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STATE OF ILLINOIS
HOUSE JOURNAL
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
NINETY-SECOND GENERAL ASSEMBLY
33RD LEGISLATIVE DAY
MONDAY, MARCH 26, 2001
12:00 O'CLOCK NOON
NO. 33
[March 26, 2001] 2
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Daily Journal Index
33rd Legislative Day
Action Page(s)
Adjournment........................................ 69
Change of Sponsorship.............................. 8
Committee on Rules Referrals....................... 6
Correctional Budget & Impact Note Requested........ 7
Fiscal Note Requested.............................. 7
Fiscal Note Supplied............................... 7
Home Rule Note Requested........................... 7
Judicial Note Requested............................ 7
Pension Impact Notes Supplied...................... 8
Quorum Roll Call................................... 5
State Mandates Note Requested...................... 7
State Mandates Notes Supplied...................... 7
Bill Number Legislative Action Page(s)
HB 0001 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 38
HB 0036 Third Reading...................................... 11
HB 0041 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 5
HB 0041 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 14
HB 0131 Second Reading..................................... 38
HB 0131 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 46
HB 0152 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 5
HB 0152 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 14
HB 0185 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 58
HB 0201 Third Reading...................................... 60
HB 0241 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 5
HB 0241 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 38
HB 0276 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 5
HB 0276 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 15
HB 0279 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 5
HB 0279 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 15
HB 0300 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 5
HB 0300 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 16
HB 0335 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 38
HB 0335 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 51
HB 0352 Third Reading...................................... 12
HB 0426 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 5
HB 0426 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 20
HB 0446 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 38
HB 0448 Third Reading...................................... 13
HB 0512 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 5
HB 0512 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 20
HB 0629 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 43
HB 0633 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 0633 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 37
HB 0661 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 5
HB 0661 Recall............................................. 37
HB 0770 Third Reading...................................... 61
HB 0776 Second Reading..................................... 14
HB 0854 Third Reading...................................... 12
HB 0898 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 5
HB 0898 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 21
HB 0909 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 5
HB 0909 Motion Submitted................................... 7
HB 0909 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 22
HB 0921 Third Reading...................................... 11
HB 0982 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 22
3 [March 26, 2001]
Bill Number Legislative Action Page(s)
HB 1000 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 5
HB 1000 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 64
HB 1026 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 43
HB 1033 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 5
HB 1033 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 22
HB 1041 Second Reading..................................... 68
HB 1046 Third Reading...................................... 12
HB 1081 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 5
HB 1081 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 22
HB 1083 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 5
HB 1083 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 24
HB 1083 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 60
HB 1096 Second Reading..................................... 14
HB 1709 Recall............................................. 65
HB 1786 Second Reading..................................... 68
HB 1810 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 45
HB 1848 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 5
HB 1848 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 59
HB 1851 Third Reading...................................... 12
HB 1895 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 45
HB 1927 Third Reading...................................... 11
HB 2001 Third Reading...................................... 61
HB 2026 Second Reading..................................... 38
HB 2056 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 2056 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 24
HB 2221 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 2221 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 31
HB 2244 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 2244 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 31
HB 2284 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 2284 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 61
HB 2290 Second Reading..................................... 68
HB 2315 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 2315 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 32
HB 2382 Recall............................................. 65
HB 2384 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 2384 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 33
HB 2392 Third Reading...................................... 12
HB 2395 Second Reading..................................... 14
HB 2437 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 2487 Second Reading..................................... 14
HB 2492 Second Reading..................................... 14
HB 2502 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 2502 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 59
HB 2511 Third Reading...................................... 11
HB 2518 Recall............................................. 60
HB 2519 Recall............................................. 60
HB 2540 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 2540 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 64
HB 2552 Second Reading..................................... 68
HB 3004 Second Reading..................................... 68
HB 3014 Second Reading..................................... 68
HB 3033 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 3033 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 51
HB 3048 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 65
HB 3059 Second Reading..................................... 14
HB 3065 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 3065 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 32
HB 3066 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 65
HB 3085 Second Reading..................................... 68
HB 3089 Recall............................................. 64
HB 3125 Second Reading..................................... 68
HB 3126 Third Reading...................................... 51
HB 3129 Second Reading..................................... 68
[March 26, 2001] 4
Bill Number Legislative Action Page(s)
HB 3130 Second Reading..................................... 68
HB 3136 Third Reading...................................... 13
HB 3137 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 3137 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 33
HB 3150 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 3150 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 36
HB 3196 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 53
HB 3212 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 3238 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 3246 Third Reading...................................... 50
HB 3267 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 3267 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 36
HB 3280 Second Reading..................................... 66
HB 3302 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 3307 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 46
HB 3332 Second Reading..................................... 68
HB 3346 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 3346 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 53
HB 3387 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 3387 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 37
HB 3395 Committee Report-Floor Amendment/s................. 6
HB 3395 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 12
HB 3557 Third Reading...................................... 11
HB 3618 Second Reading..................................... 14
HJR 0010 Adoption........................................... 61
HJR 0019 Resolution......................................... 67
HR 0032 Adoption........................................... 37
HR 0032 Committee Report................................... 6
HR 0157 Resolution......................................... 66
HR 0158 Resolution......................................... 67
HR 0163 Agreed Resolution.................................. 8
HR 0164 Agreed Resolution.................................. 9
HR 0165 Agreed Resolution.................................. 9
HR 0166 Agreed Resolution.................................. 10
HR 0167 Agreed Resolution.................................. 10
SB 0316 First Reading...................................... 66
SB 0360 First Reading...................................... 66
SB 1329 First Reading...................................... 66
5 [March 26, 2001]
The House met pursuant to adjournment.
The Speaker in the Chair.
Prayer by Pastor David Davidson of the Faith Temple Assembly of God
in Frankfort, Illinois.
Representative Lang led the House in the Pledge of Allegiance.
By direction of the Speaker, a roll call was taken to ascertain the
attendance of Members, as follows:
115 present. (ROLL CALL 1)
By unanimous consent, Representatives Bugielski, Shirley Jones and
Stephens were excused from attendance.
REQUEST TO BE SHOWN ON QUORUM
Having been absent when the Quorum Roll Call for Attendance was
taken, this is to advise you that I, Representative Brosnahan, should
be recorded as present.
Having been absent when the Quorum Roll Call for Attendance was
taken, this is to advise you that I, Representative Dart, should be
recorded as present.
Having been absent when the Quorum Roll Call for Attendance was
taken, this is to advise you that I, Representative Giles, should be
recorded as present.
Having been absent when the Quorum Roll Call for Attendance was
taken, this is to advise you that I, Representative Mulligan, should be
recorded as present.
Having been absent when the Quorum Roll Call for Attendance was
taken, this is to advise you that I, Representative Scott, should be
recorded as present.
SUBCOMMITTEE ASSIGNMENTS
Representative Daniels appointed the following members to serve
under the House Telecommunications Rewrite Committee:
Subcommittee on Telecommunications: Representatives Bost, Cross,
Moore and Persico.
REPORTS FROM THE COMMITTEE ON RULES
Representative Currie, Chairperson, from the Committee on Rules to
which the following were referred, action taken earlier today, and
reported the same back with the following recommendations:
That the Floor Amendment be reported "recommends be adopted":
Amendment No. 3 to HOUSE BILL 41.
Amendment No. 2 to HOUSE BILL 152.
Amendment No. 2 to HOUSE BILL 241.
Amendment No. 2 to HOUSE BILL 276.
Amendment No. 3 to HOUSE BILL 279.
Amendment No. 2 to HOUSE BILL 300.
Amendment No. 2 to HOUSE BILL 426.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 512.
Amendment No. 2 to HOUSE BILL 661.
Amendment No. 2 to HOUSE BILL 898.
Amendment No. 2 to HOUSE BILL 909.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 1000.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 1033.
Amendment No. 3 to HOUSE BILL 1081.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 1083.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 1848.
[March 26, 2001] 6
Amendment No. 2 to HOUSE BILL 2056.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 2221.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 2244.
Amendment No. 2 to HOUSE BILL 2284.
Amendment No. 2 to HOUSE BILL 2315.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 2384.
Amendment No. 2 to HOUSE BILL 2437.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 2502.
Amendment No. 2 to HOUSE BILL 2540.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 3033.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 3065.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 3137.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 3150.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 3212.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 3238.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 3267.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 3302.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 3346.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 3387.
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 3395.
The Motion to Table Committee Amendment:
Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 633.
That the resolution be reported "be adopted as amended" and be
placed on the House Calendar: HOUSE RESOLUTION 32.
The committee roll call vote on the foregoing legislative measures
is as follows:
4, Yeas; 0, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
Y Currie, Chair A Ryder
Y Hannig Y Tenhouse, Spkpn
Y Turner, Art
COMMITTEE ON RULES
REFERRALS
Representative Barbara Flynn Currie, Chairperson of the Committee
on Rules, reported the following legislative measures and/or joint
action motions have been assigned as follows:
Committee on Aging: House Amendment 2 to HOUSE BILL 1302.
Committee on Cities & Villages: House Amendment 1 to HOUSE BILL
3295 and House Amendment 1 to HOUSE BILL 3584.
Committee on Commerce & Business Development: House Amendment 3 to
HOUSE BILL 282 and House Amendment 1 to HOUSE BILL 3203.
Committee on Computer Techonology: House Amendment 1 to HOUSE BILL
3353.
Committee on Constitutional Officers: House Amendment 1 to HOUSE
BILL 3382.
Committee on Consumer Protection: House Amendment 1 to HOUSE BILL
176.
Committee on Elementary & Secondary Education: House Amendment 1
to HOUSE BILL 2834.
Committee on Environment & Energy: House Amendment 1 to HOUSE BILL
346, House Amendment 2 to HOUSE BILL 424 and House Amendment 1 to HOUSE
BILL 1147.
Committee on Executive: House Amendment 2 to HOUSE BILL 640.
Committee on Human Services: House Amendment 1 to HOUSE BILL 2973.
Committee on Judiciary I-Civil Law: House Amendment 1 to HOUSE
BILL 789, House Amendment 1 to HOUSE BILL 1414, House Amendment 1 to
HOUSE BILL 3024, House Amendment 2 to HOUSE BILL 3024 and House
Amendment 1 to HOUSE BILL 3031.
Committee on Judiciary II-Criminal Law: House Amendment 1 to HOUSE
BILL 1045 and House Amendment 1 to HOUSE BILL 2865.
Committee on Registration & Regulation: House Amendment 1 to HOUSE
BILL 2303 and House Amendment 1 to HOUSE BILL 2565.
7 [March 26, 2001]
Committee on Revenue: House Amendment 1 to HOUSE BILL 843.
Committee on The Disabled Community: House Amendment 1 to HOUSE
BILL 34.
Special Committee on Prosecutorial Misconduct: House Amendment 3
to HOUSE BILL 1843.
Special Committee on Tobacco Settlement Proceeds: House Amendment
2 to HOUSE BILL 1886.
MOTIONS
SUBMITTED
Representative Hamos submitted the following written motion, which
was placed in the Committee on Rules:
MOTION
I move to table Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 909.
REQUEST FOR FISCAL NOTE
Representative Black requested that a Fiscal Note be supplied for
HOUSE BILL 300, as amended.
FISCAL NOTE SUPPLIED
Fiscal Notes have been supplied for HOUSE BILLS 418, 548, as
amended, 570, as amended, 2381, 2470, 2487, 2527, as amended, 3061,
3146, 3280, 3321 and 3618.
REQUEST FOR STATE MANDATES NOTE
Representative Burke requested that a State Mandates Note be
supplied for HOUSE BILL 2146.
Representative Osterman requested that State Mandates Notes be
supplied for HOUSE BILLS 906 and 1689.
STATE MANDATES NOTES SUPPLIED
State Mandates Notes have been supplied for HOUSE BILLS 2382 and
3395.
REQUEST FOR CORRECTIONAL BUDGET & IMPACT NOTE
Representative Black requested that a Correctional Budget & Impact
Note be supplied for HOUSE BILL 300, as amended.
REQUEST FOR JUDICIAL NOTE
Representative Black requested that a Judicial Note be supplied for
HOUSE BILL 300, as amended.
Representative Burke requested that a Judicial Note be supplied for
HOUSE BILL 2146.
REQUEST FOR HOME RULE NOTE
Representative Burke requested that a Home Rule Note be supplied
for HOUSE BILL 2146.
[March 26, 2001] 8
Representative Osterman requested that Home Rule Notes be supplied
for HOUSE BILLS 403, 482, 902, 906, 914, 1689 and 1790.
PENSION IMPACT NOTES SUPPLIED
Pension Impact Notes have been supplied for HOUSE BILLS 1012, 2313
and 3587.
CHANGE OF SPONSORSHIP
Representative Madigan asked and obtained unanimous consent to be
removed as chief sponsor and Representative Hamos asked and obtained
unanimous consent to be shown as chief sponsor of HOUSE BILL 424.
Representative Madigan asked and obtained unanimous consent to be
removed as chief sponsor and Representative Granberg asked and obtained
unanimous consent to be shown as chief sponsor of HOUSE BILL 843.
Representative Madigan asked and obtained unanimous consent to be
removed as chief sponsor and Representative Howard asked and obtained
unanimous consent to be shown as chief sponsor of HOUSE BILL 3353.
Representative Dart asked and obtained unanimous consent to be
removed as chief sponsor and Representative Bradley asked and obtained
unanimous consent to be shown as chief sponsor of HOUSE BILL 158.
Representative Madigan asked and obtained unanimous consent to be
removed as chief sponsor and Representative O'Brien asked and obtained
unanimous consent to be shown as chief sponsor of HOUSE BILL 2865.
Representative Durkin asked and obtained unanimous consent to be
removed as chief sponsor and Representative Yarbrough asked and
obtained unanimous consent to be shown as chief sponsor of HOUSE BILL
922.
Representative Madigan asked and obtained unanimous consent to be
removed as chief sponsor and Representative Collins asked and obtained
unanimous consent to be shown as chief sponsor of HOUSE BILL 2834.
AGREED RESOLUTION
The following resolutions were offered and placed in the Committee
on Rules.
HOUSE RESOLUTION 163
Offered by Representative Dart:
WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of Representatives wish
to express their sincere condolences to the family and friends of
Richard McVicker, who recently passed away; and
WHEREAS, Richard McVicker was a retired captain with the Chicago
Fire Department who rescued four children from a burning home more than
thirty years ago; and
WHEREAS, Richard McVicker was born on September 29, 1931 in
Chicago, Illinois; he was a veteran of the United State Navy; and
WHEREAS, Mr. McVicker retired from the Chicago Fire Department last
year after serving for more than 40 years as a firefighter; and
WHEREAS, Mr. McVicker received numerous awards during his career
which include the 1969 Chicago Firefighter of the Year, where his
valiant act of heroism not only saved the lives of the four boys, it
also created a hero that the boys have looked up to, even to this day;
and
WHEREAS, Mr. McVicker dedication and passion for his work has
inspired his three sons to work in the fields of police and fire; and
WHEREAS, The passing of Richard McVicker will be deeply felt by all
who knew and loved him, especially his loving wife of 45 years, Arlene,
his sons, Bob McVicker, Ed McVicker, and Dan McVicker; his daughters,
Laura Felton, Linda Pressner, and Carol Willis; his 15 grandchildren;
and his many nieces and nephews; therefore, be it
9 [March 26, 2001]
RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we mourn, along with
all who knew him, the death of Richard McVicker of Chicago, Illinois;
and be it further
RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be presented to
the family of Richard McVicker with our sincere condolences.
HOUSE RESOLUTION 164
Offered by Representative Dart:
WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of Representatives are
pleased to honor Helen C. Wooten, who is retiring as Principal of the
Vanderpoel Magnet School for the Humanities Academy in Chicago, on
March 19, 2001; and
WHEREAS, Helen Wooten was born in Houston, Texas on February 24,
1940; she received her Bachelor of Science degree in Elementary
Education from Prairie View A. & M. University as well as her Masters
in Education degree; and
WHEREAS, Helen Wooten is the Past President of the Chicago Alumnae
Chapter of Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc.; she is the President and
Founder of the Chicago Prairie View A. & M. Alumni Association; she is
the Founder and Organizer of ETA XI Chapter Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority,
Inc.; she is a member of Women of Achievements, Principal Association,
and she is a member of St. James Catholic Church; and
WHEREAS, Helen Wooten has received the Karrie Award from Sigma
Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc., the "Excellence Award" from the Texas
Educational Association, the "Excellence Award" from the National Women
of Achievements in 1988, the "Outstanding President" award from the
Chicago Alumnae Chapter of Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc. in 1987, the
Principal Excellence Award from the Chicago Board of Education in 1994,
the Phi Delta Kappa Educator of the Year: 1998, the Outstanding
Achievements and Awards for African-American Women in the Twentieth
Century: 1998 from Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, and the Principal Mentor
from the Chicago Public School and Principal Association in 1998; and
WHEREAS, Helen Wooten has been listed in Who's Who in Professional
and Executive Women: 1987, Two Thousand Notable Women-First Edition:
1988, the Who's Who in the Midwest: 1992-1999, Who's Who in America:
1994-1999, and Who's Who in the World: 1997-1999; and
WHEREAS, Helen Wooten is to be commended for her hard work and
dedication to education; therefore, be it
RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we congratulate Helen
Wooten for a job well done and wish her the best in her future
endeavors; and be it further
RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be presented to
Helen Wooten, with our sincere regards.
HOUSE RESOLUTION 165
Offered by Representative Dart:
WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of Representatives wish
to express their sincere condolences to the family and friends of
Camillo Volini, who passed away on March 1, 2001; and
WHEREAS, Mr. Volini was born on Chicago's Near North Side, the son
of the late Dr. Italo Volini, one of the founders of the Stritch School
of Medicine at Loyola University; he attended Quigley Preparatory
Seminary and graduated from Loyola University and Loyola Law School; he
worked on the staff of Poetry magazine from 1958 to 1960 as an
assistant editor and contributor; and
WHEREAS, Mr. Volini began his legal career in the Chicago's
corporation counsel office in the late 1950s; in 1968, he was appointed
special prosecutor in a case involving demonstrators charged with
crimes at the 1968 Democratic National Convention; and
WHEREAS, Mr. Volini opened a private practice in the Edgewater
community during the 1980s; both he and his wife, former Alderman of
the 48th Ward, Marion Kennedy Volini, were active in local politics;
[March 26, 2001] 10
and
WHEREAS, In an effort to help his community, Mr. Volini was active
in federal court seeking scattered-site public housing throughout the
city; he worked on cases aimed at ridding the community of slum
landlords; he often handled cases pro bono for many of the families in
the Edgewater community; and
WHEREAS, The passing of Camillo Volini will be deeply felt by all
who knew and loved him, especially his wife, Marion; his children,
Michael Volini, Marion Moore, David Volini, Marcella Landis, and Monica
Volini; and his nine grandchildren; therefore, be it
RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we mourn, along with
all who knew him, the death of Camillo Volini of Chicago, Illinois; and
be it further
RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be presented to
the family of Camillo Volini with our sincere condolences.
HOUSE RESOLUTION 166
Offered by Representative Hamos - Schoenberg:
WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of Representatives are
pleased to recognize milestone events in the lives of the citizens of
the State of Illinois; and
WHEREAS, It has come to our attention that Helen McCarthy is
stepping down from her duties as Director of the Children Network of
Evanston this year; and
WHEREAS, Helen McCarthy received her Master's Degree from the
University of Chicago School of Social Service Administration in 1975;
she has managed social service programs that have focused on family
support for the past 25 years; and
WHEREAS, Helen McCarthy started her career in public health with
the City of Evanston and became the Director of Health and Human
Services for the City during the 1980s; and
WHEREAS, Helen McCarthy has been associated with the Childcare
Network of Evanston for the past nine years; she has been committed to
improving the quality of child care for low income families; and
WHEREAS, The Board of Directors of the Children's Network of
Evanston will honor Helen McCarthy at an event on March 26, 2001 for
her many years of dedicated service to the Evanston early childhood
community; therefore, be it
RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we congratulate Helen
McCarthy for her dedication as Director of the Childhood Network of
Evanston and for her many years of service to the Evanston early
childhood community, and we wish her well in all of her future
endeavors; and be it further
RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be presented to
Helen McCarthy as an expression of our esteem.
HOUSE RESOLUTION 167
Offered by Representative Schoenberg:
WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of Representatives wish
to express their sincere condolences to the family and friends of Helen
Walker, who recently passed away; and
WHEREAS, Helen Walker attended Aquinas Dominican High School in
Chicago; she attended the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana
where she met her husband; and she received a Master's degree in
English from Northwestern University; and
WHEREAS, Helen Walker is remembered for her dedication to children
and community; she was a member of the Evanston Township High School
District 202 school board; before her election to the school board she
had been PTA Council co-president, co-chairwoman of the Evanston school
districts' Joint Legislative Task Force, and head of a Candidate
Nominating Committee; and
WHEREAS, Helen Walker grew up along Chicago's South Shore; she
11 [March 26, 2001]
worked for World Book, Inc. for eight years; she loved English,
literature, and had a great sense of humor; and
WHEREAS, Helen Walker was a proud feminist, who marched for women's
rights; she was a also a passionate Democrat; and
WHEREAS, The passing of Helen Walker will be deeply felt by all who
knew and loved her, especially her husband, George Walker; and her
daughters, Nora and Elizabeth; therefore, be it
RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we mourn, along with
her family and friends, the death of Helen Walker; and be it further
RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be presented to
the family of Helen Walker.
HOUSE BILLS ON THIRD READING
The following bills and any amendments adopted thereto were printed
and laid upon the Members' desks. These bills have been examined, any
amendments thereto engrossed and any errors corrected. Any amendments
pending were tabled pursuant to Rule 40(a).
On motion of Representative Poe, HOUSE BILL 36 was taken up and
read by title a third time.
And the question being, "Shall this bill pass?" it was decided in
the affirmative by the following vote:
110, Yeas; 0, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
(ROLL CALL 2)
This bill, having received the votes of a constitutional majority
of the Members elected, was declared passed.
Ordered that the Clerk inform the Senate and ask their concurrence.
On motion of Representative Younge, HOUSE BILL 2511 was taken up
and read by title a third time.
And the question being, "Shall this bill pass?" it was decided in
the affirmative by the following vote:
109, Yeas; 0, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
(ROLL CALL 3)
This bill, having received the votes of a constitutional majority
of the Members elected, was declared passed.
Ordered that the Clerk inform the Senate and ask their concurrence.
On motion of Representative Moffitt, HOUSE BILL 3557 was taken up
and read by title a third time.
And the question being, "Shall this bill pass?" it was decided in
the affirmative by the following vote:
110, Yeas; 0, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
(ROLL CALL 4)
This bill, having received the votes of a constitutional majority
of the Members elected, was declared passed.
Ordered that the Clerk inform the Senate and ask their concurrence.
On motion of Representative Delgado, HOUSE BILL 1927 was taken up
and read by title a third time.
And the question being, "Shall this bill pass?" it was decided in
the affirmative by the following vote:
110, Yeas; 0, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
(ROLL CALL 5)
This bill, having received the votes of a constitutional majority
of the Members elected, was declared passed.
Ordered that the Clerk inform the Senate and ask their concurrence.
On motion of Representative Pankau, HOUSE BILL 921 was taken up and
read by title a third time.
And the question being, "Shall this bill pass?" it was decided in
the affirmative by the following vote:
110, Yeas; 0, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
[March 26, 2001] 12
(ROLL CALL 6)
This bill, having received the votes of a constitutional majority
of the Members elected, was declared passed.
Ordered that the Clerk inform the Senate and ask their concurrence.
On motion of Representative Erwin, HOUSE BILL 2392 was taken up and
read by title a third time.
And the question being, "Shall this bill pass?" it was decided in
the affirmative by the following vote:
110, Yeas; 0, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
(ROLL CALL 7)
This bill, having received the votes of a constitutional majority
of the Members elected, was declared passed.
Ordered that the Clerk inform the Senate and ask their concurrence.
On motion of Representative Beaubien, HOUSE BILL 854 was taken up
and read by title a third time.
And the question being, "Shall this bill pass?" it was decided in
the affirmative by the following vote:
110, Yeas; 0, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
(ROLL CALL 8)
This bill, having received the votes of a constitutional majority
of the Members elected, was declared passed.
Ordered that the Clerk inform the Senate and ask their concurrence.
On motion of Representative Curry, HOUSE BILL 352 was taken up and
read by title a third time.
And the question being, "Shall this bill pass?" it was decided in
the affirmative by the following vote:
108, Yeas; 0, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
(ROLL CALL 9)
This bill, having received the votes of a constitutional majority
of the Members elected, was declared passed.
Ordered that the Clerk inform the Senate and ask their concurrence.
On motion of Representative Myers, HOUSE BILL 1851 was taken up and
read by title a third time.
And the question being, "Shall this bill pass?" it was decided in
the affirmative by the following vote:
109, Yeas; 0, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
(ROLL CALL 10)
This bill, having received the votes of a constitutional majority
of the Members elected, was declared passed.
Ordered that the Clerk inform the Senate and ask their concurrence.
On motion of Representative Scully, HOUSE BILL 1046 was taken up
and read by title a third time.
And the question being, "Shall this bill pass?" it was decided in
the affirmative by the following vote:
110, Yeas; 1, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
(ROLL CALL 11)
This bill, having received the votes of a constitutional majority
of the Members elected, was declared passed.
Ordered that the Clerk inform the Senate and ask their concurrence.
HOUSE BILLS ON SECOND READING
HOUSE BILL 3395. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
Representative Madigan offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 3395
13 [March 26, 2001]
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 3395 on page 2, line 33 by
inserting after "entity" the following:
", other than a unit of local government or a school district,"; and
on page 3, by replacing lines 21 through 34 with the following:
"provided by the State of Illinois or a State agency.
"Public works" means all fixed works constructed for public use by
any public body, other than work done directly by any public utility
company, whether or not done under public supervision or direction, or
paid for wholly or in part out of public funds. "Public works" as
defined herein includes all projects financed in whole or in part with
bonds issued under the Industrial Project Revenue Bond Act (Article 11,
Division 74 of the Illinois Municipal Code), the Industrial Building
Revenue Bond Act, the Illinois Development Finance Authority Act, the
Illinois Sports Facilities Authority Act, or the Build Illinois Bond
Act, and all projects financed in whole or in part with loans or other
funds made available pursuant to the Build Illinois Act. "Public works"
also means, through December 31, 2005, all projects financed in whole
or in part with funds from the Fund for Illinois' Future under Section
6z-47 of the State Finance Act, funds for school construction under
Section 5 of the General Obligation Bond Act, funds authorized under
Section 3 of the School Construction Bond Act, funds for school
infrastructure under Section 6z-45 of the State Finance Act, or funds
for transportation purposes under Section 4 of the General Obligation
Bond Act."; and
on page 4, by replacing lines 14 through 25 with the following:
"of any State contract, grant, or reimbursement that they will not use
State funds to promote, assist, or deter union organizing or to
otherwise seek to influence the decision of any of its employees to be
represented or not represented by a labor organization, and, with
respect to employees engaged in employment in connection with a State
contract, grant, or reimbursement, that they will:
(i) not require or prohibit the attendance of employees at
any meeting related to union representation; and
(ii) not schedule or hold meetings related to union
representation during an employee's work time or in work areas; and
(iii) allow a labor organization the same"; and
on page 5, line 6 by changing "an" to "a"; and
on page 5, by replacing lines 10 through 16 with the following:
"(d) Any contractor or grantee entering into a contract".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was held on the order
of Second Reading.
HOUSE BILLS ON THIRD READING
The following bills and any amendments adopted thereto were printed
and laid upon the Members' desks. These bills have been examined, any
amendments thereto engrossed and any errors corrected. Any amendments
pending were tabled pursuant to Rule 40(a).
On motion of Representative Acevedo, HOUSE BILL 448 was taken up
and read by title a third time.
And the question being, "Shall this bill pass?" it was decided in
the affirmative by the following vote:
111, Yeas; 0, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
(ROLL CALL 12)
This bill, having received the votes of a constitutional majority
of the Members elected, was declared passed.
Ordered that the Clerk inform the Senate and ask their concurrence.
On motion of Representative McCarthy, HOUSE BILL 3136 was taken up
[March 26, 2001] 14
and read by title a third time.
And the question being, "Shall this bill pass?" it was decided in
the affirmative by the following vote:
91, Yeas; 16, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
(ROLL CALL 13)
This bill, having received the votes of a constitutional majority
of the Members elected, was declared passed.
Ordered that the Clerk inform the Senate and ask their concurrence.
HOUSE BILLS ON SECOND READING
Having been printed, the following bills were taken up, read by
title a second time and advanced to the order of Third Reading: HOUSE
BILLS 776, 1096, 2395, 2487, 2492, 3059 and 3618.
HOUSE BILL 41. Having been recalled on February 21, 2001, and held
on the order of Second Reading, the same was again taken up.
Representative Meyer offered the following amendment and moved its
adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 3 TO HOUSE BILL 41
AMENDMENT NO. 3. Amend House Bill 41, AS AMENDED, with reference
to the page and line numbers of House Amendment No. 1, on page 2, lines
4, 13, and 21 by changing "shall" wherever it appears to "may".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 3
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was again advanced to
the order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 152. Having been recalled on March 21, 2001, and held
on the order of Second Reading, the same was again taken up.
Representative Schmitz offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO HOUSE BILL 152
AMENDMENT NO. ___. Amend House Bill 152, AS AMENDED, as follows:
in Section 5, by replacing Sec. 4c with the following:
"(625 ILCS 25/4c new)
Sec. 4c. Children at least 4 years of age but under 12 years of
age. Every person, when transporting a child at least 4 years of age
but under 12 years of age, as provided in Section 4 of this Act, is
responsible for securing that child in seat safety belts or in a child
booster seat and a federally approved lap-and-shoulder belt system. As
used in this Section, "child booster seat" means a child passenger
restraint system that meets the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards
set forth in 49 C.F.R. 571.213 that is designed to elevate a child
weighing 40 pounds or more but not more than 80 pounds or a child less
than 4 feet 9 inches in height to properly sit in a federally approved
lap-and-shoulder belt system.".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 2
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was again advanced to
the order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 276. Having been recalled on March 21, 2001, and held
15 [March 26, 2001]
on the order of Second Reading, the same was again taken up.
Representative Holbrook offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO HOUSE BILL 276
AMENDMENT NO. 2. Amend House Bill 276, AS AMENDED, with reference
to page and line numbers of House Amendment No. 1, on page 3, in line
17 by replacing "40%" with "30%"; and
on page 4, in line 5 by inserting "of the project amount for a Phase II
survey or" after "50%".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 2
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was again advanced to
the order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 279. Having been printed, was taken up and read by title
a second time.
The following amendment was offered in the Committee on Executive,
adopted and printed:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 279
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 279 on page 4, line 2, by
replacing "licensed physician" with "physician licensed to practice
medicine in all of its branches"; and
on page 8, below line 4, by inserting the following:
"Section 90. The Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems Act is
amended by changing Section 3.70 as follows:
(210 ILCS 50/3.70)
Sec. 3.70. Emergency Medical Dispatcher.
(a) "Emergency Medical Dispatcher" means a person who has
successfully completed a dispatching course meeting or exceeding the
national curriculum of the United States Department of Transportation
in accordance with rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this
Act, who accepts calls from the public for emergency medical services
and dispatches designated emergency medical services personnel and
vehicles. The Emergency Medical Dispatcher may or may not provide
prearrival medical instructions to the caller, at the discretion of the
entity or agency that employs him. Such instructions shall be provided
in accordance with protocols established by the EMS Medical Director of
the EMS System in which the dispatcher operates. If the dispatcher
operates under the authority of an Emergency Telephone System Board
established under the Emergency Telephone System Act, the protocols
shall be established by such Board in consultation with the EMS Medical
Director. Persons who have already completed a course of instruction
in emergency medical dispatch based on, equivalent to or exceeding the
national curriculum of the United States Department of Transportation,
or as otherwise approved by the Department, shall be considered
Emergency Medical Dispatchers on the effective date of this amendatory
Act.
(b) The Department shall have the authority and responsibility to:
(1) Prescribe education and continuing education requirements
for the Emergency Medical Dispatcher, which meet or exceed the
national curriculum of the United States Department of
Transportation, through rules adopted pursuant to this Act;
(2) Require the Emergency Medical Dispatcher to notify the
Department of the EMS System(s) in which he operates;
(3) Require the Emergency Medical Dispatcher who provides
prearrival instructions to callers to comply with the protocols for
such instructions established by the EMS Medical Director(s) and
[March 26, 2001] 16
Emergency Telephone System Board or Boards, or in the absence of an
Emergency Telephone System Board or Boards the governmental agency
performing the duties of an Emergency Telephone System Board or
Boards, of the EMS System or Systems in which he operates;
(4) Require the Emergency Medical Dispatcher to keep the
Department currently informed as to the entity or agency that
employs or supervises his activities as an Emergency Medical
Dispatcher;
(5) (Blank) Establish a mechanism for phasing in the
Emergency Medical Dispatcher requirements over a five-year period;
(5.5) Establish an annual recertification requirement for
Emergency Medical Dispatchers that requires at least 12 hours of
continuing education each year; and
(6) Establish criteria for modifying or waiving Emergency
Medical Dispatcher requirements based on (i) the scope and
frequency of dispatch activities and the dispatcher's access to
training or (ii) whether the previously-attended dispatcher
training program merits automatic recertification for the
dispatcher.
(Source: P.A. 89-177, eff. 7-19-95.)".
Floor Amendment No. 2 was recommended be adopted by the Committee
on Rules.
Floor Amendment No. 3 remained in the Committee on Rules.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was held on the order
of Second Reading.
HOUSE BILL 300. Having been printed, was taken up and read by title
a second time.
The following amendment was offered in the Committee on Judiciary
II-Criminal Law, adopted and printed:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 300
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 300 as follows:
on page 5, lines 30 through 32, by deleting the following:
"and the court makes a finding that the person was actually innocent of
the crime for which he or she was convicted".
Representative Howard offered the following amendment and moved its
adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO HOUSE BILL 300
AMENDMENT NO. 2. Amend House Bill 300, AS AMENDED, by replacing
everything after the enacting clause with the following:
"Section 5. The Criminal Identification Act is amended by
changing Section 5 as follows:
(20 ILCS 2630/5) (from Ch. 38, par. 206-5)
Sec. 5. Arrest reports; expungement.
(a) All policing bodies of this State shall furnish to the
Department, daily, in the form and detail the Department requires,
fingerprints and descriptions of all persons who are arrested on
charges of violating any penal statute of this State for offenses that
are classified as felonies and Class A or B misdemeanors and of all
minors of the age of 10 and over who have been arrested for an offense
which would be a felony if committed by an adult, and may forward such
fingerprints and descriptions for minors arrested for Class A or B
misdemeanors. Moving or nonmoving traffic violations under the
Illinois Vehicle Code shall not be reported except for violations of
Chapter 4, Section 11-204.1, or Section 11-501 of that Code. In
addition, conservation offenses, as defined in the Supreme Court Rule
17 [March 26, 2001]
501(c), that are classified as Class B misdemeanors shall not be
reported.
Whenever an adult or minor prosecuted as an adult, not having
previously been convicted of any criminal offense or municipal
ordinance violation, charged with a violation of a municipal ordinance
or a felony or misdemeanor, is acquitted or released without being
convicted, whether the acquittal or release occurred before, on, or
after the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1991, the Chief
Judge of the circuit wherein the charge was brought, any judge of that
circuit designated by the Chief Judge, or in counties of less than
3,000,000 inhabitants, the presiding trial judge at the defendant's
trial may upon verified petition of the defendant order the record of
arrest expunged from the official records of the arresting authority
and the Department and order that the records of the clerk of the
circuit court be sealed until further order of the court upon good
cause shown and the name of the defendant obliterated on the official
index required to be kept by the circuit court clerk under Section 16
of the Clerks of Courts Act, but the order shall not affect any index
issued by the circuit court clerk before the entry of the order. The
Department may charge the petitioner a fee equivalent to the cost of
processing any order to expunge or seal the records, and the fee shall
be deposited into the State Police Services Fund. The records of those
arrests, however, that result in a disposition of supervision for any
offense shall not be expunged from the records of the arresting
authority or the Department nor impounded by the court until 2 years
after discharge and dismissal of supervision. Those records that
result from a supervision for a violation of Section 3-707, 3-708,
3-710, 5-401.3, or 11-503 of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar
provision of a local ordinance, or for a violation of Section 12-3.2,
12-15 or 16A-3 of the Criminal Code of 1961, or probation under Section
10 of the Cannabis Control Act, Section 410 of the Illinois Controlled
Substances Act, Section 12-4.3(b)(1) and (2) of the Criminal Code of
1961 (as those provisions existed before their deletion by Public Act
89-313), Section 10-102 of the Illinois Alcoholism and Other Drug
Dependency Act when the judgment of conviction has been vacated,
Section 40-10 of the Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse and Dependency Act
when the judgment of conviction has been vacated, or Section 10 of the
Steroid Control Act shall not be expunged from the records of the
arresting authority nor impounded by the court until 5 years after
termination of probation or supervision. Those records that result
from a supervision for a violation of Section 11-501 of the Illinois
Vehicle Code or a similar provision of a local ordinance, shall not be
expunged. All records set out above may be ordered by the court to be
expunged from the records of the arresting authority and impounded by
the court after 5 years, but shall not be expunged by the Department,
but shall, on court order be sealed by the Department and may be
disseminated by the Department only as required by law or to the
arresting authority, the State's Attorney, and the court upon a later
arrest for the same or a similar offense or for the purpose of
sentencing for any subsequent felony. Upon conviction for any offense,
the Department of Corrections shall have access to all sealed records
of the Department pertaining to that individual.
(a-5) Those records maintained by the Department for persons
arrested prior to their 17th birthday shall be expunged as provided in
Section 5-915 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
(b) Whenever a person has been convicted of a crime or of the
violation of a municipal ordinance, in the name of a person whose
identity he has stolen or otherwise come into possession of, the
aggrieved person from whom the identity was stolen or otherwise
obtained without authorization, upon learning of the person having been
arrested using his identity, may, upon verified petition to the chief
judge of the circuit wherein the arrest was made, have a court order
entered nunc pro tunc by the chief judge to correct the arrest record,
conviction record, if any, and all official records of the arresting
authority, the Department, other criminal justice agencies, the
prosecutor, and the trial court concerning such arrest, if any, by
[March 26, 2001] 18
removing his name from all such records in connection with the arrest
and conviction, if any, and by inserting in the records the name of the
offender, if known or ascertainable, in lieu of the has name. The
records of the clerk of the circuit court clerk shall be sealed until
further order of the court upon good cause shown and the name of the
aggrieved person obliterated on the official index required to be kept
by the circuit court clerk under Section 16 of the Clerks of Courts
Act, but the order shall not affect any index issued by the circuit
court clerk before the entry of the order. Nothing in this Section
shall limit the Department of State Police or other criminal justice
agencies or prosecutors from listing under an offender's name the false
names he or she has used. For purposes of this Section, convictions for
moving and nonmoving traffic violations other than convictions for
violations of Chapter 4, Section 11-204.1 or Section 11-501 of the
Illinois Vehicle Code shall not be a bar to expunging the record of
arrest and court records for violation of a misdemeanor or municipal
ordinance.
(c) Whenever a person who has been convicted of an offense is
granted a pardon by the Governor which specifically authorizes
expungement, he may, upon verified petition to the chief judge of the
circuit where the person had been convicted, any judge of the circuit
designated by the Chief Judge, or in counties of less than 3,000,000
inhabitants, the presiding trial judge at the defendant's trial, may
have a court order entered expunging the record of arrest from the
official records of the arresting authority and order that the records
of the clerk of the circuit court and the Department be sealed until
further order of the court upon good cause shown or as otherwise
provided herein, and the name of the defendant obliterated from the
official index requested to be kept by the circuit court clerk under
Section 16 of the Clerks of Courts Act in connection with the arrest
and conviction for the offense for which he had been pardoned but the
order shall not affect any index issued by the circuit court clerk
before the entry of the order. All records sealed by the Department
may be disseminated by the Department only as required by law or to the
arresting authority, the State's Attorney, and the court upon a later
arrest for the same or similar offense or for the purpose of sentencing
for any subsequent felony. Upon conviction for any subsequent offense,
the Department of Corrections shall have access to all sealed records
of the Department pertaining to that individual. Upon entry of the
order of expungement, the clerk of the circuit court shall promptly
mail a copy of the order to the person who was pardoned.
(c-5) Whenever a person has been convicted of criminal sexual
assault, aggravated criminal sexual assault, predatory criminal sexual
assault of a child, criminal sexual abuse, or aggravated criminal
sexual abuse, the victim of that offense may request that the State's
Attorney of the county in which the conviction occurred file a verified
petition with the presiding trial judge at the defendant's trial to
have a court order entered to seal the records of the clerk of the
circuit court in connection with the proceedings of the trial court
concerning that offense. However, the records of the arresting
authority and the Department of State Police concerning the offense
shall not be sealed. The court, upon good cause shown, shall make the
records of the clerk of the circuit court in connection with the
proceedings of the trial court concerning the offense available for
public inspection.
(c-6) If a conviction or sentence has been set aside on direct
review or on collateral attack and the court determines by clear and
convincing evidence that the defendant was factually innocent of the
charge, the court shall enter an expungement order as provided in
subsection (b) of Section 5-5-4 of the Unified Code of Corrections.
(d) Notice of the petition for subsections (a), (b), and (c) shall
be served upon the State's Attorney or prosecutor charged with the duty
of prosecuting the offense, the Department of State Police, the
arresting agency and the chief legal officer of the unit of local
government affecting the arrest. Unless the State's Attorney or
prosecutor, the Department of State Police, the arresting agency or
19 [March 26, 2001]
such chief legal officer objects to the petition within 30 days from
the date of the notice, the court shall enter an order granting or
denying the petition. The clerk of the court shall promptly mail a copy
of the order to the person, the arresting agency, the prosecutor, the
Department of State Police and such other criminal justice agencies as
may be ordered by the judge.
(e) Nothing herein shall prevent the Department of State Police
from maintaining all records of any person who is admitted to probation
upon terms and conditions and who fulfills those terms and conditions
pursuant to Section 10 of the Cannabis Control Act, Section 410 of the
Illinois Controlled Substances Act, Section 12-4.3 of the Criminal Code
of 1961, Section 10-102 of the Illinois Alcoholism and Other Drug
Dependency Act, Section 40-10 of the Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse
and Dependency Act, or Section 10 of the Steroid Control Act.
(f) No court order issued pursuant to the expungement provisions
of this Section shall become final for purposes of appeal until 30 days
after notice is received by the Department. Any court order contrary
to the provisions of this Section is void.
(g) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (c-5) of this
Section, the court shall not order the sealing or expungement of the
arrest records and records of the circuit court clerk of any person
granted supervision for or convicted of any sexual offense committed
against a minor under 18 years of age. For the purposes of this
Section, "sexual offense committed against a minor" includes but is not
limited to the offenses of indecent solicitation of a child or criminal
sexual abuse when the victim of such offense is under 18 years of age.
(Source: P.A. 90-590, eff. 1-1-00; 91-295, eff. 1-1-00; 91-357, eff.
7-29-99.)
Section 10. The Unified Code of Corrections is amended by
changing Section 5-5-4 as follows:
(730 ILCS 5/5-5-4) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-5-4)
Sec. 5-5-4. Resentences.
(a) Where a conviction or sentence has been set aside on direct
review or on collateral attack, the court shall not impose a new
sentence for the same offense or for a different offense based on the
same conduct which is more severe than the prior sentence less the
portion of the prior sentence previously satisfied unless the more
severe sentence is based upon conduct on the part of the defendant
occurring after the original sentencing. If a sentence is vacated on
appeal or on collateral attack due to the failure of the trier of fact
at trial to determine beyond a reasonable doubt the existence of a fact
(other than a prior conviction) necessary to increase the punishment
for the offense beyond the statutory maximum otherwise applicable,
either the defendant may be re-sentenced to a term within the range
otherwise provided or, if the State files notice of its intention to
again seek the extended sentence, the defendant shall be afforded a new
trial.
(b) If a conviction or sentence has been set aside on direct
review or on collateral attack and the court determines by clear and
convincing evidence that the defendant was factually innocent of the
charge, the court shall enter an order expunging the record of arrest
from the official records of the arresting authority and order that the
records of the clerk of the circuit court and Department of State
Police be sealed until further order of the court upon good cause shown
or as otherwise provided herein, and the name of the defendant
obliterated from the official index requested to be kept by the circuit
court clerk under Section 16 of the Clerks of Courts Act in connection
with the arrest and conviction for the offense but the order shall not
affect any index issued by the circuit court clerk before the entry of
the order.
All records sealed by the Department of State Police may be
disseminated by the Department only as required by law or to the
arresting authority, the State's Attorney, the court upon a later
arrest for the same or similar offense, or for the purpose of
sentencing for any subsequent felony. Upon conviction for any
subsequent offense, the Department of Corrections shall have access to
[March 26, 2001] 20
all sealed records of the Department pertaining to that individual.
Upon entry of the order of expungement, the clerk of the circuit
court shall promptly mail a copy of the order to the person whose
records were expunged and sealed.
(Source: P.A. 91-953, eff. 2-23-01.)
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon becoming
law.".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
Floor Amendment No. 3 remained in the Committee on Rules.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendments
numbered 1 and 2 were ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was
held on the order of Second Reading.
HOUSE BILL 426. Having been printed, was taken up and read by title
a second time.
The following amendments were offered in the Committee on Labor,
adopted and printed:
"GET AMENDMENT NO. 1 HERE".
Representative Hoffman offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO HOUSE BILL 426
AMENDMENT NO. 2. Amend House Bill 426, AS AMENDED, as follows:
by replacing subsection (d) of Sec. 12-5.05 of Section 5 with the
following:
"(d) For the purposes of this Section, "corporate entity" means
any corporation, unincorporated association, partnership, or any other
form of business ownership organized or doing business in this State,
but does not include the State of Illinois or any State agency,
political subdivision, unit of local government, or school district.".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendments
numbered 1 and 2 were ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was
held on the order of Second Reading.
HOUSE BILL 512. Having been printed, was taken up and read by title
a second time.
Representative John Turner offered the following amendment and
moved its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 512
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 512 as follows:
on page 1, by inserting after line 30 the following:
"Section 10. The Mineral Lease Release of Record Act is amended by
changing Sections 1 and 2 as follows:
(765 ILCS 510/1) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 4401)
Sec. 1.
When any lease on land heretofore or hereafter taken for the
purpose of prospecting for or mining or producing coal, oil, gas, or
other minerals mineral, or for the purpose of mining the coal or other
mineral from said land, so leased, shall terminate become forfeited by
the terms of the said lease or the acts or omissions of the said
lessee, his, her, or their heirs, representatives, successors or
21 [March 26, 2001]
assigns, it shall be the duty of said lessee, his, her or their heirs,
representatives, successors or assigns, within 60 days from the date of
termination of the lease within sixty days from the time this act shall
take effect, if such forfeiture take effect prior thereto, and within
sixty days from the date of forfeiture of any and all other leases, to
have such lease or leases, released of record in the county where such
land is situate, without any cost to the owner or owners of the land;
and any failure so to do after notice and demand, shall constitute a
petty offense.
(Source: P.A. 77-2719.)
(765 ILCS 510/2) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 4402)
Sec. 2. Whenever the lessee of any coal, oil, gas, or other
mineral lease shall terminate and the lessee, his, her, or their heirs,
representatives, successors, or assigns lands, or the person, firm,
company or corporation, owning, holding or having control of any such
lease shall allow the same to become forfeited, or by his, her or their
acts shall forfeit the same, and shall refuse, fail or neglect to cause
the same to be released of record in the county where such lands are
located situate, the lessor or owner of the lands may begin and
maintain a civil action for a judgment that the lease has terminated.
The recording of a judgment of termination in the office of the
recorder of the county wherein are located the lands covered by such
terminated lease shall constitute a release of the lease. Upon
judgment being rendered that a lease has terminated and that the
lessee, his, her or their heirs, representatives, successors, or
assigns has not released the same of record within 60 days after notice
and demand, the court shall enter judgment against all such persons who
shall have failed to release such lease of record for all court costs,
litigation expenses, and attorney's fees reasonably incurred by the
lessor or owner of the lands or minerals in obtaining the judgment of
termination. to compel the party to release the same of record and upon
judgment being rendered ordering the lease forfeited and directing the
release, the lessee, or the person, firm, company or corporation
owning, holding or controlling the lease, shall be ordered to pay all
costs accruing by the action, including a reasonable attorney's fee to
be taxed as cost.
(Source: P.A. 84-1308.)".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 898. Having been recalled on March 20,2001, and held on
the order of Second Reading, the same was again taken up.
Representative O'Brien offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO HOUSE BILL 898
AMENDMENT NO. 2. Amend House Bill 898, AS AMENDED, with reference
to page and line numbers of House Amendment No. 1, on page 2, line 21,
after "liability", by inserting ", except for willful and wanton
conduct,"; and
on page 2, line 24, after "liability", by inserting ", except for
willful and wanton conduct,"; and
on page 2, line 28, after "claims", by inserting ", except a claim
based on willful and wanton conduct,"; and
on page 4, line 11, after "liability", by inserting ", except for
willful and wanton conduct,"; and
on page 4, line 14, after "liability", by inserting ", except for
willful and wanton conduct,"; and
on page 4, line 18, after "claims", by inserting ", except a claim
[March 26, 2001] 22
based on willful and wanton conduct,".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 2
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was again advanced to
the order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 909. Having been recalled on March 21, 2001, and held
on the order of Second Reading, the same was again taken up.
On motion of Representative Hamos, Amemdment No. 1 was ordered to
lie on the table.
Floor Amendment No. 2 remained in the Committee on Rules.
There being no further amendments, the bill was again held on the
order of Second Reading.
HOUSE BILL 1033. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
Representative Tenhouse offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 1033
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 1033 on page 3, by deleting
lines 18 though 30; and
by deleting all of pages 4 and 5; and
on page 6, by deleting lines 1 through 7; and
on page 6, line 8, by replacing "Section 20" with "Section 15".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 982. Having been printed, was taken up and read by title
a second time.
Representative Osterman offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 982
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 982 on page 1, line 22, by
changing "6 months" to "one year 6 months".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 1081. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
The following amendment was offered in the Committee on Counties &
Townships, adopted and printed:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 1081
23 [March 26, 2001]
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 1081 by replacing everything
after the enacting clause with the following:
"Section 5. The Fire Protection District Act is amended by adding
Section 8.20 as follows:
(70 ILCS 705/8.20 new)
Sec. 8.20. Open burning.
(a) The board of trustees of any fire protection district
incorporated under this Act may, by ordinance, regulate open burning
within the district for the purpose of preventing and controlling fire.
The ordinance must require that the district be notified of open
burning before it takes place, but may not require that a permit for
open burning be obtained from the district. An ordinance adopted under
this Section must be consistent with the Department of Natural
Resources' standards for controlled burns on public and private lands.
The district may not enforce an ordinance adopted under this Section
within the corporate limits of a municipality with a population of
1,000,000 or more.
(b) The fire department of a fire protection district that has
adopted an open burning ordinance may extinguish an open burn that does
not comply with the provisions of the ordinance.
(c) The fire protection district may provide that persons setting
open burns on any agricultural land with an area of 50 acres or more
may voluntarily comply with the provisions of an ordinance adopted
under this Section and with the Department of Natural Resources'
standards for controlled burns.".
Representative Slone offered and withdrew Amendment No. 2.
Representative Slone offered the following amendment and moved its
adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 3 TO HOUSE BILL 1081
AMENDMENT NO. 3. Amend House Bill 1081 by replacing everything
after the enacting clause with the following:
"Section 5. The Fire Protection District Act is amended by adding
Section 8.20 as follows:
(70 ILCS 705/8.20 new)
Sec. 8.20. Open burning.
(a) The board of trustees of any fire protection district
incorporated under this Act may, by ordinance, regulate open burning
within the district for the purpose of preventing and controlling fire.
The ordinance must require that the district be notified of open
burning before it takes place, but may not require that a permit for
open burning be obtained from the district. The district may not
enforce an ordinance adopted under this Section within the corporate
limits of a municipality with a population of 1,000,000 or more.
(b) The fire department of a fire protection district may
extinguish any open burn that presents a clear, present, and
unreasonable danger to persons or adjacent property or that presents an
unreasonable risk because of wind, weather, or the types of
combustibles. The unreasonable risk may include the height of flames,
windblown embers, the creation of hazardous fumes, or an unattended
fire. Fire departments may not unreasonably interfere with permitted
and legal open burning.
(c) The fire protection district may provide that persons setting
open burns on any agricultural land with an area of 50 acres or more
may voluntarily comply with the provisions of an ordinance adopted
under this Section.".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendments
numbered 1 and 3 were ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was
[March 26, 2001] 24
held on the order of Second Reading.
HOUSE BILL 1083. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
Floor Amendment No. 1 remained in the Committee on Rules.
There being no further amendments, the bill was ordered held on the
order of Second Reading.
HOUSE BILL 2056. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
The following amendment was offered in the Committee on
Transportation & Motor Vehicles, adopted and printed:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 2056
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 2056 as follows:
by replacing everything after the enacting clause with the following:
"Section 5. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by changing
Sections 11-1414, 12-215, and 12-805 as follows:
(625 ILCS 5/11-1414) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 11-1414)
Sec. 11-1414. Approaching, overtaking, and passing school bus.
(a) The driver of a vehicle shall stop such vehicle before meeting
or overtaking, from either direction, any school bus stopped for the
purpose of receiving or discharging pupils on a highway, on a roadway
on school property, or upon a private road within an area that is
covered by a contract or agreement executed pursuant to Section
11-209.1 of this Code. Such stop is required before reaching the
school bus when there is in operation on the school bus the visual
signals as specified in Sections 12-803 and 12-805 of this Code. The
driver of the vehicle shall not proceed until the school bus resumes
motion or the driver of the vehicle is signaled by the school bus
driver to proceed or the visual signals are no longer actuated.
(b) The stop signal arm required by Section 12-803 of this Code
shall be extended after the school bus has come to a complete stop for
the purpose of loading or discharging pupils and shall be closed before
the school bus is placed in motion again. The stop signal arm shall
not be extended at any other time.
(c) The alternately flashing red signal lamps of an 8-lamp
flashing signal system required by Section 12-805 of this Code shall be
actuated after the school bus has come to a complete stop for the
purpose of loading or discharging pupils and shall be turned off before
the school bus is placed in motion again. The red signal lamps shall
not be actuated at any other time except as provided in paragraph (d)
of this Section.
(d) The alternately flashing amber signal lamps of an 8-lamp
flashing signal system required by Section 12-805 of this Code shall
be actuated continuously during not less than the last 100 feet
traveled by the school bus before stopping for the purpose of loading
or discharging pupils within an urban area and during not less than the
last 200 feet traveled by the school bus outside an urban area. The
amber signal lamps shall remain actuated until the school bus is
stopped. The amber signal lamps shall not be actuated at any other
time.
(d-5) The alternately flashing head lamps permitted by Section
12-805 of this Code may be operated while the alternately flashing red
or amber signal lamps required by that Section are actuated.
(e) The driver of a vehicle upon a highway having 4 or more lanes
which permits at least 2 lanes of traffic to travel in opposite
directions need not stop such vehicle upon meeting a school bus which
is stopped in the opposing roadway; and need not stop such vehicle when
driving upon a controlled access highway when passing a school bus
traveling in either direction that is stopped in a loading zone
adjacent to the surfaced or improved part of the controlled access
highway where pedestrians are not permitted to cross.
25 [March 26, 2001]
(f) Beginning with the effective date of this amendatory Act of
1985, the Secretary of State shall suspend for a period of 3 months the
driving privileges of any person convicted of a violation of subsection
(a) of this Section or a similar provision of a local ordinance; the
Secretary shall suspend for a period of one year the driving privileges
of any person convicted of a second or subsequent violation of
subsection (a) of this Section or a similar provision of a local
ordinance if the second or subsequent violation occurs within 5 years
of a prior conviction for the same offense. In addition to the
suspensions authorized by this Section, any person convicted of
violating this Section or a similar provision of a local ordinance
shall be subject to a mandatory fine of $150 or, upon a second or
subsequent violation, $500. The Secretary may also grant, for the
duration of any suspension issued under this subsection, a restricted
driving permit granting the privilege of driving a motor vehicle
between the driver's residence and place of employment or within other
proper limits that the Secretary of State shall find necessary to avoid
any undue hardship. A restricted driving permit issued hereunder shall
be subject to cancellation, revocation and suspension by the Secretary
of State in like manner and for like cause as a driver's license may be
cancelled, revoked or suspended; except that a conviction upon one or
more offenses against laws or ordinances regulating the movement of
traffic shall be deemed sufficient cause for the revocation, suspension
or cancellation of the restricted driving permit. The Secretary of
State may, as a condition to the issuance of a restricted driving
permit, require the applicant to participate in a designated driver
remedial or rehabilitative program. Any conviction for a violation of
this subsection shall be included as an offense for the purposes of
determining suspension action under any other provision of this Code,
provided however, that the penalties provided under this subsection
shall be imposed unless those penalties imposed under other applicable
provisions are greater.
The owner of any vehicle alleged to have violated paragraph (a) of
this Section shall, upon appropriate demand by the State's Attorney or
other authorized prosecutor acting in response to a signed complaint,
provide a written statement or deposition identifying the operator of
the vehicle if such operator was not the owner at the time of the
alleged violation. Failure to supply such information shall be
construed to be the same as a violation of paragraph (a) and shall be
subject to the same penalties herein provided. In the event the owner
has assigned control for the use of the vehicle to another, the person
to whom control was assigned shall comply with the provisions of this
paragraph and be subject to the same penalties as herein provided.
(Source: P.A. 91-260, eff. 1-1-00.)
(625 ILCS 5/12-215) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 12-215)
Sec. 12-215. Oscillating, rotating or flashing lights on motor
vehicles. Except as otherwise provided in this Code:
(a) The use of red or white oscillating, rotating or flashing
lights, whether lighted or unlighted, is prohibited except on:
1. Law enforcement vehicles of State, Federal or local
authorities;
2. A vehicle operated by a police officer or county coroner
and designated or authorized by local authorities, in writing, as a
law enforcement vehicle; however, such designation or authorization
must be carried in the vehicle;
3. Vehicles of local fire departments and State or federal
firefighting vehicles;
4. Vehicles which are designed and used exclusively as
ambulances or rescue vehicles; furthermore, such lights shall not
be lighted except when responding to an emergency call for and
while actually conveying the sick or injured; and
5. Tow trucks licensed in a state that requires such lights;
furthermore, such lights shall not be lighted on any such tow truck
while the tow truck is operating in the State of Illinois; and.
6. School buses operating alternately flashing head lamps as
permitted under Section 12-805 of this Code.
[March 26, 2001] 26
(b) The use of amber oscillating, rotating or flashing lights,
whether lighted or unlighted, is prohibited except on:
1. Second division vehicles designed and used for towing or
hoisting vehicles; furthermore, such lights shall not be lighted
except as required in this paragraph 1; such lights shall be
lighted when such vehicles are actually being used at the scene of
an accident or disablement; if the towing vehicle is equipped with
a flat bed that supports all wheels of the vehicle being
transported, the lights shall not be lighted while the vehicle is
engaged in towing on a highway; if the towing vehicle is not
equipped with a flat bed that supports all wheels of a vehicle
being transported, the lights shall be lighted while the towing
vehicle is engaged in towing on a highway during all times when the
use of headlights is required under Section 12-201 of this Code;
2. Motor vehicles or equipment of the State of Illinois,
local authorities and contractors; furthermore, such lights shall
not be lighted except while such vehicles are engaged in
maintenance or construction operations within the limits of
construction projects;
3. Vehicles or equipment used by engineering or survey crews;
furthermore, such lights shall not be lighted except while such
vehicles are actually engaged in work on a highway;
4. Vehicles of public utilities, municipalities, or other
construction, maintenance or automotive service vehicles except
that such lights shall be lighted only as a means for indicating
the presence of a vehicular traffic hazard requiring unusual care
in approaching, overtaking or passing while such vehicles are
engaged in maintenance, service or construction on a highway;
5. Oversized vehicle or load; however, such lights shall only
be lighted when moving under permit issued by the Department under
Section 15-301 of this Code;
6. The front and rear of motorized equipment owned and
operated by the State of Illinois or any political subdivision
thereof, which is designed and used for removal of snow and ice
from highways;
7. Fleet safety vehicles registered in another state,
furthermore, such lights shall not be lighted except as provided
for in Section 12-212 of this Code;
8. Such other vehicles as may be authorized by local
authorities;
9. Law enforcement vehicles of State or local authorities
when used in combination with red oscillating, rotating or flashing
lights;
10. Vehicles used for collecting or delivering mail for the
United States Postal Service provided that such lights shall not be
lighted except when such vehicles are actually being used for such
purposes;
11. Any vehicle displaying a slow-moving vehicle emblem as
provided in Section 12-205.1;
12. All trucks equipped with self-compactors or roll-off
hoists and roll-on containers for garbage or refuse hauling. Such
lights shall not be lighted except when such vehicles are actually
being used for such purposes;
13. Vehicles used by a security company, alarm responder, or
control agency, if the security company, alarm responder, or
control agency is bound by a contract with a federal, State, or
local government entity to use the lights; and
14. Security vehicles of the Department of Human Services;
however, the lights shall not be lighted except when being used for
security related purposes under the direction of the superintendent
of the facility where the vehicle is located.
(c) The use of blue oscillating, rotating or flashing lights,
whether lighted or unlighted, is prohibited except on:
1. Rescue squad vehicles not owned by a fire department and
vehicles owned or fully operated by a:
voluntary firefighter;
27 [March 26, 2001]
paid firefighter;
part-paid firefighter;
call firefighter;
member of the board of trustees of a fire protection
district;
paid or unpaid member of a rescue squad; or
paid or unpaid member of a voluntary ambulance unit.
However, such lights are not to be lighted except when
responding to a bona fide emergency.
2. Police department vehicles in cities having a population
of 500,000 or more inhabitants.
3. Law enforcement vehicles of State or local authorities
when used in combination with red oscillating, rotating or flashing
lights.
4. Vehicles of local fire departments and State or federal
firefighting vehicles when used in combination with red
oscillating, rotating or flashing lights.
5. Vehicles which are designed and used exclusively as
ambulances or rescue vehicles when used in combination with red
oscillating, rotating or flashing lights; furthermore, such lights
shall not be lighted except when responding to an emergency call.
6. Vehicles that are equipped and used exclusively as organ
transport vehicles when used in combination with red oscillating,
rotating, or flashing lights; furthermore, these lights shall only
be lighted when the transportation is declared an emergency by a
member of the transplant team or a representative of the organ
procurement organization.
(d) The use of a combination of amber and white oscillating,
rotating or flashing lights, whether lighted or unlighted, is
prohibited, except motor vehicles or equipment of the State of
Illinois, local authorities and contractors may be so equipped;
furthermore, such lights shall not be lighted except while such
vehicles are engaged in highway maintenance or construction operations
within the limits of highway construction projects.
(e) All oscillating, rotating or flashing lights referred to in
this Section shall be of sufficient intensity, when illuminated, to be
visible at 500 feet in normal sunlight.
(f) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit a manufacturer of
oscillating, rotating or flashing lights or his representative from
temporarily mounting such lights on a vehicle for demonstration
purposes only.
(g) Any person violating the provisions of subsections (a), (b),
(c) or (d) of this Section who without lawful authority stops or
detains or attempts to stop or detain another person shall be guilty of
a Class 4 felony.
(h) Except as provided in subsection (g) above, any person
violating the provisions of subsections (a) or (c) of this Section
shall be guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
(Source: P.A. 90-330, eff. 8-8-97; 90-347, eff. 1-1-98; 90-655, eff.
7-30-98; 91-357, eff. 7-29-99.)
(625 ILCS 5/12-805) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 12-805)
Sec. 12-805. Special lighting equipment.
Each school bus purchased as a new vehicle after December 31, 1975
shall be equipped with an 8-lamp flashing signal system. Until December
31, 1978, all other school buses shall be equipped with either a 4-lamp
or an 8-lamp flashing signal system. After December 31, 1978, all
school buses shall be equipped with an 8-lamp flashing signal system.
A 4-lamp flashing signal system shall have 2 alternately flashing
red lamps mounted as high and as widely spaced laterally on the same
level as practicable at the front of the school bus and 2 such lamps
mounted in the same manner at the rear.
An 8-lamp flashing signal system shall have, in addition to a
4-lamp system, 4 alternately flashing amber lamps. Each amber lamp
shall be mounted next to a red lamp and at the same level but closer to
the centerline of the school bus.
Each signal lamp shall be a sealed beam at least 5 1/2 inches in
[March 26, 2001] 28
diameter and shall have sufficient intensity to be visible at 500 feet
in normal sunlight. Both the 4-lamp and 8-lamp system shall be actuated
only by means of a manual switch. There shall be a device for
indicating to the driver that the system is operating properly or is
inoperative.
A school bus may also be equipped with alternately flashing head
lamps, which may be operated in conjunction with the 8-lamp flashing
signal system.
(Source: P.A. 79-1400.)
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon becoming
law.".
Representative Winkel offered the following amendment and moved its
adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO HOUSE BILL 2056
AMENDMENT NO. 2. Amend House Bill 2056, AS AMENDED, with reference
to page and line numbers of House Amendment No. 1, by replacing lines 6
through 21 on page 1, all of pages 2 and 3, and lines 1 through 21 on
page 4 with the following:
"changing Sections 11-1414, 12-215, 12-805, and 12-815 and adding
Sections 12-802.1 and 12-816 as follows:
(625 ILCS 5/11-1414) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 11-1414)
Sec. 11-1414. Approaching, overtaking, and passing school bus.
(a) The driver of a vehicle shall stop such vehicle before meeting
or overtaking, from either direction, any school bus stopped for the
purpose of receiving or discharging pupils on a highway, on a roadway
on school property, or upon a private road within an area that is
covered by a contract or agreement executed pursuant to Section
11-209.1 of this Code. Such stop is required before reaching the
school bus when there is in operation on the school bus the visual
signals as specified in Sections 12-803 and 12-805 of this Code. The
driver of the vehicle shall not proceed until the school bus resumes
motion or the driver of the vehicle is signaled by the school bus
driver to proceed or the visual signals are no longer actuated.
(b) The stop signal arm required by Section 12-803 of this Code
shall be extended after the school bus has come to a complete stop for
the purpose of loading or discharging pupils and shall be closed before
the school bus is placed in motion again. The stop signal arm shall
not be extended at any other time.
(c) The alternately flashing red signal lamps of an 8-lamp
flashing signal system required by Section 12-805 of this Code shall be
actuated after the school bus has come to a complete stop for the
purpose of loading or discharging pupils and shall be turned off before
the school bus is placed in motion again. The red signal lamps shall
not be actuated at any other time except as provided in paragraph (d)
of this Section.
(d) The alternately flashing amber signal lamps of an 8-lamp
flashing signal system required by Section 12-805 of this Code shall
be actuated continuously during not less than the last 100 feet
traveled by the school bus before stopping for the purpose of loading
or discharging pupils within an urban area and during not less than the
last 200 feet traveled by the school bus outside an urban area. The
amber signal lamps shall remain actuated until the school bus is
stopped. The amber signal lamps shall not be actuated at any other
time.
(e) The driver of a vehicle upon a highway having 4 or more lanes
which permits at least 2 lanes of traffic to travel in opposite
directions need not stop such vehicle upon meeting a school bus which
is stopped in the opposing roadway; and need not stop such vehicle when
driving upon a controlled access highway when passing a school bus
traveling in either direction that is stopped in a loading zone
adjacent to the surfaced or improved part of the controlled access
highway where pedestrians are not permitted to cross.
29 [March 26, 2001]
(f) Beginning with the effective date of this amendatory Act of
1985, the Secretary of State shall suspend for a period of 3 months the
driving privileges of any person convicted of a violation of subsection
(a) of this Section or a similar provision of a local ordinance; the
Secretary shall suspend for a period of one year the driving privileges
of any person convicted of a second or subsequent violation of
subsection (a) of this Section or a similar provision of a local
ordinance if the second or subsequent violation occurs within 5 years
of a prior conviction for the same offense. In addition to the
suspensions authorized by this Section, any person convicted of
violating this Section or a similar provision of a local ordinance
shall be subject to a mandatory fine of $150 or, upon a second or
subsequent violation, $500. The Secretary may also grant, for the
duration of any suspension issued under this subsection, a restricted
driving permit granting the privilege of driving a motor vehicle
between the driver's residence and place of employment or within other
proper limits that the Secretary of State shall find necessary to avoid
any undue hardship. A restricted driving permit issued hereunder shall
be subject to cancellation, revocation and suspension by the Secretary
of State in like manner and for like cause as a driver's license may be
cancelled, revoked or suspended; except that a conviction upon one or
more offenses against laws or ordinances regulating the movement of
traffic shall be deemed sufficient cause for the revocation, suspension
or cancellation of the restricted driving permit. The Secretary of
State may, as a condition to the issuance of a restricted driving
permit, require the applicant to participate in a designated driver
remedial or rehabilitative program. Any conviction for a violation of
this subsection shall be included as an offense for the purposes of
determining suspension action under any other provision of this Code,
provided however, that the penalties provided under this subsection
shall be imposed unless those penalties imposed under other applicable
provisions are greater.
The owner of any vehicle alleged to have violated paragraph (a) of
this Section shall, upon appropriate demand by the State's Attorney, or
other authorized prosecutor, or law enforcement officer acting in
response to a signed complaint, provide a written statement or
deposition identifying the operator of the vehicle if such operator was
not the owner at the time of the alleged violation. Failure to supply
such information shall be construed to be the same as a violation of
paragraph (a) and shall be subject to the same penalties herein
provided. In the event the owner has assigned control for the use of
the vehicle to another, the person to whom control was assigned shall
comply with the provisions of this paragraph and be subject to the same
penalties as herein provided.
(g) A law enforcement officer shall have the power to issue a
citation in response to a signed complaint concerning a violation of
subsection (a) of this Section or a similar provision of a local
ordinance.
(Source: P.A. 91-260, eff. 1-1-00.)"; and
on page 9, below line 8, by inserting the following:
"(625 ILCS 5/12-802.1 new)
Sec. 12-802.1. Exterior reflective markings.
(a) Every school bus sold or manufactured for use in Illinois on
or after January 1, 2002 must be equipped with exterior reflective
markings on the rear and sides of the bus that comply with rules
adopted by the Illinois Department of Transportation.
(b) The Department shall adopt rules for implementing this
Section. The rules:
(1) Shall require the rear of school buses to be marked with
reflective material to outline the perimeter of the back of the bus
and the perimeter of the rear emergency exit.
(2) Shall require the horizontal application of strips of
reflective material, not less than 1.75 inches wide, above the rear
windows, and above the rear bumper from the edges of the rear
emergency exit door to both corners of the school bus with vertical
strips of reflective material at each corner connected to the
[March 26, 2001] 30
horizontal strips.
(3) Shall require the horizontal application of strips of
reflective material, not less than 1.75 inches wide, the entire
length of the sides of the school bus and located equidistant, or
as close as practicable, between the bottom of the bus and the
bottom window line so as not to interfere with required lettering
and not to be placed on rub rails."; and
on page 10, below line 2, by inserting the following:
"(625 ILCS 5/12-815) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 12-815)
Sec. 12-815. Strobe lamp on school bus.
(a) A school bus manufactured prior to January 1, 2000 may be
equipped with one strobe lamp that will emit 60 to 120 flashes per
minute of white or bluish-white light visible to a motorist approaching
the bus from any direction. A school bus manufactured on or after
January 1, 2000 shall be equipped with one strobe lamp that will emit
60 to 120 flashes per minute of white or bluish-white light visible to
a motorist approaching the bus from any direction. The lamp shall be
of sufficient brightness to be visible in normal sunlight when viewed
directly from a distance of at least one mile.
(b) The strobe lamp shall be mounted on the rooftop of the bus
with the light generating element in the lamp located equidistant from
each side and either at or behind the center of the rooftop. The
maximum height of the element above the rooftop shall not exceed 1/30
of its distance from the rear of the rooftop. If the structure of the
strobe lamp obscures the light generating element, the element shall be
deemed to be in the center of the lamp with a maximum height 1/4 inch
less than the maximum height of the strobe lamp unless otherwise
indicated in rules and regulations promulgated by the Department. The
Department may promulgate rules and regulations to govern measurements,
glare, effectiveness and protection of strobe lamps on school buses,
including higher strobe lamps than authorized in this paragraph.
(c) The strobe lamp must may be lighted only when the school bus
is actually being used as a school bus and:
1. is stopping or stopped for loading or discharging pupils
on a highway outside an urban area; or
2. is bearing one or more pupils and is either stopped or, in
the interest of safety, is moving very slowly at a speed:
(i) less than the posted minimum speed limit, or
(ii) less than 30 miles per hour on a highway outside an
urban area.
(Source: P.A. 91-168, eff. 1-1-00; 91-679, eff. 1-26-00.)
(625 ILCS 5/12-816 new)
Sec. 12-816. Bus driver complaints; reporting and investigation.
(a) Any school bus operating in the State of Illinois, as defined
in Section 1-182 of this Code, shall display a toll free number, which
may be contacted to report the improper operation of a school bus. The
toll free number shall be conspicuously displayed on the exterior of
every school bus.
(b) The Secretary of State, subject to appropriation, shall adopt
rules establishing a toll free number that may be contacted to report
the improper operation of a school bus. In addition, the Secretary of
State shall establish by rule a procedure for response to these reports
and a procedure under which the reports are forwarded to the
appropriate law enforcement and school officials within a reasonable
period of time.
(c) There shall be established in the Office of Secretary of
State, subject to appropriation, a division exclusively dedicated to
handling receipt, investigation, and follow up of all complaints
related to this Section. This division shall also be responsible for
all administrative hearings that occur as result of action taken by the
Secretary in conjunction with the rules provided for in subsection (b)
of this Section.
(d) The School Bus Toll Free Hotline Fund is created as a special
fund in the State treasury. The moneys in the fund shall come from
appropriations. All moneys in the School Bus Toll Free Hotline Fund
shall, subject to appropriation, be used to implement the activities
31 [March 26, 2001]
required under this Section.
Section 10. The State Finance Act is amended by adding Section
5.545 as follows:
(30 ILCS 105/5.545 new)
Sec. 5.545. The School Bus Toll Free Hotline Fund.".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendments
numbered 1 and 2 were ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was
advanced to the order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 2221. Having been recalled on March 21, 2001, and held
on the order of Second Reading, the same was again taken up.
Representative Jerry Mitchell offered the following amendment and
moved its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 2221
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 2221 on page 1, in line 16 by
inserting after "training" the following:
", except for a school district employee who was offered the chance to
attend annual training at a time when school is not in session but
chose instead to train during the school session".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was again advanced to
the order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 2244. Having been recalled on March 23, 2001, and held
on the order of Second Reading, the same was again taken up.
Representative Kosel offered the following amendment and moved its
adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 2244
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 2244 as follows:
on page 1, line 5, by replacing "Section 11-310" with "Sections 11-310
and 12-208"; and
on page 2, by replacing lines 26 and 27 with following:
"(625 ILCS 5/12-208) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 12-208)
Sec. 12-208. Signal lamps and signal devices.
(a) Every vehicle other than an antique vehicle displaying an
antique plate operated in this State shall be equipped with a stop lamp
or lamps on the rear of the vehicle which shall display a red or amber
light visible from a distance of not less than 500 feet to the rear in
normal sunlight and which shall be actuated upon application of the
service (foot) brake, and which may but need not be incorporated with
other rear lamps. During times when lighted lamps are not required, an
antique vehicle may be equipped with a stop lamp or lamps on the rear
of such vehicle of the same type originally installed by the
manufacturer as original equipment and in working order. However, at
all other times, except as provided in subsection (a-1), such antique
vehicle must be equipped with stop lamps meeting the requirements of
Section 12-208 of this Act.
(a-1) An antique vehicle may display a blue light or lights of up
to one inch in diameter as part of the vehicle's rear stop lamp or
lamps.
(b) Every motor vehicle other than an antique vehicle displaying
an antique plate shall be equipped with an electric turn signal device
[March 26, 2001] 32
which shall indicate the intention of the driver to turn to the right
or to the left in the form of flashing lights located at and showing to
the front and rear of the vehicle on the side of the vehicle toward
which the turn is to be made. The lamps showing to the front shall be
mounted on the same level and as widely spaced laterally as practicable
and, when signaling, shall emit a white or amber light, or any shade of
light between white and amber. The lamps showing to the rear shall be
mounted on the same level and as widely spaced laterally as practicable
and, when signaling, shall emit a red or amber light. An antique
vehicle shall be equipped with a turn signal device of the same type
originally installed by the manufacturer as original equipment and in
working order.
(c) Every trailer and semitrailer shall be equipped with an
electric turn signal device which indicates the intention of the driver
in the power unit to turn to the right or to the left in the form of
flashing red or amber lights located at the rear of the vehicle on the
side toward which the turn is to be made and mounted on the same level
and as widely spaced laterally as practicable.
(d) Turn signal lamps must be visible from a distance of not less
than 300 feet in normal sunlight.
(e) Motorcycles and motor-driven cycles need not be equipped with
electric turn signals. Antique vehicles need not be equipped with turn
signals unless such were installed by the manufacturer as original
equipment.
(Source: P.A. 77-37.)".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was again advanced to
the order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 2315. Having been recalled on March 21, 2001, and held
on the order of Second Reading, the same was again taken up.
Representative Mendoza offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO HOUSE BILL 2315
AMENDMENT NO. 2. Amend House Bill 2315 as follows:
on page 5, line 16, by replacing "fire-stabilized" with
"fin-stabilized".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 2
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was again advanced to
the order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 3065. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
Representative Crotty offered the following amendment and moved its
adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 3065
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 3065 as follows:
on page 3, by replacing line 4 with the following:
"traffic accidents that occurred during nighttime hours, for which the
driver has been found to be at fault, during the 12 months before he or
she applied for the special restricted license."; and
on page 3, by replacing line 12 with the following:
33 [March 26, 2001]
"traffic accidents that occurred during nighttime hours, for which the
driver has been found to be at fault, during the 12 months before he or
she applied for the special restricted license.
(h) Any driver issued a special restricted license as defined in
subsection (g) whose privilege to drive during nighttime hours has been
suspended due to an accident occurring during nighttime hours may
request a hearing as provided in Section 2-118 of this Code to contest
that suspension. If it is determined that the accident for which the
driver was at fault was not influenced by the driver's use of vision
aid arrangements other than standard eyeglasses or contact lenses, the
Secretary may reinstate that driver's privilege to drive during
nighttime hours.".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 3137. Having been read by title a second time on March
21, 2001, and held on the order of Second Reading, the same was again
taken up.
Representative McGuire offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 3137
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 3137 on page 2, in line 1, by
changing "require that" to "encourage"; and
on page 2, in line 2, after "personnel", by inserting "to"; and
by deleting lines 13 through 19 on page 3.
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 2384. Having been recalled on March 20, 2001, and held
on the order of Second Reading, the same was again taken up.
Representative Feigenholtz offered the following amendment and
moved its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 2384
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 2384 by replacing the title with
the following:
"AN ACT in relation to human needs."; and
on page 1, after line 16, by inserting the following:
"Section 10. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by changing
Section 5-2 as follows:
(305 ILCS 5/5-2) (from Ch. 23, par. 5-2)
Sec. 5-2. Classes of Persons Eligible. Medical assistance under
this Article shall be available to any of the following classes of
persons in respect to whom a plan for coverage has been submitted to
the Governor by the Illinois Department and approved by him:
1. Recipients of basic maintenance grants under Articles III and
IV.
2. Persons otherwise eligible for basic maintenance under Articles
III and IV but who fail to qualify thereunder on the basis of need, and
who have insufficient income and resources to meet the costs of
necessary medical care, including but not limited to the following:
[March 26, 2001] 34
(a) All persons otherwise eligible for basic maintenance
under Article III but who fail to qualify under that Article on the
basis of need and who meet either of the following requirements:
(i) their income, as determined by the Illinois
Department in accordance with any federal requirements, is
equal to or less than 70% in fiscal year 2001, equal to or
less than 85% in fiscal year 2002, and equal to or less than
100% in fiscal year 2003 and thereafter of the nonfarm income
official poverty line, as defined by the federal Office of
Management and Budget and revised annually in accordance with
Section 673(2) of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of
1981, applicable to families of the same size; or
(ii) their income, after the deduction of costs incurred
for medical care and for other types of remedial care, is
equal to or less than 70% in fiscal year 2001, equal to or
less than 85% in fiscal year 2002, and equal to or less than
100% in fiscal year 2003 and thereafter of the nonfarm income
official poverty line, as defined in item (i) of this
subparagraph (a).
(b) All persons who would be determined eligible for such
basic maintenance under Article IV by disregarding the maximum
earned income permitted by federal law.
3. Persons who would otherwise qualify for Aid to the Medically
Indigent under Article VII.
4. Persons not eligible under any of the preceding paragraphs who
fall sick, are injured, or die, not having sufficient money, property
or other resources to meet the costs of necessary medical care or
funeral and burial expenses.
5. (a) Women during pregnancy, after the fact of pregnancy has
been determined by medical diagnosis, and during the 60-day period
beginning on the last day of the pregnancy, together with their
infants and children born after September 30, 1983, whose income
and resources are insufficient to meet the costs of necessary
medical care to the maximum extent possible under Title XIX of the
Federal Social Security Act.
(b) The Illinois Department and the Governor shall provide a
plan for coverage of the persons eligible under paragraph 5(a) by
April 1, 1990. Such plan shall provide ambulatory prenatal care to
pregnant women during a presumptive eligibility period and
establish an income eligibility standard that is equal to 133% of
the nonfarm income official poverty line, as defined by the federal
Office of Management and Budget and revised annually in accordance
with Section 673(2) of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of
1981, applicable to families of the same size, provided that costs
incurred for medical care are not taken into account in determining
such income eligibility.
(c) The Illinois Department may conduct a demonstration in at
least one county that will provide medical assistance to pregnant
women, together with their infants and children up to one year of
age, where the income eligibility standard is set up to 185% of the
nonfarm income official poverty line, as defined by the federal
Office of Management and Budget. The Illinois Department shall
seek and obtain necessary authorization provided under federal law
to implement such a demonstration. Such demonstration may
establish resource standards that are not more restrictive than
those established under Article IV of this Code.
6. Persons under the age of 18 who fail to qualify as dependent
under Article IV and who have insufficient income and resources to meet
the costs of necessary medical care to the maximum extent permitted
under Title XIX of the Federal Social Security Act.
7. Persons who are 18 years of age or younger and would qualify as
disabled as defined under the Federal Supplemental Security Income
Program, provided medical service for such persons would be eligible
for Federal Financial Participation, and provided the Illinois
Department determines that:
(a) the person requires a level of care provided by a
35 [March 26, 2001]
hospital, skilled nursing facility, or intermediate care facility,
as determined by a physician licensed to practice medicine in all
its branches;
(b) it is appropriate to provide such care outside of an
institution, as determined by a physician licensed to practice
medicine in all its branches;
(c) the estimated amount which would be expended for care
outside the institution is not greater than the estimated amount
which would be expended in an institution.
8. Persons who become ineligible for basic maintenance assistance
under Article IV of this Code in programs administered by the Illinois
Department due to employment earnings and persons in assistance units
comprised of adults and children who become ineligible for basic
maintenance assistance under Article VI of this Code due to employment
earnings. The plan for coverage for this class of persons shall:
(a) extend the medical assistance coverage for up to 12
months following termination of basic maintenance assistance; and
(b) offer persons who have initially received 6 months of the
coverage provided in paragraph (a) above, the option of receiving
an additional 6 months of coverage, subject to the following:
(i) such coverage shall be pursuant to provisions of the
federal Social Security Act;
(ii) such coverage shall include all services covered
while the person was eligible for basic maintenance
assistance;
(iii) no premium shall be charged for such coverage; and
(iv) such coverage shall be suspended in the event of a
person's failure without good cause to file in a timely
fashion reports required for this coverage under the Social
Security Act and coverage shall be reinstated upon the filing
of such reports if the person remains otherwise eligible.
9. Persons with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) or with
AIDS-related conditions with respect to whom there has been a
determination that but for home or community-based services such
individuals would require the level of care provided in an inpatient
hospital, skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility the
cost of which is reimbursed under this Article. Assistance shall be
provided to such persons to the maximum extent permitted under Title
XIX of the Federal Social Security Act.
10. Participants in the long-term care insurance partnership
program established under the Partnership for Long-Term Care Act who
meet the qualifications for protection of resources described in
Section 25 of that Act.
11. Persons with disabilities who are employed and eligible for
Medicaid, pursuant to Section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(xv) of the Social
Security Act, as provided by the Illinois Department by rule.
12. Subject to federal approval, for the receipt of family
planning services, persons whose income is less than 200% of the
poverty guidelines updated annually in the Federal Register by the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services under authority of 42 U.S.C.
9902(2). The Department must request federal approval of coverage
under this paragraph 12 within 30 days after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly.
The Illinois Department and the Governor shall provide a plan for
coverage of the persons eligible under paragraph 7 as soon as possible
after July 1, 1984.
The eligibility of any such person for medical assistance under
this Article is not affected by the payment of any grant under the
Senior Citizens and Disabled Persons Property Tax Relief and
Pharmaceutical Assistance Act or any distributions or items of income
described under subparagraph (X) of paragraph (2) of subsection (a) of
Section 203 of the Illinois Income Tax Act. The Department shall by
rule establish the amounts of assets to be disregarded in determining
eligibility for medical assistance, which shall at a minimum equal the
amounts to be disregarded under the Federal Supplemental Security
Income Program. The amount of assets of a single person to be
[March 26, 2001] 36
disregarded shall not be less than $2,000, and the amount of assets of
a married couple to be disregarded shall not be less than $3,000.
To the extent permitted under federal law, any person found guilty
of a second violation of Article VIIIA shall be ineligible for medical
assistance under this Article, as provided in Section 8A-8.
The eligibility of any person for medical assistance under this
Article shall not be affected by the receipt by the person of donations
or benefits from fundraisers held for the person in cases of serious
illness, as long as neither the person nor members of the person's
family have actual control over the donations or benefits or the
disbursement of the donations or benefits.
(Source: P.A. 91-676, eff. 12-23-99; 91-699, eff. 7-1-00; 91-712, eff.
7-1-00; revised 6-26-00.)".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was again advanced to
the order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 3150. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
Representative Hannig offered the following amendment and moved its
adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 3150
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 3150 on page 1, by replacing
line 11, with the following:
"candidate or public question, (ii) identify that candidate by name or
identify the public question, and (iii)"; and
on page 1, by replacing lines 14 and 15 with the following:
"(b) The State Board of Elections may impose a civil penalty of
$10,000 upon any person, other than a person who is merely an employee
of the person or entity who has been contracted with to conduct the
push-polling, who violates this Section."; and
on page 1, line 18, after "office", by inserting "or public question";
and
on page 1, line 22, after "record", by inserting the following:
"or asking questions relating to the public question that state, imply,
or convey information favorable or unfavorable to the public question".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 3267. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
Representative Miller offered the following amendment and moved its
adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 3267
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 3267 on page 4, line 6, by
deleting "veterans,"; and
on page 5, by deleting lines 6 through 9.
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
37 [March 26, 2001]
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 3387. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
Representative Hannig offered the following amendment and moved its
adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 3387
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 3387 on page 1, line 8, after
the period, by inserting the following:
"If a regional office of education makes an interfund loan, then it
must repay the loan by the end of the fiscal year.".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
RESOLUTIONS
Having been reported out of the Committee on Human Services on
February 23, 2001, HOUSE RESOLUTION 32 was taken up for consideration.
Representative Lou Jones offered the following amendment and moved
its
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE RESOLUTION 32
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Resolution 32 on page 1, line 21, by
changing "March" to "June". adoption:
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
RECALLS
By unanimous consent, on motion of Representative McGuire, HOUSE
BILL 661 was recalled from the order of Third Reading to the order of
Second Reading and held on that order.
HOUSE BILLS ON SECOND READING
HOUSE BILL 633. Having been printed, was taken up and read by title
a second time.
The following amendment was offered in the Committee on Judiciary
II-Criminal Law, adopted and printed:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 633
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 633 as follows:
on page 2, line 8, by inserting after "Act" the following:
"and the manner in which a defendant is admitted into a drug court
program"; and
on page 2, line 11, by deleting "the prosecutor and".
On motion of Representative O'Brien, Amendment No. 1 was tabled.
[March 26, 2001] 38
There being no further amendments, the bill was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 2026. Having been recalled on March 21, 2001, and held
on the order of Second Reading, the same was again taken up and
advanced to the order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 1. Having been recalled on March 15, 2001, and held on
the order of Second Reading, the same was again taken up.
Representative Hoffman offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 1
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 1 on page 7, line 30, after the
period by inserting the following:
"The Inspector General of the Department, ex officio, is a non-voting
member of the Executive Council.".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was again advanced to
the order of Third Reading.
Having been printed, the following bill was taken up, read by title
a second time and held on the order of Second Reading: HOUSE BILL 131.
HOUSE BILL 241. Having been recalled on March 21, 2001, and held
on the order of Second Reading, the same was again taken up.
Representative Flowers offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO HOUSE BILL 241
AMENDMENT NO. 2. Amend House Bill 241 on page 8 by deleting lines
12 through 19.
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 2
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was again advanced to
the order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 335. Having been printed, was taken up and read by title
a second time.
Representative Hoffman offered and withdrew Amendment No. 1.
Representative Monique Davis offered and withdrew Amendment No. 2.
There being no further amendments, the bill was held on the order
of Second Reading.
HOUSE BILL 446. Having been read by title a second time on
February 16, 2201, and held on the order of Second Reading, the same
was again taken up.
Representative Feigenholtz offered the following amendment and
moved its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 446
39 [March 26, 2001]
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 446 as follows:
on page 1, by replacing lines 4 through 31 with the following:
"Section 5. The Uniform Anatomical Gift Act is amended by changing
Section 3 as follows:
(755 ILCS 50/3) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 303)
Sec. 3. Persons who may execute an anatomical gift.
(a) Any individual of sound mind who has attained the age of 18
may give all or any part of his or her body for any purpose specified
in Section 4. Such a gift may be executed in any of the ways set out
in Section 5, and shall take effect upon the individual's death without
the need to obtain the consent of any survivor. An anatomical gift
made by an agent of an individual, as authorized by the individual
under the Powers of Attorney for Health Care Law, as now or hereafter
amended, is deemed to be a gift by that individual and takes effect
without the need to obtain the consent of any other person.
(b) If no gift has been executed under subsection (a), any of the
following persons, in the order of priority stated in items (1) through
(11) (6) below, when persons in prior classes are not available and in
the absence of (i) actual notice of contrary intentions by the decedent
and (ii) actual notice of opposition by any member within the same
priority class, may give all or any part of the decedent's body after
or immediately before death for any purpose specified in Section 4:
(1) the decedent's agent under a power of attorney for health
care,
(2) the decedent's surrogate decision maker under the Health
Care Surrogate Act,
(3) the decedent's guardian of the decedent,
(4) (1) the decedent's spouse,
(5) (2) the decedent's adult sons or daughters,
(6) (3) either of the decedent's parents,
(7) (4) any of the decedent's adult brothers or sisters,
(8) any adult grandchild of the decedent,
(9) a close friend of the decedent,
(10) (5) the guardian of the decedent's estate decedent at
the time of his or her death,
(11) (6) any person authorized or under obligation to dispose
of the body.
If the donee has actual notice of opposition to the gift by the
decedent or any person in the highest priority class in which an
available person can be found, then no gift of all or any part of the
decedent's body shall be accepted.
(c) For the purposes of this Act, a person will not be considered
"available" for the giving of consent or refusal if:
(1) the existence of the person is unknown to the donee and
is not readily ascertainable through the examination of the
decedent's hospital records and the questioning of any persons who
are available for giving consent;
(2) the donee has unsuccessfully attempted to contact the
person by telephone or in any other reasonable manner;
(3) the person is unable or unwilling to respond in a manner
which indicates the person's refusal or consent.
(d) A gift of all or part of a body authorizes any examination
necessary to assure medical acceptability of the gift for the purposes
intended.
(e) The rights of the donee created by the gift are paramount to
the rights of others except as provided by Section 8 (d).
(f) If no gift has been executed under this Section, then no part
of the decedent's body may be used for any purpose specified in Section
4 of this Act, except in accordance with the Organ Donation Request Act
or the Corneal Transplant Act.
(g) As used in this Section, "close friend" means any person 18
years of age or older who has exhibited special care and concern for
the decedent and who presents an affidavit to a representative of the
hospital's designated organ procurement agency or tissue bank stating
that he or she (i) is a close friend of the decedent, (ii) is willing
and able to become involved in the decedent's health care, and (iii)
[March 26, 2001] 40
has maintained sufficient regular contact with the decedent to be
familiar with the decedent's activities, health, and religious and
moral beliefs. The affidavit must also state facts and circumstances
that demonstrate that familiarity.
(Source: P.A. 86-736.)
Section 10. The Illinois Corneal Transplant Act is amended by
changing Section 2 as follows:
(755 ILCS 55/2) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 352)
Sec. 2. (a) Objection to the removal of corneal tissue may be made
known to the coroner or county medical examiner or authorized
individual acting for the coroner or county medical examiner by the
individual during his lifetime or by the following persons, in the
order of priority stated, after the decedent's death:
(1) The decedent's agent under a power of attorney for health
care;
(2) If there is no agent, the decedent's surrogate decision
maker under the Health Care Surrogate Act;
(3) If there is no agent and no surrogate decision maker, the
decedent's guardian of the person;
(4) (1) If there is no agent, no surrogate decision maker,
and no guardian of the person, the decedent's spouse;
(5) (2) If there is no agent, no surrogate decision maker, no
guardian of the person, and no spouse, any of the decedent's adult
sons or daughters;
(6) (3) If there is no agent, no surrogate decision maker, no
guardian of the person, no spouse, and no adult sons or daughters,
either of the decedent's parents;
(7) (4) If there is no agent, no surrogate decision maker, no
guardian of the person, no spouse, no adult sons or daughters, and
no parents, any of the decedent's adult brothers or sisters;
(8) If there is no agent, no surrogate decision maker, no
guardian of the person, no spouse, no adult sons or daughters, no
parents, and no adult brothers or sisters, any adult grandchild of
the decedent;
(9) If there is no agent, no surrogate decision maker, no
guardian of the person, no spouse, no adult sons or daughters, no
parents, no adult brothers or sisters, and no adult grandchildren,
a close friend of the decedent;
(10) (5) If there is no agent, no surrogate decision maker,
no guardian of the person, no spouse, no adult sons or daughters,
no parents, and no adult brothers or sisters, no adult
grandchildren, and no close friend, the guardian of the decedent's
estate; decedent at the time of his or her death.
(11) If there is no agent, no surrogate decision maker, no
guardian of the person, no spouse, no adult sons or daughters, no
parents, no adult brothers or sisters, no adult grandchildren, no
close friend, and no guardian of the decedent's estate, any person
authorized or under obligation to dispose of the body.
(b) If the coroner or county medical examiner or any authorized
individual acting for the coroner or county medical examiner has actual
notice of any contrary indications by the decedent or actual notice
that any member within the same class specified in subsection (a),
paragraphs (1) through (8) (5) of this Section, in the same order of
priority, objects to the removal, the coroner or county medical
examiner shall not approve the removal of corneal tissue.
(c) As used in this Section, "close friend" means any person 18
years of age or older who has exhibited special care and concern for
the decedent and who presents an affidavit to a representative of the
hospital's designated organ procurement agency or tissue bank stating
that he or she (i) is a close friend of the decedent, (ii) is willing
and able to become involved in the decedent's health care, and (iii)
has maintained sufficient regular contact with the decedent to be
familiar with the decedent's activities, health, and religious and
moral beliefs. The affidavit must also state facts and circumstances
that demonstrate that familiarity.
(Source: P.A. 87-633.)
41 [March 26, 2001]
Section 15. The Organ Donation Request Act is amended by changing
Section 2 as follows:
(755 ILCS 60/2) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 752)
Sec. 2. Notification; consent; definitions.
(a) When, based upon generally accepted medical standards, an
inpatient in a general acute care hospital with more than 100 beds is a
suitable candidate for organ or tissue donation and such patient has
not made an anatomical gift of all or any part of his or her body
pursuant to Section 5 of the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act, the hospital
administrator, or his or her designated representative, shall, if the
candidate is suitable for the donation of organs at the time of or
after notification of death, notify the hospital's federally designated
organ procurement agency. The organ procurement agency shall request a
consent for organ donation according to the priority and conditions
established in subsection (b). In the case of a candidate suitable for
donation of tissue only, the hospital administrator or his or her
designated representative or tissue bank shall, at the time of or
shortly after notification of death, request a consent for tissue
donation according to the priority need conditions established in
subsection (b). Alternative procedures for requesting consent may be
implemented by mutual agreement between a hospital and a federally
designated organ procurement agency or tissue bank.
(b) In making a request for organ or tissue donation, the hospital
administrator or his or her designated representative or the hospital's
federally designated organ procurement agency or tissue bank shall
request any of the following persons, in the order of priority stated
in items (1) through (11) (7) below, when persons in prior classes are
not available and in the absence of (i) actual notice of contrary
intentions by the decedent, (ii) actual notice of opposition by any
member within the same priority class, and (iii) reason to believe that
an anatomical gift is contrary to the decedent's religious beliefs, to
consent to the gift of all or any part of the decedent's body for any
purpose specified in Section 4 of the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act:
(1) the decedent's agent under a power of attorney for health
care the Powers of Attorney for Health Care Law;
(2) the decedent's surrogate decision maker under the Health
Care Surrogate Act;
(3) the decedent's guardian of the person;
(4) (3) the decedent's spouse;
(5) (4) the decedent's adult sons or daughters;
(6) (5) either of the decedent's parents;
(7) (6) any of the decedent's adult brothers or sisters;
(8) any adult grandchild of the decedent;
(9) a close friend of the decedent;
(10) (7) the guardian of the decedent's estate; decedent at
the time of his or her death.
(11) any person authorized or under obligation to dispose of
the body.
(b-1) As used in this Section, "close friend" means any person 18
years of age or older who has exhibited special care and concern for
the decedent and who presents an affidavit to a representative of the
hospital's designated organ procurement agency or tissue bank stating
that he or she (i) is a close friend of the decedent, (ii) is willing
and able to become involved in the decedent's health care, and (iii)
has maintained sufficient regular contact with the decedent to be
familiar with the decedent's activities, health, and religious and
moral beliefs. The affidavit must also state facts and circumstances
that demonstrate that familiarity.
(c) If (1) the hospital administrator, or his or her designated
representative, the organ procurement agency, or the tissue bank has
actual notice of opposition to the gift by the decedent or any person
in the highest priority class in which an available person can be
found, or (2) there is reason to believe that an anatomical gift is
contrary to the decedent's religious beliefs, or (3) the Director of
Public Health has adopted a rule signifying his determination that the
need for organs and tissues for donation has been adequately met, then
[March 26, 2001] 42
such gift of all or any part of the decedent's body shall not be
requested. If a donation is requested, consent or refusal may only be
obtained from the person or persons in the highest priority class
available. If the hospital administrator, or his or her designated
representative, the designated organ procurement agency, or the tissue
bank is unable to obtain consent from any of the persons named in items
(1) through (11) (7) of subsection (b) (a) of this Section, the
decedent's body shall not be used for an anatomical gift unless a valid
anatomical gift document was executed under the Uniform Anatomical Gift
Act or the Corneal Transplant Act.
(d) For the purposes of this Act, a person will not be considered
"available" for the giving of consent or refusal if:
(1) the existence of the person is unknown to the hospital
administrator or designee, organ procurement agency, or tissue bank
and is not readily ascertainable through the examination of the
decedent's hospital records and the questioning of any persons who
are available for giving consent;
(2) the administrator or designee, organ procurement agency,
or tissue bank has unsuccessfully attempted to contact the person
by telephone or in any other reasonable manner;
(3) the person is unable or unwilling to respond in a manner
which indicates the person's refusal or consent.
(e) For the purposes of this Act, "federally designated organ
procurement agency" means the organ procurement agency designated by
the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services for
the service area in which a hospital is located; except that in the
case of a hospital located in a county adjacent to Wisconsin which
currently contracts with an organ procurement agency located in
Wisconsin that is not the organ procurement agency designated by the
U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services for the service area in
which the hospital is located, if the hospital applies for a waiver
pursuant to 42 USC 1320b-8(a), it may designate an organ procurement
agency located in Wisconsin to be thereafter deemed its federally
designated organ procurement agency for the purposes of this Act.
(f) For the purposes of this Act, "tissue bank" means any facility
or program operating in Illinois that is certified by the American
Association of Tissue Banks or the Eye Bank Association of America and
is involved in procuring, furnishing, donating, or distributing
corneas, bones, or other human tissue for the purpose of injecting,
transfusing, or transplanting any of them into the human body. "Tissue
bank" does not include a licensed blood bank.
For the purposes of this Act, "tissue" does not include organs.
(g) Nothing in Public Act 89-393 this amendatory Act of 1995
alters any agreements or affiliations between tissue banks and
hospitals.
(Source: P.A. 89-393, eff. 8-20-95; revised 2-23-00.)"; and
by deleting pages 2 through 9.
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
Representative Wirsing offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO HOUSE BILL 446
AMENDMENT NO. 2. Amend House Bill 446, AS AMENDED, with reference
to page and line numbers of House Amendment No. 1, on page 5, line 19
by changing "(8)" to "(11)".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendments
numbered 1 and 2 were ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was
43 [March 26, 2001]
advanced to the order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 629. Having been printed, was taken up and read by title
a second time.
The following amendment was offered in the Committee on Elementary
& Secondary Education, adopted and printed:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 629
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 629 as follows:
on page 1, line 8, after "material.", by inserting the following:
"In this Section, "sexually explicit material" means material that is
obscene, child pornography, or material harmful to minors, as those
terms are defined under Sections 11-20, 11-20.1, and 11-21 of the
Criminal Code of 1961."; and
on page 1, line 12, after "materials", by inserting "while on school
grounds. The board must maintain a copy of the policy. Upon request,
the board must make available a copy of the policy for inspection.
Compliance with this Section is subject to an audit by the State Board
of Education"; and
on page 1, line 19, after "material.", by inserting the following:
"In this Section, "sexually explicit material" means material that is
obscene, child pornography, or material harmful to minors, as those
terms are defined under Sections 11-20, 11-20.1, and 11-21 of the
Criminal Code of 1961."; and
on page 1, line 22, after "materials", by inserting "while on school
grounds. The board must maintain a copy of the policy. Upon request,
the board must make available a copy of the policy for inspection.
Compliance with this Section is subject to an audit by the State Board
of Education".
Representative Fowler offered the following amendment and moved its
adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO HOUSE BILL 629
AMENDMENT NO. 2. Amend House Bill 629, AS AMENDED, in Section 5,
Sec. 10-28, after "Prevention of", by inserting "Internet"; and
in Section 5, Sec. 10-28, before "while on school grounds.", by
inserting "on the Internet"; and
in Section 5, Sec. 34-21.8, after "Prevention of", by inserting
"Internet"; and
in Section 5, Sec. 34-21.8, before "while on school grounds.", by
inserting "on the Internet".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendments
numbered 1 and 2 were ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was
advanced to the order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 1026. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
The following amendment was offered in the Committee on Elementary
& Secondary Education, adopted and printed:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 1026
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 1026 on page 4, line 1, by
replacing "must" with "is encouraged to".
Representative Delgado offered the following amendment and moved
[March 26, 2001] 44
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO HOUSE BILL 1026
AMENDMENT NO. 2. Amend House Bill 1026 on page 1, by replacing
lines 1 and 2 with the following:
"AN ACT concerning education."; and
on page 1, line 6, by replacing "14C-8" with "14C-8, 21-1,"; and
on page 6, immediately below line 3, by inserting the following:
"(105 ILCS 5/21-1) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-1)
Sec. 21-1. Qualification of teachers. No one may be certified to
teach or supervise in the public schools of this State who is not of
good character, good health, a citizen of the United States or legally
present and authorized for employment, and at least 19 years of age.
If the holder of a certificate under this Section is not a citizen of
the United States 6 years after the date of the issuance of the
original certificate, any certificate held by such person on that date
shall be cancelled by the board of education and no other certificate
to teach shall be issued to such person until such person is a citizen
of the United States. However, the State Superintendent of Education
may extend this 6-year time limit for a period of 2 years if the person
certifies his or her intention to become a United States citizen and
furnishes proof that he or she has filed an application for United
States citizenship. Upon the expiration of this extension period, the
State Superintendent of Education may grant an additional extension of
2 years upon proof that the person's application for citizenship is
pending. If the person is not a United States citizen by the end of
this additional extension period, any certificate held by that person
at the end of this period shall be cancelled by the board of education
and no other certificate may be issued until the person furnishes proof
that he or she is a United States citizen.
Citizenship is not required for the issuance of a temporary
part-time certificate to participants in approved training programs for
exchange students as described in Section 21-10.2. A certificate
issued under this plan shall expire on June 30 following the date of
issue. One renewal for one year is authorized if the holder remains as
an official participant in an approved exchange program.
In determining good character under this Section, any felony
conviction of the applicant may be taken into consideration, but such a
conviction shall not operate as a bar to registration.
No person otherwise qualified shall be denied the right to be
certified, to receive training for the purpose of becoming a teacher or
to engage in practice teaching in any school because of a physical
disability including but not limited to visual and hearing
disabilities; nor shall any school district refuse to employ a teacher
on such grounds, provided that the person is able to carry out the
duties of the position for which he applies.
No person may be granted or continue to hold a teaching certificate
who has knowingly altered or misrepresented his or her teaching
qualifications in order to acquire the certificate. Any other
certificate held by such person may be suspended or revoked by the
State Teacher Certification Board, depending upon the severity of the
alteration or misrepresentation.
No one may teach or supervise in the public schools nor receive for
teaching or supervising any part of any public school fund, who does
not hold a certificate of qualification granted by the State Board of
Education or by the State Teacher Certification Board and a regional
superintendent of schools as hereinafter provided, or by the board of
education of a city having a population exceeding 500,000 inhabitants
except as provided in Section 34-6 and in Section 10-22.34 or Section
10-22.34b. However, the provisions of this Article do not apply to a
member of the armed forces who is employed as a teacher of subjects in
the Reserve Officer's Training Corps of any school. Sections 21-2
through 21-24 do not apply to cities having a population exceeding
500,000 inhabitants, until July 1, 1988.
45 [March 26, 2001]
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, the board of
education of any school district may grant to a teacher of the district
a leave of absence with full pay for a period of not more than one year
to permit such teacher to teach in a foreign state under the provisions
of the Exchange Teacher Program established under Public Law 584, 79th
Congress, and Public Law 402, 80th Congress, as amended. The school
board granting such leave of absence may employ with or without pay a
national of the foreign state wherein the teacher on leave of absence
will teach, if the national is qualified to teach in that foreign
state, and if that national will teach in a grade level similar to the
one which was taught in such foreign state. The State Board of
Education shall promulgate and enforce such reasonable rules as may be
necessary to effectuate this paragraph.
(Source: P.A. 88-189; 89-159, eff. 1-1-96; 89-397, eff. 8-20-95;
89-626, eff. 8-9-96.)".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendments
numbered 1 and 2 were ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was
advanced to the order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 1810. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
Representative Kurtz offered and withdrew Amendment No. 1.
There being no further amendments, the bill was ordered held on the
order of Second Reading.
HOUSE BILL 1895. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
Representative Hoeft offered the following amendment and moved its
adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 1895
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 1895 on page 4, by replacing
lines 21 through 30 with the following:
"School personnel may consider not giving the Illinois Standards
Achievement Test or the Prairie State Achievement Examination to any
student who has been enrolled in a State approved bilingual education
program less than 3 cumulative academic years shall be exempted if the
student's lack of English as determined by an English language
proficiency test would keep the student from understanding the test.,
and That student student's district shall participate in State
assessments developed for students with limited English proficiency,
unless the student was enrolled in a district after September 30 and
therefore has not attended school in that district for a full academic
year have an alternative test program in place for that student. The
State Board of Education shall appoint a task force of concerned
parents, teachers, school administrators and other professionals to
assist in identifying such alternative tests. Reasonable
accommodations as prescribed"; and
on page 5, line 11, by replacing "performance levels" with "any Prairie
State Achievement Awards performance levels"; and
on page 9, line 9, by replacing "weeks during" with "specific dates on
weeks during"; and
on page 9, line 21, after "student", by inserting the following:
"or a student in a State-approved transitional bilingual education
program or a transitional program of instruction who is administered a
State assessment developed for students with limited English
proficiency in accordance with the requirements of subsection (a) of
this Section"; and
[March 26, 2001] 46
on page 10, line 6, after "students.", by inserting the following:
"All pupils who are enrolled in a State-approved transitional bilingual
education program or transitional program of instruction and whose lack
of English as determined by an English language proficiency test would
keep them from understanding the Prairie State Achievement Examination
nevertheless shall have the option of taking the examination.".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 131. Having been read by title a second time earlier
today, and held on the order of Second Reading, the same was again
taken up.
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 3307. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
The following amendment was offered in the Committee on Exectuive,
adopted and printed:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 3307
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 3307 on page 1, immediately
below line 3, by inserting the following:
"Section 5. The Historic Preservation Agency Act is amended by
changing Sections 6 and 16 as follows:
(20 ILCS 3405/6) (from Ch. 127, par. 2706)
Sec. 6. Jurisdiction. The Agency shall have jurisdiction over the
following described areas which are hereby designated as State Historic
Sites, State Memorials, and Miscellaneous Properties:
State Historic Sites
Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum Historic Site,
Sangamon County;
Apple River Fort State Historic Site, Jo Daviess County;
Bishop Hill State Historic Site, Henry County;
Black Hawk State Historic Site, Rock Island County;
Bryant Cottage State Historic Site, Piatt County;
Buel House, Pope County;
Cahokia Courthouse State Historic Site, St. Clair County;
Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site, in Madison and St. Clair
Counties (however, the Illinois State Museum shall act as
curator of artifacts pursuant to the provisions of the
Archaeological and Paleontological Resources Protection Act);
Crenshaw House State Historic Site, Gallatin County;
Dana-Thomas House State Historic Site, Sangamon County;
David Davis Mansion State Historic Site, McLean County;
Douglas Tomb State Historic Site, Cook County;
Fort de Chartres State Historic Site, Randolph County;
Fort Kaskaskia State Historic Site, Randolph County;
Grand Village of the Illinois, LaSalle County;
U. S. Grant Home State Historic Site, Jo Daviess County;
Hotel Florence, Cook County;
Jarrot Mansion State Historic Site, St. Clair County;
Jubilee College State Historic Site, Peoria County;
Lincoln-Herndon Law Offices State Historic Site, Sangamon County;
47 [March 26, 2001]
Lincoln Log Cabin State Historic Site, Coles County;
Lincoln's New Salem State Historic Site, Menard County;
Lincoln Tomb State Historic Site, Sangamon County;
Pierre Menard Home State Historic Site, Randolph County;
Pullman Factory, Cook County;
Martin-Boismenue House State Historic Site, St. Clair County;
Metamora Courthouse State Historic Site, Woodford County;
Moore Home State Historic Site, Coles County;
Mount Pulaski Courthouse State Historic Site, Logan County;
Old Market House State Historic Site, Jo Daviess County;
Old State Capitol State Historic Site, Sangamon County;
Postville Courthouse State Historic Site, Logan County;
Rose Hotel, Hardin County;
Carl Sandburg State Historic Site, Knox County;
Shawneetown Bank State Historic Site, Gallatin County;
Sugar Loaf Mound State Historic Site, Madison County;
Union Station State Historic Site, Sangamon County;
Vachel Lindsay Home, Sangamon County;
Vandalia State House State Historic Site, Fayette County; and
Washburne House State Historic Site, Jo Daviess County.
State Memorials
Campbell's Island State Memorial, Rock Island County;
Governor Bond State Memorial, Randolph County;
Governor Coles State Memorial, Madison County;
Governor Horner State Memorial, Cook County;
Governor Small State Memorial, Kankakee County;
Illinois Vietnam Veterans State Memorial, Sangamon County;
Kaskaskia Bell State Memorial, Randolph County;
Korean War Memorial, Sangamon County;
Lewis and Clark State Memorial, Madison County;
Lincoln Monument State Memorial, Lee County;
Lincoln Trail State Memorial, Lawrence County;
Lovejoy State Memorial, Madison County;
Norwegian Settlers State Memorial, LaSalle County; and
Wild Bill Hickok State Memorial, LaSalle County.
Miscellaneous Properties
Albany Mounds, Whiteside County;
Emerald Mound, St. Clair County;
Halfway Tavern, Marion County;
Hofmann Tower, Cook County; and
Kincaid Mounds, Massac and Pope Counties.
(Source: P.A. 89-231, eff. 1-1-96; 89-324, eff. 8-13-95; 90-760, eff.
8-14-98.)
(20 ILCS 3405/16) (from Ch. 127, par. 2716)
Sec. 16. The Agency shall have the following additional powers:
(a) To hire agents and employees necessary to carry out the duties
and purposes of the Agency.
(b) To take all measures necessary to erect, maintain, preserve,
restore, and conserve all State Historic Sites and State Memorials,
except when supervision and maintenance is otherwise provided by law.
This authorization includes the power to enter into contracts, acquire
and dispose of real and personal property, and enter into leases of
real and personal property.
(c) To provide recreational facilities including camp sites,
lodges and cabins, trails, picnic areas and related recreational
facilities at all sites under the jurisdiction of the Agency.
(d) To lay out, construct and maintain all needful roads, parking
areas, paths or trails, bridges, camp or lodge sites, picnic areas,
lodges and cabins, and any other structures and improvements necessary
and appropriate in any State historic site or easement thereto; and to
provide water supplies, heat and light, and sanitary facilities for the
public and living quarters for the custodians and keepers of State
historic sites.
(e) To grant licenses and rights-of-way within the areas
controlled by the Agency for the construction, operation and
maintenance upon, under or across the property, of facilities for
[March 26, 2001] 48
water, sewage, telephone, telegraph, electric, gas, or other public
service, subject to the terms and conditions as may be determined by
the Agency.
(f) To authorize the officers, employees and agents of the Agency,
for the purposes of investigation and to exercise the rights, powers,
and duties vested and that may be vested in it, to enter and cross all
lands and waters in this State, doing no damage to private property.
(g) To transfer jurisdiction of or exchange any realty under the
control of the Agency to any other Department of the State Government,
or to any agency of the Federal Government, or to acquire or accept
Federal lands, when any transfer, exchange, acquisition or acceptance
is advantageous to the State and is approved in writing by the
Governor.
(h) To erect, supervise, and maintain all public monuments and
memorials erected by the State, except when the supervision and
maintenance of public monuments and memorials is otherwise provided by
law.
(i) To accept, hold, maintain, and administer, as trustee,
property given in trust for educational or historic purposes for the
benefit of the People of the State of Illinois and to dispose of any
property under the terms of the instrument creating the trust.
(j) To lease concessions on any property under the jurisdiction of
the Agency for a period not exceeding 25 years and to lease a
concession complex at Lincoln's New Salem State Historic Site for which
a cash incentive has been authorized under Section 5.1 of the Historic
Preservation Agency Act for a period not to exceed 40 years. All
leases, for whatever period, shall be made subject to the written
approval of the Governor. All concession leases extending for a period
in excess of 10 years, will contain provisions for the Agency to
participate, on a percentage basis, in the revenues generated by any
concession operation.
(k) To sell surplus agricultural products grown on land owned by
or under the jurisdiction of the Agency, when the products cannot be
used by the Agency.
(l) To enforce the laws of the State and the rules and regulations
of the Agency in or on any lands owned, leased, or managed by the
Agency.
(m) To cooperate with private organizations and agencies of the
State of Illinois by providing areas and the use of staff personnel
where feasible for the sale of publications on the historic and
cultural heritage of the State and craft items made by Illinois
craftsmen. These sales shall not conflict with existing concession
agreements. The Agency is authorized to negotiate with the
organizations and agencies for a portion of the monies received from
sales to be returned to the Agency's Historic Sites Fund for the
furtherance of interpretive and restoration programs.
(n) To establish local bank or savings and loan association
accounts, upon the written authorization of the Director, to
temporarily hold income received at any of its properties. The local
accounts established under this Section shall be in the name of the
Historic Preservation Agency and shall be subject to regular audits.
The balance in a local bank or savings and loan association account
shall be forwarded each week to the Agency for deposit with the State
Treasurer when on Monday of that each week if the amount to be
deposited in a fund exceeds $500.
No bank or savings and loan association shall receive public funds
as permitted by this Section, unless it has complied with the
requirements established under Section 6 of the Public Funds Investment
Act.
(o) To accept offers of gifts, gratuities, or grants from the
federal government, its agencies, or offices, or from any person, firm,
or corporation.
(p) To make reasonable rules and regulations as may be necessary
to discharge the duties of the Agency.
(q) With appropriate cultural organizations, to further and
advance the goals of the Agency.
49 [March 26, 2001]
(r) To make grants for the purposes of planning, survey,
rehabilitation, restoration, reconstruction, landscaping, and
acquisition of Illinois properties (i) designated individually in the
National Register of Historic Places, (ii) designated as a landmark
under a county or municipal landmark ordinance, or (iii) located within
a National Register of Historic Places historic district or a locally
designated historic district when the Director determines that the
property is of historic significance whenever an appropriation is made
therefor by the General Assembly or whenever gifts or grants are
received for that purpose and to promulgate regulations as may be
necessary or desirable to carry out the purposes of the grants.
Grantees may, as prescribed by rule, be required to provide
matching funds for each grant. Grants made under this subsection shall
be known as Illinois Heritage Grants.
Every owner of a historic property, or the owner's agent, is
eligible to apply for a grant under this subsection.
(s) To establish and implement a pilot program for charging
admission to State historic sites. Fees may be charged for special
events, admissions, and parking or any combination; fees may be charged
at all sites or selected sites. All fees shall be deposited into the
Illinois Historic Sites Fund. The Agency shall have the discretion to
set and adjust reasonable fees at the various sites, taking into
consideration various factors including but not limited to: cost of
services furnished to each visitor, impact of fees on attendance and
tourism and the costs expended collecting the fees. The Agency shall
keep careful records of the income and expenses resulting from the
imposition of fees, shall keep records as to the attendance at each
historic site, and shall report to the Governor and General Assembly by
January 31 after the close of each year. The report shall include
information on costs, expenses, attendance, comments by visitors, and
any other information the Agency may believe pertinent, including:
(1) Recommendations as to whether fees should be continued at
each State historic site.
(2) How the fees should be structured and imposed.
(3) Estimates of revenues and expenses associated with each
site.
In the final report to be filed by January 31, 1996, the Agency
shall include recommendations as to whether fees should be charged at
State historic sites and if so how the fees should be structured and
imposed and estimates of revenues and expenses associated with any
recommended fees.
(t) To provide for overnight tent and trailer campsites and to
provide suitable housing facilities for student and juvenile overnight
camping groups. The Agency shall charge the same rates charged by the
Department of Conservation for the same or similar facilities and
services.
(u) To engage in marketing activities designed to promote the
sites and programs administered by the Agency. In undertaking these
activities, the Agency may take all necessary steps with respect to
products and services, including but not limited to retail sales,
wholesale sales, direct marketing, mail order sales, telephone sales,
advertising and promotion, purchase of product and materials inventory,
design, printing and manufacturing of new products, reproductions, and
adaptations, copyright and trademark licensing and royalty agreements,
and payment of applicable taxes. In addition, the Agency shall have
the authority to sell advertising in its publications and printed
materials. All income from marketing activities shall be deposited
into the Illinois Historic Sites Fund.
(Source: P.A. 91-202, eff. 1-1-00.)
Section 10. The Illinois Historic Preservation Act is amended by
changing Sections 2 and 4 as follows:
(20 ILCS 3410/2) (from Ch. 127, par. 133d2)
Sec. 2. As used in this Act:
(a) "Council" means the Illinois Historic Sites Advisory Council;
(b) "Demolish" means raze, reconstruct or substantially alter;
(c) "Agency" means the Historic Preservation Agency;
[March 26, 2001] 50
(d) "Director" means the Director of Historic Preservation who
will serve as the State Historic Preservation Officer;
(e) "Place" means (1) any parcel or contiguous grouping of parcels
of real estate under common or related ownership or control, where any
significant improvements are at least 40 years old, or (2) any
aboriginal mound, fort, earthwork, village, location, burial ground,
historic or prehistoric ruin, mine case or other location which is or
may be the source of important archeological data; Land
(f) (Blank). "Registered Illinois Historic Place" means any place
listed on the "Illinois Register of Historic Places" pursuant to
Section 6 of this Act;
(g) "Person" means any natural person, partnership, corporation,
trust, estate, association, body politic, agency, or unit of government
and its legal representatives, agents, or assigns.; and
(h) "Municipal Preservation Agency" means any agency described in
Section 11-48.2-3 of the "Illinois Municipal Code", as now or hereafter
amended, or any agency with similar authority created by a municipality
under Article VII, Section 6 of the Illinois Constitution.
(i) "Critical Historic Feature" means those physical and
environmental components which taken singly or together, make a place
eligible for designation as a Registered Illinois Historic Place.
(Source: P.A. 84-25.)
(20 ILCS 3410/4) (from Ch. 127, par. 133d4)
Sec. 4. In addition to those powers specifically granted or
necessary to perform the duties prescribed by this Act, the Council
shall have the following powers:
(a) to recommend nominations to the National Register of Historic
Places;
(b) to nominate places to the Illinois Register of Historic
Places;
(c) to recommend removal of places from the National Register of
Historic Places; and
(d) (Blank). to recommend removal of places from the Illinois
Register of Historic Places;
(e) (Blank). to establish guidelines determining the eligibility
for listing and removing places on the Illinois Register of Historic
Places; and
(f) to advise the Agency on matters pertaining to historic
preservation.
(Source: P.A. 84-25.)
(20 ILCS 3410/6 rep.)
(20 ILCS 3410/7 rep.)
(20 ILCS 3410/8 rep.)
(20 ILCS 3410/9 rep.)
(20 ILCS 3410/10 rep.)
(20 ILCS 3410/11 rep.)
(20 ILCS 3410/12 rep.)
(20 ILCS 3410/13 rep.)
(20 ILCS 3410/14 rep.)
Section 15. The Illinois Historic Preservation Act is amended by
repealing Sections 6 through 14."; and
on page 1, line 5, by replacing "Section 5." with "Section 20.".
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILLS ON THIRD READING
The following bills and any amendments adopted thereto were printed
and laid upon the Members' desks. These bills have been examined, any
amendments thereto engrossed and any errors corrected. Any amendments
pending were tabled pursuant to Rule 40(a).
On motion of Representative Stephens, HOUSE BILL 3246 was taken up
51 [March 26, 2001]
and read by title a third time.
And the question being, "Shall this bill pass?" it was decided in
the affirmative by the following vote:
112, Yeas; 0, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
(ROLL CALL 14)
This bill, having received the votes of a constitutional majority
of the Members elected, was declared passed.
Ordered that the Clerk inform the Senate and ask their concurrence.
On motion of Representative Klingler, HOUSE BILL 3126 was taken up
and read by title a third time.
And the question being, "Shall this bill pass?" it was decided in
the affirmative by the following vote:
112, Yeas; 0, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
(ROLL CALL 15)
This bill, having received the votes of a constitutional majority
of the Members elected, was declared passed.
Ordered that the Clerk inform the Senate and ask their concurrence.
HOUSE BILLS ON SECOND READING
HOUSE BILL 335. Having been read by title a second time earlier
today, and held on the order of Second Reading, the same was again
taken up.
Representative Monique Davis offered the following amendment and
moved its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 4 TO HOUSE BILL 335
AMENDMENT NO. 4. Amend House Bill 335 as follows:
on page 2, by replacing lines 10 through 24 with the following:
"The provisions of this subsection (b), other than this sentence,
are inoperative after December 31, 2003.
(c) Each law enforcement agency shall compile the data described
in subsection (b) of this Section for the calendar year into a report
to the Secretary of State, which shall be submitted to the Secretary of
State no later than March 1 in 2003 and 2004. The Secretary of State
shall determine the format that all law enforcement agencies shall use
to submit the report.
(d) The Secretary of State shall analyze the annual reports of law
enforcement agencies required by this Section and submit a report of
the findings to the Governor, the General Assembly, and each law
enforcement agency no later than June 1 in 2003 and 2004.
(e) The report of the Secretary of State shall include at least
the following information for each law enforcement agency:"; and
on page 3, below line 2, by inserting the following:
"The provisions of this subsection (e), other than this sentence,
are inoperative after December 31, 2003."; and
on page 3, lines 10 and 11, by replacing "Attorney General" with
"Secretary of State"; and
on page 4, by replacing lines 8 and 9 with the following:
"Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect on January 1,
2002.".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 3033. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
Representative Steve Davis offered the following amendment and
[March 26, 2001] 52
moved its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 3033
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 3033 by replacing the title with
the following:
"AN ACT in relation to public employee benefits."; and
by replacing everything after the enacting clause with the following:
"Section 5. The Law Enforcement Officers, Civil Defense Workers,
Civil Air Patrol Members, Paramedics, Firemen, Chaplains, and State
Employees Compensation Act is amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
(820 ILCS 315/3) (from Ch. 48, par. 283)
Sec. 3. If a claim therefor is made within one year of the date of
death of the law enforcement officer, civil defense worker, civil air
patrol member, paramedic, fireman, chaplain, or State employee,
compensation in the amount of $10,000 shall be paid to the person
designated by a law enforcement officer, civil defense worker, civil
air patrol member, paramedic, fireman, chaplain, or State employee
killed in the line of duty prior to January 1, 1974, and $20,000 if
such death occurred after December 31, 1973 and before July 1, 1983,
$50,000 if such death occurred on or after July 1, 1983 and before
January 1, 1996 the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1995, and
$100,000 if the death occurred on or after January 1, 1996 and before
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly,
and $118,000 if the death occurred on or after the effective date of
this amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly and before January 1,
2003.
Beginning January 1, 2003, the death compensation rate for death in
the line of duty occurring in a particular calendar year shall be the
death compensation rate for death occurring in the previous calendar
year increased by a percentage thereof equal to the percentage
increase, if any, in the index known as the "Employment Cost Index,
Wages and Salaries, by Occupation and Industry Group: State and Local
Government Workers: Public Administration", as published by the United
States Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, for the 12
months ending with the month of June of that previous calendar year the
effective date of this amendatory Act of 1995.
If no beneficiary is designated or surviving at the death of the
law enforcement officer, civil defense worker, civil air patrol member,
paramedic, fireman, chaplain, or State employee killed in the line of
duty, the compensation shall be paid as follows:
(a) when there is a surviving spouse, the entire sum shall be
paid to the spouse;
(b) when there is no surviving spouse, but a surviving
descendant of the decedent, the entire sum shall be paid to the
decedent's descendants per stirpes;
(c) when there is neither a surviving spouse nor a surviving
descendant, the entire sum shall be paid to the parents of the
decedent in equal parts, allowing to the surviving parent, if one
is dead, the entire sum; and.
(d) when there is no surviving spouse, descendant or parent
of the decedent, but there are surviving brothers or sisters, or
descendants of a brother or sister, who were receiving their
principal support from the decedent at his death, the entire sum
shall be paid, in equal parts, to the dependent brothers or sisters
or dependent descendant of a brother or sister. Dependency shall
be determined by the Court of Claims based upon the investigation
and report of the Attorney General.
When there is no beneficiary designated or surviving at the death
of the law enforcement officer, civil defense worker, civil air patrol
member, paramedic, fireman, chaplain, or State employee killed in the
line of duty and no surviving spouse, descendant, parent, nor dependent
brother or sister, or dependent descendant of a brother or sister, no
compensation shall be payable under this Act.
No part of such compensation may be paid to any other person for
53 [March 26, 2001]
any efforts in securing such compensation.
(Source: P.A. 89-323, eff. 1-1-96.)
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon becoming
law.".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 3346. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
Floor Amendment No. 1 remained in the Committee on Rules.
There being no further amendments, the bill was ordered held on the
order of Second Reading.
HOUSE BILL 3196. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
Representative Hassert offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 3196
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 3196 by replacing everything
after the enacting clause with the following:
"Section 5. The School Code is amended by changing Sections
10-21.9 and 34-18.5 as follows:
(105 ILCS 5/10-21.9) (from Ch. 122, par. 10-21.9)
Sec. 10-21.9. Criminal background investigations.
(a) After August 1, 1985, Certified and noncertified applicants
for employment with a school district, except school bus driver
applicants, and student teachers assigned to the district are required,
as a condition of employment or student teaching in that district, to
authorize an investigation to determine if such applicants or student
teachers have been convicted of any of the enumerated criminal or drug
offenses in subsection (c) of this Section or have been convicted,
within 7 years of the application for employment with the school
district or of being assigned as a student teacher to that district, of
any other felony under the laws of this State or of any offense
committed or attempted in any other state or against the laws of the
United States that, if committed or attempted in this State, would have
been punishable as a felony under the laws of this State. Authorization
for the investigation shall be furnished by the applicant or student
teacher to the school district, except that if the applicant is a
substitute teacher seeking employment in more than one school district,
a teacher seeking concurrent part-time employment positions with more
than one school district (as a reading specialist, special education
teacher or otherwise), or an educational support personnel employee
seeking employment positions with more than one district, any such
district may require the applicant to furnish authorization for the
investigation to the regional superintendent of the educational service
region in which are located the school districts in which the applicant
is seeking employment as a substitute or concurrent part-time teacher
or concurrent educational support personnel employee. Upon receipt of
this authorization, the school district or the appropriate regional
superintendent, as the case may be, shall submit the applicant's or
student teacher's name, sex, race, date of birth and social security
number to the Department of State Police on forms prescribed by the
Department. The regional superintendent submitting the requisite
information to the Department of State Police shall promptly notify the
school districts in which the applicant is seeking employment as a
substitute or concurrent part-time teacher or concurrent educational
[March 26, 2001] 54
support personnel employee that the investigation of the applicant has
been requested. The Department of State Police shall conduct an
investigation to ascertain if the applicant being considered for
employment or student teacher has been convicted of any of the
enumerated criminal or drug offenses in subsection (c) or has been
convicted, within 7 years of the application for employment with the
school district or of being assigned as a student teacher to that
district, of any other felony under the laws of this State or of any
offense committed or attempted in any other state or against the laws
of the United States that, if committed or attempted in this State,
would have been punishable as a felony under the laws of this State.
The Department shall charge the school district or the appropriate
regional superintendent a fee for conducting such investigation, which
fee shall be deposited in the State Police Services Fund and shall not
exceed the cost of the inquiry; and the applicant or student teacher
shall not be charged a fee for such investigation by the school
district or by the regional superintendent. The regional
superintendent may seek reimbursement from the State Board of Education
or the appropriate school district or districts for fees paid by the
regional superintendent to the Department for the criminal background
investigations required by this Section.
(b) The Department shall furnish, pursuant to positive
identification, records of convictions, until expunged, to the
president of the school board for the school district which requested
the investigation, or to the regional superintendent who requested the
investigation. Any information concerning the record of convictions
obtained by the president of the school board or the regional
superintendent shall be confidential and may only be transmitted to the
superintendent of the school district or his designee, the appropriate
regional superintendent if the investigation was requested by the
school district, the presidents of the appropriate school boards if the
investigation was requested from the Department of State Police by the
regional superintendent, the State Superintendent of Education, the
State Teacher Certification Board or any other person necessary to the
decision of hiring the applicant for employment or assigning the
student teacher to a school district. A copy of the record of
convictions obtained from the Department of State Police shall be
provided to the applicant for employment or student teacher. If an
investigation of an applicant for employment as a substitute or
concurrent part-time teacher or concurrent educational support
personnel employee in more than one school district was requested by
the regional superintendent, and the Department of State Police upon
investigation ascertains that the applicant has not been convicted of
any of the enumerated criminal or drug offenses in subsection (c) or
has not been convicted, within 7 years of the application for
employment with the school district, of any other felony under the laws
of this State or of any offense committed or attempted in any other
state or against the laws of the United States that, if committed or
attempted in this State, would have been punishable as a felony under
the laws of this State and so notifies the regional superintendent,
then the regional superintendent shall issue to the applicant a
certificate evidencing that as of the date specified by the Department
of State Police the applicant has not been convicted of any of the
enumerated criminal or drug offenses in subsection (c) or has not been
convicted, within 7 years of the application for employment with the
school district, of any other felony under the laws of this State or of
any offense committed or attempted in any other state or against the
laws of the United States that, if committed or attempted in this
State, would have been punishable as a felony under the laws of this
State. The school board of any school district located in the
educational service region served by the regional superintendent who
issues such a certificate to an applicant for employment as a
substitute teacher in more than one such district may rely on the
certificate issued by the regional superintendent to that applicant, or
may initiate its own investigation of the applicant through the
Department of State Police as provided in subsection (a). Any person
55 [March 26, 2001]
who releases any confidential information concerning any criminal
convictions of an applicant for employment or student teacher shall be
guilty of a Class A misdemeanor, unless the release of such information
is authorized by this Section.
(c) No school board shall knowingly employ a person or knowingly
allow a person to student teach who has been convicted for committing
attempted first degree murder or for committing or attempting to commit
first degree murder or a Class X felony or any one or more of the
following offenses: (i) those defined in Sections 11-6, 11-9, 11-14,
11-15, 11-15.1, 11-16, 11-17, 11-18, 11-19, 11-19.1, 11-19.2, 11-20,
11-20.1, 11-21, 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1, 12-15 and 12-16 of the "Criminal
Code of 1961"; (ii) those defined in the "Cannabis Control Act" except
those defined in Sections 4(a), 4(b) and 5(a) of that Act; (iii) those
defined in the "Illinois Controlled Substances Act"; and (iv) any
offense committed or attempted in any other state or against the laws
of the United States, which if committed or attempted in this State,
would have been punishable as one or more of the foregoing offenses.
Further, no school board shall knowingly employ a person or knowingly
allow a person to student teach who has been found to be the
perpetrator of sexual or physical abuse of any minor under 18 years of
age pursuant to proceedings under Article II of the Juvenile Court Act
of 1987.
(d) No school board shall knowingly employ a person or knowingly
allow a person to student teach for whom a criminal background
investigation has not been initiated.
(e) Upon receipt of the record of a conviction of or a finding of
child abuse by a holder of any certificate issued pursuant to Article
21 or Section 34-8.1 or 34-83 of the School Code, the appropriate
regional superintendent of schools or the State Superintendent of
Education shall initiate the certificate suspension and revocation
proceedings authorized by law.
(f) After January 1, 1990 the provisions of this Section shall
apply to all employees of persons or firms holding contracts with any
school district including, but not limited to, food service workers,
school bus drivers and other transportation employees, who have direct,
daily contact with the pupils of any school in such district. For
purposes of criminal background investigations on employees of persons
or firms holding contracts with more than one school district and
assigned to more than one school district, the regional superintendent
of the educational service region in which the contracting school
districts are located may, at the request of any such school district,
be responsible for receiving the authorization for investigation
prepared by each such employee and submitting the same to the
Department of State Police. Any information concerning the record of
conviction of any such employee obtained by the regional superintendent
shall be promptly reported to the president of the appropriate school
board or school boards.
(Source: P.A. 90-566, eff. 1-2-98; 91-885, eff. 7-6-00.)
(105 ILCS 5/34-18.5) (from Ch. 122, par. 34-18.5)
Sec. 34-18.5. Criminal background investigations.
(a) After August 1, 1985, Certified and noncertified applicants
for employment with the school district and student teachers assigned
to the district are required, as a condition of employment or student
teaching in that district, to authorize an investigation to determine
if such applicants or student teachers have been convicted of any of
the enumerated criminal or drug offenses in subsection (c) of this
Section or have been convicted, within 7 years of the application for
employment with the school district or of being assigned as a student
teacher to that district, of any other felony under the laws of this
State or of any offense committed or attempted in any other state or
against the laws of the United States that, if committed or attempted
in this State, would have been punishable as a felony under the laws of
this State. Authorization for the investigation shall be furnished by
the applicant or student teacher to the school district, except that if
the applicant is a substitute teacher seeking employment in more than
one school district, or a teacher seeking concurrent part-time
[March 26, 2001] 56
employment positions with more than one school district (as a reading
specialist, special education teacher or otherwise), or an educational
support personnel employee seeking employment positions with more than
one district, any such district may require the applicant to furnish
authorization for the investigation to the regional superintendent of
the educational service region in which are located the school
districts in which the applicant is seeking employment as a substitute
or concurrent part-time teacher or concurrent educational support
personnel employee. Upon receipt of this authorization, the school
district or the appropriate regional superintendent, as the case may
be, shall submit the applicant's or student teacher's name, sex, race,
date of birth and social security number to the Department of State
Police on forms prescribed by the Department. The regional
superintendent submitting the requisite information to the Department
of State Police shall promptly notify the school districts in which the
applicant is seeking employment as a substitute or concurrent part-time
teacher or concurrent educational support personnel employee that the
investigation of the applicant has been requested. The Department of
State Police shall conduct an investigation to ascertain if the
applicant being considered for employment or student teacher has been
convicted of any of the enumerated criminal or drug offenses in
subsection (c) or has been convicted, within 7 years of the application
for employment with the school district or of being assigned as a
student teacher to that district, of any other felony under the laws of
this State or of any offense committed or attempted in any other state
or against the laws of the United States that, if committed or
attempted in this State, would have been punishable as a felony under
the laws of this State. The Department shall charge the school
district or the appropriate regional superintendent a fee for
conducting such investigation, which fee shall be deposited in the
State Police Services Fund and shall not exceed the cost of the
inquiry; and the applicant or student teacher shall not be charged a
fee for such investigation by the school district or by the regional
superintendent. The regional superintendent may seek reimbursement
from the State Board of Education or the appropriate school district or
districts for fees paid by the regional superintendent to the
Department for the criminal background investigations required by this
Section.
(b) The Department shall furnish, pursuant to positive
identification, records of convictions, until expunged, to the
president of the board of education for the school district which
requested the investigation, or to the regional superintendent who
requested the investigation. Any information concerning the record of
convictions obtained by the president of the board of education or the
regional superintendent shall be confidential and may only be
transmitted to the general superintendent of the school district or his
designee, the appropriate regional superintendent if the investigation
was requested by the board of education for the school district, the
presidents of the appropriate board of education or school boards if
the investigation was requested from the Department of State Police by
the regional superintendent, the State Superintendent of Education, the
State Teacher Certification Board or any other person necessary to the
decision of hiring the applicant for employment or assigning the
student teacher to a school district. A copy of the record of
convictions obtained from the Department of State Police shall be
provided to the applicant for employment or student teacher. If an
investigation of an applicant for employment as a substitute or
concurrent part-time teacher or concurrent educational support
personnel employee in more than one school district was requested by
the regional superintendent, and the Department of State Police upon
investigation ascertains that the applicant has not been convicted of
any of the enumerated criminal or drug offenses in subsection (c) or
has not been convicted, within 7 years of the application for
employment with the school district, of any other felony under the laws
of this State or of any offense committed or attempted in any other
state or against the laws of the United States that, if committed or
57 [March 26, 2001]
attempted in this State, would have been punishable as a felony under
the laws of this State and so notifies the regional superintendent,
then the regional superintendent shall issue to the applicant a
certificate evidencing that as of the date specified by the Department
of State Police the applicant has not been convicted of any of the
enumerated criminal or drug offenses in subsection (c) or has not been
convicted, within 7 years of the application for employment with the
school district, of any other felony under the laws of this State or of
any offense committed or attempted in any other state or against the
laws of the United States that, if committed or attempted in this
State, would have been punishable as a felony under the laws of this
State. The school board of any school district located in the
educational service region served by the regional superintendent who
issues such a certificate to an applicant for employment as a
substitute or concurrent part-time teacher or concurrent educational
support personnel employee in more than one such district may rely on
the certificate issued by the regional superintendent to that
applicant, or may initiate its own investigation of the applicant
through the Department of State Police as provided in subsection (a).
Any person who releases any confidential information concerning any
criminal convictions of an applicant for employment or student teacher
shall be guilty of a Class A misdemeanor, unless the release of such
information is authorized by this Section.
(c) The board of education shall not knowingly employ a person or
knowingly allow a person to student teach who has been convicted for
committing attempted first degree murder or for committing or
attempting to commit first degree murder or a Class X felony or any one
or more of the following offenses: (i) those defined in Sections 11-6,
11-9, 11-14, 11-15, 11-15.1, 11-16, 11-17, 11-18, 11-19, 11-19.1,
11-19.2, 11-20, 11-20.1, 11-21, 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1, 12-15 and 12-16
of the Criminal Code of 1961; (ii) those defined in the Cannabis
Control Act, except those defined in Sections 4(a), 4(b) and 5(a) of
that Act; (iii) those defined in the Illinois Controlled Substances
Act; and (iv) any offense committed or attempted in any other state or
against the laws of the United States, which if committed or attempted
in this State, would have been punishable as one or more of the
foregoing offenses. Further, the board of education shall not knowingly
employ a person or knowingly allow a person to student teach who has
been found to be the perpetrator of sexual or physical abuse of any
minor under 18 years of age pursuant to proceedings under Article II of
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
(d) The board of education shall not knowingly employ a person or
knowingly allow a person to student teach for whom a criminal
background investigation has not been initiated.
(e) Upon receipt of the record of a conviction of or a finding of
child abuse by a holder of any certificate issued pursuant to Article
21 or Section 34-8.1 or 34-83 of the School Code, the board of
education or the State Superintendent of Education shall initiate the
certificate suspension and revocation proceedings authorized by law.
(f) After March 19, 1990, the provisions of this Section shall
apply to all employees of persons or firms holding contracts with any
school district including, but not limited to, food service workers,
school bus drivers and other transportation employees, who have direct,
daily contact with the pupils of any school in such district. For
purposes of criminal background investigations on employees of persons
or firms holding contracts with more than one school district and
assigned to more than one school district, the regional superintendent
of the educational service region in which the contracting school
districts are located may, at the request of any such school district,
be responsible for receiving the authorization for investigation
prepared by each such employee and submitting the same to the
Department of State Police. Any information concerning the record of
conviction of any such employee obtained by the regional superintendent
shall be promptly reported to the president of the appropriate school
board or school boards.
(Source: P.A. 90-566, eff. 1-2-98; 91-885, eff. 7-6-00.)
[March 26, 2001] 58
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon becoming
law.".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 185. Having been read by title a second time on March
23, 2001, and held on the order of Second Reading, the same was again
taken up.
Representative Hoffman offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 3 TO HOUSE BILL 185
AMENDMENT NO. 3. Amend House Bill 185, AS AMENDED, as follows:
in Section 5, in the introductory clause, by replacing "2-2.02 and
2-2.04" with "2-2.02, 2-2.04, and 2-7"; and
in Section 5, below the last line of Sec. 2-2.04, by inserting the
following:
"(30 ILCS 740/2-7) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 667)
Sec. 2-7. Quarterly reports; annual audit.
(a) Any Metro-East Transit District participant shall, no later
than 60 30 days following the end of each quarter month of any fiscal
year, file with the Department on forms provided by the Department for
that purpose, a report of the actual operating deficit experienced
during that quarter. The Department shall, upon receipt of the
quarterly report, determine whether the and upon determining that such
operating deficits were incurred in conformity with the program of
proposed expenditures approved by the Department pursuant to Section
2-11. Any Metro-East District may either monthly or quarterly for any
fiscal year file a request for the participant's eligible share, as
allocated in accordance with Section 2-6, of the amounts transferred
into the Metro-East Public Transportation Fund, pay to any Metro-East
Transit District participant such portion of such operating deficit as
funds have been transferred to the Metro-East Transit Public
Transportation Fund and allocated to that Metro-East Transit District
participant.
(b) Each participant other than any Metro-East Transit District
participant shall, 30 days before the end of each quarter, file with
the Department on forms provided by the Department for such purposes a
report of the projected eligible operating expenses to be incurred in
the next quarter and 30 days before the third and fourth quarters of
any fiscal year a statement of actual eligible operating expenses
incurred in the preceding quarters. Within 45 days of receipt by the
Department of such quarterly report, the Comptroller shall order paid
and the Treasurer shall pay from the Downstate Public Transportation
Fund to each participant an amount equal to one-third of such
participant's eligible operating expenses; provided, however, that in
Fiscal Year 1997, the amount paid to each participant from the
Downstate Public Transportation Fund shall be an amount equal to 47% of
such participant's eligible operating expenses and shall be increased
to 49% in Fiscal Year 1998, 51% in Fiscal Year 1999, 53% in Fiscal Year
2000, and 55% in Fiscal Year 2001 and thereafter; however, in any year
that a participant receives funding under subsection (i) of Section
2705-305 of the Department of Transportation Law (20 ILCS
2705/2705-305), that participant shall be eligible only for assistance
equal to the following percentage of its eligible operating expenses:
42% in Fiscal Year 1997, 44% in Fiscal Year 1998, 46% in Fiscal Year
1999, 48% in Fiscal Year 2000, and 50% in Fiscal Year 2001 and
thereafter. Any such payment for the third and fourth quarters of any
fiscal year shall be adjusted to reflect actual eligible operating
expenses for preceding quarters of such fiscal year. However, no
59 [March 26, 2001]
participant shall receive an amount less than that which was received
in the immediate prior year, provided in the event of a shortfall in
the fund those participants receiving less than their full allocation
pursuant to Section 2-6 of this Article shall be the first participants
to receive an amount not less than that received in the immediate prior
year.
(c) No later than 180 days following the last day of the Fiscal
Year each participant shall provide the Department with an audit
prepared by a Certified Public Accountant covering that Fiscal Year.
Any discrepancy between the grants paid and one-third of the eligible
operating expenses or in the case of the Bi-State Metropolitan
Development District the approved program amount shall be reconciled by
appropriate payment or credit. Beginning in Fiscal Year 1985, For those
participants other than a Metro-East Transit District the Bi-State
Metropolitan Development District, any discrepancy between the grants
paid and the percentage of the eligible operating expenses provided for
by paragraph (b) of this Section shall be reconciled by appropriate
payment or credit. In the case of any Metro-East Transit District, any
amount of payments from the Metro-East Public Transportation Fund which
exceed the eligible deficit of the participant shall be reconciled by
appropriate payment or credit.
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00; 91-357, eff. 7-29-99; revised
8-9-99.)".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 3
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 2502. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
Representative Younge offered the following amendment and moved its
adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 2502
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 2502 as follows:
on page 1, line 1, by replacing "an East St. Louis" with "a
southwestern Illinois"; and
on page 1, line 6, by replacing "East St. Louis" with "Southwestern
Illinois"; and
on page 1, line 19, by replacing "East St. Louis" with "Southwestern
Illinois"; and
on page 2, line 13, by replacing "East St. Louis" with "Southwestern
Illinois"; and
on page 2, line 15, by replacing "East St. Louis, Illinois" with "St.
Clair County"; and
on page 2, line 25, by replacing "East St. Louis" with "Southwestern
Illinois".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 1848. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
Representative Stroger offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
[March 26, 2001] 60
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 1848
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 1848 on page 1, line 31, after
the period, by inserting the following:
"The notice required under this paragraph must include a statement that
public access to the Internet is available at public libraries. Any
notice required under this paragraph is in addition to any other notice
required under this subsection (b).".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILLS ON THIRD READING
The following bill and any amendments adopted thereto were printed
and laid upon the Members' desks. This bill has been examined, any
amendments thereto engrossed and any errors corrected. Any amendments
pending were tabled pursuant to Rule 40(a).
On motion of Representative Steve Davis, HOUSE BILL 201 was taken
up and read by title a third time.
And the question being, "Shall this bill pass?" it was decided in
the affirmative by the following vote:
109, Yeas; 1, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
(ROLL CALL 16)
This bill, having received the votes of a constitutional majority
of the Members elected, was declared passed.
Ordered that the Clerk inform the Senate and ask their concurrence.
HOUSE BILLS ON SECOND READING
HOUSE BILL 1083. Having been read by title a second time earlier
today, and held on the order of Second Reading, the same was again
taken up.
Representative Slone offered the following amendment and moved its
adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 1083
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 1083 by replacing everything
after the enacting clause with the following:
"Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Water
Quantity Protection Act of 2001.".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was held on the order
of Second Reading.
RECALLS
By unanimous consent, on motion of Representative Younge, HOUSE
BILL 2518 was recalled from the order of Third Reading to the order of
Second Reading and held on that order.
By unanimous consent, on motion of Representative Younge, HOUSE
BILL 2519 was recalled from the order of Third Reading to the order of
61 [March 26, 2001]
Second Reading and held on that order.
HOUSE BILL ON THIRD READING
The following bill and any amendments adopted thereto was printed
and laid upon the Members' desks. This bill has been examined, any
amendments thereto engrossed and any errors corrected. Any amendments
pending were tabled pursuant to Rule 40(a).
On motion of Representative Black, HOUSE BILL 770 was taken up and
read by title a third time.
And the question being, "Shall this bill pass?" it was decided in
the affirmative by the following vote:
113, Yeas; 0, Nays; 1, Answering Present.
(ROLL CALL 17)
This bill, having received the votes of a constitutional majority
of the Members elected, was declared passed.
Ordered that the Clerk inform the Senate and ask their concurrence.
RESOLUTIONS
Having been reported out of the Committee on Registration &
Regulation on March 8, 2001, HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION 10 was taken up for
consideration.
Representative Ryan moved the adoption of the resolution.
And on that motion, a vote was taken resulting as follows:
114, Yeas; 0, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
(ROLL CALL 18)
The motion prevailed and the Resolution was adopted.
Ordered that the Clerk inform the Senate and ask their concurrence.
HOUSE BILLS ON THIRD READING
The following bill and any amendments adopted thereto were printed
and laid upon the Members' desks. This bill has been examined, any
amendments thereto engrossed and any errors corrected. Any amendments
pending were tabled pursuant to Rule 40(a).
On motion of Representative Fritchey, HOUSE BILL 2001 was taken up
and read by title a third time.
And the question being, "Shall this bill pass?" it was decided in
the affirmative by the following vote:
113, Yeas; 0, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
(ROLL CALL 19)
This bill, having received the votes of a constitutional majority
of the Members elected, was declared passed.
Ordered that the Clerk inform the Senate and ask their concurrence.
HOUSE BILLS ON SECOND READING
HOUSE BILL 2284. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
The following amendment was offered in the Committee on Executive,
adopted and printed:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 2284
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 2284 on page 1, by inserting the
following after line 5:
"Section 5. Policy declaration. The General Assembly finds that
epilepsy is a devastating health condition that afflicts 2,300,000
[March 26, 2001] 62
United States citizens, over 125,000 of whom reside in Illinois. The
General Assembly also finds that epilepsy afflicts its victims at all
ages, but is particularly devastating to children and the elderly. It
is the opinion of General Assembly that epilepsy can cause serious
financial, social, and emotional hardships on the victims and their
families of such a major consequence that it is essential for the State
to develop and implement policies, plans, programs, and services to
alleviate such hardships.
It is the intent of the General Assembly through implementation of
this Act to establish a program for the conduct of education and
research regarding the cause, cure, and treatment of both the
physiologic and psychosocial aspects of epilepsy. Additionally, it is
the intent of the General Assembly, through the establishment of
regional epilepsy centers and a comprehensive, statewide system of
regional and community-based services, to provide for the
identification, evaluation, diagnosis, referral, and treatment of
victims of such health problems.
Section 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
"Epilepsy" means a disorder characterized by recurring attacks
of motor, sensory, or psychic malfunction with or without
unconsciousness or convulsive movements.
"Regional epilepsy center" means a postsecondary higher
educational institution having:
(1) a medical school in affiliation with a medical
center;
(2) an established education and outreach initiative to
provide assistance to both children and adults with epilepsy;
and
(3) full-time educators, advance practice nurses,
epileptologists treating both children and adults, social
workers, psychologists, and researchers involved in exploring
both the pathophysiologic and psycho-social aspects of
epilepsy.
"Primary epilepsy provider" means a licensed hospital, a
medical center under the supervision of a physician licensed to
practice medicine in all of its branches, or a medical center that
provides medical consultation, evaluation, referral, and treatment
to persons who may be or who have been diagnosed as victims of
epilepsy.
"Epilepsy Advisory Committee" or "Advisory Committee" or
"Committee" means the Epilepsy Disease Advisory Committee created
under Section 20 of this Act.
"Department" means the Illinois Department of Public Health.
"Director" means the Director of Public Health.
Section 15. Development of standards for a service network;
designation of regional centers and primary providers. By January 1,
2002, the Department, in consultation with the Advisory Committee,
shall develop standards for the conduct of research and for the
identification, evaluation, diagnosis, referral, and treatment of
victims of epilepsy and their families through the regional centers.
The standards shall include the following:
(a) A description of the specific populations and geographic
areas to be served.
(b) Standards, criteria, and procedures for designation of
the Regional Centers that will ensure the provision of quality care
to a broad segment of the population through on-site facilities and
services available within the service area defined by the
Department. At least one regional center shall be conveniently
located to serve the Chicago metropolitan area and at least one
regional center shall be conveniently located to serve the balance
of the State. The regional centers shall provide at least the
following:
(1) Comprehensive diagnosis and treatment facilities and
services that have (i) professional medical staff specifically
trained in neurology and the detection, diagnosis, and
treatment of epilepsy, (ii) sufficient support staff who are
63 [March 26, 2001]
trained as caregivers to victims of epilepsy,
(iii) appropriate and adequate equipment necessary for
diagnosis and treatment, (iv) transportation services
necessary for outreach to the service area defined by the
Department and for assuring access of patients to available
services, and (v) such other support services, staff, and
equipment as may be required;
(2) Consultation and referral services for victims and
their families to ensure informed consent to treatment and to
assist them in obtaining necessary assistance and support
services through primary epilepsy providers and various
private and public agencies that may otherwise be available to
provide services under this Act;
(3) Research programs and facilities to assist faculty
and students in discovering the cause of and diagnosis, cure,
and treatment of epilepsy;
(4) Training, consultation, and continuing education for
caregivers, including families of those who are affected by
epilepsy;
(5) Centralized data collection, processing, and storage
that will serve as a clearinghouse of information to assist
victims and families and to facilitate research;
(6) Programs of scientific and medical research in
relation to epilepsy that are designed and conducted in a
manner that may enable the center to qualify for federal
financial participation in the cost of such programs.
Section 20. Epilepsy Advisory Committee. There is created the
Epilepsy Advisory Committee consisting of the Director or his or her
designee, who shall serve as a non-voting member and who shall be the
chairman of the Committee and 11 voting members appointed by the
Director.
The appointed members shall include persons who are experienced in
research and the delivery of services to victims of epilepsy and their
families. Such members shall include 4 physicians licensed to practice
medicine in all of its branches experienced in the diagnosis and
treatment of epilepsy, at least 3 of whom shall be physicians who are
board certified in neurology; one representative of a postsecondary
educational institution that administers or is affiliated with a
medical center in the State, one representative of a licensed hospital,
one nurse, one social worker, one representative of an organization
established under the Illinois Insurance Code for the purpose of
providing health insurance, and 2 victims of epilepsy or members of
their families.
Each member appointed by the Director shall serve for a term of 2
years and until his or her successor is appointed and qualified.
Members of the Committee shall not be compensated, but shall be
reimbursed for expenses actually incurred in the performance of their
duties. No more than 7 members may be of the same political party.
Vacancies shall be filled in the same manner as original
appointments.
Section 25. Regional Epilepsy Center grants-in-aid. Pursuant to
appropriations made by the General Assembly, the Department shall
provide grants-in-aid to regional epilepsy centers for necessary
research and for the development and maintenance of services for
victims of epilepsy and their families. The Department shall adopt
rules and procedures governing the distribution and specific purposes
of such grants.".
Representative Shirley Jones offered the following amendment and
moved its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO HOUSE BILL 2284
AMENDMENT NO. 2. Amend House Bill 2284, AS AMENDED, with reference
to page and line numbers of House Amendment No. 1, on page 2, by
[March 26, 2001] 64
replacing line 15 with the following:
"(3) physicians licensed to practice medicine in all of its
branches, full-time educators,"; and
on page 2, line 24 by replacing "branches" with "branches, a physician
licensed to practice medicine in all of its branches".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendments
numbered 1 and 2 were ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was
advanced to the order of Third Reading.
RECALLS
By unanimous consent, on motion of Representative Schmitz, HOUSE
BILL 3089 was recalled from the order of Third Reading to the order of
Second Reading and held on that order.
HOUSE BILLS ON SECOND READING
HOUSE BILL 1000. Having been recalled on March 26, 2001, and held
on the order of Second Reading, the same was again taken up.
Representative Saviano offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 1000
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 1000 on page 7, by replacing
lines 11 through 13 with the following:
"making the report, the address in Illinois at which the records
supporting such report are kept and are open to inspection, the period
of time covered by said report, the"; and
on page 8, by replacing lines 3 and 4 with "report,"; and
on page 8, line 14, immediately before "The" by inserting the
following:
"Every railroad company, express company, common or contract
carrier, person, firm, or corporation filing or required to file a
report under this Section shall deliver and make available to the
Department, upon the Department's request, the records supporting the
report, within 30 days of the request.".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was again advanced to
the order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 2540. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
The following amendments were offered in the Committee on
Executive, adopted and printed:
"GET AMENDMENT NO. 1 HERE".
Representative Saviano offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO HOUSE BILL 2540
AMENDMENT NO. 2. Amend House Bill 2540 on page 1, by replacing
lines 21 through 23 with "pertaining to appraising and related
65 [March 26, 2001]
functions."; and
on page 1, line 24, by deleting "or oral"; and
on page 4, line 25, after "in", by inserting "connection with"; and
on page 5, line 11, by replacing "if" with "unless"; and
on page 5, by replacing lines 12 through 14 with "broker or salesperson
is providing or attempting to provide an appraisal report, as defined
in Section 1-10 of this Act, in connection with a federally-related
transaction."; and
on page 16, lines 27 and 28, by deleting "for valuation"; and
on page 19, line 23, by replacing "reported to" with "reported"; and
on page 27, line 11, by deleting "school"; and
on page 27, line 12, by replacing "school" with "education provider";
and
on page 29, line 13, after "appointment", by inserting "and shall hold
a valid appraiser license issued under this Act or a predecessor Act
for a period of at least 5 years prior to the appointment"; and
on page 30, line 9, by replacing "January" with "July"; and
on page 32, immediately below line 32, by inserting the following:
"OBRE shall maintain and update a registry of the names and
addresses of all licensees and a listing of disciplinary orders issued
pursuant to this Act and shall transmit the registry, along with any
national registry fees that may be required, to the entity specified
by, and in a manner consistent with, Title XI of the federal Financial
Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989.".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendments
numbered 1 and 2 were ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was
advanced to the order of Third Reading.
HOUSE BILL 3048. Having been read by title a second time on March
7, 2001, and held on the order of Second Reading, the same was again
taken up.
Representative Saviano offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 3048
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 3048 on page 1, line 9, after
"function" by inserting "that requires professional judgment and that
is".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the
order of Third Reading.
RECALLS
By unanimous consent, on motion of Representative O'Brien, HOUSE
BILL 1709 was recalled from the order of Third Reading to the order of
Second Reading and held on that order.
By unanimous consent, on motion of Representative Soto, HOUSE BILL
2382 was recalled from the order of Third Reading to the order of
Second Reading and held on that order.
HOUSE BILLS ON SECOND READING
HOUSE BILL 3066. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
[March 26, 2001] 66
title a second time.
The following amendment was offered in the Committee on Labor,
adopted and printed:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO HOUSE BILL 3066
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend House Bill 3066 on page 1, by replacing
lines 19 through 21 with the following:
"individual, excluding supervisors, students, and managerial,
confidential, and short term employees, who is student, and part-time
academic employees of community colleges employed full or part time
by"; and
on page 1, by replacing lines 26 through 30 with the following:
"Act, and peace officers employed by a State university. For the
purposes of this Act, part-time academic employees of community
colleges shall be defined as those employees who provide less than 6
credit hours of instruction per academic semester.".
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was ordered engrossed; and the bill, as amended, was held on the order
of Second Reading.
Having been printed, the following bill was taken up, read by title
a second time and held on the order of Second Reading: HOUSE BILL 3280.
SENATE BILLS ON FIRST READING
Having been printed, the following bills were taken up, read by
title a first time and placed in the Committee on Rules: SENATE BILLS
316, 360 and 1329.
RESOLUTION
The following resolutions were offered and placed in the Committee
on Rules.
HOUSE RESOLUTION 157
Offered by Representative Berns:
WHEREAS, Throughout history brave Americans have shed their blood
during wars and conflicts to preserve, protect, and defend the
foundation of the principles of democracy and freedom; and
WHEREAS, Many of those that have served have been the brave men and
women of the State of Illinois; and
WHEREAS, In every military conflict and national time of need since
1818, the brave men and women of the State of Illinois have risen to
the cause of defending democracy; and
WHEREAS, These brave men and women often left behind family,
friends, farms, and business, and often many of them were to never
return, making the ultimate sacrifice for their country; and
WHEREAS, With the signing of the Armistice ending the "War to End
All Wars", WWI on November 11th 1918, the veterans of Illinois were
given a holiday of solemn remembrance and thanks from their countrymen
which later came to be known as Veteran's Day; and
WHEREAS, The people of the great State of Illinois wish to thank
those numerous veterans for their sacrifices and service; therefore, be
it
RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that Interstate 74,
traversing through the heart of Illinois is designated as the Veterans
Memorial Parkway, in honor of the veterans of the State of Illinois;
and be it further
RESOLVED, That the Department of Transportation is requested to
67 [March 26, 2001]
erect appropriate plaques along this route in recognition of the
Veteran's Memorial Parkway; and be it further
RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be delivered to
the Secretary of the Department of Transportation.
HOUSE RESOLUTION 158
Offered by Representative Berns:
WHEREAS, Throughout history brave Americans have shed their blood
during wars and conflicts to preserve, protect, and defend the
foundation of the principles of democracy and freedom; and
WHEREAS, Many of those that have served have been the brave men and
women of the State of Illinois; and
WHEREAS, In every military conflict and national time of need since
1818, the brave men and women of the State of Illinois have risen to
the cause of defending democracy; and
WHEREAS, These brave men and women often left behind family,
friends, farms, and business, and often many of them were to never
return, making the ultimate sacrifice for their country; and
WHEREAS, With the signing of the Armistice ending the "War to End
All Wars", WWI on November 11th 1918, the veterans of Illinois were
given a holiday of solemn remembrance and thanks from their countrymen
which later came to be known as Veteran's Day; and
WHEREAS, The people of the great State of Illinois wish to thank
those numerous veterans for their sacrifices and service; therefore, be
it
RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that the portion of
Interstate 74 between the intersection of Interstate Route 74 with
Interstate Route 57 the intersection of Interstate Route 74 with U.S.
Route 45 is designated as the Veterans Memorial Parkway; and be it
further
RESOLVED, That the Department of Transportation is requested to
erect appropriate plaques along this route in recognition of the
Veteran's Memorial Parkway; and be it further
RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be delivered to
the Secretary of the Department of Transportation.
HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION 19
Offered by Representative Hartke:
WHEREAS, There are over 48,000 adults and juveniles incarcerated in
36 correctional facilities run by the State of Illinois; and
WHEREAS, Despite problems of overcrowding and understaffing, these
prisons have an excellent record of maintaining the public safety; and
WHEREAS, In other states where private prisons have made
encroachments, correctional security has often been significantly
compromised, resulting in more serious injuries to staff and inmates,
as well as a growing number of inmate escapes; and
WHEREAS, One of the primary causes of such unsafe conditions in
private prisons is the poor training, high turnover, and low
compensation of their employees; and
WHEREAS, The Illinois General Assembly has recognized that "issues
of liability, accountability, and cost warrant a prohibition of the
ownership, operation, or management of correctional facilities by
for-profit contractors" by its enactment of a moratorium against
private prisons; and
WHEREAS, In spite of that moratorium, attempts are still being made
to privatize operations of the State's correctional facilities through
incremental measures; and
WHEREAS, The Department of Corrections currently contracts out
medical services at its facilities, which has led to difficulty in
recruiting and retaining health care professionals and hardships for
employees, including bounced pay checks from fly-by-night contractors;
and
WHEREAS, The Fiscal Year 2002 budget submitted to the General
[March 26, 2001] 68
Assembly by Governor Ryan would allow for privatization of a number of
important functions that impact prison security at the new Kewanee
Youth Center and Lawrence Correctional Center, including dietary,
medical, commissary, and educational services; and
WHEREAS, The privatization of such support functions would be
detrimental to the efficient and secure function of these facilities
and is therefore contrary to the intent of the Private Correctional
Facility Moratorium Act; and
WHEREAS, Proposed legislation is making another attempt to foster
privatization in the Illinois prison system that would allow certain
inmates to be housed in private nursing homes; and
WHEREAS, The establishment of such nursing homes could lead to
situations where inmates who should be incarcerated are living in
unsecured settings; therefore, be it
RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE NINETY- SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY, THE SENATE CONCURRING HEREIN, that the State of
Illinois affirm its commitment to a secure, safe, and effective State
prison system by forestalling efforts to incrementally privatize
operations of the Department of Corrections; and be it further
RESOLVED, That the Department of Corrections revise its budget to
allow for the dietary, educational, health, and commissary services at
Kewanee Youth Center and Lawrence Correctional Center to be provided by
employees of the Department of Corrections; and be it further
RESOLVED, That the General Assembly supports the continued
examination of the operations of Department of Correction's medical
vendors that has been undertaken by the House Prison Reform Task Force;
and be it further
RESOLVED, That the General Assembly opposes the housing of
convicted persons in private nursing home settings; and be it further
RESOLVED, That the Department of Corrections shall, prior to the
privatization of any aspect of operations at a State correctional
facility, seek the authorization of the General Assembly to request
bids for any services that are normally performed by employees of the
Department of Corrections; and be it further
RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be delivered to
the Director of Corrections.
HOUSE BILLS ON SECOND READING
Having been printed, the following bills were taken up, read by
title a second time and held on the order of Second Reading: HOUSE
BILLS 1041, 1786, 2290, 2552, 3004, 3014, 3085, 3125, 3129, 3130 and
3332.
At the hour of 5:30 o'clock p.m., Representative Currie moved that
the House do now adjourn.
The motion prevailed.
And in accordance therewith and pursuant to SENATE JOINT RESOLUTION
20, the House stood adjourned until Tuesday, March 27, 2001, at 10:00
o'clock a.m.
69 [March 26, 2001]
NO. 1
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
QUORUM ROLL CALL FOR ATTENDANCE
MAR 26, 2001
0 YEAS 0 NAYS 115 PRESENT
P ACEVEDO P FEIGENHOLTZ P LINDNER P POE
P BASSI P FLOWERS P LYONS,EILEEN P REITZ
P BEAUBIEN P FORBY P LYONS,JOSEPH P RIGHTER
P BELLOCK P FOWLER P MATHIAS P RUTHERFORD
P BERNS P FRANKS P MAUTINO P RYAN
P BIGGINS P FRITCHEY P MAY P RYDER
P BLACK P GARRETT P McAULIFFE P SAVIANO
P BOLAND P GILES P McCARTHY P SCHMITZ
P BOST P GRANBERG P McGUIRE P SCHOENBERG
P BRADLEY P HAMOS P McKEON P SCOTT
P BRADY P HANNIG P MENDOZA P SCULLY
P BROSNAHAN P HARTKE P MEYER P SLONE
P BRUNSVOLD P HASSERT P MILLER P SMITH
E BUGIELSKI P HOEFT P MITCHELL,BILL P SOMMER
P BURKE P HOFFMAN P MITCHELL,JERRY P SOTO
P CAPPARELLI P HOLBROOK P MOFFITT E STEPHENS
P COLLINS P HOWARD P MOORE P STROGER
P COULSON P HULTGREN P MORROW P TENHOUSE
P COWLISHAW P JOHNSON P MULLIGAN P TURNER,ART
P CROSS P JONES,JOHN P MURPHY P TURNER,JOHN
P CROTTY P JONES,LOU P MYERS P WAIT
P CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY P NOVAK P WINKEL
P CURRY P KENNER P O'BRIEN P WINTERS
P DANIELS P KLINGLER P O'CONNOR P WIRSING
P DART P KOSEL P OSMOND P WOJCIK
P DAVIS,MONIQUE P KRAUSE P OSTERMAN P YARBROUGH
P DAVIS,STEVE P KURTZ P PANKAU P YOUNGE
P DELGADO P LANG P PARKE P ZICKUS
P DURKIN P LAWFER P PERSICO P MR. SPEAKER
P ERWIN P LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
[March 26, 2001] 70
NO. 2
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
HOUSE BILL 36
AGFIRST INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOP
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAR 26, 2001
110 YEAS 0 NAYS 0 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y FEIGENHOLTZ Y LINDNER Y POE
Y BASSI Y FLOWERS Y LYONS,EILEEN Y REITZ
Y BEAUBIEN Y FORBY Y LYONS,JOSEPH Y RIGHTER
Y BELLOCK Y FOWLER Y MATHIAS Y RUTHERFORD
Y BERNS Y FRANKS Y MAUTINO Y RYAN
Y BIGGINS Y FRITCHEY Y MAY Y RYDER
Y BLACK Y GARRETT Y McAULIFFE Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND A GILES Y McCARTHY Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GRANBERG Y McGUIRE Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y HAMOS Y McKEON A SCOTT
Y BRADY Y HANNIG Y MENDOZA Y SCULLY
E BROSNAHAN Y HARTKE Y MEYER Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HASSERT Y MILLER Y SMITH
E BUGIELSKI Y HOEFT Y MITCHELL,BILL Y SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOFFMAN Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOLBROOK Y MOFFITT E STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOWARD Y MOORE Y STROGER
Y COULSON Y HULTGREN Y MORROW Y TENHOUSE
Y COWLISHAW Y JOHNSON A MULLIGAN Y TURNER,ART
Y CROSS Y JONES,JOHN Y MURPHY Y TURNER,JOHN
Y CROTTY Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WAIT
Y CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK Y WINKEL
Y CURRY Y KENNER Y O'BRIEN Y WINTERS
Y DANIELS Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y WIRSING
A DART Y KOSEL Y OSMOND Y WOJCIK
Y DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y YARBROUGH
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y YOUNGE
Y DELGADO Y LANG Y PARKE Y ZICKUS
Y DURKIN Y LAWFER Y PERSICO Y MR. SPEAKER
Y ERWIN Y LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
71 [March 26, 2001]
NO. 3
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
HOUSE BILL 2511
AFRICA-AMERICA PEACE BRIGADE
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAR 26, 2001
109 YEAS 0 NAYS 0 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y FEIGENHOLTZ Y LINDNER Y POE
Y BASSI Y FLOWERS Y LYONS,EILEEN Y REITZ
Y BEAUBIEN Y FORBY Y LYONS,JOSEPH Y RIGHTER
Y BELLOCK Y FOWLER Y MATHIAS Y RUTHERFORD
Y BERNS Y FRANKS Y MAUTINO Y RYAN
Y BIGGINS Y FRITCHEY Y MAY Y RYDER
Y BLACK Y GARRETT Y McAULIFFE Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND A GILES Y McCARTHY Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GRANBERG Y McGUIRE Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y HAMOS Y McKEON A SCOTT
Y BRADY Y HANNIG Y MENDOZA Y SCULLY
E BROSNAHAN Y HARTKE Y MEYER Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HASSERT Y MILLER Y SMITH
E BUGIELSKI Y HOEFT Y MITCHELL,BILL Y SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOFFMAN Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOLBROOK Y MOFFITT E STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOWARD Y MOORE Y STROGER
Y COULSON Y HULTGREN Y MORROW Y TENHOUSE
Y COWLISHAW Y JOHNSON A MULLIGAN Y TURNER,ART
Y CROSS Y JONES,JOHN Y MURPHY Y TURNER,JOHN
Y CROTTY Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WAIT
Y CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK Y WINKEL
Y CURRY Y KENNER Y O'BRIEN Y WINTERS
Y DANIELS Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y WIRSING
A DART Y KOSEL Y OSMOND Y WOJCIK
Y DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y YARBROUGH
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y YOUNGE
Y DELGADO Y LANG A PARKE Y ZICKUS
Y DURKIN Y LAWFER Y PERSICO Y MR. SPEAKER
Y ERWIN Y LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
[March 26, 2001] 72
NO. 4
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
HOUSE BILL 3557
DCCA-FIRE TRUCK LOAN PROGRAM
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAR 26, 2001
110 YEAS 0 NAYS 0 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y FEIGENHOLTZ Y LINDNER Y POE
Y BASSI Y FLOWERS Y LYONS,EILEEN Y REITZ
Y BEAUBIEN Y FORBY Y LYONS,JOSEPH Y RIGHTER
Y BELLOCK Y FOWLER Y MATHIAS Y RUTHERFORD
Y BERNS Y FRANKS Y MAUTINO Y RYAN
Y BIGGINS Y FRITCHEY Y MAY Y RYDER
Y BLACK Y GARRETT Y McAULIFFE Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND A GILES Y McCARTHY Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GRANBERG Y McGUIRE Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y HAMOS Y McKEON A SCOTT
Y BRADY Y HANNIG Y MENDOZA Y SCULLY
E BROSNAHAN Y HARTKE Y MEYER Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HASSERT Y MILLER Y SMITH
E BUGIELSKI Y HOEFT Y MITCHELL,BILL Y SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOFFMAN Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOLBROOK Y MOFFITT E STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOWARD Y MOORE Y STROGER
Y COULSON Y HULTGREN Y MORROW Y TENHOUSE
Y COWLISHAW Y JOHNSON A MULLIGAN Y TURNER,ART
Y CROSS Y JONES,JOHN Y MURPHY Y TURNER,JOHN
Y CROTTY Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WAIT
Y CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK Y WINKEL
Y CURRY Y KENNER Y O'BRIEN Y WINTERS
Y DANIELS Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y WIRSING
A DART Y KOSEL Y OSMOND Y WOJCIK
Y DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y YARBROUGH
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y YOUNGE
Y DELGADO Y LANG Y PARKE Y ZICKUS
Y DURKIN Y LAWFER Y PERSICO Y MR. SPEAKER
Y ERWIN Y LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
73 [March 26, 2001]
NO. 5
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
HOUSE BILL 1927
SCH CD-MANDATE WAIVERS-PE
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAR 26, 2001
110 YEAS 0 NAYS 0 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y FEIGENHOLTZ Y LINDNER Y POE
Y BASSI Y FLOWERS Y LYONS,EILEEN Y REITZ
Y BEAUBIEN Y FORBY Y LYONS,JOSEPH Y RIGHTER
Y BELLOCK Y FOWLER Y MATHIAS Y RUTHERFORD
Y BERNS Y FRANKS Y MAUTINO Y RYAN
Y BIGGINS Y FRITCHEY Y MAY Y RYDER
Y BLACK Y GARRETT Y McAULIFFE Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND A GILES Y McCARTHY Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GRANBERG Y McGUIRE Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y HAMOS Y McKEON A SCOTT
Y BRADY Y HANNIG Y MENDOZA Y SCULLY
E BROSNAHAN Y HARTKE Y MEYER Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HASSERT Y MILLER Y SMITH
E BUGIELSKI Y HOEFT Y MITCHELL,BILL Y SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOFFMAN Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOLBROOK Y MOFFITT E STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOWARD Y MOORE Y STROGER
Y COULSON Y HULTGREN Y MORROW Y TENHOUSE
Y COWLISHAW Y JOHNSON A MULLIGAN Y TURNER,ART
Y CROSS Y JONES,JOHN Y MURPHY Y TURNER,JOHN
Y CROTTY Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WAIT
Y CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK Y WINKEL
Y CURRY Y KENNER Y O'BRIEN Y WINTERS
Y DANIELS Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y WIRSING
A DART Y KOSEL Y OSMOND Y WOJCIK
Y DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y YARBROUGH
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y YOUNGE
Y DELGADO Y LANG Y PARKE Y ZICKUS
Y DURKIN Y LAWFER Y PERSICO Y MR. SPEAKER
Y ERWIN Y LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
[March 26, 2001] 74
NO. 6
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
HOUSE BILL 921
INTERIOR DESIGN PROFSSN-SUNSET
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAR 26, 2001
110 YEAS 0 NAYS 0 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y FEIGENHOLTZ Y LINDNER Y POE
Y BASSI Y FLOWERS Y LYONS,EILEEN Y REITZ
Y BEAUBIEN Y FORBY Y LYONS,JOSEPH Y RIGHTER
Y BELLOCK Y FOWLER Y MATHIAS Y RUTHERFORD
Y BERNS Y FRANKS Y MAUTINO Y RYAN
Y BIGGINS Y FRITCHEY Y MAY Y RYDER
Y BLACK Y GARRETT Y McAULIFFE Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND A GILES Y McCARTHY Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GRANBERG Y McGUIRE Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y HAMOS Y McKEON A SCOTT
Y BRADY Y HANNIG Y MENDOZA Y SCULLY
E BROSNAHAN Y HARTKE Y MEYER Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HASSERT Y MILLER Y SMITH
E BUGIELSKI Y HOEFT Y MITCHELL,BILL Y SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOFFMAN Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOLBROOK Y MOFFITT E STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOWARD Y MOORE Y STROGER
Y COULSON Y HULTGREN Y MORROW Y TENHOUSE
Y COWLISHAW Y JOHNSON A MULLIGAN Y TURNER,ART
Y CROSS Y JONES,JOHN Y MURPHY Y TURNER,JOHN
Y CROTTY Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WAIT
Y CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK Y WINKEL
Y CURRY Y KENNER Y O'BRIEN Y WINTERS
Y DANIELS Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y WIRSING
A DART Y KOSEL Y OSMOND Y WOJCIK
Y DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y YARBROUGH
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y YOUNGE
Y DELGADO Y LANG Y PARKE Y ZICKUS
Y DURKIN Y LAWFER Y PERSICO Y MR. SPEAKER
Y ERWIN Y LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
75 [March 26, 2001]
NO. 7
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
HOUSE BILL 2392
CONVEYANCES-INDEX NUMBER
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAR 26, 2001
110 YEAS 0 NAYS 0 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y FEIGENHOLTZ Y LINDNER Y POE
Y BASSI Y FLOWERS Y LYONS,EILEEN Y REITZ
Y BEAUBIEN Y FORBY Y LYONS,JOSEPH Y RIGHTER
Y BELLOCK Y FOWLER Y MATHIAS Y RUTHERFORD
Y BERNS Y FRANKS Y MAUTINO Y RYAN
Y BIGGINS Y FRITCHEY Y MAY Y RYDER
Y BLACK Y GARRETT Y McAULIFFE Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND A GILES Y McCARTHY Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GRANBERG Y McGUIRE Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y HAMOS Y McKEON A SCOTT
Y BRADY Y HANNIG Y MENDOZA Y SCULLY
E BROSNAHAN Y HARTKE Y MEYER Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HASSERT Y MILLER Y SMITH
E BUGIELSKI Y HOEFT Y MITCHELL,BILL Y SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOFFMAN Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOLBROOK Y MOFFITT E STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOWARD Y MOORE Y STROGER
Y COULSON Y HULTGREN Y MORROW Y TENHOUSE
Y COWLISHAW Y JOHNSON A MULLIGAN Y TURNER,ART
Y CROSS Y JONES,JOHN Y MURPHY Y TURNER,JOHN
Y CROTTY Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WAIT
Y CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK Y WINKEL
Y CURRY Y KENNER Y O'BRIEN Y WINTERS
Y DANIELS Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y WIRSING
A DART Y KOSEL Y OSMOND Y WOJCIK
Y DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y YARBROUGH
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y YOUNGE
Y DELGADO Y LANG Y PARKE Y ZICKUS
Y DURKIN Y LAWFER Y PERSICO Y MR. SPEAKER
Y ERWIN Y LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
[March 26, 2001] 76
NO. 8
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
HOUSE BILL 854
VET HOMES-HOSTILE FIRE
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAR 26, 2001
110 YEAS 0 NAYS 0 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y FEIGENHOLTZ Y LINDNER Y POE
Y BASSI Y FLOWERS Y LYONS,EILEEN Y REITZ
Y BEAUBIEN Y FORBY Y LYONS,JOSEPH Y RIGHTER
Y BELLOCK Y FOWLER Y MATHIAS Y RUTHERFORD
Y BERNS Y FRANKS Y MAUTINO Y RYAN
Y BIGGINS Y FRITCHEY Y MAY Y RYDER
Y BLACK Y GARRETT Y McAULIFFE Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND A GILES Y McCARTHY Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GRANBERG Y McGUIRE Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y HAMOS Y McKEON A SCOTT
Y BRADY Y HANNIG Y MENDOZA Y SCULLY
E BROSNAHAN Y HARTKE Y MEYER Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HASSERT Y MILLER Y SMITH
E BUGIELSKI Y HOEFT Y MITCHELL,BILL Y SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOFFMAN Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOLBROOK Y MOFFITT E STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOWARD Y MOORE Y STROGER
Y COULSON Y HULTGREN Y MORROW Y TENHOUSE
Y COWLISHAW Y JOHNSON A MULLIGAN Y TURNER,ART
Y CROSS Y JONES,JOHN Y MURPHY Y TURNER,JOHN
Y CROTTY Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WAIT
Y CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK Y WINKEL
Y CURRY Y KENNER Y O'BRIEN Y WINTERS
Y DANIELS Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y WIRSING
A DART Y KOSEL Y OSMOND Y WOJCIK
Y DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y YARBROUGH
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y YOUNGE
Y DELGADO Y LANG Y PARKE Y ZICKUS
Y DURKIN Y LAWFER Y PERSICO Y MR. SPEAKER
Y ERWIN Y LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
77 [March 26, 2001]
NO. 9
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
HOUSE BILL 352
SCH CD-FULL DAY-HAZARD THREAT
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAR 26, 2001
108 YEAS 0 NAYS 0 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y FEIGENHOLTZ A LINDNER Y POE
Y BASSI Y FLOWERS Y LYONS,EILEEN Y REITZ
Y BEAUBIEN Y FORBY Y LYONS,JOSEPH Y RIGHTER
Y BELLOCK Y FOWLER Y MATHIAS Y RUTHERFORD
Y BERNS Y FRANKS Y MAUTINO Y RYAN
Y BIGGINS A FRITCHEY Y MAY Y RYDER
Y BLACK Y GARRETT Y McAULIFFE Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND A GILES Y McCARTHY Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GRANBERG Y McGUIRE Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y HAMOS Y McKEON A SCOTT
Y BRADY Y HANNIG Y MENDOZA Y SCULLY
E BROSNAHAN Y HARTKE Y MEYER Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HASSERT Y MILLER Y SMITH
E BUGIELSKI Y HOEFT Y MITCHELL,BILL Y SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOFFMAN Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOLBROOK Y MOFFITT E STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOWARD Y MOORE Y STROGER
Y COULSON Y HULTGREN Y MORROW Y TENHOUSE
Y COWLISHAW Y JOHNSON A MULLIGAN Y TURNER,ART
Y CROSS Y JONES,JOHN Y MURPHY Y TURNER,JOHN
Y CROTTY Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WAIT
Y CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK Y WINKEL
Y CURRY Y KENNER Y O'BRIEN Y WINTERS
Y DANIELS Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y WIRSING
A DART Y KOSEL Y OSMOND Y WOJCIK
Y DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y YARBROUGH
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y YOUNGE
Y DELGADO Y LANG Y PARKE Y ZICKUS
Y DURKIN Y LAWFER Y PERSICO Y MR. SPEAKER
Y ERWIN Y LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
[March 26, 2001] 78
NO. 10
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
HOUSE BILL 1851
HIGH ED-INCENTIVE ACCESS GRANT
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAR 26, 2001
109 YEAS 0 NAYS 0 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y FEIGENHOLTZ Y LINDNER Y POE
Y BASSI A FLOWERS Y LYONS,EILEEN Y REITZ
Y BEAUBIEN Y FORBY Y LYONS,JOSEPH Y RIGHTER
Y BELLOCK Y FOWLER Y MATHIAS Y RUTHERFORD
Y BERNS Y FRANKS Y MAUTINO Y RYAN
Y BIGGINS Y FRITCHEY Y MAY Y RYDER
Y BLACK Y GARRETT Y McAULIFFE Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND A GILES Y McCARTHY Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GRANBERG Y McGUIRE Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y HAMOS Y McKEON A SCOTT
Y BRADY Y HANNIG Y MENDOZA Y SCULLY
E BROSNAHAN Y HARTKE Y MEYER Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HASSERT Y MILLER Y SMITH
E BUGIELSKI Y HOEFT Y MITCHELL,BILL Y SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOFFMAN Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOLBROOK Y MOFFITT E STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOWARD Y MOORE Y STROGER
Y COULSON Y HULTGREN Y MORROW Y TENHOUSE
Y COWLISHAW Y JOHNSON A MULLIGAN Y TURNER,ART
Y CROSS Y JONES,JOHN Y MURPHY Y TURNER,JOHN
Y CROTTY Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WAIT
Y CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK Y WINKEL
Y CURRY Y KENNER Y O'BRIEN Y WINTERS
Y DANIELS Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y WIRSING
A DART Y KOSEL Y OSMOND Y WOJCIK
Y DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y YARBROUGH
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y YOUNGE
Y DELGADO Y LANG Y PARKE Y ZICKUS
Y DURKIN Y LAWFER Y PERSICO Y MR. SPEAKER
Y ERWIN Y LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
79 [March 26, 2001]
NO. 11
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
HOUSE BILL 1046
COMPUTER LEMON ACT
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAR 26, 2001
110 YEAS 1 NAYS 0 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y FEIGENHOLTZ Y LINDNER Y POE
Y BASSI Y FLOWERS Y LYONS,EILEEN Y REITZ
Y BEAUBIEN Y FORBY Y LYONS,JOSEPH Y RIGHTER
Y BELLOCK Y FOWLER Y MATHIAS Y RUTHERFORD
Y BERNS Y FRANKS Y MAUTINO Y RYAN
Y BIGGINS Y FRITCHEY Y MAY Y RYDER
Y BLACK Y GARRETT Y McAULIFFE Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND A GILES Y McCARTHY Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GRANBERG Y McGUIRE Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y HAMOS Y McKEON A SCOTT
Y BRADY Y HANNIG Y MENDOZA Y SCULLY
E BROSNAHAN Y HARTKE Y MEYER Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HASSERT Y MILLER Y SMITH
E BUGIELSKI Y HOEFT Y MITCHELL,BILL Y SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOFFMAN Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOLBROOK Y MOFFITT E STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOWARD Y MOORE Y STROGER
Y COULSON Y HULTGREN Y MORROW Y TENHOUSE
Y COWLISHAW N JOHNSON A MULLIGAN Y TURNER,ART
Y CROSS Y JONES,JOHN Y MURPHY Y TURNER,JOHN
Y CROTTY Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WAIT
Y CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK Y WINKEL
Y CURRY A KENNER Y O'BRIEN Y WINTERS
Y DANIELS Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y WIRSING
Y DART Y KOSEL Y OSMOND Y WOJCIK
Y DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y YARBROUGH
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y YOUNGE
Y DELGADO Y LANG Y PARKE Y ZICKUS
Y DURKIN Y LAWFER Y PERSICO Y MR. SPEAKER
Y ERWIN Y LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
[March 26, 2001] 80
NO. 12
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
HOUSE BILL 448
ENERGY ASSISTANCE-ELIGIBILITY
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAR 26, 2001
111 YEAS 0 NAYS 0 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y FEIGENHOLTZ Y LINDNER Y POE
Y BASSI Y FLOWERS Y LYONS,EILEEN Y REITZ
Y BEAUBIEN Y FORBY Y LYONS,JOSEPH Y RIGHTER
Y BELLOCK Y FOWLER Y MATHIAS Y RUTHERFORD
Y BERNS Y FRANKS Y MAUTINO Y RYAN
Y BIGGINS Y FRITCHEY Y MAY Y RYDER
Y BLACK Y GARRETT Y McAULIFFE Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND A GILES Y McCARTHY Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GRANBERG Y McGUIRE Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y HAMOS Y McKEON A SCOTT
Y BRADY Y HANNIG Y MENDOZA Y SCULLY
E BROSNAHAN Y HARTKE Y MEYER Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HASSERT Y MILLER Y SMITH
E BUGIELSKI Y HOEFT Y MITCHELL,BILL Y SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOFFMAN Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOLBROOK Y MOFFITT E STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOWARD Y MOORE Y STROGER
Y COULSON Y HULTGREN Y MORROW Y TENHOUSE
Y COWLISHAW Y JOHNSON A MULLIGAN Y TURNER,ART
Y CROSS Y JONES,JOHN Y MURPHY Y TURNER,JOHN
Y CROTTY Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WAIT
Y CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK Y WINKEL
Y CURRY Y KENNER Y O'BRIEN Y WINTERS
Y DANIELS Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y WIRSING
Y DART Y KOSEL Y OSMOND Y WOJCIK
Y DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y YARBROUGH
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y YOUNGE
Y DELGADO Y LANG Y PARKE Y ZICKUS
Y DURKIN Y LAWFER Y PERSICO Y MR. SPEAKER
Y ERWIN Y LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
81 [March 26, 2001]
NO. 13
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
HOUSE BILL 3136
PENCD-ART9-WIDOW ANNUITY
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAR 26, 2001
91 YEAS 16 NAYS 0 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y FEIGENHOLTZ Y LINDNER N POE
Y BASSI Y FLOWERS Y LYONS,EILEEN Y REITZ
Y BEAUBIEN N FORBY Y LYONS,JOSEPH Y RIGHTER
Y BELLOCK Y FOWLER Y MATHIAS Y RUTHERFORD
N BERNS Y FRANKS Y MAUTINO Y RYAN
Y BIGGINS Y FRITCHEY Y MAY N RYDER
N BLACK Y GARRETT Y McAULIFFE Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND A GILES Y McCARTHY Y SCHMITZ
N BOST Y GRANBERG Y McGUIRE Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y HAMOS Y McKEON A SCOTT
Y BRADY Y HANNIG Y MENDOZA Y SCULLY
E BROSNAHAN Y HARTKE Y MEYER Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HASSERT Y MILLER Y SMITH
E BUGIELSKI Y HOEFT N MITCHELL,BILL N SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOFFMAN Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOLBROOK Y MOFFITT E STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOWARD Y MOORE A STROGER
Y COULSON N HULTGREN Y MORROW Y TENHOUSE
Y COWLISHAW N JOHNSON A MULLIGAN Y TURNER,ART
Y CROSS Y JONES,JOHN Y MURPHY N TURNER,JOHN
Y CROTTY Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WAIT
Y CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK N WINKEL
Y CURRY A KENNER Y O'BRIEN Y WINTERS
Y DANIELS A KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR N WIRSING
Y DART Y KOSEL Y OSMOND N WOJCIK
Y DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y YARBROUGH
Y DAVIS,STEVE A KURTZ N PANKAU Y YOUNGE
Y DELGADO Y LANG Y PARKE Y ZICKUS
Y DURKIN N LAWFER Y PERSICO Y MR. SPEAKER
Y ERWIN Y LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
[March 26, 2001] 82
NO. 14
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
HOUSE BILL 3246
VEH CD-SCHOOL-WORK ZONE SPEED
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAR 26, 2001
112 YEAS 0 NAYS 0 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y FEIGENHOLTZ Y LINDNER Y POE
Y BASSI Y FLOWERS Y LYONS,EILEEN Y REITZ
Y BEAUBIEN Y FORBY Y LYONS,JOSEPH Y RIGHTER
Y BELLOCK Y FOWLER Y MATHIAS Y RUTHERFORD
Y BERNS Y FRANKS Y MAUTINO Y RYAN
Y BIGGINS Y FRITCHEY Y MAY Y RYDER
Y BLACK Y GARRETT Y McAULIFFE Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND A GILES Y McCARTHY Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GRANBERG Y McGUIRE Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y HAMOS Y McKEON A SCOTT
Y BRADY Y HANNIG Y MENDOZA Y SCULLY
E BROSNAHAN Y HARTKE Y MEYER Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HASSERT Y MILLER Y SMITH
E BUGIELSKI Y HOEFT Y MITCHELL,BILL Y SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOFFMAN Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOLBROOK Y MOFFITT E STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOWARD Y MOORE Y STROGER
Y COULSON Y HULTGREN Y MORROW Y TENHOUSE
Y COWLISHAW Y JOHNSON Y MULLIGAN Y TURNER,ART
Y CROSS Y JONES,JOHN Y MURPHY Y TURNER,JOHN
Y CROTTY Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WAIT
Y CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK Y WINKEL
Y CURRY Y KENNER Y O'BRIEN Y WINTERS
Y DANIELS Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y WIRSING
Y DART Y KOSEL Y OSMOND Y WOJCIK
Y DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y YARBROUGH
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y YOUNGE
Y DELGADO Y LANG Y PARKE Y ZICKUS
Y DURKIN Y LAWFER Y PERSICO Y MR. SPEAKER
Y ERWIN Y LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
83 [March 26, 2001]
NO. 15
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
HOUSE BILL 3126
PUBLIC AID-TECH
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAR 26, 2001
112 YEAS 0 NAYS 0 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y FEIGENHOLTZ Y LINDNER Y POE
Y BASSI Y FLOWERS Y LYONS,EILEEN Y REITZ
Y BEAUBIEN Y FORBY Y LYONS,JOSEPH Y RIGHTER
Y BELLOCK Y FOWLER Y MATHIAS Y RUTHERFORD
Y BERNS Y FRANKS Y MAUTINO Y RYAN
Y BIGGINS Y FRITCHEY Y MAY Y RYDER
Y BLACK Y GARRETT Y McAULIFFE Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND A GILES Y McCARTHY Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GRANBERG Y McGUIRE Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y HAMOS Y McKEON A SCOTT
Y BRADY Y HANNIG Y MENDOZA Y SCULLY
E BROSNAHAN Y HARTKE Y MEYER Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HASSERT Y MILLER Y SMITH
E BUGIELSKI Y HOEFT Y MITCHELL,BILL Y SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOFFMAN Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOLBROOK Y MOFFITT E STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOWARD Y MOORE Y STROGER
Y COULSON Y HULTGREN Y MORROW Y TENHOUSE
Y COWLISHAW Y JOHNSON Y MULLIGAN Y TURNER,ART
Y CROSS Y JONES,JOHN Y MURPHY Y TURNER,JOHN
Y CROTTY Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WAIT
Y CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK Y WINKEL
Y CURRY Y KENNER Y O'BRIEN Y WINTERS
Y DANIELS Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y WIRSING
Y DART Y KOSEL Y OSMOND Y WOJCIK
Y DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y YARBROUGH
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y YOUNGE
Y DELGADO Y LANG Y PARKE Y ZICKUS
Y DURKIN Y LAWFER Y PERSICO Y MR. SPEAKER
Y ERWIN Y LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
[March 26, 2001] 84
NO. 16
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
HOUSE BILL 201
SOS-INSPECTOR GENERAL
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAR 26, 2001
109 YEAS 1 NAYS 2 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y FEIGENHOLTZ Y LINDNER Y POE
Y BASSI Y FLOWERS Y LYONS,EILEEN Y REITZ
Y BEAUBIEN Y FORBY Y LYONS,JOSEPH Y RIGHTER
Y BELLOCK Y FOWLER Y MATHIAS Y RUTHERFORD
Y BERNS Y FRANKS Y MAUTINO Y RYAN
Y BIGGINS Y FRITCHEY Y MAY Y RYDER
Y BLACK Y GARRETT Y McAULIFFE Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND A GILES Y McCARTHY Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GRANBERG Y McGUIRE Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY A HAMOS Y McKEON A SCOTT
Y BRADY Y HANNIG Y MENDOZA Y SCULLY
Y BROSNAHAN Y HARTKE Y MEYER Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HASSERT Y MILLER Y SMITH
E BUGIELSKI Y HOEFT Y MITCHELL,BILL Y SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOFFMAN Y MITCHELL,JERRY P SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOLBROOK Y MOFFITT E STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOWARD Y MOORE Y STROGER
N COULSON Y HULTGREN Y MORROW Y TENHOUSE
Y COWLISHAW Y JOHNSON Y MULLIGAN Y TURNER,ART
Y CROSS Y JONES,JOHN Y MURPHY Y TURNER,JOHN
Y CROTTY Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WAIT
Y CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK Y WINKEL
Y CURRY Y KENNER Y O'BRIEN Y WINTERS
Y DANIELS Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y WIRSING
Y DART Y KOSEL Y OSMOND Y WOJCIK
Y DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y YARBROUGH
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y YOUNGE
P DELGADO Y LANG Y PARKE Y ZICKUS
Y DURKIN Y LAWFER Y PERSICO Y MR. SPEAKER
Y ERWIN Y LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
85 [March 26, 2001]
NO. 17
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
HOUSE BILL 770
ASSOCIATE JUDGES-MINIMUM
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAR 26, 2001
113 YEAS 0 NAYS 1 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y FEIGENHOLTZ A LINDNER Y POE
Y BASSI Y FLOWERS Y LYONS,EILEEN Y REITZ
Y BEAUBIEN Y FORBY Y LYONS,JOSEPH P RIGHTER
Y BELLOCK Y FOWLER Y MATHIAS Y RUTHERFORD
Y BERNS Y FRANKS Y MAUTINO Y RYAN
Y BIGGINS Y FRITCHEY Y MAY Y RYDER
Y BLACK Y GARRETT Y McAULIFFE Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND Y GILES Y McCARTHY Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GRANBERG Y McGUIRE Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y HAMOS Y McKEON Y SCOTT
Y BRADY Y HANNIG Y MENDOZA Y SCULLY
Y BROSNAHAN Y HARTKE Y MEYER Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HASSERT Y MILLER Y SMITH
E BUGIELSKI Y HOEFT Y MITCHELL,BILL Y SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOFFMAN Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOLBROOK Y MOFFITT E STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOWARD Y MOORE Y STROGER
Y COULSON Y HULTGREN Y MORROW Y TENHOUSE
Y COWLISHAW Y JOHNSON Y MULLIGAN Y TURNER,ART
Y CROSS Y JONES,JOHN Y MURPHY Y TURNER,JOHN
Y CROTTY Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WAIT
Y CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK Y WINKEL
Y CURRY Y KENNER Y O'BRIEN Y WINTERS
Y DANIELS Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y WIRSING
Y DART Y KOSEL Y OSMOND Y WOJCIK
Y DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y YARBROUGH
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y YOUNGE
Y DELGADO Y LANG Y PARKE Y ZICKUS
Y DURKIN Y LAWFER Y PERSICO Y MR. SPEAKER
Y ERWIN Y LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
[March 26, 2001] 86
NO. 18
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION 10
TASK FORCE-PARAPROFESSIONALS
ADOPTED
MAR 26, 2001
114 YEAS 0 NAYS 0 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y FEIGENHOLTZ Y LINDNER Y POE
Y BASSI Y FLOWERS Y LYONS,EILEEN Y REITZ
Y BEAUBIEN Y FORBY Y LYONS,JOSEPH Y RIGHTER
Y BELLOCK Y FOWLER Y MATHIAS Y RUTHERFORD
Y BERNS Y FRANKS Y MAUTINO Y RYAN
Y BIGGINS Y FRITCHEY Y MAY Y RYDER
Y BLACK Y GARRETT Y McAULIFFE Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND Y GILES Y McCARTHY Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GRANBERG Y McGUIRE Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y HAMOS Y McKEON Y SCOTT
Y BRADY Y HANNIG Y MENDOZA Y SCULLY
Y BROSNAHAN Y HARTKE Y MEYER Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HASSERT Y MILLER Y SMITH
E BUGIELSKI Y HOEFT Y MITCHELL,BILL Y SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOFFMAN Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOLBROOK Y MOFFITT E STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOWARD Y MOORE A STROGER
Y COULSON Y HULTGREN Y MORROW Y TENHOUSE
Y COWLISHAW Y JOHNSON Y MULLIGAN Y TURNER,ART
Y CROSS Y JONES,JOHN Y MURPHY Y TURNER,JOHN
Y CROTTY Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WAIT
Y CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK Y WINKEL
Y CURRY Y KENNER Y O'BRIEN Y WINTERS
Y DANIELS Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y WIRSING
Y DART Y KOSEL Y OSMOND Y WOJCIK
Y DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y YARBROUGH
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y YOUNGE
Y DELGADO Y LANG Y PARKE Y ZICKUS
Y DURKIN Y LAWFER Y PERSICO Y MR. SPEAKER
Y ERWIN Y LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
87 [March 26, 2001]
NO. 19
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
HOUSE BILL 2001
TOBACCO SETTLEMENT-HEALTH CARE
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAR 26, 2001
113 YEAS 0 NAYS 0 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y FEIGENHOLTZ Y LINDNER Y POE
Y BASSI A FLOWERS Y LYONS,EILEEN Y REITZ
Y BEAUBIEN Y FORBY Y LYONS,JOSEPH Y RIGHTER
Y BELLOCK Y FOWLER Y MATHIAS Y RUTHERFORD
Y BERNS Y FRANKS Y MAUTINO Y RYAN
Y BIGGINS Y FRITCHEY Y MAY Y RYDER
Y BLACK Y GARRETT Y McAULIFFE Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND Y GILES Y McCARTHY Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GRANBERG Y McGUIRE Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y HAMOS Y McKEON Y SCOTT
Y BRADY Y HANNIG Y MENDOZA Y SCULLY
Y BROSNAHAN Y HARTKE Y MEYER Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HASSERT Y MILLER Y SMITH
E BUGIELSKI Y HOEFT Y MITCHELL,BILL Y SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOFFMAN Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOLBROOK Y MOFFITT E STEPHENS
Y COLLINS A HOWARD Y MOORE Y STROGER
Y COULSON Y HULTGREN Y MORROW Y TENHOUSE
Y COWLISHAW Y JOHNSON Y MULLIGAN Y TURNER,ART
Y CROSS Y JONES,JOHN Y MURPHY Y TURNER,JOHN
Y CROTTY Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WAIT
Y CURRIE E JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK Y WINKEL
Y CURRY Y KENNER Y O'BRIEN Y WINTERS
Y DANIELS Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y WIRSING
Y DART Y KOSEL Y OSMOND Y WOJCIK
Y DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y YARBROUGH
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y YOUNGE
Y DELGADO Y LANG Y PARKE Y ZICKUS
Y DURKIN Y LAWFER Y PERSICO Y MR. SPEAKER
Y ERWIN Y LEITCH
E - Denotes Excused Absence
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