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Public Act 096-0555 |
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AN ACT concerning ethics.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Illinois Governmental Ethics Act is amended | ||||
by changing Section 4A-101 as follows: | ||||
(5 ILCS 420/4A-101) (from Ch. 127, par. 604A-101) | ||||
Sec. 4A-101. Persons required to file. The following | ||||
persons shall file
verified written statements of economic | ||||
interests, as provided in this Article:
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(a) Members of the General Assembly and candidates for | ||||
nomination or
election to the General Assembly.
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(b) Persons holding an elected office in the Executive | ||||
Branch of this
State, and candidates for nomination or | ||||
election to these offices.
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(c) Members of a Commission or Board created by the | ||||
Illinois Constitution,
and candidates for nomination or | ||||
election to such Commission or Board.
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(d) Persons whose appointment to office is subject to | ||||
confirmation by
the Senate.
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(e) Holders of, and candidates for nomination or | ||||
election to, the office
of judge or associate judge of the | ||||
Circuit Court and the office of judge of
the Appellate or | ||||
Supreme Court.
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(f) Persons who are employed by any branch, agency, | ||
authority or board
of the government of this State, | ||
including but not limited to, the Illinois
State Toll | ||
Highway Authority, the Illinois Housing Development | ||
Authority,
the Illinois Community College Board, and | ||
institutions under the
jurisdiction of the Board of | ||
Trustees
of the University of Illinois, Board of Trustees | ||
of Southern Illinois
University, Board of Trustees of | ||
Chicago State University,
Board of Trustees of Eastern | ||
Illinois University, Board of Trustees of
Governor's State | ||
University, Board of Trustees of Illinois State | ||
University,
Board of Trustees of Northeastern Illinois | ||
University, Board of Trustees of
Northern Illinois | ||
University, Board of Trustees of Western Illinois
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University, or Board of Trustees of the Illinois | ||
Mathematics and Science
Academy, and are compensated for | ||
services as employees and not as
independent contractors | ||
and who:
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(1) are, or function as, the head of a department, | ||
commission, board,
division, bureau, authority or | ||
other administrative unit within the
government of | ||
this State, or who exercise similar authority within | ||
the
government of this State;
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(2) have direct supervisory authority over, or | ||
direct responsibility for
the formulation, | ||
negotiation, issuance or execution of contracts |
entered into
by the State in the amount of $5,000 or | ||
more;
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(3) have authority for the issuance or | ||
promulgation of rules and
regulations within areas | ||
under the authority of the State;
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(4) have authority for the approval of | ||
professional licenses;
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(5) have responsibility with respect to the | ||
financial inspection
of regulated nongovernmental | ||
entities;
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(6) adjudicate, arbitrate, or decide any judicial | ||
or administrative
proceeding, or review the | ||
adjudication, arbitration or decision of any judicial
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or administrative proceeding within the authority of | ||
the State;
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(7) have supervisory responsibility for 20 or more | ||
employees of the
State; or
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(8) negotiate, assign, authorize, or grant naming | ||
rights or sponsorship rights regarding any property or | ||
asset of the State, whether real, personal, tangible, | ||
or intangible ; or .
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(9) have responsibility with respect to the | ||
procurement of goods or services. | ||
(g) Persons who are elected to office in a unit of | ||
local government,
and candidates for nomination or | ||
election to that office, including regional
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superintendents of school districts.
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(h) Persons appointed to the governing board of a unit | ||
of local
government, or of a special district, and persons | ||
appointed to a zoning
board, or zoning board of appeals, or | ||
to a regional, county, or municipal
plan commission, or to | ||
a board of review of any county, and persons
appointed to | ||
the Board of the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority
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and any Trustee appointed under Section 22 of the | ||
Metropolitan Pier and
Exposition Authority Act, and | ||
persons appointed to a board or commission of
a unit of | ||
local government who have authority to authorize the | ||
expenditure of
public funds. This subsection does not apply | ||
to members of boards or
commissions who function in an | ||
advisory capacity.
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(i) Persons who are employed by a unit of local | ||
government and are
compensated for services as employees | ||
and not as independent contractors and
who:
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(1) are, or function as, the head of a department, | ||
division, bureau,
authority or other administrative | ||
unit within the unit of local
government, or who | ||
exercise similar authority within the unit of local
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government;
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(2) have direct supervisory authority over, or | ||
direct responsibility for
the formulation, | ||
negotiation, issuance or execution of contracts | ||
entered into
by the unit of local government in the |
amount of $1,000 or greater;
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(3) have authority to approve licenses
and permits | ||
by the unit of local government; this item does not | ||
include
employees who function in a ministerial | ||
capacity;
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(4) adjudicate, arbitrate, or decide any judicial | ||
or administrative
proceeding, or review the | ||
adjudication, arbitration or decision of any judicial
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or administrative proceeding within the authority of | ||
the unit of local
government;
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(5) have authority to issue or promulgate rules and | ||
regulations within
areas under the authority of the | ||
unit of local government; or
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(6) have supervisory responsibility for 20 or more | ||
employees of the
unit of local government.
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(j) Persons on the Board of Trustees of the Illinois | ||
Mathematics and
Science Academy.
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(k) Persons employed by a school district in positions | ||
that
require that
person to hold an administrative or a | ||
chief school business official
endorsement.
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(l) Special government agents. A "special government | ||
agent" is a
person who is directed, retained, designated, | ||
appointed, or
employed, with or without compensation, by or | ||
on behalf of a
statewide executive branch constitutional | ||
officer to make an ex
parte communication under Section | ||
5-50 of the State Officials and
Employees Ethics Act or |
Section 5-165 of the Illinois
Administrative Procedure | ||
Act.
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(m) Members of the board of commissioners of any flood | ||
prevention district. | ||
(n) Members of the board of any retirement system or | ||
investment board established under the Illinois Pension | ||
Code, if not required to file under any other provision of | ||
this Section. | ||
(o) Members of the board of any pension fund | ||
established under the Illinois Pension Code, if not | ||
required to file under any other provision of this Section. | ||
This Section shall not be construed to prevent any unit of | ||
local government
from enacting financial disclosure | ||
requirements that mandate
more information
than required by | ||
this Act.
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(Source: P.A. 95-719, eff. 5-21-08; 96-6, eff. 4-3-09.)
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Section 10. The State Officials and Employees Ethics Act is | ||
amended by changing Sections 1-5, 5-10, 5-30, 5-40, 5-45, 15-5, | ||
15-25, 20-5, 20-10, 20-20, 20-21, 20-45, 20-50, 20-55, 20-60, | ||
20-65, 20-70, 20-80, 20-85, 20-90, 20-95, 25-5, 25-20, 25-50, | ||
25-65, 25-95, 35-5, and 50-5 and by adding Sections 20-20a, | ||
20-51, 20-52, 25-20a, 25-51, 25-52, and 50-10 as follows: | ||
(5 ILCS 430/1-5)
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Sec. 1-5. Definitions. As used in this Act:
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"Appointee" means a person appointed to a position in or | ||
with a State
agency, regardless of whether the position is | ||
compensated.
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"Campaign for elective office" means any activity in | ||
furtherance of an
effort to influence the selection, | ||
nomination, election, or appointment of any
individual to any | ||
federal, State, or local public office or office in a
political | ||
organization, or the selection, nomination, or election
of | ||
Presidential or Vice-Presidential electors,
but does not | ||
include
activities (i) relating to the support or opposition of | ||
any executive,
legislative, or administrative action (as those | ||
terms are defined in Section 2
of the Lobbyist Registration | ||
Act), (ii) relating to collective bargaining, or
(iii) that are | ||
otherwise in furtherance of the person's official State duties.
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"Candidate" means a person who has
filed nominating papers | ||
or petitions for nomination or election to an elected
State | ||
office, or who has been appointed to fill a vacancy in | ||
nomination, and
who remains eligible for placement on the | ||
ballot at either a
general primary election or general | ||
election.
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"Collective bargaining" has the same meaning as that term | ||
is defined in
Section 3 of the Illinois Public Labor Relations | ||
Act.
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"Commission" means an ethics commission created by this | ||
Act.
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"Compensated time" means any time worked by or credited to |
a State employee
that counts
toward any minimum work time | ||
requirement imposed as a condition of employment
with a State | ||
agency, but does not include any designated State holidays or | ||
any
period when the employee is on a
leave of absence.
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"Compensatory time off" means authorized time off earned by | ||
or awarded to a
State employee to compensate in whole or in | ||
part for time worked in excess of
the minimum work time | ||
required
of that employee as a condition of employment with a | ||
State agency.
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"Contribution" has the same meaning as that term is defined | ||
in Section 9-1.4
of the Election Code.
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"Employee" means (i) any person employed full-time, | ||
part-time, or
pursuant to a contract and whose employment | ||
duties are subject to the direction
and
control of an employer | ||
with regard to the material details of how the work is
to be | ||
performed or (ii) any appointed or elected commissioner, | ||
trustee, director, or board member of a board of a State | ||
agency, including any retirement system or investment board | ||
subject to the Illinois Pension Code or (iii) any other | ||
appointee.
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"Employment benefits" include but are not limited to the | ||
following: modified compensation or benefit terms; compensated | ||
time off; or change of title, job duties, or location of office | ||
or employment. An employment benefit may also include favorable | ||
treatment in determining whether to bring any disciplinary or | ||
similar action or favorable treatment during the course of any |
disciplinary or similar action or other performance review. | ||
"Executive branch constitutional officer" means the | ||
Governor, Lieutenant
Governor, Attorney General, Secretary of | ||
State, Comptroller, and Treasurer.
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"Gift" means any gratuity, discount, entertainment, | ||
hospitality, loan,
forbearance, or other tangible or | ||
intangible item having monetary value
including, but not
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limited to, cash, food and drink, and honoraria for speaking | ||
engagements
related to or attributable to government | ||
employment or the official position of
an
employee, member, or | ||
officer.
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"Governmental entity" means a unit of local government | ||
(including a community college district) or a school
district | ||
but not a State
agency.
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"Leave of absence" means any period during which a State | ||
employee does not
receive (i) compensation for State | ||
employment, (ii) service credit towards
State pension | ||
benefits, and (iii) health insurance benefits paid for by the
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State.
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"Legislative branch constitutional officer" means a member | ||
of the General
Assembly and the Auditor General.
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"Legislative leader" means the President and Minority | ||
Leader of the Senate
and the Speaker and Minority Leader of the | ||
House of Representatives.
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"Member" means a member of the General Assembly.
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"Officer" means an executive branch constitutional officer
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or a
legislative branch constitutional officer.
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"Political" means any activity in support
of or in | ||
connection with any campaign for elective office or any | ||
political
organization, but does not include activities (i) | ||
relating to the support or
opposition of any executive, | ||
legislative, or administrative action (as those
terms are | ||
defined in Section 2 of the Lobbyist Registration Act), (ii) | ||
relating
to collective bargaining, or (iii) that are
otherwise
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in furtherance of the person's official
State duties or | ||
governmental and public service functions.
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"Political organization" means a party, committee, | ||
association, fund, or
other organization (whether or not | ||
incorporated) that is required to file a
statement of | ||
organization with the State Board of Elections or a county | ||
clerk
under Section 9-3 of the Election Code, but only with | ||
regard to those
activities that require filing with the State | ||
Board of Elections or a county
clerk.
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"Prohibited political activity" means:
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(1) Preparing for, organizing, or participating in any
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political meeting, political rally, political | ||
demonstration, or other political
event.
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(2) Soliciting contributions, including but not | ||
limited to the purchase
of, selling, distributing, or | ||
receiving
payment for tickets for any political | ||
fundraiser,
political meeting, or other political event.
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(3) Soliciting, planning the solicitation of, or |
preparing any document or
report regarding any thing of | ||
value intended as a campaign contribution.
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(4) Planning, conducting, or participating in a public | ||
opinion
poll in connection with a campaign for elective | ||
office or on behalf of a
political organization for | ||
political purposes or for or against any referendum
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question.
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(5) Surveying or gathering information from potential | ||
or actual
voters in an election to determine probable vote | ||
outcome in connection with a
campaign for elective office | ||
or on behalf of a political organization for
political | ||
purposes or for or against any referendum question.
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(6) Assisting at the polls on election day on behalf of | ||
any
political organization or candidate for elective | ||
office or for or against any
referendum
question.
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(7) Soliciting votes on behalf of a candidate for | ||
elective office or a
political organization or for or | ||
against any referendum question or helping in
an effort to | ||
get voters
to the polls.
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(8) Initiating for circulation, preparing, | ||
circulating, reviewing, or
filing any petition on
behalf of | ||
a candidate for elective office or for or against any | ||
referendum
question.
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(9) Making contributions on behalf
of any candidate for | ||
elective office in that capacity or in connection with a
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campaign for elective office.
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(10) Preparing or reviewing responses to candidate | ||
questionnaires in
connection with a campaign for elective | ||
office or on behalf of a political
organization for | ||
political purposes.
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(11) Distributing, preparing for distribution, or | ||
mailing campaign
literature, campaign signs, or other | ||
campaign material on behalf of any
candidate for elective | ||
office or for or against any referendum question.
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(12) Campaigning for any elective
office or for or | ||
against any referendum question.
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(13) Managing or working on a campaign for elective
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office or for or against any referendum question.
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(14) Serving as a delegate, alternate, or proxy to a | ||
political
party convention.
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(15) Participating in any recount or challenge to the | ||
outcome of
any election, except to the extent that under | ||
subsection (d) of
Section 6 of Article IV of the Illinois | ||
Constitution each house of the General
Assembly shall judge | ||
the elections, returns, and qualifications of its members.
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"Prohibited source" means any person or entity who:
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(1) is seeking official action (i) by the
member or | ||
officer or (ii) in the case of an employee, by
the employee
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or by the
member, officer, State agency, or other employee | ||
directing the
employee;
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(2) does business or seeks to do business (i) with the
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member or officer or (ii) in the case of an employee,
with |
the
employee or with the member, officer, State agency, or | ||
other
employee directing the
employee;
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(3) conducts activities regulated (i) by the
member or | ||
officer or (ii) in the case of an employee, by
the employee | ||
or by the member, officer, State agency, or
other employee | ||
directing the employee;
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(4) has interests that may be substantially affected by | ||
the performance or
non-performance of the official duties | ||
of the member, officer, or
employee; or
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(5) is registered or required to be registered with the | ||
Secretary of State
under the Lobbyist Registration Act, | ||
except that an entity not otherwise a
prohibited source | ||
does not become a prohibited source merely because a
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registered lobbyist is one of its members or serves on its | ||
board of
directors ; or | ||
(6) is an agent of, a spouse of, or an immediate family | ||
member who is living with a "prohibited source" .
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"State agency" includes all officers, boards, commissions | ||
and agencies
created by the Constitution, whether in the | ||
executive or legislative
branch; all officers,
departments, | ||
boards, commissions, agencies, institutions, authorities,
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public institutions of higher learning as defined in Section 2 | ||
of the Higher
Education
Cooperation Act (except community | ||
colleges), and bodies politic and corporate of the State; and
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administrative
units or corporate outgrowths of the State | ||
government which are created by
or pursuant to statute, other |
than units of local government (including community college | ||
districts) and their
officers, school districts, and boards of | ||
election commissioners; and all
administrative units and | ||
corporate outgrowths of the above and as may be
created by | ||
executive order of the Governor. "State agency" includes the | ||
General
Assembly, the Senate, the House of Representatives, the | ||
President and Minority
Leader of the Senate, the Speaker and | ||
Minority Leader of the House of
Representatives, the Senate | ||
Operations Commission, and the legislative support
services | ||
agencies. "State agency" includes the Office
of the Auditor | ||
General. "State agency" does not include the judicial branch.
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"State employee" means any employee of a State agency.
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"Ultimate jurisdictional
authority" means the following:
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(1) For members, legislative partisan staff, and | ||
legislative secretaries,
the appropriate
legislative | ||
leader: President of the
Senate, Minority Leader of the | ||
Senate, Speaker of the House of Representatives,
or | ||
Minority Leader of the House of Representatives.
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(2) For State employees who are professional staff or | ||
employees of the
Senate and not covered under item (1), the | ||
Senate Operations Commission.
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(3) For State employees who are professional staff or | ||
employees of the
House of Representatives and not covered | ||
under item (1), the Speaker of the
House of | ||
Representatives.
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(4) For State employees who are employees of the |
legislative support
services agencies, the Joint Committee | ||
on Legislative Support Services.
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(5) For State employees of the Auditor General, the | ||
Auditor General.
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(6) For State employees of public institutions of | ||
higher learning as
defined in Section 2 of the Higher | ||
Education Cooperation Act (except community colleges), the | ||
board of
trustees of the appropriate public institution of | ||
higher learning.
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(7) For State employees of an executive branch | ||
constitutional officer
other than those described in | ||
paragraph (6), the
appropriate executive branch | ||
constitutional officer.
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(8) For State employees not under the jurisdiction of | ||
paragraph (1), (2),
(3), (4), (5), (6), or (7), the | ||
Governor.
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(Source: P.A. 95-880, eff. 8-19-08; 96-6, eff. 4-3-09.) | ||
(5 ILCS 430/5-10)
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Sec. 5-10. Ethics training. | ||
(a) Each officer, member, and employee
must complete, at | ||
least
annually beginning in 2004, an ethics training program | ||
conducted by the
appropriate
State agency. Each ultimate | ||
jurisdictional authority
must implement an ethics training | ||
program for its officers, members, and
employees.
These ethics | ||
training programs shall be overseen by the appropriate Ethics
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Commission and Inspector
General appointed pursuant to this Act | ||
in consultation with the Office of the
Attorney
General.
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(b) Each ultimate jurisdictional authority subject to the | ||
Executive Ethics Commission shall submit to the Executive | ||
Ethics Commission, at least annually, or more frequently as | ||
required by that Commission, an annual report that summarizes | ||
ethics training that was completed during the previous year, | ||
and lays out the plan for the ethics training programs in the | ||
coming year. | ||
(c) Each Inspector General
shall set standards and
| ||
determine the hours and frequency of training necessary for | ||
each
position or category of positions. A person who fills a | ||
vacancy in an
elective or appointed position that requires | ||
training and a person
employed in a position that requires | ||
training must complete his or her
initial ethics training | ||
within 30 days 6 months after commencement of his or
her office | ||
or employment.
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(d) Upon completion of the ethics training program, each | ||
officer, member, and employee must certify in writing that the | ||
person has completed the training program. Each officer, | ||
member, and employee must provide to his or her ethics officer | ||
a signed copy of the certification by the deadline for | ||
completion of the ethics training program. | ||
(e) The ethics training provided under this Act by the | ||
Secretary of State may be expanded to satisfy the requirement | ||
of Section 4.5 of the Lobbyist Registration Act. |
(Source: P.A. 93-615, eff. 11-19-03; 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.) | ||
(5 ILCS 430/5-30)
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Sec. 5-30. Prohibited offer or promise. | ||
(a)
An officer or employee of the executive or legislative | ||
branch or a
candidate for an executive or legislative branch | ||
office may not promise
anything of value related to State | ||
government, including but not limited to
positions in State | ||
government, promotions, or salary increases, other employment | ||
benefits, board or commission appointments, favorable | ||
treatment in any official or regulatory matter, the awarding of | ||
any public contract, or action or inaction on any legislative | ||
or regulatory matter, in
consideration for a contribution to a | ||
political committee, political party, or
other entity that has | ||
as one of its purposes the financial support of a
candidate for | ||
elective office.
| ||
(b) Any State employee who is requested or directed by an | ||
officer, member, or employee of the executive or legislative | ||
branch or a candidate for an executive or legislative branch | ||
office to engage in activity prohibited by Section 5-30 shall | ||
report such request or directive to the appropriate ethics | ||
officer or Inspector General. | ||
(c) Nothing in this Section prevents the making or | ||
accepting of voluntary
contributions otherwise in accordance | ||
with law.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-615, eff. 11-19-03.) |
(5 ILCS 430/5-40)
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Sec. 5-40. Fundraising in Sangamon County. Except as | ||
provided in this
Section, any executive branch constitutional | ||
officer, any candidate for an
executive branch constitutional | ||
office, any member of the General Assembly,
any candidate for | ||
the General Assembly, any political caucus of the General
| ||
Assembly, or any political committee on behalf of any of the | ||
foregoing may not
hold a political fundraising function in | ||
Sangamon County on any day the legislature is
in session (i) | ||
during the period beginning February 1 and ending on the later
| ||
of the actual adjournment dates
of either house of the spring | ||
session and (ii) during fall veto session.
For purposes of this | ||
Section, the legislature is not considered to be in
session on | ||
a day that is solely a perfunctory session day or on a day when | ||
only
a committee is meeting.
| ||
During the period beginning June 1 and ending on the first | ||
day of fall veto
session each year, this Section does not apply | ||
to (i) a member of the General
Assembly whose legislative or | ||
representative district is entirely within
Sangamon County or | ||
(ii) a candidate for the General Assembly from that
legislative | ||
or representative district.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-615, eff. 11-19-03.) | ||
(5 ILCS 430/5-45)
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Sec. 5-45. Procurement; revolving door prohibition.
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(a) No former officer, member, or State employee, or spouse | ||
or
immediate family member living with such person, shall, | ||
within a period of one
year immediately after termination of | ||
State employment, knowingly accept
employment or receive | ||
compensation or fees for services from a person or entity
if | ||
the officer, member, or State employee, during the year | ||
immediately
preceding termination of State employment, | ||
participated personally and
substantially in the decision to | ||
award of State contracts , or the issuance of State contract | ||
change orders, with a cumulative value
of over $25,000
or more | ||
to the person or entity, or its parent or subsidiary.
| ||
(b) No former officer of the executive branch or State | ||
employee of the
executive branch with regulatory or
licensing | ||
authority, or spouse or immediate family member living with | ||
such
person, shall, within a period of one year immediately | ||
after termination of
State employment, knowingly accept | ||
employment or receive compensation or of fees
for services from | ||
a person or entity if the officer
or State
employee, during the | ||
year immediately preceding
termination of State employment, | ||
participated personally and substantially in making made a | ||
regulatory or licensing decision that
directly applied to the | ||
person or entity, or its parent or subsidiary.
| ||
(c) The requirements of this Section may be waived
(i) for | ||
the executive
branch, in writing by
the Executive Ethics | ||
Commission, (ii) for the
legislative branch, in writing by
the | ||
Legislative Ethics Commission, and (iii) for the
Auditor |
General, in writing by the Auditor General.
During the time | ||
period from the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
| ||
93rd General Assembly until the Executive Ethics Commission | ||
first meets, the
requirements of this Section may be waived in | ||
writing by the appropriate
ultimate jurisdictional authority. | ||
During the time period from the
effective date of this | ||
amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly until the
| ||
Legislative Ethics Commission first meets, the requirements of | ||
this Section may
be waived in writing by the appropriate | ||
ultimate jurisdictional authority.
The waiver shall be granted
| ||
upon a showing that the
prospective
employment or relationship | ||
did not affect the decisions referred to in sections
(a) and | ||
(b).
| ||
(c) Within 6 months after the effective date of this | ||
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, each executive | ||
branch constitutional officer and legislative leader, the | ||
Auditor General, and the Joint Committee on Legislative Support | ||
Services shall adopt a policy delineating which State positions | ||
under his or her jurisdiction and control, by the nature of | ||
their duties, may have the authority to participate personally | ||
and substantially in the award of State contracts or in | ||
regulatory or licensing decisions. The Governor shall adopt | ||
such a policy for all State employees of the executive branch | ||
not under the jurisdiction and control of any other executive | ||
branch constitutional officer. (d) This Section applies only to | ||
persons who terminate an affected position
on or after the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General
| ||
Assembly.
| ||
The policies required under subsection (c) of this Section | ||
shall be filed with the appropriate ethics commission | ||
established under this Act or, for the Auditor General, with | ||
the Office of the Auditor General. | ||
(d) Each Inspector General shall have the authority to | ||
determine that additional State positions under his or her | ||
jurisdiction, not otherwise subject to the policies required by | ||
subsection (c) of this Section, are nonetheless subject to the | ||
notification requirement of subsection (f) below due to their | ||
involvement in the award of State contracts or in regulatory or | ||
licensing decisions. | ||
(e) The Joint Committee on Legislative Support Services, | ||
the Auditor General, and each of the executive branch | ||
constitutional officers and legislative leaders subject to | ||
subsection (c) of this Section shall provide written | ||
notification to all employees in positions subject to the | ||
policies required by subsection (c) or a determination made | ||
under subsection (d): (1) upon hiring, promotion, or transfer | ||
into the relevant position; and (2) at the time the employee's | ||
duties are changed in such a way as to qualify that employee. | ||
An employee receiving notification must certify in writing that | ||
the person was advised of the prohibition and the requirement | ||
to notify the appropriate Inspector General in subsection (f). | ||
(f) Any State employee in a position subject to the |
policies required by subsection (c) or to a determination under | ||
subsection (d), but who does not fall within the prohibition of | ||
subsection (h) below, who is offered non-State employment | ||
during State employment or within a period of one year | ||
immediately after termination of State employment shall, prior | ||
to accepting such non-State employment, notify the appropriate | ||
Inspector General. Within 10 calendar days after receiving | ||
notification from an employee in a position subject to the | ||
policies required by subsection (c), such Inspector General | ||
shall make a determination as to whether the State employee is | ||
restricted from accepting such employment by subsection (a) or | ||
(b). In making a determination, in addition to any other | ||
relevant information, an Inspector General shall assess the | ||
effect of the prospective employment or relationship upon | ||
decisions referred to in subsections (a) and (b), based on the | ||
totality of the participation by the former officer, member, or | ||
State employee in those decisions. A determination by an | ||
Inspector General must be in writing, signed and dated by the | ||
Inspector General, and delivered to the subject of the | ||
determination within 10 calendar days or the person is deemed | ||
eligible for the employment opportunity. For purposes of this | ||
subsection, "appropriate Inspector General" means (i) for | ||
members and employees of the legislative branch, the | ||
Legislative Inspector General; (ii) for the Auditor General and | ||
employees of the Office of the Auditor General, the Inspector | ||
General provided for in Section 30-5 of this Act; and (iii) for |
executive branch officers and employees, the Inspector General | ||
having jurisdiction over the officer or employee. Notice of any | ||
determination of an Inspector General and of any such appeal | ||
shall be given to the ultimate jurisdictional authority, the | ||
Attorney General, and the Executive Ethics Commission. | ||
(g) An Inspector General's determination regarding | ||
restrictions under subsection (a) or (b) may be appealed to the | ||
appropriate Ethics Commission by the person subject to the | ||
decision or the Attorney General no later than the 10th | ||
calendar day after the date of the determination. | ||
On appeal, the Ethics Commission or Auditor General shall | ||
seek, accept, and consider written public comments regarding a | ||
determination. In deciding whether to uphold an Inspector | ||
General's determination, the appropriate Ethics Commission or | ||
Auditor General shall assess, in addition to any other relevant | ||
information, the effect of the prospective employment or | ||
relationship upon the decisions referred to in subsections (a) | ||
and (b), based on the totality of the participation by the | ||
former officer, member, or State employee in those decisions. | ||
The Ethics Commission shall decide whether to uphold an | ||
Inspector General's determination within 10 calendar days or | ||
the person is deemed eligible for the employment opportunity. | ||
(h) The following officers, members, or State employees | ||
shall not, within a period of one year immediately after | ||
termination of office or State employment, knowingly accept | ||
employment or receive compensation or fees for services from a |
person or entity if the person or entity or its parent or | ||
subsidiary, during the year immediately preceding termination | ||
of State employment, was a party to a State contract or | ||
contracts with a cumulative value of $25,000 or more involving | ||
the officer, member, or State employee's State agency, or was | ||
the subject of a regulatory or licensing decision involving the | ||
officer, member, or State employee's State agency, regardless | ||
of whether he or she participated personally and substantially | ||
in the award of the State contract or contracts or the making | ||
of the regulatory or licensing decision in question: | ||
(1) members or officers; | ||
(2) members of a commission or board created by the | ||
Illinois Constitution; | ||
(3) persons whose appointment to office is subject to | ||
the advice and consent of the Senate; | ||
(4) the head of a department, commission, board, | ||
division, bureau, authority, or other administrative unit | ||
within the government of this State; | ||
(5) chief procurement officers, State purchasing | ||
officers, and their designees whose duties are directly | ||
related to State procurement; and | ||
(6) chiefs of staff, deputy chiefs of staff, associate | ||
chiefs of staff, assistant chiefs of staff, and deputy | ||
governors. | ||
(Source: P.A. 93-615, eff. 11-19-03; 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.) |
(5 ILCS 430/15-5)
| ||
Sec. 15-5. Definitions. In this Article:
| ||
"Public body" means (1) any officer, member, or State | ||
agency; (2) the federal
government; (3) any local law | ||
enforcement agency or prosecutorial office; (4)
any
federal or | ||
State judiciary, grand or petit jury, law enforcement agency, | ||
or
prosecutorial office; and (5) any officer, employee, | ||
department, agency, or
other division of any of the foregoing.
| ||
"Supervisor" means an officer, a member, or a State | ||
employee who has
the authority to direct and control the work | ||
performance of a State
employee or who has authority to take | ||
corrective action regarding any violation
of a law, rule, or | ||
regulation of which the State employee complains.
| ||
"Retaliatory action" means the reprimand, discharge, | ||
suspension, demotion, or
denial of promotion or transfer , or | ||
change of
any State employee in the terms or and conditions
of
| ||
employment of any State employee ,
and that is taken in
| ||
retaliation for a State employee's involvement in protected | ||
activity, as
set forth in Section 15-10.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-615, eff. 11-19-03.)
| ||
(5 ILCS 430/15-25)
| ||
Sec. 15-25. Remedies. The State employee may be awarded | ||
all remedies
necessary to make
the State employee whole and to | ||
prevent future violations of this Article.
The circuit courts | ||
of this State shall have jurisdiction to hear cases brought |
under this Article. Remedies imposed by the court may include, | ||
but are not limited to, all of the
following:
| ||
(1) reinstatement of the employee to either the same | ||
position held before
the retaliatory action or to an | ||
equivalent position;
| ||
(2) 2 times the amount of back pay;
| ||
(3) interest on the back pay;
| ||
(4) the reinstatement of full fringe benefits and | ||
seniority rights;
and
| ||
(5) the payment of reasonable costs and attorneys' | ||
fees.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-615, eff. 11-19-03; 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.) | ||
(5 ILCS 430/20-5)
| ||
Sec. 20-5. Executive Ethics Commission.
| ||
(a) The Executive Ethics Commission is created.
| ||
(b) The Executive Ethics Commission shall consist of 9
| ||
commissioners.
The Governor shall appoint 5 commissioners, and | ||
the Attorney General, Secretary
of State, Comptroller, and | ||
Treasurer shall each appoint one commissioner.
Appointments | ||
shall be made by and with the advice and consent of the
Senate | ||
by three-fifths of the elected members concurring by record | ||
vote.
Any nomination not acted upon by the Senate within 60 | ||
session days of the
receipt thereof shall be deemed to have | ||
received the advice and consent of
the Senate. If, during a | ||
recess of the Senate, there is a vacancy in an office
of |
commissioner, the appointing authority shall make a temporary
| ||
appointment until the next meeting of the Senate when the | ||
appointing
authority shall make a nomination to fill that | ||
office. No person rejected for
an office of commissioner shall, | ||
except by the Senate's request, be
nominated again for that | ||
office at the same session of the Senate or be
appointed to | ||
that office during a recess of that Senate.
No more than 5
| ||
commissioners may be of the same
political party.
| ||
The terms of the initial commissioners shall commence upon | ||
qualification.
Four initial appointees of the Governor, as | ||
designated by the Governor, shall
serve terms running through | ||
June 30, 2007. One initial appointee of the
Governor, as | ||
designated by the Governor, and the initial appointees of the
| ||
Attorney General, Secretary of State, Comptroller, and | ||
Treasurer shall serve
terms running through June 30, 2008.
The | ||
initial appointments shall be made within 60 days
after the | ||
effective date of this Act.
| ||
After the initial terms, commissioners shall serve for | ||
4-year terms
commencing on July 1 of the year of appointment | ||
and running
through June 30 of the fourth following year. | ||
Commissioners may be
reappointed to one or more subsequent | ||
terms.
| ||
Vacancies occurring other than at the end of a term shall | ||
be filled
by the appointing authority only for the balance of | ||
the
term of the commissioner whose office is vacant.
| ||
Terms shall run regardless of whether the position is |
filled.
| ||
(c) The appointing authorities shall appoint commissioners | ||
who
have experience holding governmental office or employment | ||
and shall
appoint commissioners from the general public.
A | ||
person is not eligible to
serve as a commissioner if that | ||
person (i) has been convicted of a
felony or a crime of | ||
dishonesty or moral turpitude, (ii) is, or was
within the | ||
preceding 12 months, engaged in activities that
require | ||
registration under the Lobbyist Registration Act, (iii) is | ||
related
to the appointing authority, or (iv) is a State officer | ||
or employee.
| ||
(d) The Executive Ethics Commission shall have
| ||
jurisdiction over all officers and employees of State agencies | ||
other
than the General Assembly, the Senate, the House of | ||
Representatives,
the President and Minority Leader of the | ||
Senate, the Speaker and
Minority Leader of the House of | ||
Representatives, the Senate
Operations Commission, the | ||
legislative support services agencies, and
the Office of the | ||
Auditor General.
The jurisdiction of the
Commission is limited | ||
to matters arising under this Act.
| ||
A member or legislative branch State employee serving on an | ||
executive branch board or commission remains subject to the | ||
jurisdiction of the Legislative Ethics Commission and is not | ||
subject to the jurisdiction of the Executive Ethics Commission. | ||
(d-5) The Executive Ethics Commission shall have | ||
jurisdiction over all chief procurement officers and |
procurement compliance monitors and their respective staffs. | ||
The Executive Ethics Commission shall have jurisdiction over | ||
any matters arising under the Illinois Procurement Code if the | ||
Commission is given explicit authority in that Code. | ||
(e) The Executive Ethics Commission must meet, either
in | ||
person or by other technological means, at least monthly and as
| ||
often as necessary. At the first meeting of the Executive
| ||
Ethics Commission, the commissioners shall choose from their
| ||
number a chairperson and other officers that they deem | ||
appropriate.
The terms of officers shall be for 2 years | ||
commencing July 1 and
running through June 30 of the second | ||
following year. Meetings shall be held at
the call
of the | ||
chairperson or any 3 commissioners. Official action by the
| ||
Commission shall require the affirmative vote of 5 | ||
commissioners, and
a quorum shall consist of 5 commissioners. | ||
Commissioners shall receive
compensation in an amount equal to | ||
the compensation of members of the State
Board of Elections and | ||
may be
reimbursed for their reasonable expenses actually | ||
incurred in the
performance of their duties.
| ||
(f) No commissioner or employee of the Executive
Ethics | ||
Commission may during his or her term of appointment or | ||
employment:
| ||
(1) become a candidate for any elective office;
| ||
(2) hold any other elected or appointed public office | ||
except for
appointments on governmental advisory boards or | ||
study commissions or as
otherwise expressly authorized by |
law;
| ||
(3) be actively involved in the affairs of any | ||
political party or
political
organization; or
| ||
(4) advocate for the appointment of another person to | ||
an appointed or elected office or position or actively | ||
participate in any campaign for any elective office.
| ||
(g) An appointing authority may remove a commissioner only | ||
for cause.
| ||
(h) The Executive Ethics Commission shall appoint an | ||
Executive Director. The
compensation of the Executive Director | ||
shall be as determined by the Commission
or by the Compensation | ||
Review Board, whichever amount is higher . The Executive
| ||
Director of the Executive Ethics Commission may employ and | ||
determine the
compensation of staff, as appropriations permit.
| ||
(i) The Executive Ethics Commission shall appoint, by a | ||
majority of the members appointed to the Commission, chief | ||
procurement officers and procurement compliance monitors in | ||
accordance with the provisions of the Illinois Procurement | ||
Code. The compensation of a chief procurement officer and | ||
procurement compliance monitor shall be determined by the | ||
Commission. | ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.)
| ||
(5 ILCS 430/20-10)
| ||
Sec. 20-10. Offices of Executive Inspectors General.
| ||
(a) Five independent Offices of the Executive Inspector |
General are
created,
one each for the Governor, the Attorney | ||
General, the Secretary of State, the
Comptroller, and the | ||
Treasurer. Each Office shall be under the direction and
| ||
supervision
of an Executive Inspector General and shall be a | ||
fully independent office with
separate
appropriations.
| ||
(b) The Governor, Attorney General, Secretary of State, | ||
Comptroller, and
Treasurer shall each appoint an Executive | ||
Inspector General, without regard to
political affiliation and | ||
solely on the basis of integrity and
demonstrated ability.
| ||
Appointments shall be made by and with the advice and consent | ||
of the
Senate by three-fifths of the elected members concurring | ||
by record vote.
Any nomination not acted upon by the Senate | ||
within 60 session days of the
receipt thereof shall be deemed | ||
to have received the advice and consent of
the Senate. If, | ||
during a recess of the Senate, there is a vacancy in an office
| ||
of Executive Inspector General, the appointing authority shall | ||
make a
temporary appointment until the next meeting of the | ||
Senate when the
appointing authority shall make a nomination to | ||
fill that office. No person
rejected for an office of Executive | ||
Inspector General shall, except by the
Senate's request, be | ||
nominated again for that office at the same session of
the | ||
Senate or be appointed to that office during a recess of that | ||
Senate.
| ||
Nothing in this Article precludes the appointment by the | ||
Governor, Attorney
General,
Secretary of State, Comptroller, | ||
or Treasurer of any other inspector general
required or
|
permitted by law. The Governor, Attorney General, Secretary of | ||
State,
Comptroller, and
Treasurer
each may appoint an existing | ||
inspector general as the Executive Inspector
General
required | ||
by this
Article, provided that such an inspector general is not | ||
prohibited by law,
rule,
jurisdiction, qualification, or | ||
interest from serving as the Executive
Inspector General
| ||
required by
this Article.
An appointing authority may not | ||
appoint a relative as an Executive Inspector
General.
| ||
Each Executive Inspector General shall have the following | ||
qualifications:
| ||
(1) has not been convicted of any felony under the laws | ||
of this State,
another State, or the United States;
| ||
(2) has earned a baccalaureate degree from an | ||
institution of higher
education; and
| ||
(3) has 5 or more years of cumulative service (A) with | ||
a federal,
State, or
local law enforcement agency, at least | ||
2 years of which have been in a
progressive investigatory | ||
capacity; (B)
as a
federal, State, or local prosecutor; (C)
| ||
as a
senior manager or executive of a federal, State, or | ||
local
agency; (D) as a member, an officer,
or a State
or | ||
federal judge; or (E) representing any combination of (A) | ||
through (D).
| ||
The term of each initial Executive Inspector General shall
| ||
commence upon qualification and shall run through June 30, | ||
2008. The
initial appointments shall be made within 60 days | ||
after the effective
date of this Act.
|
After the initial term, each Executive Inspector General | ||
shall serve
for 5-year terms commencing on July 1 of the year | ||
of appointment
and running through June 30 of the fifth | ||
following year. An
Executive Inspector General may be | ||
reappointed to one or more
subsequent terms.
| ||
A vacancy occurring other than at the end of a term shall | ||
be filled
by the appointing authority only for the balance of | ||
the term of the Executive
Inspector General whose office is | ||
vacant.
| ||
Terms shall run regardless of whether the position is | ||
filled.
| ||
(c) The Executive Inspector General appointed by the | ||
Attorney General shall
have jurisdiction over the Attorney | ||
General and all officers and employees of,
and vendors and | ||
others doing business with,
State agencies within the | ||
jurisdiction of the Attorney General. The Executive
Inspector | ||
General appointed by the Secretary of State shall have | ||
jurisdiction
over the Secretary of State and all officers and | ||
employees of, and vendors and
others doing business with, State | ||
agencies within the
jurisdiction of the Secretary of State. The | ||
Executive Inspector General
appointed by the Comptroller shall | ||
have jurisdiction over the Comptroller and
all officers and | ||
employees of, and vendors and others doing business with,
State | ||
agencies within the jurisdiction of the Comptroller. The
| ||
Executive Inspector General appointed by the Treasurer shall | ||
have jurisdiction
over the Treasurer and all officers and |
employees of, and vendors and others
doing business with, State | ||
agencies within the jurisdiction
of the Treasurer. The | ||
Executive Inspector General appointed by the Governor
shall | ||
have jurisdiction over the Governor, the Lieutenant Governor, | ||
and all
officers and employees of, and vendors and others doing | ||
business with,
executive branch State agencies under the | ||
jurisdiction of the
Executive Ethics Commission and not within | ||
the jurisdiction of the
Attorney
General, the Secretary of | ||
State, the Comptroller, or the Treasurer.
| ||
The jurisdiction of each Executive Inspector General is to | ||
investigate
allegations of fraud, waste, abuse, mismanagement, | ||
misconduct, nonfeasance,
misfeasance,
malfeasance, or | ||
violations of this Act or violations of other related
laws and | ||
rules.
| ||
(d) The minimum compensation for each Executive Inspector | ||
General shall be
determined by the Executive Ethics Commission | ||
and shall be made from appropriations made to the Comptroller | ||
for this purpose . The actual compensation for each
Executive | ||
Inspector General shall be determined by the appointing | ||
executive
branch
constitutional officer and must be at or above | ||
the minimum compensation level
set by
the Executive Ethics | ||
Commission. Subject to Section 20-45 of this Act, each
| ||
Executive Inspector General has full
authority
to organize his | ||
or her Office of the Executive Inspector General, including the
| ||
employment and determination of the compensation of staff, such | ||
as deputies,
assistants, and other employees, as |
appropriations permit. A separate
appropriation
shall be made | ||
for each Office of Executive Inspector General.
| ||
(e) No Executive Inspector General or employee of the | ||
Office of
the Executive Inspector General may, during his or | ||
her term of appointment or
employment:
| ||
(1) become a candidate for any elective office;
| ||
(2) hold any other elected or appointed public office
| ||
except for appointments on governmental advisory boards
or | ||
study commissions or as otherwise expressly authorized by | ||
law;
| ||
(3) be actively involved in the affairs of any | ||
political party or
political organization; or
| ||
(4) advocate for the appointment of another person to | ||
an appointed or elected office or position or actively | ||
participate in any campaign for any
elective office.
| ||
In this subsection an appointed public office means a | ||
position authorized by
law that is filled by an appointing | ||
authority as provided by law and does not
include employment by | ||
hiring in the ordinary course of business.
| ||
(e-1) No Executive Inspector General or employee of the | ||
Office of the
Executive Inspector General may, for one year | ||
after the termination of his or
her appointment or employment:
| ||
(1) become a candidate for any elective office;
| ||
(2) hold any elected public office; or
| ||
(3) hold any appointed State, county, or local judicial | ||
office.
|
(e-2) The requirements of item (3) of subsection (e-1) may | ||
be waived by the
Executive Ethics Commission.
| ||
(f) An Executive Inspector General may be removed only for | ||
cause and may
be removed only by the appointing constitutional | ||
officer. At the time of the
removal,
the appointing | ||
constitutional officer must report to the Executive Ethics
| ||
Commission the
justification for the
removal.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.)
| ||
(5 ILCS 430/20-20)
| ||
Sec. 20-20. Duties of the Executive Inspectors
General. In | ||
addition to duties otherwise assigned by law,
each Executive | ||
Inspector General shall have the following duties:
| ||
(1) To receive and investigate allegations of | ||
violations of this
Act. The
Executive Inspector General may | ||
receive information through the
Office of any Executive | ||
Inspector General or
through an ethics commission.
An | ||
investigation may be conducted only in response
to | ||
information reported to the Executive Inspector General
as | ||
provided in this Section and not upon his or her own | ||
prerogative.
Allegations may not be made anonymously. An | ||
investigation may not be initiated
more than one year after | ||
the most recent act of the alleged violation or of a
series | ||
of alleged violations except where there is reasonable | ||
cause to believe
that fraudulent concealment has occurred. | ||
To constitute fraudulent concealment
sufficient to toll |
this limitations period, there must be an affirmative act | ||
or
representation calculated to prevent discovery of the | ||
fact that a violation has
occurred. The
Executive Inspector | ||
General shall have the discretion to determine the
| ||
appropriate means of investigation as permitted by law.
| ||
(2) To request information relating to an | ||
investigation from any
person when the Executive Inspector | ||
General deems that information necessary in
conducting an | ||
investigation.
| ||
(3) To issue subpoenas
to compel the attendance of | ||
witnesses for the
purposes of testimony and production of | ||
documents and other items for
inspection and copying and to | ||
make service of those subpoenas and subpoenas
issued under | ||
item (7) of Section 20-15.
| ||
(4) To submit reports as required by this Act.
| ||
(5) To file
pleadings in the name of
the Executive | ||
Inspector General with the Executive Ethics
Commission, | ||
through the Attorney General, as provided in this Article | ||
if the
Attorney General finds that reasonable cause exists | ||
to believe that a violation
has
occurred.
| ||
(6) To assist and coordinate the ethics officers
for | ||
State agencies under the jurisdiction of the
Executive | ||
Inspector General and to work with those ethics officers.
| ||
(7) To participate in or conduct, when appropriate, | ||
multi-jurisdictional
investigations.
| ||
(8) To request, as the Executive Inspector General |
deems appropriate, from
ethics officers
of State agencies | ||
under his or her jurisdiction, reports or information
on | ||
(i) the content of a State agency's ethics
training program | ||
and (ii) the percentage of new officers and
employees who | ||
have completed ethics training.
| ||
(9) To review hiring and employment files of each State | ||
agency within the Executive Inspector General's | ||
jurisdiction to ensure compliance with Rutan v. Republican | ||
Party of Illinois, 497 U.S. 62 (1990), and with all | ||
applicable employment laws. | ||
(10) To establish a policy that ensures the appropriate | ||
handling and correct recording of all investigations | ||
conducted by the Office, and to ensure that the policy is | ||
accessible via the Internet in order that those seeking to | ||
report those allegations are familiar with the process and | ||
that the subjects of those allegations are treated fairly. | ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.) | ||
(5 ILCS 430/20-20a new)
| ||
Sec. 20-20a. Attorney General investigatory authority. In | ||
addition to investigatory authority otherwise granted by law, | ||
the Attorney General shall have the authority to investigate | ||
violations of this Act pursuant to Section 20-50 or Section | ||
20-51 of this Act after receipt of notice from the Executive | ||
Ethics Commission or pursuant to Section 5-45. The Attorney | ||
General shall have the discretion to determine the appropriate |
means of investigation as permitted by law, including (i) the | ||
request of information relating to an investigation from any | ||
person when the Attorney General deems that information | ||
necessary in conducting an investigation; and (ii) the issuance | ||
of subpoenas to compel the attendance of witnesses for the | ||
purposes of sworn testimony and production of documents and | ||
other items for inspection and copying and the service of those | ||
subpoenas. | ||
Nothing in this Section shall be construed as granting the | ||
Attorney General the authority to investigate alleged | ||
misconduct pursuant to notice received under Section 20-50 or | ||
Section 20-51 of this Act, if the information contained in the | ||
notice indicates that the alleged misconduct was minor in | ||
nature. As used in this Section, misconduct that is "minor in | ||
nature" means misconduct that was a violation of office, | ||
agency, or department policy and not of this Act or any other | ||
civil or criminal law. | ||
(5 ILCS 430/20-21)
| ||
Sec. 20-21. Special Executive Inspectors General.
| ||
(a) The Executive Ethics Commission, on its own initiative | ||
and by majority
vote,
may appoint special Executive Inspectors | ||
General (i) to investigate alleged
violations of this Act if
an | ||
investigation by the Inspector General was not concluded within | ||
6 months
after its
initiation, where the Commission finds that | ||
the Inspector General's reasons
under Section 20-65 for failing |
to complete the investigation are insufficient ,
and (ii) to | ||
accept referrals from the Commission of allegations made | ||
pursuant
to this Act concerning an Executive Inspector General | ||
or employee of an Office
of an Executive Inspector General and | ||
to investigate those allegations , (iii) to investigate matters | ||
within the jurisdiction of an Executive Inspector General if an | ||
Executive Inspector General (including his or her employees) | ||
could be reasonably deemed to be a wrongdoer or suspect, or if | ||
in the determination of the Commission, an investigation | ||
presents real or apparent conflicts of interest for the Office | ||
of the Executive Inspector General, and (iv) to investigate | ||
alleged violations of this Act pursuant to Section 20-50 and | ||
Section 20-51 .
| ||
(b) A special Executive Inspector General must have the | ||
same qualifications
as an Executive Inspector General | ||
appointed under Section 20-10.
| ||
(c) The Commission's appointment of a special Executive | ||
Inspector General
must be in writing and must specify the | ||
duration and purpose of the
appointment.
| ||
(d) A special Executive Inspector General shall have the | ||
same powers and
duties
with respect to the purpose of his or | ||
her appointment as an Executive
Inspector General appointed | ||
under Section 20-10.
| ||
(e) A special Executive
Inspector
General shall report the | ||
findings of his or her investigation to the
Commission.
| ||
(f) The Commission may report the findings of a special |
Executive Inspector
General and its recommendations, if any, to | ||
the appointing authority of the
appropriate Executive | ||
Inspector General.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.)
| ||
(5 ILCS 430/20-45)
| ||
Sec. 20-45. Standing; representation.
| ||
(a) With the exception of a person appealing an Inspector | ||
General's determination under Section 5-45 of this Act or under | ||
applicable provisions of the Illinois Procurement Code, only | ||
Only an Executive Inspector General or the Attorney General may | ||
bring actions before the
Executive Ethics Commission.
The | ||
Attorney General may bring actions before the Executive Ethics | ||
Commission upon receipt of notice pursuant to Section 5-50 or | ||
Section 5-51 or pursuant to Section 5-45.
| ||
(b) With the exception of Section 5-45, the The Attorney | ||
General shall represent an Executive Inspector General in
all | ||
proceedings before the
Commission.
Whenever the Attorney | ||
General is sick or
absent, or unable to attend, or is | ||
interested in any matter or
proceeding under this Act, upon the | ||
filing of a petition under seal by any
person with standing,
| ||
the Supreme Court (or any other court of competent jurisdiction | ||
as designated
and determined by rule of the Supreme Court) may | ||
appoint
some competent attorney to prosecute or defend that | ||
matter or proceeding, and
the attorney so appointed shall have | ||
the same
power and authority in relation to
that matter or |
proceeding as the
Attorney General would have had if present | ||
and
attending to the same.
| ||
(c) Attorneys representing an Inspector General in
| ||
proceedings before the Executive Ethics Commission, except an | ||
attorney
appointed under subsection (b),
shall be appointed or | ||
retained by the Attorney General, shall
be under the | ||
supervision, direction, and control of the Attorney General, | ||
and
shall serve at the pleasure of the Attorney General. The | ||
compensation of any
attorneys appointed or retained in | ||
accordance
with this subsection or subsection (b) shall be paid | ||
by the appropriate Office
of the Executive
Inspector General.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.)
| ||
(5 ILCS 430/20-50)
| ||
Sec. 20-50. Investigation reports ; complaint procedure .
| ||
(a) If an Executive Inspector General, upon the conclusion | ||
of an
investigation, determines that reasonable cause exists to | ||
believe that a
violation
has occurred, then
the Executive | ||
Inspector General shall issue a summary report of the
| ||
investigation. The report shall be delivered to the
appropriate | ||
ultimate jurisdictional
authority and to the head of each State
| ||
agency
affected by or involved in the investigation, if | ||
appropriate. The appropriate ultimate jurisdictional authority | ||
or agency head shall respond to the summary report within 20 | ||
days, in writing, to the Executive Inspector General. The | ||
response shall include a description of any corrective or |
disciplinary action to be imposed.
| ||
(b) The summary report of the investigation shall include | ||
the following:
| ||
(1) A description of any allegations or other | ||
information
received by the Executive Inspector General | ||
pertinent to the
investigation.
| ||
(2) A description of any alleged misconduct discovered | ||
in the
course of the investigation.
| ||
(3) Recommendations for any corrective or disciplinary
| ||
action to be taken in response to any alleged misconduct | ||
described in the
report, including but not limited to | ||
discharge.
| ||
(4) Other information the Executive Inspector General
| ||
deems relevant to the investigation or resulting | ||
recommendations.
| ||
(c) Within 30 days after receiving a response from the | ||
appropriate ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency head | ||
Not less than 30 days after delivery of the summary report of
| ||
an
investigation under subsection (a),
the Executive Inspector | ||
General shall notify the Commission and the Attorney General if | ||
the Executive Inspector General believes that a complaint | ||
should be filed with the Commission. If if the Executive | ||
Inspector General desires to file a petition for leave to file
| ||
a
complaint with the Commission , the Executive Inspector | ||
General shall submit the summary report and supporting | ||
documents to notify the Commission and the
Attorney General. If |
the Attorney General concludes that there is insufficient | ||
evidence that a violation has occurred, the Attorney General | ||
shall notify the Executive Inspector General and the Executive | ||
Inspector General shall deliver to the Executive Ethics | ||
Commission a copy of the summary report and response from the | ||
ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency head.
If the | ||
Attorney General determines
that reasonable cause exists to | ||
believe that a violation has occurred, then the
Executive | ||
Inspector
General, represented by the Attorney
General, may | ||
file with the Executive Ethics Commission a petition for
leave | ||
to file a complaint.
The complaint petition shall set
forth the | ||
alleged violation and the
grounds that exist to support the | ||
complaint petition . The petition for leave to
file a complaint | ||
must be filed with the Commission within 18 months
after the | ||
most recent act of the
alleged violation or of a series of | ||
alleged violations
except where there is reasonable cause to | ||
believe
that fraudulent concealment has occurred. To | ||
constitute fraudulent concealment
sufficient to toll this | ||
limitations period, there must be an affirmative act or
| ||
representation calculated to prevent discovery of the fact that | ||
a violation has
occurred.
If a petition for leave to file a | ||
complaint is not filed with the Commission
within 6 months | ||
after notice by the Inspector General to the Commission and the
| ||
Attorney General, then the Commission may set a meeting of the | ||
Commission at
which the Attorney General shall appear and | ||
provide a status
report to the Commission.
|
(c-5) Within 30 days after receiving a response from the | ||
appropriate ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency head | ||
under subsection (a), if the Executive Inspector General does | ||
not believe that a complaint should be filed, the Executive | ||
Inspector General shall deliver to the Executive Ethics | ||
Commission a statement setting forth the basis for the decision | ||
not to file a complaint and a copy of the summary report and | ||
response from the ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency | ||
head. An Inspector General may also submit a redacted version | ||
of the summary report and response from the ultimate | ||
jurisdictional authority if the Inspector General believes | ||
either contains information that, in the opinion of the | ||
Inspector General, should be redacted prior to releasing the | ||
report, may interfere with an ongoing investigation, or | ||
identifies an informant or complainant. | ||
(c-10) If, after reviewing the documents, the Commission | ||
believes that further investigation is warranted, the | ||
Commission may request that the Executive Inspector General | ||
provide additional information or conduct further | ||
investigation. The Commission may also appoint a Special | ||
Executive Inspector General to investigate or refer the summary | ||
report and response from the ultimate jurisdictional authority | ||
to the Attorney General for further investigation or review. If | ||
the Commission requests the Attorney General to investigate or | ||
review, the Commission must notify the Attorney General and the | ||
Inspector General. The Attorney General may not begin an |
investigation or review until receipt of notice from the | ||
Commission.
If, after review, the Attorney General determines | ||
that reasonable cause exists to believe that a violation has | ||
occurred, then the Attorney General may file a complaint with | ||
the Executive Ethics Commission. If the Attorney General | ||
concludes that there is insufficient evidence that a violation | ||
has occurred, the Attorney General shall notify the Executive | ||
Ethics Commission and the appropriate Executive Inspector | ||
General. | ||
(d) A copy of the complaint filed with the Executive Ethics | ||
Commission petition must be served on all respondents named in | ||
the
complaint and on each respondent's ultimate jurisdictional | ||
authority in
the same manner as process is served under the | ||
Code of Civil
Procedure.
| ||
(e) A respondent may file objections to the petition for | ||
leave to
file a complaint within 30 days after notice of the | ||
petition has been
served on the respondent.
| ||
(f) The Commission shall meet, either in person or by | ||
telephone, at least 30 days after the complaint is served on | ||
all respondents
in a closed session to review the sufficiency | ||
of the complaint.
If the Commission finds that complaint is | ||
sufficient, the Commission shall
grant the petition for leave | ||
to file the
complaint.
The Commission shall
issue notice by | ||
certified mail, return receipt requested, to the Executive | ||
Inspector General , Attorney General, and all respondents of
the | ||
Commission's ruling on the sufficiency of the complaint. If the |
complaint
is deemed to
sufficiently allege a violation of this | ||
Act, then the Commission shall notify
the parties and shall
| ||
include a hearing date scheduled within 4 weeks after the date | ||
of the notice,
unless all of the parties consent to a later | ||
date.
If the complaint is deemed not to sufficiently allege a
| ||
violation, then
the Commission shall send by certified mail, | ||
return receipt requested,
a notice to the Executive Inspector | ||
General, Attorney General, and all respondents the parties of | ||
the decision to dismiss the complaint.
| ||
(g) On the scheduled date
the Commission shall conduct a | ||
closed meeting,
either in person or, if the parties consent, by | ||
telephone, on the complaint and
allow all
parties the | ||
opportunity to present testimony and evidence.
All such | ||
proceedings shall be transcribed.
| ||
(h) Within an appropriate time limit set by rules of the | ||
Executive
Ethics Commission, the Commission shall (i) dismiss | ||
the
complaint , or (ii) issue a recommendation of discipline to | ||
the
respondent and the respondent's ultimate jurisdictional | ||
authority , (iii) or
impose an administrative fine upon the | ||
respondent, (iv) issue injunctive relief as described in | ||
Section 50-10, or (v) impose a combination of (ii) through (iv) | ||
or both .
| ||
(i) The proceedings on any complaint filed with the | ||
Commission
shall be conducted pursuant to rules promulgated by | ||
the Commission.
| ||
(j) The Commission may designate hearing officers
to |
conduct proceedings as determined by rule of the Commission.
| ||
(k) In all proceedings before the Commission, the standard | ||
of
proof is by a preponderance of the evidence.
| ||
(l) Within 30 days after the issuance of a final | ||
administrative decision that concludes that a violation | ||
occurred, the Executive Ethics Commission shall make public the | ||
entire record of proceedings before the Commission, the | ||
decision, any recommendation, any discipline imposed, and the | ||
response from the agency head or ultimate jurisdictional | ||
authority to the Executive Ethics Commission. When the | ||
Inspector General concludes that there is insufficient
| ||
evidence that a violation has occurred, the Inspector General | ||
shall close the
investigation. At the request of the subject of | ||
the investigation, the
Inspector
General shall provide a | ||
written statement to the subject of the investigation
and to | ||
the Commission of
the Inspector General's decision to close the | ||
investigation. Closure by the
Inspector General does not bar | ||
the Inspector General from resuming the
investigation if | ||
circumstances warrant.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.) | ||
(5 ILCS 430/20-51 new) | ||
Sec. 20-51. Closed investigations. When the Inspector | ||
General concludes that there is insufficient evidence that a | ||
violation has occurred, the Inspector General shall close the | ||
investigation. The Inspector General shall provide the |
Commission with a written statement of the Inspector General's | ||
decision to close the investigation. At the request of the | ||
subject of the investigation, the Inspector General shall | ||
provide a written statement to the subject of the investigation | ||
of the Inspector General's decision to close the investigation. | ||
Closure by the Inspector General does not bar the Inspector | ||
General from resuming the investigation if circumstances | ||
warrant. The Commission also has the discretion to request that | ||
the Executive Inspector General conduct further investigation | ||
of any matter closed pursuant to this Section, to appoint a | ||
Special Executive Inspector General to investigate,
or to refer | ||
the allegations to the Attorney General for further | ||
investigation or review. If the Commission requests the | ||
Attorney General to investigate or review, the Commission must | ||
notify the Attorney General and the Inspector General. The | ||
Attorney General may not begin an investigation or review until | ||
receipt of notice from the Commission. | ||
(5 ILCS 430/20-52 new) | ||
Sec. 20-52. Release of summary reports. | ||
(a) Within 60 days after receipt of a summary report and | ||
response from the ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency | ||
head that resulted in a suspension of at least 3 days or | ||
termination of employment, the Executive Ethics Commission | ||
shall make available to the public the report and response or a | ||
redacted version of the report and response. The Executive |
Ethics Commission may make available to the public any other | ||
summary report and response of the ultimate jurisdictional | ||
authority or agency head or a redacted version of the report | ||
and response. | ||
(b) The Commission shall redact information in the summary | ||
report that may reveal the identity of witnesses, complainants, | ||
or informants or if the Commission determines it is appropriate | ||
to protect the identity of a person before the report is made | ||
public. The Commission may also redact any information it | ||
believes should not be made public. Prior to publication, the | ||
Commission shall permit the respondents, Inspector General, | ||
and Attorney General to review documents to be made public and | ||
offer suggestions for redaction or provide a response that | ||
shall be made public with the summary report. | ||
(c) The Commission may withhold publication of the report | ||
or response if the Executive Inspector General or Attorney | ||
General certifies that releasing the report to the public will | ||
interfere with an ongoing investigation. | ||
(5 ILCS 430/20-55)
| ||
Sec. 20-55. Decisions; recommendations.
| ||
(a) All decisions of the Executive Ethics Commission
must | ||
include a description of the alleged misconduct, the decision | ||
of
the Commission, including any fines levied and any | ||
recommendation
of discipline, and the reasoning for that | ||
decision. All decisions of the
Commission shall be delivered to |
the head of the appropriate State
agency, the appropriate | ||
ultimate jurisdictional authority, and the
appropriate | ||
Executive Inspector General. The Executive Ethics
Commission | ||
shall promulgate rules for the decision and
recommendation | ||
process.
| ||
(b) If the Executive Ethics Commission issues a
| ||
recommendation of discipline to an agency head or ultimate
| ||
jurisdictional authority, that agency head or ultimate | ||
jurisdictional
authority must respond to that recommendation | ||
in 30 days with a
written response to the Executive Ethics | ||
Commission. This
response must include any disciplinary action | ||
the agency head or
ultimate jurisdictional authority has taken | ||
with respect to the officer or
employee in question. If the | ||
agency head or ultimate jurisdictional
authority did not take | ||
any disciplinary action, or took a different
disciplinary | ||
action than that recommended by the Executive
Ethics | ||
Commission, the agency head or ultimate jurisdictional
| ||
authority must describe the different action and explain the | ||
reasons for the
different action in the
written response. This | ||
response must be served upon the Executive
Ethics Commission | ||
and
the appropriate Executive Inspector General within the | ||
30-day period and is not
exempt from the provisions of the | ||
Freedom of Information Act.
| ||
(c) Disciplinary action under this Act against a person | ||
subject to the Personnel Code, the Secretary of State Merit | ||
Employment Code, the Comptroller Merit Employment Code, or the |
State Treasurer Employment Code is within the jurisdiction of | ||
the Executive Ethics Commission and is not within the | ||
jurisdiction of those Acts. | ||
(d) Any hearing to contest disciplinary action for a | ||
violation of this Act against a person subject to the Personnel | ||
Code, the Secretary of State Merit Employment Code, the | ||
Comptroller Merit Employment Code, or the State Treasurer | ||
Employment Code pursuant to an agreement between an Executive | ||
Inspector General and an ultimate jurisdictional authority | ||
shall be conducted by the Executive Ethics Commission and not | ||
under any of those Acts. | ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.) | ||
(5 ILCS 430/20-60)
| ||
Sec. 20-60. Appeals. A decision of the Executive
Ethics | ||
Commission to impose a fine or injunctive relief is subject to | ||
judicial review
under the Administrative Review Law. All other | ||
decisions by the
Executive Ethics Commission are final and not | ||
subject to
review either administratively or judicially.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.)
| ||
(5 ILCS 430/20-65)
| ||
Sec. 20-65. Reporting of investigations Investigations not | ||
concluded within 6 months . | ||
(a) Each Executive Inspector General shall file a quarterly | ||
activity report with the Executive Ethics Commission that |
reflects investigative activity during the previous quarter. | ||
The Executive Ethics Commission shall establish the reporting | ||
dates. The activity report shall include at least the | ||
following: | ||
(1) The number of investigations opened during the | ||
preceding quarter, the affected offices or agencies, and | ||
the unique tracking numbers for new investigations. | ||
(2) The number of investigations closed during the | ||
preceding quarter, the affected offices or agencies, and | ||
the unique tracking numbers for closed investigations. | ||
(3) The status of each on-going investigation that | ||
remained open at the end of the quarter, the affected | ||
office, agency or agencies, the investigation's unique | ||
tracking number, and a brief statement of the general | ||
nature of the investigation. | ||
(b) If
any investigation is not concluded within 6 months | ||
after its initiation,
the appropriate Executive Inspector | ||
General shall file a 6-month report with notify the Executive
| ||
Ethics Commission by the fifteenth day of the month following | ||
it being open for 6 months. The 6-month report shall disclose: | ||
and appropriate ultimate jurisdictional authority
of the | ||
general | ||
(1) The general nature of the allegation or information | ||
giving rise to the
investigation , the title or job duties | ||
of the subjects of the investigation, and the | ||
investigation's unique tracking number. |
(2) The date of the last alleged violation of this Act | ||
or other State law giving rise to the investigation. | ||
(3) Whether the Executive Inspector General has found | ||
credible the allegations of criminal conduct. | ||
(4) Whether the allegation has been referred to an | ||
appropriate law enforcement agency and the identity of the | ||
law enforcement agency to which those allegations were | ||
referred. | ||
(5) If an allegation has not been referred to an | ||
appropriate law enforcement agency, and the reasons for the | ||
failure to complete the investigation
within 6 months , a | ||
summary of the investigative steps taken, additional | ||
investigative steps contemplated at the time of the report, | ||
and an estimate of additional time necessary to complete | ||
the investigation .
| ||
(6) Any other information deemed necessary by the | ||
Executive Ethics Commission in determining whether to | ||
appoint a Special Inspector General. | ||
(c) If an Executive Inspector General has referred an | ||
allegation to an appropriate law enforcement agency and | ||
continues to investigate the matter, the future reporting | ||
requirements of this Section are suspended. | ||
(d) Reports filed under this Section are exempt from the | ||
Freedom of Information Act. | ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.)
|
(5 ILCS 430/20-70)
| ||
Sec. 20-70. Cooperation in investigations. It is the duty | ||
of
every officer and employee under the jurisdiction of an | ||
Executive
Inspector General, including any inspector general | ||
serving in any
State agency under the jurisdiction of that | ||
Executive Inspector
General, to cooperate with the Executive | ||
Inspector General and the Attorney General in any
investigation | ||
undertaken pursuant to this Act. Failure to cooperate includes, | ||
but is not limited to, intentional omissions and knowing false | ||
statements. Failure to cooperate
with an investigation of the | ||
Executive Inspector General or the Attorney General is grounds
| ||
for disciplinary action, including dismissal. Nothing in this | ||
Section limits or
alters a person's existing rights or | ||
protections under State or federal law.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.)
| ||
(5 ILCS 430/20-80)
| ||
Sec. 20-80. Referrals of investigations. If an Executive
| ||
Inspector General determines that any alleged misconduct | ||
involves
any person not subject to the jurisdiction of the | ||
Executive
Ethics Commission, that Executive Inspector General | ||
shall refer the
reported allegations to the appropriate | ||
Inspector General, appropriate ethics
commission, or other
| ||
appropriate body. If an Executive Inspector General determines | ||
that
any alleged misconduct may give rise to criminal | ||
penalties, the
Executive Inspector General may refer the |
allegations regarding that
misconduct to the appropriate law | ||
enforcement authority. If an Executive Inspector General | ||
determines that any alleged misconduct resulted in the loss of | ||
public funds in an amount of $5,000 or greater, the Executive | ||
Inspector General shall refer the allegations regarding that | ||
misconduct to the Attorney General and any other appropriate | ||
law enforcement authority.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.)
| ||
(5 ILCS 430/20-85)
| ||
Sec. 20-85. Monthly Quarterly reports by Executive | ||
Inspector General.
Each Executive Inspector General shall | ||
submit monthly quarterly
reports to the appropriate executive | ||
branch constitutional officer and the
Executive Ethics | ||
Commission , on dates determined by the executive branch | ||
constitutional officer
Executive Ethics Commission , | ||
indicating:
| ||
(1) the number of allegations received since the date | ||
of the last report;
| ||
(2) the number of investigations initiated since the | ||
date of
the last report;
| ||
(3) the number of investigations concluded since the | ||
date of
the last report;
| ||
(4) the number of investigations pending as of the | ||
reporting
date;
| ||
(5) the number of complaints forwarded to the Attorney |
General since the
date of the last report; and
| ||
(6) the number of actions filed with the Executive | ||
Ethics Commission since
the date of the last report and the | ||
number of
actions pending before the Executive Ethics | ||
Commission as of the reporting
date ; and | ||
(7) the number of allegations referred to any law | ||
enforcement agency .
| ||
The monthly report shall be available on the websites of | ||
the Executive Inspector General and the constitutional | ||
officer. | ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.)
| ||
(5 ILCS 430/20-90)
| ||
Sec. 20-90. Confidentiality.
| ||
(a) The identity of any individual providing information or | ||
reporting any
possible or alleged
misconduct to an Executive | ||
Inspector General or the Executive Ethics
Commission
shall be | ||
kept confidential and may not be disclosed
without the consent | ||
of that individual, unless the individual consents to
| ||
disclosure of his or her name or disclosure of the individual's | ||
identity is
otherwise required by law. The confidentiality | ||
granted by this subsection does
not preclude the disclosure of | ||
the identity of a person in any capacity other
than as the | ||
source of an allegation.
| ||
(b) Subject to the provisions of Section 20-52 Section | ||
20-50(c) , commissioners, employees,
and agents of the |
Executive Ethics Commission,
the Executive Inspectors General, | ||
and employees and agents of each Office of
an
Executive | ||
Inspector General , the Attorney General, and the employees and | ||
agents of the office of the Attorney General shall keep | ||
confidential and shall not disclose
information exempted from | ||
disclosure under the Freedom of
Information Act or by this Act.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.)
| ||
(5 ILCS 430/20-95)
| ||
Sec. 20-95. Exemptions.
| ||
(a) Documents generated by an ethics
officer under this | ||
Act, except Section 5-50, are exempt from the provisions of
the | ||
Freedom
of Information Act.
| ||
(b) Any allegations
and related documents
submitted to an | ||
Executive Inspector General and any pleadings and
related | ||
documents brought before the Executive Ethics
Commission are | ||
exempt from the provisions of the Freedom of
Information Act so | ||
long as the Executive Ethics Commission
does not make a finding | ||
of a violation of this Act.
If the Executive
Ethics Commission | ||
finds that a violation has occurred, the
entire record of | ||
proceedings before the Commission, the decision and
| ||
recommendation, and the response mandatory report from the | ||
agency head or
ultimate jurisdictional authority to the | ||
Executive Ethics
Commission are not exempt from the provisions | ||
of the Freedom of
Information Act but information contained | ||
therein that is otherwise exempt from
the
Freedom of |
Information Act must be redacted before disclosure as provided | ||
in
Section 8 of the Freedom of Information Act. A summary | ||
report released by the Executive Ethics Commission under | ||
Section 20-52 is a public record, but information redacted by | ||
the Executive Ethics Commission shall not be part of the public | ||
record.
| ||
(c) Meetings of the Commission under
Sections 20-5
and | ||
20-15 of this Act are exempt from the provisions of the Open
| ||
Meetings Act.
| ||
(d) Unless otherwise provided in this Act, all | ||
investigatory files and
reports of the Office of an Executive | ||
Inspector General, other than monthly quarterly
reports | ||
required under Section 20-85 , are confidential, are exempt from | ||
disclosure
under the Freedom of Information Act, and shall not | ||
be divulged to
any person or agency, except as necessary (i) to | ||
a the appropriate law
enforcement
authority if the matter is | ||
referred pursuant to this Act , (ii) to the ultimate
| ||
jurisdictional authority, (iii) to the
Executive Ethics | ||
Commission; or (iv) to another Inspector General appointed
| ||
pursuant to this Act.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.)
| ||
(5 ILCS 430/25-5)
| ||
Sec. 25-5. Legislative Ethics Commission.
| ||
(a) The Legislative Ethics Commission is created.
| ||
(b) The Legislative Ethics Commission shall consist of 8
|
commissioners appointed 2 each by the
President and Minority | ||
Leader of the Senate and the Speaker and Minority Leader
of the | ||
House of Representatives.
| ||
The terms of the initial commissioners shall commence upon | ||
qualification.
Each appointing authority shall designate one | ||
appointee who
shall serve for a 2-year term running through
| ||
June 30, 2005.
Each appointing authority shall designate one | ||
appointee who
shall serve for a
4-year term running through | ||
June 30, 2007.
The initial appointments shall be made within 60 | ||
days
after the effective date of this Act.
| ||
After the initial terms, commissioners shall serve for | ||
4-year terms
commencing on July 1 of the year of appointment | ||
and running
through June 30 of the fourth following year. | ||
Commissioners may be
reappointed to one or more subsequent | ||
terms.
| ||
Vacancies occurring other than at the end of a term shall | ||
be filled
by the appointing authority only for the balance of | ||
the
term of the commissioner whose office is vacant.
| ||
Terms shall run regardless of whether the position is | ||
filled.
| ||
(c) The appointing authorities shall appoint commissioners | ||
who
have experience holding governmental office or employment | ||
and may
appoint commissioners who are members of the General | ||
Assembly as well as
commissioners from the general public.
A | ||
commissioner who is a member of the General Assembly must | ||
recuse himself or
herself from participating in any matter |
relating to any investigation or
proceeding in which he or she | ||
is the subject.
A person is not eligible to
serve as a | ||
commissioner if that person (i) has been convicted of a
felony | ||
or a crime of dishonesty or moral turpitude, (ii) is, or was
| ||
within the preceding 12 months, engaged in activities that
| ||
require registration under the Lobbyist Registration Act, | ||
(iii) is a
relative of the appointing authority, or (iv) is a | ||
State officer or employee
other than a member of the General | ||
Assembly.
| ||
(d) The Legislative Ethics Commission shall have
| ||
jurisdiction over members of the General Assembly and
all State
| ||
employees whose ultimate jurisdictional authority is
(i) a | ||
legislative leader, (ii) the Senate Operations Commission, or | ||
(iii) the
Joint Committee on Legislative Support Services.
The | ||
jurisdiction of the
Commission is limited to matters arising | ||
under this Act.
| ||
An officer or executive branch State employee serving on a | ||
legislative branch board or commission remains subject to the | ||
jurisdiction of the Executive Ethics Commission and is not | ||
subject to the jurisdiction of the Legislative Ethics | ||
Commission. | ||
(e) The Legislative Ethics Commission must meet, either
in | ||
person or by other technological means, monthly or as
often as | ||
necessary. At the first meeting of the Legislative
Ethics | ||
Commission, the commissioners shall choose from their
number a | ||
chairperson and other officers that they deem appropriate.
The |
terms of officers shall be for 2 years commencing July 1 and
| ||
running through June 30 of the second following year. Meetings | ||
shall be held at
the call
of the chairperson or any 3 | ||
commissioners. Official action by the
Commission shall require | ||
the affirmative vote of 5 commissioners, and
a quorum shall | ||
consist of 5 commissioners. Commissioners shall receive
no | ||
compensation but
may be
reimbursed for their reasonable | ||
expenses actually incurred in the
performance of their duties.
| ||
(f) No commissioner, other than a commissioner who is a | ||
member of the
General
Assembly, or employee of the Legislative
| ||
Ethics Commission may during his or her term of appointment or | ||
employment:
| ||
(1) become a candidate for any elective office;
| ||
(2) hold any other elected or appointed public office
| ||
except for appointments on governmental advisory boards
or | ||
study commissions or as otherwise expressly authorized by | ||
law;
| ||
(3) be actively involved in the affairs of any | ||
political party or political
organization; or
| ||
(4) advocate for the appointment of another person to | ||
an appointed or elected office or position or actively | ||
participate in any campaign for any
elective office.
| ||
(g) An appointing authority may remove a
commissioner only | ||
for cause.
| ||
(h) The Legislative Ethics Commission shall appoint an
| ||
Executive Director subject to the approval of at least 3 of the |
4 legislative leaders. The compensation of the Executive | ||
Director shall
be as determined by the Commission or by the | ||
Compensation Review
Board, whichever amount is higher . The | ||
Executive Director of the Legislative
Ethics Commission may | ||
employ, subject to the approval of at least 3 of the 4 | ||
legislative leaders, and determine the
compensation of staff, | ||
as appropriations permit.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03; 93-685, eff. 7-8-04.) | ||
(5 ILCS 430/25-20)
| ||
Sec. 25-20. Duties of the Legislative Inspector
General. In | ||
addition to duties otherwise assigned by law,
the Legislative | ||
Inspector General shall have the following duties:
| ||
(1) To receive and investigate allegations of | ||
violations of this
Act. The
Legislative Inspector General | ||
may receive information through the
Office of the | ||
Legislative Inspector General or
through an ethics | ||
commission.
An investigation may be conducted only in | ||
response
to information reported to the Legislative | ||
Inspector General
as provided in this Section and not upon | ||
his or her own prerogative.
Allegations may not be made | ||
anonymously. An investigation may not be initiated
more | ||
than one year after the most recent act of the alleged | ||
violation or of a
series of alleged violations except where | ||
there is reasonable cause to believe
that fraudulent | ||
concealment has occurred. To constitute fraudulent |
concealment
sufficient to toll this limitations period, | ||
there must be an affirmative act or
representation | ||
calculated to prevent discovery of the fact that a | ||
violation
has occurred. The
Legislative Inspector General | ||
shall have the discretion to determine the
appropriate | ||
means of investigation as permitted by law.
| ||
(2) To request information relating to an | ||
investigation from any
person when the Legislative | ||
Inspector General deems that information necessary
in
| ||
conducting an investigation.
| ||
(3) To issue subpoenas, with the advance approval of | ||
the Commission,
to compel the attendance of witnesses for | ||
the
purposes of testimony and production of documents and | ||
other items for
inspection and copying and to make service | ||
of those subpoenas and subpoenas
issued under item (7) of | ||
Section 25-15.
| ||
(4) To submit reports as required by this Act.
| ||
(5) To file
pleadings in the name of
the Legislative | ||
Inspector General with the Legislative Ethics
Commission, | ||
through the Attorney General, as provided in this Article | ||
if the
Attorney General finds that reasonable cause exists | ||
to believe that a violation
has
occurred.
| ||
(6) To assist and coordinate the ethics officers
for | ||
State agencies under the jurisdiction of the
Legislative | ||
Inspector General and to work with those ethics officers.
| ||
(7) To participate in or conduct, when appropriate, |
multi-jurisdictional
investigations.
| ||
(8) To request, as the Legislative Inspector General | ||
deems appropriate,
from ethics officers
of State agencies | ||
under his or her jurisdiction, reports or information
on | ||
(i) the content of a State agency's ethics
training program | ||
and (ii) the percentage of new officers and
employees who | ||
have completed ethics training.
| ||
(9) To establish a policy that ensures the appropriate | ||
handling and correct recording of all investigations of | ||
allegations and to ensure that the policy is accessible via | ||
the Internet in order that those seeking to report those | ||
allegations are familiar with the process and that the | ||
subjects of those allegations are treated fairly. | ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.) | ||
(5 ILCS 430/25-20a new)
| ||
Sec. 25-20a. Attorney General investigatory authority. In | ||
addition to investigatory authority otherwise granted by law, | ||
the Attorney General shall have the authority to investigate | ||
violations of this Act pursuant to Section 25-50 or Section | ||
25-51 of this Act after receipt of notice from the Legislative | ||
Ethics Commission or pursuant to Section 5-45. The Attorney | ||
General shall have the discretion to determine the appropriate | ||
means of investigation as permitted by law, including (i) the | ||
request of information relating to an investigation from any | ||
person when the Attorney General deems that information |
necessary in conducting an investigation; and (ii) the issuance | ||
of subpoenas to compel the attendance of witnesses for the | ||
purposes of sworn testimony and production of documents and | ||
other items for inspection and copying and the service of those | ||
subpoenas. | ||
Nothing in this Section shall be construed as granting the | ||
Attorney General the authority to investigate alleged | ||
misconduct pursuant to notice received under Section 5-45, | ||
Section 25-50, or Section 25-51 of this Act, if the information | ||
contained in the notice indicates that the alleged misconduct | ||
was minor in nature. As used in this Section, misconduct that | ||
is "minor in nature" means misconduct that was a violation of | ||
office, agency, or department policy and not of this Act or any | ||
other civil or criminal law. | ||
(5 ILCS 430/25-50)
| ||
Sec. 25-50. Investigation reports ; complaint procedure .
| ||
(a) If the Legislative Inspector General, upon the | ||
conclusion of an
investigation, determines that reasonable | ||
cause exists to believe that a
violation
has occurred, then
the | ||
Legislative Inspector General shall issue a summary report of | ||
the
investigation. The report shall be delivered to the
| ||
appropriate ultimate jurisdictional
authority and to the head | ||
of each State
agency
affected by or involved in the | ||
investigation, if appropriate. The appropriate ultimate | ||
jurisdictional authority or agency head shall respond to the |
summary report within 20 days, in writing, to the Legislative | ||
Inspector General. The response shall include a description of | ||
any corrective or disciplinary action to be imposed.
| ||
(b) The summary report of the investigation shall include | ||
the following:
| ||
(1) A description of any allegations or other | ||
information
received by the Legislative Inspector General | ||
pertinent to the
investigation.
| ||
(2) A description of any alleged misconduct discovered | ||
in the
course of the investigation.
| ||
(3) Recommendations for any corrective or disciplinary
| ||
action to be taken in response to any alleged misconduct | ||
described in the
report, including but not limited to | ||
discharge.
| ||
(4) Other information the Legislative Inspector | ||
General
deems relevant to the investigation or resulting | ||
recommendations.
| ||
(c) Within 30 days after receiving a response from the | ||
appropriate ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency head | ||
Not less than 30 days after delivery of the summary report of
| ||
an
investigation under subsection (a), the Legislative | ||
Inspector General shall notify the Commission and the Attorney | ||
General if the Legislative Inspector General believes that a | ||
complaint should be filed with the Commission. If
if the | ||
Legislative Inspector General desires to file a petition for | ||
leave to
file a
complaint with the Commission , the Legislative |
Inspector General shall submit the summary report and | ||
supporting documents to notify the Commission and
the
Attorney | ||
General. If the Attorney General concludes that there is | ||
insufficient evidence that a violation has occurred, the | ||
Attorney General shall notify the Legislative Inspector | ||
General and the Legislative Inspector General shall deliver to | ||
the Legislative Ethics Commission a copy of the summary report | ||
and response from the ultimate jurisdictional authority or | ||
agency head.
If the Attorney General determines
that reasonable | ||
cause exists to believe that a violation has occurred, then the
| ||
Legislative Inspector
General, represented by the Attorney
| ||
General, may file with the Legislative Ethics Commission a | ||
petition for
leave to file a complaint.
The complaint petition | ||
shall set
forth the alleged violation and the
grounds that | ||
exist to support the complaint petition . The petition for leave | ||
to
file a complaint must be filed with the Commission within 18 | ||
months
after the most recent act of the alleged violation or of | ||
a series of alleged
violations
except where there is reasonable | ||
cause to believe
that fraudulent concealment has occurred. To | ||
constitute fraudulent concealment
sufficient to toll this | ||
limitations period, there must be an affirmative act or
| ||
representation calculated to prevent discovery of the fact that | ||
a violation has
occurred.
If a petition for leave to file a | ||
complaint is not filed with the Commission
within 6 months | ||
after notice by the Inspector General to the Commission and the
| ||
Attorney General, then the Commission may set a meeting of the |
Commission at
which the Attorney General shall appear and | ||
provide a status
report to the Commission.
| ||
(c-5) Within 30 days after receiving a response from the | ||
appropriate ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency head | ||
under subsection (a), if the Legislative Inspector General does | ||
not believe that a complaint should be filed, the Legislative | ||
Inspector General shall deliver to the Legislative Ethics | ||
Commission a statement setting forth the basis for the decision | ||
not to file a complaint and a copy of the summary report and | ||
response from the ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency | ||
head. The Inspector General may also submit a redacted version | ||
of the summary report and response from the ultimate | ||
jurisdictional authority if the Inspector General believes | ||
either contains information that, in the opinion of the | ||
Inspector General, should be redacted prior to releasing the | ||
report, may interfere with an ongoing investigation, or | ||
identifies an informant or complainant. | ||
(c-10) If, after reviewing the documents, the Commission | ||
believes that further investigation is warranted, the | ||
Commission may request that the Legislative Inspector General | ||
provide additional information or conduct further | ||
investigation. The Commission may also refer the summary report | ||
and response from the ultimate jurisdictional authority to the | ||
Attorney General for further investigation or review. If the | ||
Commission requests the Attorney General to investigate or | ||
review, the Commission must notify the Attorney General and the |
Legislative Inspector General. The Attorney General may not | ||
begin an investigation or review until receipt of notice from | ||
the Commission. If, after review, the Attorney General | ||
determines that reasonable cause exists to believe that a | ||
violation has occurred, then the Attorney General may file a | ||
complaint with the Legislative Ethics Commission. If the | ||
Attorney General concludes that there is insufficient evidence | ||
that a violation has occurred, the Attorney General shall | ||
notify the Legislative Ethics Commission and the appropriate | ||
Legislative Inspector General. | ||
(d) A copy of the complaint filed with the Legislative | ||
Ethics Commission petition must be served on all respondents | ||
named in the
complaint and on each respondent's ultimate | ||
jurisdictional authority in
the same manner as process is | ||
served under the Code of Civil
Procedure.
| ||
(e) A respondent may file objections to the petition for | ||
leave to
file a complaint within 30 days after notice of the | ||
petition has been
served on the respondent.
| ||
(f) The Commission shall meet, at least 30 days after the | ||
complaint is served on all respondents either in person or by | ||
telephone,
in a closed session to review the sufficiency of the | ||
complaint.
If the Commission finds that complaint is | ||
sufficient, the Commission shall
grant the petition for leave | ||
to file the
complaint.
The Commission shall
issue notice by | ||
certified mail, return receipt requested, to the Legislative | ||
Inspector General , the Attorney General, and all respondents of
|
the Commission's ruling on the sufficiency of the complaint. If | ||
the complaint
is deemed to
sufficiently allege a violation of | ||
this Act, then the Commission shall notify
the parties and | ||
shall
include a hearing date scheduled within 4 weeks after the | ||
date of the notice,
unless all of the parties consent to a | ||
later date.
If the complaint is deemed not to sufficiently | ||
allege a
violation, then
the Commission shall send by certified | ||
mail, return receipt requested,
a notice to the Legislative | ||
Inspector General, the Attorney General, and all respondents | ||
the parties of the decision to dismiss the complaint.
| ||
(g) On the scheduled date
the Commission shall conduct a | ||
closed meeting,
either in person or, if the parties consent, by | ||
telephone, on the complaint and
allow all
parties the | ||
opportunity to present testimony and evidence.
All such | ||
proceedings shall be transcribed.
| ||
(h) Within an appropriate time limit set by rules of the | ||
Legislative
Ethics Commission, the Commission shall (i) | ||
dismiss the
complaint , or (ii) issue a recommendation of | ||
discipline to the
respondent and the respondent's ultimate | ||
jurisdictional authority , (iii) or
impose an administrative | ||
fine upon the respondent, (iv) issue injunctive relief as | ||
described in Section 50-10, or (v) impose a combination of (ii) | ||
through (iv) or both .
| ||
(i) The proceedings on any complaint filed with the | ||
Commission
shall be conducted pursuant to rules promulgated by | ||
the Commission.
|
(j) The Commission may designate hearing officers
to | ||
conduct proceedings as determined by rule of the Commission.
| ||
(k) In all proceedings before the Commission, the standard | ||
of
proof is by a preponderance of the evidence.
| ||
(l) Within 30 days after the issuance of a final | ||
administrative decision that concludes that a violation | ||
occurred, the Legislative Ethics Commission shall make public | ||
the entire record of proceedings before the Commission, the | ||
decision, any recommendation, any discipline imposed, and the | ||
response from the agency head or ultimate jurisdictional | ||
authority to the Legislative Ethics Commission. When the | ||
Inspector General concludes that there is insufficient
| ||
evidence that a violation has occurred, the Inspector General | ||
shall close the
investigation. At the request of the subject of | ||
the investigation, the
Inspector
General shall provide a | ||
written statement to the subject of the investigation
and to | ||
the Commission of
the Inspector General's decision to close the | ||
investigation. Closure by the
Inspector General does not bar | ||
the Inspector General from resuming the
investigation if | ||
circumstances warrant.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.) | ||
(5 ILCS 430/25-51 new) | ||
Sec. 25-51. Closed investigations. When the Legislative | ||
Inspector General concludes that there is insufficient | ||
evidence that a violation has occurred, the Inspector General |
shall close the investigation. The Legislative Inspector | ||
General shall provide the Commission with a written statement | ||
of the decision to close the investigation. At the request of | ||
the subject of the investigation, the Legislative Inspector | ||
General shall provide a written statement to the subject of the | ||
investigation of the Inspector General's decision to close the | ||
investigation. Closure by the Legislative Inspector General | ||
does not bar the Inspector General from resuming the | ||
investigation if circumstances warrant. The Commission also | ||
has the discretion to request that the Legislative Inspector | ||
General conduct further investigation of any matter closed | ||
pursuant to this Section, or to refer the allegations to the | ||
Attorney General for further review or investigation. If the | ||
Commission requests the Attorney General to investigate or | ||
review, the Commission must notify the Attorney General and the | ||
Inspector General. The Attorney General may not begin an | ||
investigation or review until receipt of notice from the | ||
Commission. | ||
(5 ILCS 430/25-52 new) | ||
Sec. 25-52. Release of summary reports. | ||
(a) Within 60 days after receipt of a summary report and | ||
response from the ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency | ||
head that resulted in a suspension of at least 3 days or | ||
termination of employment, the Legislative Ethics Commission | ||
shall make available to the public the report and response or a |
redacted version of the report and response. The Legislative | ||
Ethics Commission may make available to the public any other | ||
summary report and response of the ultimate jurisdictional | ||
authority or agency head or a redacted version of the report | ||
and response. | ||
(b) The Legislative Ethics Commission shall redact | ||
information in the summary report that may reveal the identity | ||
of witnesses, complainants, or informants or if the Commission | ||
determines it is appropriate to protect the identity of a | ||
person before publication. The Commission may also redact any | ||
information it believes should not be made public.
Prior to | ||
publication, the Commission shall permit the respondents, | ||
Legislative Inspector General, and Attorney General to review | ||
documents to be made public and offer suggestions for redaction | ||
or provide a response that shall be made public with the | ||
summary report. | ||
(c) The Legislative Ethics Commission may withhold | ||
publication of the report or response if the Legislative | ||
Inspector General or Attorney General certifies that | ||
publication will interfere with an ongoing investigation. | ||
(5 ILCS 430/25-65)
| ||
Sec. 25-65. Reporting of investigations Investigations not | ||
concluded within 6 months . | ||
(a) The Legislative Inspector General shall file a | ||
quarterly activity report with the Legislative Ethics |
Commission that reflects investigative activity during the | ||
previous quarter. The Legislative Ethics Commission shall | ||
establish the reporting dates. The activity report shall | ||
include at least the following: | ||
(1) A summary of any investigation opened during the | ||
preceding quarter, the affected office, agency or | ||
agencies, the investigation's unique tracking number, and | ||
a brief statement of the general nature of the allegation | ||
or allegations. | ||
(2) A summary of any investigation closed during the | ||
preceding quarter, the affected office, agency or | ||
agencies, the investigation's unique tracking number, and | ||
a brief statement of the general nature of the allegation | ||
or allegations. | ||
(3) The status of an ongoing investigation that | ||
remained open at the end of the quarter, the affected | ||
office, agency or agencies, the investigation's unique | ||
tracking number, and a brief statement of the general | ||
nature of the investigation. | ||
(b) If
any investigation is not concluded within 6 months | ||
after its initiation,
the Legislative Inspector General shall | ||
file a 6-month report with notify the Legislative
Ethics | ||
Commission no later than 10 days after the 6th month. The | ||
6-month report shall disclose: and appropriate ultimate | ||
jurisdictional authority
of the | ||
(1) The general nature of the allegation or information |
giving rise to the
investigation , the title or job duties | ||
of the subjects of the investigation, and the | ||
investigation's unique tracking number. | ||
(2) The date of the last alleged violation of this Act | ||
or other State law giving rise to the investigation. | ||
(3) Whether the Legislative Inspector General has | ||
found credible the allegations of criminal conduct. | ||
(4) Whether the allegation has been referred to an | ||
appropriate law enforcement agency and the identity of the | ||
law enforcement agency to which those allegations were | ||
referred. | ||
(5) If an allegation has not been referred to an | ||
appropriate law enforcement agency, and the reasons for the | ||
failure to complete the investigation
within 6 months , a | ||
summary of the investigative steps taken, additional | ||
investigative steps contemplated at the time of the report, | ||
and an estimate of additional time necessary to complete | ||
the investigation. | ||
(6) Any other information deemed necessary by the | ||
Legislative Ethics Commission in determining whether to | ||
appoint a Special Inspector General. | ||
(c) If the Legislative Inspector General has referred an | ||
allegation to an appropriate law enforcement agency and | ||
continues to investigate the matter, the future reporting | ||
requirements of this Section are suspended .
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.) |
(5 ILCS 430/25-95)
| ||
Sec. 25-95. Exemptions.
| ||
(a) Documents generated by an ethics
officer under this | ||
Act, except Section 5-50, are exempt from the provisions of
the | ||
Freedom
of Information Act.
| ||
(a-5) Requests from ethics officers, members, and State | ||
employees to the Office of the Legislative Inspector General, a | ||
Special Legislative Inspector General, the Legislative Ethics | ||
Commission, an ethics officer, or a person designated by a | ||
legislative leader for guidance on matters involving the | ||
interpretation or application of this Act or rules promulgated | ||
under this Act are exempt from the provisions of the Freedom of | ||
Information Act. Guidance provided to an ethics officer, | ||
member, or State employee at the request of an ethics officer, | ||
member, or State employee by the Office of the Legislative | ||
Inspector General, a Special Legislative Inspector General, | ||
the Legislative Ethics Commission, an ethics officer, or a | ||
person designated by a legislative leader on matters involving | ||
the interpretation or application of this Act or rules | ||
promulgated under this Act is exempt from the provisions of the | ||
Freedom of Information Act.
| ||
(b) Summary investigation reports released by the | ||
Legislative Ethics Commission as provided in Section 25-52 are | ||
public records. Otherwise, any Any allegations
and related | ||
documents
submitted to the Legislative Inspector General and |
any pleadings and
related documents brought before the | ||
Legislative Ethics
Commission are exempt from the provisions of | ||
the Freedom of
Information Act so long as the Legislative | ||
Ethics Commission
does not make a finding of a violation of | ||
this Act.
If the Legislative
Ethics Commission finds that a | ||
violation has occurred, the
entire record of proceedings before | ||
the Commission, the decision and
recommendation, and the | ||
mandatory report from the agency head or
ultimate | ||
jurisdictional authority to the Legislative Ethics
Commission | ||
are not exempt from the provisions of the Freedom of
| ||
Information Act but information contained therein that is | ||
exempt from the
Freedom of Information Act must be redacted | ||
before disclosure as provided in
Section 8 of the Freedom of | ||
Information Act.
| ||
(c) Meetings of the Commission under
Sections 25-5
and | ||
25-15 of this Act are exempt from the provisions of the Open
| ||
Meetings Act.
| ||
(d) Unless otherwise provided in this Act, all | ||
investigatory files and
reports of the Office of the | ||
Legislative Inspector General, other than
monthly quarterly
| ||
reports, are confidential, are exempt from disclosure
under the | ||
Freedom of Information Act, and shall not be divulged to
any | ||
person or agency, except as necessary (i) to the appropriate | ||
law
enforcement
authority if the matter is referred pursuant to | ||
this Act, (ii) to the ultimate
jurisdictional authority, or | ||
(iii) to the
Legislative Ethics Commission.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03; 93-685, eff. 7-8-04.) | ||
(5 ILCS 430/35-5)
| ||
Sec. 35-5. Appointment of Inspectors General. Nothing in | ||
this Act
precludes
the appointment by the Governor, the | ||
Lieutenant Governor, the Attorney General,
the
Secretary of | ||
State, the Comptroller, or the Treasurer of any inspector | ||
general
required
or permitted by law. Nothing in this Act | ||
precludes the Governor, the Attorney
General,
the Secretary of | ||
State, the Comptroller, or the Treasurer from appointing an
| ||
existing
inspector general under his or her jurisdiction to | ||
serve simultaneously as an
Executive
Inspector General. This | ||
Act shall be read consistently with all existing State
statutes
| ||
that create inspectors general under the jurisdiction of an | ||
executive branch
constitutional officer.
| ||
This Act prohibits the appointment or employment by an | ||
officer, member, State employee, or State agency of any person | ||
to serve or act with respect to one or more State agencies as | ||
an Inspector General under this Act except as authorized and | ||
required by Articles 20, 25, and 30 of this Act or Section 14 | ||
of the Secretary of State Act. No officer, member, State | ||
employee, or State agency may appoint or employ an inspector | ||
general for any purpose except as authorized or required by | ||
law. | ||
(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.) |
(5 ILCS 430/50-5)
| ||
Sec. 50-5. Penalties.
| ||
(a) A person is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor if that | ||
person intentionally
violates any provision of Section 5-15, | ||
5-30, 5-40, or 5-45 or Article 15.
| ||
(a-1) An ethics commission may levy an administrative fine | ||
for a violation of Section 5-45 of this Act of up to 3 times the | ||
total annual compensation that would have been obtained in | ||
violation of Section 5-45. | ||
(b) A person who intentionally violates any provision
of | ||
Section 5-20, 5-35, 5-50, or 5-55 is guilty of a business | ||
offense
subject to a fine of at least $1,001 and up to $5,000.
| ||
(c) A person who intentionally violates any provision of | ||
Article 10 is
guilty of a business
offense and subject to a | ||
fine of at least $1,001 and up to $5,000.
| ||
(d) Any person who intentionally makes a
false report | ||
alleging a violation of any provision of this Act to an ethics
| ||
commission,
an inspector general,
the State Police, a State's | ||
Attorney, the Attorney General, or any other law
enforcement | ||
official is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
| ||
(e) An ethics commission may levy an administrative fine of | ||
up to $5,000
against any person
who violates this Act, who | ||
intentionally obstructs or interferes with an
investigation
| ||
conducted under this Act by an inspector general, or who
| ||
intentionally makes a false, frivolous, or bad faith | ||
allegation.
|
(f) In addition to any other penalty that may apply, | ||
whether criminal or
civil, a State employee who intentionally | ||
violates
any provision of Section 5-5, 5-15, 5-20, 5-30, 5-35, | ||
5-45 5-40 , or 5-50, Article 10,
Article 15, or Section 20-90 or | ||
25-90 is subject to discipline or discharge by
the
appropriate | ||
ultimate
jurisdictional authority.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-615, eff. 11-19-03; 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.) | ||
(5 ILCS 430/50-10 new)
| ||
Sec. 50-10. Injunctive relief. | ||
(a) For a violation of any Section of this Act, an ethics | ||
commission may issue appropriate injunctive relief up to and | ||
including discharge of a State employee. | ||
(b) Any injunctive relief issued pursuant to this Section | ||
must comport with the requirements of Section 20-40.
| ||
(5 ILCS 430/20-40 rep.)
| ||
Section 15. The State Officials and Employees Ethics Act is | ||
amended by repealing Section 20-40. | ||
Section 20. The Secretary of State Act is amended by | ||
changing Section 14 as follows:
| ||
(15 ILCS 305/14)
| ||
Sec. 14. Inspector General.
| ||
(a) The Secretary of State must, with the advice and |
consent of the Senate,
appoint an Inspector General for the | ||
purpose of detection, deterrence, and
prevention of fraud,
| ||
corruption, mismanagement, gross or aggravated misconduct, or | ||
misconduct
that may be criminal in nature in the Office of the | ||
Secretary of State. The
Inspector General shall serve a 5-year | ||
term.
If no successor is appointed and qualified upon the
| ||
expiration of the Inspector General's term, the Office of | ||
Inspector General is
deemed vacant and the powers and duties | ||
under this Section may be exercised
only by an appointed and | ||
qualified interim Inspector General until a successor
| ||
Inspector General is appointed and qualified.
If the General | ||
Assembly is not in session when a vacancy in the Office of
| ||
Inspector General occurs, the Secretary of State may appoint an | ||
interim
Inspector General whose term shall expire 2 weeks after | ||
the next
regularly scheduled session day of the Senate.
| ||
(b) The Inspector General shall have the following | ||
qualifications:
| ||
(1) has not been convicted of any felony under the laws | ||
of this State,
another State, or the United States;
| ||
(2) has earned a baccalaureate degree from an | ||
institution of higher
education; and
| ||
(3) has either (A) 5 or more years of service with a | ||
federal, State, or
local law enforcement agency, at least 2 | ||
years of which have been in a
progressive investigatory | ||
capacity; (B) 5 or more years of service as a
federal, | ||
State, or local prosecutor; or (C) 5 or more years of |
service as a
senior manager or executive of a federal, | ||
State, or local
agency.
| ||
(c) The Inspector General may review, coordinate, and | ||
recommend methods and
procedures to increase the integrity of | ||
the Office of the Secretary of State.
The duties of the | ||
Inspector General shall
supplement and not supplant the duties | ||
of the Chief Auditor for the Secretary
of State's Office or any | ||
other Inspector General that may be authorized by law.
The | ||
Inspector General must report directly to the Secretary
of | ||
State.
| ||
(d) In addition to the authority otherwise provided by this | ||
Section, but
only when investigating the Office of the | ||
Secretary of State, its employees, or
their actions for
fraud, | ||
corruption, mismanagement, gross or aggravated misconduct, or
| ||
misconduct that may be criminal in nature, the Inspector | ||
General is
authorized:
| ||
(1) To have access to all records, reports, audits, | ||
reviews, documents,
papers, recommendations, or other | ||
materials available that relate to programs
and operations | ||
with respect to which the Inspector General has | ||
responsibilities
under this Section.
| ||
(2) To make any investigations and reports relating to | ||
the administration
of the programs and operations of the | ||
Office of the Secretary of State that
are, in the judgment | ||
judgement of the Inspector General, necessary or | ||
desirable.
|
(3) To request any information or assistance that may | ||
be necessary for
carrying out the duties and | ||
responsibilities provided by this Section from any
local, | ||
State, or federal governmental agency or unit thereof.
| ||
(4) To require by subpoena the
appearance of witnesses | ||
and the production of all information, documents,
reports, | ||
answers, records, accounts, papers, and other data and | ||
documentary
evidence necessary in the performance of the | ||
functions assigned by this
Section, with the exception of | ||
subsection (c) and with the exception of records
of a labor
| ||
organization authorized and recognized under the Illinois | ||
Public Labor
Relations
Act to be the exclusive bargaining | ||
representative of employees of the Secretary
of State, | ||
including, but not limited to, records of representation of | ||
employees
and
the negotiation of collective bargaining | ||
agreements. A subpoena may be issued
under
this paragraph | ||
(4) only by the
Inspector General and not by members of the | ||
Inspector General's staff.
A person duly
subpoenaed for | ||
testimony, documents, or other items who neglects or | ||
refuses to
testify or produce documents or other items | ||
under the requirements of the
subpoena shall be subject to | ||
punishment as
may be determined by a court of competent | ||
jurisdiction, unless (i) the
testimony, documents, or | ||
other items are covered by the attorney-client
privilege or
| ||
any other privilege or right recognized by law or (ii) the | ||
testimony,
documents, or other items concern the |
representation of employees and the
negotiation of | ||
collective bargaining agreements by a labor
organization | ||
authorized and recognized under the Illinois Public
Labor | ||
Relations Act to be the exclusive bargaining | ||
representative of
employees of the Secretary of State. | ||
Nothing in this Section limits a
person's right to | ||
protection against self-incrimination under the Fifth
| ||
Amendment of the United States Constitution or Article I, | ||
Section 10,
of the Constitution of the State of Illinois.
| ||
(5) To have direct and prompt access to the Secretary | ||
of State for any
purpose pertaining to the performance of | ||
functions and responsibilities under
this Section.
| ||
(d-5) In addition to the authority otherwise provided by | ||
this Section, the Secretary of State Inspector General shall | ||
have jurisdiction to investigate complaints and allegations of | ||
wrongdoing by any person or entity related to the Lobbyist | ||
Registration Act. When investigating those complaints and | ||
allegations, the Inspector General is authorized: | ||
(1) To have access to all records, reports, audits, | ||
reviews, documents, papers, recommendations, or other | ||
materials available that relate to programs and operations | ||
with respect to which the Inspector General has | ||
responsibilities under this Section. | ||
(2) To request any information or assistance that may | ||
be necessary for carrying out the duties and | ||
responsibilities provided by this Section from any local, |
State, or federal governmental agency or unit thereof. | ||
(3) To require by subpoena the appearance of witnesses | ||
and the production of all information, documents, reports, | ||
answers, records, accounts, papers, and other data and | ||
documentary evidence necessary in the performance of the | ||
functions assigned by this Section. A subpoena may be | ||
issued under this paragraph (3) only by the Inspector | ||
General and not by members of the Inspector General's | ||
staff. A person duly subpoenaed for testimony, documents, | ||
or other items who neglects or refuses to testify or | ||
produce documents or other items under the requirements of | ||
the subpoena shall be subject to punishment as may be | ||
determined by a court of competent jurisdiction, unless the | ||
testimony, documents, or other items are covered by the | ||
attorney-client privilege or any other privilege or right | ||
recognized by law. Nothing in this Section limits a | ||
person's right to protection against self-incrimination | ||
under the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution | ||
or Section 10 of Article I of the Constitution of the State | ||
of Illinois. | ||
(4) To have direct and prompt access to the Secretary | ||
of State for any purpose pertaining to the performance of | ||
functions and responsibilities under this Section.
| ||
(e) The Inspector General may receive and investigate | ||
complaints or
information from an employee of the Secretary of | ||
State concerning the possible
existence of an activity |
constituting a violation of law, rules, or
regulations; | ||
mismanagement; abuse of authority; or substantial and specific
| ||
danger to the public health and safety. Any person
employee who | ||
knowingly files a
false
complaint or files a complaint with | ||
reckless disregard for the truth or the
falsity
of the facts | ||
underlying the complaint may be subject to discipline as set | ||
forth
in the rules of the Department of Personnel of the | ||
Secretary of State.
| ||
The Inspector General may not, after receipt of a complaint | ||
or information
from an employee , disclose the
identity of the | ||
source
employee without the consent of the source
employee , | ||
unless the
Inspector General determines that
disclosure of the | ||
identity is reasonable and necessary for the furtherance of
the
| ||
investigation.
| ||
Any employee who has the authority to recommend or
approve | ||
any personnel action or to direct others to recommend or | ||
approve any
personnel action may not, with respect to that | ||
authority, take or threaten to
take any action against any | ||
employee as a reprisal for making a
complaint or disclosing | ||
information to the Inspector General, unless the
complaint was | ||
made or the information disclosed with the knowledge that it | ||
was
false or with willful disregard for its truth or falsity.
| ||
(f) The Inspector General must adopt rules, in accordance | ||
with the
provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure | ||
Act, establishing minimum
requirements for initiating, | ||
conducting, and completing investigations. The
rules must |
establish criteria for determining, based upon the nature of | ||
the
allegation, the appropriate method of investigation, which | ||
may include, but is
not limited to, site visits, telephone | ||
contacts, personal interviews, or
requests for written | ||
responses. The rules must also clarify how the Office of
the | ||
Inspector General shall interact with other local, State, and | ||
federal law
enforcement investigations.
| ||
Any employee of the Secretary of State subject to | ||
investigation or inquiry
by the Inspector General or any agent | ||
or representative of the Inspector
General concerning | ||
misconduct that is criminal in nature shall have the right
to | ||
be notified of the right to remain silent
during the | ||
investigation or inquiry and the right to be represented in the
| ||
investigation or inquiry by an attorney or a representative of | ||
a labor
organization that is
the exclusive collective | ||
bargaining representative of employees of the
Secretary of | ||
State.
Any investigation or inquiry by the Inspector General or | ||
any agent or
representative of the Inspector General must be | ||
conducted with an awareness of
the provisions of a collective | ||
bargaining agreement that applies to the
employees
of the | ||
Secretary of State and with an awareness of the rights of the | ||
employees
as set forth in State and federal law and applicable | ||
judicial decisions. Any
recommendations for discipline or any | ||
action taken
against any employee by the
Inspector General or | ||
any representative or agent of the Inspector General must
| ||
comply with the provisions of the collective bargaining |
agreement that applies
to the employee.
| ||
(g) On or before January 1 of each year, the Inspector | ||
General shall report
to the President of the Senate, the | ||
Minority Leader of the Senate, the Speaker
of the House of | ||
Representatives, and the Minority Leader of the House of
| ||
Representatives on the types of investigations and the | ||
activities undertaken by
the Office of the Inspector General | ||
during the previous calendar year.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-559, eff. 8-20-03.)
| ||
Section 25. The Secretary of State Merit Employment Code is | ||
amended by adding Section 17.5 as follows: | ||
(15 ILCS 310/17.5 new) | ||
Sec. 17.5. State Officials and Employees Ethics Act. | ||
(a) Disciplinary action under the State Officials and | ||
Employees Ethics Act against a person subject to this Act is | ||
within the jurisdiction of the Executive Ethics Commission and | ||
is not within the jurisdiction of this Act. | ||
(b) Any hearing to contest disciplinary action against a | ||
person subject to this Act pursuant to an agreement between an | ||
Executive Inspector General and an ultimate jurisdictional | ||
authority, as defined in the State Officials and Employees | ||
Ethics Act, shall be conducted by the Executive Ethics | ||
Commission and not under this Act, at the request of that | ||
person. |
Section 30. The Comptroller Merit Employment Code is | ||
amended by adding Section 17.5 as follows: | ||
(15 ILCS 410/17.5 new) | ||
Sec. 17.5. State Officials and Employees Ethics Act. | ||
(a) Disciplinary action under the State Officials and | ||
Employees Ethics Act against a person subject to this Act is | ||
within the jurisdiction of the Executive Ethics Commission and | ||
is not within the jurisdiction of this Act. | ||
(b) Any hearing to contest disciplinary action against a | ||
person subject to this Act pursuant to an agreement between an | ||
Executive Inspector General and an ultimate jurisdictional | ||
authority, as defined in the State Officials and Employees | ||
Ethics Act, shall be conducted by the Executive Ethics | ||
Commission and not under this Act, at the request of that | ||
person. | ||
Section 35. The State Treasurer Employment Code is amended | ||
by adding Section 14.5 as follows: | ||
(15 ILCS 510/14.5 new) | ||
Sec. 14.5. State Officials and Employees Ethics Act. | ||
(a) Disciplinary action under the State Officials and | ||
Employees Ethics Act against a person subject to this Act is | ||
within the jurisdiction of the Executive Ethics Commission and |
is not within the jurisdiction of this Act. | ||
(b) Any hearing to contest disciplinary action against a | ||
person subject to this Act pursuant to an agreement between an | ||
Executive Inspector General and an ultimate jurisdictional | ||
authority, as defined in the State Officials and Employees | ||
Ethics Act, shall be conducted by the Executive Ethics | ||
Commission and not under this Act, at the request of that | ||
person. | ||
Section 40. The Personnel Code is amended by adding Section | ||
20 as follows: | ||
(20 ILCS 415/20 new) | ||
Sec. 20. State Officials and Employees Ethics Act. | ||
(a) Disciplinary action under the State Officials and | ||
Employees Ethics Act against a person subject to this Act is | ||
within the jurisdiction of the Executive Ethics Commission and | ||
is not within the jurisdiction of this Act. | ||
(b) Any hearing to contest disciplinary action against a | ||
person subject to this Act pursuant to an agreement between an | ||
Executive Inspector General and an ultimate jurisdictional | ||
authority, as defined in the State Officials and Employees | ||
Ethics Act, shall be conducted by the Executive Ethics | ||
Commission and not under this Act.
| ||
Section 45. The Children and Family Services Act is amended |
by changing Section 35.5 as follows:
| ||
(20 ILCS 505/35.5)
| ||
Sec. 35.5. Inspector General.
| ||
(a) The Governor shall appoint, and the Senate shall | ||
confirm, an Inspector
General who shall
have the authority to | ||
conduct investigations into allegations of or incidents
of | ||
possible misconduct, misfeasance, malfeasance, or violations | ||
of rules,
procedures, or laws by any employee, foster parent, | ||
service provider, or
contractor of the Department of Children | ||
and Family Services , except for allegations of violations of | ||
the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act which shall be | ||
referred to the Office of the Governor's Executive Inspector | ||
General for investigation . The Inspector
General shall make | ||
recommendations
to the Director of Children and Family Services | ||
concerning sanctions or
disciplinary actions against | ||
Department
employees or providers of service under contract to | ||
the Department. The Director of Children and Family Services | ||
shall provide the Inspector General with an implementation | ||
report on the status of any corrective actions taken on | ||
recommendations under review and shall continue sending | ||
updated reports until the corrective action is completed. The | ||
Director shall provide a written response to the Inspector | ||
General indicating the status of any sanctions or disciplinary | ||
actions against employees or providers of service involving any | ||
investigation subject to review. In any case, information |
included in the reports to the Inspector General and Department | ||
responses shall be subject to the public disclosure | ||
requirements of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
| ||
Any
investigation
conducted by the Inspector General shall be | ||
independent and separate from the
investigation mandated by the | ||
Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act. The
Inspector General | ||
shall be appointed for a term of 4 years. The Inspector
General | ||
shall function independently within the Department of Children | ||
and Family Services with respect to the operations of the | ||
Office of Inspector General, including the performance of | ||
investigations and issuance of findings and recommendations, | ||
and shall
report to the Director of Children and Family | ||
Services and the Governor and
perform other
duties the Director | ||
may designate. The Inspector General shall adopt rules
as | ||
necessary to carry out the
functions, purposes, and duties of | ||
the office of Inspector General in the
Department of Children | ||
and Family Services, in accordance with the Illinois
| ||
Administrative Procedure Act and any other applicable law.
| ||
(b) The Inspector
General shall have access to all | ||
information and personnel necessary to perform
the duties of | ||
the office. To minimize duplication of efforts, and to assure
| ||
consistency and conformance with the requirements and | ||
procedures established in
the B.H. v. Suter consent decree and | ||
to share resources
when appropriate, the Inspector General | ||
shall coordinate his or her
activities with the Bureau of | ||
Quality Assurance within the Department.
|
(c) The Inspector General shall be the primary liaison | ||
between the
Department and the Department of State Police with | ||
regard to investigations
conducted under the Inspector | ||
General's auspices.
If the Inspector General determines that a | ||
possible criminal act
has been committed,
or that special | ||
expertise is required in the investigation, he or she shall
| ||
immediately notify the Department of State Police.
All | ||
investigations conducted by the Inspector General shall be
| ||
conducted in a manner designed to ensure the preservation of | ||
evidence for
possible use in a criminal prosecution.
| ||
(d) The Inspector General may recommend to the Department | ||
of Children and
Family Services, the Department of Public | ||
Health, or any other appropriate
agency, sanctions to be | ||
imposed against service providers under the
jurisdiction of or | ||
under contract with the Department for the protection of
| ||
children in the custody or under the guardianship of the | ||
Department who
received services from those providers. The | ||
Inspector General may seek the
assistance of the Attorney | ||
General or any of the several State's Attorneys in
imposing | ||
sanctions.
| ||
(e) The Inspector General shall at all times be granted | ||
access to any foster
home, facility, or program operated for or | ||
licensed or funded by the
Department.
| ||
(f) Nothing in this Section shall limit investigations by | ||
the Department of
Children and Family Services that may | ||
otherwise be required by law or that may
be necessary in that |
Department's capacity as the central administrative
authority | ||
for child welfare.
| ||
(g) The Inspector General shall have the power to subpoena | ||
witnesses and
compel the production of books and papers | ||
pertinent to an investigation
authorized by this Act. The power | ||
to subpoena or to compel the
production of books and papers, | ||
however, shall not extend to the person or
documents of a
labor | ||
organization or its representatives insofar as the person or | ||
documents of
a labor organization relate to the function of | ||
representing an employee subject
to investigation under this | ||
Act. Any person who fails to appear in response to
a subpoena | ||
or to answer any question or produce any books or papers | ||
pertinent
to an investigation under this Act, except as | ||
otherwise provided in this
Section, or who knowingly gives | ||
false testimony in relation to an investigation
under this Act | ||
is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
| ||
(h) The Inspector General shall provide to the General | ||
Assembly and the
Governor, no later than January 1 of each | ||
year, a summary of reports and
investigations made under this | ||
Section for the prior fiscal year. The
summaries shall detail | ||
the imposition of sanctions and the final disposition
of those | ||
recommendations. The summaries shall not contain any | ||
confidential or
identifying information concerning the | ||
subjects of the reports and
investigations. The summaries also | ||
shall include detailed recommended
administrative actions and | ||
matters for consideration by the General Assembly.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-527, eff. 6-1-08 .)
| ||
Section 50. The Department of Human Services Act is amended | ||
by changing Section 1-17 as follows: | ||
(20 ILCS 1305/1-17) | ||
Sec. 1-17. Inspector General. | ||
(a) Appointment; powers and duties. The Governor shall | ||
appoint, and the Senate shall confirm, an Inspector General. | ||
The Inspector General shall be appointed for a term of 4 years | ||
and shall function within the Department of Human Services and | ||
report to the Secretary of Human Services and the Governor. The | ||
Inspector General shall function independently within the | ||
Department of Human Services with respect to the operations of | ||
the office, including the performance of investigations and | ||
issuance of findings and recommendations. The appropriation | ||
for the Office of Inspector General shall be separate from the | ||
overall appropriation for the Department of Human Services. The | ||
Inspector General shall investigate reports of suspected abuse | ||
or neglect (as those terms are defined by the Department of | ||
Human Services) of patients or residents in any mental health | ||
or developmental disabilities facility operated by the | ||
Department of Human Services and shall have authority to | ||
investigate and take immediate action on reports of abuse or | ||
neglect of recipients, whether patients or residents, in any | ||
mental health or developmental disabilities facility or |
program that is licensed or certified by the Department of | ||
Human Services (as successor to the Department of Mental Health | ||
and Developmental Disabilities) or that is funded by the | ||
Department of Human Services (as successor to the Department of | ||
Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities) and is not | ||
licensed or certified by any agency of the State. The Inspector | ||
General shall also have the authority to investigate alleged or | ||
suspected cases of abuse, neglect, and exploitation of adults | ||
with disabilities living in domestic settings in the community | ||
pursuant to the Abuse of Adults with Disabilities Intervention | ||
Act (20 ILCS 2435/). At the specific, written request of an | ||
agency of the State other than the Department of Human Services | ||
(as successor to the Department of Mental Health and | ||
Developmental Disabilities), the Inspector General may | ||
cooperate in investigating reports of abuse and neglect of | ||
persons with mental illness or persons with developmental | ||
disabilities. The Inspector General shall have no supervision | ||
over or involvement in routine, programmatic, licensure, or | ||
certification operations of the Department of Human Services or | ||
any of its funded agencies. The Inspector General shall have no | ||
authority to investigate alleged violations of the State | ||
Officials and Employees Ethics Act. Allegations of misconduct | ||
under the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act shall be | ||
referred to the Office of the Governor's Executive Inspector | ||
General for investigation. | ||
The Inspector General shall promulgate rules establishing |
minimum requirements for reporting allegations of abuse and | ||
neglect and initiating, conducting, and completing | ||
investigations. The promulgated rules shall clearly set forth | ||
that in instances where 2 or more State agencies could | ||
investigate an allegation of abuse or neglect, the Inspector | ||
General shall not conduct an investigation that is redundant to | ||
an investigation conducted by another State agency. The rules | ||
shall establish criteria for determining, based upon the nature | ||
of the allegation, the appropriate method of investigation, | ||
which may include, but need not be limited to, site visits, | ||
telephone contacts, or requests for written responses from | ||
agencies. The rules shall also clarify how the Office of the | ||
Inspector General shall interact with the licensing unit of the | ||
Department of Human Services in investigations of allegations | ||
of abuse or neglect. Any allegations or investigations of | ||
reports made pursuant to this Act shall remain confidential | ||
until a final report is completed. The resident or patient who | ||
allegedly was abused or neglected and his or her legal guardian | ||
shall be informed by the facility or agency of the report of | ||
alleged abuse or neglect. Final reports regarding | ||
unsubstantiated or unfounded allegations shall remain | ||
confidential, except that final reports may be disclosed | ||
pursuant to Section 6 of the Abused and Neglected Long Term | ||
Care Facility Residents Reporting Act. | ||
For purposes of this Section, "required reporter" means a | ||
person who suspects, witnesses, or is informed of an allegation |
of abuse and neglect at a State-operated facility or a | ||
community agency and who is either: (i) a person employed at a | ||
State-operated facility or a community agency on or off site | ||
who is providing or monitoring services to an individual or | ||
individuals or is providing services to the State-operated | ||
facility or the community agency; or (ii) any person or | ||
contractual agent of the Department of Human Services involved | ||
in providing, monitoring, or administering mental health or | ||
developmental services, including, but not limited to, payroll | ||
personnel, contractors, subcontractors, and volunteers. A | ||
required reporter shall report the allegation of abuse or | ||
neglect, or cause a report to be made, to the Office of the | ||
Inspector General (OIG) Hotline no later than 4 hours after the | ||
initial discovery of the incident of alleged abuse or neglect. | ||
A required reporter as defined in this paragraph who willfully | ||
fails to comply with the reporting requirement is guilty of a | ||
Class A misdemeanor. | ||
For purposes of this Section, "State-operated facility" | ||
means a mental health facility or a developmental disability | ||
facility as defined in Sections 1-114 and 1-107 of the Mental | ||
Health and Developmental Disabilities Code. | ||
For purposes of this Section, "community agency" or | ||
"agency" means any community entity or program providing mental | ||
health or developmental disabilities services that is | ||
licensed, certified, or funded by the Department of Human | ||
Services and is not licensed or certified by an other human |
services agency of the State (for example, the Department of | ||
Public Health, the Department of Children and Family Services, | ||
or the Department of Healthcare and Family Services). | ||
When the Office of the Inspector General has substantiated | ||
a case of abuse or neglect, the Inspector General shall include | ||
in the final report any mitigating or aggravating circumstances | ||
that were identified during the investigation. Upon | ||
determination that a report of neglect is substantiated, the | ||
Inspector General shall then determine whether such neglect | ||
rises to the level of egregious neglect. | ||
(b) Department of State Police. The Inspector General | ||
shall, within 24 hours after determining that a reported | ||
allegation of suspected abuse or neglect indicates that any | ||
possible criminal act has been committed or that special | ||
expertise is required in the investigation, immediately notify | ||
the Department of State Police or the appropriate law | ||
enforcement entity. The Department of State Police shall | ||
investigate any report from a State-operated facility | ||
indicating a possible murder, rape, or other felony. All | ||
investigations conducted by the Inspector General shall be | ||
conducted in a manner designed to ensure the preservation of | ||
evidence for possible use in a criminal prosecution. | ||
(b-5) Preliminary report of investigation; facility or | ||
agency response. The Inspector General shall make a | ||
determination to accept or reject a preliminary report of the | ||
investigation of alleged abuse or neglect based on established |
investigative procedures. Notice of the Inspector General's | ||
determination must be given to the person who claims to be the | ||
victim of the abuse or neglect, to the person or persons | ||
alleged to have been responsible for abuse or neglect, and to | ||
the facility or agency. The facility or agency or the person or | ||
persons alleged to have been responsible for the abuse or | ||
neglect and the person who claims to be the victim of the abuse | ||
or neglect may request clarification or reconsideration based | ||
on additional information. For cases where the allegation of | ||
abuse or neglect is substantiated, the Inspector General shall | ||
require the facility or agency to submit a written response. | ||
The written response from a facility or agency shall address in | ||
a concise and reasoned manner the actions that the agency or | ||
facility will take or has taken to protect the resident or | ||
patient from abuse or neglect, prevent reoccurrences, and | ||
eliminate problems identified and shall include implementation | ||
and completion dates for all such action. | ||
(c) Inspector General's report; facility's or agency's | ||
implementation reports. The Inspector General shall, within 10 | ||
calendar days after the transmittal date of a completed | ||
investigation where abuse or neglect is substantiated or | ||
administrative action is recommended, provide a complete | ||
report on the case to the Secretary of Human Services and to | ||
the agency in which the abuse or neglect is alleged to have | ||
happened. The complete report shall include a written response | ||
from the agency or facility operated by the State to the |
Inspector General that addresses in a concise and reasoned | ||
manner the actions that the agency or facility will take or has | ||
taken to protect the resident or patient from abuse or neglect, | ||
prevent reoccurrences, and eliminate problems identified and | ||
shall include implementation and completion dates for all such | ||
action. The Secretary of Human Services shall accept or reject | ||
the response and establish how the Department will determine | ||
whether the facility or program followed the approved response. | ||
The Secretary may require Department personnel to visit the | ||
facility or agency for training, technical assistance, | ||
programmatic, licensure, or certification purposes. | ||
Administrative action, including sanctions, may be applied | ||
should the Secretary reject the response or should the facility | ||
or agency fail to follow the approved response. Within 30 days | ||
after the Secretary has approved a response, the facility or | ||
agency making the response shall provide an implementation | ||
report to the Inspector General on the status of the corrective | ||
action implemented. Within 60 days after the Secretary has | ||
approved the response, the facility or agency shall send notice | ||
of the completion of the corrective action or shall send an | ||
updated implementation report. The facility or agency shall | ||
continue sending updated implementation reports every 60 days | ||
until the facility or agency sends a notice of the completion | ||
of the corrective action. The Inspector General shall review | ||
any implementation plan that takes more than 120 days. The | ||
Inspector General shall monitor compliance through a random |
review of completed corrective actions. This monitoring may | ||
include, but need not be limited to, site visits, telephone | ||
contacts, or requests for written documentation from the | ||
facility or agency to determine whether the facility or agency | ||
is in compliance with the approved response. The facility or | ||
agency shall inform the resident or patient and the legal | ||
guardian whether the reported allegation was substantiated, | ||
unsubstantiated, or unfounded. There shall be an appeals | ||
process for any person or agency that is subject to any action | ||
based on a recommendation or recommendations. | ||
(d) Sanctions. The Inspector General may recommend to the | ||
Departments of Public Health and Human Services sanctions to be | ||
imposed against mental health and developmental disabilities | ||
facilities under the jurisdiction of the Department of Human | ||
Services for the protection of residents, including | ||
appointment of on-site monitors or receivers, transfer or | ||
relocation of residents, and closure of units. The Inspector | ||
General may seek the assistance of the Attorney General or any | ||
of the several State's Attorneys in imposing such sanctions. | ||
Whenever the Inspector General issues any recommendations to | ||
the Secretary of Human Services, the Secretary shall provide a | ||
written response. | ||
(e) Training programs. The Inspector General shall | ||
establish and conduct periodic training programs for | ||
Department of Human Services employees and community agency | ||
employees concerning the prevention and reporting of neglect |
and abuse. | ||
(f) Access to facilities. The Inspector General shall at | ||
all times be granted access to any mental health or | ||
developmental disabilities facility operated by the Department | ||
of Human Services, shall establish and conduct unannounced site | ||
visits to those facilities at least once annually, and shall be | ||
granted access, for the purpose of investigating a report of | ||
abuse or neglect, to the records of the Department of Human | ||
Services and to any facility or program funded by the | ||
Department of Human Services that is subject under the | ||
provisions of this Section to investigation by the Inspector | ||
General for a report of abuse or neglect. | ||
(g) Other investigations. Nothing in this Section shall | ||
limit investigations by the Department of Human Services that | ||
may otherwise be required by law or that may be necessary in | ||
that Department's capacity as the central administrative | ||
authority responsible for the operation of State mental health | ||
and developmental disability facilities. | ||
(g-5) Health care worker registry. After notice and an | ||
opportunity for a hearing that is separate and distinct from | ||
the Office of the Inspector General's appeals process as | ||
implemented under subsection (c) of this Section, the Inspector | ||
General shall report to the Department of Public Health's | ||
health care worker registry under Section 3-206.01 of the | ||
Nursing Home Care Act the identity of individuals against whom | ||
there has been a substantiated finding of physical or sexual |
abuse or egregious neglect of a service recipient. | ||
Nothing in this subsection shall diminish or impair the | ||
rights of a person who is a member of a collective bargaining | ||
unit pursuant to the Illinois Public Labor Relations Act or | ||
pursuant to any federal labor statute. An individual who is a | ||
member of a collective bargaining unit as described above shall | ||
not be reported to the Department of Public Health's health | ||
care worker registry until the exhaustion of that individual's | ||
grievance and arbitration rights, or until 3 months after the | ||
initiation of the grievance process, whichever occurs first, | ||
provided that the Department of Human Services' hearing under | ||
this subsection regarding the reporting of an individual to the | ||
Department of Public Health's health care worker registry has | ||
concluded. Notwithstanding anything hereinafter or previously | ||
provided, if an action taken by an employer against an | ||
individual as a result of the circumstances that led to a | ||
finding of physical or sexual abuse or egregious neglect is | ||
later overturned under a grievance or arbitration procedure | ||
provided for in Section 8 of the Illinois Public Labor | ||
Relations Act or under a collective bargaining agreement, the | ||
report must be removed from the registry. | ||
The Department of Human Services shall promulgate or amend | ||
rules as necessary or appropriate to establish procedures for | ||
reporting to the registry, including the definition of | ||
egregious neglect, procedures for notice to the individual and | ||
victim, appeal and hearing procedures, and petition for removal |
of the report from the registry. The portion of the rules | ||
pertaining to hearings shall provide that, at the hearing, both | ||
parties may present written and oral evidence. The Department | ||
shall be required to establish by a preponderance of the | ||
evidence that the Office of the Inspector General's finding of | ||
physical or sexual abuse or egregious neglect warrants | ||
reporting to the Department of Public Health's health care | ||
worker registry under Section 3-206.01 of the Nursing Home Care | ||
Act. | ||
Notice to the individual shall include a clear and concise | ||
statement of the grounds on which the report to the registry is | ||
based and notice of the opportunity for a hearing to contest | ||
the report. The Department of Human Services shall provide the | ||
notice by certified mail to the last known address of the | ||
individual. The notice shall give the individual an opportunity | ||
to contest the report in a hearing before the Department of | ||
Human Services or to submit a written response to the findings | ||
instead of requesting a hearing. If the individual does not | ||
request a hearing or if after notice and a hearing the | ||
Department of Human Services finds that the report is valid, | ||
the finding shall be included as part of the registry, as well | ||
as a brief statement from the reported individual if he or she | ||
chooses to make a statement. The Department of Public Health | ||
shall make available to the public information reported to the | ||
registry. In a case of inquiries concerning an individual | ||
listed in the registry, any information disclosed concerning a |
finding of abuse or neglect shall also include disclosure of | ||
the individual's brief statement in the registry relating to | ||
the reported finding or include a clear and accurate summary of | ||
the statement. | ||
At any time after the report of the registry, an individual | ||
may petition the Department of Human Services for removal from | ||
the registry of the finding against him or her. Upon receipt of | ||
such a petition, the Department of Human Services shall conduct | ||
an investigation and hearing on the petition. Upon completion | ||
of the investigation and hearing, the Department of Human | ||
Services shall report the removal of the finding to the | ||
registry unless the Department of Human Services determines | ||
that removal is not in the public interest. | ||
(h) Quality Care Board. There is created, within the Office | ||
of the Inspector General, a Quality Care Board to be composed | ||
of 7 members appointed by the Governor with the advice and | ||
consent of the Senate. One of the members shall be designated | ||
as chairman by the Governor. Of the initial appointments made | ||
by the Governor, 4 Board members shall each be appointed for a | ||
term of 4 years and 3 members shall each be appointed for a | ||
term of 2 years. Upon the expiration of each member's term, a | ||
successor shall be appointed for a term of 4 years. In the case | ||
of a vacancy in the office of any member, the Governor shall | ||
appoint a successor for the remainder of the unexpired term. | ||
Members appointed by the Governor shall be qualified by | ||
professional knowledge or experience in the area of law, |
investigatory techniques, or in the area of care of the | ||
mentally ill or developmentally disabled. Two members | ||
appointed by the Governor shall be persons with a disability or | ||
a parent of a person with a disability. Members shall serve | ||
without compensation, but shall be reimbursed for expenses | ||
incurred in connection with the performance of their duties as | ||
members. | ||
The Board shall meet quarterly, and may hold other meetings | ||
on the call of the chairman. Four members shall constitute a | ||
quorum. The Board may adopt rules and regulations it deems | ||
necessary to govern its own procedures. | ||
(i) Scope and function of the Quality Care Board. The Board | ||
shall monitor and oversee the operations, policies, and | ||
procedures of the Inspector General to assure the prompt and | ||
thorough investigation of allegations of neglect and abuse. In | ||
fulfilling these responsibilities, the Board may do the | ||
following: | ||
(1) Provide independent, expert consultation to the | ||
Inspector General on policies and protocols for | ||
investigations of alleged neglect and abuse. | ||
(2) Review existing regulations relating to the | ||
operation of facilities under the control of the Department | ||
of Human Services. | ||
(3) Advise the Inspector General as to the content of | ||
training activities authorized under this Section. | ||
(4) Recommend policies concerning methods for |
improving the intergovernmental relationships between the | ||
Office of the Inspector General and other State or federal | ||
agencies. | ||
(j) Investigators. The Inspector General shall establish a | ||
comprehensive program to ensure that every person employed or | ||
newly hired to conduct investigations shall receive training on | ||
an on-going basis concerning investigative techniques, | ||
communication skills, and the appropriate means of contact with | ||
persons admitted or committed to the mental health or | ||
developmental disabilities facilities under the jurisdiction | ||
of the Department of Human Services. | ||
(k) Subpoenas; testimony; penalty. The Inspector General | ||
shall have the power to subpoena witnesses and compel the | ||
production of books and papers pertinent to an investigation | ||
authorized by this Act, provided that the power to subpoena or | ||
to compel the production of books and papers shall not extend | ||
to the person or documents of a labor organization or its | ||
representatives insofar as the person or documents of a labor | ||
organization relate to the function of representing an employee | ||
subject to investigation under this Act. Mental health records | ||
of patients shall be confidential as provided under the Mental | ||
Health and Developmental Disabilities Confidentiality Act. Any | ||
person who fails to appear in response to a subpoena or to | ||
answer any question or produce any books or papers pertinent to | ||
an investigation under this Act, except as otherwise provided | ||
in this Section, or who knowingly gives false testimony in |
relation to an investigation under this Act is guilty of a | ||
Class A misdemeanor. | ||
(l) Annual report. The Inspector General shall provide to | ||
the General Assembly and the Governor, no later than January 1 | ||
of each year, a summary of reports and investigations made | ||
under this Act for the prior fiscal year with respect to | ||
residents of institutions under the jurisdiction of the | ||
Department of Human Services. The report shall detail the | ||
imposition of sanctions and the final disposition of those | ||
recommendations. The summaries shall not contain any | ||
confidential or identifying information concerning the | ||
subjects of the reports and investigations. The report shall | ||
also include a trend analysis of the number of reported | ||
allegations and their disposition, for each facility and | ||
Department-wide, for the most recent 3-year time period and a | ||
statement, for each facility, of the staffing-to-patient | ||
ratios. The ratios shall include only the number of direct care | ||
staff. The report shall also include detailed recommended | ||
administrative actions and matters for consideration by the | ||
General Assembly. | ||
(m) Program audit. The Auditor General shall conduct a | ||
biennial program audit of the Office of the Inspector General | ||
in relation to the Inspector General's compliance with this | ||
Act. The audit shall specifically include the Inspector | ||
General's effectiveness in investigating reports of alleged | ||
neglect or abuse of residents in any facility operated by the |
Department of Human Services and in making recommendations for | ||
sanctions to the Departments of Human Services and Public | ||
Health. The Auditor General shall conduct the program audit | ||
according to the provisions of the Illinois State Auditing Act | ||
and shall report its findings to the General Assembly no later | ||
than January 1 of each odd-numbered year.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 95-545, eff. 8-28-07.) | ||
Section 55. The Governor's Office of Management and Budget | ||
Act is amended by changing Section 1 and by adding Sections 7.1 | ||
and 7.2 as follows:
| ||
(20 ILCS 3005/1) (from Ch. 127, par. 411)
| ||
Sec. 1. Definitions.
| ||
"Capital expenditure" means money spent for replacing, | ||
remodeling, expanding,
or acquiring facilities, buildings or | ||
land owned directly by the State through
any State department, | ||
authority, public corporation of the State, State
college or | ||
university, or any other public agency created by the State,
| ||
but not units of local government or school districts.
| ||
"Director" means the Director of the Governor's Office of | ||
Management and
Budget.
| ||
"Office" means the Governor's Office of Management and | ||
Budget.
| ||
"State Agency," whether used in the singular or plural, | ||
means all
Departments, Officers, Commissions, Boards, |
Institutions and bodies,
politic and corporate of the State, | ||
including the Offices of Clerk of
the Supreme Court and Clerks | ||
of the Appellate Courts; except it shall
not mean the several | ||
Courts of the State, nor the Legislature, its
Committees or | ||
Commissions, nor the Constitutionally elected State
Officers , | ||
nor the Executive Ethics Commission, nor the Offices of | ||
Executive Inspectors General .
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03.)
| ||
(20 ILCS 3005/7.1 new) | ||
Sec. 7.1. Transparency in finance. Upon request by the | ||
President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of | ||
Representatives, or the Minority Leaders of the Senate and | ||
House of Representatives, the Office shall provide a summary of | ||
all formal presentations submitted by the Office to credit | ||
rating agencies or potential investors in State bonds. Within | ||
10 business days after the submission of State financial | ||
information to credit rating agencies or potential investors in | ||
State bonds, a summary of the submitted information shall be | ||
provided to the legislative leaders and posted on the Office's | ||
website. Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary, the | ||
Office shall not release any information that is not subject to | ||
disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act. | ||
(20 ILCS 3005/7.2 new) | ||
Sec. 7.2. Quarterly financial reports. The Office shall |
prepare and publish a quarterly financial report to update the | ||
public and the General Assembly on the status of the State's | ||
finances. At a minimum, each report shall include the following | ||
information: | ||
(1) A review of the State's economic outlook. | ||
(2) A review of general funds revenue performance, both | ||
quarterly and year to date, and an evaluation of that | ||
performance. | ||
(3) The outlook for future general funds revenue | ||
performance, including projections of future general funds | ||
revenues. | ||
(4) An assessment of the State's financial position, | ||
including a summary of general fund receipts, transfers, | ||
expenditures, and liabilities. | ||
(5) A review of Statewide employment statistics. | ||
(6) Other information necessary to present the status | ||
of the State's finances. | ||
In addition, the fourth quarter report for each fiscal year | ||
shall include a summary of fiscal and balanced budget notes | ||
issued by the Office to the General Assembly during the prior | ||
legislative session. Each report shall be posted on the | ||
Office's website within 45 days. | ||
Section 60. The General Assembly Compensation Act is | ||
amended by changing Section 4 as follows: |
(25 ILCS 115/4) (from Ch. 63, par. 15.1)
| ||
Sec. 4. Office allowance. Beginning July 1, 2001, each | ||
member
of the House
of Representatives is authorized to approve | ||
the expenditure of not more than
$61,000 per year and each | ||
member of the
Senate is authorized to approve the
expenditure | ||
of not more than $73,000 per
year to pay for "personal | ||
services",
"contractual services", "commodities", "printing", | ||
"travel",
"operation of automotive equipment", | ||
"telecommunications services", as
defined in the State Finance | ||
Act, and the compensation of one or more
legislative assistants | ||
authorized pursuant to this Section, in connection
with his or | ||
her legislative duties and not in connection with any political
| ||
campaign.
On July 1, 2002 and on July 1 of each year | ||
thereafter, the amount authorized
per year under this Section | ||
for each member of the Senate and each member of
the House of | ||
Representatives shall be increased by a percentage increase
| ||
equivalent to the lesser of (i) the increase in the designated | ||
cost of living
index or (ii) 5%. The designated cost of living | ||
index is the index known as
the "Employment Cost Index, Wages | ||
and Salaries, By
Occupation and Industry Groups: State and | ||
Local Government Workers: Public
Administration" as published | ||
by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S.
Department of | ||
Labor for the calendar year immediately preceding the year of | ||
the
respective July 1st increase date. The increase shall be | ||
added to the then
current amount, and the adjusted amount so | ||
determined shall be the annual
amount beginning July 1 of the |
increase year until July 1 of the next year. No
increase under | ||
this provision shall be less than zero.
| ||
A member may purchase office equipment if the member | ||
certifies
to the Secretary of the Senate or the Clerk of the | ||
House, as applicable,
that the purchase price, whether paid in | ||
lump sum or installments, amounts
to less than would be charged | ||
for renting or leasing the equipment over
its anticipated | ||
useful life. All such equipment must be purchased through
the | ||
Secretary of the Senate or the Clerk of the House, as | ||
applicable, for
proper identification and verification of | ||
purchase.
| ||
Each member of the General Assembly is authorized to employ | ||
one or more
legislative assistants, who shall be solely under | ||
the direction and control
of that member, for the purpose of | ||
assisting the member in the performance
of his or her official | ||
duties. A legislative assistant may be employed
pursuant to | ||
this Section as a full-time employee, part-time employee, or
| ||
contractual employee, at
the discretion of the member. If | ||
employed as a State employee, a
legislative assistant shall | ||
receive employment benefits on the same terms
and conditions | ||
that apply to other employees of the General Assembly.
Each | ||
member shall adopt and implement personnel policies
for | ||
legislative assistants under his or her direction and
control | ||
relating to work time requirements, documentation for | ||
reimbursement for
travel on official State business, | ||
compensation, and the earning and accrual of
State benefits for |
those legislative assistants who may be eligible to receive
| ||
those benefits.
The policies shall also require legislative | ||
assistants to
periodically submit time sheets documenting, in | ||
quarter-hour increments, the
time
spent each day on official | ||
State business.
The
policies shall require the time sheets to | ||
be submitted on paper,
electronically, or both and to be | ||
maintained in either paper or electronic
format by the | ||
applicable fiscal office
for a period of at least 2 years.
| ||
Contractual employees may satisfy
the time sheets requirement | ||
by complying with the terms of their contract,
which shall | ||
provide for a means of compliance with this requirement.
A | ||
member may
satisfy the requirements of this paragraph by | ||
adopting and implementing the
personnel policies promulgated | ||
by that
member's legislative leader under the State Officials | ||
and Employees Ethics
Act
with respect to that member's | ||
legislative
assistants.
| ||
As used in this Section the term "personal services" shall | ||
include
contributions of the State under the Federal Insurance | ||
Contribution Act and
under Article 14 of the Illinois Pension | ||
Code. As used in this Section the
term "contractual services" | ||
shall not include improvements to real property
unless those | ||
improvements are the obligation of the lessee under the lease
| ||
agreement. Beginning July 1, 1989, as used in the Section, the | ||
term "travel"
shall be limited to travel in connection with a | ||
member's legislative duties and
not in connection with any | ||
political campaign. Beginning on the effective
date of this |
amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, as
used
in this | ||
Section, the term "printing" includes, but is not limited to,
| ||
newsletters,
brochures, certificates,
congratulatory
mailings,
| ||
greeting or welcome messages, anniversary or
birthday cards, | ||
and congratulations for prominent achievement cards. As used
in | ||
this Section, the term "printing" includes fees for | ||
non-substantive
resolutions charged by the Clerk of the House | ||
of Representatives under
subsection (c-5) of Section 1 of the | ||
Legislative Materials Act.
No newsletter or brochure that is | ||
paid for, in whole or in part, with
funds
provided under this | ||
Section may be printed or mailed during a period
beginning | ||
December 15 of the year preceding a general primary
election | ||
and ending the day after the general primary election and | ||
during a
period beginning September 1 of the year of a general | ||
election and ending the
day after the general election, except | ||
that such a newsletter or brochure may
be mailed during
those | ||
times if it is mailed to a constituent in response to that | ||
constituent's
inquiry concerning the needs of that constituent | ||
or questions raised by that
constituent.
Nothing in
this | ||
Section shall be construed to authorize expenditures for | ||
lodging and meals
while a member is in attendance at sessions | ||
of the General Assembly.
| ||
Any utility bill for service provided to a member's | ||
district office for
a period including portions of 2 | ||
consecutive fiscal years may be paid from
funds appropriated | ||
for such expenditure in either fiscal year.
|
If a vacancy occurs in the office of Senator or | ||
Representative in the General
Assembly, any office equipment in | ||
the possession of the vacating member
shall transfer to the | ||
member's successor; if the successor does not want
such | ||
equipment, it shall be transferred to the Secretary of the | ||
Senate or
Clerk of the House of Representatives, as the case | ||
may be, and if not
wanted by other members of the General | ||
Assembly then to the Department of
Central Management Services | ||
for treatment as surplus property under the
State Property | ||
Control Act. Each member, on or before June 30th of each
year, | ||
shall conduct an inventory of all equipment purchased pursuant | ||
to
this Act. Such inventory shall be filed with the Secretary | ||
of the Senate
or the Clerk of the House, as the case may be. | ||
Whenever a vacancy occurs,
the Secretary of the Senate or the | ||
Clerk of the House, as the case may be,
shall conduct an | ||
inventory of equipment purchased.
| ||
In the event that a member leaves office during his or her | ||
term, any
unexpended or unobligated portion of the allowance | ||
granted under this Section
shall lapse. The vacating member's | ||
successor shall be granted an allowance
in an amount, rounded | ||
to the nearest dollar, computed by dividing the annual
| ||
allowance by 365 and multiplying the quotient by the number of | ||
days remaining
in the fiscal year.
| ||
From any appropriation for the purposes of this Section for | ||
a
fiscal year which overlaps 2 General Assemblies, no more than | ||
1/2 of the
annual allowance per member may be spent or |
encumbered by any member of
either the outgoing or incoming | ||
General Assembly, except that any member
of the incoming | ||
General Assembly who was a member of the outgoing General
| ||
Assembly may encumber or spend any portion of his annual | ||
allowance within
the fiscal year.
| ||
The appropriation for the annual allowances permitted by | ||
this Section
shall be included in an appropriation to the | ||
President of the Senate and to
the Speaker of the House of | ||
Representatives for their respective members.
The President of | ||
the Senate and the Speaker of the House shall voucher for
| ||
payment individual members' expenditures from their annual | ||
office
allowances to the State Comptroller, subject to the | ||
authority of the
Comptroller under Section 9 of the State | ||
Comptroller Act.
| ||
Nothing in this Section prohibits the expenditure of | ||
personal funds or the funds of a political committee controlled | ||
by an officeholder to defray the customary and reasonable | ||
expenses of an officeholder in connection with the performance | ||
of governmental and public service functions. | ||
(Source: P.A. 95-6, eff. 6-20-07.)
| ||
Section 65. The Lobbyist Registration Act is amended by | ||
changing Sections 2, 3, 3.1, 5, 6, 7, 10, and 11 and by adding | ||
Sections 4.5 and 11.3 as follows:
| ||
(25 ILCS 170/2) (from Ch. 63, par. 172)
|
Sec. 2. Definitions. As used in this Act, unless the | ||
context otherwise
requires:
| ||
(a) "Person" means any individual, firm, partnership, | ||
committee,
association, corporation, or any other organization | ||
or group of persons.
| ||
(b) "Expenditure" means a payment, distribution, loan, | ||
advance, deposit,
or gift of money or anything of value, and | ||
includes a contract, promise, or
agreement, whether or not | ||
legally enforceable, to make an expenditure, for
the ultimate | ||
purpose of influencing executive, legislative, or | ||
administrative
action, other than compensation as defined in | ||
subsection (d).
| ||
(c) "Official" means:
| ||
(1) the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Secretary of | ||
State, Attorney
General, State Treasurer, and State | ||
Comptroller;
| ||
(2) Chiefs of Staff for officials described in item | ||
(1);
| ||
(3) Cabinet members of any elected constitutional | ||
officer, including
Directors, Assistant Directors and | ||
Chief Legal Counsel or General Counsel;
| ||
(4) Members of the General Assembly.
| ||
(d) "Compensation" means any money, thing of value or | ||
financial benefits
received or to be received in return for | ||
services rendered or to be
rendered, for lobbying as defined in | ||
subsection (e).
|
Monies paid to members of the General Assembly by the State | ||
as
remuneration for performance of their Constitutional and | ||
statutory duties
as members of the General Assembly shall not | ||
constitute compensation as
defined by this Act.
| ||
(e) "Lobby" and "lobbying"
"Lobbying" means any | ||
communication with an official of the
executive or legislative | ||
branch of State government as defined in subsection
(c) for the | ||
ultimate purpose of influencing any executive, legislative, or
| ||
administrative action.
| ||
(f) "Influencing" means any communication, action, | ||
reportable
expenditure as prescribed in Section 6 or other | ||
means used to promote,
support, affect, modify, oppose or delay | ||
any executive, legislative or
administrative action or to | ||
promote goodwill with officials as defined in
subsection (c).
| ||
(g) "Executive action" means the proposal, drafting, | ||
development,
consideration, amendment, adoption, approval, | ||
promulgation, issuance,
modification, rejection or | ||
postponement by a State entity of a rule,
regulation, order, | ||
decision, determination, contractual arrangement, purchasing
| ||
agreement or other quasi-legislative or quasi-judicial action | ||
or proceeding.
| ||
(h) "Legislative action" means the development, drafting, | ||
introduction,
consideration, modification, adoption, | ||
rejection, review, enactment, or passage
or defeat of any bill, | ||
amendment, resolution, report, nomination,
administrative rule | ||
or other matter by either house of the General Assembly or
a |
committee thereof, or by a legislator. Legislative action also | ||
means the
action of the Governor in approving or vetoing any | ||
bill or portion thereof, and
the action of the Governor or any | ||
agency in the development of a proposal for
introduction in the | ||
legislature.
| ||
(i) "Administrative action" means the execution or | ||
rejection of any rule,
regulation, legislative rule, standard, | ||
fee, rate, contractual arrangement,
purchasing agreement or | ||
other delegated legislative or quasi-legislative action
to be | ||
taken or withheld by any executive agency, department, board or
| ||
commission of the State.
| ||
(j) "Lobbyist" means any natural person who undertakes to | ||
lobby State government
as provided in subsection (e).
| ||
(k) "Lobbying entity" means any entity that hires, retains, | ||
employs, or compensates a natural person to lobby State | ||
government as provided in subsection (e).
| ||
(Source: P.A. 88-187.)
| ||
(25 ILCS 170/3) (from Ch. 63, par. 173)
| ||
Sec. 3. Persons required to register.
| ||
(a) Except as provided in Section
Sections 4 and 9, any | ||
natural
the following persons shall
register with the Secretary | ||
of State as provided herein: (1) Any person who, for | ||
compensation or otherwise,
undertakes to lobby, or any
either | ||
individually or as an employee or contractual employee of | ||
another
person, undertakes to influence executive, legislative |
or administrative
action. (2) Any person or entity who employs | ||
another person for the purposes
of lobbying, shall register | ||
with the Secretary of State as provided in this Act, unless | ||
that person or entity qualifies for one or more of the | ||
following exemptions
influencing executive, legislative or | ||
administrative action .
| ||
(1) Persons or entities who, for the purpose of | ||
influencing executive, legislative, or administrative | ||
action and who do not make expenditures that are reportable | ||
pursuant to Section 6, appear without compensation or | ||
promise thereof only as witnesses before committees of the | ||
House and Senate for the purpose of explaining or arguing | ||
for or against the passage of or action upon any | ||
legislation then pending before those committees, or who | ||
seek without compensation or promise thereof the approval | ||
or veto of any legislation by the Governor. | ||
(1.4) A unit of local government or a school district. | ||
(1.5) An elected or appointed official or an employee | ||
of a unit of local government or school district who, in | ||
the scope of his or her public office or employment, seeks | ||
to influence executive, legislative, or administrative | ||
action exclusively on behalf of that unit of local | ||
government or school district. | ||
(2) Persons or entities who own, publish, or are | ||
employed by a newspaper or other regularly published | ||
periodical, or who own or are employed by a radio station, |
television station, or other bona fide news medium that in | ||
the ordinary course of business disseminates news, | ||
editorial or other comment, or paid advertisements that | ||
directly urge the passage or defeat of legislation. This | ||
exemption is not applicable to such an individual insofar | ||
as he or she receives additional compensation or expenses | ||
from some source other than the bona fide news medium for | ||
the purpose of influencing executive, legislative, or | ||
administrative action. This exemption does not apply to | ||
newspapers and periodicals owned by or published by trade | ||
associations and not-for-profit corporations engaged | ||
primarily in endeavors other than dissemination of news. | ||
(3) Persons or entities performing professional | ||
services in drafting bills or in advising and rendering | ||
opinions to clients as to the construction and effect of | ||
proposed or pending legislation when those professional | ||
services are not otherwise, directly or indirectly, | ||
connected with executive, legislative, or administrative | ||
action. | ||
(4) Persons or entities who are employees of | ||
departments, divisions, or agencies of State government | ||
and who appear before committees of the House and Senate | ||
for the purpose of explaining how the passage of or action | ||
upon any legislation then pending before those committees | ||
will affect those departments, divisions, or agencies of | ||
State government. |
(5) Employees of the General Assembly, legislators, | ||
legislative agencies, and legislative commissions who, in | ||
the course of their official duties only, engage in | ||
activities that otherwise qualify as lobbying. | ||
(6) Persons or entities in possession of technical | ||
skills and knowledge relevant to certain areas of | ||
executive, legislative, or administrative actions, whose | ||
skills and knowledge would be helpful to officials when | ||
considering those actions, whose activities are limited to | ||
making occasional appearances for or communicating on | ||
behalf of a registrant, and who do not make expenditures | ||
that are reportable pursuant to Section 6 even though | ||
receiving expense reimbursement for those occasional | ||
appearances. | ||
(7) Any full-time employee of a bona fide church or | ||
religious organization who represents that organization | ||
solely for the purpose of protecting the right of the | ||
members thereof to practice the religious doctrines of that | ||
church or religious organization, or any such bona fide | ||
church or religious organization. | ||
(8) Persons who receive no compensation other than | ||
reimbursement for expenses of up to $500 per year while | ||
engaged in lobbying State government, unless those persons | ||
make expenditures that are reportable under Section 6. | ||
(9) Any attorney or group or firm of attorneys in the | ||
course of representing a client in any administrative or |
judicial proceeding, or any witness providing testimony in | ||
any administrative or judicial proceeding, in which ex | ||
parte communications are not allowed and who does not make | ||
expenditures that are reportable pursuant to Section 6. | ||
(10) Persons or entities who, in the scope of their | ||
employment as a vendor, offer or solicit an official for | ||
the purchase of any goods or services when (1) the | ||
solicitation is limited to either an oral inquiry or | ||
written advertisements and informative literature; or (2) | ||
the goods and services are subject to competitive bidding | ||
requirements of the Illinois Procurement Code; or (3) the | ||
goods and services are for sale at a cost not to exceed | ||
$5,000; and (4) the persons or entities do not make | ||
expenditures that are reportable under Section 6.
| ||
(b) It is a violation of this Act to engage in lobbying or | ||
to employ any
person for the purpose of lobbying who is not | ||
registered with the Office of the
Secretary of State, except | ||
upon condition that the person register and the
person does in | ||
fact register within 2 business days after being employed or | ||
retained for lobbying services.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-615, eff. 11-19-03.)
| ||
(25 ILCS 170/3.1)
| ||
Sec. 3.1. Prohibition on serving on boards and commissions.
| ||
Notwithstanding any other law of this State, on and after | ||
February 1, 2004,
but not before that date, a person required |
to be registered
under this Act, his or her spouse, and his or | ||
her immediate family members
living with that person may not
| ||
serve on a board, commission, authority, or task force | ||
authorized or created
by State law or by executive order of the | ||
Governor if the lobbyist is engaged in the same subject area as | ||
defined in Section 5(c-6) as the board or commission ; except | ||
that this
restriction does not apply to any of the
following:
| ||
(1) a registered lobbyist, his or her spouse, or any | ||
immediate family
member living with the registered | ||
lobbyist, who is serving in an elective
public office, | ||
whether
elected or appointed to fill a vacancy; and
| ||
(2) a registered lobbyist, his or her spouse, or any | ||
immediate family
member living with the registered | ||
lobbyist, who is serving on a State
advisory body
that | ||
makes nonbinding recommendations to an agency of State | ||
government
but does not make binding recommendations or | ||
determinations or take any
other substantive action.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-615, eff. 11-19-03; 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.)
| ||
(25 ILCS 170/4.5 new) | ||
Sec. 4.5. Ethics training. Each person required to register | ||
under this Act must complete a program of ethics training | ||
provided by the Secretary of State. A person registered under | ||
this Act must complete the training program during each | ||
calendar year the person remains registered. If the Secretary | ||
of State uses the ethics training developed in accordance with |
Section 5-10 of the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act, | ||
that training must be expanded to include appropriate | ||
information about the requirements, responsibilities, and | ||
opportunities imposed by or arising under this Act, including | ||
reporting requirements. | ||
The Secretary of State shall adopt rules for the | ||
implementation of this Section. | ||
(25 ILCS 170/5)
| ||
Sec. 5. Lobbyist registration and disclosure. Every person | ||
required to
register under Section 3 shall
before any service
| ||
is performed which requires the person to register, but in any | ||
event not
later than 2 business days after being employed or | ||
retained, and on or before
each
January 31 and July 31 | ||
thereafter, file in the Office of the
Secretary of State a | ||
written statement in a format prescribed by the Secretary of | ||
State containing the
following
information
with respect to each | ||
person or entity
employing or retaining the person required to | ||
register:
| ||
(a) The registrant's name, permanent address, e-mail
| ||
address, if any,
fax
number, if any, business telephone | ||
number, and temporary address, if the
registrant has a | ||
temporary address while lobbying.
| ||
(a-5) If the registrant is an organization or business | ||
entity, the
information required under subsection (a) for | ||
each person associated with the
registrant who will be |
lobbying,
regardless of whether lobbying is a significant | ||
part of his or her duties.
| ||
(b) The name and address of the person or persons | ||
employing or retaining
registrant to perform such services | ||
or on whose behalf the registrant appears.
| ||
(c) A brief description of the executive, legislative, | ||
or administrative
action in reference to which such service | ||
is to be rendered.
| ||
(c-5) Each executive and legislative branch agency the | ||
registrant
expects
to lobby during the registration | ||
period.
| ||
(c-6) The nature of the client's business, by | ||
indicating all
of the following categories that apply: (1) | ||
banking and financial services, (2)
manufacturing, (3) | ||
education, (4) environment, (5) healthcare, (6)
insurance, | ||
(7) community interests, (8) labor, (9) public relations or
| ||
advertising, (10) marketing or sales, (11) hospitality, | ||
(12) engineering,
(13) information or technology products | ||
or services, (14) social services,
(15) public utilities, | ||
(16) racing or wagering, (17) real estate or
construction, | ||
(18) telecommunications, (19) trade or professional
| ||
association, (20) travel or tourism, (21) transportation, | ||
and (22) other
(setting forth the nature of that other | ||
business).
| ||
The registrant must file an amendment to the statement | ||
within 14 calendar
days
to report any substantial change or |
addition to the information previously
filed, except that a | ||
registrant must file an amendment to the statement to
disclose | ||
a new agreement to retain the registrant for lobbying services
| ||
before any service is performed which requires the person to | ||
register, but in
any event not later than 2 business days after | ||
entering into the retainer
agreement.
| ||
Not later than 12 months after the effective date of this | ||
amendatory
Act of the 93rd General Assembly, or as soon | ||
thereafter as the Secretary of
State has provided adequate | ||
software to the persons required to file, all
statements and | ||
amendments to statements required to be filed shall be filed
| ||
electronically. The Secretary of State shall promptly make all | ||
filed
statements and amendments to statements publicly | ||
available by means of a
searchable database that is accessible | ||
through the World Wide Web. The
Secretary of State shall | ||
provide all software necessary to comply with this
provision to | ||
all persons required to file. The Secretary of State shall
| ||
implement a plan to provide computer access and assistance to | ||
persons
required to file electronically.
| ||
All Persons required to register under this Act prior to | ||
July 1, 2003,
shall
remit a single, annual and nonrefundable | ||
$50 registration fee.
All fees collected for registrations | ||
prior to July 1, 2003, shall be deposited
into the Lobbyist | ||
Registration Administration Fund for administration and
| ||
enforcement of this Act. Beginning July 1, 2003, all persons | ||
other than
entities qualified under Section 501(c)(3) of the |
Internal Revenue Code
required to register under this Act shall | ||
remit a single, annual, and
nonrefundable $1,000 $350 | ||
registration fee. Entities required to register under this
Act
| ||
which are qualified under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal | ||
Revenue Code shall
remit a single, annual,
and nonrefundable | ||
$150 registration fee. Each individual required to register
| ||
under this Act shall submit, on an annual basis, a picture of | ||
the registrant. A registrant may, in lieu of submitting a
| ||
picture on an annual basis, authorize the Secretary of State to | ||
use any photo
identification available in any database | ||
maintained by the Secretary of State
for other purposes. Of | ||
each registration fee collected for registrations on
or after | ||
July 1, 2003, $50 shall be deposited into the Lobbyist
| ||
Registration Administration Fund for administration and | ||
enforcement
of this
Act and is intended to be used to implement | ||
and maintain
electronic
filing of
reports under this Act, the | ||
next
$100 shall be deposited into the Lobbyist
Registration | ||
Administration Fund for administration and enforcement of this
| ||
Act, and any balance shall be deposited into the General | ||
Revenue Fund , except that amounts resulting from the fee | ||
increase of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly | ||
shall be deposited into the Lobbyist Registration | ||
Administration Fund to be used for the costs of reviewing and | ||
investigating violations of this Act .
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-32, eff. 7-1-03; 93-615, eff. 11-19-03; | ||
93-617, eff. 12-9-03.)
|
(25 ILCS 170/6) (from Ch. 63, par. 176)
| ||
Sec. 6. Reports.
| ||
(a) Lobbyist reports. Except as otherwise provided in this | ||
Section, every lobbyist registered under this Act who is solely | ||
employed by a lobbying entity
person required to
register as | ||
prescribed in Section 3 shall file an affirmation
report , | ||
verified under
oath pursuant to Section 1-109 of the Code of | ||
Civil Procedure, with
to the
Secretary of
State attesting to | ||
the accuracy of any reports filed pursuant to subsection (b) as | ||
those reports pertain to work performed by the lobbyist. Any | ||
lobbyist registered under this Act who is not solely employed | ||
by a lobbying entity shall personally file reports required of | ||
lobbying entities pursuant to subsection (b). A lobbyist may, | ||
if authorized so to do by a lobbying entity by whom he or she is | ||
employed or retained, file lobbying entity reports pursuant to | ||
subsection (b) provided that the lobbying entity may delegate | ||
the filing of the lobbying entity report to only one lobbyist | ||
in any reporting period
all expenditures for lobbying made or | ||
incurred by the lobbyist on his
behalf or the behalf of his | ||
employer. In the case where an individual is
solely employed by | ||
another person to perform job related functions any part of
| ||
which includes lobbying, the employer shall be responsible for | ||
reporting all
lobbying expenditures incurred on the employer's | ||
behalf as shall be identified
by the lobbyist to the employer | ||
preceding such report. Persons who contract
with another person |
to perform lobbying activities shall be responsible for
| ||
reporting all lobbying expenditures incurred on the employer's | ||
behalf. Any
additional lobbying expenses incurred by the | ||
employer which are separate and
apart from those incurred by | ||
the contractual employee shall be reported by the
employer .
| ||
(b) Lobbying entity reports. Except as otherwise provided | ||
in this Section, every lobbying entity registered under this | ||
Act shall report expenditures related to lobbying. The report | ||
shall itemize each individual expenditure or transaction
over
| ||
$100 and shall include the name of the official on whose behalf | ||
the
expenditure
was made, the name of the client on whose | ||
behalf the expenditure was made , if applicable , the
total | ||
amount of the expenditure, a description of the expenditure, | ||
the address and location of the expenditure if the expenditure | ||
was for an intangible item such as lodging, the date on which | ||
the expenditure occurred and
the subject matter of the lobbying | ||
activity, if any.
| ||
The report shall include the names and addresses of all | ||
clients who retained the lobbying entity together with an | ||
itemized description for each client of the following: (1) | ||
lobbying regarding executive action, including the name of any | ||
executive agency lobbied and the subject matter; (2) lobbying | ||
regarding legislative action, including the General Assembly | ||
and any other agencies lobbied and the subject matter; and (3) | ||
lobbying regarding administrative action, including the agency | ||
lobbied and the subject matter. Registrants who made no |
reportable expenditures during a reporting period shall file a | ||
report stating that no expenditures were incurred.
| ||
Expenditures attributable to lobbying officials shall be | ||
listed and reported
according to the following categories:
| ||
(1) travel and lodging on behalf of others.
| ||
(2) meals, beverages and other entertainment.
| ||
(3) gifts (indicating which, if any, are on the basis | ||
of personal friendship) .
| ||
(4) honoraria.
| ||
(5) any other thing or service of value not listed | ||
under categories (1) through (4), setting forth a | ||
description of the expenditure.
The category travel and | ||
lodging includes, but is not limited to, all travel and | ||
living accommodations made for or on behalf of State | ||
officials in the State capital during sessions of the | ||
General Assembly.
| ||
Individual expenditures required to be reported as | ||
described herein which
are
equal to or less than $100 in value | ||
need not be itemized but are required to be
categorized and | ||
reported by officials in an aggregate total in a manner
| ||
prescribed by rule of the Secretary of State.
| ||
(b-3) Expenditures incurred for hosting receptions, | ||
benefits and other large
gatherings held for purposes of | ||
goodwill or otherwise to influence executive,
legislative or | ||
administrative action to which there are 25 or more State
| ||
officials invited shall be reported listing only the total |
amount of
the
expenditure, the date of the event, and the | ||
estimated number of officials in
attendance.
| ||
(b-5) Each individual expenditure required to be reported | ||
shall include all
expenses made for or on behalf of State | ||
officials and their immediate family members of the immediate
| ||
family of those persons .
| ||
The category travel and lodging includes, but is not | ||
limited to, all travel
and living accommodations made for or on | ||
behalf of State officials in the
capital during sessions of the | ||
General Assembly.
| ||
(b-7) Matters excluded from reports. Reasonable and bona | ||
fide expenditures made by the registrant
who is a member of a | ||
legislative or State study commission or committee while
| ||
attending and participating in meetings and hearings of such | ||
commission or
committee need not be reported.
| ||
Reasonable and bona fide expenditures made by the | ||
registrant for personal
sustenance, lodging, travel, office | ||
expenses and clerical or support staff
need not be reported.
| ||
Salaries, fees, and other compensation paid to
the | ||
registrant
for the
purposes of lobbying
need not be
reported.
| ||
Any contributions required to be reported under Article 9 | ||
of the Election
Code need not be reported.
| ||
The report shall include: (1) the name of each State | ||
government
entity lobbied; (2) whether the lobbying involved | ||
executive, legislative, or
administrative action, or a | ||
combination; (3) the names of the persons who
performed the |
lobbyist services; and (4) a brief description of the
| ||
legislative, executive, or administrative action involved.
| ||
Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, gifts and | ||
honoraria
returned or reimbursed to the registrant within 30 | ||
days of the date of
receipt shall not be reported.
| ||
A gift or honorarium returned or reimbursed to the | ||
registrant within 10
days after the official receives a copy of | ||
a report pursuant to Section 6.5
shall not be included in the | ||
final report unless the registrant informed the
official, | ||
contemporaneously with the receipt of the gift or honorarium, | ||
that
the gift or honorarium is a reportable expenditure | ||
pursuant to this Act.
| ||
(c) Reports under this Section shall be filed by July 31, | ||
for expenditures
from the previous January 1 through the later | ||
of June 30 or the final day of
the regular General Assembly | ||
session, and by January 31, for expenditures from
the entire | ||
previous calendar year.
| ||
Registrants who made no reportable expenditures during a | ||
reporting period
shall file a report stating that no | ||
expenditures were incurred. Such reports
shall be filed in | ||
accordance with the deadlines as prescribed in this
subsection.
| ||
A registrant who terminates employment or duties which | ||
required him to
register under this Act shall give the | ||
Secretary of State, within 30 days after
the date of such | ||
termination, written notice of such termination and shall
| ||
include therewith a report of the expenditures described |
herein, covering the
period of time since the filing of his | ||
last report to the date of termination
of employment. Such | ||
notice and report shall be final and relieve such
registrant of | ||
further reporting under this Act, unless and until he later | ||
takes
employment or assumes duties requiring him to again | ||
register under this Act.
| ||
(d) Failure to file any such report within the time | ||
designated or the
reporting of incomplete information shall | ||
constitute a violation of this Act.
| ||
A registrant shall preserve for a period of 2 years all | ||
receipts and records
used in preparing reports under this Act.
| ||
(e) Within 30 days after a filing deadline or as provided | ||
by rule , the lobbyist shall notify each
official on whose | ||
behalf an expenditure has been reported. Notification shall
| ||
include the name of the registrant, the total amount of the | ||
expenditure, a description of the expenditure, the
date on | ||
which the expenditure occurred, and the subject matter of the | ||
lobbying
activity.
| ||
(f) Lobbyist and lobbying entity reports shall be filed | ||
weekly when the General Assembly is in session and monthly | ||
otherwise, in accordance with rules the Secretary of State | ||
shall adopt for the implementation of this subsection. A report | ||
filed under this Act is due in the Office of the Secretary of | ||
State no later than the close of business on the date on which | ||
it is required to be filed. | ||
(g) All reports filed under this Act shall be filed in a |
format or on forms prescribed by the Secretary of State.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-244, eff. 1-1-04; 93-615, eff. 11-19-03.)
| ||
(25 ILCS 170/7) (from Ch. 63, par. 177)
| ||
Sec. 7. Duties of the Secretary of State.
| ||
(a) It shall be the duty of the Secretary of State to | ||
provide appropriate
forms for the registration and reporting of | ||
information required by this
Act and to keep such registrations | ||
and reports on file in his office for 3
years from the date of | ||
filing. He shall also provide and maintain a
register with | ||
appropriate blanks and indexes so that the information
required | ||
in Sections 5 and 6 of this Act may be accordingly entered. | ||
Such
records shall be considered public information and open to | ||
public
inspection.
| ||
A report filed under this Act is due in the Office of the | ||
Secretary of
State no later than the close of business on the | ||
date on which it is required
to be filed.
| ||
(b) Within 10 days after a filing deadline, the Secretary | ||
of State shall notify
persons he determines are required to | ||
file but have failed to do so.
| ||
(c) The Secretary of State shall provide adequate software | ||
to the persons required to file under this Act, and all | ||
registrations, reports, statements, and amendments required to | ||
be filed shall be filed electronically.
Not later than 12 | ||
months after the effective date of this amendatory
Act of the | ||
93rd General Assembly, or as soon thereafter as the Secretary |
of
State has provided adequate software to the persons required | ||
to file, all
reports required under this Act shall be filed | ||
electronically. The Secretary of
State shall promptly make all | ||
filed reports publicly available by means of a
searchable | ||
database that is accessible through the World Wide Web. The
| ||
Secretary of State shall provide all software necessary to | ||
comply with this
provision to all persons required to file. The | ||
Secretary of State shall
implement a plan to provide computer | ||
access and assistance to persons
required to file | ||
electronically.
| ||
(d) Not later than 12 months after the effective date of | ||
this amendatory Act of
the 93rd General Assembly, the Secretary | ||
of State shall include registrants'
pictures when publishing
or | ||
posting on his or her website the information required in | ||
Section 5.
| ||
(e) The Secretary of State shall receive and investigate | ||
allegations of violations of this Act. Any employee of the | ||
Secretary of State who receives an allegation shall immediately | ||
transmit it to the Secretary of State Inspector General.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-615, eff. 11-19-03.)
| ||
(25 ILCS 170/10) (from Ch. 63, par. 180)
| ||
Sec. 10. Penalties.
| ||
(a) Any person who violates any of the provisions of this | ||
Act shall be
guilty of a business offense and shall be fined | ||
not more than $10,000 for each violation. Every day that a |
report or registration is late shall constitute a separate | ||
violation. In determining the appropriate fine for each | ||
violation, the trier of fact shall consider the scope of the | ||
entire lobbying project, the nature of activities conducted | ||
during the time the person was in violation of this Act, and | ||
whether or not the violation was intentional or unreasonable .
| ||
(b) In addition to the penalties provided for in subsection | ||
(a)
of this Section, any person convicted of any violation of | ||
any provision of
this Act is prohibited for a period of three | ||
years from the date of such
conviction from lobbying.
| ||
(c) There is created in the State treasury a special fund | ||
to be known as
the Lobbyist Registration Administration Fund. | ||
All fines collected in the
enforcement of this Section shall be | ||
deposited into the Fund. These funds
shall, subject to | ||
appropriation, be used by the Office of the Secretary of
State | ||
for implementation and administration of this Act.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 88-187 .)
| ||
(25 ILCS 170/11) (from Ch. 63, par. 181)
| ||
Sec. 11. Enforcement
Venue .
| ||
(a) The Secretary of State Inspector General appointed | ||
under Section 14 of the Secretary of State Act shall initiate | ||
investigations of violations of this Act upon receipt of an | ||
allegation. If the Inspector General finds credible evidence of | ||
a violation, he or she shall make the information available to | ||
the public and transmit copies of the evidence to the alleged |
violator. If the violator does not correct the violation within | ||
30 days, the Inspector General shall transmit the full record | ||
of the investigation to any appropriate State's Attorney or to | ||
the Attorney General.
| ||
(b) Any violation of this Act may be prosecuted in the | ||
county where the
offense is committed or in Sangamon County. In | ||
addition to the State's
Attorney of the appropriate county, the | ||
Attorney General of Illinois also
is authorized to prosecute | ||
any violation of this Act.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 76-1848.)
| ||
(25 ILCS 170/11.3 new) | ||
Sec. 11.3. Compensation from a State agency. It is a | ||
violation of this Act for a person registered or required to be | ||
registered under this Act to accept or agree to accept | ||
compensation from a State agency for the purpose of lobbying | ||
legislative action. | ||
This Section does not apply to compensation (i) that is a | ||
portion of the salary of a full-time employee of a State agency | ||
whose responsibility or authority includes, but is not limited | ||
to, lobbying executive, legislative, or administrative action | ||
or (ii) to an individual who is contractually retained by a | ||
State agency that is not listed in Section 5-15 of the Civil | ||
Administrative Code of Illinois. | ||
For the purpose of this Section, "State agency" is defined | ||
as in the Illinois State Auditing Act.
|
(25 ILCS 170/4 rep.)
| ||
Section 70. The Lobbyist Registration Act is amended by | ||
repealing Section 4.
| ||
Section 75. The State Prompt Payment Act is amended by | ||
changing Section 3-2 as follows:
| ||
(30 ILCS 540/3-2) (from Ch. 127, par. 132.403-2)
| ||
Sec. 3-2. Beginning July 1, 1993, in any instance where a | ||
State official or
agency is late in payment of a vendor's bill | ||
or invoice for goods or services
furnished to the State, as | ||
defined in Section 1, properly approved in
accordance with | ||
rules promulgated under Section 3-3, the State official or
| ||
agency shall pay interest to the vendor in accordance with the | ||
following:
| ||
(1) Any bill approved for payment under this Section | ||
must be paid
or the payment issued to the payee within 60 | ||
days of receipt
of a proper bill or invoice.
If payment is | ||
not issued to the payee within this 60 day
period, an
| ||
interest penalty of 1.0% of any amount approved and unpaid | ||
shall be added
for each month or fraction thereof after the | ||
end of this 60 day period,
until final payment is made.
| ||
(1.1) A State agency shall review in a timely manner | ||
each bill or
invoice after its receipt. If the
State agency | ||
determines that the bill or invoice contains a defect |
making it
unable to process the payment request, the agency
| ||
shall notify the vendor requesting payment as soon as | ||
possible after
discovering the
defect pursuant to rules | ||
promulgated under Section 3-3; provided, however, that the | ||
notice for construction related bills or invoices must be | ||
given not later than 30 days after the bill or invoice was | ||
first submitted. The notice shall
identify the defect and | ||
any additional information
necessary to correct the | ||
defect. If one or more items on a construction related bill | ||
or invoice are disapproved, but not the entire bill or | ||
invoice, then the portion that is not disapproved shall be | ||
paid.
| ||
(2) Where a State official or agency is late in payment | ||
of a
vendor's bill or invoice properly approved in | ||
accordance with this Act, and
different late payment terms | ||
are not reduced to writing as a contractual
agreement, the | ||
State official or agency shall automatically pay interest
| ||
penalties required by this Section amounting to $50 or more | ||
to the appropriate
vendor. Each agency shall be responsible | ||
for determining whether an interest
penalty
is
owed and
for | ||
paying the interest to the vendor.
For interest of at least | ||
$5 but less than $50, the vendor must
initiate a written | ||
request for the interest penalty when such interest is due
| ||
and payable. The Department of Central Management Services | ||
and the State
Comptroller shall jointly promulgate rules | ||
establishing the conditions under
which interest of less |
than $5 may be claimed and paid. In the event an
individual | ||
has paid a vendor for services in advance, the provisions | ||
of this
Section shall apply until payment is made to that | ||
individual.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 94-972, eff. 7-1-07 .)
| ||
Section 80. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by | ||
changing Section 12-13.1 as follows:
| ||
(305 ILCS 5/12-13.1)
| ||
Sec. 12-13.1. Inspector General.
| ||
(a) The Governor shall appoint, and the Senate shall | ||
confirm, an Inspector
General who shall function within the | ||
Illinois Department of Public Aid (now Healthcare and Family | ||
Services) and
report to the Governor. The term of the Inspector | ||
General shall expire on the
third Monday of January, 1997 and | ||
every 4 years thereafter.
| ||
(b) In order to prevent, detect, and eliminate fraud, | ||
waste, abuse,
mismanagement, and misconduct, the Inspector | ||
General shall oversee the
Department of Healthcare and Family | ||
Services' integrity
functions, which include, but are not | ||
limited to, the following:
| ||
(1) Investigation of misconduct by employees, vendors, | ||
contractors and
medical providers , except for allegations | ||
of violations of the State Officials and Employees Ethics | ||
Act which shall be referred to the Office of the Governor's |
Executive Inspector General for investigation .
| ||
(2) Audits of medical providers related to ensuring | ||
that appropriate
payments are made for services rendered | ||
and to the recovery of overpayments.
| ||
(3) Monitoring of quality assurance programs generally | ||
related to the
medical assistance program and specifically | ||
related to any managed care
program.
| ||
(4) Quality control measurements of the programs | ||
administered by the
Department of Healthcare and Family | ||
Services.
| ||
(5) Investigations of fraud or intentional program | ||
violations committed by
clients of the Department of | ||
Healthcare and Family Services.
| ||
(6) Actions initiated against contractors or medical | ||
providers for any of
the following reasons:
| ||
(A) Violations of the medical assistance program.
| ||
(B) Sanctions against providers brought in | ||
conjunction with the
Department of Public Health or the | ||
Department of Human Services (as successor
to the | ||
Department of Mental Health and Developmental | ||
Disabilities).
| ||
(C) Recoveries of assessments against hospitals | ||
and long-term care
facilities.
| ||
(D) Sanctions mandated by the United States | ||
Department of Health and
Human Services against | ||
medical providers.
|
(E) Violations of contracts related to any managed | ||
care programs.
| ||
(7) Representation of the Department of Healthcare and | ||
Family Services at
hearings with the Illinois Department of | ||
Professional Regulation in actions
taken against | ||
professional licenses held by persons who are in violation | ||
of
orders for child support payments.
| ||
(b-5) At the request of the Secretary of Human Services, | ||
the Inspector
General shall, in relation to any function | ||
performed by the Department of Human
Services as successor to | ||
the Department of Public Aid, exercise one or more
of the | ||
powers provided under this Section as if those powers related | ||
to the
Department of Human Services; in such matters, the | ||
Inspector General shall
report his or her findings to the | ||
Secretary of Human Services.
| ||
(c) The Inspector General shall have access to all | ||
information, personnel
and facilities of the
Department of | ||
Healthcare and Family Services and the Department of
Human | ||
Services (as successor to the Department of Public Aid), their | ||
employees, vendors, contractors and medical providers and any | ||
federal,
State or local governmental agency that are necessary | ||
to perform the duties of
the Office as directly related to | ||
public assistance programs administered by
those departments. | ||
No medical provider shall
be compelled, however, to provide | ||
individual medical records of patients who
are not clients of | ||
the Medical Assistance Program. State and local
governmental |
agencies are authorized and directed to provide the requested
| ||
information, assistance or cooperation.
| ||
(d) The Inspector General shall serve as the
Department of | ||
Healthcare and Family Services'
primary liaison with law | ||
enforcement,
investigatory and prosecutorial agencies, | ||
including but not limited to the
following:
| ||
(1) The Department of State Police.
| ||
(2) The Federal Bureau of Investigation and other | ||
federal law enforcement
agencies.
| ||
(3) The various Inspectors General of federal agencies | ||
overseeing the
programs administered by the
Department of | ||
Healthcare and Family Services.
| ||
(4) The various Inspectors General of any other State | ||
agencies with
responsibilities for portions of programs | ||
primarily administered by the
Department of Healthcare and | ||
Family Services.
| ||
(5) The Offices of the several United States Attorneys | ||
in Illinois.
| ||
(6) The several State's Attorneys.
| ||
The Inspector General shall meet on a regular basis with | ||
these entities to
share information regarding possible | ||
misconduct by any persons or entities
involved with the public | ||
aid programs administered by the Department
of Healthcare and | ||
Family Services.
| ||
(e) All investigations conducted by the Inspector General | ||
shall be conducted
in a manner that ensures the preservation of |
evidence for use in criminal
prosecutions. If the Inspector | ||
General determines that a possible criminal act
relating to | ||
fraud in the provision or administration of the medical | ||
assistance
program has been committed, the Inspector General | ||
shall immediately notify the
Medicaid Fraud Control Unit. If | ||
the Inspector General determines that a
possible criminal act | ||
has been committed within the jurisdiction of the Office,
the | ||
Inspector General may request the special expertise of the | ||
Department of
State Police. The Inspector General may present | ||
for prosecution the findings
of any criminal investigation to | ||
the Office of the Attorney General, the
Offices of the several | ||
United States Attorneys in Illinois or the several
State's | ||
Attorneys.
| ||
(f) To carry out his or her duties as described in this | ||
Section, the
Inspector General and his or her designees shall | ||
have the power to compel
by subpoena the attendance and | ||
testimony of witnesses and the production
of books, electronic | ||
records and papers as directly related to public
assistance | ||
programs administered by the Department of Healthcare and | ||
Family Services or
the Department of Human Services (as | ||
successor to the Department of Public
Aid). No medical provider | ||
shall be compelled, however, to provide individual
medical | ||
records of patients who are not clients of the Medical | ||
Assistance
Program.
| ||
(g) The Inspector General shall report all convictions, | ||
terminations, and
suspensions taken against vendors, |
contractors and medical providers to the
Department of | ||
Healthcare and Family Services and to any agency responsible | ||
for
licensing or regulating those persons or entities.
| ||
(h) The Inspector General shall make annual
reports, | ||
findings, and recommendations regarding the Office's | ||
investigations
into reports of fraud, waste, abuse, | ||
mismanagement, or misconduct relating to
any public aid | ||
programs administered by the Department
of Healthcare and | ||
Family Services or the Department of Human Services (as | ||
successor to the
Department of Public Aid) to the General | ||
Assembly and the Governor. These
reports shall include, but not | ||
be limited to, the following information:
| ||
(1) Aggregate provider billing and payment | ||
information, including the
number of providers at various | ||
Medicaid earning levels.
| ||
(2) The number of audits of the medical assistance
| ||
program and the dollar savings resulting from those audits.
| ||
(3) The number of prescriptions rejected annually | ||
under the
Department of Healthcare and Family Services' | ||
Refill Too Soon program and the
dollar savings resulting | ||
from that program.
| ||
(4) Provider sanctions, in the aggregate, including | ||
terminations and
suspensions.
| ||
(5) A detailed summary of the investigations | ||
undertaken in the previous
fiscal year. These summaries | ||
shall comply with all laws and rules regarding
maintaining |
confidentiality in the public aid programs.
| ||
(i) Nothing in this Section shall limit investigations by | ||
the
Department of Healthcare and Family Services or the | ||
Department of Human Services that may
otherwise be required by | ||
law or that may be necessary in their capacity as the
central | ||
administrative authorities responsible for administration of | ||
public aid
programs in this
State.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
| ||
Section 85. The Whistleblower Act is amended by changing | ||
Section 20 and by adding Sections 20.1 and 20.2 as follows:
| ||
(740 ILCS 174/20)
| ||
Sec. 20. Retaliation for certain refusals prohibited. An | ||
employer
may not retaliate against an employee for refusing to | ||
participate in an
activity that would result in a violation of | ||
a State or federal law,
rule, or
regulation , including, but not | ||
limited to, violations of the Freedom of Information Act .
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-544, eff. 1-1-04.)
| ||
(740 ILCS 174/20.1 new) | ||
Sec. 20.1. Other retaliation. Any other act or omission not | ||
otherwise specifically set forth in this Act, whether within or | ||
without the workplace, also constitutes retaliation by an | ||
employer under this Act if the act or omission would be | ||
materially adverse to a reasonable employee and is because of |
the employee disclosing or attempting to disclose public | ||
corruption or wrongdoing. | ||
(740 ILCS 174/20.2 new) | ||
Sec. 20.2. Threatening retaliation. An employer may not | ||
threaten any employee with any act or omission if that act or | ||
omission would constitute retaliation against the employee | ||
under this Act.
| ||
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | ||
becoming law, except that Section 20 and Section 65 take effect | ||
January 1, 2010.
|