schools of that township |
to
the electors of their respective school districts at the |
same consolidated
election in accordance with the general |
election law, the ballot in each
such district to be in |
substantially the following form:
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
OFFICIAL BALLOT
|
Shall the offices of township
|
treasurer and YES
|
trustee of -----------------
|
schools of Township ..... NO
|
Range ..... be abolished?
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
(4) At the consolidated election at which the
|
proposition to abolish
the offices of township treasurer |
and trustee of schools of a township is
submitted to the |
electors of each elementary and unit school district that
|
is subject to the jurisdiction and authority of the |
township treasurer and
trustee of schools of that township, |
a majority of the electors voting on
the proposition in |
each such elementary and unit school district votes in
|
favor of the proposition as submitted to them.
|
If in each elementary and unit school district that is |
subject to the
jurisdiction and authority of the township |
treasurer and trustees of
schools of the township in which |
those offices are sought to be abolished a
majority of the |
electors in each such district voting at the consolidated
|
election on the proposition to abolish the offices of township |
treasurer
and trustee of schools of that township votes in |
favor of the proposition
as submitted to them, the proposition |
shall be deemed to have passed; but
if in any such elementary |
or unit school district a majority of the
electors voting on |
that proposition in that district fails to vote in favor
of the |
proposition as submitted to them, then notwithstanding the vote |
of
the electors in any other such elementary or unit school |
district on that
proposition the proposition shall not be |
deemed to have passed in any of
those elementary or unit school |
districts, and the offices of township
treasurer and trustee of |
schools of the township in which those offices
were sought to |
be abolished shall not be abolished, unless in each of those
|
elementary and unit school districts remaining subject to the |
jurisdiction
and authority of the township treasurer and |
trustees of schools of that
township proceedings are again |
initiated to abolish those offices and all
of the proceedings |
and conditions prescribed in paragraphs (1) through (4)
of this |
subsection are repeated and met in each of those elementary and
|
unit school districts.
|
Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions of this Section |
or any other
provision of the School Code, the offices of |
|
township treasurer and trustee of
schools of a township that |
has a population of less than 200,000 and that
contains a unit |
school district and is located in a Class II county school unit
|
shall also be
abolished as provided in this subsection if all |
of the conditions set forth in
paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of |
this subsection are met
and if the following additional |
condition is met:
|
The electors in all of the school districts subject to |
the jurisdiction and
authority of the township treasurer |
and trustees of schools of the township in
which those |
offices are sought to be abolished shall vote at the
|
consolidated
election on the proposition to abolish the |
offices of township treasurer and
trustee of schools of |
that township. If a majority of the electors in all of
the |
school districts combined voting on the proposition vote in |
favor of the
proposition, then the proposition shall be |
deemed to have passed; but if a
majority of the electors |
voting on the proposition in all of the school
district |
fails to vote in favor of the proposition as submitted to |
them, then
the proposition shall not be deemed to have |
passed and the offices of township
treasurer and trustee of |
schools of the township in which those offices were
sought |
to be abolished shall not be abolished, unless and until |
the proceedings
detailed in paragraphs (1) through (3) of |
this subsection and the conditions
set forth in this |
paragraph are met.
|
If the proposition to abolish the offices of township |
treasurer and
trustee of schools of a township is deemed to |
have passed at the
consolidated election as provided in this |
subsection,
those offices shall be
deemed abolished by |
operation of law effective on January 1
of the
calendar year |
immediately following the calendar year in which that
|
consolidated election is held, provided that if after the
|
election, the trustees of schools by resolution elect to |
abolish the offices of
township treasurer and trustee of |
schools effective on July 1 immediately
following the election, |
|
then the offices shall be abolished on July 1
immediately |
following the election.
On the date that
the offices of |
township treasurer and trustee of schools of a
township are |
deemed abolished by operation of law, the school board of each
|
elementary and unit school district and the school board of |
each high
school district that is subject to the jurisdiction |
and authority of the
township treasurer and trustees of schools |
of that township at the time
those offices are abolished: (i) |
shall appoint its own school treasurer as
provided in Section |
8-1; and (ii) unless the term of the contract of a
township |
treasurer expires on the date that the office of township
|
treasurer is abolished, shall pay to the former township |
treasurer its
proportionate share of any aggregate |
compensation that, were the office of
township treasurer not |
abolished at that time, would
have been payable to the former |
township treasurer after that date over the
remainder of the |
term of the contract of the former township treasurer that
|
began prior to but ends after that date. In addition, on the |
date that the offices of township treasurer and trustee of
|
schools of a township are deemed abolished as provided in this |
subsection,
the school board of each elementary school, high |
school and unit school
district that until that date is subject |
to the jurisdiction and authority
of the township treasurer and |
trustees of schools of that township shall be
deemed by |
operation of law to have agreed and assumed to pay and, when
|
determined, shall pay to the Illinois Municipal Retirement
Fund |
a proportionate share of the unfunded liability existing in |
that Fund
at the time these offices are abolished in that
|
calendar year for all annuities or other benefits then or
|
thereafter to become payable from that Fund with respect to all |
periods of
service performed prior to that date as a |
participating employee in that
Fund by persons serving during |
those periods of service as a trustee of
schools, township |
treasurer or regular employee in the office of the
township |
treasurer of that township. That unfunded liability shall be
|
actuarially determined by the board of trustees of the Illinois |
|
Municipal
Retirement Fund, and the board of trustees shall |
thereupon notify each
school board required to pay a |
proportionate share of that unfunded
liability of the aggregate |
amount of the unfunded liability so determined.
The amount so |
paid to the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund by each of
those |
school districts shall be credited to the account of the |
township in
that Fund. For each elementary school, high school |
and unit school district
under the jurisdiction and authority |
of a township treasurer and trustees
of schools of a township |
in which those offices are abolished as provided
in this |
subsection, each such district's proportionate share of the
|
aggregate compensation payable to the former township |
treasurer as provided
in this paragraph and each such |
district's proportionate share of the
aggregate amount of the |
unfunded liability payable to the Illinois
Municipal |
Retirement Fund as provided in this paragraph shall be computed
|
in accordance with the ratio that the number of pupils in |
average daily
attendance in each such district as reported in |
schedules prepared under
Section 24-19 for the school year last |
ending prior to the date on which
the offices of township |
treasurer and trustee of schools of that township
are abolished |
bears to the aggregate number of pupils in average daily
|
attendance in all of those districts as so reported for that |
school year.
|
Upon abolition of the offices of township treasurer and |
trustee of
schools of a township as provided in this |
subsection: (i) the regional
board of school trustees, in its |
corporate capacity, shall be deemed the
successor in interest |
to the former trustees of schools of that township
with respect |
to the common school lands and township loanable funds of the
|
township; (ii) all right, title and interest existing or vested |
in the
former trustees of schools of that township in the |
common school lands and
township loanable funds of the |
township, and all records, moneys,
securities and other assets, |
rights of property and causes of action
pertaining to or |
constituting a part of those common school lands or
township |
|
loanable funds, shall be transferred to and deemed vested by
|
operation of law in the regional board of school trustees, |
which shall hold
legal title to, manage and operate all common |
school lands and township
loanable funds of the township, |
receive the rents, issues and profits
therefrom, and have and |
exercise with respect thereto the same powers and
duties as are |
provided by this Code to be exercised by regional boards of
|
school trustees when acting as township land commissioners in |
counties
having at least 220,000 but fewer than 2,000,000 |
inhabitants; (iii) the
regional board of school trustees shall |
select to serve as its treasurer
with respect to the common |
school lands and township loanable funds of the
township a |
person from time to time also serving as the appointed school
|
treasurer of any school district that was subject to the |
jurisdiction and
authority of the township treasurer and |
trustees of schools of that
township at the time those offices |
were abolished, and the person selected
to also serve as |
treasurer of the regional board of school trustees shall
have |
his compensation for services in that capacity fixed by the |
regional
board of school trustees, to be paid from the township |
loanable funds, and
shall make to the regional board of school |
trustees the reports required to be
made by treasurers of |
township land commissioners, give bond as required by
|
treasurers of township land commissioners, and perform the |
duties and
exercise the powers of treasurers of township land |
commissioners; (iv) the
regional board of school trustees shall |
designate in the manner provided by
Section 8-7, insofar as |
applicable, a depositary for its treasurer, and the
proceeds of |
all rents, issues and profits from the common school lands and
|
township loanable funds of that township shall be deposited and |
held in the
account maintained for those purposes with that |
depositary and shall be
expended and distributed therefrom as |
provided in Section 15-24 and other
applicable provisions of |
this Code; and (v) whenever there is vested in the
trustees of |
schools of a township at the time that office is abolished
|
under this subsection the legal title to any school buildings |
|
or school
sites used or occupied for school purposes by any |
elementary school, high
school or unit school district subject |
to the jurisdiction and authority of
those trustees of school |
at the time that office is abolished, the legal
title to those |
school buildings and school sites shall be deemed
transferred |
by operation of law to and invested in the
school board of that |
school district, in its corporate
capacity Section 7-28, the
|
same to be held, sold, exchanged leased or otherwise |
transferred in
accordance with applicable provisions of this |
Code.
|
Notwithstanding Section 2-3.25g of this Code, a waiver of a |
mandate
established under this Section may not be requested.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-269, eff. 7-23-99; 92-448, eff. 8-21-01 .)
|
(105 ILCS 5/5-17) (from Ch. 122, par. 5-17)
|
Sec. 5-17. Payment of claims - Apportionment and |
distribution of
funds. At the regular meetings, the trustees |
shall appropriate and pay
from the income of the permanent |
township fund, if it is sufficient, all
valid claims for the |
following:
|
1. The compensation of the treasurer.
|
2. The cost of publishing the annual statement.
|
3. The cost of a record book, if any.
|
4. The cost of dividing school lands and making plats.
|
If the income of the permanent township fund is not |
sufficient to
meet such items the additional amount needed may |
be taken from the total
of other funds subject to distribution, |
each district -- exclusive of
any district which has withdrawn |
from the jurisdiction and authority of the
trustees of schools |
of the township and which has elected or appointed its
own |
school treasurer as provided in subsection (b) of Section
5-1 - |
- being charged as its share of such items the proportion |
which the
amount of school funds of the district handled by the |
township treasurer
bears to the total amount of all school |
funds handled by such treasurer.
|
In Class II county school units (excluding therefrom, |
|
however, any
township therein in which the offices of township |
treasurer and trustee of
schools have been abolished as |
provided in subsection (c) of Section 5-1)
if any balance of |
the income from the
permanent township fund in any township |
remains after paying such items,
such balance shall be |
apportioned and distributed to the districts and
parts of |
districts in the township -- including any district which has
|
withdrawn from the jurisdiction and authority of the trustees |
of schools of
the township and which has elected or appointed |
its own school treasurer as
provided in subsection (b) of |
Section 5-1 -- in which schools
have been kept as required by |
law during the preceding year ending June 30,
according to the |
number of pupils in average daily attendance in grades one to
|
eight inclusive as reported in schedules prepared under Section |
24-19 . At the
semi-annual meetings in all such townships all |
remaining funds subject
to distribution shall be apportioned |
and distributed to the districts
and parts of districts in the |
township in which schools have been kept
as required by law |
during the preceding year ending June 30, in the
manner and |
subject to the limitations prescribed in Sections 18-2
through |
18-11 for the distribution of the common school fund among the
|
counties, provided that -- except for any balance of the income |
from the
permanent township fund remaining after payment of the |
items set forth in
subparagraphs 1, 2, 3 and 4 of this Section - |
- no funds shall be
apportioned or distributed to any school |
district which has withdrawn from
the jurisdiction and |
authority of the trustees of schools and appointed its
own |
school treasurer pursuant to Section 5-1; and the trustees |
shall
direct the treasurer to make a regular monthly |
apportionment and
distribution between semi-annual meetings, |
in the manner prescribed by
those sections, of any available |
funds on hand from the common school fund.
The funds |
distributed shall be credited to the respective districts and
|
parts of districts.
|
In Class I county school units and in any township forming |
a part of
a Class II county school unit in which township the |
|
offices of township
treasurer and trustee of schools have been |
abolished as provided in
subsection (c) of Section 5-1, if any |
balance of income from the
permanent township fund in any |
township remains after paying such items,
such balance or a |
part thereof equal to but not greater than the then
current tax |
levy or tax levies for common school purposes by all the
school |
districts or parts of school districts in said township on
|
property in said township in process of collection in the |
county wherein
the township having such fund is located, shall, |
upon an order drawn by
the treasurer and signed by the |
president and secretary of the township land
commissioners or |
regional board of school trustees, be paid annually on
or |
before February 1 to the County
Treasurer of the county in |
which such township is situated. It shall
then be the duty of |
the County Treasurer to apply and credit the sum so
received |
upon all tax bills for school purposes of the taxpayers in the
|
township, said sum to be applied and credited proportionately |
upon the
basis of the value of assessed property represented by |
each such tax
bill. Any sum received by the County Treasurer in |
excess of the amount
required to discharge in full the amount |
of all taxes for school
purposes so extended against taxable |
property within the township shall
be held by the County |
Treasurer and applied to taxes subsequently
extended for such |
purposes: Provided, that if a petition, signed by at
least 5% |
of the legal voters of the township, is presented to the |
regional
superintendent of schools of the educational service |
region
in which the township is located
requesting a vote on |
the proposition that such balance of the income
from the |
permanent township fund shall be apportioned and distributed to
|
the districts and parts of districts in the township in which |
schools
have been kept as required by law during the preceding |
year ending June
30, according to the number of pupils in |
average daily attendance in
grades one to eight, inclusive, as |
reported in schedules prepared pursuant
to Section 24-19 upon |
an order drawn by the treasurer and signed by the
president and |
secretary of the township land commissioners or regional
board |
|
of school trustees, to be paid annually
on or before February |
1, the regional superintendent of schools shall certify
to the |
proper election authority the proposition for submission to the
|
voters of the township in accordance with the general election |
law.
The treasurer shall cause a copy of the order to be |
published in one or
more newspapers published in the county |
school unit within 10 days after
the order is drawn. If no |
newspaper is published in the county school unit,
the order |
shall be published in a newspaper having general circulation
|
within the county school unit. The publication of the order |
shall include a
notice of (1) the specific number of voters |
required to sign a petition
requesting that the proposition to |
apportion and distribute to the several
school districts the |
excess of the income from the permanent township fund
be |
submitted to the voters of the township; (2) the time within |
which
the petition must be filed; and
(3) the date of the |
prospective referendum. The treasurer shall provide a
petition |
form to any individual requesting one. If the proposition |
receives
a majority of the votes cast thereon, it shall |
supersede the preceding
provisions for the distribution of such |
balance.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-1253; 86-1441; 87-435; 87-473.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/7-14) (from Ch. 122, par. 7-14)
|
Sec. 7-14. Bonded indebtedness-Tax rate.
|
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b), whenever the |
boundaries of any
school district are changed by the annexation |
or detachment of territory, each
such district as it exists on |
and after such action shall assume the bonded
indebtedness , as |
well as financial obligations to the Capital Development Board
|
pursuant to Section 35-15 (now repealed) of this
the School
|
Code, of all the territory included
therein after such change. |
The tax rate for bonded indebtedness shall be
determined in the |
manner provided in Section 19-7 of this Act, except the
County |
Clerk shall annually extend taxes against all the taxable |
property
situated in the county and contained in each such |
|
district as it exists after
the action. Notwithstanding the |
provisions of this subsection, if the
boundaries of a school |
district are changed by annexation or detachment of
territory |
after June 30, 1987, and prior to September 15, 1987, and if |
the
school district to which territory is being annexed has no |
outstanding
bonded indebtedness on the date such annexation |
occurs, then the annexing
school district shall not be liable |
for any bonded indebtedness of the
district from which the |
territory is detached, and the school district from
which the |
territory is detached shall remain liable for all of its bonded
|
indebtedness.
|
(b) Whenever a school district with bonded indebtedness has |
become dissolved
under this Article and its territory annexed |
to another district, the
annexing district or districts shall |
not, except by action pursuant to
resolution of the school |
board of the annexing district prior to the effective
date of |
the annexation, assume the bonded indebtedness of the dissolved
|
district; nor, except by action pursuant to resolution of the |
school
board of the dissolving district, shall the territory of |
the dissolved
district assume the bonded indebtedness of the |
annexing district or districts.
If the annexing district or |
districts do not assume the bonded indebtedness of
the |
dissolved district, a tax rate for the bonded indebtedness |
shall be
determined in the manner provided in Section 19-7, and |
the county clerk or
clerks shall annually extend taxes for each |
outstanding bond issue against
all the taxable property that |
was situated within the boundaries of the
district as the |
boundaries existed at the time of the issuance of each bond
|
issue regardless of whether the property is still contained in |
that same
district at the time of the extension of the taxes by |
the county clerk
or clerks.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-107; 87-1120; 87-1215; 88-45.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/7A-11) (from Ch. 122, par. 7A-11)
|
Sec. 7A-11. Assets, liabilities and bonded indebtedness - |
Tax rate.
|
|
(a) Upon the effective date of the change as provided in |
Section 7A-8, and
subject to the provisions of subsection (b) |
of this Section 7A-11, the
newly created elementary school |
district shall receive all the assets and
assume all the |
liabilities and obligations of the dissolved unit school
|
district, including all the bonded indebtedness of the |
dissolved unit
school district and its financial obligations to |
the Capital Development
Board pursuant to Section 35-15 (now |
repealed) .
|
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of |
this Section,
upon the stipulation of the school board of the |
annexing high school
district and either the school board of |
the unit school district prior to
the effective date of its |
dissolution, or thereafter of the school board of
the newly |
created elementary school district, and with the approval in
|
either case of the regional superintendent of schools of the |
educational
service region in which the territory described in |
the petition filed under
this Article or the greater portion of |
the equalized assessed valuation of
such territory is situated, |
the assets, liabilities and obligations of the
dissolved unit |
school district, including all the bonded indebtedness of
the |
dissolved unit school district and its financial obligations to |
the
Capital Development Board pursuant to Section 35-15 (now |
repealed) , may be divided and
assumed between and by such newly |
created elementary school district and
the annexing high school |
district in accordance with the terms and
provisions of such |
stipulation and approval. In such event, the provisions
of |
Section 19-29, as now or hereafter amended, shall be applied to
|
determine the debt incurring power of the newly created |
elementary school
district and of the contiguous annexing high |
school district.
|
(c) Without regard to whether the receipt of assets and the |
assumption
of liabilities and obligations of the dissolved unit |
school district is
determined pursuant to subsection (a) or (b) |
of this Section, the tax rate
for bonded indebtedness shall be |
determined in the manner provided in
Section 19-7; and |
|
notwithstanding the creation of such new elementary
school |
district, the county clerk or clerks shall annually extend |
taxes for
each outstanding bond issue against all the taxable |
property that was
situated within the boundaries of the |
dissolved unit school district as
such boundaries existed at |
the time of the issuance of each such bond
issue, regardless of |
whether such property was still contained in that unit
school |
district at the time of its dissolution and regardless of |
whether
such property is contained in the newly created |
elementary school district
at the time of the extension of such |
taxes by the county clerk or clerks.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-1028.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/11A-12) (from Ch. 122, par. 11A-12)
|
Sec. 11A-12. Bonded indebtedness - Tax rate.
|
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b), whenever a new |
district
is created under the provisions of this Article, each
|
such district as
it exists on and after such action shall |
assume the financial obligations
to the Capital Development |
Board , pursuant to Section 35-15 (now repealed) of this
the
|
School
Code and the Capital Development Board Act, of all the |
territory included
therein after such change, and the |
outstanding bonded indebtedness shall
be treated as |
hereinafter provided in this Section and in Section 19-29
of |
this Act. The tax rate for bonded indebtedness shall be |
determined in
the manner provided in Section 19-7 of this Act, |
and notwithstanding the
creation of any such new district, the |
County Clerk or Clerks shall annually
extend taxes for each |
outstanding bond issue against all the taxable property
that |
was situated within the boundaries of the district as such |
boundaries
existed at the time of the issuance of each such |
bond issue regardless of
whether such property is still |
contained
in that same district at the time of the extension of |
such taxes by the
County Clerk or Clerks.
|
(b) Whenever the entire territory of 2 or more school |
districts is
organized into a community unit school district |
|
pursuant to a petition filed
under this Article, the petition |
may provide that the entire territory of the
new community unit |
school district shall assume the bonded indebtedness of the
|
previously existing school district. In that case the tax rate |
for bonded
indebtedness shall be determined in the manner |
provided in Section 19-7 of this
Act, except the County Clerk |
shall annually extend taxes for each outstanding
bond issue |
against all the taxable property situated in the new community |
unit
school district as it exists after the organization.
|
(Source: P.A. 88-555, eff. 7-27-94.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/11B-11) (from Ch. 122, par. 11B-11)
|
Sec. 11B-11. Bonded indebtedness - Tax rate. Whenever a new |
district
is created under any of the provisions of this Act, |
each such district as
it exists on and after such
action shall |
assume the financial obligations
to the Capital Development |
Board , pursuant to Section 35-15 (now repealed) of this
"The |
School
Code " and the Capital Development Board Act, of all the |
territory included
therein after such change, and the |
outstanding bonded indebtedness shall
be treated as |
hereinafter provided in this Section and in Section 19-29
of |
this Act. The tax rate for bonded indebtedness shall be |
determined in
the manner provided in Section 19-7 of this Act, |
and notwithstanding the
creation of any such new district, the |
County Clerk or Clerks shall annually
extend taxes for each |
outstanding bond issue against all the taxable property
that |
was situated within the boundaries of the district as such |
boundaries
existed at the time of the issuance of each such |
bond issue regardless of
whether such property is still |
contained
in that same district at the time of the extension of |
such taxes by the
County Clerk or Clerks.
|
(Source: P.A. 83-686.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/11D-9) (from Ch. 122, par. 11D-9)
|
Sec. 11D-9. Bonded indebtedness; tax rate. Whenever new |
districts
are created under any of the provisions of this |
|
Article, each such district as
it exists on and after such |
action shall assume the financial obligations
to the Capital |
Development Board , pursuant to Section 35-15 (now repealed) of |
this
The School
Code and the Capital Development Board Act, of |
all the territory included
therein after such change, and the |
outstanding bonded indebtedness shall
be treated as provided in |
this Section and in Section 19-29
of this Act. The tax rate for |
bonded indebtedness shall be determined in
the manner provided |
in Section 19-7 of this Act, and notwithstanding the
creation |
of any such new districts, the county clerk or clerks shall |
annually
extend taxes for each outstanding bond issue against |
all the taxable property
that was situated within the |
boundaries of each district as such boundaries
existed at the |
time of the issuance of each such bond issue, regardless of
|
whether such property is still contained in that same district |
at the time
of the extension of such taxes by the county clerk |
or clerks.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-1334.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/14C-1) (from Ch. 122, par. 14C-1)
|
Sec. 14C-1.
|
The General Assembly finds that there are large numbers of |
children in
this State who come from environments where the |
primary language is other
than English. Experience has shown |
that public school classes in which
instruction is given only |
in English are often inadequate for the education
of children |
whose native tongue is another language. The General Assembly
|
believes that a program of transitional bilingual education can |
meet the
needs of these children and facilitate their |
integration into the regular
public school curriculum. |
Therefore, pursuant to the policy of this State
to insure equal |
educational opportunity to every child, and in recognition
of |
the educational needs of children of limited English-speaking |
ability ,
and in recognition of the success of the limited |
existing bilingual
programs conducted pursuant to Sections |
10-22.38a and 34-18.2 of The School
Code , it is the purpose of |
|
this Act to provide for the establishment of
transitional |
bilingual education programs in the public schools, and to
|
provide supplemental financial assistance to help local school |
districts
meet the extra costs of such programs.
|
(Source: P.A. 78-727.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/14C-8) (from Ch. 122, par. 14C-8)
|
Sec. 14C-8. Teacher certification - Qualifications - |
Issuance of
certificates. No person shall be eligible
for |
employment by a school district as a teacher of transitional
|
bilingual education without either (a) holding a valid teaching |
certificate
issued pursuant to Article 21 of this Code and |
meeting such additional language
and course requirements as |
prescribed by the State Board of Education or
(b) meeting the |
requirements
set forth in this Section.
The Certification Board |
shall issue certificates
valid for teaching in all grades of |
the common school in
transitional bilingual education programs |
to any person
who presents it with satisfactory evidence that |
he
possesses an adequate speaking and reading ability in a
|
language other than English in which transitional bilingual
|
education is offered and communicative skills in
English, and |
possessed within 5 years previous to his or her
applying
for a |
certificate under this Section a valid teaching
certificate |
issued by a foreign country, or by a State or
possession or |
territory of the United States, or other evidence
of teaching |
preparation as may be determined to be
sufficient by the |
Certification Board, or holds
a degree from an institution of |
higher learning in a foreign country
which the Certification |
Board determines to be the equivalent of a
bachelor's degree |
from a recognized
institution of higher learning in the
United |
States; provided that any
person seeking a certificate under |
this
Section must meet the following additional requirements:
|
(1) Such persons must be in good health;
|
(2) Such persons must be of sound moral character;
|
(3) Such persons must be legally present in the
United |
States and possess legal authorization for employment;
|
|
(4) Such persons must not be employed to replace
any |
presently employed teacher who otherwise would not be
replaced |
for any reason.
|
Certificates issuable pursuant to
this Section shall be |
issuable only during the 5 years
immediately following the |
effective date of this Act and
thereafter for additional |
periods of one year only upon
a determination by the State |
Board of Education that a
school district lacks the number of |
teachers necessary to
comply with the mandatory requirements of |
Section
Sections 14C-2.1
and 14C-3 of this Article for the |
establishment and maintenance
of programs of transitional |
bilingual education
and said certificates issued by the |
Certification Board
shall be valid for a period of 6 years |
following their
date of issuance and shall not be renewed, |
except that one renewal for
a period of two years may be |
granted if necessary to permit the holder of
a certificate |
issued under this Section to acquire a teaching certificate
|
pursuant to Article 21 of this Code. Such certificates
and the |
persons to whom they are issued shall be exempt
from the |
provisions of Article 21 of this Code except
that Sections |
21-12, 21-13, 21-16, 21-17, 21-19, 21-21,
21-22, 21-23 and |
21-24 shall continue to be applicable to
all such certificates.
|
After the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1984, an |
additional
renewal for a period to expire August 31, 1985, may |
be granted. The State
Board of Education shall report to the |
General Assembly on or before
January 31, 1985 its |
recommendations for the qualification of teachers of
bilingual |
education and for the qualification of teachers of English as a
|
second language. Said qualification program shall take effect |
no later than
August 31, 1985.
|
Beginning July 1, 2001, the State Board of Education shall |
implement a test
or
tests to assess the speaking, reading, |
writing, and grammar skills of
applicants for a
certificate |
issued under this Section in the English language and in the
|
language of the
transitional bilingual education program |
requested by the applicant and shall
establish
appropriate fees |
|
for these tests. The State Board of Education, in
consultation |
with the
Certification Board, shall promulgate rules to |
implement the required tests,
including
specific provisions to |
govern test selection, test validation,
determination of a |
passing
score, administration of the test or tests, frequency |
of administration,
applicant fees,
identification requirements |
for test takers, frequency of applicants taking the
tests, the
|
years for which a score is valid, waiving tests for individuals |
who have
satisfactorily
passed other tests, and the |
consequences of dishonest conduct in the
application for or
|
taking of the tests.
|
If the qualifications of an applicant for a certificate |
valid for
teaching in transitional bilingual education |
programs in all grades of the
common schools do not meet the |
requirements established for the issuance of
that certificate, |
the Certification Board nevertheless shall issue the
applicant |
a substitute teacher's certificate under Section 21-9
whenever |
it appears from the face of the
application submitted for |
certification as a teacher of transitional
bilingual education |
and the evidence presented in support thereof that the
|
applicant's qualifications meet the requirements established |
for the
issuance of a certificate under Section 21-9; provided, |
that if it
does not appear from the face of such application |
and supporting evidence
that the applicant is qualified for |
issuance of a certificate under Section
21-9 the Certification |
Board shall evaluate the application with
reference to the |
requirements for issuance of certificates under Section
21-9 |
and shall inform the applicant, at the time it denies the
|
application submitted for
certification as a teacher of |
transitional bilingual education, of the
additional |
qualifications which the applicant must possess in order to |
meet
the requirements established for issuance of (i) a |
certificate valid for
teaching in transitional bilingual |
education programs in all grades of the
common schools and (ii) |
a substitute teacher's certificate under Section 21-9.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-370, eff. 7-30-99.)
|
|
(105 ILCS 5/15-31) (from Ch. 122, par. 15-31)
|
Sec. 15-31. Disposition of funds upon liquidation of |
permanent funds.
|
Any funds received as the result of the liquidation of the |
permanent
funds belonging to any school township shall after |
the payment of the
necessary expenses connected therewith be |
apportioned and distributed to
the school districts or parts of |
districts of such township -- including,
in the case of the |
liquidation of the permanent funds belonging to any
school |
township in a Class II county school unit, any school district
|
located in such township which theretofore withdrew from the |
jurisdiction
and authority of the trustees of schools of that |
township and from the
jurisdiction and authority of the |
township treasurer as provided in
subsection (b) of Section 5-1 - |
- in which
schools have been kept as required by law during |
the preceding year ending
June 30 according to the number of |
pupils in average daily attendance in
grades one to eight, each |
inclusive, as reported in schedules prepared
under Section |
24-19 of this Act, and upon the completion of such
liquidation |
and distribution and the submission of all reports required by
|
law the office of township land commissioners and their |
treasurer in such
township shall terminate.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-1441.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/18-8.05)
|
Sec. 18-8.05. Basis for apportionment of general State |
financial aid and
supplemental general State aid to the common |
schools for the 1998-1999 and
subsequent school years.
|
(A) General Provisions.
|
(1) The provisions of this Section apply to the 1998-1999 |
and subsequent
school years. The system of general State |
financial aid provided for in this
Section
is designed to |
assure that, through a combination of State financial aid and
|
required local resources, the financial support provided each |
|
pupil in Average
Daily Attendance equals or exceeds a
|
prescribed per pupil Foundation Level. This formula approach |
imputes a level
of per pupil Available Local Resources and |
provides for the basis to calculate
a per pupil level of |
general State financial aid that, when added to Available
Local |
Resources, equals or exceeds the Foundation Level. The
amount |
of per pupil general State financial aid for school districts, |
in
general, varies in inverse
relation to Available Local |
Resources. Per pupil amounts are based upon
each school |
district's Average Daily Attendance as that term is defined in |
this
Section.
|
(2) In addition to general State financial aid, school |
districts with
specified levels or concentrations of pupils |
from low income households are
eligible to receive supplemental |
general State financial aid grants as provided
pursuant to |
subsection (H).
The supplemental State aid grants provided for |
school districts under
subsection (H) shall be appropriated for |
distribution to school districts as
part of the same line item |
in which the general State financial aid of school
districts is |
appropriated under this Section.
|
(3) To receive financial assistance under this Section, |
school districts
are required to file claims with the State |
Board of Education, subject to the
following requirements:
|
(a) Any school district which fails for any given |
school year to maintain
school as required by law, or to |
maintain a recognized school is not
eligible to file for |
such school year any claim upon the Common School
Fund. In |
case of nonrecognition of one or more attendance centers in |
a
school district otherwise operating recognized schools, |
the claim of the
district shall be reduced in the |
proportion which the Average Daily
Attendance in the |
attendance center or centers bear to the Average Daily
|
Attendance in the school district. A "recognized school" |
means any
public school which meets the standards as |
established for recognition
by the State Board of |
Education. A school district or attendance center
not |
|
having recognition status at the end of a school term is |
entitled to
receive State aid payments due upon a legal |
claim which was filed while
it was recognized.
|
(b) School district claims filed under this Section are |
subject to
Sections 18-9 , 18-10, and 18-12, except as |
otherwise provided in this
Section.
|
(c) If a school district operates a full year school |
under Section
10-19.1, the general State aid to the school |
district shall be determined
by the State Board of |
Education in accordance with this Section as near as
may be |
applicable.
|
(d) (Blank).
|
(4) Except as provided in subsections (H) and (L), the |
board of any district
receiving any of the grants provided for |
in this Section may apply those funds
to any fund so received |
for which that board is authorized to make expenditures
by law.
|
School districts are not required to exert a minimum |
Operating Tax Rate in
order to qualify for assistance under |
this Section.
|
(5) As used in this Section the following terms, when |
capitalized, shall
have the meaning ascribed herein:
|
(a) "Average Daily Attendance": A count of pupil |
attendance in school,
averaged as provided for in |
subsection (C) and utilized in deriving per pupil
financial |
support levels.
|
(b) "Available Local Resources": A computation of |
local financial
support, calculated on the basis of Average |
Daily Attendance and derived as
provided pursuant to |
subsection (D).
|
(c) "Corporate Personal Property Replacement Taxes": |
Funds paid to local
school districts pursuant to "An Act in |
relation to the abolition of ad valorem
personal property |
tax and the replacement of revenues lost thereby, and
|
amending and repealing certain Acts and parts of Acts in |
connection therewith",
certified August 14, 1979, as |
amended (Public Act 81-1st S.S.-1).
|
|
(d) "Foundation Level": A prescribed level of per pupil |
financial support
as provided for in subsection (B).
|
(e) "Operating Tax Rate": All school district property |
taxes extended for
all purposes, except Bond and
Interest, |
Summer School, Rent, Capital Improvement, and Vocational |
Education
Building purposes.
|
(B) Foundation Level.
|
(1) The Foundation Level is a figure established by the |
State representing
the minimum level of per pupil financial |
support that should be available to
provide for the basic |
education of each pupil in
Average Daily Attendance. As set |
forth in this Section, each school district
is assumed to exert
|
a sufficient local taxing effort such that, in combination with |
the aggregate
of general State
financial aid provided the |
district, an aggregate of State and local resources
are |
available to meet
the basic education needs of pupils in the |
district.
|
(2) For the 1998-1999 school year, the Foundation Level of |
support is
$4,225. For the 1999-2000 school year, the |
Foundation Level of support is
$4,325. For the 2000-2001 school |
year, the Foundation Level of support is
$4,425. For the |
2001-2002 school year and 2002-2003 school year, the
Foundation |
Level of support is $4,560. For the 2003-2004 school year, the |
Foundation Level of support is $4,810.
|
(3) For the 2004-2005 school year and each school year |
thereafter,
the Foundation Level of support is $4,964 $5,060 or |
such greater amount as
may be established by law by the General |
Assembly.
|
(C) Average Daily Attendance.
|
(1) For purposes of calculating general State aid pursuant |
to subsection
(E), an Average Daily Attendance figure shall be |
utilized. The Average Daily
Attendance figure for formula
|
calculation purposes shall be the monthly average of the actual |
number of
pupils in attendance of
each school district, as |
|
further averaged for the best 3 months of pupil
attendance for |
each
school district. In compiling the figures for the number |
of pupils in
attendance, school districts
and the State Board |
of Education shall, for purposes of general State aid
funding, |
conform
attendance figures to the requirements of subsection |
(F).
|
(2) The Average Daily Attendance figures utilized in |
subsection (E) shall be
the requisite attendance data for the |
school year immediately preceding
the
school year for which |
general State aid is being calculated
or the average of the |
attendance data for the 3 preceding school
years, whichever is |
greater. The Average Daily Attendance figures
utilized in |
subsection (H) shall be the requisite attendance data for the
|
school year immediately preceding the school year for which |
general
State aid is being calculated.
|
(D) Available Local Resources.
|
(1) For purposes of calculating general State aid pursuant |
to subsection
(E), a representation of Available Local |
Resources per pupil, as that term is
defined and determined in |
this subsection, shall be utilized. Available Local
Resources |
per pupil shall include a calculated
dollar amount representing |
local school district revenues from local property
taxes and |
from
Corporate Personal Property Replacement Taxes, expressed |
on the basis of pupils
in Average
Daily Attendance. Calculation |
of Available Local Resources shall exclude any tax amnesty |
funds received as a result of Public Act 93-26.
|
(2) In determining a school district's revenue from local |
property taxes,
the State Board of Education shall utilize the |
equalized assessed valuation of
all taxable property of each |
school
district as of September 30 of the previous year. The |
equalized assessed
valuation utilized shall
be obtained and |
determined as provided in subsection (G).
|
(3) For school districts maintaining grades kindergarten |
through 12, local
property tax
revenues per pupil shall be |
calculated as the product of the applicable
equalized assessed
|
|
valuation for the district multiplied by 3.00%, and divided by |
the district's
Average Daily
Attendance figure. For school |
districts maintaining grades kindergarten
through 8, local
|
property tax revenues per pupil shall be calculated as the |
product of the
applicable equalized
assessed valuation for the |
district multiplied by 2.30%, and divided by the
district's |
Average
Daily Attendance figure. For school districts |
maintaining grades 9 through 12,
local property
tax revenues |
per pupil shall be the applicable equalized assessed valuation |
of
the district
multiplied by 1.05%, and divided by the |
district's Average Daily
Attendance
figure.
|
(4) The Corporate Personal Property Replacement Taxes paid |
to each school
district during the calendar year 2 years before |
the calendar year in which a
school year begins, divided by the |
Average Daily Attendance figure for that
district, shall be |
added to the local property tax revenues per pupil as
derived |
by the application of the immediately preceding paragraph (3). |
The sum
of these per pupil figures for each school district |
shall constitute Available
Local Resources as that term is |
utilized in subsection (E) in the calculation
of general State |
aid.
|
(E) Computation of General State Aid.
|
(1) For each school year, the amount of general State aid |
allotted to a
school district shall be computed by the State |
Board of Education as provided
in this subsection.
|
(2) For any school district for which Available Local |
Resources per pupil
is less than the product of 0.93 times the |
Foundation Level, general State aid
for that district shall be |
calculated as an amount equal to the Foundation
Level minus |
Available Local Resources, multiplied by the Average Daily
|
Attendance of the school district.
|
(3) For any school district for which Available Local |
Resources per pupil
is equal to or greater than the product of |
0.93 times the Foundation Level and
less than the product of |
1.75 times the Foundation Level, the general State aid
per |
|
pupil shall be a decimal proportion of the Foundation Level |
derived using a
linear algorithm. Under this linear algorithm, |
the calculated general State
aid per pupil shall decline in |
direct linear fashion from 0.07 times the
Foundation Level for |
a school district with Available Local Resources equal to
the |
product of 0.93 times the Foundation Level, to 0.05 times the |
Foundation
Level for a school district with Available Local |
Resources equal to the product
of 1.75 times the Foundation |
Level. The allocation of general
State aid for school districts |
subject to this paragraph 3 shall be the
calculated general |
State aid
per pupil figure multiplied by the Average Daily |
Attendance of the school
district.
|
(4) For any school district for which Available Local |
Resources per pupil
equals or exceeds the product of 1.75 times |
the Foundation Level, the general
State aid for the school |
district shall be calculated as the product of $218
multiplied |
by the Average Daily Attendance of the school
district.
|
(5) The amount of general State aid allocated to a school |
district for
the 1999-2000 school year meeting the requirements |
set forth in paragraph (4)
of subsection
(G) shall be increased |
by an amount equal to the general State aid that
would have |
been received by the district for the 1998-1999 school year by
|
utilizing the Extension Limitation Equalized Assessed |
Valuation as calculated
in paragraph (4) of subsection (G) less |
the general State aid allotted for the
1998-1999
school year. |
This amount shall be deemed a one time increase, and shall not
|
affect any future general State aid allocations.
|
(F) Compilation of Average Daily Attendance.
|
(1) Each school district shall, by July 1 of each year, |
submit to the State
Board of Education, on forms prescribed by |
the State Board of Education,
attendance figures for the school |
year that began in the preceding calendar
year. The attendance |
information so transmitted shall identify the average
daily |
attendance figures for each month of the school year. Beginning |
with
the general State aid claim form for the 2002-2003 school
|
|
year, districts shall calculate Average Daily Attendance as |
provided in
subdivisions (a), (b), and (c) of this paragraph |
(1).
|
(a) In districts that do not hold year-round classes,
|
days of attendance in August shall be added to the month of |
September and any
days of attendance in June shall be added |
to the month of May.
|
(b) In districts in which all buildings hold year-round |
classes,
days of attendance in July and August shall be |
added to the month
of September and any days of attendance |
in June shall be added to
the month of May.
|
(c) In districts in which some buildings, but not all, |
hold
year-round classes, for the non-year-round buildings, |
days of
attendance in August shall be added to the month of |
September
and any days of attendance in June shall be added |
to the month of
May. The average daily attendance for the |
year-round buildings
shall be computed as provided in |
subdivision (b) of this paragraph
(1). To calculate the |
Average Daily Attendance for the district, the
average |
daily attendance for the year-round buildings shall be
|
multiplied by the days in session for the non-year-round |
buildings
for each month and added to the monthly |
attendance of the
non-year-round buildings.
|
Except as otherwise provided in this Section, days of
|
attendance by pupils shall be counted only for sessions of not |
less than
5 clock hours of school work per day under direct |
supervision of: (i)
teachers, or (ii) non-teaching personnel or |
volunteer personnel when engaging
in non-teaching duties and |
supervising in those instances specified in
subsection (a) of |
Section 10-22.34 and paragraph 10 of Section 34-18, with
pupils |
of legal school age and in kindergarten and grades 1 through |
12.
|
Days of attendance by tuition pupils shall be accredited |
only to the
districts that pay the tuition to a recognized |
school.
|
(2) Days of attendance by pupils of less than 5 clock hours |
|
of school
shall be subject to the following provisions in the |
compilation of Average
Daily Attendance.
|
(a) Pupils regularly enrolled in a public school for |
only a part of
the school day may be counted on the basis |
of 1/6 day for every class hour
of instruction of 40 |
minutes or more attended pursuant to such enrollment,
|
unless a pupil is
enrolled in a block-schedule format of 80 |
minutes or more of instruction,
in which case the pupil may |
be counted on the basis of the proportion of
minutes of |
school work completed each day to the minimum number of
|
minutes that school work is required to be held that day.
|
(b) Days of attendance may be less than 5 clock hours |
on the opening
and closing of the school term, and upon the |
first day of pupil
attendance, if preceded by a day or days |
utilized as an institute or
teachers' workshop.
|
(c) A session of 4 or more clock hours may be counted |
as a day of
attendance upon certification by the regional |
superintendent, and
approved by the State Superintendent |
of Education to the extent that the
district has been |
forced to use daily multiple sessions.
|
(d) A session of 3 or more clock hours may be counted |
as a day of
attendance (1) when the remainder of the school |
day or at least
2 hours in the evening of that day is |
utilized for an
in-service training program for teachers, |
up to a maximum of 5 days per
school year of which a |
maximum of 4 days of such 5 days may be used for
|
parent-teacher conferences, provided a district conducts |
an in-service
training program for teachers which has been |
approved by the State
Superintendent of Education; or, in |
lieu of 4 such days, 2 full days may
be used, in which |
event each such day
may be counted as a day of attendance; |
and (2) when days in
addition to
those provided in item (1) |
are scheduled by a school pursuant to its school
|
improvement plan adopted under Article 34 or its revised or |
amended school
improvement plan adopted under Article 2, |
provided that (i) such sessions of
3 or more clock hours |
|
are scheduled to occur at regular intervals, (ii) the
|
remainder of the school days in which such sessions occur |
are utilized
for in-service training programs or other |
staff development activities for
teachers, and (iii) a |
sufficient number of minutes of school work under the
|
direct supervision of teachers are added to the school days |
between such
regularly scheduled sessions to accumulate |
not less than the number of minutes
by which such sessions |
of 3 or more clock hours fall short of 5 clock hours.
Any |
full days used for the purposes of this paragraph shall not |
be considered
for
computing average daily attendance. Days |
scheduled for in-service training
programs, staff |
development activities, or parent-teacher conferences may |
be
scheduled separately for different
grade levels and |
different attendance centers of the district.
|
(e) A session of not less than one clock hour of |
teaching
hospitalized or homebound pupils on-site or by |
telephone to the classroom may
be counted as 1/2 day of |
attendance, however these pupils must receive 4 or
more |
clock hours of instruction to be counted for a full day of |
attendance.
|
(f) A session of at least 4 clock hours may be counted |
as a day of
attendance for first grade pupils, and pupils |
in full day kindergartens,
and a session of 2 or more hours |
may be counted as 1/2 day of attendance by
pupils in |
kindergartens which provide only 1/2 day of attendance.
|
(g) For children with disabilities who are below the |
age of 6 years and
who
cannot attend 2 or more clock hours |
because of their disability or
immaturity, a session of not |
less than one clock hour may be counted as 1/2 day
of |
attendance; however for such children whose educational |
needs so require
a session of 4 or more clock hours may be |
counted as a full day of attendance.
|
(h) A recognized kindergarten which provides for only |
1/2 day of
attendance by each pupil shall not have more |
than 1/2 day of attendance
counted in any one day. However, |
|
kindergartens may count 2 1/2 days
of
attendance in any 5 |
consecutive school days. When a pupil attends such a
|
kindergarten for 2 half days on any one school day, the |
pupil shall have
the following day as a day absent from |
school, unless the school district
obtains permission in |
writing from the State Superintendent of Education.
|
Attendance at kindergartens which provide for a full day of |
attendance by
each pupil shall be counted the same as |
attendance by first grade pupils.
Only the first year of |
attendance in one kindergarten shall be counted,
except in |
case of children who entered the kindergarten in their |
fifth year
whose educational development requires a second |
year of kindergarten as
determined under the rules and |
regulations of the State Board of Education.
|
(G) Equalized Assessed Valuation Data.
|
(1) For purposes of the calculation of Available Local |
Resources required
pursuant to subsection (D), the
State Board |
of Education shall secure from the Department of
Revenue the |
value as equalized or assessed by the Department of Revenue of
|
all taxable property of every school district, together with |
(i) the applicable
tax rate used in extending taxes for the |
funds of the district as of
September 30 of the previous year
|
and (ii) the limiting rate for all school
districts subject to |
property tax extension limitations as imposed under the
|
Property Tax Extension Limitation Law.
|
The Department of Revenue shall add to the equalized |
assessed value of all
taxable
property of each school district |
situated entirely or partially within a county
that is or was |
subject to the alternative general homestead exemption |
provisions of Section 15-176 of the Property Tax Code (a)
(i)
|
an amount equal to the total amount by which the
homestead |
exemption allowed under Section 15-176 of the Property Tax Code |
for
real
property situated in that school district exceeds the |
total amount that would
have been
allowed in that school |
district if the maximum reduction under Section 15-176
was
(i) |
|
$4,500 in Cook County or $3,500 in all other counties in tax |
year 2003 or (ii) $5,000 in all counties in tax year 2004 and |
thereafter and (b)
(ii) an amount equal to the aggregate amount |
for the taxable year of all additional exemptions under Section |
15-175 of the Property Tax Code for owners with a household |
income of $30,000 or less. The county clerk of any county that |
is or was subject to the alternative general homestead |
exemption provisions of Section 15-176 of the Property Tax Code |
shall
annually calculate and certify to the Department of |
Revenue for each school
district all
homestead exemption |
amounts under Section 15-176 of the Property Tax Code and all |
amounts of additional exemptions under Section 15-175 of the |
Property Tax Code for owners with a household income of $30,000 |
or less. It is the intent of this paragraph that if the general |
homestead exemption for a parcel of property is determined |
under Section 15-176 of the Property Tax Code rather than |
Section 15-175, then the calculation of Available Local |
Resources shall not be affected by the difference, if any, |
between the amount of the general homestead exemption allowed |
for that parcel of property under Section 15-176 of the |
Property Tax Code and the amount that would have been allowed |
had the general homestead exemption for that parcel of property |
been determined under Section 15-175 of the Property Tax Code. |
It is further the intent of this paragraph that if additional |
exemptions are allowed under Section 15-175 of the Property Tax |
Code for owners with a household income of less than $30,000, |
then the calculation of Available Local Resources shall not be |
affected by the difference, if any, because of those additional |
exemptions.
|
This equalized assessed valuation, as adjusted further by |
the requirements of
this subsection, shall be utilized in the |
calculation of Available Local
Resources.
|
(2) The equalized assessed valuation in paragraph (1) shall |
be adjusted, as
applicable, in the following manner:
|
(a) For the purposes of calculating State aid under |
this Section,
with respect to any part of a school district |
|
within a redevelopment
project area in respect to which a |
municipality has adopted tax
increment allocation |
financing pursuant to the Tax Increment Allocation
|
Redevelopment Act, Sections 11-74.4-1 through 11-74.4-11 |
of the Illinois
Municipal Code or the Industrial Jobs |
Recovery Law, Sections 11-74.6-1 through
11-74.6-50 of the |
Illinois Municipal Code, no part of the current equalized
|
assessed valuation of real property located in any such |
project area which is
attributable to an increase above the |
total initial equalized assessed
valuation of such |
property shall be used as part of the equalized assessed
|
valuation of the district, until such time as all
|
redevelopment project costs have been paid, as provided in |
Section 11-74.4-8
of the Tax Increment Allocation |
Redevelopment Act or in Section 11-74.6-35 of
the |
Industrial Jobs Recovery Law. For the purpose of
the |
equalized assessed valuation of the
district, the total |
initial equalized assessed valuation or the current
|
equalized assessed valuation, whichever is lower, shall be |
used until
such time as all redevelopment project costs |
have been paid.
|
(b) The real property equalized assessed valuation for |
a school district
shall be adjusted by subtracting from the |
real property
value as equalized or assessed by the |
Department of Revenue for the
district an amount computed |
by dividing the amount of any abatement of
taxes under |
Section 18-170 of the Property Tax Code by 3.00% for a |
district
maintaining grades kindergarten through 12, by |
2.30% for a district
maintaining grades kindergarten |
through 8, or by 1.05% for a
district
maintaining grades 9 |
through 12 and adjusted by an amount computed by dividing
|
the amount of any abatement of taxes under subsection (a) |
of Section 18-165 of
the Property Tax Code by the same |
percentage rates for district type as
specified in this |
subparagraph (b).
|
(3) For the 1999-2000 school year and each school year |
|
thereafter, if a
school district meets all of the criteria of |
this subsection (G)(3), the school
district's Available Local |
Resources shall be calculated under subsection (D)
using the |
district's Extension Limitation Equalized Assessed Valuation |
as
calculated under this
subsection (G)(3).
|
For purposes of this subsection (G)(3) the following terms |
shall have
the following meanings:
|
"Budget Year": The school year for which general State |
aid is calculated
and
awarded under subsection (E).
|
"Base Tax Year": The property tax levy year used to |
calculate the Budget
Year
allocation of general State aid.
|
"Preceding Tax Year": The property tax levy year |
immediately preceding the
Base Tax Year.
|
"Base Tax Year's Tax Extension": The product of the |
equalized assessed
valuation utilized by the County Clerk |
in the Base Tax Year multiplied by the
limiting rate as |
calculated by the County Clerk and defined in the Property |
Tax
Extension Limitation Law.
|
"Preceding Tax Year's Tax Extension": The product of |
the equalized assessed
valuation utilized by the County |
Clerk in the Preceding Tax Year multiplied by
the Operating |
Tax Rate as defined in subsection (A).
|
"Extension Limitation Ratio": A numerical ratio, |
certified by the
County Clerk, in which the numerator is |
the Base Tax Year's Tax
Extension and the denominator is |
the Preceding Tax Year's Tax Extension.
|
"Operating Tax Rate": The operating tax rate as defined |
in subsection (A).
|
If a school district is subject to property tax extension |
limitations as
imposed under
the Property Tax Extension |
Limitation Law, the State Board of Education shall
calculate |
the Extension
Limitation
Equalized Assessed Valuation of that |
district. For the 1999-2000 school
year, the
Extension |
Limitation Equalized Assessed Valuation of a school district as
|
calculated by the State Board of Education shall be equal to |
the product of the
district's 1996 Equalized Assessed Valuation |
|
and the district's Extension
Limitation Ratio. For the |
2000-2001 school year and each school year
thereafter,
the |
Extension Limitation Equalized Assessed Valuation of a school |
district as
calculated by the State Board of Education shall be |
equal to the product of
the Equalized Assessed Valuation last |
used in the calculation of general State
aid and the
district's |
Extension Limitation Ratio. If the Extension Limitation
|
Equalized
Assessed Valuation of a school district as calculated |
under
this subsection (G)(3) is less than the district's |
equalized assessed valuation
as calculated pursuant to |
subsections (G)(1) and (G)(2), then for purposes of
calculating |
the district's general State aid for the Budget Year pursuant |
to
subsection (E), that Extension
Limitation Equalized |
Assessed Valuation shall be utilized to calculate the
|
district's Available Local Resources
under subsection (D).
|
(4) For the purposes of calculating general State aid for |
the 1999-2000
school year only, if a school district |
experienced a triennial reassessment on
the equalized assessed |
valuation used in calculating its general State
financial aid |
apportionment for the 1998-1999 school year, the State Board of
|
Education shall calculate the Extension Limitation Equalized |
Assessed Valuation
that would have been used to calculate the |
district's 1998-1999 general State
aid. This amount shall equal |
the product of the equalized assessed valuation
used to
|
calculate general State aid for the 1997-1998 school year and |
the district's
Extension Limitation Ratio. If the Extension |
Limitation Equalized Assessed
Valuation of the school district |
as calculated under this paragraph (4) is
less than the |
district's equalized assessed valuation utilized in |
calculating
the
district's 1998-1999 general State aid |
allocation, then for purposes of
calculating the district's |
general State aid pursuant to paragraph (5) of
subsection (E),
|
that Extension Limitation Equalized Assessed Valuation shall |
be utilized to
calculate the district's Available Local |
Resources.
|
(5) For school districts having a majority of their |
|
equalized assessed
valuation in any county except Cook, DuPage, |
Kane, Lake, McHenry, or Will, if
the amount of general State |
aid allocated to the school district for the
1999-2000 school |
year under the provisions of subsection (E), (H), and (J) of
|
this Section is less than the amount of general State aid |
allocated to the
district for the 1998-1999 school year under |
these subsections, then the
general
State aid of the district |
for the 1999-2000 school year only shall be increased
by the |
difference between these amounts. The total payments made under |
this
paragraph (5) shall not exceed $14,000,000. Claims shall |
be prorated if they
exceed $14,000,000.
|
(H) Supplemental General State Aid.
|
(1) In addition to the general State aid a school district |
is allotted
pursuant to subsection (E), qualifying school |
districts shall receive a grant,
paid in conjunction with a |
district's payments of general State aid, for
supplemental |
general State aid based upon the concentration level of |
children
from low-income households within the school |
district.
Supplemental State aid grants provided for school |
districts under this
subsection shall be appropriated for |
distribution to school districts as part
of the same line item |
in which the general State financial aid of school
districts is |
appropriated under this Section.
If the appropriation in any |
fiscal year for general State aid and
supplemental general |
State aid is insufficient to pay the amounts required
under the |
general State aid and supplemental general State aid |
calculations,
then the
State Board of Education shall ensure |
that
each school district receives the full amount due for |
general State aid
and the remainder of the appropriation shall |
be used
for supplemental general State aid, which the State |
Board of Education shall
calculate and pay to eligible |
districts on a prorated basis.
|
(1.5) This paragraph (1.5) applies only to those school |
years
preceding the 2003-2004 school year.
For purposes of this
|
subsection (H), the term "Low-Income Concentration Level" |
|
shall be the
low-income
eligible pupil count from the most |
recently available federal census divided by
the Average Daily |
Attendance of the school district.
If, however, (i) the |
percentage decrease from the 2 most recent federal
censuses
in |
the low-income eligible pupil count of a high school district |
with fewer
than 400 students exceeds by 75% or more the |
percentage change in the total
low-income eligible pupil count |
of contiguous elementary school districts,
whose boundaries |
are coterminous with the high school district,
or (ii) a high |
school district within 2 counties and serving 5 elementary
|
school
districts, whose boundaries are coterminous with the |
high school
district, has a percentage decrease from the 2 most |
recent federal
censuses in the low-income eligible pupil count |
and there is a percentage
increase in the total low-income |
eligible pupil count of a majority of the
elementary school |
districts in excess of 50% from the 2 most recent
federal |
censuses, then
the
high school district's low-income eligible |
pupil count from the earlier federal
census
shall be the number |
used as the low-income eligible pupil count for the high
school |
district, for purposes of this subsection (H).
The changes made |
to this paragraph (1) by Public Act 92-28 shall apply to
|
supplemental general State aid
grants for school years |
preceding the 2003-2004 school year that are paid
in fiscal |
year 1999 or thereafter
and to
any State aid payments made in |
fiscal year 1994 through fiscal year
1998 pursuant to |
subsection 1(n) of Section 18-8 of this Code (which was
|
repealed on July 1, 1998), and any high school district that is |
affected by
Public Act 92-28 is
entitled to a
recomputation of |
its supplemental general State aid grant or State aid
paid in |
any of those fiscal years. This recomputation shall not be
|
affected by any other funding.
|
(1.10) This paragraph (1.10) applies to the 2003-2004 |
school year
and each school year thereafter. For purposes of |
this subsection (H), the
term "Low-Income Concentration Level" |
shall, for each fiscal year, be the
low-income eligible
pupil |
count
as of July 1 of the immediately preceding fiscal year
(as |
|
determined by the Department of Human Services based
on the |
number of pupils
who are eligible for at least one of the |
following
low income programs: Medicaid, KidCare, TANF, or Food |
Stamps,
excluding pupils who are eligible for services provided |
by the Department
of Children and Family Services,
averaged |
over
the 2 immediately preceding fiscal years for fiscal year |
2004 and over the 3
immediately preceding fiscal years for each |
fiscal year thereafter)
divided by the Average Daily Attendance |
of the school district.
|
(2) Supplemental general State aid pursuant to this |
subsection (H) shall
be
provided as follows for the 1998-1999, |
1999-2000, and 2000-2001 school years
only:
|
(a) For any school district with a Low Income |
Concentration Level of at
least 20% and less than 35%, the |
grant for any school year
shall be $800
multiplied by the |
low income eligible pupil count.
|
(b) For any school district with a Low Income |
Concentration Level of at
least 35% and less than 50%, the |
grant for the 1998-1999 school year shall be
$1,100 |
multiplied by the low income eligible pupil count.
|
(c) For any school district with a Low Income |
Concentration Level of at
least 50% and less than 60%, the |
grant for the 1998-99 school year shall be
$1,500 |
multiplied by the low income eligible pupil count.
|
(d) For any school district with a Low Income |
Concentration Level of 60%
or more, the grant for the |
1998-99 school year shall be $1,900 multiplied by
the low |
income eligible pupil count.
|
(e) For the 1999-2000 school year, the per pupil amount |
specified in
subparagraphs (b), (c), and (d) immediately |
above shall be increased to $1,243,
$1,600, and $2,000, |
respectively.
|
(f) For the 2000-2001 school year, the per pupil |
amounts specified in
subparagraphs (b), (c), and (d) |
immediately above shall be
$1,273, $1,640, and $2,050, |
respectively.
|
|
(2.5) Supplemental general State aid pursuant to this |
subsection (H)
shall be provided as follows for the 2002-2003 |
school year:
|
(a) For any school district with a Low Income |
Concentration Level of less
than 10%, the grant for each |
school year shall be $355 multiplied by the low
income |
eligible pupil count.
|
(b) For any school district with a Low Income |
Concentration
Level of at least 10% and less than 20%, the |
grant for each school year shall
be $675
multiplied by the |
low income eligible pupil
count.
|
(c) For any school district with a Low Income |
Concentration
Level of at least 20% and less than 35%, the |
grant for each school year shall
be $1,330
multiplied by |
the low income eligible pupil
count.
|
(d) For any school district with a Low Income |
Concentration
Level of at least 35% and less than 50%, the |
grant for each school year shall
be $1,362
multiplied by |
the low income eligible pupil
count.
|
(e) For any school district with a Low Income |
Concentration
Level of at least 50% and less than 60%, the |
grant for each school year shall
be $1,680
multiplied by |
the low income eligible pupil
count.
|
(f) For any school district with a Low Income |
Concentration
Level of 60% or more, the grant for each |
school year shall be $2,080
multiplied by the low income |
eligible pupil count.
|
(2.10) Except as otherwise provided, supplemental general |
State aid
pursuant to this subsection
(H) shall be provided as |
follows for the 2003-2004 school year and each
school year |
thereafter:
|
(a) For any school district with a Low Income |
Concentration
Level of 15% or less, the grant for each |
school year
shall be $355 multiplied by the low income |
eligible pupil count.
|
(b) For any school district with a Low Income |
|
Concentration
Level greater than 15%, the grant for each |
school year shall be
$294.25 added to the product of $2,700 |
and the square of the Low
Income Concentration Level, all |
multiplied by the low income
eligible pupil count.
|
For the 2003-2004 and 2004-2005 school year only, the grant |
shall be no less than the
grant
for
the 2002-2003 school year. |
For the 2005-2006 school year only, the grant shall
be no
less |
than the grant for the 2002-2003 school year multiplied by |
0.66. For the
2006-2007
school year only, the grant shall be no |
less than the grant for the 2002-2003
school year
multiplied by |
0.33.
|
For the 2003-2004 school year only, the grant shall be no |
greater
than the grant received during the 2002-2003 school |
year added to the
product of 0.25 multiplied by the difference |
between the grant amount
calculated under subsection (a) or (b) |
of this paragraph (2.10), whichever
is applicable, and the |
grant received during the 2002-2003 school year.
For the |
2004-2005 school year only, the grant shall be no greater than
|
the grant received during the 2002-2003 school year added to |
the
product of 0.50 multiplied by the difference between the |
grant amount
calculated under subsection (a) or (b) of this |
paragraph (2.10), whichever
is applicable, and the grant |
received during the 2002-2003 school year.
For the 2005-2006 |
school year only, the grant shall be no greater than
the grant |
received during the 2002-2003 school year added to the
product |
of 0.75 multiplied by the difference between the grant amount
|
calculated under subsection (a) or (b) of this paragraph |
(2.10), whichever
is applicable, and the grant received during |
the 2002-2003
school year.
|
(3) School districts with an Average Daily Attendance of |
more than 1,000
and less than 50,000 that qualify for |
supplemental general State aid pursuant
to this subsection |
shall submit a plan to the State Board of Education prior to
|
October 30 of each year for the use of the funds resulting from |
this grant of
supplemental general State aid for the |
improvement of
instruction in which priority is given to |
|
meeting the education needs of
disadvantaged children. Such |
plan shall be submitted in accordance with
rules and |
regulations promulgated by the State Board of Education.
|
(4) School districts with an Average Daily Attendance of |
50,000 or more
that qualify for supplemental general State aid |
pursuant to this subsection
shall be required to distribute |
from funds available pursuant to this Section,
no less than |
$261,000,000 in accordance with the following requirements:
|
(a) The required amounts shall be distributed to the |
attendance centers
within the district in proportion to the |
number of pupils enrolled at each
attendance center who are |
eligible to receive free or reduced-price lunches or
|
breakfasts under the federal Child Nutrition Act of 1966 |
and under the National
School Lunch Act during the |
immediately preceding school year.
|
(b) The distribution of these portions of supplemental |
and general State
aid among attendance centers according to |
these requirements shall not be
compensated for or |
contravened by adjustments of the total of other funds
|
appropriated to any attendance centers, and the Board of |
Education shall
utilize funding from one or several sources |
in order to fully implement this
provision annually prior |
to the opening of school.
|
(c) Each attendance center shall be provided by the
|
school district a distribution of noncategorical funds and |
other
categorical funds to which an attendance center is |
entitled under law in
order that the general State aid and |
supplemental general State aid provided
by application of |
this subsection supplements rather than supplants the
|
noncategorical funds and other categorical funds provided |
by the school
district to the attendance centers.
|
(d) Any funds made available under this subsection that |
by reason of the
provisions of this subsection are not
|
required to be allocated and provided to attendance centers |
may be used and
appropriated by the board of the district |
for any lawful school purpose.
|
|
(e) Funds received by an attendance center
pursuant to |
this
subsection shall be used
by the attendance center at |
the discretion
of the principal and local school council |
for programs to improve educational
opportunities at |
qualifying schools through the following programs and
|
services: early childhood education, reduced class size or |
improved adult to
student classroom ratio, enrichment |
programs, remedial assistance, attendance
improvement, and |
other educationally beneficial expenditures which
|
supplement
the regular and basic programs as determined by |
the State Board of Education.
Funds provided shall not be |
expended for any political or lobbying purposes
as defined |
by board rule.
|
(f) Each district subject to the provisions of this |
subdivision (H)(4)
shall submit an
acceptable plan to meet |
the educational needs of disadvantaged children, in
|
compliance with the requirements of this paragraph, to the |
State Board of
Education prior to July 15 of each year. |
This plan shall be consistent with the
decisions of local |
school councils concerning the school expenditure plans
|
developed in accordance with part 4 of Section 34-2.3. The |
State Board shall
approve or reject the plan within 60 days |
after its submission. If the plan is
rejected, the district |
shall give written notice of intent to modify the plan
|
within 15 days of the notification of rejection and then |
submit a modified plan
within 30 days after the date of the |
written notice of intent to modify.
Districts may amend |
approved plans pursuant to rules promulgated by the State
|
Board of Education.
|
Upon notification by the State Board of Education that |
the district has
not submitted a plan prior to July 15 or a |
modified plan within the time
period specified herein, the
|
State aid funds affected by that plan or modified plan |
shall be withheld by the
State Board of Education until a |
plan or modified plan is submitted.
|
If the district fails to distribute State aid to |
|
attendance centers in
accordance with an approved plan, the |
plan for the following year shall
allocate funds, in |
addition to the funds otherwise required by this
|
subsection, to those attendance centers which were |
underfunded during the
previous year in amounts equal to |
such underfunding.
|
For purposes of determining compliance with this |
subsection in relation
to the requirements of attendance |
center funding, each district subject to the
provisions of |
this
subsection shall submit as a separate document by |
December 1 of each year a
report of expenditure data for |
the prior year in addition to any
modification of its |
current plan. If it is determined that there has been
a |
failure to comply with the expenditure provisions of this |
subsection
regarding contravention or supplanting, the |
State Superintendent of
Education shall, within 60 days of |
receipt of the report, notify the
district and any affected |
local school council. The district shall within
45 days of |
receipt of that notification inform the State |
Superintendent of
Education of the remedial or corrective |
action to be taken, whether by
amendment of the current |
plan, if feasible, or by adjustment in the plan
for the |
following year. Failure to provide the expenditure report |
or the
notification of remedial or corrective action in a |
timely manner shall
result in a withholding of the affected |
funds.
|
The State Board of Education shall promulgate rules and |
regulations
to implement the provisions of this |
subsection. No funds shall be released
under this |
subdivision (H)(4) to any district that has not submitted a |
plan
that has been approved by the State Board of |
Education.
|
(I) General State Aid for Newly Configured School Districts.
|
(1) For a new school district formed by combining property |
included
totally within 2 or more previously existing school |
|
districts, for its
first year of existence the general State |
aid and supplemental general State
aid calculated under this |
Section
shall be computed for the new district and for the |
previously existing
districts for which property is totally |
included
within the new district. If the computation on the |
basis of the previously
existing districts is greater, a |
supplementary payment equal to the difference
shall be made for |
the first 4 years of existence of the new district.
|
(2) For a school district which annexes all of the |
territory of one or more
entire other school districts, for the |
first year during which the change
of boundaries attributable |
to such annexation becomes effective for all
purposes as |
determined under Section 7-9 or 7A-8, the general State aid and
|
supplemental general State aid calculated
under this Section |
shall be computed for the annexing district as constituted
|
after the annexation and for the annexing and each annexed |
district as
constituted prior to the annexation; and if the |
computation on the basis of
the annexing and annexed districts |
as constituted prior to the annexation is
greater, a |
supplementary payment equal to the difference shall be made for
|
the first 4 years of existence of the annexing school district |
as
constituted upon such annexation.
|
(3) For 2 or more school districts which annex all of the |
territory of
one or more entire other school districts, and for |
2 or more community unit
districts which result upon the |
division (pursuant to petition under
Section 11A-2) of one or |
more other unit school districts into 2 or more
parts and which |
together include all of the parts into which such other
unit |
school district or districts are so divided, for the first year
|
during which the change of boundaries attributable to such |
annexation or
division becomes effective for all purposes as |
determined under Section 7-9
or 11A-10, as the case may be, the |
general State aid and supplemental general
State aid calculated |
under this Section
shall be computed for each annexing or |
resulting district as constituted
after the annexation or |
division and for each annexing and annexed
district, or for |
|
each resulting and divided district, as constituted prior
to |
the annexation or division; and if the aggregate of the general |
State aid
and supplemental general State aid as so
computed for |
the annexing or resulting districts as constituted after the
|
annexation or division is less than the aggregate of the |
general State aid and
supplemental general State aid as so |
computed for the annexing and annexed
districts, or for the |
resulting and divided districts, as constituted prior to
the |
annexation or division, then
a supplementary payment equal to |
the difference shall be made and allocated
between or among the |
annexing or resulting districts, as constituted upon
such |
annexation or division, for the first 4 years of their |
existence. The
total difference payment shall be allocated |
between or among the annexing
or resulting districts in the |
same ratio as the pupil enrollment from that
portion of the |
annexed or divided district or districts which is annexed to
or |
included in each such annexing or resulting district bears to |
the total
pupil enrollment from the entire annexed or divided |
district or districts,
as such pupil enrollment is determined |
for the school year last ending
prior to the date when the |
change of boundaries attributable to the
annexation or division |
becomes effective for all purposes. The amount of
the total |
difference payment and the amount thereof to be allocated to |
the
annexing or resulting districts shall be computed by the |
State Board of
Education on the basis of pupil enrollment and |
other data which shall be
certified to the State Board of |
Education, on forms which it shall provide
for that purpose, by |
the regional superintendent of schools for each
educational |
service region in which the annexing and annexed districts, or
|
resulting and divided districts are located.
|
(3.5) Claims for financial assistance under this |
subsection (I) shall
not be recomputed except as expressly |
provided under this Section.
|
(4) Any
supplementary payment made under this subsection |
(I)
shall be treated as separate from all other payments made |
pursuant to
this Section.
|
|
(J) Supplementary Grants in Aid.
|
(1) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Section, |
the amount of the
aggregate general State aid in combination |
with supplemental general State aid
under this Section for |
which
each school district is eligible shall be no
less than |
the amount of the aggregate general State aid entitlement that |
was
received by the district under Section
18-8 (exclusive of |
amounts received
under subsections 5(p) and 5(p-5) of that |
Section)
for the 1997-98 school year,
pursuant to the |
provisions of that Section as it was then in effect.
If a |
school district qualifies to receive a supplementary payment |
made under
this subsection (J), the amount
of the aggregate |
general State aid in combination with supplemental general
|
State aid under this Section
which that district is eligible to |
receive for each school year shall be no less than the amount |
of the aggregate
general State aid entitlement that was |
received by the district under
Section 18-8 (exclusive of |
amounts received
under subsections 5(p) and 5(p-5) of that |
Section)
for the 1997-1998 school year, pursuant to the |
provisions of that
Section as it was then in effect.
|
(2) If, as provided in paragraph (1) of this subsection |
(J), a school
district is to receive aggregate general State |
aid in
combination with supplemental general State aid under |
this Section for the 1998-99 school year and any subsequent |
school
year that in any such school year is less than the |
amount of the aggregate
general
State
aid entitlement that the |
district received for the 1997-98 school year, the
school |
district shall also receive, from a separate appropriation made |
for
purposes of this subsection (J), a supplementary payment |
that is equal to the
amount of the difference in the aggregate |
State aid figures as described in
paragraph (1).
|
(3) (Blank).
|
(K) Grants to Laboratory and Alternative Schools.
|
In calculating the amount to be paid to the governing board |
|
of a public
university that operates a laboratory school under |
this Section or to any
alternative school that is operated by a |
regional superintendent of schools,
the State
Board of |
Education shall require by rule such reporting requirements as |
it
deems necessary.
|
As used in this Section, "laboratory school" means a public |
school which is
created and operated by a public university and |
approved by the State Board of
Education. The governing board |
of a public university which receives funds
from the State |
Board under this subsection (K) may not increase the number of
|
students enrolled in its laboratory
school from a single |
district, if that district is already sending 50 or more
|
students, except under a mutual agreement between the school |
board of a
student's district of residence and the university |
which operates the
laboratory school. A laboratory school may |
not have more than 1,000 students,
excluding students with |
disabilities in a special education program.
|
As used in this Section, "alternative school" means a |
public school which is
created and operated by a Regional |
Superintendent of Schools and approved by
the State Board of |
Education. Such alternative schools may offer courses of
|
instruction for which credit is given in regular school |
programs, courses to
prepare students for the high school |
equivalency testing program or vocational
and occupational |
training. A regional superintendent of schools may contract
|
with a school district or a public community college district |
to operate an
alternative school. An alternative school serving |
more than one educational
service region may be established by |
the regional superintendents of schools
of the affected |
educational service regions. An alternative school
serving |
more than one educational service region may be operated under |
such
terms as the regional superintendents of schools of those |
educational service
regions may agree.
|
Each laboratory and alternative school shall file, on forms |
provided by the
State Superintendent of Education, an annual |
State aid claim which states the
Average Daily Attendance of |
|
the school's students by month. The best 3 months'
Average |
Daily Attendance shall be computed for each school.
The general |
State aid entitlement shall be computed by multiplying the
|
applicable Average Daily Attendance by the Foundation Level as |
determined under
this Section.
|
(L) Payments, Additional Grants in Aid and Other Requirements.
|
(1) For a school district operating under the financial |
supervision
of an Authority created under Article 34A, the |
general State aid otherwise
payable to that district under this |
Section, but not the supplemental general
State aid, shall be |
reduced by an amount equal to the budget for
the operations of |
the Authority as certified by the Authority to the State
Board |
of Education, and an amount equal to such reduction shall be |
paid
to the Authority created for such district for its |
operating expenses in
the manner provided in Section 18-11. The |
remainder
of general State school aid for any such district |
shall be paid in accordance
with Article 34A when that Article |
provides for a disposition other than that
provided by this |
Article.
|
(2) (Blank).
|
(3) Summer school. Summer school payments shall be made as |
provided in
Section 18-4.3.
|
(M) Education Funding Advisory Board.
|
The Education Funding Advisory
Board, hereinafter in this |
subsection (M) referred to as the "Board", is hereby
created. |
The Board
shall consist of 5 members who are appointed by the |
Governor, by and with the
advice and consent of the Senate. The |
members appointed shall include
representatives of education, |
business, and the general public. One of the
members so |
appointed shall be
designated by the Governor at the time the |
appointment is made as the
chairperson of the
Board.
The |
initial members of the Board may
be appointed any time after |
the effective date of this amendatory Act of
1997. The regular |
term of each member of the
Board shall be for 4 years from the |
|
third Monday of January of the
year in which the term of the |
member's appointment is to commence, except that
of the 5 |
initial members appointed to serve on the
Board, the member who |
is appointed as the chairperson shall serve for
a term that |
commences on the date of his or her appointment and expires on |
the
third Monday of January, 2002, and the remaining 4 members, |
by lots drawn at
the first meeting of the Board that is
held
|
after all 5 members are appointed, shall determine 2 of their |
number to serve
for terms that commence on the date of their
|
respective appointments and expire on the third
Monday of |
January, 2001,
and 2 of their number to serve for terms that |
commence
on the date of their respective appointments and |
expire on the third Monday
of January, 2000. All members |
appointed to serve on the
Board shall serve until their |
respective successors are
appointed and confirmed. Vacancies |
shall be filled in the same manner as
original appointments. If |
a vacancy in membership occurs at a time when the
Senate is not |
in session, the Governor shall make a temporary appointment |
until
the next meeting of the Senate, when he or she shall |
appoint, by and with the
advice and consent of the Senate, a |
person to fill that membership for the
unexpired term. If the |
Senate is not in session when the initial appointments
are |
made, those appointments shall
be made as in the case of |
vacancies.
|
The Education Funding Advisory Board shall be deemed |
established,
and the initial
members appointed by the Governor |
to serve as members of the
Board shall take office,
on the date |
that the
Governor makes his or her appointment of the fifth |
initial member of the
Board, whether those initial members are |
then serving
pursuant to appointment and confirmation or |
pursuant to temporary appointments
that are made by the |
Governor as in the case of vacancies.
|
The State Board of Education shall provide such staff |
assistance to the
Education Funding Advisory Board as is |
reasonably required for the proper
performance by the Board of |
its responsibilities.
|
|
For school years after the 2000-2001 school year, the |
Education
Funding Advisory Board, in consultation with the |
State Board of Education,
shall make recommendations as |
provided in this subsection (M) to the General
Assembly for the |
foundation level under subdivision (B)(3) of this Section and
|
for the
supplemental general State aid grant level under |
subsection (H) of this Section
for districts with high |
concentrations of children from poverty. The
recommended |
foundation level shall be determined based on a methodology |
which
incorporates the basic education expenditures of |
low-spending schools
exhibiting high academic performance. The |
Education Funding Advisory Board
shall make such |
recommendations to the General Assembly on January 1 of odd
|
numbered years, beginning January 1, 2001.
|
(N) (Blank).
|
(O) References.
|
(1) References in other laws to the various subdivisions of
|
Section 18-8 as that Section existed before its repeal and |
replacement by this
Section 18-8.05 shall be deemed to refer to |
the corresponding provisions of
this Section 18-8.05, to the |
extent that those references remain applicable.
|
(2) References in other laws to State Chapter 1 funds shall |
be deemed to
refer to the supplemental general State aid |
provided under subsection (H) of
this Section.
|
(P) Public Act 93-838
This amendatory Act of the 93rd General |
Assembly and Public Act 93-808
House Bill 4266 of the 93rd |
General Assembly make inconsistent changes to this Section. If |
House Bill 4266 becomes law, then Under Section 6 of the |
Statute on Statutes there is an irreconcilable conflict between |
Public Act 93-808 and Public Act 93-838
House Bill 4266 and |
this amendatory Act . Public Act 93-838
This amendatory Act , |
being the last acted upon, is controlling. The text of Public |
Act 93-838
this amendatory Act is the law regardless of the |
|
text of Public Act 93-808
House Bill 4266 . |
(Source: P.A. 92-16, eff. 6-28-01; 92-28, eff. 7-1-01; 92-29, |
eff. 7-1-01; 92-269, eff. 8-7-01; 92-604, eff. 7-1-02; 92-636, |
eff. 7-11-02; 92-651, eff. 7-11-02; 93-21, eff. 7-1-03; 93-715, |
eff. 7-12-04; 93-808, eff. 7-26-04; 93-838, eff. 7-30-04; |
93-875, eff. 8-6-04; revised 10-21-04.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/18-11) (from Ch. 122, par. 18-11)
|
Sec. 18-11. Payment of claims.
|
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this Section, |
and except as
provided in subsection (c) of this Section with |
respect to payments made under
Sections 18-8 through 18-10 for |
fiscal year 1994 only, as soon as may
be after the 10th and |
20th days of each of the months of August through the
following |
July if moneys are available in the common school fund
in the |
State treasury for payments under Sections 18-8.05
18-8 through |
18-9
18-10 the State
Comptroller shall draw his warrants upon |
the State Treasurer as directed by
the State Board of Education |
pursuant to Section 2-3.17b and
in accordance with the |
transfers from the General Revenue Fund to the
Common School |
Fund as specified in Section 8a of the State Finance Act.
|
Each such semimonthly warrant shall
be in an amount equal |
to 1/24 of the total amount to be distributed to school
|
districts for the fiscal year.
The amount of payments made in |
July of each year shall be
considered as payments for claims |
covering the school year that commenced
during the immediately |
preceding calendar year.
If the payments provided for under |
Sections 18-8.05
18-8 through 18-9
18-10 have been
assigned as |
security for State aid anticipation certificates pursuant to
|
Section 18-18, the State Board of Education shall pay the |
appropriate amount of
the payment, as specified in the |
notification required by Section 18-18,
directly to the |
assignee.
|
(b) As soon as may be after the 10th and 20th days of each |
of the months
of June, 1982 through July, 1983, if moneys are |
available in the Common
School Fund in the State treasury for |
|
payments under Sections 18-8 through
18-10, the State |
Comptroller shall draw his warrants upon the State Treasurer
|
proportionate for the various counties payable to the regional
|
superintendent of schools in accordance with the transfers from |
the General
Revenue Fund to the Common School Fund as specified |
in Section 8a of
the State Finance Act.
|
Each such semimonthly warrant for the months of June and |
July, 1982 shall
be in an amount equal to 1/24 of the total |
amount to be distributed to school
districts by the regional |
superintendent for school year 1981-1982.
|
Each such semimonthly warrant for the months of August, |
1982 through July,
1983 shall be in an amount equal to 1/24 of |
the total amount to be distributed
to school districts by the |
regional superintendent for school year 1982-1983.
|
The State Superintendent of Education shall, from monies |
appropriated for
such purpose, compensate districts for |
interest lost arising from the
change in payments in June, 1982 |
to payments in the months of June and July,
1982, for claims |
arising from school year 1981-1982. The amount appropriated
for |
such purpose shall be based upon the Prime Commercial Rate in |
effect
May 15, 1982. The amount of such compensation shall be |
equal to the ratio
of the district's net State aid entitlement |
for school year 1981-1982 divided
by the total net State aid |
entitlement times the funds appropriated for
such purpose. |
Payment in full of the amount of compensation derived from
the |
computation required in the preceding sentence shall be made as |
soon
as may be after July 1, 1982 upon warrants payable to the |
several regional
superintendents of schools.
|
The State Superintendent of Education shall, from monies |
appropriated for
such purpose, compensate districts for |
interest lost arising from the change
in payments in June, 1983 |
to payments in the months of June and July, 1983,
for claims |
arising from school year 1982-1983. The amount appropriated
for |
such purpose shall be based upon an interest rate of no less |
than 15
per cent or the Prime Commercial Rate in effect May 15, |
1983, whichever
is greater. The amount of such compensation |
|
shall be equal to the ratio
of the district's net State aid |
entitlement for school year 1982-1983 divided
by the total net |
State aid entitlement times the funds appropriated for
such |
purpose. Payment in full of the amount of compensation derived |
from
the computation required in the preceding sentence shall |
be made as soon as
may be after July 1, 1983 upon warrants |
payable to the several regional
superintendents of schools.
|
The State Superintendent of Education shall, from monies |
appropriated
for such purpose, compensate districts for |
interest lost arising from the
change in payments in June, 1992 |
and each year thereafter to payments in the
months of June and |
July, 1992 and each year thereafter. The amount
appropriated |
for such purpose shall be based upon the Prime Commercial Rate
|
in effect June 15, 1992 and June 15 annually thereafter. The |
amount of
such compensation shall be equal to the ratio of the |
district's net State
aid entitlement divided by the total net |
State aid entitlement times the
amount of funds appropriated |
for such purpose. Payment of the compensation
shall be made as |
soon as may be after July 1 upon warrants payable
to the |
several regional superintendents of schools.
|
The regional superintendents shall make payments to their |
respective school
districts as soon as may be after receipt of |
the warrants unless the payments
have been assigned as security |
for State aid anticipation certificates pursuant
to Section |
18-18. If such an assignment has been made, the regional
|
superintendent shall, as soon as may be after receipt of the |
warrants, pay
the appropriate amount of the payment as |
specified in the notification
required by Section 18-18, |
directly to the assignee.
|
As used in this Section, "Prime Commercial Rate" means such |
prime rate
as from time to time is publicly announced by the |
largest commercial banking
institution in this State, measured |
in terms of total assets.
|
(c) With respect to all school districts but for fiscal |
year 1994 only,
as soon as may be after the 10th and 20th days |
of August, 1993 and as soon as
may be after the 10th and 20th |
|
days of each of the months of
October, 1993 through July, 1994 |
if moneys are available in the Common School
Fund in
the State |
treasury for payments under Sections 18-8 through 18-10, the
|
State Comptroller shall draw his warrants upon the State |
Treasurer as
directed
by the State Board of Education in |
accordance with transfers from the General Revenue
Fund to the |
Common School Fund as specified in Section 8a of the State
|
Finance Act. The warrant for the 10th
day of August, 1993 and |
each semimonthly warrant for the months of October,
1993 |
through July, 1994 shall be in an amount equal to 1/24 of the |
total amount
to be distributed to that school district
for
|
fiscal year 1994, and the warrant for the 20th day of August, |
1993 shall be in
an
amount equal to 3/24 of that total. The |
amount of payments made in July of
1994 shall be considered as |
payments for claims covering the school
year that commenced |
during the immediately preceding calendar year.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-14; 87-887; 87-895; 88-45; 88-89; 88-641, eff. |
9-9-94.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/18-12) (from Ch. 122, par. 18-12)
|
Sec. 18-12. Dates for filing State aid claims. The school |
board of
each school district shall require teachers, |
principals, or
superintendents to furnish from records kept by |
them such data as it
needs in preparing and certifying to the
|
regional superintendent its school district report of claims |
provided in
Sections 18-8.05 through 18-9
18-10 as required by |
the State
Superintendent of Education. The district claim
shall |
be based on the latest available equalized assessed valuation |
and tax
rates, as provided in Section 18-8.05 and shall use the |
average
daily
attendance as determined by the method outlined |
in Section 18-8.05
and shall be
certified and filed with the |
regional superintendent by June 21
for districts with an
|
official
school calendar end date before June 15 or within 2 |
weeks following the
official school calendar end date for |
districts with a school year end date
of June 15 or later. The |
regional superintendent shall certify and file
with the State |
|
Superintendent of Education district State aid claims by
July 1 |
for districts with an official school calendar end date before |
June
15 or no later than July 15 for districts with an official |
school calendar
end date of June 15 or later.
Failure to
so |
file by these deadlines constitutes a forfeiture of the right
|
to
receive payment by
the State until such claim is filed and |
vouchered for payment. The
regional superintendent of schools |
shall certify the county report of claims
by July 15; and the |
State Superintendent of Education shall voucher
for payment |
those claims to the State Comptroller as provided in Section |
18-11.
|
Except as otherwise provided in this Section, if any school |
district
fails to provide the minimum school term specified
in |
Section 10-19, the State aid claim for that year shall be |
reduced by the
State Superintendent of Education in an amount |
equivalent to .56818% for
each day less than the number of days |
required by this Code.
|
If
the State Superintendent of Education determines that |
the failure
to
provide the minimum school term was occasioned |
by an act or acts of God, or
was occasioned by conditions |
beyond the control of the school district
which posed a |
hazardous threat to the health and safety of pupils, the
State |
aid claim need not be reduced.
|
If the State Superintendent of Education determines that |
the
failure to provide the minimum school term was due to a |
school being
closed on or after September 11, 2001 for more |
than one-half day of
attendance due to a bioterrorism or |
terrorism threat that was
investigated by a law enforcement |
agency, the State aid claim shall not
be reduced.
|
If, during any school day, (i) a school district has |
provided at least
one
clock hour of instruction but must close |
the schools due to adverse weather
conditions
or due to a |
condition
beyond the control of the school district that poses |
a hazardous threat to
the health and safety of pupils
prior to |
providing the minimum hours of instruction required
for a full |
day of attendance, or (ii) the school district must delay the
|
|
start of the school day due to adverse weather conditions
and |
this delay
prevents the district from providing the minimum |
hours of instruction required
for a full day of attendance, the |
partial day of attendance may be counted
as a full day of |
attendance. The partial day of attendance
and the reasons |
therefor shall
be certified in writing within a month of the |
closing or delayed start by
the local school
district |
superintendent to the Regional Superintendent of Schools for
|
forwarding to the State Superintendent of Education for |
approval.
|
If a school building is ordered to be closed by the school |
board, in
consultation with a local emergency response agency, |
due to a condition
that poses a hazardous threat to the health |
and safety of pupils, then the
school district shall have a |
grace period of 4 days in which the general
State aid claim |
shall not be reduced so that alternative housing of the
pupils |
may be located.
|
No exception to the requirement of providing a minimum |
school term may
be approved by the State Superintendent of |
Education pursuant to this Section
unless a school district has |
first used all emergency days provided for
in its regular |
calendar.
|
If the State Superintendent of Education declares that an |
energy
shortage exists during any part of the school year for |
the State or a
designated portion of the State, a district may |
operate the school
attendance centers within the district 4 |
days of the week during the
time of the shortage by extending |
each existing school day by one clock
hour of school work, and |
the State aid claim shall not be reduced, nor
shall the |
employees of that district suffer any reduction in salary or
|
benefits as a result thereof. A district may operate all |
attendance
centers on this revised schedule, or may apply the |
schedule to selected
attendance centers, taking into |
consideration such factors as pupil
transportation schedules |
and patterns and sources of energy for
individual attendance |
centers.
|
|
No State aid claim may be filed for any district unless the |
district
superintendent executes and files with the State
|
Superintendent of Education, in the method prescribed by the
|
Superintendent, certification that the district has complied |
with the requirements
of Section 10-22.5 in regard to the |
nonsegregation of pupils on account
of color, creed, race, sex |
or nationality.
|
No State aid claim may be filed for any district unless the |
district
superintendent executes and files with the State
|
Superintendent of Education, in the method prescribed by the
|
Superintendent,
a sworn statement that to the best of his or |
her knowledge or belief the
employing or assigning personnel |
have complied with Section 24-4 in all
respects.
|
Electronically submitted State aid claims shall be |
submitted by
duly authorized district or regional individuals |
over a secure network
that is password protected. The |
electronic submission of a State aid
claim must be accompanied |
with an affirmation that all of the provisions
of Sections |
18-8.05 through 18-9
18-10 , 10-22.5, and 24-4 of this Code are
|
met in all respects.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-661, eff. 7-16-02; 93-54, eff. 7-1-03.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-56) (from Ch. 122, par. 34-56)
|
Sec. 34-56. Amount to cover loss and cost of collecting tax |
not added.
|
In ascertaining the rate per cent that will produce the |
amount of any
tax levied pursuant to the authority granted by |
Section 34-53,
Sections 34--53 and 34--54
the county clerk |
shall not add any amount to cover the loss and cost of
|
collecting the tax.
|
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 31.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-73) (from Ch. 122, par. 34-73)
|
Sec. 34-73. Certain taxes additional to maximum otherwise |
authorized -
not reducible. Each of the taxes authorized to be |
levied by Sections 34-33,
34-39, 34-53.2, 34-53.3, 34-54.1, |
|
34-57, 34-58, 34-60, 34-62, and 34-69 , and
34-72 of this Code, |
and by Section 17-128 of the "Illinois Pension Code"
shall be |
in addition to and exclusive of the maximum of all other taxes
|
which the school district is authorized by law to levy upon the |
aggregate
valuation of all taxable property within the school |
district or city and
the county clerk in reducing taxes under |
the provisions of the Property Tax
Code shall not consider any |
of such
taxes therein authorized as a part of the tax levy of |
the school district or
city required to be included in the |
aggregate of all taxes to be reduced and no
reduction of any |
tax levy made under the Property Tax Code shall diminish any |
amount appropriated or levied for
any such tax.
|
(Source: P.A. 88-670, eff. 12-2-94.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-74) (from Ch. 122, par. 34-74)
|
Sec. 34-74. Custody of school moneys. Except as provided in |
Article
Articles 34A and 34B, and Section 34-29.2 of this
Code, |
all moneys raised by taxation for school purposes, or
received |
from
the state common school fund, or from any other source for |
school
purposes, shall be held by the city treasurer, |
ex-officio, as school
treasurer, in separate funds for school |
purposes, subject to the order
of the board upon
(i) its |
warrants signed by its president and secretary and
|
countersigned by the mayor and city comptroller
or (ii) its |
checks, as
defined in Section 3-104 of the Uniform Commercial |
Code, signed by its
president, secretary, and comptroller and |
countersigned by the mayor and city
comptroller.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-151, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
Section 25. The Public Community College Act is amended by |
changing Section 2-12 as follows:
|
(110 ILCS 805/2-12) (from Ch. 122, par. 102-12)
|
Sec. 2-12. The State Board shall have the power and it |
shall be its duty:
|
(a) To provide statewide planning for community colleges as
|
|
institutions of higher education and co-ordinate the programs, |
services
and activities of all community colleges in the State |
so as to encourage
and establish a system of locally initiated |
and administered
comprehensive community colleges.
|
(b) To organize and conduct feasibility surveys for new |
community
colleges or for the inclusion of existing |
institutions as community
colleges and the locating of new |
institutions.
|
(c) To approve all locally funded capital projects for |
which no
State monies are required, in accordance with |
standards established by rule.
|
(d) To cooperate with the community colleges in continuing |
studies
of student characteristics, admission standards, |
grading policies,
performance of transfer students, |
qualification and certification of
facilities and any other |
problem of community college education.
|
(e) To enter into contracts with other governmental |
agencies and eligible
providers, such as local educational |
agencies, community-based
organizations of demonstrated |
effectiveness, volunteer literacy organizations
of |
demonstrated effectiveness, institutions of higher education, |
public and
private nonprofit agencies, libraries, and public |
housing authorities; to
accept federal funds and to plan with |
other State agencies when appropriate for
the allocation of |
such federal funds for instructional programs and student
|
services including such funds for adult education and adult |
literacy,
vocational and technical education, and retraining |
as may be allocated by
state and federal agencies for the aid |
of community colleges. To receive,
receipt for, hold in trust, |
expend and administer, for all purposes of this
Act, funds and |
other aid made available by the federal government or by other
|
agencies public or private, subject to appropriation by the |
General Assembly.
The changes to this subdivision (e) made by |
this amendatory Act of the 91st
General
Assembly apply on and |
after July 1, 2001.
|
(f) To determine efficient and adequate standards for |
|
community
colleges for the physical plant, heating, lighting, |
ventilation,
sanitation, safety, equipment and supplies, |
instruction and teaching,
curriculum, library, operation, |
maintenance, administration and
supervision, and to grant |
recognition certificates to community colleges
meeting such |
standards.
|
(g) To determine the standards for establishment of |
community
colleges and the proper location of the site in |
relation to existing
institutions of higher education offering |
academic, occupational and
technical training curricula, |
possible enrollment, assessed valuation,
industrial, business, |
agricultural, and other conditions reflecting
educational |
needs in the area to be served; however, no community
college |
may be considered as being recognized nor may the establishment
|
of any community college be authorized in any district which |
shall be
deemed inadequate for the maintenance, in accordance |
with the desirable
standards thus determined, of a community |
college offering the basic
subjects of general education and |
suitable vocational and
semiprofessional and technical |
curricula.
|
(h) To approve or disapprove new units of instruction, |
research or
public service as defined in Section 3-25.1
of this |
Act submitted by the
boards of trustees of the respective |
community college districts of this
State. The State Board may |
discontinue programs which fail to reflect
the educational |
needs of the area being served.
The community college district |
shall be granted 60 days following the
State Board staff |
recommendation and prior to the State Board's action to
respond |
to concerns regarding the program in question. If the State |
Board
acts to abolish a community college program, the |
community college district
has a right to appeal the decision |
in accordance with administrative rules
promulgated by the |
State Board under the provisions of the Illinois
Administrative |
Procedure Act.
|
(i) To participate in, to recommend approval or |
disapproval, and to
assist in the coordination of the programs
|
|
of community colleges participating in programs of |
interinstitutional
cooperation with other public or nonpublic |
institutions of higher education.
If the State Board does not |
approve a particular cooperative agreement,
the community |
college district has a right to appeal the decision in
|
accordance with administrative rules promulgated by the State |
Board under
the provisions of the Illinois Administrative |
Procedure Act.
|
(j) To establish guidelines regarding sabbatical leaves.
|
(k) To establish guidelines for the admission into special,
|
appropriate programs conducted or created by community |
colleges for
elementary and secondary school dropouts who have |
received truant status
from the school districts of this State |
in compliance with Section 26-14 of
The School Code.
|
(l) The Community College Board shall conduct a study of |
community
college teacher education courses to determine how |
the community college
system can increase its participation in |
the preparation of elementary and
secondary teachers.
|
(m) To establish by July 1, 1997 uniform financial |
accounting and reporting
standards
and principles for |
community colleges and develop procedures and systems
for |
community colleges for reporting financial data to the State |
Board.
|
(n) To create and participate in the conduct and operation |
of any
corporation, joint venture, partnership, association, |
or other organizational
entity that has the power: (i) to |
acquire land, buildings, and other capital
equipment for the |
use and benefit of the community colleges or their students;
|
(ii) to accept gifts and make grants for the use and benefit of |
the community
colleges or their students; (iii) to aid in the |
instruction and education of
students of community colleges; |
and (iv) to promote activities to acquaint
members of the |
community with the facilities of the various community
|
colleges.
|
(o) On and after July 1, 2001, to ensure the effective |
teaching of adults
and to prepare them
for success in |
|
employment and lifelong learning by administering a
network of |
providers, programs, and services to provide adult basic
|
education, adult secondary/general education development, |
English as a
second language, and any other instruction |
designed to prepare adult
students to function successfully in |
society and to experience success in
postsecondary education |
and the world of work.
In order to effect an orderly transition |
as provided under
Section 10-22.19a of the School Code and |
Section 1-4 of the Adult Education
Act,
from July
1, 2000
until |
July 1, 2001, the State Board of Education shall coordinate
|
administration of the
powers and duties listed in this |
subdivision (o) with the State Board.
|
(p) On and after July 1, 2001, to supervise the |
administration of adult
education and adult literacy programs, |
to establish the standards for such
courses of instruction and |
supervise the administration thereof, to contract
with other |
State and local agencies and eligible providers, such as local
|
educational agencies, community-based organizations of |
demonstrated
effectiveness, volunteer literacy organizations |
of demonstrated effectiveness,
institutions of higher |
education, public and private nonprofit agencies,
libraries, |
and public housing authorities, for the purpose of promoting |
and
establishing classes for instruction under these programs, |
to contract with
other State and local agencies to accept and |
expend appropriations for
educational purposes to reimburse |
local eligible providers for the cost of
these programs, and to |
establish an advisory council consisting of all
categories of |
eligible providers; agency partners, such as the State Board of
|
Education, the Department of Human Services, the Department of |
Employment
Security, and the Secretary of State literacy |
program; and other
stakeholders to identify, deliberate, and |
make recommendations to the State
Board on adult education |
policy and priorities. In order to effect an orderly
transition |
as provided under Section 10-22.19a of the School Code and |
Section
1-4 of the Adult Education Act, from July 1, 2000 until |
July 1, 2001, the
State Board of Education shall coordinate
|
|
administration of the powers and duties listed in this |
subdivision (p) with the
State Board. The State Board shall |
support statewide geographic distribution;
diversity of |
eligible providers; and the adequacy, stability, and
|
predictability of funding so as not to disrupt or diminish, but |
rather to
enhance, adult education by this change of |
administration.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-830, eff. 7-1-00.)
|
(20 ILCS 3105/9.04 rep.)
|
Section 80. The Capital Development Board Act is amended by |
repealing Section 9.04. |
(105 ILCS 5/1A-6 rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/1B-21 rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.16 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.35 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.37 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.38 rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.40 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.43 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.52 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.54 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.55 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.55A rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.67 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.68 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.72 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.82 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.85 rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.88 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.90 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.91 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.100 rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.101 rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.106 rep.)
|
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.110 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.113 rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.114 rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/7-03 rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/Art. 7C rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/10-20.2b rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/10-20.9 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/10-20.16 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/10-20.25 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/10-22.16 rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/10-22.17 rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/10-22.19a rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/10-22.38a rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/10-23.9 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/13-1 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/13-2 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/13-3 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/13-4 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/13-5 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/13-6 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/13-7 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/13-8 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/13-9 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/13-10 rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/13-11 rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/13-36 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/14-3.02 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/14-3.03 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/14-12.02 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/14C-2.1 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/17-2.2b rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/17-2.6 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/17-2.11b rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/17-3.1 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/17-3.3 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/17-8.01 rep.)
|
|
(105 ILCS 5/17-9.01 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/17-13 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/18-8.7 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/18-10 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/22-4 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/22-9 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/22-26 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/24-19 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/24-20 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/24-22 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/27-16 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/28-3 rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/29-17 rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/29-18 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/30-6 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/30-14.1 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/32-4.10a rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-21.5 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-22.8 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-42.1 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-42.2 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-54 rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/34-72 rep.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-87 rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/Art. 34B rep.) |
(105 ILCS 5/Art. 35 rep.) |
Section 85. The School Code is amended by repealing |
Sections 1A-6, 1B-21, 2-3.16, 2-3.35, 2-3.37, 2-3.38, 2-3.40, |
2-3.43, 2-3.52, 2-3.54, 2-3.55, 2-3.55A, 2-3.67, 2-3.68, |
2-3.72, 2-3.82, 2-3.85, 2-3.88, 2-3.90, 2-3.91, 2-3.100, |
2-3.101, 2-3.106, 2-3.110, 2-3.113, 2-3.114, 7-03, 10-20.2b, |
10-20.9, 10-20.16, 10-20.25, 10-22.16, 10-22.17, 10-22.19a, |
10-22.38a, 10-23.9, 13-1, 13-2, 13-3, 13-4, 13-5, 13-6, 13-7, |
13-8, 13-9, 13-10, 13-11, 13-36, 14-3.02, 14-3.03, 14-12.02, |
14C-2.1, 17-2.2b, 17-2.6, 17-2.11b, 17-3.1, 17-3.3, 17-8.01, |
17-9.01, 17-13, 18-8.7, 18-10, 22-4, 22-9, 22-26, 24-19, 24-20, |
|
24-22, 27-16, 28-3, 29-17, 29-18, 30-6, 30-14.1, 32-4.10a, |
34-21.5, 34-22.8, 34-42.1, 34-42.2, 34-54, 34-72, and 34-87 and |
Articles 7C, 34B, and 35. |
(105 ILCS 205/Act rep.) |
Section 90. The School District Educational Effectiveness |
and Fiscal Efficiency Act is repealed.
|
Section 95. Saving clause.
Any repeal made by this Act |
shall not affect or impair any of the following: suits pending |
or rights existing at the time this
Act takes effect; any grant |
or conveyance made or right acquired or cause of action now |
existing under any Section, Article, or Act repealed by this |
Act; the validity of any bonds or other obligations issued or |
sold and constituting valid obligations of the issuing |
authority at the time this Act takes effect; the validity of |
any contract; the validity of any tax levied under any law in |
effect prior to the effective date of this Act; or any offense |
committed, act done, penalty, punishment, or forfeiture |
incurred or any claim, right, power, or remedy accrued under |
any law in effect prior to the effective date of this Act. The |
repeal of any curative or validating Act under this Act shall |
not affect the corporate existence or powers of any school |
district lawfully validated thereby.
|