State of Illinois
91st General Assembly
Legislation

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91_SB0786eng

 
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 1        AN ACT promoting micro-enterprise and self-employment  in
 2    Illinois.

 3        Be  it  enacted  by  the People of the State of Illinois,
 4    represented in the General Assembly:

 5        Section 1. Short title. This Act  may  be  cited  as  the
 6    Micro-Enterprise and Self-Employment Assistance Act.

 7        Section 5. Definitions. In this Act:
 8        "Department"  means  the  Illinois Department of Commerce
 9    and Community Affairs.
10        "Micro-enterprise" means a new  or  existing  very  small
11    business  entity  or self-employed individual with 5 or fewer
12    employees whose capital needs  are  too  small  generally  to
13    obtain  business  credit  from regulated commercial financial
14    institutions.
15        "Microcredit" means the  practice  of  lending  money  or
16    extending    other    forms    of    business    credit    to
17    micro-enterprises.
18        "Small non-bank lender" or "SNBL" means an entity that is
19    not  regulated  by  the  Office of Banks and Real Estate, the
20    Department of Financial Institutions, or any  agency  of  the
21    United  States  government,  and that is primarily engaged in
22    providing microcredit to micro-enterprises.

23        Section 10. Legislative findings.
24        (a)  Micro-enterprise is  important  to  the  economy  of
25    Illinois.   Very  small  businesses  provide  livelihoods  to
26    thousands of people in this State  and  produce  and  provide
27    essential  goods  and  services.  Most  micro-enterprises are
28    businesses operated by a  single  self-employed  person  with
29    few,  if  any,  additional  employees.  Self-employed persons
30    comprise more than 8% of the total workforce in Illinois.
 
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 1        (b)  Micro-enterprise is an important component  of  this
 2    State's  welfare-to-work  policy.   Micro-enterprise provides
 3    individuals with opportunities for economic  self-sufficiency
 4    and  self-respect.   Owning  and  operating  one's  own small
 5    business should be a viable alternative  to  welfare  and  to
 6    traditional wage-labor employment. It is in the best interest
 7    of  this State and its economy that individuals be encouraged
 8    to form and operate their own small businesses.
 9        (c)  Lack of access to capital is a  serious  barrier  to
10    starting  and  successfully  operating a very small business.
11    Traditional financial institutions cannot profitably  provide
12    business credit to micro-enterprises.  The high relative cost
13    of  making  and  servicing  loans  to  very  small businesses
14    discourages commercial banks from making those loans. Minimum
15    loan size requirements deprive micro-enterprises of access to
16    traditional sources of business  loans  and  have  created  a
17    credit   gap  for  very  small  businesses.   Trends  in  the
18    financial services industry may exacerbate  this  problem  by
19    causing  commercial  banks  to  concentrate  on  larger, more
20    profitable loans.
21        (d)  Many prospective micro-entrepreneurs lack the  basic
22    business  knowledge  and  experience  necessary  to  own  and
23    operate   a  successful  small  business  venture.  Providing
24    adequate business education, training and counseling services
25    to micro-enterprises can substantially increase their chances
26    of success.  It is in the best  interests  of  Illinois  that
27    Illinois micro-entrepreneurs have access to adequate business
28    training  programs,  counseling  services, and other forms of
29    technical assistance.
30        (e)  Small non-bank lenders provide the principal  source
31    of  microcredit  for  many micro-enterprises.  Various public
32    and private entities have formed SNBL's to  fill  the  credit
33    gap  that  exists  for  very  small  businesses  in Illinois.
34    Micro-loans  provided  by   SNBL's   are   often   the   only
 
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 1    institutional     source     of    capital    available    to
 2    micro-enterprises.    Coordinating    technical    assistance
 3    programs for micro-enterprises with credit provided by SNBL's
 4    can  significantly  increase the success rates of microcredit
 5    loans.   Assisting   technical   assistance   providers   and
 6    encouraging good microcredit practices by SNBL's are  in  the
 7    public interest.
 8        (f)  It  is  in  the best interests of this State and the
 9    micro-enterprises  operating  in  this  State  that  programs
10    assisting  self-employed  persons  and  small  businesses  be
11    well-publicized, coordinated, and accessible to all  eligible
12    micro-enterprises.    This  State  and  its  units  of  local
13    government  sponsor  many  programs  intended  primarily   to
14    benefit  small  business.   These  programs  include training
15    programs,  business  counseling  services,   loan   programs,
16    specialized     grants,     tax    incentives,    procurement
17    opportunities, and other small business assistance  services.
18    Many  of  these programs also benefit SNBL's by enhancing the
19    credit  and  business  opportunities  of   micro-enterprises.
20    Modem  communications technology, including the Internet, can
21    increase  the  effectiveness  and   availability   of   these
22    programs.

23        Section  15.  Micro-Enterprise  Council. There is created
24    within  the  Department   the   Micro-Enterprise   Assistance
25    Council.   The  Council shall consist of 11 members.   One of
26    the members shall be the Director of the Department or his or
27    her  designee,  one  shall  be  the  Director  of   Financial
28    Institutions  or  his  or  her designee, and one shall be the
29    Secretary of Human Services or his or  her  designee.   Three
30    members  shall be appointed by the Governor. Of the remaining
31    4 members, one shall be appointed by  the  President  of  the
32    Senate,  one by the Minority Leader of the Senate, one by the
33    Speaker of the House  of  Representatives,  and  one  by  the
 
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 1    Minority  Leader  of the House of Representatives.  Appointed
 2    members   shall   be   uniquely   qualified   by   education,
 3    professional  knowledge,  or  experience  to  serve  on   the
 4    Council.    Appointed  members  shall  include  operators  of
 5    micro-enterprises,  representatives  of   SNBL's,   financial
 6    institutions,   technical  assistance  providers,  and  other
 7    individuals   who   have    been    active    in    assisting
 8    micro-enterprises   and   SNBL's.   Appointed  members  shall
 9    reflect the geographic, cultural,  and  ethnic  diversity  of
10    this State.
11        Of  the  initial  appointments, members shall be randomly
12    assigned to staggered terms; 4 members shall be appointed for
13    a term of 3 years, 4 members shall be appointed for a term of
14    2 years, and 3 members shall be appointed for a term  of  one
15    year.  Upon the expiration of each member's term, a successor
16    shall be appointed for a term of 3 years. In the  case  of  a
17    vacancy  in  the  office  of any member, a successor shall be
18    appointed for the remainder of  the  unexpired  term  by  the
19    person  designated as responsible for making the appointment.
20    No member shall serve more than 3 consecutive terms.  Members
21    shall serve without compensation but shall be reimbursed  for
22    expenses incurred in connection with the performance of their
23    duties as members.
24        One  of the members shall be designated as chairperson by
25    the  Governor.   If  the  Governor  does  not   appoint   the
26    chairperson  within  60 days after the effective date of this
27    Act, the Council shall convene and elect a chairperson  by  a
28    simple  majority  vote.  Upon  a  vacancy  in the position of
29    chairperson, the Governor shall have 30 days from the date of
30    the vacancy to appoint a new chairperson.   If  the  Governor
31    does  not  appoint  a  new  chairperson  within  30 days, the
32    Council shall convene and elect a new chairperson by a simple
33    majority vote.
34        The first meeting of the Council shall be held within  65
 
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 1    days  after  the  effective  date  of this Act.   The Council
 2    shall meet quarterly and may hold other meetings on the  call
 3    of  the  chairperson.    Meetings may be held in person or by
 4    conference telephone call. Six members constitute  a  quorum.
 5    The  Council may adopt rules it deems necessary to govern its
 6    procedures. The Department and the  Department  of  Financial
 7    Institutions  shall cooperate with the Council to fulfill the
 8    purposes of this Act  and  shall  provide  the  Council  with
 9    dedicated  staff and administrative support necessary for the
10    Council to perform its duties under this Act. The  Department
11    may  apply for grants from the public and private sectors and
12    is authorized to accept grants, gifts, and donations.

13        Section 20. Duties and responsibilities  of  the  Council
14    and the Department.
15        (a)  With  the  advice and assistance of the Council, the
16    Department shall promote micro-enterprise and self-employment
17    as  alternatives  to  welfare  and   traditional   wage-labor
18    employment throughout Illinois.
19        (b) The Council shall conduct hearings, as necessary, and
20    issue  an  annual report to the Department, the Governor, and
21    the General Assembly regarding the status of micro-enterprise
22    within Illinois.  In that regard, the  Council  shall  review
23    the following:
24             (1)  The number of micro-enterprises in Illinois and
25        their prospects for business success.
26             (2)  The   availability   of   technical  assistance
27        services  and   other   programs   and   incentives   for
28        micro-enterprise  in  Illinois, including entrepreneurial
29        training, legal services, business incubators,  insurance
30        and risk-sharing pools, and other business assistance.
31             (3)  The  availability and sources of microcredit in
32        Illinois.
33             (4)  Barriers to the  success  of  micro-enterprises
 
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 1        operating   in  Illinois  and  disincentives  to  persons
 2        seeking  self-employment  as  a  means   of   earning   a
 3        livelihood.
 4        (c)  The  Council  shall recommend to the Department, the
 5    Governor, and the General Assembly, on an annual  basis,  all
 6    of the following:
 7             (1)  New   initiatives   to   advocate  and  promote
 8        micro-enterprise and self-employment as  alternatives  to
 9        welfare and traditional wage-labor employment.
10             (2)  Programs  and incentives to coordinate and fund
11        more efficiently the technical support services  required
12        by  micro-enterprises  in  Illinois,  including  business
13        training,  small  business  incubators,  legal  services,
14        insurance  and  risk-sharing  pools,  communications, and
15        information technology.
16             (3)  Ways to assist  SNBL's  and  to  encourage  the
17        availability  of  microcredit to micro-enterprises and to
18        other small businesses that may have difficulty obtaining
19        business credit  as  a  consequence  of  changes  in  the
20        financial services industry.
21             (4)  Better   coordination  of  public  and  private
22        sector programs and  initiatives  intended  to  help  and
23        promote self-employment and very small businesses.
24             (5)  Changes  in  State and local laws and practices
25        that disproportionately burden micro-enterprises or  that
26        discourage    persons   from   seeking   self-employment,
27        including without limitation changes  in  welfare  rules,
28        licensing  and  permitting  requirements,  tax  laws, and
29        procurement practices.
30        (d)  The Department, with the advice  and  assistance  of
31    the  Council,  shall  solicit  and apply for grants, matching
32    funds, and other moneys from public and  private  sources  in
33    order to promote micro-enterprise and microcredit in Illinois
34    and to fund the Council's activities.
 
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 1        (e)  The  Council  shall  perform  the  other  duties and
 2    discharge the other responsibilities  conferred  upon  it  by
 3    this Act.
 4        (f)  The  Department  may  hold hearings, take testimony,
 5    and request information from State agencies.

 6        Section 25.  Interactive Micro-Enterprise Resource Guide.
 7    The  Department,  with  the  advice  and  assistance  of  the
 8    Council, shall create and maintain an Internet-based resource
 9    guide  for  Illinois  micro-enterprises,  small   businesses,
10    SNBL's,  financial  institutions,  and  technical  assistance
11    providers.   The guide shall provide an up-to-date listing of
12    all  programs,  counseling  services,  tax incentives, loans,
13    grants,  procurement  opportunities,  and  other   assistance
14    offered  by any agency of federal, State, or local government
15    that is targeted primarily to benefit  self-employed  persons
16    and  other  small business ventures located in any particular
17    location within Illinois. Every  State  agency  and  unit  of
18    local   government   shall  cooperate  with  the  Council  in
19    assembling, reporting, and updating, not less than  quarterly
20    in  a format specified by the Council, information concerning
21    all programs administered or  sponsored  by  that  agency  or
22    local  governmental unit. The Department, in cooperation with
23    the  Council,  shall  establish  reporting  regulations  that
24    minimize the burden of compliance on reporting entities.  The
25    Department  shall provide the necessary staff, administrative
26    support, and Internet access in order to create and  maintain
27    the guide. The Department may impose user fees on some or all
28    users  of the guide to the extent that the Department and the
29    Council believe that fees are advisable.

30        Section 30.  Illinois Microcredit Study. The  Department,
31    with  the  advice  and  assistance  of  the  Council  and the
32    Department  of   Financial   Institutions,   shall   conduct,
 
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 1    complete,  and  deliver  to  the  Governor  and  the  General
 2    Assembly  within  24  months  following the effective date of
 3    this Act a study of microcredit in Illinois. The study  shall
 4    include but not be limited to the following factors:
 5        (1)  Assessing  the  availability  of,  demand  for,  and
 6    potential  for  promoting business development of microcredit
 7    in Illinois.
 8        (2)  Investigating the effects of trends in the financial
 9    services industry on the ability of very small businesses  in
10    Illinois to access business credit.
11        (3)  Identifying  cost-effective  ways  of  promoting the
12    availability of microcredit in Illinois,  which  may  include
13    State-sponsored  loan programs, guarantees, secondary markets
14    for microcredit loans, and statewide coordination of existing
15    microcredit programs.
16        (4)  Identifying  successful  microcredit  practices  and
17    recommending guidelines for SNBL's  and  other  providers  of
18    microcredit   in   Illinois.   The  Department  of  Financial
19    Institutions shall provide the  Department  and  the  Council
20    with  necessary  staff and administrative support in order to
21    conduct, compile, and publish the study.

22        Section 95. Repeal. This Act  is  repealed  December  31,
23    2004.

24        Section  99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect upon
25    becoming law.

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