(205 ILCS 610/2) (from Ch. 17, par. 1002)
Sec. 2. Power of Commissioner. (a) Whenever the Commissioner is notified by any officer of a bank or by any
other means becomes aware that an
emergency exists, or is impending, he may, by proclamation, authorize all banks in the State
of Illinois to close or alter the hours at any or all of their offices, or if only a
bank or banks, or offices thereof, in a particular
area or areas of the State of Illinois are affected by the emergency or
impending
emergency, the Commissioner may authorize only the affected bank, banks, or
offices thereof, to close. The office or offices so closed may remain closed
until
the Commissioner declares, by further proclamation, that the emergency or
impending emergency has ended, or until an earlier time when the officers of the bank determine that the office or offices so closed should reopen, and, in either event, for the further amount of time reasonably necessary to reopen. The
Commissioner during an emergency or while an impending emergency exists,
which affects, or may affect, a particular bank or banks, or a particular
office or offices thereof, but not banks located in the area generally of
the said county or municipality, may authorize the particular bank or
banks, or office or offices so affected, to close. The office or offices so
closed shall remain closed until the Commissioner is notified by a bank
officer of the closed bank that the emergency has ended, or until an earlier time when the officers of the bank determine that the office or offices so closed should reopen, and, in either event, for the further amount of time reasonably necessary to reopen.
(b) Whenever the Secretary becomes aware that an emergency exists, or is impending, he or she may, by proclamation, waive any requirements to the notices, applications, or reports required to be filed and authorize any bank organized under the laws of this State, of another state, or of the United States, to open and operate offices in this State, notwithstanding any other laws of this State to the contrary. Any office or offices opened in accordance with this subsection may remain open until the Commissioner declares, by further proclamation, that the emergency or impending emergency has ended. The Department of Financial and Professional Regulation may adopt rules to implement this subsection (b).
(c) When the officers of a bank are of the opinion that an emergency exists, or is impending, which affects or may affect the bank's offices, they shall have the authority, in the reasonable exercise of their discretion, to determine not to open any of the bank's offices on any day or, if having opened, to close an office during the continuation of the emergency, even if the Commissioner does not issue a proclamation. The office closed shall remain closed until the time that the officers determine the emergency has ended, and for the further amount of time reasonably necessary to reopen. No bank office shall remain closed for more than 48 consecutive hours, excluding legal holidays and other days on which the bank is permitted to remain closed under the Promissory Note and Bank Holiday Act, without the prior approval of the Commissioner. (Source: P.A. 102-553, eff. 1-1-22 .)
|
(205 ILCS 610/5)
Sec. 5.
Year 2000 Consumer Protections.
(a) For the purposes of this Section:
(1) the term "Illinois financial institution" means:
(A) a State bank, a national bank, or an |
| out-of-state bank, as those terms are defined in the Illinois Banking Act, or any subsidiary of a State bank, a national bank, or an out-of-state bank;
|
|
(B) a foreign banking corporation, as that term
|
| is defined in the Foreign Banking Office Act, or any subsidiary of a foreign banking corporation;
|
|
(C) a corporate fiduciary, as that term is
|
| defined in the Corporate Fiduciary Act, or any subsidiary of a corporate fiduciary;
|
|
(D) a savings bank organized under the Savings
|
| Bank Act, an out-of-state savings bank chartered under the laws of a state other than Illinois, a territory of the United States, or the District of Columbia, or a federal savings bank organized under federal law, or any subsidiary of a savings bank, an out-of-state savings bank, or a federal savings bank;
|
|
(E) an association or federal association, as
|
| those terms are defined in the Illinois Savings and Loan Act of 1985, or any subsidiary of an association or federal association;
|
|
(F) an out-of-state savings and loan association
|
| chartered under the laws of a state other than Illinois, a territory of the United States or the District of Columbia, or a federal savings and loan association organized under federal law whose principal business office is located outside of Illinois, or any subsidiary of an out-of-state savings and loan association or federal savings and loan association whose principal business office is located outside of Illinois;
|
|
(G) a credit union, as defined in the Illinois
|
| Credit Union Act, or any subsidiary of a credit union; or
|
|
(H) a network owned by one or more financial
|
| institutions, as those terms are defined in the Electronic Fund Transfer Act.
|
|
(2) the term "consumer" means an individual person;
|
|
(3) the term "Year 2000 failure" means any failure by
|
| any device or system (including, without limitation, any computer system and any microchip or integrated circuit embedded in another device or product), or any software, firmware, or other set or collection of processing instructions, however constructed, in processing, calculating, comparing, sequencing, displaying, storing, transmitting, or receiving date-related data during the years 1999 and 2000 or from, into, or between the twentieth century and the twenty-first century, or the failure to recognize or accurately process any specific date, or the failure to accurately account for the status of the year 2000 as a leap year.
|
|
(b) A financial institution shall stay an action for the collection of a
debt from a
consumer for 30 days if the consumer's default, failure to pay, breach,
omission, or other
violation of the agreement that is the basis of the collection action was
caused by a Year
2000 failure on the part of any person, provided the consumer notifies the
financial
institution in writing of his or her inability to meet the debt obligation
within 30 days of
discovering the inability to meet the obligation due to the Year 2000 failure,
and the notice
sets forth:
(1) the identity of the person experiencing the Year
|
|
(2) the reason such person's Year 2000 failure caused
|
| the consumer's inability to meet the obligation; and
|
|
(3) the name and telephone number of a representative
|
| of the person experiencing the Year 2000 failure who the financial institution may call for purposes of verification.
|
|
This subsection shall not be applied more than once in connection with the
same
debt of
a consumer, nor shall it otherwise affect the consumer's underlying debt
obligation, the
accrual of any interest on the debt obligation, or the calculation of any
period of
delinquency for the debt obligation.
(c) A financial institution shall not charge a late fee on a consumer debt
obligation,
or if already charged shall waive such late fee, if the consumer's failure to
timely pay under
the agreement that provides the basis for the late fee was caused by a Year
2000 failure on
the part of any person, provided the consumer notifies the financial
institution in writing of
his or her inability to make timely payment within 30 days of discovering the
inability to
make timely payment due to the Year 2000 failure, and the notice sets forth:
(1) the identity of the person experiencing the Year
|
|
(2) the reason such person's Year 2000 failure caused
|
| the consumer's inability to make timely payment; and
|
|
(3) the name and telephone number of a representative
|
| of the person experiencing the Year 2000 failure who the financial institution may call for purposes of verification.
|
|
This subsection shall not be applied more than once in connection with the
same
debt of
a consumer, nor shall it otherwise affect the consumer's underlying debt
obligation, the
accrual of any interest on the debt obligation, or the calculation of any
period of
delinquency for the debt obligation.
(d) A consumer may dispute directly with a credit reporting agency operating
in this
State any negative credit information reported in connection with the consumer
resulting
from a Year 2000 failure on the part of any person other than the consumer. If
requested
by the consumer pursuant to this subsection, the credit reporting agency shall
include a
statement prepared by the consumer of no more than 100 words in the consumer's
file
explaining the negative credit information relating to such Year 2000 failure,
and the credit
reporting agency shall include the individual's statement in any report it
provides to any
person or entity regarding the consumer. The credit reporting agency shall not
charge the
consumer a fee for the inclusion of this statement in the consumer's credit
file.
(Source: P.A. 91-645, eff. 8-20-99.)
|