State of Illinois
92nd General Assembly
Legislation

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92_HB4580sam002

 










                                           LRB9213371EGfgam03

 1                    AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 4580

 2        AMENDMENT NO.     .  Amend House Bill 4580  by  replacing
 3    the title with the following:
 4        "AN ACT in relation to budget implementation."; and

 5    by  replacing  everything  after the enacting clause with the
 6    following:

 7        "Section 1.  Short title.  This Act may be cited  as  the
 8    FY2003 Budget Implementation Act.

 9        Section  5.  Purpose.   It  is the purpose of this Act to
10    make certain changes in State programs that are necessary  to
11    implement the State's FY2003 budget.

12        Section 10.  The Illinois Administrative Procedure Act is
13    amended by changing Section 5-45 as follows:

14        (5 ILCS 100/5-45) (from Ch. 127, par. 1005-45)
15        Sec. 5-45.  Emergency rulemaking.
16        (a)  "Emergency"  means  the  existence  of any situation
17    that any agency finds reasonably constitutes a threat to  the
18    public interest, safety, or welfare.
19        (b)  If  any  agency  finds that an emergency exists that
 
                            -2-            LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    requires adoption of a rule upon fewer days than is  required
 2    by  Section  5-40  and states in writing its reasons for that
 3    finding, the agency may adopt an emergency rule without prior
 4    notice  or  hearing  upon  filing  a  notice   of   emergency
 5    rulemaking  with  the  Secretary of State under Section 5-70.
 6    The notice shall include the text of the emergency  rule  and
 7    shall  be published in the Illinois Register.  Consent orders
 8    or other court orders adopting settlements negotiated  by  an
 9    agency  may  be  adopted  under  this  Section.   Subject  to
10    applicable   constitutional   or   statutory  provisions,  an
11    emergency rule  becomes  effective  immediately  upon  filing
12    under  Section  5-65  or  at a stated date less than 10  days
13    thereafter.  The agency's finding  and  a  statement  of  the
14    specific  reasons  for  the  finding  shall be filed with the
15    rule.  The  agency  shall  take  reasonable  and  appropriate
16    measures to make emergency rules known to the persons who may
17    be affected by them.
18        (c)  An  emergency  rule may be effective for a period of
19    not longer than 150 days, but the agency's authority to adopt
20    an identical rule under Section 5-40 is  not  precluded.   No
21    emergency  rule may be adopted more than once in any 24 month
22    period,  except  that  this  limitation  on  the  number   of
23    emergency rules that may be adopted in a 24 month period does
24    not  apply  to (i) emergency rules that make additions to and
25    deletions from the Drug Manual under Section  5-5.16  of  the
26    Illinois  Public Aid Code or the generic drug formulary under
27    Section 3.14 of the Illinois Food, Drug and Cosmetic  Act  or
28    (ii)  emergency  rules adopted by the Pollution Control Board
29    before July 1, 1997 to implement portions  of  the  Livestock
30    Management  Facilities  Act.   Two  or  more  emergency rules
31    having substantially the same purpose  and  effect  shall  be
32    deemed to be a single rule for purposes of this Section.
33        (d)  In  order  to provide for the expeditious and timely
34    implementation  of  the  State's  fiscal  year  1999  budget,
 
                            -3-            LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    emergency rules to implement  any  provision  of  Public  Act
 2    90-587  or  90-588  or any other budget initiative for fiscal
 3    year 1999 may be adopted in accordance with this  Section  by
 4    the  agency  charged  with  administering  that  provision or
 5    initiative,  except  that  the  24-month  limitation  on  the
 6    adoption of emergency rules and the  provisions  of  Sections
 7    5-115  and  5-125  do  not  apply to rules adopted under this
 8    subsection (d).  The adoption of emergency  rules  authorized
 9    by  this  subsection  (d) shall be deemed to be necessary for
10    the public interest, safety, and welfare.
11        (e)  In order to provide for the expeditious  and  timely
12    implementation  of  the  State's  fiscal  year  2000  budget,
13    emergency rules to implement any provision of this amendatory
14    Act  of  the  91st  General  Assembly  or  any  other  budget
15    initiative  for fiscal year 2000 may be adopted in accordance
16    with this Section by the agency  charged  with  administering
17    that  provision  or  initiative,  except  that  the  24-month
18    limitation  on  the  adoption  of  emergency  rules  and  the
19    provisions  of Sections 5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules
20    adopted under this subsection (e).  The adoption of emergency
21    rules authorized by this subsection (e) shall be deemed to be
22    necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
23        (f)  In order to provide for the expeditious  and  timely
24    implementation  of  the  State's  fiscal  year  2001  budget,
25    emergency rules to implement any provision of this amendatory
26    Act  of  the  91st  General  Assembly  or  any  other  budget
27    initiative  for fiscal year 2001 may be adopted in accordance
28    with this Section by the agency  charged  with  administering
29    that  provision  or  initiative,  except  that  the  24-month
30    limitation  on  the  adoption  of  emergency  rules  and  the
31    provisions  of Sections 5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules
32    adopted under this subsection (f).  The adoption of emergency
33    rules authorized by this subsection (f) shall be deemed to be
34    necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
 
                            -4-            LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        (g)  In order to provide for the expeditious  and  timely
 2    implementation  of  the  State's  fiscal  year  2002  budget,
 3    emergency rules to implement any provision of this amendatory
 4    Act  of  the  92nd  General  Assembly  or  any  other  budget
 5    initiative  for fiscal year 2002 may be adopted in accordance
 6    with this Section by the agency  charged  with  administering
 7    that  provision  or  initiative,  except  that  the  24-month
 8    limitation  on  the  adoption  of  emergency  rules  and  the
 9    provisions  of Sections 5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules
10    adopted under this subsection (g).  The adoption of emergency
11    rules authorized by this subsection (g) shall be deemed to be
12    necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
13        (h)  In order to provide for the expeditious  and  timely
14    implementation  of  the  State's  fiscal  year  2003  budget,
15    emergency rules to implement any provision of this amendatory
16    Act  of  the  92nd  General  Assembly  or  any  other  budget
17    initiative  for fiscal year 2003 may be adopted in accordance
18    with this Section by the agency  charged  with  administering
19    that  provision  or  initiative,  except  that  the  24-month
20    limitation  on  the  adoption  of  emergency  rules  and  the
21    provisions  of Sections 5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules
22    adopted under this subsection (h).  The adoption of emergency
23    rules authorized by this subsection (h) shall be deemed to be
24    necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
25    (Source: P.A.  91-24,  eff.  7-1-99;  91-357,  eff.  7-29-99;
26    91-712, eff. 7-1-00; 92-10, eff. 6-11-01.)

27        Section  15.  The Illinois Act on the Aging is amended by
28    changing Section 4.02 as follows:

29        (20 ILCS 105/4.02) (from Ch. 23, par. 6104.02)
30        Sec. 4.02.  The Department shall establish a  program  of
31    services   to  prevent  unnecessary  institutionalization  of
32    persons age 60 and older in need of long term care or who are
 
                            -5-            LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    established as persons who suffer from Alzheimer's disease or
 2    a related disorder under the Alzheimer's  Disease  Assistance
 3    Act, thereby enabling them to remain in their own homes or in
 4    other  living  arrangements.  Such preventive services, which
 5    may be coordinated with  other  programs  for  the  aged  and
 6    monitored  by  area agencies on aging in cooperation with the
 7    Department, may include, but are not limited to, any  or  all
 8    of the following:
 9             (a)  home health services;
10             (b)  home nursing services;
11             (c)  homemaker services;
12             (d)  chore and housekeeping services;
13             (e)  day care services;
14             (f)  home-delivered meals;
15             (g)  education in self-care;
16             (h)  personal care services;
17             (i)  adult day health services;
18             (j)  habilitation services;
19             (k)  respite care;
20             (l)  other   nonmedical  social  services  that  may
21        enable the person to become self-supporting; or
22             (m)  clearinghouse  for  information   provided   by
23        senior  citizen  home owners who want to rent rooms to or
24        share living space with other senior citizens.
25        The Department shall establish eligibility standards  for
26    such  services  taking into consideration the unique economic
27    and social needs of the target population for whom  they  are
28    to be provided.  Such eligibility standards shall be based on
29    the  recipient's  ability  to  pay  for  services;  provided,
30    however,  that  in  determining  the  amount  and  nature  of
31    services  for which a person may qualify, consideration shall
32    not be given to the value of cash, property or  other  assets
33    held in the name of the person's spouse pursuant to a written
34    agreement  dividing  marital property into equal but separate
 
                            -6-            LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    shares or pursuant to a transfer of the person's interest  in
 2    a home to his spouse, provided that the spouse's share of the
 3    marital  property is not made available to the person seeking
 4    such services.
 5        Beginning July 1, 2002, the Department shall require as a
 6    condition of eligibility that all applicants  and  recipients
 7    apply  for medical assistance under Article V of the Illinois
 8    Public Aid Code in accordance with rules promulgated  by  the
 9    Department.
10        The  Department shall, in conjunction with the Department
11    of Public Aid, seek  appropriate  amendments  under  Sections
12    1915 and 1924 of the Social Security Act.  The purpose of the
13    amendments  shall  be  to  extend  eligibility  for  home and
14    community based services under Sections 1915 and 1924 of  the
15    Social  Security  Act  to  persons who transfer to or for the
16    benefit of a spouse those amounts  of  income  and  resources
17    allowed  under  Section  1924  of  the  Social  Security Act.
18    Subject to the approval of such  amendments,  the  Department
19    shall  extend  the  provisions of Section 5-4 of the Illinois
20    Public Aid Code to persons who, but for the provision of home
21    or community-based services, would require the level of  care
22    provided  in  an  institution,  as is provided for in federal
23    law.  Those persons  no  longer  found  to  be  eligible  for
24    receiving  noninstitutional  services  due  to changes in the
25    eligibility criteria shall be given 60 days notice  prior  to
26    actual   termination.   Those  persons  receiving  notice  of
27    termination  may  contact  the  Department  and  request  the
28    determination be appealed at  any  time  during  the  60  day
29    notice  period.   With the exception of the lengthened notice
30    and time frame for the appeal  request,  the  appeal  process
31    shall  follow the normal procedure.  In addition, each person
32    affected regardless of  the  circumstances  for  discontinued
33    eligibility  shall  be  given  notice  and the opportunity to
34    purchase the necessary services through  the  Community  Care
 
                            -7-            LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    Program.   If  the  individual  does  not  elect  to purchase
 2    services, the  Department  shall  advise  the  individual  of
 3    alternative  services.   The target population identified for
 4    the purposes of this Section are persons  age  60  and  older
 5    with  an identified service need.  Priority shall be given to
 6    those who are at imminent risk of institutionalization.   The
 7    services  shall  be  provided  to eligible persons age 60 and
 8    older to the extent that the cost of  the  services  together
 9    with  the  other personal maintenance expenses of the persons
10    are reasonably related to the standards established for  care
11    in  a  group  facility appropriate to the person's condition.
12    These   non-institutional   services,   pilot   projects   or
13    experimental facilities may be provided  as  part  of  or  in
14    addition  to  those authorized by federal law or those funded
15    and administered by the Department of  Human  Services.   The
16    Departments  of  Human  Services,  Public Aid, Public Health,
17    Veterans' Affairs, and Commerce  and  Community  Affairs  and
18    other  appropriate  agencies  of  State,  federal  and  local
19    governments  shall  cooperate with the Department on Aging in
20    the establishment and development  of  the  non-institutional
21    services.   The Department shall require an annual audit from
22    all chore/housekeeping and homemaker vendors contracting with
23    the Department under this Section.  The  annual  audit  shall
24    assure   that   each   audited  vendor's  procedures  are  in
25    compliance with Department's financial  reporting  guidelines
26    requiring  a 27% administrative cost split and a 73% employee
27    wages and benefits cost split.  The audit is a public  record
28    under  the  Freedom of Information Act.  The Department shall
29    execute, relative to the nursing home  prescreening  project,
30    written  inter-agency agreements with the Department of Human
31    Services and the Department of  Public  Aid,  to  effect  the
32    following:   (1)  intake  procedures  and  common eligibility
33    criteria   for    those    persons    who    are    receiving
34    non-institutional  services;  and  (2)  the establishment and
 
                            -8-            LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    development of non-institutional services  in  areas  of  the
 2    State   where   they  are  not  currently  available  or  are
 3    undeveloped.  On and after July 1,  1996,  all  nursing  home
 4    prescreenings  for individuals 60 years of age or older shall
 5    be conducted by the Department.
 6        The Department is authorized to  establish  a  system  of
 7    recipient copayment for services provided under this Section,
 8    such  copayment  to  be based upon the recipient's ability to
 9    pay but in no case to exceed the actual cost of the  services
10    provided.  Additionally,  any  portion  of  a person's income
11    which is equal to or less than the federal  poverty  standard
12    shall  not be considered by the Department in determining the
13    copayment.  The level of such  copayment  shall  be  adjusted
14    whenever  necessary  to  reflect any change in the officially
15    designated federal poverty standard.
16        The   Department,   or   the   Department's    authorized
17    representative,  shall  recover the amount of moneys expended
18    for services provided to or in behalf of a person under  this
19    Section by a claim against the person's estate or against the
20    estate  of the person's surviving spouse, but no recovery may
21    be had until after the death of the surviving spouse, if any,
22    and then only at such time when there is no  surviving  child
23    who  is  under  age  21,  blind,  or  permanently and totally
24    disabled.  This paragraph, however, shall not  bar  recovery,
25    at  the  death of the person, of moneys for services provided
26    to the person or in behalf of the person under  this  Section
27    to  which  the  person  was  not entitled; provided that such
28    recovery shall not be enforced against any real estate  while
29    it  is  occupied  as  a  homestead by the surviving spouse or
30    other dependent, if no claims by other  creditors  have  been
31    filed against the estate, or, if such claims have been filed,
32    they  remain dormant for failure of prosecution or failure of
33    the claimant to compel administration of the estate  for  the
34    purpose  of  payment.   This paragraph shall not bar recovery
 
                            -9-            LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    from the estate of a spouse, under Sections 1915 and 1924  of
 2    the  Social  Security  Act  and  Section  5-4 of the Illinois
 3    Public Aid Code, who precedes  a  person  receiving  services
 4    under this Section in death.  All moneys for services paid to
 5    or  in  behalf  of  the  person  under  this Section shall be
 6    claimed for  recovery  from  the  deceased  spouse's  estate.
 7    "Homestead",  as  used  in this paragraph, means the dwelling
 8    house and contiguous real  estate  occupied  by  a  surviving
 9    spouse  or  relative, as defined by the rules and regulations
10    of the Illinois Department of Public Aid, regardless  of  the
11    value of the property.
12        The   Department  shall  develop  procedures  to  enhance
13    availability of services on evenings,  weekends,  and  on  an
14    emergency  basis  to  meet  the  respite needs of caregivers.
15    Procedures shall be developed to permit  the  utilization  of
16    services  in  successive blocks of 24 hours up to the monthly
17    maximum established by the  Department.    Workers  providing
18    these services shall be appropriately trained.
19        Beginning on the effective date of this Amendatory Act of
20    1991,  no person may perform chore/housekeeping and homemaker
21    services under a program authorized by  this  Section  unless
22    that  person  has been issued a certificate of pre-service to
23    do so by his or her employing agency.   Information  gathered
24    to  effect  such certification shall include (i) the person's
25    name, (ii) the date the  person  was  hired  by  his  or  her
26    current employer, and (iii) the training, including dates and
27    levels.   Persons  engaged  in the program authorized by this
28    Section before the effective date of this amendatory  Act  of
29    1991 shall be issued a certificate of all pre- and in-service
30    training  from  his  or  her  employer  upon  submitting  the
31    necessary   information.    The  employing  agency  shall  be
32    required to retain records of all staff pre-  and  in-service
33    training,  and  shall  provide such records to the Department
34    upon request and upon termination of the employer's  contract
 
                            -10-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    with  the  Department.   In addition, the employing agency is
 2    responsible for the issuance of certifications of  in-service
 3    training completed to their employees.
 4        The  Department is required to develop a system to ensure
 5    that persons working as  homemakers  and  chore  housekeepers
 6    receive  increases  in  their  wages when the federal minimum
 7    wage is increased by requiring vendors to certify  that  they
 8    are  meeting  the federal minimum wage statute for homemakers
 9    and chore housekeepers.  An employer that cannot ensure  that
10    the  minimum  wage  increase is being given to homemakers and
11    chore  housekeepers  shall  be   denied   any   increase   in
12    reimbursement costs.
13        The  Department  on  Aging  and  the  Department of Human
14    Services shall cooperate in the development and submission of
15    an annual report on programs and services provided under this
16    Section.  Such joint report shall be filed with the  Governor
17    and the General Assembly on or before September 30 each year.
18        The  requirement  for  reporting  to the General Assembly
19    shall be satisfied by filing copies of the  report  with  the
20    Speaker,  the  Minority  Leader and the Clerk of the House of
21    Representatives and the President, the  Minority  Leader  and
22    the  Secretary  of  the  Senate  and the Legislative Research
23    Unit, as required by Section  3.1  of  the  General  Assembly
24    Organization  Act  and filing such additional copies with the
25    State Government Report Distribution Center for  the  General
26    Assembly  as  is required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of
27    the State Library Act.
28        Those persons previously  found  eligible  for  receiving
29    non-institutional  services  whose services were discontinued
30    under the Emergency Budget Act of Fiscal Year 1992,  and  who
31    do  not  meet the eligibility standards in effect on or after
32    July 1, 1992, shall remain ineligible on and  after  July  1,
33    1992.   Those  persons  previously not required to cost-share
34    and who were required to cost-share effective March 1,  1992,
 
                            -11-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    shall  continue  to meet cost-share requirements on and after
 2    July 1, 1992.  Beginning July 1, 1992, all  clients  will  be
 3    required   to   meet   eligibility,   cost-share,  and  other
 4    requirements and will have services discontinued  or  altered
 5    when they fail to meet these requirements.
 6    (Source: P.A. 91-303, eff. 1-1-00; 91-798, eff. 7-9-00.)

 7        Section   20.    The   Mental  Health  and  Developmental
 8    Disabilities Administrative Act is amended by adding  Section
 9    18.4 as follows:

10        (20 ILCS 1705/18.4 new)
11        Sec.  18.4.  Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust Fund;
12    reimbursement.
13        (a)  The Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust  Fund  is
14    hereby created in the State Treasury.
15        (b)  Any   funds   paid  to  the  State  by  the  federal
16    government under  Title  XIX  or  Title  XXI  of  the  Social
17    Security  Act  for  services  delivered  by  community mental
18    health services providers, and any interest  earned  thereon,
19    shall  be deposited directly into the Community Mental Health
20    Medicaid Trust Fund.
21        (c)  The  Department  shall  reimburse  community  mental
22    health  services  providers  for  Medicaid-reimbursed  mental
23    health services provided to eligible individuals.  Moneys  in
24    the  Community  Mental Health Medicaid Trust Fund may be used
25    for that purpose.
26        (d)  As used in this Section:
27        "Medicaid-reimbursed  mental   health   services"   means
28    services provided by a community mental health provider under
29    an  agreement  with  the  Department  that  is  eligible  for
30    reimbursement  under  the  federal Title XIX program or Title
31    XXI program.
32        "Provider" means a community agency that is funded by the
 
                            -12-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    Department to provide a Medicaid-reimbursed service.
 2        "Services" means mental health  services  provided  under
 3    one of the following programs:
 4             (1)  Medicaid Clinic Option;
 5             (2)  Medicaid Rehabilitation Option;
 6             (3)  Targeted Case Management.

 7        Section  25.   The  Illinois Health Finance Reform Act is
 8    amended by changing  Sections  2-1,  4-1,  4-2,  and  4-4  as
 9    follows:

10        (20 ILCS 2215/2-1) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6502-1)
11        Sec.  2-1.   Council  abolished.   Authorized.   There is
12    hereby created The  Illinois  Health  Care  Cost  Containment
13    Council  is  abolished  at  the close of business on June 30,
14    2002.  Its successor agency, for purposes  of  the  Successor
15    Agency  Act  and  Section 9b of the State Finance Act, is the
16    Illinois Department of Public Health. It shall consist of  13
17    members appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent
18    of the Senate as follows: 5 members to represent providers as
19    follows:  2  members to represent Illinois hospitals at least
20    one of which must represent a small rural hospital, 2 members
21    to represent physicians licensed to practice medicine in  all
22    its  branches,  and 1 member to represent ambulatory surgical
23    treatment  centers;  3  members  to  represent  consumers;  2
24    members to represent insurance companies; and  3  members  to
25    represent businesses.
26        The  members of the Council shall be appointed for 3-year
27    terms.
28        No more than 7 members may be  from  the  same  political
29    party.
30        Members  shall  be  appointed  within  30  days after the
31    effective date of this Act.  The additional members appointed
32    under the amendatory Act of the 91st General Assembly must be
 
                            -13-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    appointed within 30 days after the  effective  date  of  this
 2    amendatory  Act  of the 91st General Assembly. The members of
 3    the Council  shall  receive  reimbursement  of  their  actual
 4    expenses  incurred  in  connection  with  their  service;  in
 5    addition,  each  member  shall receive compensation of $150 a
 6    day for each day served at regular or special meetings of the
 7    Council, except  that  such  compensation  shall  not  exceed
 8    $20,000  in  any  one year for any member.  The Council shall
 9    elect a Chairman from among its members, and shall  have  the
10    power  to  organize and appoint such other officers as it may
11    deem necessary.
12        All appointments shall be made in writing and filed  with
13    the Secretary of State as a public record.
14    (Source: P.A. 91-756, eff. 6-2-00.)

15        (20 ILCS 2215/4-1) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6504-1)
16        Sec.  4-1.  Illinois Health Finance Data Collection.  The
17    General Assembly finds that public sector and private  sector
18    purchasers   of   health  care  need  health  care  cost  and
19    utilization data to enable  them  to  make  informed  choices
20    among health care providers in the market place.  The General
21    Assembly  finds  it  necessary  to  create a mandated uniform
22    system  in  Illinois  for  the  collection,   analysis,   and
23    distribution of health care cost and utilization data.
24        The  purpose  of  this Article is to insure that data are
25    available  to  make  valid  comparisons  among  health   care
26    providers  of prices and utilization of services provided and
27    to support ongoing  analysis  of  the  health  care  delivery
28    system so that the Council can fulfill its mandate.
29    (Source: P.A. 91-756, eff. 6-2-00.)

30        (20 ILCS 2215/4-2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6504-2)
31        Sec. 4-2.  Powers and duties.
32        (a)  (Blank).   The Illinois Health Care Cost Containment
 
                            -14-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    Council may enter into any agreement  with  any  corporation,
 2    association or other entity it deems appropriate to undertake
 3    the process described in this Article for the compilation and
 4    analysis  of  data collected by the Council and to conduct or
 5    contract for studies on health-related questions carried  out
 6    in  pursuance of the purposes of this Article.  The agreement
 7    may provide for the corporation,  association  or  entity  to
 8    prepare  and distribute or make available data to health care
 9    providers,  health  care  subscribers,  third-party   payors,
10    government  and  the  general  public, in accordance with the
11    rules of confidentiality and review  to  be  developed  under
12    this Act.
13        (b)  (Blank).  The  input data collected by and furnished
14    to the Council  or  designated  corporation,  association  or
15    entity  pursuant to this Section shall not be a public record
16    under the Illinois Freedom of Information  Act.   It  is  the
17    intent of this Act and of the regulations written pursuant to
18    it  to  protect  the  confidentiality  of  individual patient
19    information and the  proprietary  information  of  commercial
20    insurance carriers and health care providers.  Data specified
21    in  subsections (e) and (e-5) shall be released on a hospital
22    specific and licensed ambulatory  surgical  treatment  center
23    specific  basis to facilitate comparisons among hospitals and
24    licensed ambulatory surgical treatment centers by purchasers.
25        (c)  (Blank). The Council shall require  the  Departments
26    of  Public Health and Public Aid and hospitals located in the
27    State to assist the Council in gathering and  submitting  the
28    following  hospital-specific  financial  information, and the
29    Council  is  authorized  to  share  this   data   with   both
30    Departments  to  reduce  the  burden on hospitals by avoiding
31    duplicate data collection:

32    OPERATING REVENUES
33        (1)  Net patient service revenue
34        (2)  Other revenue
 
                            -15-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        (3)  Total operating revenue

 2    OPERATING EXPENSES
 3        (4)  Bad debt expense
 4        (5)  Total operating expenses

 5    NON-OPERATING GAINS/LOSSES
 6        (6)  Total non-operating gains
 7        (7)  Total non-operating losses

 8    PATIENT CARE REVENUES
 9        (8)  Gross inpatient revenue
10        (9)  Gross outpatient revenue
11        (10)  Other Patient care revenue
12        (11)  Total patient revenue
13        (12)  Total gross patient care revenue
14        (13)  Medicare gross revenue
15        (14)  Medicaid gross revenue
16        (15)  Total other gross revenue

17    DEDUCTIONS FROM REVENUE
18        (16)  Charity care
19        (17)  Medicare allowance
20        (18)  Medicaid allowance
21        (19)  Other contractual allowances
22        (20)  Other allowances
23        (21)  Total Deductions

24    ASSETS
25        (22)  Operating cash and short-term investments
26        (23)  Estimated patient accounts receivable
27        (24)  Other current assets
28        (25)  Total current assets
29        (26)  Total other assets
30        (27)  Total Assets

31    LIABILITIES AND FUND BALANCES
 
                            -16-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        (28)  Total current liabilities
 2        (29)  Long Term Debt
 3        (30)  Other liabilities
 4        (31)  Total liabilities
 5        (32)  Total liabilities and fund balances
 6        All financial data collected by the Council from publicly
 7    available sources such as  the  HCFA  is  releasable  by  the
 8    Council on a hospital specific basis when appropriate.
 9        (d)  Uniform Provider Utilization and Charge Information.
10    The Council shall require that:
11             (1)  The  Department  of Public Health shall require
12        that hospitals  licensed  to  operate  in  the  State  of
13        Illinois  adopt  a  uniform system for submitting patient
14        charges  for  payment  from  public  and  private  payors
15        effective January 1, 1985.  This system  shall  be  based
16        upon  adoption  of  the  uniform  hospital  billing  form
17        (UB-92)  or  its successor form developed by the National
18        Uniform Billing Committee.
19             (2)  (Blank).
20             (3)  The Department of Insurance shall  require  all
21        third-party   payors,   including  but  not  limited  to,
22        licensed   insurers,   medical   and   hospital   service
23        corporations,  health  maintenance   organizations,   and
24        self-funded  employee health plans, to accept the uniform
25        billing  form,  without  attachment   as   submitted   by
26        hospitals  pursuant  to  paragraph  (1) of subsection (d)
27        above, effective  January  1,  1985;  provided,  however,
28        nothing  shall  prevent  all such third party payors from
29        requesting additional information necessary to  determine
30        eligibility  for  benefits or liability for reimbursement
31        for services provided.
32        (e)  (Blank). The Council, in cooperation with the  State
33    Departments  of  Public  Aid,  Insurance,  and Public Health,
34    shall establish a system for the collection of the  following
 
                            -17-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    information  from  hospitals utilizing the raw data available
 2    on the uniform billing forms.  Such data  shall  include  the
 3    following  elements  and  other  elements  contained  on  the
 4    uniform  billing  form  or  its  successor form determined as
 5    necessary by the Council:
 6        (1)  Patient date of birth
 7        (2)  Patient sex
 8        (3)  Patient zip code
 9        (4)  Third-party coverage
10        (5)  Date of admission
11        (6)  Source of admission
12        (7)  Type of admission
13        (8)  Discharge date
14        (9)  Principal and up to 8 other diagnoses
15        (10)  Principal procedure and date
16        (11)  Patient status
17        (12)  Other procedures and dates
18        (13)  Total charges and components of those charges
19        (14)  Attending and consulting  physician  identification
20    numbers
21        (15)  Hospital identification number
22        (16)  An  alphanumeric number based on the information to
23    identify the payor
24        (17)  Principal source of payment.
25        (e-5)  The Council, in cooperation with the Department of
26    Public Aid, the Department of Insurance, and  the  Department
27    of Public Health, shall establish a system for the collection
28    of  the  following  information  for  each outpatient surgery
29    performed  at  hospitals  and  licensed  ambulatory  surgical
30    treatment centers using the raw data available on  outpatient
31    billing  forms submitted by hospitals and licensed ambulatory
32    surgical treatment centers to payors.  The data must  include
33    the  following  elements,  if available on the billing forms,
34    and other elements contained on the billing  forms  that  the
 
                            -18-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    Council determines are necessary:
 2             (1)  patient date of birth;
 3             (2)  patient sex;
 4             (3)  patient zip code;
 5             (4)  third-party coverage;
 6             (5)  date of admission;
 7             (6)  source of admission;
 8             (7)  type of admission;
 9             (8)  discharge date;
10             (9)  principal   diagnosis   and   up   to  8  other
11        diagnoses;
12             (10)  principal  procedure  and  the  date  of   the
13        procedure;
14             (11)  patient status;
15             (12)  other   procedures  and  the  dates  of  those
16        procedures;
17             (13)  attending     and     consulting     physician
18        identification numbers;
19             (14)  hospital  or  licensed   ambulatory   surgical
20        treatment center identification number;
21             (15)  an    alphanumeric   number   based   on   the
22        information needed to identify the payor; and
23             (16)  principal source of payment.
24        (f)  Extracts of the UB-92 transactions shall be prepared
25    by hospitals according  to  regulations  promulgated  by  the
26    Council  and submitted in electronic format to the Council or
27    the corporation, association  or  entity  designated  by  the
28    Council.
29        For  hospitals  unable  to  submit extracts in electronic
30    format, the Council shall determine an alternate  method  for
31    submission  of data.  Such extract reporting systems shall be
32    in operation before January 1, 1987; however, the Council may
33    grant time extensions to individual hospital.
34        (f-5)  Extracts of the billing forms shall be prepared by
 
                            -19-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    licensed ambulatory surgical treatment centers  according  to
 2    rules  adopted by the Council and submitted to the Council or
 3    a corporation,  association,  or  entity  designated  by  the
 4    Council.  Electronic  submissions  shall  be encouraged.  For
 5    licensed ambulatory  surgical  treatment  centers  unable  to
 6    submit  extracts  in  an  electronic  format the Council must
 7    determine an alternate method for submission of data.
 8        (g)  Under no circumstances shall patient name and social
 9    security number appear on the extracts.
10        (h)  Hospitals and licensed ambulatory surgical treatment
11    centers shall be assigned a standard identification number by
12    the Council to be used in the submission of all data.
13        (i)  The Council shall collect a  100%  inpatient  sample
14    from  hospitals  annually.  The  Council  shall  require each
15    hospital in the State  to  submit  the  UB-92  data  extracts
16    required  in  subsection  (e)  to  the  Council,  except that
17    hospitals with fewer than 50 beds  may  be  exempted  by  the
18    Council  from  the  filing  requirements if they prove to the
19    Council's satisfaction that  the  requirements  would  impose
20    undue  economic  hardship  and if the Council determines that
21    the data submitted from these hospitals are not essential  to
22    its data base and its concomitant health care cost comparison
23    efforts.
24        (i-5)  The  Council shall collect up to a 100% outpatient
25    sample  annually  from  hospitals  and  licensed   ambulatory
26    surgical  treatment  centers.  The Council shall require each
27    hospital and licensed ambulatory surgical treatment center in
28    the  State  to  submit  the  data  extracts  required   under
29    subsection  (e-5)  to  the Council, except that hospitals and
30    licensed  ambulatory  surgical  treatment  centers   may   be
31    exempted  by  the Council from the filing requirements if the
32    hospitals or licensed ambulatory surgical  treatment  centers
33    prove  to  the  Council's  satisfaction that the requirements
34    would impose undue  economic  hardship  and  if  the  Council
 
                            -20-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    determines  that  the data submitted from those hospitals and
 2    licensed  ambulatory  surgical  treatment  centers  are   not
 3    essential  to  the  Council's  database  and  its concomitant
 4    health care comparison efforts.
 5        (i-10)  The outpatient data shall  be  collected  by  the
 6    Council  on  a phase-in and trial basis for a one-year period
 7    beginning on January 1, 2001.  The  Council  shall  implement
 8    outpatient  data  collection for reporting purposes beginning
 9    on January 1, 2002.
10        (j)  The information submitted to the Council pursuant to
11    subsections (e) and (e-5) shall be reported for each  primary
12    payor   category,   including   Medicare,   Medicaid,   other
13    government  programs,  private  insurance, health maintenance
14    organizations,  self-insured,  private  pay   patients,   and
15    others.   Preferred provider organization reimbursement shall
16    also be reported for each primary third party payor category.
17        (k)  The  Council  shall  require  and   the   designated
18    corporation,  association  or  entity,  if  applicable, shall
19    prepare quarterly basic reports in the  aggregate  on  health
20    care  cost  and  utilization trends in Illinois.  The Council
21    shall provide these reports  to  the  public,  if  requested.
22    These  shall  include,  but  not  be  limited to, comparative
23    information on average charges, total  and  ancillary  charge
24    components,   length   of   stay  on  diagnosis-specific  and
25    procedure specific cases, and number of discharges,  compiled
26    in  aggregate  by  hospital  and licensed ambulatory surgical
27    treatment  center,  by  diagnosis,  and  by   primary   payor
28    category.
29        (l)  The   Council   shall,  from  information  submitted
30    pursuant to subsection (e), prepare an annual report  in  the
31    aggregate by hospital containing the following:
32             (1)  the  ratio  of  caesarean section deliveries to
33        total deliveries;
34             (2)  the average length of  stay  for  patients  who
 
                            -21-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        undergo caesarean sections;
 2             (3)  the average total charges for patients who have
 3        normal deliveries without any significant complications;
 4             (4)  the  average  total  charges  for  patients who
 5        deliver by caesarean section.
 6    The Council shall provide  this  report  to  the  public,  if
 7    requested.
 8        (l-5)  (Blank).
 9        (m)  Prior  to  the  release  or  dissemination  of these
10    reports, the Council  or  the  designated  corporation  shall
11    permit  providers  the  opportunity to verify the accuracy of
12    any information pertaining to the  provider.   The  providers
13    may  submit  to  the Council any corrections or errors in the
14    compilation of the data  with  any  supporting  evidence  and
15    documents   the   providers   may  submit.   The  Council  or
16    corporation shall correct data  found  to  be  in  error  and
17    include  additional  commentary  as requested by the provider
18    for major deviations in the charges from the average charges.
19    For purposes of this  subsection  (m),  "providers"  includes
20    physicians  licensed  to  practice  medicine  in  all  of its
21    branches.
22        (n)  In addition to  the  reports  indicated  above,  the
23    Council  shall  respond to requests by agencies of government
24    and organizations in the private sector  for  data  products,
25    special  studies  and  analysis of data collected pursuant to
26    this Section.  Such reports shall be undertaken only  by  the
27    agreement  of  a  majority  of the members of the Council who
28    shall designate the form in which the  information  shall  be
29    made  available.  The Council or the corporation, association
30    or  entity  in  consultation  with  the  Council  shall  also
31    determine a fee to be charged to  the  requesting  agency  or
32    private  sector organization to cover the direct and indirect
33    costs for producing such a report, and shall permit  affected
34    providers  the  rights  to  review the accuracy of the report
 
                            -22-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    before it is released.  Such reports  shall not be subject to
 2    The Freedom of Information Act.
 3    (Source: P.A. 91-756, eff. 6-2-00.)

 4        (20 ILCS 2215/4-4) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6504-4)
 5        Sec.  4-4.  (a)  Hospitals  shall   make   available   to
 6    prospective   patients   information  on  the  normal  charge
 7    incurred for  any  procedure  or  operation  the  prospective
 8    patient is considering.
 9        (b)  The   Department  of  Public  Health  Council  shall
10    require hospitals to post in letters no more than one inch in
11    height  the   established   charges   for   services,   where
12    applicable,  including  but  not  limited  to  the hospital's
13    private room charge, semi-private room charge, charge  for  a
14    room  with  3  or  more  beds,  intensive  care room charges,
15    emergency    room    charge,    operating    room     charge,
16    electrocardiogram  charge,  anesthesia  charge,  chest  x-ray
17    charge,  blood  sugar  charge, blood chemistry charge, tissue
18    exam charge, blood typing charge and Rh factor  charge.   The
19    definitions  of  each charge to be posted shall be determined
20    by the Department Council.
21    (Source: P.A. 90-655, eff. 7-30-98.)

22        (20 ILCS 2215/1-2 rep.)
23        (20 ILCS 2215/2-2 rep.)
24        (20 ILCS 2215/2-3 rep.)
25        (20 ILCS 2215/2-4 rep.)
26        (20 ILCS 2215/2-5 rep.)
27        (20 ILCS 2215/2-6 rep.)
28        (20 ILCS 2215/4-3 rep.)
29        (20 ILCS 2215/4-5 rep.)
30        (20 ILCS 2215/5-2 rep.)
31        Section 26.  The Illinois Health Finance  Reform  Act  is
32    amended  by  repealing Sections 1-2, 2-2, 2-3, 2-4, 2-5, 2-6,
 
                            -23-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    4-3, 4-5, and 5-2.

 2        Section 30.  The Department of Public Health  Powers  and
 3    Duties  Law  of  the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
 4    amended by adding Section 2310-57 as follows:

 5        (20 ILCS 2310/2310-57 new)
 6        Sec. 2310-57. Collecting information  regarding  hospital
 7    discharges  and  surgery.   The  Department  of Public Health
 8    shall establish a system for the collection of data regarding
 9    hospital discharges  and  inpatient  and  outpatient  surgery
10    performed  at  hospitals  and  licensed  ambulatory  surgical
11    treatment centers.
12        The  Department may establish a system to provide data to
13    hospitals required for accreditation, including data required
14    by  the  Joint  Commission  on  Accreditation  of  Healthcare
15    Organizations.
16        The Department may adopt any rules necessary to carry out
17    this  function,  including  reasonable  fees  for   providing
18    accreditation  data.   The  Department  may  contract  with a
19    vendor to collect any data required to be  submitted  to  the
20    Department under this Section.

21        Section 35.  The Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act
22    is amended by changing Section 5 as follows:

23        (20 ILCS 3305/5) (from Ch. 127, par. 1055)
24        Sec. 5.  Illinois Emergency Management Agency.
25        (a)  There  is created within the executive branch of the
26    State Government an Illinois Emergency Management Agency  and
27    a  Director  of  the  Illinois  Emergency  Management Agency,
28    herein called the "Director" who shall be the  head  thereof.
29    The  Director  shall  be  appointed by the Governor, with the
30    advice and consent of the Senate, and shall serve for a  term
 
                            -24-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    of  2  years  beginning on the third Monday in January of the
 2    odd-numbered year, and until a successor is appointed and has
 3    qualified;  except  that  the  term  of  the  first  Director
 4    appointed under this Act shall expire on the third Monday  in
 5    January,  1989.   The  Director  shall  not  hold  any  other
 6    remunerative  public  office.  The  Director shall receive an
 7    annual salary as set by the Governor from time to time or the
 8    amount set by the Compensation  Review  Board,  whichever  is
 9    higher.  If set by the Governor, the Director's annual salary
10    may not exceed 85% of the Governor's annual salary.
11        (b)  The   Illinois  Emergency  Management  Agency  shall
12    obtain,  under  the  provisions  of   the   Personnel   Code,
13    technical,  clerical,  stenographic  and other administrative
14    personnel, and may make expenditures within the appropriation
15    therefor as may be necessary to carry out the purpose of this
16    Act.  The agency created by this Act  is  intended  to  be  a
17    successor  to the agency created under the Illinois Emergency
18    Services and Disaster Agency Act of 1975 and  the  personnel,
19    equipment,  records,  and  appropriations  of that agency are
20    transferred to the successor agency as of the effective  date
21    of this Act.
22        (c)  The  Director,  subject to the direction and control
23    of the Governor, shall be the executive head of the  Illinois
24    Emergency  Management Agency and the State Emergency Response
25    Commission and shall be responsible under  the  direction  of
26    the  Governor,  for  carrying  out  the program for emergency
27    management of this State.  The Director shall  also  maintain
28    liaison   and   cooperate   with   the  emergency  management
29    organizations of this State  and  other  states  and  of  the
30    federal government.
31        (d)  The  Illinois Emergency Management Agency shall take
32    an integral part in the development and revision of political
33    subdivision  emergency  operations   plans   prepared   under
34    paragraph  (f) of Section 10.  To this end it shall employ or
 
                            -25-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    otherwise secure the services of professional  and  technical
 2    personnel  capable  of  providing  expert  assistance  to the
 3    emergency services and disaster  agencies.   These  personnel
 4    shall  consult  with emergency services and disaster agencies
 5    on a regular basis and shall make field examinations  of  the
 6    areas,   circumstances,   and   conditions   that  particular
 7    political subdivision emergency operations plans are intended
 8    to apply.
 9        (e)  The  Illinois   Emergency  Management   Agency   and
10    political   subdivisions  shall  be  encouraged  to  form  an
11    emergency management advisory committee composed  of  private
12    and  public  personnel  representing the emergency management
13    phases of mitigation, preparedness, response,  and  recovery.
14    The  Local Emergency Planning Committee, as created under the
15    Illinois Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know  Act,
16    shall  serve  as  an  advisory  committee  to  the  emergency
17    services  and  disaster agency or agencies serving within the
18    boundaries  of  that  Local  Emergency   Planning   Committee
19    planning district for:
20             (1)  the  development  of  emergency operations plan
21        provisions for hazardous chemical emergencies; and
22             (2)  the   assessment    of    emergency    response
23        capabilities related to hazardous chemical emergencies.
24        (f)  The Illinois Emergency Management Agency shall:
25             (1)  Coordinate  the  overall  emergency  management
26        program of the State.
27             (2)  Cooperate  with  local governments, the federal
28        government and any public or private agency or entity  in
29        achieving  any  purpose  of  this Act and in implementing
30        emergency    management    programs    for    mitigation,
31        preparedness, response, and recovery.
32             (2.5)  Cooperate  with  the  Department  of  Nuclear
33        Safety in  development  of  the  comprehensive  emergency
34        preparedness  and  response plan for any nuclear accident
 
                            -26-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        in accordance with Section 2005-65 of the  Department  of
 2        Nuclear  Safety  Law  of the Civil Administrative Code of
 3        Illinois and  in  development  of  the  Illinois  Nuclear
 4        Safety  Preparedness program in accordance with Section 8
 5        of the Illinois Nuclear Safety Preparedness Act.
 6             (3)  Prepare,  for   issuance   by   the   Governor,
 7        executive   orders,  proclamations,  and  regulations  as
 8        necessary or appropriate in coping with disasters.
 9             (4)  Promulgate rules and requirements for political
10        subdivision  emergency  operations  plans  that  are  not
11        inconsistent with  and  are  at  least  as  stringent  as
12        applicable federal laws and regulations.
13             (5)  Review and approve, in accordance with Illinois
14        Emergency  Management  Agency rules, emergency operations
15        plans for those political subdivisions required  to  have
16        an  emergency  services  and  disaster agency pursuant to
17        this Act.
18             (5.5)  Promulgate rules  and  requirements  for  the
19        political  subdivision  emergency  management  exercises,
20        including, but not limited to, exercises of the emergency
21        operations plans.
22             (5.10)  Review, evaluate, and approve, in accordance
23        with   Illinois   Emergency   Management   Agency  rules,
24        political subdivision emergency management exercises  for
25        those   political   subdivisions   required  to  have  an
26        emergency services and disaster agency pursuant  to  this
27        Act.
28             (6)  Determine  requirements  of  the  State and its
29        political subdivisions  for  food,  clothing,  and  other
30        necessities in event of a disaster.
31             (7)  Establish  a  register of persons with types of
32        emergency management training and skills  in  mitigation,
33        preparedness, response, and recovery.
34             (8)  Establish  a register of government and private
 
                            -27-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        response resources available for use in a disaster.
 2             (9)  Expand the Earthquake Awareness Program and its
 3        efforts to distribute earthquake  preparedness  materials
 4        to  schools,  political  subdivisions,  community groups,
 5        civic organizations, and  the  media.  Emphasis  will  be
 6        placed  on  those areas of the State most at risk from an
 7        earthquake.  Maintain the list of all  school  districts,
 8        hospitals,  airports,  power  plants,  including  nuclear
 9        power  plants, lakes, dams, emergency response facilities
10        of all types, and  all  other  major  public  or  private
11        structures  which are at the greatest risk of damage from
12        earthquakes under circumstances where  the  damage  would
13        cause  subsequent harm to the surrounding communities and
14        residents.
15             (10)  Disseminate all  information,  completely  and
16        without delay, on water levels for rivers and streams and
17        any  other data pertaining to potential flooding supplied
18        by the Division of Water Resources within the  Department
19        of Natural Resources to all political subdivisions to the
20        maximum extent possible.
21             (11)  Develop  agreements, if feasible, with medical
22        supply and equipment firms to  supply  resources  as  are
23        necessary  to  respond  to  an  earthquake  or  any other
24        disaster as defined in this Act.  These resources will be
25        made available upon notifying the vendor of the disaster.
26        Payment for the resources  will  be  in  accordance  with
27        Section 7 of this Act.  The Illinois Department of Public
28        Health  shall  determine which resources will be required
29        and requested.
30             (12)  Out of funds appropriated for these  purposes,
31        award   capital   and   non-capital  grants  to  Illinois
32        hospitals or health care facilities located outside of  a
33        city  with a population in excess of 1,000,000 to be used
34        for purposes  that  include,  but  are  not  limited  to,
 
                            -28-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        preparing  to  respond  to mass casualties and disasters,
 2        maintaining and improving patient safety and  quality  of
 3        care,  and  protecting  the  confidentiality  of  patient
 4        information.    No single grant for a capital expenditure
 5        shall exceed $300,000.  No single grant for a non-capital
 6        expenditure shall exceed  $100,000.    In  awarding  such
 7        grants, preference shall be given to hospitals that serve
 8        a  significant  number of Medicaid recipients, but do not
 9        qualify for disproportionate  share  hospital  adjustment
10        payments  under the Illinois Public Aid Code.  To receive
11        such a grant, a hospital or  health  care  facility  must
12        provide  funding  of  at  least  50%  of  the cost of the
13        project for which the  grant  is  being  requested.    In
14        awarding  such  grants  the Illinois Emergency Management
15        Agency shall consider the recommendations of the Illinois
16        Hospital Association.
17             (13) (12)  Do all other things necessary, incidental
18        or appropriate for the implementation of this Act.
19    (Source: P.A. 91-25, eff. 6-9-99; 92-73, eff. 1-1-02.)

20        Section 40.  The State Finance Act is amended by changing
21    Sections 5.198, 6z-12, and 6z-43,  changing  and  renumbering
22    Section  6z-51  (as  added  by Public Act 92-208), and adding
23    Sections 5.570 and 5.571 as follows:

24        (30 ILCS 105/5.198) (from Ch. 127, par. 141.198)
25        (Section scheduled to be repealed on October 15, 2002.)
26        Sec. 5.198.  The Illinois Health  Care  Cost  Containment
27    Council  Special  Studies  Fund.  This Section is repealed on
28    October 15, 2002.
29    (Source: P.A. 84-1240; 84-1438.)

30        (30 ILCS 105/5.570 new)
31        Sec. 5.570.  The Illinois Student  Assistance  Commission
 
                            -29-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    Contracts and Grants Fund.

 2        (30 ILCS 105/5.571 new)
 3        Sec. 5.571.  The Career and Technical Education Fund.

 4        (30 ILCS 105/6z-12) (from Ch. 127, par. 142z-12)
 5        (Section scheduled to be repealed on October 15, 2002.)
 6        Sec.  6z-12.  Funds  received by the Illinois Health Care
 7    Cost Containment Council for special studies pursuant to  the
 8    Illinois  Health Finance Reform Act shall be deposited in the
 9    Illinois Health Care Cost Containment Council Special Studies
10    Fund.  The General Assembly shall  from  time  to  time  make
11    appropriations from the Illinois Health Care Cost Containment
12    Council  Special  Studies  Fund for the payment of the direct
13    and indirect costs of special studies.  The  Illinois  Health
14    Care Cost Containment Council shall by rule, adopted pursuant
15    to the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, provide for the
16    allocation  of  the  direct  and  indirect costs of producing
17    special studies  pursuant  to  the  Illinois  Health  Finance
18    Reform Act.
19        In  addition  to any other permitted use of moneys in the
20    Fund, moneys in the Illinois  Health  Care  Cost  Containment
21    Council  Special  Studies  Fund  may  be used by the Council,
22    subject to appropriation, to provide services to the Illinois
23    Health Care Reform Task Force created under  Section  6-4  of
24    the Medicaid Revenue Act and to support Council operations.
25        The Illinois Health Care Cost Containment Council Special
26    Studies  Fund  is abolished on October 15, 2002.  Any balance
27    remaining in the Fund on that date shall  be  transferred  to
28    the Public Health Special State Projects Fund.
29        This Section is repealed on October 15, 2002.
30    (Source: P.A. 87-838; 87-1248.)

31        (30 ILCS 105/6z-43)
 
                            -30-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        Sec. 6z-43. Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund.
 2        (a)  There  is  created  in  the State Treasury a special
 3    fund to be known as the  Tobacco  Settlement  Recovery  Fund,
 4    into  which  shall  be deposited all monies paid to the State
 5    pursuant to (1) the Master Settlement  Agreement  entered  in
 6    the case of People of the State of Illinois v. Philip Morris,
 7    et  al. (Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 96-L13146) and (2)
 8    any settlement with or judgment against any  tobacco  product
 9    manufacturer  other  than  one  participating  in  the Master
10    Settlement Agreement in satisfaction of any released claim as
11    defined in the Master Settlement Agreement, as  well  as  any
12    other  monies  as  provided  by  law.   All  earnings on Fund
13    investments shall be  deposited  into  the  Fund.   Upon  the
14    creation  of  the Fund, the State Comptroller shall order the
15    State Treasurer to transfer into the Fund any monies paid  to
16    the  State  as  described  in item (1) or (2) of this Section
17    before the creation of the Fund plus any interest  earned  on
18    the investment of those monies.  The Treasurer may invest the
19    moneys  in  the Fund in the same manner, in the same types of
20    investments, and subject to the same limitations provided  in
21    the Illinois Pension Code for the investment of pension funds
22    other  than  those  established  under  Article 3 or 4 of the
23    Code.
24        (b)  As soon as may be practical  after  June  30,  2001,
25    upon  notification from and at the direction of the Governor,
26    the State Comptroller shall direct and  the  State  Treasurer
27    shall  transfer  the  unencumbered  balance  in  the  Tobacco
28    Settlement  Recovery  Fund as of June 30, 2001, as determined
29    by the Governor, into the  Budget  Stabilization  Fund.   The
30    Treasurer  may  invest the moneys in the Budget Stabilization
31    Fund in the same manner, in the same  types  of  investments,
32    and  subject to the same limitations provided in the Illinois
33    Pension Code for the investment of pension funds  other  than
34    those established under Article 3 or 4 of the Code.
 
                            -31-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        (c)  All  federal financial participation moneys received
 2    pursuant to expenditures from the  Fund  shall  be  deposited
 3    into the Fund.
 4    (Source:  P.A.  91-646,  eff.  11-19-99; 91-704, eff. 7-1-00;
 5    91-797,  eff.  6-9-00;  92-11,  eff.  6-11-01;  92-16,   eff.
 6    6-28-01.)

 7        (30 ILCS 105/6z-55)
 8        Sec. 6z-55. 6z-51.  Statewide Economic Development Fund.
 9    (a)  The  Statewide Economic Development Fund is created as a
10    special fund in the State treasury.  Moneys in the Fund shall
11    be  used,  subject  to  appropriation,  for  the  purpose  of
12    statewide economic development activities or by the  Illinois
13    Emergency  Management  Agency for awarding grants to Illinois
14    hospitals and health  care  facilities  to  provide  for  the
15    health and security of Illinois residents.
16    (Source: P.A. 92-208, eff. 8-2-01; revised 10-17-01.)

17        Section  45.   The  School  Code  is  amended by changing
18    Sections 14-7.03 and 18-3 as follows:

19        (105 ILCS 5/14-7.03) (from Ch. 122, par. 14-7.03)
20        Sec. 14-7.03. Special Education Classes for Children from
21    Orphanages, Foster Family  Homes,  Children's  Homes,  or  in
22    State  Housing Units.  If a school district maintains special
23    education classes on the site of  orphanages  and  children's
24    homes,  or if children from the orphanages, children's homes,
25    foster  family  homes,  other  State   agencies,   or   State
26    residential  units  for  children attend classes for children
27    with  disabilities  in  which  the  school  district   is   a
28    participating member of a joint agreement, or if the children
29    from  the  orphanages, children's homes, foster family homes,
30    other State  agencies,  or  State  residential  units  attend
31    classes  for the children with disabilities maintained by the
 
                            -32-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    school district, then reimbursement shall be paid to eligible
 2    districts in accordance with the provisions of  this  Section
 3    by the Comptroller as directed by the State Superintendent of
 4    Education.
 5        The   amount  of  tuition  for  such  children  shall  be
 6    determined by the actual cost of  maintaining  such  classes,
 7    using  the  per  capita  cost  formula  set  forth in Section
 8    14-7.01, such program and cost  to  be  pre-approved  by  the
 9    State Superintendent of Education.
10        On   forms   prepared  by  the  State  Superintendent  of
11    Education,  the  district  shall  certify  to  the   regional
12    superintendent the following:
13             (1)  The  name of the home or State residential unit
14        with the name of the owner or proprietor and  address  of
15        those maintaining it;
16             (2)  That  no  service  charges  or  other  payments
17        authorized  by  law  were  collected  in  lieu  of  taxes
18        therefrom  or  on  account  thereof  during either of the
19        calendar years included in  the  school  year  for  which
20        claim is being made;
21             (3)  The  number  of  children qualifying under this
22        Act in special education classes for instruction  on  the
23        site of the orphanages and children's homes;
24             (4)  The   number   of  children  attending  special
25        education classes for children with disabilities in which
26        the district is  a  participating  member  of  a  special
27        education joint agreement;
28             (5)  The   number   of  children  attending  special
29        education  classes   for   children   with   disabilities
30        maintained by the district;
31             (6)  The  computed amount of tuition payment claimed
32        as due,  as  approved  by  the  State  Superintendent  of
33        Education, for maintaining these classes.
34        If  a  school  district  makes  a claim for reimbursement
 
                            -33-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    under Section 18-3 or 18-4 of this Act it shall  not  include
 2    in  any  claim  filed  under  this  Section  a claim for such
 3    children.  Payments authorized by  law,  including  State  or
 4    federal  grants  for  education  of children included in this
 5    Section, shall be deducted in determining the tuition amount.
 6        Nothing in this Act shall be construed so as to  prohibit
 7    reimbursement  for  the  tuition  of  children  placed in for
 8    profit facilities.  Private facilities shall provide adequate
 9    space at the facility for special education classes  provided
10    by  a  school  district  or joint agreement for children with
11    disabilities who are residents of the facility at no cost  to
12    the  school  district  or joint agreement upon request of the
13    school district  or  joint  agreement.   If  such  a  private
14    facility  provides  space at no cost to the district or joint
15    agreement for special education classes provided to  children
16    with  disabilities  who  are  residents  of the facility, the
17    district or joint agreement shall not include any  costs  for
18    the use of those facilities in its claim for reimbursement.
19        Reimbursement   for  tuition  may  include  the  cost  of
20    providing summer school programs for children with severe and
21    profound disabilities served under this Section.  Claims  for
22    that  reimbursement shall be filed by November 1 and shall be
23    paid on or before December 15 from  appropriations  made  for
24    the purposes of this Section.
25        The  State  Board of Education shall establish such rules
26    and  regulations  as  may  be  necessary  to  implement   the
27    provisions of this Section.
28        Claims  filed  on  behalf of programs operated under this
29    Section housed in a jail or detention center shall be  on  an
30    individual  student  basis  only  for  eligible students with
31    disabilities.  These  claims  shall  be  in  accordance  with
32    applicable rules.
33        Each   district  claiming  reimbursement  for  a  program
34    operated as a group program shall have an approved budget  on
 
                            -34-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    file   with  the  State  Board  of  Education  prior  to  the
 2    initiation of the  program's  operation.   On  September  30,
 3    December 31, and March 31, the State Board of Education shall
 4    voucher  payments  to  group programs based upon the approved
 5    budget during the year of operation.  Final claims for  group
 6    payments  shall  be filed on or before July 15.  Final claims
 7    for group programs received at the State Board  of  Education
 8    on  or  before  June 15 shall be vouchered by June 30.  Final
 9    claims received at the State Board of Education between  June
10    16  and  July 15 shall be vouchered by August 30.  Claims for
11    group programs received after July 15 shall not be honored.
12        Each  district  claiming  reimbursement  for   individual
13    students   shall  have  the  eligibility  of  those  students
14    verified by the State Board of Education.  On  September  30,
15    December 31, and March 31, the State Board of Education shall
16    voucher  payments  for  individual  students  based  upon  an
17    estimated cost calculated from the prior year's claim.  Final
18    claims  for  individual  students for the regular school term
19    must be received at the State Board of Education by July  15.
20    Claims  for  individual students received after July 15 shall
21    not be honored. Final claims for individual students shall be
22    vouchered by August 30.
23        Reimbursement shall be made  based  upon  approved  group
24    programs or individual students.  The State Superintendent of
25    Education  shall  direct  the  Comptroller to pay a specified
26    amount  to  the  district  by  the  30th  day  of  September,
27    December, March, June,  or  August,  respectively.   However,
28    notwithstanding  any  other provisions of this Section or the
29    School Code, beginning with fiscal year 1994 and each  fiscal
30    year  thereafter  through  fiscal  year  2002,  if the amount
31    appropriated for any fiscal year  is  less  than  the  amount
32    required for purposes of this Section, the amount required to
33    eliminate  any  insufficient  reimbursement for each district
34    claim under this Section shall be reimbursed on August 30  of
 
                            -35-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    the next fiscal year, and the. payments required to eliminate
 2    any  insufficiency for prior fiscal year claims shall be made
 3    before any claims are  paid  for  the  current  fiscal  year.
 4    Notwithstanding  any  other provision of this Section or this
 5    Code, beginning with fiscal year  2003,  total  reimbursement
 6    under  this  Section  in  any  fiscal  year is limited to the
 7    amount appropriated for that purpose for  that  fiscal  year,
 8    and  if  the  amount appropriated for any fiscal year is less
 9    than the amount required for purposes of  this  Section,  the
10    insufficiency  shall be apportioned pro rata among the school
11    districts seeking reimbursement.
12        The claim of a school district otherwise eligible  to  be
13    reimbursed  in  accordance  with  Section  14-12.01  for  the
14    1976-77 school year but for this amendatory Act of 1977 shall
15    not  be  paid  unless  the  district  ceases to maintain such
16    classes for one entire school year.
17        If a school district's current reimbursement payment  for
18    the  1977-78  school  year only is less than the prior year's
19    reimbursement payment owed, the district shall  be  paid  the
20    amount  of the difference between the payments in addition to
21    the current reimbursement payment, and  the  amount  so  paid
22    shall   be   subtracted  from  the  amount  of  prior  year's
23    reimbursement payment owed to the district.
24        Regional superintendents may  operate  special  education
25    classes  for  children  from orphanages, foster family homes,
26    children's homes or State housing units  located  within  the
27    educational  services region upon consent of the school board
28    otherwise so obligated.  In electing to assume the powers and
29    duties of a school district in providing and maintaining such
30    a special education program, the regional superintendent  may
31    enter  into  joint  agreements  with  other districts and may
32    contract with public or private  schools  or  the  orphanage,
33    foster family home, children's home or State housing unit for
34    provision  of  the  special  education  program. The regional
 
                            -36-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    superintendent  exercising  the  powers  granted  under  this
 2    Section shall claim  the  reimbursement  authorized  by  this
 3    Section directly from the State Board of Education.
 4        Any child who is not a resident of Illinois who is placed
 5    in  a  child  welfare  institution,  private facility, foster
 6    family home, State operated program, orphanage or  children's
 7    home  shall  have the payment for his educational tuition and
 8    any related services assured by the placing agent.
 9        Commencing July 1, 1992, for each disabled student who is
10    placed residentially by a State agency or the courts for care
11    or custody or both care  and  custody,  welfare,  medical  or
12    mental  health  treatment  or  both medical and mental health
13    treatment, rehabilitation,  and  protection,  whether  placed
14    there  on,  before,  or  after  July  1,  1992, the costs for
15    educating the student are eligible  for  reimbursement  under
16    this  Section  providing  the  placing  agency  or  court has
17    notified the appropriate school district authorities  of  the
18    status of student residency where applicable prior to or upon
19    placement.
20        The  district  of  residence  of the parent, guardian, or
21    disabled student as defined in Sections 14-1.11 and  14-1.11a
22    is  responsible for the actual costs of the student's special
23    education program and is  eligible  for  reimbursement  under
24    this  Section when placement is made by a State agency or the
25    courts. Payments shall be made by the  resident  district  to
26    the  district  wherein  the  facility is located no less than
27    once per quarter unless otherwise agreed to in writing by the
28    parties.
29        When a dispute  arises  over  the  determination  of  the
30    district  of  residence, the district or districts may appeal
31    the decision  in  writing  to  the  State  Superintendent  of
32    Education.   The  decision  of  the  State  Superintendent of
33    Education shall be final.
34        In the event a district does not make a  tuition  payment
 
                            -37-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    to  another  district that is providing the special education
 2    program and services, the  State  Board  of  Education  shall
 3    immediately  withhold  125%  of  the  then  remaining  annual
 4    tuition  cost  from  the State aid or categorical aid payment
 5    due to the school district  that  is  determined  to  be  the
 6    resident  school  district.   All funds withheld by the State
 7    Board of Education shall  immediately  be  forwarded  to  the
 8    school district where the student is being served.
 9        When  a  child  eligible  for services under this Section
10    14-7.03 must be placed in a nonpublic facility, that facility
11    shall meet the programmatic requirements of  Section  14-7.02
12    and  its  regulations,  and the educational services shall be
13    funded only in accordance with this Section 14-7.03.
14    (Source: P.A. 89-235,  eff.  8-4-95;  89-397,  eff.  8-20-95;
15    89-698,  eff.  1-14-97;  90-463,  eff.  8-17-97; 90-644, eff.
16    7-24-98.)

17        (105 ILCS 5/18-3) (from Ch. 122, par. 18-3)
18        Sec. 18-3.   Tuition  of  children  from  orphanages  and
19    children's homes.
20        When  the  children from any home for orphans, dependent,
21    abandoned  or  maladjusted   children   maintained   by   any
22    organization  or  association admitting to such home children
23    from the State in general or  when  children  residing  in  a
24    school  district  wherein the State of Illinois maintains and
25    operates any welfare or penal institution on  property  owned
26    by  the  State  of  Illinois,  which contains houses, housing
27    units or housing accommodations  within  a  school  district,
28    attend  grades  kindergarten through 12 of the public schools
29    maintained by that school district, the State  Superintendent
30    of  Education  shall  direct  the  State Comptroller to pay a
31    specified amount sufficient to pay the annual tuition cost of
32    such children who attended such  public  schools  during  the
33    regular  school year ending on June 30 or the summer term for
 
                            -38-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    that school year, and the Comptroller shall  pay  the  amount
 2    after   receipt   of   a   voucher  submitted  by  the  State
 3    Superintendent of Education.
 4        The amount of the tuition for such children attending the
 5    public schools of the district shall  be  determined  by  the
 6    State  Superintendent  of Education by multiplying the number
 7    of such children in average daily attendance in such  schools
 8    by   1.2   times   the   total  annual  per  capita  cost  of
 9    administering the schools of the district. Such total  annual
10    per  capita cost shall be determined by totaling all expenses
11    of the school district in  the  educational,  operations  and
12    maintenance,  bond  and  interest,  transportation,  Illinois
13    municipal  retirement,  and  rent  funds  for the school year
14    preceding the filing of such tuition claims less expenditures
15    not applicable to the regular K-12 program,  less  offsetting
16    revenues  from  State  sources  except  those from the common
17    school fund, less offsetting revenues  from  federal  sources
18    except  those  from  federal  impaction aid, less student and
19    community service revenues, plus  a  depreciation  allowance;
20    and  dividing  such total by the average daily attendance for
21    the year.
22        Annually on or before June 30 the superintendent  of  the
23    district  upon  forms prepared by the State Superintendent of
24    Education shall certify to the  regional  superintendent  the
25    following:
26             1.  The  name of the home and of the organization or
27        association maintaining it; or the legal  description  of
28        the  real  estate upon which the house, housing units, or
29        housing accommodations are located and that no  taxes  or
30        service charges or other payments authorized by law to be
31        made  in  lieu  of  taxes  were collected therefrom or on
32        account thereof  during  either  of  the  calendar  years
33        included  in  the  school  year  for which claim is being
34        made;
 
                            -39-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1             2.  The number of children from the home  or  living
 2        in  such  houses, housing units or housing accommodations
 3        and attending the schools of the district;
 4             3.  The  total  number  of  children  attending  the
 5        schools of the district;
 6             4.  The per capita tuition charge of  the  district;
 7        and
 8             5.  The  computed  amount  of  the  tuition  payment
 9        claimed as due.
10        Whenever  the persons in charge of such home for orphans,
11    dependent, abandoned or maladjusted  children  have  received
12    from the parent or guardian of any such child or by virtue of
13    an  order  of  court  a specific allowance for educating such
14    child, such persons shall pay to  the  school  board  in  the
15    district  where  the  child attends school such amount of the
16    allowance as is necessary to pay the tuition required by such
17    district for the education of the child. If the allowance  is
18    insufficient   to   pay   the   tuition  in  full  the  State
19    Superintendent of Education shall direct the  Comptroller  to
20    pay  to the district the difference between the total tuition
21    charged and the amount of the allowance.
22        Whenever the facilities of a  school  district  in  which
23    such  house,  housing  units  or  housing  accommodations are
24    located, are limited, pupils may be assigned by that district
25    to the schools of any adjacent district to the limit  of  the
26    facilities  of the adjacent district to properly educate such
27    pupils as shall be determined by  the  school  board  of  the
28    adjacent  district, and the State Superintendent of Education
29    shall direct  the  Comptroller  to  pay  a  specified  amount
30    sufficient  to  pay  the  annual  tuition  of the children so
31    assigned to and attending  public  schools  in  the  adjacent
32    districts and the Comptroller shall draw his warrant upon the
33    State  Treasurer  for  the  payment  of  such  amount for the
34    benefit of the adjacent school districts in the  same  manner
 
                            -40-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    as  for  districts  in  which  the  houses,  housing units or
 2    housing accommodations are located.
 3        The  school  district  shall   certify   to   the   State
 4    Superintendent of Education the report of claims due for such
 5    tuition payments on or before July 31. Failure on the part of
 6    the  school  board  to  certify  its  claim  on July 31 shall
 7    constitute a forfeiture by the district of its right  to  the
 8    payment  of  any such tuition claim for the school year.  The
 9    State  Superintendent   of   Education   shall   direct   the
10    Comptroller  to  pay to the district, on or before August 15,
11    the amount due the district for the school year in accordance
12    with the calculation of  the  claim  as  set  forth  in  this
13    Section.
14        Claims for tuition for children from any home for orphans
15    or  dependent,  abandoned,  or maladjusted children beginning
16    with the 1993-1994 school year shall be  paid  on  a  current
17    year  basis.  On September 30, December 31, and March 31, the
18    State Board of Education shall voucher payments for districts
19    with those students based on  an  estimated  cost  calculated
20    from the prior year's claim.  Final claims for those students
21    for  the regular school term and summer term must be received
22    at the State Board of Education by July 31 following the  end
23    of  the regular school year.  Final claims for those students
24    shall be vouchered by August 15.   During  fiscal  year  1994
25    both  the 1992-1993 school year and the 1993-1994 school year
26    shall be paid in order to change the cycle of payment from  a
27    reimbursement  basis  to  a  current  year  funding  basis of
28    payment.  However, notwithstanding any  other  provisions  of
29    this  Section  or the School Code, beginning with fiscal year
30    1994 and each fiscal  year  thereafter  through  fiscal  year
31    2002,  if the amount appropriated for any fiscal year is less
32    than the amount required for purposes of  this  Section,  the
33    amount  required  to eliminate any insufficient reimbursement
34    for  each  district  claim  under  this  Section   shall   be
 
                            -41-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    reimbursed  on  August  30  of the next fiscal year, and the.
 2    payments required to eliminate any  insufficiency  for  prior
 3    fiscal  year  claims shall be made before any claims are paid
 4    for the  current  fiscal  year.   Notwithstanding  any  other
 5    provision of this Section or this Code, beginning with fiscal
 6    year  2003,  total  reimbursement  under  this Section in any
 7    fiscal year is limited to the amount  appropriated  for  that
 8    purpose  for that fiscal year, and if the amount appropriated
 9    for any fiscal year is less  than  the  amount  required  for
10    purposes   of   this  Section,  the  insufficiency  shall  be
11    apportioned pro  rata  among  the  school  districts  seeking
12    reimbursement.
13        If  a  school  district  makes  a claim for reimbursement
14    under Section 18-4 or 14-7.03 it shall  not  include  in  any
15    claim  filed  under  this  Section  children  residing on the
16    property of State institutions included in  its  claim  under
17    Section 18-4 or 14-7.03.
18        Any child who is not a resident of Illinois who is placed
19    in  a  child  welfare  institution,  private  facility, State
20    operated program, orphanage or children's home shall have the
21    payment for his educational tuition and any related  services
22    assured by the placing agent.
23        In  order  to  provide  services  appropriate  to allow a
24    student under the legal guardianship or custodianship of  the
25    State  to  participate  in  local school district educational
26    programs, costs may be incurred in appropriate cases  by  the
27    district  that  are  in  excess of 1.2 times the district per
28    capita tuition charge allowed under the  provisions  of  this
29    Section.   In  the event such excess costs are incurred, they
30    must be documented in accordance with cost rules  established
31    under  the  authority of this Section and may then be claimed
32    for reimbursement under this Section.
33        Planned services for students eligible for  this  funding
34    must  be a collaborative effort between the appropriate State
 
                            -42-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    agency or the student's group home  or  institution  and  the
 2    local school district.
 3    (Source: P.A. 91-764, eff. 6-9-00; 92-94, eff. 1-1-02.)

 4        Section  50.   The State Aid Continuing Appropriation Law
 5    is amended by changing Sections 15-10, 15-15,  and  15-25  as
 6    follows:

 7        (105 ILCS 235/15-10)
 8        (Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2002)
 9        Sec. 15-10.  Annual budget; recommendation.  The Governor
10    shall  include  a  Common  School  Fund recommendation to the
11    State Board of Education in the fiscal year 1999 through 2003
12    2002 annual Budgets sufficient to fund (i) the General  State
13    Aid  Formula  set  forth  in  subsection  (E) (Computation of
14    General State Aid) and subsection (H)  (Supplemental  General
15    State Aid) of Section 18-8.05 of the School Code and (ii) the
16    supplementary  payments  for  school  districts  set forth in
17    subsection (J)  (Supplementary  Grants  in  Aid)  of  Section
18    18-8.05 of the School Code.
19    (Source: P.A. 92-7, eff. 6-29-01.)

20        (105 ILCS 235/15-15)
21        (Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2002)
22        Sec.  15-15.   State  Aid  Formula; Funding.  The General
23    Assembly    shall   annually   make   Common   School    Fund
24    appropriations  to  the  State  Board  of Education in fiscal
25    years 1999 through 2003  2002  sufficient  to  fund  (i)  the
26    General  State  Aid  Formula  set  forth  in  subsection  (E)
27    (Computation   of  General  State  Aid)  and  subsection  (H)
28    (Supplemental General State Aid) of Section  18-8.05  of  the
29    School  Code  and  (ii) the supplementary payments for school
30    districts set forth in subsection (J)  (Supplementary  Grants
31    in Aid) of Section 18-8.05 of the School Code.
 
                            -43-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    (Source: P.A. 92-7, eff. 6-29-01.)

 2        (105 ILCS 235/15-25)
 3        (Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2002)
 4        Sec.  15-25.   Repeal.  This Article is repealed June 30,
 5    2003.  Section 15-20 of this Article  is  repealed  June  30,
 6    2002.
 7    (Source: P.A. 92-7, eff. 6-29-01.)

 8        Section  55.  The Public Community College Act is amended
 9    by adding Section 2-16.07 as follows:

10        (110 ILCS 805/2-16.07 new)
11        Sec. 2-16.07.  Career and Technical Education Fund.   The
12    Career  and  Technical Education Fund is created as a special
13    fund in the State  treasury.   The  Comptroller  shall  order
14    transferred  and  the State Treasurer shall transfer from the
15    Federal Department of Education  Fund  into  the  Career  and
16    Technical  Education  Fund such amounts as may be directed in
17    writing by the State  Board  of  Education.   All  moneys  so
18    deposited into the Career and Technical Education Fund may be
19    used,  subject  to  appropriation,  by  the  State  Board for
20    operational expenses associated with  the  administration  of
21    Career  and  Technical  Education,  for payment of Career and
22    Technical Education grants to colleges, and  for  payment  of
23    costs relating to State leadership activities, as provided by
24    the United States Department of Education.

25        Section  60.  The  Higher  Education  Student  Assistance
26    Act is amended  by   adding   Sections   65.56   and   77  as
27    follows:

28        (110 ILCS 947/65.56 new)
29        Sec.  65.56.  Illinois  Teachers and Child Care Providers
 
                            -44-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    Loan Repayment Program.
 2        (a)  In order to encourage academically talented Illinois
 3    students to enter and continue teaching in  Illinois  schools
 4    in  low-income  areas  and to encourage students to enter the
 5    early child care profession and serve low-income  areas,  the
 6    Commission   shall,   each   year,   receive   and   consider
 7    applications   for   loan  repayment  assistance  under  this
 8    Section. This program shall be known as the Illinois Teachers
 9    and  Child  Care  Providers  Loan  Repayment   Program.   The
10    Commission  shall  administer  the program and shall make all
11    necessary and proper rules not inconsistent with this Section
12    for the program's effective  implementation.  The  Commission
13    may  use  up  to 5% of the appropriation for this program for
14    administration and promotion of teacher incentive programs.
15        (b)  Beginning January 1, 2003,  subject  to  a  separate
16    appropriation  made  for  such purposes, the Commission shall
17    award a grant to each qualified applicant in an amount  equal
18    to  the amount of educational loans forgiven on behalf of the
19    qualified applicant pursuant to Sections 424 and 425 of Title
20    IV of the Higher Education  Amendments  of  1998  (20  U.S.C.
21    1078-10  and  1078-11),  up  to  a  maximum  of  $5,000.  The
22    Commission  shall  encourage  the  recipient of a grant under
23    this Section to use the grant amount awarded to pay  off  his
24    or her educational loans.
25        (c)  A person is a qualified applicant under this Section
26    if he or she meets all of the following qualifications:
27             (1)  The  person  is  a  United  States  citizen  or
28        eligible noncitizen.
29             (2)  The person is a resident of this State.
30             (3)  The  person is a borrower who has had an amount
31        of his or her  educational  loans  forgiven  pursuant  to
32        Sections  424 and 425 of Title IV of the Higher Education
33        Amendments of 1998.
34             (4)  The person has fulfilled  the  obligations  set
 
                            -45-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        forth  by  Sections 424 and 425 of Title IV of the Higher
 2        Education Amendments of 1998 in this State.
 3        (d)  All applications for  grant  assistance  under  this
 4    Section  shall  be  made  to  the  Commission.  The  form  of
 5    application  and  the information required to be set forth in
 6    the application shall be determined by  the  Commission,  and
 7    the  Commission shall require applicants to submit with their
 8    applications such  supporting  documents  as  the  Commission
 9    deems necessary.
10        (e)  A  qualified  applicant must apply for a grant under
11    this Section within 6 months after receiving notification  of
12    loan forgiveness pursuant to Sections 424 and 425 of Title IV
13    of the Higher Education Amendments of 1998.

14        (110 ILCS 947/77 new)
15        Sec.    77.  Illinois   Student   Assistance   Commission
16    Contracts and Grants Fund.
17        (a)  The Illinois Student Assistance Commission Contracts
18    and Grants Fund is created as a special  fund  in  the  State
19    treasury.   All gifts, grants, or donations of money received
20    by the Commission must be deposited into this Fund.
21        (b)  Moneys in the Fund may be used  by  the  Commission,
22    subject  to  appropriation,  for  support of the Commission's
23    student assistance outreach activities.

24        (110 ILCS 947/65.57 rep.)
25        Section 65.  The Higher Education Student Assistance  Act
26    is amended by repealing Section 65.57.

27        Section  70.  The Comprehensive Health Insurance Plan Act
28    is amended by changing Section 3 as follows:

29        (215 ILCS 105/3) (from Ch. 73, par. 1303)
30        Sec. 3.  Operation of the Plan.
 
                            -46-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        a.  There is hereby  created  an  Illinois  Comprehensive
 2    Health Insurance Plan.
 3        b.  The Plan shall operate subject to the supervision and
 4    control  of  the  board.  The board is created as a political
 5    subdivision and body politic and corporate and, as  such,  is
 6    not  a  State  agency.   The board shall consist of 10 public
 7    members, appointed  by  the  Governor  with  the  advice  and
 8    consent of the Senate.
 9        Initial  members  shall  be appointed to the Board by the
10    Governor as follows: 2 members to serve until July  1,  1988,
11    and  until  their  successors  are appointed and qualified; 2
12    members  to  serve  until  July  1,  1989,  and  until  their
13    successors are appointed and qualified; 3  members  to  serve
14    until  July 1, 1990, and until their successors are appointed
15    and qualified; and 3 members to serve until July 1, 1991, and
16    until their successors are appointed and qualified. As  terms
17    of   initial   members  expire,  their  successors  shall  be
18    appointed for terms to expire the first day in July  3  years
19    thereafter,  and  until  their  successors  are appointed and
20    qualified.
21        Any vacancy in the Board occurring for any  reason  other
22    than  the  expiration  of  a  term  shall  be  filled for the
23    unexpired  term  in  the  same   manner   as   the   original
24    appointment.
25        Any  member  of  the Board may be removed by the Governor
26    for neglect of duty, misfeasance, malfeasance, or nonfeasance
27    in office.
28        In addition, a representative of the Bureau of the Budget
29    Illinois   Health   Care   Cost   Containment   Council,    a
30    representative  of the Office of the Attorney General and the
31    Director or the Director's designated representative shall be
32    members of the board.  Four members of the General  Assembly,
33    one  each  appointed  by the President and Minority Leader of
34    the Senate and by the Speaker  and  Minority  Leader  of  the
 
                            -47-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    House of Representatives, shall serve as nonvoting members of
 2    the  board.   At  least  2  of  the  public  members shall be
 3    individuals reasonably expected to qualify for coverage under
 4    the Plan, the parent or spouse of such an  individual,  or  a
 5    surviving  family  member  of  an  individual  who could have
 6    qualified for the plan during his lifetime. The  Director  or
 7    Director's  representative  shall  be  the chairperson of the
 8    board.  Members of the board shall receive  no  compensation,
 9    but  shall  be reimbursed for reasonable expenses incurred in
10    the necessary performance of their duties.
11        c.  The board shall make an annual  report  in  September
12    and  shall  file  the report with the Secretary of the Senate
13    and the Clerk of the House of  Representatives.   The  report
14    shall  summarize  the activities of the Plan in the preceding
15    calendar year, including net written and earned premiums, the
16    expense of administration, the paid and incurred  losses  for
17    the  year  and  other  information as may be requested by the
18    General Assembly. The report shall also include analysis  and
19    recommendations   regarding   utilization   review,   quality
20    assurance and access to cost effective quality health care.
21        d.  In its plan of operation the board shall:
22             (1)  Establish   procedures  for  selecting  a  plan
23        administrator in accordance with Section 5 of this Act.
24             (2)  Establish procedures for the operation  of  the
25        board.
26             (3)  Create  a  Plan  fund,  under management of the
27        board, to fund administrative, claim, and other  expenses
28        of the Plan.
29             (4)  Establish   procedures  for  the  handling  and
30        accounting of assets and monies of the Plan.
31             (5)  Develop and implement a  program  to  publicize
32        the  existence  of the Plan, the eligibility requirements
33        and procedures for  enrollment  and  to  maintain  public
34        awareness of the Plan.
 
                            -48-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1             (6)  Establish procedures under which applicants and
 2        participants  may have grievances reviewed by a grievance
 3        committee appointed by the board.  The  grievances  shall
 4        be  reported to the board immediately after completion of
 5        the review.  The Department and the  board  shall  retain
 6        all  written complaints regarding the Plan for at least 3
 7        years.  Oral complaints shall be reduced to written  form
 8        and maintained for at least 3 years.
 9             (7)  Provide  for  other matters as may be necessary
10        and proper for the execution of its  powers,  duties  and
11        obligations under the Plan.
12        e.  No later than 5 years after the Plan is operative the
13    board  and the Department shall conduct cooperatively a study
14    of the Plan and the persons insured by the Plan to determine:
15    (1)  claims  experience  including  a  breakdown  of  medical
16    conditions  for  which  claims   were   paid;   (2)   whether
17    availability  of  the  Plan affected employment opportunities
18    for  participants;  (3)  whether  availability  of  the  Plan
19    affected the receipt of medical assistance benefits  by  Plan
20    participants;  (4) whether a change occurred in the number of
21    personal bankruptcies due to medical or other health  related
22    costs;  (5)  data regarding all complaints received about the
23    Plan including its operation and services; (6) and any  other
24    significant  observations  regarding utilization of the Plan.
25    The study shall culminate in a written report to be presented
26    to the Governor, the President of the Senate, the Speaker  of
27    the  House  and  the  chairpersons  of  the  House and Senate
28    Insurance Committees.  The report shall  be  filed  with  the
29    Secretary  of  the  Senate  and  the  Clerk  of  the House of
30    Representatives.  The  report  shall  also  be  available  to
31    members of the general public upon request.
32        f.  The board may:
33             (1)  Prepare    and    distribute   certificate   of
34        eligibility forms and  enrollment  instruction  forms  to
 
                            -49-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        insurance  producers  and  to  the general public in this
 2        State.
 3             (2)  Provide for reinsurance of  risks  incurred  by
 4        the  Plan  and  enter  into  reinsurance  agreements with
 5        insurers to establish a reinsurance  plan  for  risks  of
 6        coverage  described  in  the  Plan,  or obtain commercial
 7        reinsurance to reduce the risk of loss through the Plan.
 8             (3)  Issue  additional  types  of  health  insurance
 9        policies to provide optional coverages as  are  otherwise
10        permitted  by  this  Act  including a Medicare supplement
11        policy designed to supplement Medicare.
12             (4)  Provide  for  and   employ   cost   containment
13        measures  and requirements including, but not limited to,
14        preadmission  certification,  second  surgical   opinion,
15        concurrent  utilization  review  programs, and individual
16        case management for the purpose of making the  pool  more
17        cost effective.
18             (5)  Design, utilize, contract, or otherwise arrange
19        for  the delivery of cost effective health care services,
20        including  establishing  or  contracting  with  preferred
21        provider organizations, health maintenance organizations,
22        and other limited network provider arrangements.
23             (6)  Adopt bylaws, rules, regulations, policies  and
24        procedures  as  may  be  necessary  or convenient for the
25        implementation of the Act and the operation of the Plan.
26             (7)  Administer separate pools,  separate  accounts,
27        or other plans or arrangements as required by this Act to
28        separate  federally  eligible  individuals  or  groups of
29        federally  eligible  individuals  who  qualify  for  plan
30        coverage under Section  15  of  this  Act  from  eligible
31        persons  or  groups  of  eligible persons who qualify for
32        plan coverage under Section 7 of this Act  and  apportion
33        the  costs  of  the  administration  among  such separate
34        pools, separate accounts, or other plans or arrangements.
 
                            -50-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        g.  The  Director  may,  by  rule,  establish  additional
 2    powers and duties of the board and may adopt  rules  for  any
 3    other  purposes,  including the operation of the Plan, as are
 4    necessary or proper to implement this Act.
 5        h.  The board is not liable for  any  obligation  of  the
 6    Plan.   There  is  no  liability on the part of any member or
 7    employee of the board or the  Department,  and  no  cause  of
 8    action  of  any nature may arise against them, for any action
 9    taken or omission made by them in the  performance  of  their
10    powers  and  duties  under  this  Act,  unless  the action or
11    omission constitutes willful or wanton misconduct. The  board
12    may  provide  in  its bylaws or rules for indemnification of,
13    and legal representation for, its members and employees.
14        i.  There is no liability on the part  of  any  insurance
15    producer  for  the failure of any applicant to be accepted by
16    the Plan unless the failure of the applicant to  be  accepted
17    by  the  Plan  is  due to an act or omission by the insurance
18    producer which constitutes willful or wanton misconduct.
19    (Source: P.A. 90-30, eff. 7-1-97.)

20        Section 75.  The Children's Health Insurance Program  Act
21    is amended by changing Sections 20, 40, and 97 as follows:

22        (215 ILCS 106/20)
23        (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2002)
24        Sec. 20.  Eligibility.
25        (a)  To  be eligible for this Program, a person must be a
26    person who has a child eligible under this  Act  and  who  is
27    eligible  under  a waiver of federal requirements pursuant to
28    an application made pursuant to subdivision (a)(1) of Section
29    40 of this Act or who is a child who:
30             (1)  is a child who  is  not  eligible  for  medical
31        assistance;
32             (2)  is  a  child  whose annual household income, as
 
                            -51-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        determined by  the  Department,  is  above  133%  of  the
 2        federal poverty level and at or below 185% of the federal
 3        poverty level;
 4             (3)  is a  resident of the State of Illinois; and
 5             (4)  is  a  child  who  is  either  a  United States
 6        citizen or included in one of the following categories of
 7        non-citizens:
 8                  (A)  unmarried dependent children of  either  a
 9             United  States  Veteran  honorably  discharged  or a
10             person on active military duty;
11                  (B)  refugees  under   Section   207   of   the
12             Immigration and Nationality Act;
13                  (C)  asylees   under   Section   208   of   the
14             Immigration and Nationality Act;
15                  (D)  persons  for  whom  deportation  has  been
16             withheld  under  Section  243(h)  of the Immigration
17             and Nationality Act;
18                  (E)  persons granted  conditional  entry  under
19             Section 203(a)(7) of the Immigration and Nationality
20             Act as in effect prior to April 1, 1980;
21                  (F)  persons  lawfully  admitted  for permanent
22             residence under the Immigration and Nationality Act;
23             and
24                  (G)  parolees, for at  least  one  year,  under
25             Section 212(d)(5) of the Immigration and Nationality
26             Act.
27        Those  children  who  are  in the categories set forth in
28    subdivisions (4)(F) and (4)(G) of this subsection, who  enter
29    the  United  States on or after August 22, 1996, shall not be
30    eligible for 5 years beginning on the date the child  entered
31    the United States.
32        (b)  A  child  who  is  determined  to  be  eligible  for
33    assistance  may shall remain eligible for 12 months, provided
34    the child maintains his or her residence in  the  State,  has
 
                            -52-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    not  yet  attained  19  years  of  age,  and  is not excluded
 2    pursuant to subsection (c).  A child who has been  determined
 3    to  be  eligible  for  assistance  must  reapply or otherwise
 4    establish eligibility Eligibility shall be  re-determined  by
 5    the Department at least annually.  An eligible child shall be
 6    required,  as determined by the Department by rule, to report
 7    promptly those changes in income and other circumstances that
 8    affect eligibility.   The  eligibility  of  a  child  may  be
 9    redetermined  based  on  the  information  reported or may be
10    terminated based on the  failure  to  report  or  failure  to
11    report   accurately.    A  child's  responsible  relative  or
12    caretaker may also be held liable to the Department  for  any
13    payments  made  by the Department on such child's behalf that
14    were inappropriate.  An  applicant  shall  be  provided  with
15    notice of these obligations.
16        (c)  A  child  shall  not  be eligible for coverage under
17    this Program if:
18             (1)  the premium required pursuant to Section 30  of
19        this Act has not been paid.  If the required premiums are
20        not paid the liability of the Program shall be limited to
21        benefits  incurred  under the Program for the time period
22        for which  premiums  had  been  paid.   If  the  required
23        monthly   premium   is  not  paid,  the  child  shall  be
24        ineligible for re-enrollment for a minimum  period  of  3
25        months.   Re-enrollment  shall  be completed prior to the
26        next covered medical visit and the first month's required
27        premium shall be paid in  advance  of  the  next  covered
28        medical  visit.   The  Department  shall promulgate rules
29        regarding grace periods, notice requirements, and hearing
30        procedures pursuant to this subsection;
31             (2)  the child is an inmate of a public  institution
32        or a patient in an institution for mental diseases; or
33             (3)  the  child  is  a  member  of  a family that is
34        eligible for health benefits covered under the  State  of
 
                            -53-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        Illinois  health benefits plan on the basis of a member's
 2        employment with a public agency.
 3    (Source: P.A. 90-736, eff. 8-12-98.)

 4        (215 ILCS 106/40)
 5        (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2002)
 6        Sec. 40.  Waivers.
 7        (a)  The Department shall request any  necessary  waivers
 8    of  federal requirements in order to allow receipt of federal
 9    funding for:
10             (1)  the coverage of families with eligible children
11        under this Act; and
12             (2)  for  the  coverage  of   children   who   would
13        otherwise be eligible under this Act, but who have health
14        insurance.
15        (b)  The  failure  of  the  responsible federal agency to
16    approve a waiver for children who would otherwise be eligible
17    under this Act  but  who  have  health  insurance  shall  not
18    prevent  the  implementation  of  any  Section  of  this  Act
19    provided that there are sufficient appropriated funds.
20        (c)  Eligibility of a person under an approved waiver due
21    to the relationship with a child pursuant to Article V of the
22    Illinois Public Aid Code or this Act shall be limited to such
23    a   person  whose  countable  income  is  determined  by  the
24    Department to be at or  below  65%  of  the  federal  poverty
25    level.   Such  persons who are determined to be eligible must
26    reapply,  or  otherwise  establish  eligibility,   at   least
27    annually.    An   eligible   person  shall  be  required,  as
28    determined by the Department  by  rule,  to  report  promptly
29    those  changes  in income and other circumstances that affect
30    eligibility.  The eligibility of a person may be redetermined
31    based on the information reported or may be terminated  based
32    on  the failure to report or failure to report accurately.  A
33    person may also be held liable  to  the  Department  for  any
 
                            -54-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    payments  made by the Department on such person's behalf that
 2    were inappropriate.  An  applicant  shall  be  provided  with
 3    notice of these obligations.
 4    (Source: P.A. 90-736, eff. 8-12-98.)

 5        (215 ILCS 106/97)
 6        (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2002)
 7        Sec. 97.  Repealer.  This Act is repealed on July 1, 2003
 8    2002.
 9    (Source: P.A. 90-736, eff. 8-12-98; 91-712, eff. 7-1-00.)

10        Section  80.   The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by
11    changing Sections 5-2, 5-4.1,  5-5.4,  5-5.12,  11-16,  12-3,
12    12-4.34, 12-10.5, and 12-13.05 as follows:

13        (305 ILCS 5/5-2) (from Ch. 23, par. 5-2)
14        Sec.   5-2.  Classes   of   Persons   Eligible.   Medical
15    assistance under this Article shall be available  to  any  of
16    the  following  classes  of persons in respect to whom a plan
17    for coverage has  been  submitted  to  the  Governor  by  the
18    Illinois Department and approved by him:
19        1.  Recipients of basic maintenance grants under Articles
20    III and IV.
21        2.  Persons  otherwise  eligible  for  basic  maintenance
22    under  Articles III and IV but who fail to qualify thereunder
23    on the basis of need, and who have  insufficient  income  and
24    resources  to  meet  the  costs  of  necessary  medical care,
25    including but not limited to the following:
26             (a)  All  persons  otherwise  eligible   for   basic
27        maintenance  under  Article  III  but who fail to qualify
28        under that Article on the basis  of  need  and  who  meet
29        either of the following requirements:
30                  (i)  their   income,   as   determined  by  the
31             Illinois Department in accordance with  any  federal

 
                            -55-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1             requirements, is equal to or less than 70% in fiscal
 2             year  2001, equal to or less than 85% in fiscal year
 3             2002 and until  a  date  to  be  determined  by  the
 4             Department  by  rule, and equal to or less than 100%
 5             beginning on the date determined by  the  Department
 6             by  rule,  in fiscal year 2003 and thereafter of the
 7             nonfarm income official poverty line, as defined  by
 8             the  federal  Office  of  Management  and Budget and
 9             revised annually in accordance with  Section  673(2)
10             of  the  Omnibus  Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981,
11             applicable to families of the same size; or
12                  (ii)  their  income,  after  the  deduction  of
13             costs incurred for medical care and for other  types
14             of  remedial  care,  is equal to or less than 70% in
15             fiscal year 2001, equal  to  or  less  than  85%  in
16             fiscal  year  2002 and until a date to be determined
17             by the Department by rule, and equal to or less than
18             100%  beginning  on  the  date  determined  by   the
19             Department   by   rule,  in  fiscal  year  2003  and
20             thereafter of the nonfarm  income  official  poverty
21             line,  as  defined  in item (i) of this subparagraph
22             (a).
23             (b)  All persons who would  be  determined  eligible
24        for   such   basic   maintenance   under  Article  IV  by
25        disregarding  the  maximum  earned  income  permitted  by
26        federal law.
27        3.  Persons who would otherwise qualify for  Aid  to  the
28    Medically Indigent under Article VII.
29        4.  Persons  not  eligible  under  any  of  the preceding
30    paragraphs who fall sick, are injured,  or  die,  not  having
31    sufficient  money,  property  or  other resources to meet the
32    costs  of  necessary  medical  care  or  funeral  and  burial
33    expenses.
34        5. (a)  Women  during  pregnancy,  after  the   fact   of
 
                            -56-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        pregnancy  has  been determined by medical diagnosis, and
 2        during the 60-day period beginning on the last day of the
 3        pregnancy, together with their infants and children  born
 4        after  September 30, 1983, whose income and resources are
 5        insufficient to meet the costs of necessary medical  care
 6        to  the  maximum  extent  possible under Title XIX of the
 7        Federal Social Security Act.
 8             (b)  The Illinois Department and the Governor  shall
 9        provide a plan for coverage of the persons eligible under
10        paragraph 5(a) by April 1, 1990.  Such plan shall provide
11        ambulatory  prenatal  care  to  pregnant  women  during a
12        presumptive eligibility period and  establish  an  income
13        eligibility standard that is equal to 133% of the nonfarm
14        income  official  poverty line, as defined by the federal
15        Office of Management and Budget and revised  annually  in
16        accordance  with  Section  673(2)  of  the Omnibus Budget
17        Reconciliation Act of 1981, applicable to families of the
18        same size, provided that costs incurred for medical  care
19        are  not  taken  into  account in determining such income
20        eligibility.
21             (c)  The   Illinois   Department   may   conduct   a
22        demonstration in at least one county  that  will  provide
23        medical assistance to pregnant women, together with their
24        infants  and  children  up  to one year of age, where the
25        income eligibility standard is set  up  to  185%  of  the
26        nonfarm  income  official poverty line, as defined by the
27        federal Office of Management  and  Budget.  The  Illinois
28        Department  shall seek and obtain necessary authorization
29        provided  under  federal  law   to   implement   such   a
30        demonstration.  Such demonstration may establish resource
31        standards  that  are  not  more  restrictive  than  those
32        established under Article IV of this Code.
33        6.  Persons  under  the  age of 18 who fail to qualify as
34    dependent under Article IV and who have  insufficient  income
 
                            -57-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    and  resources to meet the costs of necessary medical care to
 2    the maximum extent permitted under Title XIX of  the  Federal
 3    Social Security Act.
 4        7.  Persons  who are 18 years of age or younger and would
 5    qualify as disabled as defined under the Federal Supplemental
 6    Security Income Program, provided medical  service  for  such
 7    persons    would    be   eligible   for   Federal   Financial
 8    Participation,   and   provided   the   Illinois   Department
 9    determines that:
10             (a)  the person requires a level of care provided by
11        a hospital, skilled  nursing  facility,  or  intermediate
12        care  facility,  as determined by a physician licensed to
13        practice medicine in all its branches;
14             (b)  it is appropriate to provide such care  outside
15        of  an institution, as determined by a physician licensed
16        to practice medicine in all its branches;
17             (c)  the estimated amount which  would  be  expended
18        for  care outside the institution is not greater than the
19        estimated  amount  which  would   be   expended   in   an
20        institution.
21        8.  Persons  who  become ineligible for basic maintenance
22    assistance  under  Article  IV  of  this  Code  in   programs
23    administered  by  the  Illinois  Department due to employment
24    earnings and persons in assistance units comprised of  adults
25    and  children  who  become  ineligible  for basic maintenance
26    assistance under Article VI of this Code  due  to  employment
27    earnings.   The  plan  for coverage for this class of persons
28    shall:
29             (a)  extend the medical assistance coverage  for  up
30        to  12  months following termination of basic maintenance
31        assistance; and
32             (b)  offer persons who  have  initially  received  6
33        months  of  the coverage provided in paragraph (a) above,
34        the  option  of  receiving  an  additional  6  months  of
 
                            -58-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        coverage, subject to the following:
 2                  (i)  such  coverage  shall   be   pursuant   to
 3             provisions of the federal Social Security Act;
 4                  (ii)  such  coverage shall include all services
 5             covered while the  person  was  eligible  for  basic
 6             maintenance assistance;
 7                  (iii)  no  premium  shall  be  charged for such
 8             coverage; and
 9                  (iv)  such coverage shall be suspended  in  the
10             event  of  a  person's failure without good cause to
11             file in a timely fashion reports required  for  this
12             coverage  under the Social Security Act and coverage
13             shall be reinstated upon the filing of such  reports
14             if the person remains otherwise eligible.
15        9.  Persons   with   acquired  immunodeficiency  syndrome
16    (AIDS) or with AIDS-related conditions with respect  to  whom
17    there   has  been  a  determination  that  but  for  home  or
18    community-based services such individuals would  require  the
19    level  of  care  provided  in  an inpatient hospital, skilled
20    nursing facility or intermediate care facility  the  cost  of
21    which  is reimbursed under this Article.  Assistance shall be
22    provided to such persons  to  the  maximum  extent  permitted
23    under Title XIX of the Federal Social Security Act.
24        10.  Participants   in   the   long-term  care  insurance
25    partnership program established  under  the  Partnership  for
26    Long-Term Care Act who meet the qualifications for protection
27    of resources described in Section 25 of that Act.
28        11.  Persons  with  disabilities  who  are  employed  and
29    eligible     for     Medicaid,     pursuant     to    Section
30    1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(xv)  of  the  Social  Security   Act,   as
31    provided by the Illinois Department by rule.
32        12.  Subject   to   federal  approval,  persons  who  are
33    eligible for medical  assistance  coverage  under  applicable
34    provisions of the federal Social Security Act and the federal
 
                            -59-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    Breast  and  Cervical  Cancer Prevention and Treatment Act of
 2    2000.  Those eligible persons are defined to include, but not
 3    be limited to, the following persons:
 4             (1)  persons who have been screened  for  breast  or
 5        cervical  cancer  under  the  U.S.  Centers  for  Disease
 6        Control and Prevention Breast and Cervical Cancer Program
 7        established  under  Title XV of the federal Public Health
 8        Services Act  in  accordance  with  the  requirements  of
 9        Section  1504 of that Act as administered by the Illinois
10        Department of Public Health; and
11             (2)  persons  whose  screenings  under   the   above
12        program  were  funded  in  whole  or  in  part  by  funds
13        appropriated  to the Illinois Department of Public Health
14        for breast or cervical cancer screening.
15    "Medical  assistance"  under  this  paragraph  12  shall   be
16    identical to the benefits provided under the State's approved
17    plan  under  Title  XIX  of  the  Social  Security  Act.  The
18    Department must request  federal  approval  of  the  coverage
19    under  this  paragraph  12 within 30 days after the effective
20    date of this amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly.
21        The Illinois Department and the Governor shall provide  a
22    plan  for  coverage of the persons eligible under paragraph 7
23    as soon as possible after July 1, 1984.
24        The eligibility of any such person for medical assistance
25    under this Article is not affected  by  the  payment  of  any
26    grant under the Senior Citizens and Disabled Persons Property
27    Tax   Relief   and   Pharmaceutical  Assistance  Act  or  any
28    distributions or items of income described under subparagraph
29    (X) of paragraph (2) of subsection (a) of Section 203 of  the
30    Illinois  Income  Tax  Act.   The  Department  shall  by rule
31    establish  the  amounts  of  assets  to  be  disregarded   in
32    determining  eligibility  for medical assistance, which shall
33    at a minimum equal the amounts to be  disregarded  under  the
34    Federal  Supplemental Security Income Program.  The amount of
 
                            -60-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    assets of a single person to be disregarded shall not be less
 2    than $2,000, and the amount of assets of a married couple  to
 3    be disregarded shall not be less than $3,000.
 4        To  the  extent  permitted  under federal law, any person
 5    found guilty of a second violation of Article VIIIA shall  be
 6    ineligible  for  medical  assistance  under  this Article, as
 7    provided in Section 8A-8.
 8        The eligibility of  any  person  for  medical  assistance
 9    under  this  Article  shall not be affected by the receipt by
10    the person of donations or benefits from fundraisers held for
11    the person in cases of serious illness, as  long  as  neither
12    the  person  nor  members  of the person's family have actual
13    control over the donations or benefits or the disbursement of
14    the donations or benefits.
15    (Source: P.A. 91-676, eff.  12-23-99;  91-699,  eff.  7-1-00;
16    91-712,   eff.  7-1-00;  92-16,  eff.  6-28-01;  92-47,  eff.
17    7-3-01.)

18        (305 ILCS 5/5-4.1) (from Ch. 23, par. 5-4.1)
19        Sec. 5-4.1.  Co-payments.  The  Department  may  by  rule
20    provide that recipients under any Article of this Code (other
21    than  group  care recipients) shall pay a fee as a co-payment
22    for services.  Co-payments may not exceed $3 for  brand  name
23    drugs,  $1 one dollar for other pharmacy services, and $2 for
24    physicians services, dental services,  optical  services  and
25    supplies,   chiropractic  services,  podiatry  services,  and
26    encounter rate clinic services.  Co-payments may  not  exceed
27    $3 three dollars for hospital outpatient and clinic services.
28    Provided,  however,  that  any such rule must provide that no
29    co-payment  requirement  can  exist   for   renal   dialysis,
30    radiation therapy, cancer chemotherapy, or insulin, and other
31    products necessary on a recurring basis, the absence of which
32    would  be  life threatening, or where co-payment expenditures
33    for required services and/or medications for chronic diseases
 
                            -61-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    that the Illinois Department shall by  rule  designate  shall
 2    cause  an  extensive  financial  burden on the recipient, and
 3    provided  no  co-payment  shall  exist  for  emergency   room
 4    encounters which are for medical emergencies.
 5    (Source: P.A. 82-664.)

 6        (305 ILCS 5/5-5.4) (from Ch. 23, par. 5-5.4)
 7        Sec.  5-5.4.  Standards of Payment - Department of Public
 8    Aid.  The Department of Public Aid shall develop standards of
 9    payment of skilled nursing and intermediate care services  in
10    facilities providing such services under this Article which:
11        (1)  Provide   Provides   for   the  determination  of  a
12    facility's payment for skilled nursing and intermediate  care
13    services  on  a prospective basis.  The amount of the payment
14    rate for all nursing facilities certified under  the  medical
15    assistance   program   shall   be  prospectively  established
16    annually  on  the  basis  of   historical,   financial,   and
17    statistical  data  reflecting  actual costs from prior years,
18    which shall be applied to the current rate year  and  updated
19    for inflation, except that the capital cost element for newly
20    constructed facilities shall be based upon projected budgets.
21    The  annually  established  payment rate shall take effect on
22    July 1 in 1984 and subsequent years.  Rate increases shall be
23    provided annually thereafter on July 1 in 1984  and  on  each
24    subsequent July 1 in the following years, except that no rate
25    increase  and no update for inflation shall be provided on or
26    after July 1, 1994 and  before  July  1,  2003  2002,  unless
27    specifically provided for in this Section.
28        For  facilities  licensed  by  the  Department  of Public
29    Health under the Nursing Home Care Act as  Intermediate  Care
30    for the Developmentally Disabled facilities or Long Term Care
31    for  Under Age 22 facilities, the rates taking effect on July
32    1, 1998 shall include an  increase  of  3%.   For  facilities
33    licensed by the Department of Public Health under the Nursing
 
                            -62-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    Home  Care  Act as Skilled Nursing facilities or Intermediate
 2    Care facilities, the rates taking  effect  on  July  1,  1998
 3    shall  include an increase of 3% plus $1.10 per resident-day,
 4    as defined by the Department.
 5        For facilities  licensed  by  the  Department  of  Public
 6    Health  under  the Nursing Home Care Act as Intermediate Care
 7    for the Developmentally Disabled facilities or Long Term Care
 8    for Under Age 22 facilities, the rates taking effect on  July
 9    1,  1999  shall  include  an  increase of 1.6% plus $3.00 per
10    resident-day, as defined by the Department.   For  facilities
11    licensed by the Department of Public Health under the Nursing
12    Home  Care  Act as Skilled Nursing facilities or Intermediate
13    Care facilities, the rates taking  effect  on  July  1,  1999
14    shall  include an increase of 1.6% and, for services provided
15    on or after October 1, 1999, shall be increased by $4.00  per
16    resident-day, as defined by the Department.
17        For  facilities  licensed  by  the  Department  of Public
18    Health under the Nursing Home Care Act as  Intermediate  Care
19    for the Developmentally Disabled facilities or Long Term Care
20    for  Under Age 22 facilities, the rates taking effect on July
21    1, 2000 shall include an increase of 2.5%  per  resident-day,
22    as defined by the Department.  For facilities licensed by the
23    Department  of  Public Health under the Nursing Home Care Act
24    as  Skilled   Nursing   facilities   or   Intermediate   Care
25    facilities,  the  rates  taking  effect on July 1, 2000 shall
26    include an increase of 2.5% per resident-day, as  defined  by
27    the Department.
28        For  facilities  licensed  by  the  Department  of Public
29    Health under the Nursing Home Care Act as  Intermediate  Care
30    for the Developmentally Disabled facilities or Long Term Care
31    for Under Age 22 facilities, the rates taking effect on March
32    1,  2001  shall  include  a  statewide  increase of 7.85%, as
33    defined by the Department.
34        For facilities  licensed  by  the  Department  of  Public
 
                            -63-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    Health  under  the Nursing Home Care Act as Intermediate Care
 2    for the Developmentally Disabled facilities or Long Term Care
 3    for Under Age 22 facilities, the rates taking effect on April
 4    1, 2002 shall  include  a  statewide  increase  of  2.0%,  as
 5    defined  by the Department.  This increase terminates on July
 6    1, 2002; beginning July 1, 2002 these rates  are  reduced  to
 7    the  level  of  the  rates  in  effect  on March 31, 2002, as
 8    defined by the Department.
 9        For facilities  licensed  by  the  Department  of  Public
10    Health  under  the  Nursing  Home Care Act as skilled nursing
11    facilities or intermediate care facilities, the rates  taking
12    effect  on July 1, 2001, and each subsequent year thereafter,
13    shall be computed using the most recent cost reports on  file
14    with  the  Department  of  Public  Aid no later than April 1,
15    2000, updated for inflation to January 1,  2001.   For  rates
16    effective  July  1,  2001 only, rates shall be the greater of
17    the rate computed for July 1, 2001 or the rate  effective  on
18    June 30, 2001.
19        Notwithstanding  any other provision of this Section, for
20    facilities licensed by the Department of Public Health  under
21    the  Nursing  Home  Care Act as skilled nursing facilities or
22    intermediate care facilities, the Illinois  Department  shall
23    determine  by  rule  the rates taking effect on July 1, 2002,
24    which shall be 5.9% less than the rates in effect on June 30,
25    2002.
26        Rates established effective  each  July  1  shall  govern
27    payment  for  services  rendered throughout that fiscal year,
28    except that rates  established  on  July  1,  1996  shall  be
29    increased  by  6.8% for services provided on or after January
30    1, 1997.  Such rates will be based upon the rates  calculated
31    for the year beginning July 1, 1990, and for subsequent years
32    thereafter until June 30, 2001 shall be based on the facility
33    cost reports for the facility fiscal year ending at any point
34    in  time  during  the  previous calendar year, updated to the
 
                            -64-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    midpoint of the rate year.  The cost report shall be on  file
 2    with the Department no later than April 1 of the current rate
 3    year.   Should the cost report not be on file by April 1, the
 4    Department shall base the rate  on  the  latest  cost  report
 5    filed  by  each  skilled  care facility and intermediate care
 6    facility, updated to the midpoint of the current  rate  year.
 7    In  determining rates for services rendered on and after July
 8    1, 1985, fixed time shall not be computed at less than  zero.
 9    The  Department shall not make any alterations of regulations
10    which would reduce any component of the Medicaid  rate  to  a
11    level  below what that component would have been utilizing in
12    the rate effective on July 1, 1984.
13        (2)  Shall take into account the actual costs incurred by
14    facilities in providing services for  recipients  of  skilled
15    nursing  and  intermediate  care  services  under the medical
16    assistance program.
17        (3)  Shall   take   into   account   the   medical    and
18    psycho-social characteristics and needs of the patients.
19        (4)  Shall take into account the actual costs incurred by
20    facilities  in  meeting licensing and certification standards
21    imposed and prescribed by the State of Illinois, any  of  its
22    political  subdivisions  or  municipalities  and  by the U.S.
23    Department of Health and Human Services pursuant to Title XIX
24    of the Social Security Act.
25        The  Department  of  Public  Aid  shall  develop  precise
26    standards for payments to reimburse  nursing  facilities  for
27    any  utilization  of appropriate rehabilitative personnel for
28    the provision of rehabilitative services which is  authorized
29    by  federal regulations, including reimbursement for services
30    provided by qualified therapists or qualified assistants, and
31    which is in accordance with accepted professional  practices.
32    Reimbursement  also  may  be  made  for  utilization of other
33    supportive personnel under appropriate supervision.
34    (Source: P.A. 91-24, eff. 7-1-99; 91-712, eff. 7-1-00; 92-10,
 
                            -65-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    eff. 6-11-01; 92-31, eff. 6-28-01; revised 12-13-01.)

 2        (305 ILCS 5/5-5.12) (from Ch. 23, par. 5-5.12)
 3        Sec. 5-5.12.  Pharmacy payments.
 4        (a)  Every  request   submitted   by   a   pharmacy   for
 5    reimbursement  under  this  Article  for  prescription  drugs
 6    provided  to  a  recipient  of  aid  under this Article shall
 7    include  the  name  of  the  prescriber  or   an   acceptable
 8    identification number as established by the Department.
 9        (b)  Pharmacies  providing  prescription drugs under this
10    Article shall be reimbursed at a rate which shall  include  a
11    professional  dispensing  fee  as  determined by the Illinois
12    Department,  plus  the  current  acquisition  cost   of   the
13    prescription  drug  dispensed.  The Illinois Department shall
14    update its  information  on  the  acquisition  costs  of  all
15    prescription  drugs  no  less  frequently than every 30 days.
16    However,  the  Illinois  Department  may  set  the  rate   of
17    reimbursement  for  the  acquisition  cost,  by  rule,  at  a
18    percentage of the current average wholesale acquisition cost.
19        (c)  Reimbursement  under  this  Article for prescription
20    drugs shall be limited  to  reimbursement  for  4  brand-name
21    prescription  drugs  per  patient per month.  This subsection
22    applies only if (i) the brand-name drug  was  not  prescribed
23    for  an  acute  or urgent condition, (ii) the brand-name drug
24    was  not  prescribed  for  Alzheimer's  disease,   arthritis,
25    diabetes, HIV/AIDS, a mental health condition, or respiratory
26    disease,  and  (iii)  a  therapeutically  equivalent  generic
27    medication  has  been  approved  by the federal Food and Drug
28    Administration.
29    (Source: P.A. 88-554, eff. 7-26-94; 89-673, eff. 8-14-96.)

30        (305 ILCS 5/11-16) (from Ch. 23, par. 11-16)
31        Sec.   11-16.  Changes    in    grants;    cancellations,
32    revocations, suspensions.
 
                            -66-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        (a)  All grants of financial aid under this Code shall be
 2    considered  as  frequently as may be required by the rules of
 3    the Illinois Department.  The Department of Public Aid  shall
 4    consider grants of financial aid to children who are eligible
 5    under Article V of this Code at least annually and shall take
 6    into  account  those  reports filed, or required to be filed,
 7    pursuant  to  Sections  11-18  and   11-19.      After   such
 8    investigation  as  may be necessary, the amount and manner of
 9    giving aid  may  be  changed  or  the  aid  may  be  entirely
10    withdrawn  if the County Department, local governmental unit,
11    or   Illinois   Department   finds   that   the   recipient's
12    circumstances  have  altered  sufficiently  to  warrant  such
13    action. Financial aid may at any time be canceled or  revoked
14    for cause or suspended for such period as may be proper.
15        (b)  Whenever   any   such  grant  of  financial  aid  is
16    cancelled, revoked, reduced, or  terminated  because  of  the
17    failure  of  the  recipient to cooperate with the Department,
18    including  but  not  limited  to  the  failure  to  keep   an
19    appointment,   attend   a   meeting,   or  produce  proof  or
20    verification of eligibility  or  need,  the  grant  shall  be
21    reinstated  in full, retroactive to the date of the change in
22    or termination of the grant, provided that within 10  working
23    days  after  the  first day the financial aid would have been
24    available, the recipient cooperates with the  Department  and
25    is  not  otherwise  ineligible for benefits for the period in
26    question.  This subsection (b) does not  apply  to  sanctions
27    imposed  for  the  failure of any recipient to participate as
28    required in the child support enforcement program or  in  any
29    educational,  training, or employment program under this Code
30    or any other sanction  under  Section  4-21,  nor  does  this
31    subsection   (b)   apply  to  any  cancellation,  revocation,
32    reduction, termination, or sanction imposed for  the  failure
33    of  any  recipient  to  cooperate  in  the  monthly reporting
34    process or the quarterly reporting process.
 
                            -67-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    (Source: P.A. 90-17, eff. 7-1-97; 91-357, eff. 7-29-99.)

 2        (305 ILCS 5/12-3) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-3)
 3        Sec. 12-3.  Local  governmental  units.  As  provided  in
 4    Article  VI, local governmental units shall provide funds for
 5    and administer the programs provided in that Article subject,
 6    where  so  provided,  to  the  supervision  of  the  Illinois
 7    Department. Local governmental units shall also  provide  the
 8    social  services  and  utilize  the rehabilitative facilities
 9    authorized in Article IX for persons served  through  Article
10    VI,  and shall discharge such other duties as may be required
11    by this Code or other laws of this State.
12        In counties not under township organization,  the  county
13    shall provide funds for and administer such programs.
14        In  counties  under  township organization (including any
15    such counties in which the governing authority is a board  of
16    commissioners) the various towns other than those towns lying
17    entirely  within the corporate limits of any city, village or
18    incorporated town having a population of  more  than  500,000
19    inhabitants  shall  provide  funds  for  and  administer such
20    programs.
21        Cities,  villages,  and  incorporated  towns   having   a
22    population  of  more  than  500,000 inhabitants shall provide
23    funds for public  aid  purposes  under  Article  VI  but  the
24    Department of Human Services shall administer the program for
25    such  municipality.    For  the fiscal year beginning July 1,
26    2003, however, the municipality shall decrease by  $5,000,000
27    the amount of funds it provides for public aid purposes under
28    Article   VI.    For   each   fiscal   year  thereafter,  the
29    municipality shall decrease the amount of funds  it  provides
30    for  public aid purposes under Article VI in that fiscal year
31    by an additional amount equal to (i) $5,000,000 or  (ii)  the
32    amount  provided  by the municipality in the preceding fiscal
33    year, whichever is less,  until  the  municipality  does  not
 
                            -68-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    provide any funds for public aid purposes under Article VI.
 2        Incorporated  towns which have superseded civil townships
 3    shall provide funds for and administer the public aid program
 4    provided by Article VI.
 5        In counties of less than 3 million  population  having  a
 6    County Veterans Assistance Commission in which there has been
 7    levied  a tax as authorized by Section 5-2006 of the Counties
 8    Code  for the purpose of  providing  assistance  to  military
 9    veterans  and  their families, the County Veterans Assistance
10    Commission shall administer the programs provided by  Article
11    VI  for such military veterans and their families as seek aid
12    through the County Veterans Assistance Commission.
13    (Source: P.A. 92-111, eff. 1-1-02.)

14        (305 ILCS 5/12-4.34)
15        (Section scheduled to be repealed on August 31, 2002)
16        Sec. 12-4.34.  Services to noncitizens.
17        (a)  Subject to specific appropriation for  this  purpose
18    and  notwithstanding  Sections 1-11 and 3-1 of this Code, the
19    Department  of  Human  Services  is  authorized  to   provide
20    services  to  legal  immigrants, including but not limited to
21    naturalization   and   nutrition   services   and   financial
22    assistance.  The nature of these  services,  payment  levels,
23    and eligibility conditions shall be determined by rule.
24        (b)  The  Illinois  Department is authorized to lower the
25    payment levels established under this subsection or take such
26    other actions during the fiscal  year  as  are  necessary  to
27    ensure  that payments under this subsection do not exceed the
28    amounts appropriated for this purpose.  These changes may  be
29    accomplished  by  emergency  rule  under  Section 5-45 of the
30    Illinois  Administrative  Procedure  Act,  except  that   the
31    limitation  on  the  number  of  emergency  rules that may be
32    adopted in a 24-month period shall not apply.
33        (c)  This Section is repealed on August 31, 2002.
 
                            -69-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    (Source: P.A. 91-24, eff. 7-1-99; 91-712, eff. 7-1-00; 92-10,
 2    eff. 6-11-01.)

 3        (305 ILCS 5/12-10.5)
 4        Sec. 12-10.5.  Medical Special Purposes Trust Fund.
 5        (a)  The Medical Special Purposes Trust Fund ("the Fund")
 6    is created.  Any grant, gift, donation, or legacy of money or
 7    securities that the Department of Public Aid is authorized to
 8    receive under Section 12-4.18 or Section 12-4.19, and that is
 9    dedicated for functions connected with the administration  of
10    any  medical program administered by the Department, shall be
11    deposited into the Fund.  All federal moneys received by  the
12    Department  as  reimbursement for disbursements authorized to
13    be made from the Fund shall also be deposited into the  Fund.
14    In  addition,  federal  moneys  received  on account of State
15    expenditures made in  connection  with  obtaining  compliance
16    with   the   federal   Health   Insurance   Portability   and
17    Accountability Act (HIPAA) shall be deposited into the Fund.
18        (b)  No  moneys  received  from  a  service provider or a
19    governmental or private entity  that  is  enrolled  with  the
20    Department  as  a  provider  of  medical  services  shall  be
21    deposited into the Fund.
22        (c)  Disbursements  may  be  made  from  the Fund for the
23    purposes connected with  the  grants,  gifts,  donations,  or
24    legacies  deposited into the Fund, including, but not limited
25    to,  medical   quality   assessment   projects,   eligibility
26    population  studies, medical information systems evaluations,
27    and other administrative functions that assist the Department
28    in fulfilling its health  care  mission  under  the  Illinois
29    Public  Aid  Code and the Children's Health Insurance Program
30    Act.
31    (Source: P.A. 92-37, eff. 7-1-01.)

32        (305 ILCS 5/12-13.05)
 
                            -70-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1        Sec. 12-13.05.  Rules for Temporary Assistance for  Needy
 2    Families.   All rules regulating the Temporary Assistance for
 3    Needy Families program and all  other  rules  regulating  the
 4    amendatory  changes  to this Code made by this amendatory Act
 5    of 1997 shall be promulgated pursuant to this  Section.   All
 6    rules  regulating the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families
 7    program and all other rules regulating the amendatory changes
 8    to this Code made by this amendatory Act of 1997 are repealed
 9    on July 1 2006 January 1, 2003.  On and after  July  1,  2006
10    January  1,  2003, the Illinois Department may not promulgate
11    any rules  regulating  the  Temporary  Assistance  for  Needy
12    Families program or regulating the amendatory changes to this
13    Code made by this amendatory Act of 1997.
14    (Source: P.A. 91-5, eff. 5-27-99; 92-111, eff. 1-1-02.)

15        Section  85.   The  Senior  Citizens and Disabled Persons
16    Property Tax Relief  and  Pharmaceutical  Assistance  Act  is
17    amended by changing Section 3.16 as follows:

18        (320 ILCS 25/3.16) (from Ch. 67 1/2, par. 403.16)
19        Sec.  3.16.   "Reasonable  cost"  means Average Wholesale
20    Price (AWP) minus 10% for  products  provided  by  authorized
21    pharmacies  plus  a professional dispensing fee determined by
22    the Department in accordance with its findings in a survey of
23    professional pharmacy  dispensing  fees  conducted  at  least
24    every  12  months.  For the purpose of this Act, AWP shall be
25    determined from the latest publication of the  Blue  Book,  a
26    universally  subscribed  pharmacist  reference guide annually
27    published by the Hearst Corporation.  AWP may also be derived
28    electronically from the drug pricing database synonymous with
29    the latest publication of the Blue Book and furnished in  the
30    National  Drug  Data  File (NDDF) by First Data Bank (FDB), a
31    service of the Hearst Corporation.  The elements of such fees
32    and methodology of such survey shall  be  promulgated  as  an
 
                            -71-           LRB9213371EGfgam03
 1    administrative   rule.    Effective   July   1,   1986,   the
 2    professional  dispensing  fee shall be $3.60 per prescription
 3    and such amount shall be adjusted on July 1st  of  each  year
 4    thereafter  in  accordance  with  a  survey  of  professional
 5    pharmacy  dispensing  fees.   The  Department  may  establish
 6    maximum  acquisition  costs  from  time  to  time  based upon
 7    information as to the cost at which covered products  may  be
 8    readily  acquired by authorized pharmacies.  In no case shall
 9    the reasonable cost of any given pharmacy  exceed  the  price
10    normally  charged to the general public by that pharmacy.  In
11    the event that generic equivalents for  covered  prescription
12    drugs  are  available  at  lower  cost,  the Department shall
13    establish the maximum  acquisition  costs  for  such  covered
14    prescription drugs at the lower generic cost unless, pursuant
15    to the conditions described in subsection (f) of Section 4, a
16    non-generic drug may be substituted.
17        Effective  July  1,  2002,  the  rates  paid for products
18    provided  by  authorized  pharmacies   and   a   professional
19    dispensing fee shall be determined by the Department by rule.
20    (Source: P.A. 91-699, eff. 1-1-01.)

21        Section  99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect upon
22    becoming law, except that Sections 25, 26,  45,  60,  and  65
23    take effect on July 1, 2002.".

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