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STATE OF ILLINOIS
HOUSE JOURNAL
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
NINETY-SECOND GENERAL ASSEMBLY
127TH LEGISLATIVE DAY
THURSDAY, MAY 2, 2002
11:00 O'CLOCK A.M.
NO. 127
[May 2, 2002] 2
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Daily Journal Index
127th Legislative Day
Action Page(s)
Adjournment........................................ 36
Committee on Rules Referrals....................... 5
Correctional Budget & Impact Note Requested........ 6
Fiscal Note Requested.............................. 5
Fiscal Note Supplied............................... 5
Fiscal Note Withdrawn.............................. 5
Home Rule Note Requested........................... 6
Introduction and First Reading - HB6284-6284....... 9
Judicial Impact Note Requested..................... 6
Letter of Transmittal.............................. 3
Quorum Roll Call................................... 3
State Debt Impact Note Requested................... 6
Temporary Committee Assignments.................... 3
Bill Number Legislative Action Page(s)
HB 4371 Motion Submitted................................... 5
HB 4563 Committee Report................................... 5
HJR 0075 Resolution......................................... 11
HJR 0076 Resolution......................................... 11
HR 0772 Adoption........................................... 34
HR 0772 Committee Report................................... 5
HR 0847 Adoption........................................... 34
HR 0848 Adoption........................................... 34
HR 0851 Adoption........................................... 34
HR 0853 Adoption........................................... 34
HR 0855 Adoption........................................... 34
HR 0857 Resolution......................................... 9
HR 0858 Adoption........................................... 34
HR 0858 Agreed Resolution.................................. 6
HR 0859 Adoption........................................... 34
HR 0859 Agreed Resolution.................................. 7
HR 0860 Adoption........................................... 34
HR 0860 Agreed Resolution.................................. 7
HR 0861 Adoption........................................... 34
HR 0861 Agreed Resolution.................................. 8
HR 0864 Adoption........................................... 34
HR 0864 Agreed Resolution.................................. 9
HR 0865 Resolution......................................... 10
SB 1666 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 34
SB 1907 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 13
SB 1982 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 31
SB 2081 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 16
SB 2081 Third Reading...................................... 31
SB 2160 Third Reading...................................... 34
SB 2235 Second Reading - Amendment/s....................... 33
SB 2241 Second Reading..................................... 34
3 [May 2, 2002]
The House met pursuant to adjournment.
The Speaker in the Chair.
Prayer by Reverend Duane Ambrose of the Caseyville United Methodist
Church in Caseyville, Illinois.
Representative Lawfer 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 Monique Davis, Murphy and
O'Brien 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 Black, 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 Rutherford, 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 Winkel, should be
recorded as present.
TEMPORARY COMMITTEE ASSIGNMENTS
The Speaker announced the following temporary committee
assignments:
Representative Scully replaced Representative Brosnahan in the
Committee on Constitutional Officers on April 30, 2002.
Representative Forby replaced Representative Osterman in the
Committee on Transportation & Motor Vehicles on May 1, 2002.
LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
STATE OF ILLINOIS
MICHAEL J. MADIGAN ROOM 300
SPEAKER STATE HOUSE
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES SPRINGFIELD, ILLINOIS 62706
May 2, 2002
Anthony D. Rossi
Chief Clerk of the House
402 State House
Springfield, IL 62706
Dear Clerk Rossi:
Please be advised that I am extending the Third Reading Deadline until
Friday, May 17, 2002 for the following House Bill:
House Bill: 4563
If you have any questions, please contact my Chief of Staff, Tim Mapes.
With kindest personal regards, I remain
Sincerely yours,
[May 2, 2002] 4
s/Michael J. Madigan
Speaker of the House
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
STATE OF ILLINOIS
MICHAEL J. MADIGAN ROOM 300
SPEAKER STATE HOUSE
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES SPRINGFIELD, ILLINOIS 62706
May 2, 2002
Anthony D. Rossi
Chief Clerk of the House
402 State House
Springfield, IL 62706
Dear Clerk Rossi:
Please be advised that I am extending the Committee and Third Reading
Deadline until Friday, May 17, 2002 for the following Senate Bills:
Senate Bills: 2130, 2192, 2215, 2294
If you have any questions, please contact my Chief of Staff, Tim Mapes.
With kindest personal regards, I remain
Sincerely yours,
s/Michael J. Madigan
Speaker of the House
HOUSE BILLS 2130, 2192, 2215 and 2294.
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
STATE OF ILLINOIS
MICHAEL J. MADIGAN ROOM 300
SPEAKER STATE HOUSE
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES SPRINGFIELD, ILLINOIS 62706
May 2, 2002
Anthony D. Rossi
Chief Clerk of the House
402 State House
Springfield, IL 62706
Dear Clerk Rossi:
Please be advised that I am extending the Third Reading Deadline until
Friday, May 17, 2002 for the Bills listed on the attached User File
0999 - titled "2002 SBs - 3rd Reading Deadline Extended 5/17/02".
If you have any questions, please contact my Chief of Staff, Tim Mapes.
With kindest personal regards, I remain
Sincerely yours,
s/Michael J. Madigan
Speaker of the House
SENATE BILLS 1540, 1542, 1545, 1552, 1556, 1565, 1573, 1577, 1583,
1588, 1609, 1622, 1623, 1627, 1635, 1637, 1641, 1649, 1650, 1657, 1666,
1689, 1690, 1697, 1701, 1704, 1710, 1721, 1732, 1756, 1760, 1761, 1777,
1795, 1798, 1809, 1814, 1820, 1839, 1849, 1851, 1859, 1880, 1907, 1917,
5 [May 2, 2002]
1924, 1927, 1930, 1932, 1934, 1936, 1949, 1953, 1966, 1968, 1975, 1976,
1978, 1982, 1983, 1999, 2001, 2017, 2018, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2030, 2037,
2049, 2050, 2052, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2098, 2117, 2118, 2132, 2149, 2155,
2164, 2185, 2188, 2189, 2197, 2198, 2201, 2204, 2205, 2209, 2210, 2211,
2212, 2214, 2216, 2223, 2224, 2225, 2226, 2227, 2232, 2235, 2241, 2245,
2269, 2271, 2312 and 2323.
REPORT 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 resolution be reported "recommends be adopted" and be
placed on the House Calendar: HOUSE RESOLUTION 772.
That the bill be reported "approved for consideration" and be
placed on the order of Second Reading -- Short Debate: HOUSE BILL
4563.
The committee roll call vote on the foregoing Legislative Measure
is as follows:
3, Yeas; 2, Nays; 0, Answering Present.
Y Currie, Chair Y Hannig (Lang)
N Cross N 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 Elementary & Secondary Education: HOUSE JOINT
RESOLUTION 76.
Committee on State Government Administration: HOUSE RESOLUTION
527.
MOTIONS
SUBMITTED
Representative Lang submitted the following written motion, which
was referred to the Committee on Rules:
MOTION
I move to concur with Senate Amendment No. 1 to HOUSE BILL 4371.
REQUEST FOR FISCAL NOTE
Representative Tenhouse requested that a Fiscal Note be supplied
for HOUSE BILL 4563, as amended.
FISCAL NOTE SUPPLIED
A Fiscal Note has been supplied for SENATE BILL 2081, as amended.
FISCAL NOTE WITHDRAWN
Representative Cross withdrew his request for a Fiscal Note on
SENATE BILL 1982.
[May 2, 2002] 6
REQUEST FOR STATE DEBT IMPACT NOTE
Representative Tenhouse requested that a State Debt Impact Note be
supplied for HOUSE BILL 4563, as amended.
REQUEST FOR JUDICIAL IMPACT NOTE
Representative Tenhouse requested that a Judicial Impact Note be
supplied for HOUSE BILL 4563, as amended.
REQUEST FOR HOME RULE NOTE
Representative Tenhouse requested that a Home Rule Note be supplied
for HOUSE BILL 4563, as amended.
REQUEST FOR CORRECTIONAL BUDGET & IMPACT NOTE
Representative Tenhouse requested that a Correctional Budget &
Impact Note be supplied for HOUSE BILL 4563, as amended.
AGREED RESOLUTIONS
The following resolutions were offered and placed on the Calendar
on the order of Agreed Resolutions.
HOUSE RESOLUTION 858
Offered by Representatives Parke - Biggins - Bellock - Marquardt:
WHEREAS, Deputy Chief William R. Cavalier, a thirty-two year
veteran of the Oak Brook Police Department, will be retiring on Friday,
April 26, 2002; and
WHEREAS, Born and raised in the Chicago area, William Cavalier
actively served in the United States Army from 1962 to 1964 and was
honorably discharged; from 1964 to 1966 he served as an Army Reservist;
and
WHEREAS, In August of 1970, William Cavalier began his law
enforcement career with the Village of Oak Brook and received his basic
police training at Northern Illinois University; from 1970 to 1985, he
was assigned as a patrol officer in the Patrol Division; in 1982, he
was assigned as a Detective in the Investigation Unit, where he was
responsible for following up on criminal incidents; from 1984 to 1987,
William Cavalier was selected to serve as the police department's first
Crime Prevention/Police-Community Relations Officer, where he developed
and implemented numerous programs for the community and school
children; he also served as the public information/media officer; and
WHEREAS, In 1987, William Cavalier was promoted to the rank of
Sergeant and returned to the field division where he served as Shift
Commander and supervised patrol officers; from 1989 to 1992, he was
assigned as the Detective Sergeant in the Investigations Unit and
oversaw all Investigative cases and supervised the Unit; in 1992,
Sergeant Cavalier was assigned as the Sergeant/Supervisor of the police
department's Communications and Records Division; in 1994, he was
selected to serve as the police department's first Accreditation
Manager, where he was responsible for writing and revising department
policy, operational procedures and rules and regulations; the Oak Brook
Police Department was nationally recognized as an accredited law
enforcement agency in May of 1997; and
WHEREAS, In October of 1997, William Cavalier was promoted to the
rank of Lieutenant and was assigned to the Support Services Division;
his responsibilities included overseeing the Investigations Unit, Crime
Prevention Unit, Department Training, Accreditation, and the Records
Division; and
7 [May 2, 2002]
WHEREAS, In January of 2000, William Cavalier was appointed to
serve as the first Deputy Chief for the department; his
responsibilities included overseeing the daily activities of the
department, supervision of the departments two Lieutenants, assuming
all department duties in the absence of the Chief of Police, and
developing and overseeing the department's budget along with the goals
and objectives; and
WHEREAS, William Cavalier earned a Master of Arts in Public
Administration from Northern Illinois University, a Bachelor of Arts in
Urban Studies and Political Science from Elmhurst College, and an
Associate of Arts in Police Science and Administration from the College
of DuPage; throughout his career, he has attended numerous police
training courses, including the School of Staff and Command at
Northwestern University; in addition, he is a graduate of the Illinois
State Law Enforcement Executive Management Program from Western
University; and
WHEREAS, William Cavalier and his wife Marilyn have been married
for 35 years, and they have three grown children; daughter, Lisa and
husband Tony; daughter, Dina and husband Tom, and son, Billy and wife
Lisa; he also enjoys spending many hours with his two grandchildren,
Jessica and Nicholas; and
WHEREAS, Deputy Chief Cavalier has made many life long friends due
to his genuine regard and compassion for all the people he has touched
through his professional and personal life; and
WHEREAS, The men and women of the Oak Brook Police Department will
miss Deputy Chief William Cavalier greatly and wish him only the best
in his retirement; therefore, be it
RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we congratulate Deputy
Chief William Cavalier on his retirement after a 32-year career with
the Oak Brook Police Department, and we wish him well in all of his
future endeavors; and be it further
RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be presented to
Deputy Chief William Cavalier as an expression of our esteem.
HOUSE RESOLUTION 859
Offered by Representative Schmidtz:
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 Chief Jerry Stevens is
retiring from the Aurora Fire Department on May 24, 2002; and
WHEREAS, Chief Stevens has been with the Aurora Fire Department for
the past 36 years; he began his career as a firefighter on May 24,
1966; he was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant on October 7, 1978, as
Captain on April 1, 1984, as Assistant Chief on May 20, 1990, and
finally as Chief on July 31, 1993; and
WHEREAS, Chief Stevens was named "Firefighter of the Year" by the
Exchange Club of Aurora in 1971; and
WHEREAS, Chief Stevens is supported by his loving and very proud
family including his wife Jacqueline and his children Vicki and Joe;
therefore, be it
RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we congratulate Chief
Jerry Stevens on his retirement after 36 years of service with the
Aurora Fire Department; and be it further
RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be presented to
Chief Jerry Stevens as an expression of our esteem.
HOUSE RESOLUTION 860
Offered by Representative Burke - Morrow:
WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of Representatives are
pleased to congratulate Justice Anne M. Burke of Chicago, an Appellate
Court Judge, for the creation of the Special Olympics; and
[May 2, 2002] 8
WHEREAS, In 1965, Justice Burke (then Anne McGlone) was a physical
education teacher who worked in a summer program for the Chicago Park
District and was actively involved in developing programs with the Park
District for mentally handicapped children; and
WHEREAS, Justice Anne Burke experienced great results working with
children with mental handicaps at West Pullman Park; by 1967, there
were 10 locations throughout the Chicagoland area with 150 children
participating in free summer programs sponsored by the Chicago Park
District; she knew there was a greatly underserved population who could
benefit from the Special Olympics, and parents needed to be shown what
their children were capable of accomplishing through sports and
recreation; and
WHEREAS, Along with other passionate women and men who were in love
with the dream of what their services could do for others, Justice
Burke brought the first Special Olympic Games to Chicago's Soldier
Field on July 20, 1968, with the help of a $25,000 grant from the
Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. Foundation; and
WHEREAS, The Chicago Special Olympics in 1968 were a tremendous
success, attracting 1,000 athletes from 26 states and Canada; the city
of Chicago, the Chicago Park District the Kennedy Foundation, and a
legion of volunteers rolled out the red carpet for the athletes who
competed in track and field events and aquatics; athletes of similar
ability levels competed against one another and were recognized for
their accomplishments; and
WHEREAS, Today, the Special Olympics serve more than one million
persons with mental handicaps in over 160 countries, a number expected
to double by the year 2005; therefore, be it
RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we congratulate Justice
Anne Burke for her selflessness and dedication to those citizens who
suffer mental handicaps, and for her founding of the Special Olympics;
and be it further
RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be presented to
Justice Anne M. Burke as an expression of our esteem.
HOUSE RESOLUTION 861
Offered by Representative Bellock - Eileen Lyons - Meyer:
WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of Representatives wish
to recognize notable achievements in high school sports; and
WHEREAS, On Saturday, November 24, 2001, the Downers Grove South
High Mustangs won their first State Class 8A Boys Football Championship
in Champaign; and
WHEREAS, The Mustangs defeated number one ranked Naperville Central
by a score of 34 to 31 before a crowd of 10,509; and
WHEREAS, The game-winning seven-yard touchdown pass was made with
38 seconds remaining on the clock; and
WHEREAS, Naperville Central's last possession resulted in an
interception by the Mustangs with 23 seconds left; and
WHEREAS, On the road to Champaign, the Mustangs defeated Belleville
East High School by a score of 48 to 14, Fremd High School by a score
of 48 to 27, Sandburg High School by a score of 31 to 14, and Maine
South High School by a score of 35 to 34 in overtime; and
WHEREAS, After starting the season with a record of one win and two
losses, the Mustangs won 11 games in a row including an overtime defeat
of 2000 State Champion Maine South; and
WHEREAS, The Chicago Tribune proclaimed, "The Underdogs are Top
Dogs!"; and
WHEREAS, The Mustang's head coach is John Belskis and assistant
coaches are David Burton, Brett Chilar, Terry Kent, Paul Maggiore,
Terry McCombs, Jack McInerney, Tony Nevrly, and Mark Wiggins; and
WHEREAS, The members of the team include Pat Sathissarat, Mike
Sharp, Mike Cuzzone, Khyam Masud, Kitt Kopach, Mitch Szczepaniak, Joe
Wesley, Josh Wieties, Phil Lampugnano, Matt Smogor, Tom Christoff,
Dustin Szczepaniak, Bob Dreveny, Kris Coffee, Josh Pasquesi, Fred
Dudek, Erik Newman, Steve Meiners, Kevin Amoo, Bob Nakielny, Isiah
9 [May 2, 2002]
Johnson, Kent Hughes, Dan Williams, Brandon Grunnet, Andrew Geocaris,
T. J. Fuller, Kyle Pott, Adam Marchewka, Brett Vollmar, Josh Jernigan,
Daryll Hammond, Pat Bailey, Dan Murphy, Phil Bridges, Sam Carson, Jake
Martin, Alex Schultz, Sal Deluca, Joe Enzbigilis, Pat Laporta, Bob
Curran, Josh Poynton, Dave Rupe, Dominic Logan, Nick Ballestra, Brian
Worrasange, Adam Mugnaini, Jim Schmidt, Jeff Miller, Dan O'Dell, Jeff
Viano, Jim Loehman, Joe Horeni, Harry Petrakos, Charlie Wilkinson, Jim
Kucera, Justin Wesley, Joe Denk, Mike Johnson, Dru Filkins, Martin
O'Donnell, Barry Barretto, Kevin Gage, Paul Niznik, Mark Skiba, Adam
Lester, Chris Polinski, Jim Loszach, Dan Ozga, Kent Richard, Greg
Wagner, Josh Panozzo, Troy Michalek, Marc Piscitiello, Adam Herzog,
Terence Pirtle, Nate Arndt, Germaine Clifton, and Josh Blazek;
therefore, be it
RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we congratulate the
Downers Grove South High School Football Team on winning their first
State Class 8A Boys Football Championship; and be it further
RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be presented to
John Belskis, the head coach of the Mustangs, assistant coaches, David
Burton, Brett Chilar, Terry Kent, Paul Maggiore, Terry McCombs, Jack
McInerney, Tony Nevrly, and Mark Wiggins, and to each member of the
Mustang team as an expression of our esteem.
HOUSE RESOLUTION 864
Offered by Representative Meyer:
WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of Representatives are
honored to recognize milestone events in the history of organizations
in the State of Illinois; and
WHEREAS, It has come to our attention that the Lemont chapter of
the Lions Club is celebrating its 40th anniversary on May 11, 2002; and
WHEREAS, The Lemont Lions Club was formed on June 7, 1962 and
chartered on October 28, 1962; and
WHEREAS, Since 1962, the Lemont Lions Club has served the residents
of Lemont through hard work and commitment to make a difference in the
lives of people everywhere; they have provided moneys annually to open
pantries, provided exams, eyeglasses, and hearing aids to the needy,
sponsored DARE programs annually with coloring books, donated funds
towards signs in Lemont, created a shelter in General Frys landing, and
participated in Canal Cleanup Day, Heritage Fest, Keepataw Days, St.
Patrick's Day, and the Classic Car Rally; and
WHEREAS, The Lemont Lions Club has provided assistance to victims
of house fires, accidents, and illness, and offered cleanup services
and assistance to residents affected by tornado damage in 1976 and
1991; in addition, the Lions Club sponsors little league teams, donates
annually to the girl and boy scouts, and provides scholarships to area
high schools; therefore, be it
RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we congratulate the
Lemont Lions Club on the celebration of its 40th anniversary of service
to the residents of Lemont; and be it further
RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be presented to
the Lemont Lions Club as an expression of our esteem.
INTRODUCTION AND FIRST READING OF BILLS
The following bill was introduced, read by title a first time,
ordered printed and placed in the Committee on Rules:
HOUSE BILL 6284. Introduced by Representatives Mulligan - Krause -
Coulson - Bellock - Tenhouse, Bassi, Kurtz, Eileen Lyons and Mathias, a
bill for AN ACT concerning State finance.
RESOLUTIONS
[May 2, 2002] 10
The following resolutions were offered and placed in the Committee
on Rules.
HOUSE RESOLUTION 857
Offered by Representative Franks:
WHEREAS, Millions of people all over the world have participated in
TV-Turnoff Week since it began in 1995; children and adults, rich and
poor - people from every background and all walks of life - take part
through schools, churches, or community groups, as families or
individuals; and
WHEREAS, According to Nielsen Media Research, 98 percent of U.S.
households have at least one television set, which is turned on an
average of seven hours, 40 minutes daily; and
WHEREAS, Forty percent of Americans frequently or always watch
television during dinner; and
WHEREAS, On average, children in the U.S. will spend more time in
front of the television (1,023 hours) than in school this year (900
hours); and
WHEREAS, According to the U.S. Department of Education, 73 percent
of parents would like to limit their children's television-watching;
and
WHEREAS, Turning off the television gives us a chance to think,
read, create, and do; to connect with our families and engage in our
communities; and
WHEREAS, TV-Turnoff Week is supported by over 70 national
organizations including the American Medical Association, the American
Academy of Pediatrics, the National Education Association, and the
President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports; therefore, be it
RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we designate the fourth
week of April as Illinois TV-Turnoff Week; and be it further
RESOLVED, That we encourage all citizens of Illinois to find
alternatives to watching television during this week.
HOUSE RESOLUTION 865
Offered by Representative Feigenholtz:
WHEREAS, Approximately 100,000 Illinoisans qualify for Medicaid
only by first spending down their monthly income on medical bills to
the Medicaid eligibility level (currently $608 per month for a single
adult and $822 per month for a married couple); and
WHEREAS, The process of verifying that these Illinoisans have spent
down their monthly income on medical bills to the Medicaid eligibility
level is often cumbersome and time-consuming for both recipients and
local office staff of the Department of Human Services; and
WHEREAS, Federal law permits the Department of Public Aid to give
Illinoisans enrolled in Medicaid spenddown the option of pre-paying
their spenddown amount in a manner similar to a monthly insurance
premium; and
WHEREAS, Having the option of pre-paying their Medicaid spenddown
amount is likely to benefit many Illinoisans on Medicaid spenddown, who
would then be able to receive a Medicaid card each month without delay
and without having to present bills and receipts to their local
Department of Human Services office each month; and
WHEREAS, Several states have established successful Medicaid
spenddown pre-payment programs; therefore, be it
RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that the Department of
Public Aid is directed to:
(1) Conduct a study of the feasibility of establishing a Medicaid
spenddown pre-payment program in Illinois, including, but not limited
to, (i) an analysis of spenddown pre-payment programs in other states,
(ii) an estimate of the number of Illinoisans who would be eligible to
participate in a spenddown pre-payment program, (iii) the projected
number of eligible individuals who are likely to participate in a
11 [May 2, 2002]
spenddown pre-payment program, (iv) an analysis of how Medicaid
spenddown recipients may or may not benefit from a spenddown
pre-payment program, (v) a description of administrative and policy
changes that would be necessary to implement a spenddown pre-payment
program, and (vi) projected cost increases and cost savings that would
result from the implementation of a spenddown pre-payment program;
(2) Collaborate with the Department of Human Services, advocates
for Medicaid spenddown recipients, and other interested parties in
designing and conducting the feasibility study; and
(3) File a written report with the House of Representatives on or
before December 31, 2002, regarding the feasibility of implementing a
Medicaid spenddown pre-payment program in Illinois; and be it further
RESOLVED, That the Department of Human Services shall cooperate in
executing the requirements of this Resolution; and be it further
RESOLVED, That a copy of this Resolution be sent to the Director of
Public Aid and to the Secretary of Human Services.
HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION 75
Offered by Representative Curry:
WHEREAS, Section 3 of Article VIII of the Constitution of the State
of Illinois provides that the General Assembly, by a vote of
three-fifths of the members elected to each house, shall appoint an
Auditor General; and
WHEREAS, The General Assembly has, by Section 2-3 of the Illinois
State Auditing Act, charged the Legislative Audit Commission with the
responsibility of diligently searching out qualified candidates for the
office and making recommendations to the General Assembly, and,
pursuant to this statutory mandate, the Legislative Audit Commission
has conducted a diligent search and has recommended to the General
Assembly the appointment of William G. Holland of Springfield,
Illinois, as Auditor General; therefore, be it
RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, THE SENATE CONCURRING
HEREIN, that pursuant to Section 3 of Article VIII of the Constitution
and upon the recommendation of the Legislative Audit Commission,
William G. Holland of Springfield, Illinois, is appointed Auditor
General for the State of Illinois for a term commencing on August 1,
2002.
HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION 76
Offered by Representative Curry:
WHEREAS, The United States Congress has passed and the President of
the United States has signed into law the federal No Child Left Behind
Act of 2001, Public Law 107-110, in an attempt by the federal
government to require states to set high academic standards to further
ensure outstanding public school performance; and
WHEREAS, Public Law 107-110 requires State compliance and alignment
of State standards in regards to student testing to meet the federal
student-testing requirements to qualify for federal education dollars;
and
WHEREAS, The State Board of Education is or will be required to
submit implementation plans to ensure compliance with Public Law
107-110 regarding student testing; and
WHEREAS, The State Board of Education is or will be required to
submit documentation regarding the progress made to ensure compliance
with Public Law 107-110's student-testing requirements; and
WHEREAS, The General Assembly, working with educators, community
groups, and private sector interests, has passed into law many similar
student-testing requirements over the course of the past decade, which
have been and are being implemented throughout the State of Illinois;
and
WHEREAS, It is the intention of the General Assembly to align
current State student testing programs with Public Law 107-110 in ways
that continue the progress being made to make Illinois' good public
[May 2, 2002] 12
schools even better and to do so in a deliberate, thoughtful, and
common-sense fashion respecting the appropriate State roles and
responsibilities and those of local school boards, administrators,
teachers, school employees, parents, and their respective local
partners; therefore, be it
RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, THE SENATE CONCURRING
HEREIN, that all Illinois Standards Achievement Test and Prairie State
Achievement Examination subject-area testing that exceeds Public Law
107-110's requirements be eliminated beginning with the 2002-03 school
year; and be it further
RESOLVED, That Illinois will comply with Public Law 107-110 by
implementing, beginning with the 2002-03 school year, testing of
students in the subject areas of reading and mathematics once in grades
3-5, 6-9, and 10-12; and be it further
RESOLVED, That Illinois will comply with Public Law 107-110 in the
2005-06 school year when Public Law 107-110 increases requirements by
requiring annual testing of reading and mathematics in grades 3-8 and
once in grades 10-12; and be it further
RESOLVED, That Illinois will comply with Public Law 107-110 in the
2007-2008 school year when Public Law 107-110 increases requirements by
requiring testing of science once in grades 3-5, 6-9, and 10-12; and be
it further
RESOLVED, That the State Assessment System Policy and
Implementation Task Force be immediately established to develop the
procedures needed to implement an approved, nationally recognized,
referenced test that meets the requirements of Public Law 107-110 and
to take any actions necessary to ensure that the assessment system,
including tests, administration, reporting, and professional
development, is of high quality and educationally useful and
understandable; and be it further
RESOLVED, That the task force shall be comprised of 25
representatives as follows: one member of the Senate appointed by the
President of the Senate and one member of the Senate appointed by the
Minority Leader of the Senate; one member of the House of
Representatives appointed by the Speaker of the House and one member of
the House of Representatives appointed by the Minority Leader of the
House; 8 teachers, with 4 appointed by Illinois Education Association
and 4 appointed by the Illinois Federation of Teachers; 6 persons
appointed by the Illinois Statewide School Management Alliance; 4
business representatives, with one each appointed by the Illinois State
Chamber of Commerce, Illinois Manufacturers' Association, Illinois
Retail Merchants Association, and Illinois Business Roundtable; the
State Superintendent of Education or his or her designee; the Deputy
Governor of Workforce and Education; and one professor appointed by the
Board of Higher Education and employed in an assessment research
position; and be it further
RESOLVED, That the task force shall select 2 members to serve as
co-chairs at its initial meeting, shall meet at the call of the chairs,
and shall have duties that include conducting a series of public
hearings during the summer and fall of 2002 for the purpose of
understanding the student testing required by Public Law 107-110; and
be it further
RESOLVED, That the task force shall submit an initial report on its
findings and recommendations to the General Assembly on December 15,
2002, with a final report and recommendations submitted to the General
Assembly on March 15, 2003; and that upon filing its final report the
task force is dissolved; and be it further
RESOLVED, That the timelines for implementation of Public Law
107-110 and policy options to be determined by the State Board of
Education in meeting the requirements of Public Law 107-110 shall come
before the General Assembly by May 14, 2002; and be it further
RESOLVED, That the State Board of Education, being a regulatory
body ultimately accountable to the citizens of Illinois through the
elected members of the General Assembly, shall not adopt any rules
pertaining to the implementation of Public Law 107-110 prior to the
13 [May 2, 2002]
final report of the task force; and be it further
RESOLVED, That suitable copies of this resolution be delivered to
the State Superintendent of Education, the President of the Senate, the
Minority Leader of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of
Representatives, the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives,
the Governor, the Illinois Education Association, the Illinois
Federation of Teachers, the Illinois Principals Association, the
Illinois Association of School Administrators, the Illinois Association
of School Business Officials, the Illinois Association of School
Boards, the Illinois State Chamber of Commerce, the Illinois
Manufacturers' Association, the Illinois Retail Merchants Association,
the Illinois Business Roundtable, and the Board of Higher Education.
SENATE BILLS ON SECOND READING
SENATE BILL 1907. 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 SENATE BILL 1907
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend Senate Bill 1907 by replacing everything
after the enacting clause with the following:
"Section 5. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by changing
Section 13B-50 as follows:
(625 ILCS 5/13B-50)
Sec. 13B-50. Costs.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (e) of Section
13B-15, no fee may shall be charged to motor vehicle owners for
obtaining inspections required under this Chapter. The Vehicle
Inspection Fund, which is a fund created in the State treasury for the
purpose of receiving moneys from the Motor Fuel Tax Fund and other
sources, shall be used, subject to appropriation, for the payment of
the costs of the program, including reimbursement of those agencies of
the State that incur expenses in the administration or enforcement of
the program. The Vehicle Inspection Fund shall continue in existence
notwithstanding the repeal of Chapter 13A. Any money in the Vehicle
Inspection Fund on January 1, 1995, shall be used for the purposes set
forth in this Chapter.
(b) The Agency may acquire, own, maintain, operate, sell, lease
and otherwise transfer real and personal property and interests in real
and personal property for the purpose of creating or operating
inspection stations and for any other purpose relating to the
administration of this Chapter, and may use money from the Vehicle
Inspection Fund for these purposes.
(Source: P.A. 88-533.)".
Representative Franks offered the following amendment and moved its
adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO SENATE BILL 1907
AMENDMENT NO. 2. Amend Senate Bill 1907, AS AMENDED, by replacing
everything after the enacting clause with the following:
"Section 5. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by changing
Sections 13B-5 and 13B-40 as follows:
(625 ILCS 5/13B-5)
Sec. 13B-5. Definitions. For the purposes of this Chapter:
"Affected counties" means Cook County; DuPage County; Lake County;
those parts of Kane County that are not included within any of the
following ZIP code areas, as designated by the U.S. Postal Service on
the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1994: 60109, 60119, 60135,
[May 2, 2002] 14
60140, 60142, 60144, 60147, 60151, 60152, 60178, 60182, 60511, 60520,
60545, and 60554; those parts of Kendall County that are not included
within any of the following ZIP code areas, as designated by the U.S.
Postal Service on the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1994:
60447, 60512, 60536, 60537, 60541, those parts of 60543 that are not
within the census defined urbanized area, 60545, and 60560; those parts
of McHenry County that are not included within any of the following ZIP
code areas, as designated by the U.S. Postal Service on the effective
date of this amendatory Act of 1994: 60001, 60033, 60034, 60071, 60072,
60097, 60098, 60142, 60152, and 60180; those parts of Will County that
are not included within any of the following ZIP code areas, as
designated by the U.S. Postal Service on the effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1994: 60401, 60407, 60408, 60410, 60416, 60418,
60421, 60442, 60447, 60468, 60481, 60935 and 60950; those parts of
Madison County that are not included within any of the following ZIP
code areas, as designated by the U.S. Postal Service on the effective
date of this amendatory Act of 1994: 62001, 62012, 62021, 62026, 62046,
62058, 62061, 62067, 62074, 62088, 62097, 62249, 62275, and 62281;
those parts of Monroe County that are not included within any of the
following ZIP code areas, as designated by the U.S. Postal Service on
the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1994: 62244, 62248, 62256,
62261, 62276, 62278, 62279, 62295, and 62298; and those parts of St.
Clair County that are not included within any of the following ZIP code
areas, as designated by the U.S. Postal Service on the effective date
of this amendatory Act of 1994: 62224, 62243, 62248, 62254, 62255,
62257, 62258, 62260, 62264, 62265, 62269, 62278, 62282, 62285, 62289,
and 62298.
"Board" means the Illinois Pollution Control Board.
"Claim evaluation center" means an automotive diagnostic facility
that meets the standards prescribed by the Agency for performing
examinations of vehicle emissions inspection damage claims.
"Contractor" means the vehicle emissions test contractor for
Official Inspection Stations described in Section 13B-45.
"Inspection area" means Cook County, DuPage County, Lake County and
those portions of Kane, Kendall, Madison, McHenry, Monroe, Will, and
St. Clair Counties included in the definition of "affected counties".
"Owner" means the registered owner of the vehicle, as indicated on
the vehicle's registration. In the case of an unregistered vehicle,
"owner" has the meaning set forth in Section 1-155 of this Code.
"Program" means the vehicle emission inspection program established
under this Chapter.
"Resident" includes natural persons, foreign and domestic
corporations, partnerships, associations, and all other commercial and
governmental entities. For the purpose of determining residence, the
owner of a vehicle shall be presumed to reside at the address indicated
on the vehicle's registration. A governmental entity, including the
federal government and its agencies, and any unit of local government
or school district, any part of which is located within an affected
county, shall be deemed a resident of an affected county for the
purpose of any vehicle that is owned by the governmental entity and
regularly operated in an affected county.
"Registration" of a vehicle means its registration under Article IV
of Chapter 3 of this Code.
(Source: P.A. 90-89, eff. 1-1-98.)
(625 ILCS 5/13B-40)
Sec. 13B-40. Grievance and damage claim requirements and
procedures.
(a) Emissions inspection and waiver denial grievance procedures
procedure. Any person aggrieved by a decision regarding the failure of
an emissions test or the denial of a waiver may file a petition with
the Agency within 30 days after the decision was made, and the Agency
shall thereupon investigate the matter. Within 45 days after its
receipt of the petition, the Agency shall submit to the petitioner and
any affected inspector or station its written determination of the
correctness or incorrectness of the decision complained of. The
written determination shall include a statement of the facts relied
15 [May 2, 2002]
upon and the legal and technical issues decided by the Agency in making
its determination, and may also include an order directing the
inspector (i) to issue an emission inspection certificate for the
vehicle effective on such date as the Agency may specify, (ii) to
reinspect the vehicle, (iii) to apply the standards that the Agency has
determined to be applicable, or (iv) to take any other action that the
Agency deems to be appropriate. In conducting the investigation, the
Agency may require the petitioner to present the vehicle for inspection
by the Agency or its designated agent. The written determination of
the Agency shall be subject to review in circuit court in accordance
with the provisions of the Administrative Review Law, except that no
challenge to the validity of a rule adopted by the Board under
subsection (a) of Section 13B-20 shall be heard by the circuit court if
the challenge could have been raised in a timely petition for review
under Section 13B-20.
(b) Vehicle damage claim requirements and procedures.
(1) The contractor shall make vehicle damage claim forms
authorized by the Agency available for vehicle owners in sufficient
quantities at all official inspection stations.
(2) Notice of the vehicle damage claim procedures and the
vehicle owner's rights in relation to a vehicle damage claim shall
be conspicuously posted at all official inspection stations.
(3) If a vehicle owner believes that his or her vehicle was
damaged by an act or omission of the contractor during or as a
result of an emissions inspection performed on or after August 1,
2002, the owner may initiate resolution of the damage claim under
this subsection by complying with the following:
(A) Within 30 days of the date of the vehicle emissions
inspection that allegedly caused the vehicle damage, the
vehicle owner shall submit a vehicle damage claim to the
contractor at the Official Inspection Station at which the
vehicle damage allegedly occurred.
(B) Within 30 days of filing the claim, the owner shall
submit to the contractor any relevant information relating to
the owner's claim for vehicle damage, including but not
limited to evaluations conducted by a claims evaluation center
or automotive repair shop meeting standards prescribed by the
Agency.
(4) The contractor shall promptly notify the Agency of each
vehicle damage claim received by the contractor under subdivision
(b)(3) and shall forward to the Agency any additional information
provided by the owner.
(5) Within 60 days after the filing of a vehicle damage
claim, the contractor shall notify the vehicle owner of its
proposed resolution of the damage claim.
(6) Within 30 days after receiving the contractor's proposed
resolution of the damage claim, the owner may petition the Agency
for a review of the adequacy and completeness of the contractor's
proposed resolution. The petition shall be in a form specified by
the Agency.
(7) Upon receiving a petition for review, the Agency shall
request the contractor to deliver to the Agency a copy of the
contractor's proposed resolution of the damage claim, together with
all documents, videotapes, and information relevant to the damage
claim and the proposed resolution. The contractor shall provide
the requested materials to the Agency within 15 days of receiving
the Agency's request.
(8) Within 30 days after receiving the relevant materials
from the contractor, the Agency shall review the materials and
determine whether the contractor's proposed resolution of the
damage claim is adequate and complete. The Agency may deem the
proposed resolution of the damage claim to be adequate and
complete. If the Agency does not deem the proposed resolution of
the damage claim to be adequate and complete, it may request the
contractor to further investigate and evaluate the damage claim and
resubmit its proposed resolution of the claim. The contractor
[May 2, 2002] 16
shall then have 30 days to respond in writing to the Agency with
the results of its further evaluation of the damage claim and its
proposed resolution.
(9) The Agency shall notify the vehicle owner in writing of
the result of its review of the adequacy and completeness of the
contractor's proposed resolution of the damage claim. Copies of
all correspondence between the Agency and the contractor relating
to the damage claim shall also be sent to the vehicle owner.
(10) If, after the Agency's review, the vehicle owner still
does not agree with all or a portion of the proposed resolution of
the damage claim by the contractor, the vehicle owner may further
pursue the damage claim through the binding arbitration process
established by the contractor and accepted by the Agency, or in
circuit court.
(11) The Agency's review of the adequacy and completeness of
the contractor's proposed resolution of a damage claim is not
binding upon the vehicle owner or the contractor and does not
affect the rights of the vehicle owner or the contractor under law.
The Agency's review of the adequacy and completeness of the
contractor's proposed resolution of a damage claim is not a final
action subject to administrative review and is not subject to
review by the Pollution Control Board or otherwise appealable.
(Source: P.A. 88-533.)
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 Amendments
numbered 1 and 2 were adopted and the bill, as amended, was advanced to
the order of Third Reading.
SENATE BILL 2081. Having been read by title a second time on May
1, 2002, and held on the order of Second Reading, the same was again
taken up.
Representative Novak offered the following amendment and moved its
adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 5 TO SENATE BILL 2081
AMENDMENT NO. 5. Amend Senate Bill 2081, AS AMENDED, by replacing
everything after the enacting clause with the following:
"Section 5. The Public Utilities Act is amended by changing
Sections 9-220, 16-102, and 16-111 and adding Section 16-111.3 as
follows:
(220 ILCS 5/9-220) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 9-220)
Sec. 9-220. Rate changes based on changes in fuel costs.
(a) Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 9-201, the
Commission may authorize the increase or decrease of rates and charges
based upon changes in the cost of fuel used in the generation or
production of electric power, changes in the cost of purchased power,
or changes in the cost of purchased gas through the application of fuel
adjustment clauses or purchased gas adjustment clauses. The Commission
may also authorize the increase or decrease of rates and charges based
upon expenditures or revenues resulting from the purchase or sale of
emission allowances created under the federal Clean Air Act Amendments
of 1990, through such fuel adjustment clauses, as a cost of fuel. For
the purposes of this paragraph, cost of fuel used in the generation or
production of electric power shall include the amount of any fees paid
by the utility for the implementation and operation of a process for
the desulfurization of the flue gas when burning high sulfur coal at
any location within the State of Illinois irrespective of the
attainment status designation of such location; but shall not include
transportation costs of coal (i) except to the extent that for
17 [May 2, 2002]
contracts entered into on and after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1997, the cost of the coal, including transportation
costs, constitutes the lowest cost for adequate and reliable fuel
supply reasonably available to the public utility in comparison to the
cost, including transportation costs, of other adequate and reliable
sources of fuel supply reasonably available to the public utility, or
(ii) except as otherwise provided in the next 3 sentences of this
paragraph. Such costs of fuel shall, when requested by a utility or at
the conclusion of the utility's next general electric rate proceeding,
whichever shall first occur, include transportation costs of coal
purchased under existing coal purchase contracts. For purposes of this
paragraph "existing coal purchase contracts" means contracts for the
purchase of coal in effect on the effective date of this amendatory Act
of 1991, as such contracts may thereafter be amended, but only to the
extent that any such amendment does not increase the aggregate quantity
of coal to be purchased under such contract. Nothing herein shall
authorize an electric utility to recover through its fuel adjustment
clause any amounts of transportation costs of coal that were included
in the revenue requirement used to set base rates in its most recent
general rate proceeding. Cost shall be based upon uniformly applied
accounting principles. Annually, the Commission shall initiate public
hearings to determine whether the clauses reflect actual costs of fuel,
gas, power, or coal transportation purchased to determine whether such
purchases were prudent, and to reconcile any amounts collected with the
actual costs of fuel, power, gas, or coal transportation prudently
purchased. In each such proceeding, the burden of proof shall be upon
the utility to establish the prudence of its cost of fuel, power, gas,
or coal transportation purchases and costs. The Commission shall issue
its final order in each such annual proceeding for an electric utility
by December 31 of the year immediately following the year to which the
proceeding pertains, provided, that the Commission shall issue its
final order with respect to such annual proceeding for the years 1996
and earlier by December 31, 1998.
(b) A public utility providing electric service, other than a
public utility described in subsections (e) or (f) of this Section, may
at any time during the mandatory transition period file with the
Commission proposed tariff sheets that eliminate the public utility's
fuel adjustment clause and adjust the public utility's base rate
tariffs by the amount necessary for the base fuel component of the base
rates to recover the public utility's average fuel and power supply
costs per kilowatt-hour for the 2 most recent years for which the
Commission has issued final orders in annual proceedings pursuant to
subsection (a), where the average fuel and power supply costs per
kilowatt-hour shall be calculated as the sum of the public utility's
prudent and allowable fuel and power supply costs as found by the
Commission in the 2 proceedings divided by the public utility's actual
jurisdictional kilowatt-hour sales for those 2 years. Notwithstanding
any contrary or inconsistent provisions in Section 9-201 of this Act,
in subsection (a) of this Section or in any rules or regulations
promulgated by the Commission pursuant to subsection (g) of this
Section, the Commission shall review and shall by order approve, or
approve as modified, the proposed tariff sheets within 60 days after
the date of the public utility's filing. The Commission may modify the
public utility's proposed tariff sheets only to the extent the
Commission finds necessary to achieve conformance to the requirements
of this subsection (b). During the 5 years following the date of the
Commission's order, but in any event no earlier than January 1, 2007
2005, a public utility whose fuel adjustment clause has been eliminated
pursuant to this subsection shall not file proposed tariff sheets
seeking, or otherwise petition the Commission for, reinstatement of a
fuel adjustment clause.
(c) Notwithstanding any contrary or inconsistent provisions in
Section 9-201 of this Act, in subsection (a) of this Section or in any
rules or regulations promulgated by the Commission pursuant to
subsection (g) of this Section, a public utility providing electric
service, other than a public utility described in subsection (e) or (f)
[May 2, 2002] 18
of this Section, may at any time during the mandatory transition period
file with the Commission proposed tariff sheets that establish the rate
per kilowatt-hour to be applied pursuant to the public utility's fuel
adjustment clause at the average value for such rate during the
preceding 24 months, provided that such average rate results in a
credit to customers' bills, without making any revisions to the public
utility's base rate tariffs. The proposed tariff sheets shall
establish the fuel adjustment rate for a specific time period of at
least 3 years but not more than 5 years, provided that the terms and
conditions for any reinstatement earlier than 5 years shall be set
forth in the proposed tariff sheets and subject to modification or
approval by the Commission. The Commission shall review and shall by
order approve the proposed tariff sheets if it finds that the
requirements of this subsection are met. The Commission shall not
conduct the annual hearings specified in the last 3 sentences of
subsection (a) of this Section for the utility for the period that the
factor established pursuant to this subsection is in effect.
(d) A public utility providing electric service, or a public
utility providing gas service may file with the Commission proposed
tariff sheets that eliminate the public utility's fuel or purchased gas
adjustment clause and adjust the public utility's base rate tariffs to
provide for recovery of power supply costs or gas supply costs that
would have been recovered through such clause; provided, that the
provisions of this subsection (d) shall not be available to a public
utility described in subsections (e) or (f) of this Section to
eliminate its fuel adjustment clause. Notwithstanding any contrary or
inconsistent provisions in Section 9-201 of this Act, in subsection (a)
of this Section, or in any rules or regulations promulgated by the
Commission pursuant to subsection (g) of this Section, the Commission
shall review and shall by order approve, or approve as modified in the
Commission's order, the proposed tariff sheets within 240 days after
the date of the public utility's filing. The Commission's order shall
approve rates and charges that the Commission, based on information in
the public utility's filing or on the record if a hearing is held by
the Commission, finds will recover the reasonable, prudent and
necessary jurisdictional power supply costs or gas supply costs
incurred or to be incurred by the public utility during a 12 month
period found by the Commission to be appropriate for these purposes,
provided, that such period shall be either (i) a 12 month historical
period occurring during the 15 months ending on the date of the public
utility's filing, or (ii) a 12 month future period ending no later than
15 months following the date of the public utility's filing. The
public utility shall include with its tariff filing information showing
both (1) its actual jurisdictional power supply costs or gas supply
costs for a 12 month historical period conforming to (i) above and (2)
its projected jurisdictional power supply costs or gas supply costs for
a future 12 month period conforming to (ii) above. If the Commission's
order requires modifications in the tariff sheets filed by the public
utility, the public utility shall have 7 days following the date of the
order to notify the Commission whether the public utility will
implement the modified tariffs or elect to continue its fuel or
purchased gas adjustment clause in force as though no order had been
entered. The Commission's order shall provide for any reconciliation
of power supply costs or gas supply costs, as the case may be, and
associated revenues through the date that the public utility's fuel or
purchased gas adjustment clause is eliminated. During the 5 years
following the date of the Commission's order, a public utility whose
fuel or purchased gas adjustment clause has been eliminated pursuant to
this subsection shall not file proposed tariff sheets seeking, or
otherwise petition the Commission for, reinstatement or adoption of a
fuel or purchased gas adjustment clause. Nothing in this subsection (d)
shall be construed as limiting the Commission's authority to eliminate
a public utility's fuel adjustment clause or purchased gas adjustment
clause in accordance with any other applicable provisions of this Act.
(e) Notwithstanding any contrary or inconsistent provisions in
Section 9-201 of this Act, in subsection (a) of this Section, or in
19 [May 2, 2002]
any rules promulgated by the Commission pursuant to subsection (g) of
this Section, a public utility providing electric service to more than
1,000,000 customers in this State may, within the first 6 months after
the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997, file with the
Commission proposed tariff sheets that eliminate, effective January 1,
1997, the public utility's fuel adjustment clause without adjusting
its base rates, and such tariff sheets shall be effective upon filing.
To the extent the application of the fuel adjustment clause had
resulted in net charges to customers after January 1, 1997, the
utility shall also file a tariff sheet that provides for a refund
stated on a per kilowatt-hour basis of such charges over a period not
to exceed 6 months; provided however, that such refund shall not
include the proportional amounts of taxes paid under the Use Tax Act,
Service Use Tax Act, Service Occupation Tax Act, and Retailers'
Occupation Tax Act on fuel used in generation. The Commission shall
issue an order within 45 days after the date of the public utility's
filing approving or approving as modified such tariff sheet. If the
fuel adjustment clause is eliminated pursuant to this subsection, the
Commission shall not conduct the annual hearings specified in the last
3 sentences of subsection (a) of this Section for the utility for any
period after December 31, 1996 and prior to any reinstatement of such
clause. A public utility whose fuel adjustment clause has been
eliminated pursuant to this subsection shall not file a proposed
tariff sheet seeking, or otherwise petition the Commission for,
reinstatement of the fuel adjustment clause prior to January 1, 2007
2005.
(f) Notwithstanding any contrary or inconsistent provisions in
Section 9-201 of this Act, in subsection (a) of this Section, or in any
rules or regulations promulgated by the Commission pursuant to
subsection (g) of this Section, a public utility providing electric
service to more than 500,000 customers but fewer than 1,000,000
customers in this State may, within the first 6 months after the
effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997, file with the Commission
proposed tariff sheets that eliminate, effective January 1, 1997, the
public utility's fuel adjustment clause and adjust its base rates by
the amount necessary for the base fuel component of the base rates to
recover 91% of the public utility's average fuel and power supply costs
for the 2 most recent years for which the Commission, as of January 1,
1997, has issued final orders in annual proceedings pursuant to
subsection (a), where the average fuel and power supply costs per
kilowatt-hour shall be calculated as the sum of the public utility's
prudent and allowable fuel and power supply costs as found by the
Commission in the 2 proceedings divided by the public utility's actual
jurisdictional kilowatt-hour sales for those 2 years, provided, that
such tariff sheets shall be effective upon filing. To the extent the
application of the fuel adjustment clause had resulted in net charges
to customers after January 1, 1997, the utility shall also file a
tariff sheet that provides for a refund stated on a per kilowatt-hour
basis of such charges over a period not to exceed 6 months. Provided
however, that such refund shall not include the proportional amounts of
taxes paid under the Use Tax Act, Service Use Tax Act, Service
Occupation Tax Act, and Retailers' Occupation Tax Act on fuel used in
generation. The Commission shall issue an order within 45 days after
the date of the public utility's filing approving or approving as
modified such tariff sheet. If the fuel adjustment clause is
eliminated pursuant to this subsection, the Commission shall not
conduct the annual hearings specified in the last 3 sentences of
subsection (a) of this Section for the utility for any period after
December 31, 1996 and prior to any reinstatement of such clause. A
public utility whose fuel adjustment clause has been eliminated
pursuant to this subsection shall not file a proposed tariff sheet
seeking, or otherwise petition the Commission for, reinstatement of the
fuel adjustment clause prior to January 1, 2007 2005.
(g) The Commission shall have authority to promulgate rules and
regulations to carry out the provisions of this Section.
(Source: P.A. 90-561, eff. 12-16-97.)
[May 2, 2002] 20
(220 ILCS 5/16-102)
Sec. 16-102. Definitions. For the purposes of this Article the
following terms shall be defined as set forth in this Section.
"Alternative retail electric supplier" means every person,
cooperative, corporation, municipal corporation, company, association,
joint stock company or association, firm, partnership, individual, or
other entity, their lessees, trustees, or receivers appointed by any
court whatsoever, that offers electric power or energy for sale, lease
or in exchange for other value received to one or more retail
customers, or that engages in the delivery or furnishing of electric
power or energy to such retail customers, and shall include, without
limitation, resellers, aggregators and power marketers, but shall not
include (i) electric utilities (or any agent of the electric utility to
the extent the electric utility provides tariffed services to retail
customers through that agent), (ii) any electric cooperative or
municipal system as defined in Section 17-100 to the extent that the
electric cooperative or municipal system is serving retail customers
within any area in which it is or would be entitled to provide service
under the law in effect immediately prior to the effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1997, (iii) a public utility that is owned and
operated by any public institution of higher education of this State,
or a public utility that is owned by such public institution of higher
education and operated by any of its lessees or operating agents,
within any area in which it is or would be entitled to provide service
under the law in effect immediately prior to the effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1997, (iv) a retail customer to the extent that
customer obtains its electric power and energy from that customer's own
cogeneration or self-generation facilities, (v) an entity that owns,
operates, sells, or arranges for the installation of a customer's own
cogeneration or self-generation facilities, but only to the extent the
entity is engaged in owning, selling or arranging for the installation
of such facility, or operating the facility on behalf of such
customer, provided however that any such third party owner or operator
of a facility built after January 1, 1999, complies with the labor
provisions of Section 16-128(a) as though such third party were an
alternative retail electric supplier, or (vi) an industrial or
manufacturing customer that owns its own distribution facilities, to
the extent that the customer provides service from that distribution
system to a third-party contractor located on the customer's premises
that is integrally and predominantly engaged in the customer's
industrial or manufacturing process; provided, that if the industrial
or manufacturing customer has elected delivery services, the customer
shall pay transition charges applicable to the electric power and
energy consumed by the third-party contractor unless such charges are
otherwise paid by the third party contractor, which shall be calculated
based on the usage of, and the base rates or the contract rates
applicable to, the third-party contractor in accordance with Section
16-102.
"Base rates" means the rates for those tariffed services that the
electric utility is required to offer pursuant to subsection (a) of
Section 16-103 and that were identified in a rate order for collection
of the electric utility's base rate revenue requirement, excluding (i)
separate automatic rate adjustment riders then in effect, (ii) special
or negotiated contract rates, (iii) delivery services tariffs filed
pursuant to Section 16-108, (iv) real-time pricing, or (v) tariffs that
were in effect prior to October 1, 1996 and that based charges for
services on an index or average of other utilities' charges, but
including (vi) any subsequent redesign of such rates for tariffed
services that is authorized by the Commission after notice and hearing.
"Competitive service" includes (i) any service that has been
declared to be competitive pursuant to Section 16-113 of this Act, (ii)
contract service, and (iii) services, other than tariffed services,
that are related to, but not necessary for, the provision of electric
power and energy or delivery services.
"Contract service" means (1) services, including the provision of
electric power and energy or other services, that are provided by
21 [May 2, 2002]
mutual agreement between an electric utility and a retail customer that
is located in the electric utility's service area, provided that,
delivery services shall not be a contract service until such services
are declared competitive pursuant to Section 16-113; and also means (2)
the provision of electric power and energy by an electric utility to
retail customers outside the electric utility's service area pursuant
to Section 16-116. Provided, however, contract service does not
include electric utility services provided pursuant to (i) contracts
that retail customers are required to execute as a condition of
receiving tariffed services, or (ii) special or negotiated rate
contracts for electric utility services that were entered into between
an electric utility and a retail customer prior to the effective date
of this amendatory Act of 1997 and filed with the Commission.
"Delivery services" means those services provided by the electric
utility that are necessary in order for the transmission and
distribution systems to function so that retail customers located in
the electric utility's service area can receive electric power and
energy from suppliers other than the electric utility, and shall
include, without limitation, standard metering and billing services.
"Electric utility" means a public utility, as defined in Section
3-105 of this Act, that has a franchise, license, permit or right to
furnish or sell electricity to retail customers within a service area.
"Mandatory transition period" means the period from the effective
date of this amendatory Act of 1997 through January 1, 2007 2005.
"Municipal system" shall have the meaning set forth in Section
17-100.
"Real-time pricing" means charges for delivered electric power and
energy that vary on an hour-to-hour basis for nonresidential retail
customers and that vary on a periodic basis during the day for
residential retail customers.
"Retail customer" means a single entity using electric power or
energy at a single premises and that (A) either (i) is receiving or is
eligible to receive tariffed services from an electric utility, or
(ii) that is served by a municipal system or electric cooperative
within any area in which the municipal system or electric cooperative
is or would be entitled to provide service under the law in effect
immediately prior to the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997,
or (B) an entity which on the effective date of this Act was receiving
electric service from a public utility and (i) was engaged in the
practice of resale and redistribution of such electricity within a
building prior to January 2, 1957, or (ii) was providing lighting
services to tenants in a multi-occupancy building, but only to the
extent such resale, redistribution or lighting service is authorized by
the electric utility's tariffs that were on file with the Commission on
the effective date of this Act.
"Service area" means (i) the geographic area within which an
electric utility was lawfully entitled to provide electric power and
energy to retail customers as of the effective date of this amendatory
Act of 1997, and includes (ii) the location of any retail customer to
which the electric utility was lawfully providing electric utility
services on such effective date.
"Small commercial retail customer" means those nonresidential
retail customers of an electric utility consuming 15,000 kilowatt-hours
or less of electricity annually in its service area.
"Tariffed service" means services provided to retail customers by
an electric utility as defined by its rates on file with the Commission
pursuant to the provisions of Article IX of this Act, but shall not
include competitive services.
"Transition charge" means a charge expressed in cents per
kilowatt-hour that is calculated for a customer or class of customers
as follows for each year in which an electric utility is entitled to
recover transition charges as provided in Section 16-108:
(1) the amount of revenue that an electric utility would
receive from the retail customer or customers if it were serving
such customers' electric power and energy requirements as a
tariffed service based on (A) all of the customers' actual usage
[May 2, 2002] 22
during the 3 years ending 90 days prior to the date on which such
customers were first eligible for delivery services pursuant to
Section 16-104, and (B) on (i) the base rates in effect on October
1, 1996 (adjusted for the reductions required by subsection (b) of
Section 16-111, for any reduction resulting from a rate decrease
under Section 16-101(b), for any restatement of base rates made in
conjunction with an elimination of the fuel adjustment clause
pursuant to subsection (b), (d), or (f) of Section 9-220 and for
any removal of decommissioning costs from base rates pursuant to
Section 16-114) and any separate automatic rate adjustment riders
(other than a decommissioning rate as defined in Section 16-114)
under which the customers were receiving or, had they been
customers, would have received electric power and energy from the
electric utility during the year immediately preceding the date on
which such customers were first eligible for delivery service
pursuant to Section 16-104, or (ii) to the extent applicable, any
contract rates, including contracts or rates for consolidated or
aggregated billing, under which such customers were receiving
electric power and energy from the electric utility during such
year;
(2) less the amount of revenue, other than revenue from
transition charges and decommissioning rates, that the electric
utility would receive from such retail customers for delivery
services provided by the electric utility, assuming such customers
were taking delivery services for all of their usage, based on the
delivery services tariffs in effect during the year for which the
transition charge is being calculated and on the usage identified
in paragraph (1);
(3) less the market value for the electric power and energy
that the electric utility would have used to supply all of such
customers' electric power and energy requirements, as a tariffed
service, based on the usage identified in paragraph (1), with such
market value determined in accordance with Section 16-112 of this
Act;
(4) less the following amount which represents the amount to
be attributed to new revenue sources and cost reductions by the
electric utility through the end of the period for which transition
costs are recovered pursuant to Section 16-108, referred to in this
Article XVI as a "mitigation factor":
(A) for nonresidential retail customers, an amount equal
to the greater of (i) 0.5 cents per kilowatt-hour during the
period October 1, 1999 through December 31, 2004, 0.6 cents
per kilowatt-hour in calendar year 2005, and 0.9 cents per
kilowatt-hour in calendar year 2006, multiplied in each year
by the usage identified in paragraph (1), or (ii) an amount
equal to the following percentages of the amount produced by
applying the applicable base rates (adjusted as described in
subparagraph (1)(B)) or contract rate to the usage identified
in paragraph (1): 8% for the period October 1, 1999 through
December 31, 2002, 10% in calendar years 2003 and 2004, 11% in
calendar year 2005 and 12% in calendar year 2006; and
(B) for residential retail customers, an amount equal to
the following percentages of the amount produced by applying
the base rates in effect on October 1, 1996 (adjusted as
described in subparagraph (1)(B)) to the usage identified in
paragraph (1): (i) 6% from May 1, 2002 through December 31,
2002, (ii) 7% in calendar years 2003 and 2004, (iii) 8% in
calendar year 2005, and (iv) 10% in calendar year 2006;
(5) divided by the usage of such customers identified in
paragraph (1),
provided that the transition charge shall never be less than zero.
"Unbundled service" means a component or constituent part of a
tariffed service which the electric utility subsequently offers
separately to its customers.
(Source: P.A. 90-561, eff. 12-16-97; 91-50, eff. 6-30-99.)
(220 ILCS 5/16-111)
23 [May 2, 2002]
Sec. 16-111. Rates and restructuring transactions during mandatory
transition period.
(a) During the mandatory transition period, notwithstanding any
provision of Article IX of this Act, and except as provided in
subsections (b), (d), (e), and (f) of this Section, the Commission
shall not (i) initiate, authorize or order any change by way of
increase (other than in connection with a request for rate increase
which was filed after September 1, 1997 but prior to October 15, 1997,
by an electric utility serving less than 12,500 customers in this
State), (ii) initiate or, unless requested by the electric utility,
authorize or order any change by way of decrease, restructuring or
unbundling (except as provided in Section 16-109A), in the rates of any
electric utility that were in effect on October 1, 1996, or (iii) in
any order approving any application for a merger pursuant to Section
7-204 that was pending as of May 16, 1997, impose any condition
requiring any filing for an increase, decrease, or change in, or other
review of, an electric utility's rates or enforce any such condition of
any such order; provided, however, that this subsection shall not
prohibit the Commission from:
(1) approving the application of an electric utility to
implement an alternative to rate of return regulation or a
regulatory mechanism that rewards or penalizes the electric utility
through adjustment of rates based on utility performance, pursuant
to Section 9-244;
(2) authorizing an electric utility to eliminate its fuel
adjustment clause and adjust its base rate tariffs in accordance
with subsection (b), (d), or (f) of Section 9-220 of this Act, to
fix its fuel adjustment factor in accordance with subsection (c) of
Section 9-220 of this Act, or to eliminate its fuel adjustment
clause in accordance with subsection (e) of Section 9-220 of this
Act;
(3) ordering into effect tariffs for delivery services and
transition charges in accordance with Sections 16-104 and 16-108,
for real-time pricing in accordance with Section 16-107, or the
options required by Section 16-110 and subsection (n) of 16-112,
allowing a billing experiment in accordance with Section 16-106, or
modifying delivery services tariffs in accordance with Section
16-109; or
(4) ordering or allowing into effect any tariff to recover
charges pursuant to Sections 9-201.5, 9-220.1, 9-221, 9-222 (except
as provided in Section 9-222.1), 16-108, and 16-114 of this Act,
Section 5-5 of the Electricity Infrastructure Maintenance Fee Law,
Section 6-5 of the Renewable Energy, Energy Efficiency, and Coal
Resources Development Law of 1997, and Section 13 of the Energy
Assistance Act of 1989.
After December 31, 2004, the provisions of this subsection (a)
shall not apply to an electric utility whose average residential retail
rate was less than or equal to 90% of the average residential retail
rate for the "Midwest Utilities", as that term is defined in subsection
(b) of this Section, based on data reported on Form 1 to the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission for calendar year 1995, and which served
between 150,000 and 250,000 retail customers in this State on January
1, 1995 unless the electric utility or its holding company has been
acquired by or merged with an affiliate of another electric utility
subsequent to January 1, 2002. This exemption shall be limited to this
subsection (a) and shall not extend to any other provisions of this
Act.
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a), each
Illinois electric utility serving more than 12,500 customers in
Illinois shall file tariffs (i) reducing, effective August 1, 1998,
each component of its base rates to residential retail customers by 15%
from the base rates in effect immediately prior to January 1, 1998 and
(ii) if the public utility provides electric service to (A) more than
500,000 customers but less than 1,000,000 customers in this State on
January 1, 1999, reducing, effective May 1, 2002, each component of its
base rates to residential retail customers by an additional 5% from the
[May 2, 2002] 24
base rates in effect immediately prior to January 1, 1998, or (B) at
least 1,000,000 customers in this State on January 1, 1999, reducing,
effective October 1, 2001, each component of its base rates to
residential retail customers by an additional 5% from the base rates in
effect immediately prior to January 1, 1998. Provided, however, that
(A) if an electric utility's average residential retail rate is less
than or equal to the average residential retail rate for a group of
Midwest Utilities (consisting of all investor-owned electric utilities
with annual system peaks in excess of 1000 megawatts in the States of
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, Ohio, and
Wisconsin), based on data reported on Form 1 to the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission for calendar year 1995, then it shall only be
required to file tariffs (i) reducing, effective August 1, 1998, each
component of its base rates to residential retail customers by 5% from
the base rates in effect immediately prior to January 1, 1998, (ii)
reducing, effective October 1, 2000, each component of its base rates
to residential retail customers by the lesser of 5% of the base rates
in effect immediately prior to January 1, 1998 or the percentage by
which the electric utility's average residential retail rate exceeds
the average residential retail rate of the Midwest Utilities, based on
data reported on Form 1 to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission for
calendar year 1999, and (iii) reducing, effective October 1, 2002, each
component of its base rates to residential retail customers by an
additional amount equal to the lesser of 5% of the base rates in effect
immediately prior to January 1, 1998 or the percentage by which the
electric utility's average residential retail rate exceeds the average
residential retail rate of the Midwest Utilities, based on data
reported on Form 1 to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission for
calendar year 2001; and (B) if the average residential retail rate of
an electric utility serving between 150,000 and 250,000 retail
customers in this State on January 1, 1995 is less than or equal to 90%
of the average residential retail rate for the Midwest Utilities, based
on data reported on Form 1 to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
for calendar year 1995, then it shall only be required to file tariffs
(i) reducing, effective August 1, 1998, each component of its base
rates to residential retail customers by 2% from the base rates in
effect immediately prior to January 1, 1998; (ii) reducing, effective
October 1, 2000, each component of its base rates to residential retail
customers by 2% from the base rate in effect immediately prior to
January 1, 1998; and (iii) reducing, effective October 1, 2002, each
component of its base rates to residential retail customers by 1% from
the base rates in effect immediately prior to January 1, 1998.
Provided, further, that any electric utility for which a decrease in
base rates has been or is placed into effect between October 1, 1996
and the dates specified in the preceding sentences of this subsection,
other than pursuant to the requirements of this subsection, shall be
entitled to reduce the amount of any reduction or reductions in its
base rates required by this subsection by the amount of such other
decrease. The tariffs required under this subsection shall be filed 45
days in advance of the effective date. Notwithstanding anything to the
contrary in Section 9-220 of this Act, no restatement of base rates in
conjunction with the elimination of a fuel adjustment clause under that
Section shall result in a lesser decrease in base rates than customers
would otherwise receive under this subsection had the electric
utility's fuel adjustment clause not been eliminated.
(c) Any utility reducing its base rates by 15% on August 1, 1998
pursuant to subsection (b) shall include the following statement on its
bills for residential customers from August 1 through December 31,
1998: "Effective August 1, 1998, your rates have been reduced by 15% by
the Electric Service Customer Choice and Rate Relief Law of 1997 passed
by the Illinois General Assembly.". Any utility reducing its base
rates by 5% on August 1, 1998, pursuant to subsection (b) shall include
the following statement on its bills for residential customers from
August 1 through December 31, 1998: "Effective August 1, 1998, your
rates have been reduced by 5% by the Electric Service Customer Choice
and Rate Relief Law of 1997 passed by the Illinois General Assembly.".
25 [May 2, 2002]
Any utility reducing its base rates by 2% on August 1, 1998
pursuant to subsection (b) shall include the following statement on its
bills for residential customers from August 1 through December 31,
1998: "Effective August 1, 1998, your rates have been reduced by 2% by
the Electric Service Customer Choice and Rate Relief Law of 1997 passed
by the Illinois General Assembly.".
(d) During the mandatory transition period, but not before January
1, 2000, and notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a), an
electric utility may request an increase in its base rates if the
electric utility demonstrates that the 2-year average of its earned
rate of return on common equity, calculated as its net income
applicable to common stock divided by the average of its beginning and
ending balances of common equity using data reported in the electric
utility's Form 1 report to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission but
adjusted to remove the effects of accelerated depreciation or
amortization or other transition or mitigation measures implemented by
the electric utility pursuant to subsection (g) of this Section and the
effect of any refund paid pursuant to subsection (e) of this Section,
is below the 2-year average for the same 2 years of the monthly average
yields of 30-year U.S. Treasury bonds published by the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System in its weekly H.15 Statistical
Release or successor publication. The Commission shall review the
electric utility's request, and may review the justness and
reasonableness of all rates for tariffed services, in accordance with
the provisions of Article IX of this Act, provided that the Commission
shall consider any special or negotiated adjustments to the revenue
requirement agreed to between the electric utility and the other
parties to the proceeding. In setting rates under this Section, the
Commission shall exclude the costs and revenues that are associated
with competitive services and any billing or pricing experiments
conducted under Section 16-106.
(e) For the purposes of this subsection (e) all calculations and
comparisons shall be performed for the Illinois operations of
multijurisdictional utilities. During the mandatory transition period,
notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a), if the 2-year average
of an electric utility's earned rate of return on common equity,
calculated as its net income applicable to common stock divided by the
average of its beginning and ending balances of common equity using
data reported in the electric utility's Form 1 report to the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission but adjusted to remove the effect of any
refund paid under this subsection (e), and further adjusted to include
the annual amortization of any difference between the consideration
received by an affiliated interest of the electric utility in the sale
of an asset which had been sold or transferred by the electric utility
to the affiliated interest subsequent to the effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1997 and the consideration for which such asset had
been sold or transferred to the affiliated interest, with such
difference to be amortized ratably from the date of the sale by the
affiliated interest to December 31, 2006, exceeds the 2-year average of
the Index for the same 2 years by 1.5 or more percentage points, the
electric utility shall make refunds to customers beginning the first
billing day of April in the following year in the manner described in
paragraph (3) of this subsection. For purposes of this subsection (e),
the "Index" shall be the sum of (A) the average for the 12 months ended
September 30 of the monthly average yields of 30-year U.S. Treasury
bonds published by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
in its weekly H.15 Statistical Release or successor publication for
each year 1998 through 2006 2004, and (B) (i) 4.00 percentage points
for each of the 12-month periods ending September 30, 1998 through
September 30, 1999 or 8.00 percentage points if the electric utility's
average residential retail rate is less than or equal to 90% of the
average residential retail rate for the "Midwest Utilities", as that
term is defined in subsection (b) of this Section, based on data
reported on Form 1 to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission for
calendar year 1995, and the electric utility served between 150,000 and
250,000 retail customers on January 1, 1995, (ii) 7.00 percentage
[May 2, 2002] 26
points for each of the 12-month periods ending September 30, 2000
through September 30, 2006 2004 if the electric utility was providing
service to at least 1,000,000 customers in this State on January 1,
1999, or 9.00 percentage points if the electric utility's average
residential retail rate is less than or equal to 90% of the average
residential retail rate for the "Midwest Utilities", as that term is
defined in subsection (b) of this Section, based on data reported on
Form 1 to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission for calendar year
1995 and the electric utility served between 150,000 and 250,000 retail
customers in this State on January 1, 1995, (iii) 11.00 percentage
points for each of the 12-month periods ending September 30, 2000
through September 30, 2006 2004, but only if the electric utility's
average residential retail rate is less than or equal to 90% of the
average residential retail rate for the "Midwest Utilities", as that
term is defined in subsection (b) of this Section, based on data
reported on Form 1 to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission for
calendar year 1995, the electric utility served between 150,000 and
250,000 retail customers in this State on January 1, 1995, and the
electric utility offers delivery services on or before June 1, 2000 to
retail customers whose annual electric energy use comprises 33% of the
kilowatt hour sales to that group of retail customers that are
classified under Division D, Groups 20 through 39 of the Standard
Industrial Classifications set forth in the Standard Industrial
Classification Manual published by the United States Office of
Management and Budget, excluding the kilowatt hour sales to those
customers that are eligible for delivery services pursuant to Section
16-104(a)(1)(i), and offers delivery services to its remaining retail
customers classified under Division D, Groups 20 through 39 on or
before October 1, 2000, and, provided further, that the electric
utility commits not to petition pursuant to Section 16-108(f) for entry
of an order by the Commission authorizing the electric utility to
implement transition charges for an additional period after December
31, 2006, or (iv) 5.00 percentage points for each of the 12-month
periods ending September 30, 2000 through September 30, 2006 2004 for
all other electric utilities or 7.00 percentage points for such
utilities for each of the 12-month periods ending September 30, 2000
through September 30, 2006 2004 for any such utility that commits not
to petition pursuant to Section 16-108(f) for entry of an order by the
Commission authorizing the electric utility to implement transition
charges for an additional period after December 31, 2006 or 11.00
percentage points for each of the 12-month periods ending September 30,
2005 and September 30, 2006 for each electric utility providing service
to fewer than 6,500, or between 75,000 and 150,000, electric retail
customers in this State on January 1, 1995 if such utility commits not
to petition pursuant to Section 16-108(f) for entry of an order by the
Commission authorizing the electric utility to implement transition
charges for an additional period after December 31, 2006.
(1) For purposes of this subsection (e), "excess earnings"
means the difference between (A) the 2-year average of the electric
utility's earned rate of return on common equity, less (B) the
2-year average of the sum of (i) the Index applicable to each of
the 2 years and (ii) 1.5 percentage points; provided, that "excess
earnings" shall never be less than zero.
(2) On or before March 31 of each year 2000 through 2007 2005
each electric utility shall file a report with the Commission
showing its earned rate of return on common equity, calculated in
accordance with this subsection, for the preceding calendar year
and the average for the preceding 2 calendar years.
(3) If an electric utility has excess earnings, determined in
accordance with paragraphs (1) and (2) of this subsection, the
refunds which the electric utility shall pay to its customers
beginning the first billing day of April in the following year
shall be calculated and applied as follows:
(i) The electric utility's excess earnings shall be
multiplied by the average of the beginning and ending balances
of the electric utility's common equity for the 2-year period
27 [May 2, 2002]
in which excess earnings occurred.
(ii) The result of the calculation in (i) shall be
multiplied by 0.50 and then divided by a number equal to 1
minus the electric utility's composite federal and State
income tax rate.
(iii) The result of the calculation in (ii) shall be
divided by the sum of the electric utility's projected total
kilowatt-hour sales to retail customers plus projected
kilowatt-hours to be delivered to delivery services customers
over a one year period beginning with the first billing date
in April in the succeeding year to determine a cents per
kilowatt-hour refund factor.
(iv) The cents per kilowatt-hour refund factor
calculated in (iii) shall be credited to the electric
utility's customers by applying the factor on the customer's
monthly bills to each kilowatt-hour sold or delivered until
the total amount calculated in (ii) has been paid to
customers.
(f) During the mandatory transition period, an electric utility
may file revised tariffs reducing the price of any tariffed service
offered by the electric utility for all customers taking that tariffed
service, which shall be effective 7 days after filing.
(g) During the mandatory transition period, an electric utility
may, without obtaining any approval of the Commission other than that
provided for in this subsection and notwithstanding any other provision
of this Act or any rule or regulation of the Commission that would
require such approval:
(1) implement a reorganization, other than a merger of 2 or
more public utilities as defined in Section 3-105 or their holding
companies;
(2) retire generating plants from service;
(3) sell, assign, lease or otherwise transfer assets to an
affiliated or unaffiliated entity and as part of such transaction
enter into service agreements, power purchase agreements, or other
agreements with the transferee; provided, however, that the prices,
terms and conditions of any power purchase agreement must be
approved or allowed into effect by the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission; or
(4) use any accelerated cost recovery method including
accelerated depreciation, accelerated amortization or other capital
recovery methods, or record reductions to the original cost of its
assets.
In order to implement a reorganization, retire generating plants
from service, or sell, assign, lease or otherwise transfer assets
pursuant to this Section, the electric utility shall comply with
subsections (c) and (d) of Section 16-128, if applicable, and
subsection (k) of this Section, if applicable, and provide the
Commission with at least 30 days notice of the proposed reorganization
or transaction, which notice shall include the following information:
(i) a complete statement of the entries that the
electric utility will make on its books and records of account
to implement the proposed reorganization or transaction
together with a certification from an independent certified
public accountant that such entries are in accord with
generally accepted accounting principles and, if the
Commission has previously approved guidelines for cost
allocations between the utility and its affiliates, a
certification from the chief accounting officer of the utility
that such entries are in accord with those cost allocation
guidelines;
(ii) a description of how the electric utility will use
proceeds of any sale, assignment, lease or transfer to retire
debt or otherwise reduce or recover the costs of services
provided by such electric utility;
(iii) a list of all federal approvals or approvals
required from departments and agencies of this State, other
[May 2, 2002] 28
than the Commission, that the electric utility has or will
obtain before implementing the reorganization or transaction;
(iv) an irrevocable commitment by the electric utility
that it will not, as a result of the transaction, impose any
stranded cost charges that it might otherwise be allowed to
charge retail customers under federal law or increase the
transition charges that it is otherwise entitled to collect
under this Article XVI; and
(v) if the electric utility proposes to sell, assign,
lease or otherwise transfer a generating plant that brings the
amount of net dependable generating capacity transferred
pursuant to this subsection to an amount equal to or greater
than 15% of the electric utility's net dependable capacity as
of the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997, and
enters into a power purchase agreement with the entity to
which such generating plant is sold, assigned, leased, or
otherwise transferred, the electric utility also agrees, if
its fuel adjustment clause has not already been eliminated, to
eliminate its fuel adjustment clause in accordance with
subsection (b) of Section 9-220 for a period of time equal to
the length of any such power purchase agreement or successor
agreement, or until January 1, 2005, whichever is longer; if
the capacity of the generating plant so transferred and
related power purchase agreement does not result in the
elimination of the fuel adjustment clause under this
subsection, and the fuel adjustment clause has not already
been eliminated, the electric utility shall agree that the
costs associated with the transferred plant that are included
in the calculation of the rate per kilowatt-hour to be applied
pursuant to the electric utility's fuel adjustment clause
during such period shall not exceed the per kilowatt-hour cost
associated with such generating plant included in the electric
utility's fuel adjustment clause during the full calendar year
preceding the transfer, with such limit to be adjusted each
year thereafter by the Gross Domestic Product Implicit Price
Deflator.
(vi) In addition, if the electric utility proposes to
sell, assign, or lease, (A) either (1) an amount of generating
plant that brings the amount of net dependable generating
capacity transferred pursuant to this subsection to an amount
equal to or greater than 15% of its net dependable capacity on
the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997, or (2) one
or more generating plants with a total net dependable capacity
of 1100 megawatts, or (B) transmission and distribution
facilities that either (1) bring the amount of transmission
and distribution facilities transferred pursuant to this
subsection to an amount equal to or greater than 15% of the
electric utility's total depreciated original cost investment
in such facilities, or (2) represent an investment of
$25,000,000 in terms of total depreciated original cost, the
electric utility shall provide, in addition to the information
listed in subparagraphs (i) through (v), the following
information: (A) a description of how the electric utility
will meet its service obligations under this Act in a safe and
reliable manner and (B) the electric utility's projected
earned rate of return on common equity, calculated in
accordance with subsection (d) of this Section, for each year
from the date of the notice through December 31, 2006 2004
both with and without the proposed transaction. If the
Commission has not issued an order initiating a hearing on the
proposed transaction within 30 days after the date the
electric utility's notice is filed, the transaction shall be
deemed approved. The Commission may, after notice and
hearing, prohibit the proposed transaction if it makes either
or both of the following findings: (1) that the proposed
transaction will render the electric utility unable to provide
29 [May 2, 2002]
its tariffed services in a safe and reliable manner, or (2)
that there is a strong likelihood that consummation of the
proposed transaction will result in the electric utility being
entitled to request an increase in its base rates during the
mandatory transition period pursuant to subsection (d) of this
Section. Any hearing initiated by the Commission into the
proposed transaction shall be completed, and the Commission's
final order approving or prohibiting the proposed transaction
shall be entered, within 90 days after the date the electric
utility's notice was filed. Provided, however, that a sale,
assignment, or lease of transmission facilities to an
independent system operator that meets the requirements of
Section 16-126 shall not be subject to Commission approval
under this Section.
In any proceeding conducted by the Commission pursuant to
this subparagraph (vi), intervention shall be limited to
parties with a direct interest in the transaction which is the
subject of the hearing and any statutory consumer protection
agency as defined in subsection (d) of Section 9-102.1.
Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 10-113 of this Act,
any application seeking rehearing of an order issued under
this subparagraph (vi), whether filed by the electric utility
or by an intervening party, shall be filed within 10 days
after service of the order.
The Commission shall not in any subsequent proceeding or otherwise,
review such a reorganization or other transaction authorized by this
Section, but shall retain the authority to allocate costs as stated in
Section 16-111(i). An entity to which an electric utility sells,
assigns, leases or transfers assets pursuant to this subsection (g)
shall not, as a result of the transactions specified in this subsection
(g), be deemed a public utility as defined in Section 3-105. Nothing
in this subsection (g) shall change any requirement under the
jurisdiction of the Illinois Department of Nuclear Safety including,
but not limited to, the payment of fees. Nothing in this subsection (g)
shall exempt a utility from obtaining a certificate pursuant to Section
8-406 of this Act for the construction of a new electric generating
facility. Nothing in this subsection (g) is intended to exempt the
transactions hereunder from the operation of the federal or State
antitrust laws. Nothing in this subsection (g) shall require an
electric utility to use the procedures specified in this subsection for
any of the transactions specified herein. Any other procedure
available under this Act may, at the electric utility's election, be
used for any such transaction.
(h) During the mandatory transition period, the Commission shall
not establish or use any rates of depreciation, which for purposes of
this subsection shall include amortization, for any electric utility
other than those established pursuant to subsection (c) of Section
5-104 of this Act or utilized pursuant to subsection (g) of this
Section. Provided, however, that in any proceeding to review an
electric utility's rates for tariffed services pursuant to Section
9-201, 9-202, 9-250 or 16-111(d) of this Act, the Commission may
establish new rates of depreciation for the electric utility in the
same manner provided in subsection (d) of Section 5-104 of this Act. An
electric utility implementing an accelerated cost recovery method
including accelerated depreciation, accelerated amortization or other
capital recovery methods, or recording reductions to the original cost
of its assets, pursuant to subsection (g) of this Section, shall file a
statement with the Commission describing the accelerated cost recovery
method to be implemented or the reduction in the original cost of its
assets to be recorded. Upon the filing of such statement, the
accelerated cost recovery method or the reduction in the original cost
of assets shall be deemed to be approved by the Commission as though an
order had been entered by the Commission.
(i) Subsequent to the mandatory transition period, the Commission,
in any proceeding to establish rates and charges for tariffed services
offered by an electric utility, shall consider only (1) the then
[May 2, 2002] 30
current or projected revenues, costs, investments and cost of capital
directly or indirectly associated with the provision of such tariffed
services; (2) collection of transition charges in accordance with
Sections 16-102 and 16-108 of this Act; (3) recovery of any employee
transition costs as described in Section 16-128 which the electric
utility is continuing to incur, including recovery of any unamortized
portion of such costs previously incurred or committed, with such costs
to be equitably allocated among bundled services, delivery services,
and contracts with alternative retail electric suppliers; and (4)
recovery of the costs associated with the electric utility's compliance
with decommissioning funding requirements; and shall not consider any
other revenues, costs, investments or cost of capital of either the
electric utility or of any affiliate of the electric utility that are
not associated with the provision of tariffed services. In setting
rates for tariffed services, the Commission shall equitably allocate
joint and common costs and investments between the electric utility's
competitive and tariffed services. In determining the justness and
reasonableness of the electric power and energy component of an
electric utility's rates for tariffed services subsequent to the
mandatory transition period and prior to the time that the provision of
such electric power and energy is declared competitive, the Commission
shall consider the extent to which the electric utility's tariffed
rates for such component for each customer class exceed the market
value determined pursuant to Section 16-112, and, if the electric power
and energy component of such tariffed rate exceeds the market value by
more than 10% for any customer class, may establish such electric power
and energy component at a rate equal to the market value plus 10%. In
any such case, the Commission may also elect to extend the provisions
of Section 16-111(e) for any period in which the electric utility is
collecting transition charges, using information applicable to such
period.
(j) During the mandatory transition period, an electric utility
may elect to transfer to a non-operating income account under the
Commission's Uniform System of Accounts either or both of (i) an amount
of unamortized investment tax credit that is in addition to the ratable
amount which is credited to the electric utility's operating income
account for the year in accordance with Section 46(f)(2) of the federal
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as in effect prior to P.L. 101-508, or
(ii) "excess tax reserves", as that term is defined in Section
203(e)(2)(A) of the federal Tax Reform Act of 1986, provided that (A)
the amount transferred may not exceed the amount of the electric
utility's assets that were created pursuant to Statement of Financial
Accounting Standards No. 71 which the electric utility has written off
during the mandatory transition period, and (B) the transfer shall not
be effective until approved by the Internal Revenue Service. An
electric utility electing to make such a transfer shall file a
statement with the Commission stating the amount and timing of the
transfer for which it intends to request approval of the Internal
Revenue Service, along with a copy of its proposed request to the
Internal Revenue Service for a ruling. The Commission shall issue an
order within 14 days after the electric utility's filing approving,
subject to receipt of approval from the Internal Revenue Service, the
proposed transfer.
(k) If an electric utility is selling or transferring to a single
buyer 5 or more generating plants located in this State with a total
net dependable capacity of 5000 megawatts or more pursuant to
subsection (g) of this Section and has obtained a sale price or
consideration that exceeds 200% of the book value of such plants, the
electric utility must provide to the Governor, the President of the
Illinois Senate, the Minority Leader of the Illinois Senate, the
Speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives, and the Minority
Leader of the Illinois House of Representatives no later than 15 days
after filing its notice under subsection (g) of this Section or 5 days
after the date on which this subsection (k) becomes law, whichever is
later, a written commitment in which such electric utility agrees to
expend $2 billion outside the corporate limits of any municipality with
31 [May 2, 2002]
1,000,000 or more inhabitants within such electric utility's service
area, over a 6-year period beginning with the calendar year in which
the notice is filed, on projects, programs, and improvements within its
service area relating to transmission and distribution including,
without limitation, infrastructure expansion, repair and replacement,
capital investments, operations and maintenance, and vegetation
management.
(Source: P.A. 90-561, eff. 12-16-97; 90-563, eff. 12-16-97; 91-50, eff.
6-30-99.)
(220 ILCS 5/16-111.3 new)
Sec. 16-111.3. Transition period earnings calculations. At such
time as the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System ceases to
include the monthly average yields of 30-year U.S. Treasury bonds in
its weekly H.15 Statistical Release or successor publication, the
Monthly Treasury Long-Term Average Rates (25 years and above) published
by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System in its weekly
H.15 Statistical Release or successor publication shall instead be used
to establish a rate for the purpose of calculating the Index defined in
subsection (e) of Section 16-111 of this Act, and at such time, such
Monthly Treasury Long-Term Average Rates (25 years and above) shall
also be used in place of the monthly average yields of 30-year U.S.
Treasury bonds in the rate of return calculation required by subsection
(d) of Section 16-111. An electric utility shall also remove the
effects, if any, of any impairment due to the application of Statement
of Financial Accounting Standards No. 142, which was issued in June
2001, when making the calculations required by this Section or by
subsections (d) and (e) of Section 16-111.
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. 5
was adopted and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the order of
Third Reading.
SENATE BILLS ON THIRD READING
The following bill and any amendments adopted thereto was printed
and laid upon the Members' desks. Any amendments pending were tabled
pursuant to Rule 40(a).
On motion of Representative Novak, SENATE BILL 2081 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; 2, Nays; 1, Answering Present.
(ROLL CALL 2)
This bill, as amended, 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
in the House amendment/s adopted.
SENATE BILLS ON SECOND READING
SENATE BILL 1982. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
The following amendment was offered in the Committee on State
Government Administration, adopted and printed:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO SENATE BILL 1982
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend Senate Bill 1982 by replacing everything
[May 2, 2002] 32
after the enacting clause with the following:
"Section 5. The Unified Code of Corrections is amended by changing
Sections 3-4-3 and 3-7-2a as follows:
(730 ILCS 5/3-4-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-4-3)
Sec. 3-4-3. Funds and Property of Persons Committed.
(a) The Department shall establish accounting records with
accounts for each person who has or receives money while in an
institution or facility of the Department and it shall allow the
withdrawal and disbursement of money by the person under rules and
regulations of the Department. Any interest or other income from moneys
deposited with the Department by a resident of the Juvenile Division
in excess of $200 shall accrue to the individual's account, or in
balances up to $200 shall accrue to the Residents' Benefit Fund. For
an individual in an institution or facility of the Adult Division the
interest shall accrue to the Residents' Benefit Fund. The Department
shall disburse all moneys so held no later than the person's final
discharge from the Department. Moneys in the account of a committed
person who files a lawsuit determined frivolous under Article XXII of
the Code of Civil Procedure shall be deducted to pay for the filing
fees and cost of the suit as provided in that Article. The Department
shall under rules and regulations record and receipt all personal
property not allowed to committed persons. The Department shall return
such property to the individual no later than the person's release on
parole.
(b) Any money held in accounts of committed persons separated from
the Department by death, discharge, or unauthorized absence and
unclaimed for a period of 1 year thereafter by the person or his legal
representative shall be transmitted to the State Treasurer who shall
deposit it into the General Revenue Fund. Articles of personal property
of persons so separated may be sold or used by the Department if
unclaimed for a period of 1 year for the same purpose. Clothing, if
unclaimed within 30 days, may be used or disposed of as determined by
the Department.
(c) Ten percent of the profits on sales from commissary stores
shall be expended by the Department for the special benefit of
committed persons which shall include but not be limited to the
advancement of inmate payrolls, for the special benefit of employees,
and for the advancement or reimbursement of employee travel, provided
that amounts expended for employees shall not exceed the amount of
profits derived from sales made to employees by such commissaries, as
determined by the Department. The remainder of the profits from sales
from commissary stores must be used to pay for wages and benefits of
employees covered under a collective bargaining agreement who are
employed at commissary facilities of the Department.
(d) The Department shall confiscate any unauthorized currency
found in the possession of a committed person. The Department shall
transmit the confiscated currency to the State Treasurer who shall
deposit it into the General Revenue Fund.
(Source: P.A. 89-689, eff. 12-31-96; 90-505, eff. 8-19-97.)
(730 ILCS 5/3-7-2a) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-7-2a)
Sec. 3-7-2a. If a facility maintains a commissary or commissaries,
the selling prices for all goods shall be sufficient to cover the costs
of the goods and an additional charge of up to 35% for tobacco products
and up to 25% for non-tobacco products. The amount of the additional
charges for goods sold at commissaries shall be based upon the amount
necessary to pay for the wages and benefits of commissary employees who
are employed in commissary facilities of the Department. The
Department shall determine the additional charges upon any changes in
wages and benefits of commissary employees as negotiated in the
collective bargaining agreement from 3% through 10%. A compliance
audit of all commissaries and the distribution of commissary funds
shall be included in the regular compliance audit of the Department
conducted by the Auditor General in accordance with the Illinois State
Auditing Act.
Items purchased for sale at any such commissary shall be purchased,
wherever possible, at wholesale costs.
33 [May 2, 2002]
(Source: P.A. 82-652.)".
Floor Amendment No. 2 remained in the Committee on Rules.
Representative Reitz offered the following amendment and moved its
adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 3 TO SENATE BILL 1982
AMENDMENT NO. 3. Amend Senate Bill 1982, AS AMENDED, with
reference to the page and line numbers of House Amendment No. 1, on
page 2, line 17, by changing "Ten" to "Forty"; and
on page 2, line 26, by inserting "first" after "used"; and
on page 2, line 29, by inserting after "Department" the following:
"and then to pay the costs of dietary staff".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendments
numbered 1 and 3 were adopted and the bill, as amended, was advanced to
the order of Third Reading.
SENATE BILL 2235. Having been printed, was taken up and read by
title a second time.
The following amendments were offered in the Committee on
Environment & Energy, adopted and printed:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO SENATE BILL 2235
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend Senate Bill 2235 on page 3, line 16 by
changing "17" to "20"; and
on page 4, line 15 by deleting "and"; and
on page 4, line 17 by changing "." to "; and"; and
on page 4, by inserting after line 17 the following:
"(14) three members designated by the Mayor of the City of
Chicago.".
AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO SENATE BILL 2235
AMENDMENT NO. 2. Amend Senate Bill 2235 on page 1, line 15, by
changing "have access to receive" to "receive"; and
on page 2, lines 4 and 5, by changing "assist ensure that citizens to
obtain have" to "ensure that citizens have"; and
on page 2, line 21, by changing "promote ensure" to "ensure"; and
by deleting lines 33 and 34 on page 16 and lines 1 and 2 on page 17.
Representative Morrow offered the following amendment and moved its
adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 3 TO SENATE BILL 2235
AMENDMENT NO. 3. Amend Senate Bill 2235, AS AMENDED, in Section 5,
Sec. 13, by inserting after the second paragraph of subsection (k) the
following:
"This Section is repealed effective December 31, 2007 unless
renewed by action of the General Assembly. The General Assembly shall
consider the results of the evaluations described in Section 8 in its
deliberations.".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
[May 2, 2002] 34
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendments
numbered 1, 2 and 3 were adopted and the bill, as amended, was advanced
to the order of Third Reading.
Having been printed, the following bill was taken up, read by title
a second time and advanced to the order of Third Reading: SENATE BILL
2241.
SENATE BILL 1666. Having been read by title a second time on April
30, 2002, and held on the order of Second Reading, the same was again
taken up.
Representative Biggins offered the following amendment and moved
its adoption:
AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO SENATE BILL 1666
AMENDMENT NO. 1. Amend Senate Bill 1666 on page 2, line 18, by
replacing "Annual" with "An".
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted and ordered
printed.
There being no further amendments, the foregoing Amendment No. 1
was adopted and the bill, as amended, was advanced to the order of
Third Reading.
SENATE BILLS ON THIRD READING
The following bills and any amendments adopted thereto were printed
and laid upon the Members' desks. Any amendments pending were tabled
pursuant to Rule 40(a).
On motion of Representative Garrett, SENATE BILL 2160 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:
84, Yeas; 30, Nays; 1, 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.
DISTRIBUTION OF SUPPLEMENTAL CALENDAR
Supplemental Calendar No. 1 was distributed to the Members at 12:30
o'clock p.m.
RESOLUTIONS
Having been reported out of the Committee on Rules earlier today,
HOUSE RESOLUTION 772 was taken up for consideration.
Representative Garrett moved the adoption of the resolution.
The motion prevailed and the Resolution was adopted.
HOUSE RESOLUTIONS 847, 848, 851, 853, 855, 858, 859, 860, 861 and
864 were taken up for consideration.
Representative Currie moved the adoption of the resolutions.
The motion prevailed and the Resolutions were adopted.
At the hour of 12:40 o'clock p.m., Representative Currie moved that
the House do now adjourn.
35 [May 2, 2002]
The motion prevailed.
And in accordance therewith and pursuant to HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION
74, the House stood adjourned until Tuesday, May 7, 2002, at 1:00
o'clock p.m.
[May 2, 2002] 36
NO. 1
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
QUORUM ROLL CALL FOR ATTENDANCE
MAY 02, 2002
0 YEAS 0 NAYS 115 PRESENT
P ACEVEDO P ERWIN P LAWFER P PARKE
P BASSI P FEIGENHOLTZ P LEITCH P POE
P BEAUBIEN P FLOWERS P LINDNER P REITZ
P BELLOCK P FORBY P LYONS,EILEEN P RIGHTER
P BERNS P FOWLER P LYONS,JOSEPH P RUTHERFORD
P BIGGINS P FRANKS P MARQUARDT P RYAN
P BLACK P FRITCHEY P MATHIAS P SAVIANO
P BOLAND P GARRETT P MAUTINO P SCHMITZ
P BOST P GILES P MAY P SCHOENBERG
P BRADLEY P GRANBERG P McAULIFFE P SCULLY
P BRADY P HAMOS P McCARTHY P SIMPSON
P BROSNAHAN P HANNIG P McGUIRE P SLONE
P BRUNSVOLD P HARTKE P McKEON P SMITH
P BUGIELSKI P HASSERT P MENDOZA P SOMMER
P BURKE P HOEFT P MEYER P SOTO
P CAPPARELLI P HOFFMAN P MILLER P STEPHENS
P COLLINS P HOLBROOK P MITCHELL,BILL P TENHOUSE
P COLVIN P HOWARD P MITCHELL,JERRY P TURNER
P COULSON P HULTGREN P MOFFITT P WAIT
P COWLISHAW P JEFFERSON P MORROW P WATSON
P CROSS P JOHNSON P MULLIGAN P WINKEL
P CROTTY P JONES,JOHN E MURPHY P WINTERS
P CURRIE P JONES,LOU P MYERS P WIRSING
P CURRY P JONES,SHIRLEY P NOVAK P WOJCIK
P DANIELS P KENNER E O'BRIEN P WRIGHT
P DART P KLINGLER P O'CONNOR P YARBROUGH
E DAVIS,MONIQUE P KOSEL P OSMOND P YOUNGE
P DAVIS,STEVE P KRAUSE P OSTERMAN P ZICKUS
P DELGADO P KURTZ P PANKAU P MR. SPEAKER
P DURKIN P LANG
E - Denotes Excused Absence
37 [May 2, 2002]
NO. 2
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
SENATE BILL 2081
UTIL RATE INDEX TREASURY BOND
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAY 02, 2002
112 YEAS 2 NAYS 1 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y ERWIN Y LAWFER Y PARKE
Y BASSI Y FEIGENHOLTZ N LEITCH Y POE
Y BEAUBIEN Y FLOWERS Y LINDNER Y REITZ
Y BELLOCK Y FORBY Y LYONS,EILEEN Y RIGHTER
Y BERNS Y FOWLER Y LYONS,JOSEPH Y RUTHERFORD
Y BIGGINS Y FRANKS Y MARQUARDT Y RYAN
Y BLACK Y FRITCHEY Y MATHIAS Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND Y GARRETT Y MAUTINO Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GILES Y MAY Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y GRANBERG Y McAULIFFE Y SCULLY
Y BRADY Y HAMOS Y McCARTHY Y SIMPSON
Y BROSNAHAN Y HANNIG Y McGUIRE Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD Y HARTKE Y McKEON Y SMITH
Y BUGIELSKI Y HASSERT Y MENDOZA Y SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOEFT Y MEYER Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOFFMAN Y MILLER Y STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOLBROOK Y MITCHELL,BILL Y TENHOUSE
Y COLVIN Y HOWARD Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y TURNER
Y COULSON Y HULTGREN Y MOFFITT Y WAIT
Y COWLISHAW Y JEFFERSON Y MORROW Y WATSON
Y CROSS N JOHNSON Y MULLIGAN Y WINKEL
Y CROTTY Y JONES,JOHN E MURPHY Y WINTERS
Y CURRIE Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS Y WIRSING
Y CURRY Y JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK Y WOJCIK
P DANIELS Y KENNER E O'BRIEN Y WRIGHT
Y DART Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y YARBROUGH
E DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KOSEL Y OSMOND Y YOUNGE
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN Y ZICKUS
Y DELGADO Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y MR. SPEAKER
Y DURKIN Y LANG
E - Denotes Excused Absence
[May 2, 2002] 38
NO. 3
STATE OF ILLINOIS
NINETY-SECOND
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE ROLL CALL
SENATE BILL 2160
CONSUMER FRAUD-MAIL-DISCLOSURE
THIRD READING
PASSED
MAY 02, 2002
84 YEAS 30 NAYS 1 PRESENT
Y ACEVEDO Y ERWIN N LAWFER Y PARKE
Y BASSI Y FEIGENHOLTZ N LEITCH N POE
Y BEAUBIEN Y FLOWERS Y LINDNER Y REITZ
N BELLOCK Y FORBY N LYONS,EILEEN N RIGHTER
Y BERNS Y FOWLER Y LYONS,JOSEPH N RUTHERFORD
Y BIGGINS Y FRANKS N MARQUARDT N RYAN
N BLACK P FRITCHEY Y MATHIAS Y SAVIANO
Y BOLAND Y GARRETT Y MAUTINO Y SCHMITZ
Y BOST Y GILES Y MAY Y SCHOENBERG
Y BRADLEY Y GRANBERG Y McAULIFFE N SCULLY
Y BRADY Y HAMOS N McCARTHY N SIMPSON
Y BROSNAHAN Y HANNIG Y McGUIRE Y SLONE
Y BRUNSVOLD N HARTKE Y McKEON Y SMITH
Y BUGIELSKI N HASSERT Y MENDOZA N SOMMER
Y BURKE Y HOEFT Y MEYER Y SOTO
Y CAPPARELLI Y HOFFMAN Y MILLER N STEPHENS
Y COLLINS Y HOLBROOK Y MITCHELL,BILL N TENHOUSE
Y COLVIN Y HOWARD Y MITCHELL,JERRY Y TURNER
Y COULSON N HULTGREN Y MOFFITT N WAIT
N COWLISHAW Y JEFFERSON Y MORROW Y WATSON
N CROSS N JOHNSON Y MULLIGAN Y WINKEL
Y CROTTY Y JONES,JOHN E MURPHY N WINTERS
Y CURRIE Y JONES,LOU Y MYERS N WIRSING
Y CURRY Y JONES,SHIRLEY Y NOVAK N WOJCIK
N DANIELS Y KENNER E O'BRIEN N WRIGHT
Y DART Y KLINGLER Y O'CONNOR Y YARBROUGH
E DAVIS,MONIQUE Y KOSEL N OSMOND Y YOUNGE
Y DAVIS,STEVE Y KRAUSE Y OSTERMAN N ZICKUS
Y DELGADO Y KURTZ Y PANKAU Y MR. SPEAKER
Y DURKIN Y LANG
E - Denotes Excused Absence
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