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Public Act 100-0159 |
HB3169 Enrolled | LRB100 00350 KTG 10354 b |
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AN ACT concerning children.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Identity Protection Act is amended by |
changing Section 10 as follows: |
(5 ILCS 179/10)
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Sec. 10. Prohibited Activities. |
(a) Beginning July 1, 2010, no person or State or local |
government agency may do any of the following:
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(1) Publicly post or publicly display in any manner an |
individual's social security number.
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(2) Print an individual's social security number on any |
card required for the individual to access products or |
services provided by the person or entity.
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(3) Require an individual to transmit his or her social |
security number over the Internet, unless the connection is |
secure or the social security number is encrypted.
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(4) Print an individual's social security number on any |
materials that are mailed to the individual, through the |
U.S. Postal Service, any private mail service, electronic |
mail, or any similar method of delivery, unless State or |
federal law requires the social security number to be on |
the document to be mailed. Notwithstanding any provision in |
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this Section to the contrary, social security numbers may |
be included in applications and forms sent by mail, |
including, but not limited to, any material mailed in |
connection with the administration of the Unemployment |
Insurance Act, any material mailed in connection with any |
tax administered by the Department of Revenue, and |
documents sent as part of an application or enrollment |
process or to establish, amend, or terminate an account, |
contract, or policy or to confirm the accuracy of the |
social security number. A social security number that may |
permissibly be mailed under this Section may not be |
printed, in whole or in part, on a postcard or other mailer |
that does not require an envelope or be visible on an |
envelope without the envelope having been opened.
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(b) Except as otherwise provided in this Act, beginning |
July 1, 2010, no person or State or local government agency may |
do any of the following:
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(1) Collect, use, or disclose a social security number |
from an individual, unless (i) required to do so under |
State or federal law, rules, or regulations, or the |
collection, use, or disclosure of the social security |
number is otherwise necessary for the performance of that |
agency's duties and responsibilities; (ii) the need and |
purpose for the social security number is documented before |
collection of the social security number; and (iii) the |
social security number collected is relevant to the |
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documented need and purpose.
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(2) Require an individual to use his or her social |
security number to access an Internet website.
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(3) Use the social security number for any purpose |
other than the purpose for which it was collected.
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(c) The prohibitions in subsection (b) do not apply in the |
following circumstances:
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(1) The disclosure of social security numbers to |
agents, employees, contractors, or subcontractors of a |
governmental entity or disclosure by a governmental entity |
to another governmental entity or its agents, employees, |
contractors, or subcontractors if disclosure is necessary |
in order for the entity to perform its duties and |
responsibilities; and, if disclosing to a contractor or |
subcontractor, prior to such disclosure, the governmental |
entity must first receive from the contractor or |
subcontractor a copy of the contractor's or |
subcontractor's policy that sets forth how the |
requirements imposed under this Act on a governmental |
entity to protect an individual's social security number |
will be achieved.
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(2) The disclosure of social security numbers pursuant |
to a court order, warrant, or subpoena.
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(3) The collection, use, or disclosure of social |
security numbers in order to ensure the safety of: State |
and local government employees; persons committed to |
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correctional facilities, local jails, and other |
law-enforcement facilities or retention centers; wards of |
the State; youth in care as defined in Section 4d of the |
Children and Family Services Act, and all persons working |
in or visiting a State or local government agency facility.
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(4) The collection, use, or disclosure of social |
security numbers for internal verification or |
administrative purposes.
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(5) The disclosure of social security numbers by a |
State agency to any entity for the collection of delinquent |
child support or of any State debt or to a governmental |
agency to assist with an investigation or the prevention of |
fraud.
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(6) The collection or use of social security numbers to |
investigate or prevent fraud, to conduct background |
checks, to collect a debt, to obtain a credit report from a |
consumer reporting agency under the federal Fair Credit |
Reporting Act, to undertake any permissible purpose that is |
enumerated under the federal Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, or to |
locate a missing person, a lost relative, or a person who |
is due a benefit, such as a pension benefit or an unclaimed |
property benefit.
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(d) If any State or local government agency has adopted |
standards for the collection, use, or disclosure of social |
security numbers that are stricter than the standards under |
this Act with respect to the protection of those social |
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security numbers, then, in the event of any conflict with the |
provisions of this Act, the stricter standards adopted by the |
State or local government agency shall control.
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(Source: P.A. 96-874, eff. 6-1-10; 97-333, eff. 8-12-11.) |
Section 10. The State Employee Indemnification Act is |
amended by changing Section 1 as follows: |
(5 ILCS 350/1) (from Ch. 127, par. 1301)
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Sec. 1. Definitions. For the purpose of this Act:
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(a) The term "State" means the State of Illinois, the |
General
Assembly, the court, or any State office, department, |
division, bureau,
board, commission, or committee, the |
governing boards of the public
institutions of higher education |
created by the State, the Illinois
National Guard, the |
Comprehensive Health Insurance Board, any poison control
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center designated under the Poison Control System Act that |
receives State
funding, or any other agency or instrumentality |
of the State. It
does not mean any local public entity as that |
term is defined in Section
1-206 of the Local Governmental and |
Governmental Employees Tort Immunity
Act or a pension fund.
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(b) The term "employee" means: any present or former |
elected or
appointed officer, trustee or employee of the State, |
or of a pension
fund;
any present or former commissioner or |
employee of the Executive Ethics
Commission or of the |
Legislative Ethics Commission; any present or former
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Executive, Legislative, or Auditor General's Inspector |
General; any present or
former employee of an Office of an |
Executive, Legislative, or Auditor General's
Inspector |
General; any present or former member of the Illinois National
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Guard
while on active duty; individuals or organizations who |
contract with the
Department of Corrections, the Department of |
Juvenile Justice, the Comprehensive Health Insurance Board, or |
the
Department of Veterans' Affairs to provide services; |
individuals or
organizations who contract with the Department |
of Human Services (as
successor to the Department of Mental |
Health and Developmental
Disabilities) to provide services |
including but not limited to treatment and
other services for |
sexually violent persons; individuals or organizations who
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contract with the Department of
Military
Affairs for youth |
programs; individuals or
organizations who contract to perform |
carnival and amusement ride safety
inspections for the |
Department of Labor; individuals who contract with the Office |
of the State's Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor to provide legal |
services, but only when performing duties within the scope of |
the Office's prosecutorial activities; individual |
representatives of or
designated organizations authorized to |
represent the Office of State Long-Term
Ombudsman for the |
Department on Aging; individual representatives of or
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organizations designated by the Department on Aging in the |
performance of their
duties as adult protective services |
agencies or regional administrative agencies
under the Adult |
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Protective Services Act; individuals or organizations |
appointed as members of a review team or the Advisory Council |
under the Adult Protective Services Act; individuals or |
organizations who perform
volunteer services for the State |
where such volunteer relationship is reduced
to writing; |
individuals who serve on any public entity (whether created by |
law
or administrative action) described in paragraph (a) of |
this Section; individuals or not for profit organizations who, |
either as volunteers, where
such volunteer relationship is |
reduced to writing, or pursuant to contract,
furnish |
professional advice or consultation to any agency or |
instrumentality of
the State; individuals who serve as foster |
parents for the Department of
Children and Family Services when |
caring for youth in care as defined in Section 4d of the |
Children and Family Services Act a Department ward ; individuals |
who serve as members of an independent team of experts under |
Brian's Law; and individuals
who serve as arbitrators pursuant |
to Part 10A of
Article II of the Code of Civil Procedure and |
the rules of the Supreme Court
implementing Part 10A, each as |
now or hereafter amended; the term "employee" does not mean an
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independent contractor except as provided in this Section. The |
term includes an
individual appointed as an inspector by the |
Director of State Police when
performing duties within the |
scope of the activities of a Metropolitan
Enforcement Group or |
a law enforcement organization established under the
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Intergovernmental Cooperation Act. An individual who renders |
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professional
advice and consultation to the State through an |
organization which qualifies as
an "employee" under the Act is |
also an employee. The term includes the estate
or personal |
representative of an employee.
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(c) The term "pension fund" means a retirement system or |
pension
fund created under the Illinois Pension Code.
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(Source: P.A. 98-49, eff. 7-1-13; 98-83, eff. 7-15-13; 98-732, |
eff. 7-16-14; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14 .)
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Section 15. The Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is |
amended by changing Section 5-535 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 5/5-535) (was 20 ILCS 5/6.15)
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Sec. 5-535. In the Department of Children and Family |
Services. A Children and Family Services Advisory Council of 21
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members shall be appointed
by the Governor. The Department of |
Children and Family Services may involve the participation of |
additional persons with specialized expertise to assist the |
Council in specified tasks. The Council shall advise the |
Department with
respect to
services and programs for |
individuals under the Department of Children and Family |
Services' care, which may include, but is not limited to: |
(1) reviewing the Department of Children and Family |
Services' monitoring process for child care facilities and |
child care institutions, as defined in Sections 2.05 and |
2.06 of the Child Care Act of 1969; |
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(2) reviewing monitoring standards to address the |
quality of life for youth in Department of Children and |
Family Services' licensed child care facilities; |
(3) assisting and making recommendations to establish |
standards for monitoring the safety and well-being of youth |
placed in Department of Children and Family Services' |
licensed child care facilities and overseeing the |
implementation of its recommendations; |
(4) identifying areas of improvement in the quality of |
investigations of allegations of child abuse or neglect in |
Department of Children and Family Services' licensed child |
care facilities and institutions and transitional living |
programs; |
(5) reviewing indicated and unfounded reports selected |
at random or requested by the Council; |
(6) reviewing a random sample of comprehensive call |
data reports on (i) calls made to the Department of |
Children and Family Services' statewide toll-free |
telephone number established under Section 9.1a of the |
Child Care Act of 1969 and (ii) calls made to the central |
register established under Section 7.7 of the Abused and |
Neglected Child Reporting Act through the State-wide, |
toll-free telephone number established under Section 7.6 |
of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act, including |
those where investigations were not initiated; and |
(7) preparing and providing recommendations that |
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identify areas of needed improvement regarding the |
investigation of allegations of abuse and neglect to |
children in Department of Children and Family Services' |
licensed child care facilities and institutions and |
transitional living programs, as well as needed changes to |
existing laws, rules, and procedures of the Department of |
Children and Family Services, and overseeing |
implementation of its recommendations. |
The Council's initial recommendations shall be filed with |
the General Assembly and made available to the public no later |
than March 1, 2017. |
The Department of Children and Family Services shall |
provide, upon request, all records and information in the |
Department of Children and Family Services' possession |
relevant to the Advisory Council's review. All documents, in |
compliance with applicable privacy laws and redacted where |
appropriate, concerning reports and investigations of child |
abuse and neglect made available to members of the Advisory |
Council and all records generated as a result of the reports |
shall be confidential and shall not be disclosed, except as |
specifically authorized by applicable law. It is a Class A |
misdemeanor to permit, assist, or encourage the unauthorized |
release of any information contained in reports or records and |
these reports or records are not subject to the Freedom of |
Information Act. |
In
appointing the first Council, 8 members shall be named |
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to serve 2 years,
and 8 members named to serve 4 years. The |
member first
appointed under Public Act 83-1538
shall serve for |
a term of 4
years. All members appointed thereafter
shall be |
appointed for terms of 4 years. Beginning July 1, 2015, the |
Advisory Council shall include as appointed members at least |
one youth from each of the Department of Children and Family |
Services' regional youth advisory boards established pursuant |
to Section 5 of the Department of Children and Family Services |
Statewide Youth Advisory Board Act and at least 2 adult former |
youth in care as defined in Section 4d of the Children and |
Family Services Act wards of the Department of Children and |
Family Services . At its first meeting the Council
shall select |
a chairperson from among its members and appoint a committee to
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draft rules of procedure.
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(Source: P.A. 99-346, eff. 1-1-16 .)
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Section 20. The Children and Family Services Act is amended |
by changing Sections 5, 5a, 6b, 7.5, 34.11, 35.1, and 39.3 and |
by adding Section 4d as follows: |
(20 ILCS 505/4d new) |
Sec. 4d. Definition. As used in this Act: |
"Youth in care" means persons placed in the temporary |
custody or guardianship of the Department pursuant to the |
Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
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(20 ILCS 505/5) (from Ch. 23, par. 5005)
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Sec. 5. Direct child welfare services; Department of |
Children and Family
Services. To provide direct child welfare |
services when not available
through other public or private |
child care or program facilities.
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(a) For purposes of this Section:
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(1) "Children" means persons found within the State who |
are under the
age of 18 years. The term also includes |
persons under age 21 who:
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(A) were committed to the Department pursuant to |
the
Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile Court Act of |
1987, as amended, prior to
the age of 18 and who |
continue under the jurisdiction of the court; or
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(B) were accepted for care, service and training by
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the Department prior to the age of 18 and whose best |
interest in the
discretion of the Department would be |
served by continuing that care,
service and training |
because of severe emotional disturbances, physical
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disability, social adjustment or any combination |
thereof, or because of the
need to complete an |
educational or vocational training program.
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(2) "Homeless youth" means persons found within the
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State who are under the age of 19, are not in a safe and |
stable living
situation and cannot be reunited with their |
families.
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(3) "Child welfare services" means public social |
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services which are
directed toward the accomplishment of |
the following purposes:
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(A) protecting and promoting the health, safety |
and welfare of
children,
including homeless, dependent |
or neglected children;
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(B) remedying, or assisting in the solution
of |
problems which may result in, the neglect, abuse, |
exploitation or
delinquency of children;
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(C) preventing the unnecessary separation of |
children
from their families by identifying family |
problems, assisting families in
resolving their |
problems, and preventing the breakup of the family
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where the prevention of child removal is desirable and |
possible when the
child can be cared for at home |
without endangering the child's health and
safety;
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(D) restoring to their families children who have |
been
removed, by the provision of services to the child |
and the families when the
child can be cared for at |
home without endangering the child's health and
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safety;
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(E) placing children in suitable adoptive homes, |
in
cases where restoration to the biological family is |
not safe, possible or
appropriate;
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(F) assuring safe and adequate care of children |
away from their
homes, in cases where the child cannot |
be returned home or cannot be placed
for adoption. At |
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the time of placement, the Department shall consider
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concurrent planning,
as described in subsection (l-1) |
of this Section so that permanency may
occur at the |
earliest opportunity. Consideration should be given so |
that if
reunification fails or is delayed, the |
placement made is the best available
placement to |
provide permanency for the child;
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(G) (blank);
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(H) (blank); and
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(I) placing and maintaining children in facilities |
that provide
separate living quarters for children |
under the age of 18 and for children
18 years of age |
and older, unless a child 18 years of age is in the |
last
year of high school education or vocational |
training, in an approved
individual or group treatment |
program, in a licensed shelter facility,
or secure |
child care facility.
The Department is not required to |
place or maintain children:
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(i) who are in a foster home, or
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(ii) who are persons with a developmental |
disability, as defined in
the Mental
Health and |
Developmental Disabilities Code, or
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(iii) who are female children who are |
pregnant, pregnant and
parenting or parenting, or
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(iv) who are siblings, in facilities that |
provide separate living quarters for children 18
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years of age and older and for children under 18 |
years of age.
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(b) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to authorize |
the
expenditure of public funds for the purpose of performing |
abortions.
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(c) The Department shall establish and maintain |
tax-supported child
welfare services and extend and seek to |
improve voluntary services
throughout the State, to the end |
that services and care shall be available
on an equal basis |
throughout the State to children requiring such services.
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(d) The Director may authorize advance disbursements for |
any new program
initiative to any agency contracting with the |
Department. As a
prerequisite for an advance disbursement, the |
contractor must post a
surety bond in the amount of the advance |
disbursement and have a
purchase of service contract approved |
by the Department. The Department
may pay up to 2 months |
operational expenses in advance. The amount of the
advance |
disbursement shall be prorated over the life of the contract
or |
the remaining months of the fiscal year, whichever is less, and |
the
installment amount shall then be deducted from future |
bills. Advance
disbursement authorizations for new initiatives |
shall not be made to any
agency after that agency has operated |
during 2 consecutive fiscal years.
The requirements of this |
Section concerning advance disbursements shall
not apply with |
respect to the following: payments to local public agencies
for |
child day care services as authorized by Section 5a of this |
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Act; and
youth service programs receiving grant funds under |
Section 17a-4.
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(e) (Blank).
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(f) (Blank).
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(g) The Department shall establish rules and regulations |
concerning
its operation of programs designed to meet the goals |
of child safety and
protection,
family preservation, family |
reunification, and adoption, including but not
limited to:
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(1) adoption;
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(2) foster care;
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(3) family counseling;
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(4) protective services;
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(5) (blank);
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(6) homemaker service;
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(7) return of runaway children;
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(8) (blank);
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(9) placement under Section 5-7 of the Juvenile Court |
Act or
Section 2-27, 3-28, 4-25 or 5-740 of the Juvenile |
Court Act of 1987 in
accordance with the federal Adoption |
Assistance and Child Welfare Act of
1980; and
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(10) interstate services.
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Rules and regulations established by the Department shall |
include
provisions for training Department staff and the staff |
of Department
grantees, through contracts with other agencies |
or resources, in alcohol
and drug abuse screening techniques |
approved by the Department of Human
Services, as a successor to |
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the Department of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse,
for the |
purpose of identifying children and adults who
should be |
referred to an alcohol and drug abuse treatment program for
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professional evaluation.
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(h) If the Department finds that there is no appropriate |
program or
facility within or available to the Department for a |
youth in care ward and that no
licensed private facility has an |
adequate and appropriate program or none
agrees to accept the |
youth in care ward , the Department shall create an appropriate
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individualized, program-oriented plan for such youth in care |
ward . The
plan may be developed within the Department or |
through purchase of services
by the Department to the extent |
that it is within its statutory authority
to do.
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(i) Service programs shall be available throughout the |
State and shall
include but not be limited to the following |
services:
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(1) case management;
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(2) homemakers;
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(3) counseling;
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(4) parent education;
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(5) day care; and
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(6) emergency assistance and advocacy.
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In addition, the following services may be made available |
to assess and
meet the needs of children and families:
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(1) comprehensive family-based services;
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(2) assessments;
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(3) respite care; and
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(4) in-home health services.
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The Department shall provide transportation for any of the |
services it
makes available to children or families or for |
which it refers children
or families.
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(j) The Department may provide categories of financial |
assistance and
education assistance grants, and shall
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establish rules and regulations concerning the assistance and |
grants, to
persons who
adopt children with physical or mental |
disabilities, children who are older, or other hard-to-place
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children who (i) immediately prior to their adoption were youth |
in care legal wards of
the Department
or (ii) were determined |
eligible for financial assistance with respect to a
prior |
adoption and who become available for adoption because the
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prior adoption has been dissolved and the parental rights of |
the adoptive
parents have been
terminated or because the |
child's adoptive parents have died.
The Department may continue |
to provide financial assistance and education assistance |
grants for a child who was determined eligible for financial |
assistance under this subsection (j) in the interim period |
beginning when the child's adoptive parents died and ending |
with the finalization of the new adoption of the child by |
another adoptive parent or parents. The Department may also |
provide categories of financial
assistance and education |
assistance grants, and
shall establish rules and regulations |
for the assistance and grants, to persons
appointed guardian of |
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the person under Section 5-7 of the Juvenile Court
Act or |
Section 2-27, 3-28, 4-25 or 5-740 of the Juvenile Court Act of |
1987
for children who were youth in care wards of the |
Department for 12 months immediately
prior to the appointment |
of the guardian.
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The amount of assistance may vary, depending upon the needs |
of the child
and the adoptive parents,
as set forth in the |
annual
assistance agreement. Special purpose grants are |
allowed where the child
requires special service but such costs |
may not exceed the amounts
which similar services would cost |
the Department if it were to provide or
secure them as guardian |
of the child.
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Any financial assistance provided under this subsection is
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inalienable by assignment, sale, execution, attachment, |
garnishment, or any
other remedy for recovery or collection of |
a judgment or debt.
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(j-5) The Department shall not deny or delay the placement |
of a child for
adoption
if an approved family is available |
either outside of the Department region
handling the case,
or |
outside of the State of Illinois.
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(k) The Department shall accept for care and training any |
child who has
been adjudicated neglected or abused, or |
dependent committed to it pursuant
to the Juvenile Court Act or |
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
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(l) The Department shall
offer family preservation |
services, as defined in Section 8.2 of the Abused
and
Neglected |
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Child
Reporting Act, to help families, including adoptive and |
extended families.
Family preservation
services shall be |
offered (i) to prevent the
placement
of children in
substitute |
care when the children can be cared for at home or in the |
custody of
the person
responsible for the children's welfare,
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(ii) to
reunite children with their families, or (iii) to
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maintain an adoptive placement. Family preservation services |
shall only be
offered when doing so will not endanger the |
children's health or safety. With
respect to children who are |
in substitute care pursuant to the Juvenile Court
Act of 1987, |
family preservation services shall not be offered if a goal |
other
than those of subdivisions (A), (B), or (B-1) of |
subsection (2) of Section 2-28
of
that Act has been set.
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Nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to create a |
private right of
action or claim on the part of any individual |
or child welfare agency, except that when a child is the |
subject of an action under Article II of the Juvenile Court Act |
of 1987 and the child's service plan calls for services to |
facilitate achievement of the permanency goal, the court |
hearing the action under Article II of the Juvenile Court Act |
of 1987 may order the Department to provide the services set |
out in the plan, if those services are not provided with |
reasonable promptness and if those services are available.
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The Department shall notify the child and his family of the
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Department's
responsibility to offer and provide family |
preservation services as
identified in the service plan. The |
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child and his family shall be eligible
for services as soon as |
the report is determined to be "indicated". The
Department may |
offer services to any child or family with respect to whom a
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report of suspected child abuse or neglect has been filed, |
prior to
concluding its investigation under Section 7.12 of the |
Abused and Neglected
Child Reporting Act. However, the child's |
or family's willingness to
accept services shall not be |
considered in the investigation. The
Department may also |
provide services to any child or family who is the
subject of |
any report of suspected child abuse or neglect or may refer |
such
child or family to services available from other agencies |
in the community,
even if the report is determined to be |
unfounded, if the conditions in the
child's or family's home |
are reasonably likely to subject the child or
family to future |
reports of suspected child abuse or neglect. Acceptance
of such |
services shall be voluntary. The Department may also provide |
services to any child or family after completion of a family |
assessment, as an alternative to an investigation, as provided |
under the "differential response program" provided for in |
subsection (a-5) of Section 7.4 of the Abused and Neglected |
Child Reporting Act.
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The Department may, at its discretion except for those |
children also
adjudicated neglected or dependent, accept for |
care and training any child
who has been adjudicated addicted, |
as a truant minor in need of
supervision or as a minor |
requiring authoritative intervention, under the
Juvenile Court |
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Act or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, but no such child
shall |
be committed to the Department by any court without the |
approval of
the Department. On and after the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly and before |
January 1, 2017, a minor charged with a criminal offense under |
the Criminal
Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 or |
adjudicated delinquent shall not be placed in the custody of or
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committed to the Department by any court, except (i) a minor |
less than 16 years
of age committed to the Department under |
Section 5-710 of the Juvenile Court
Act
of 1987, (ii) a minor |
for whom an independent basis of abuse, neglect, or dependency |
exists, which must be defined by departmental rule, or (iii) a |
minor for whom the court has granted a supplemental petition to |
reinstate wardship pursuant to subsection (2) of Section 2-33 |
of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. On and after January 1, |
2017, a minor charged with a criminal offense under the |
Criminal
Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 or |
adjudicated delinquent shall not be placed in the custody of or
|
committed to the Department by any court, except (i) a minor |
less than 15 years
of age committed to the Department under |
Section 5-710 of the Juvenile Court
Act
of 1987, ii) a minor |
for whom an independent basis of abuse, neglect, or dependency |
exists, which must be defined by departmental rule, or (iii) a |
minor for whom the court has granted a supplemental petition to |
reinstate wardship pursuant to subsection (2) of Section 2-33 |
of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. An independent basis exists |
|
when the allegations or adjudication of abuse, neglect, or |
dependency do not arise from the same facts, incident, or |
circumstances which give rise to a charge or adjudication of |
delinquency.
|
As soon as is possible after August 7, 2009 (the effective |
date of Public Act 96-134), the Department shall develop and |
implement a special program of family preservation services to |
support intact, foster, and adoptive families who are |
experiencing extreme hardships due to the difficulty and stress |
of caring for a child who has been diagnosed with a pervasive |
developmental disorder if the Department determines that those |
services are necessary to ensure the health and safety of the |
child. The Department may offer services to any family whether |
or not a report has been filed under the Abused and Neglected |
Child Reporting Act. The Department may refer the child or |
family to services available from other agencies in the |
community if the conditions in the child's or family's home are |
reasonably likely to subject the child or family to future |
reports of suspected child abuse or neglect. Acceptance of |
these services shall be voluntary. The Department shall develop |
and implement a public information campaign to alert health and |
social service providers and the general public about these |
special family preservation services. The nature and scope of |
the services offered and the number of families served under |
the special program implemented under this paragraph shall be |
determined by the level of funding that the Department annually |
|
allocates for this purpose. The term "pervasive developmental |
disorder" under this paragraph means a neurological condition, |
including but not limited to, Asperger's Syndrome and autism, |
as defined in the most recent edition of the Diagnostic and |
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders of the American |
Psychiatric Association. |
(l-1) The legislature recognizes that the best interests of |
the child
require that
the child be placed in the most |
permanent living arrangement as soon as is
practically
|
possible. To achieve this goal, the legislature directs the |
Department of
Children and
Family Services to conduct |
concurrent planning so that permanency may occur at
the
|
earliest opportunity. Permanent living arrangements may |
include prevention of
placement of a child outside the home of |
the family when the child can be cared
for at
home without |
endangering the child's health or safety; reunification with |
the
family,
when safe and appropriate, if temporary placement |
is necessary; or movement of
the child
toward the most |
permanent living arrangement and permanent legal status.
|
When determining reasonable efforts to be made with respect |
to a child, as
described in this
subsection, and in making such |
reasonable efforts, the child's health and
safety shall be the
|
paramount concern.
|
When a child is placed in foster care, the Department shall |
ensure and
document that reasonable efforts were made to |
prevent or eliminate the need to
remove the child from the |
|
child's home. The Department must make
reasonable efforts to |
reunify the family when temporary placement of the child
occurs
|
unless otherwise required, pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act |
of 1987.
At any time after the dispositional hearing where the |
Department believes
that further reunification services would |
be ineffective, it may request a
finding from the court that |
reasonable efforts are no longer appropriate. The
Department is |
not required to provide further reunification services after |
such
a
finding.
|
A decision to place a child in substitute care shall be |
made with
considerations of the child's health, safety, and |
best interests. At the
time of placement, consideration should |
also be given so that if reunification
fails or is delayed, the |
placement made is the best available placement to
provide |
permanency for the child.
|
The Department shall adopt rules addressing concurrent |
planning for
reunification and permanency. The Department |
shall consider the following
factors when determining |
appropriateness of concurrent planning:
|
(1) the likelihood of prompt reunification;
|
(2) the past history of the family;
|
(3) the barriers to reunification being addressed by |
the family;
|
(4) the level of cooperation of the family;
|
(5) the foster parents' willingness to work with the |
family to reunite;
|
|
(6) the willingness and ability of the foster family to |
provide an
adoptive
home or long-term placement;
|
(7) the age of the child;
|
(8) placement of siblings.
|
(m) The Department may assume temporary custody of any |
child if:
|
(1) it has received a written consent to such temporary |
custody
signed by the parents of the child or by the parent |
having custody of the
child if the parents are not living |
together or by the guardian or
custodian of the child if |
the child is not in the custody of either
parent, or
|
(2) the child is found in the State and neither a |
parent,
guardian nor custodian of the child can be located.
|
If the child is found in his or her residence without a parent, |
guardian,
custodian or responsible caretaker, the Department |
may, instead of removing
the child and assuming temporary |
custody, place an authorized
representative of the Department |
in that residence until such time as a
parent, guardian or |
custodian enters the home and expresses a willingness
and |
apparent ability to ensure the child's health and safety and |
resume
permanent
charge of the child, or until a
relative |
enters the home and is willing and able to ensure the child's |
health
and
safety and assume charge of the
child until a |
parent, guardian or custodian enters the home and expresses
|
such willingness and ability to ensure the child's safety and |
resume
permanent charge. After a caretaker has remained in the |
|
home for a period not
to exceed 12 hours, the Department must |
follow those procedures outlined in
Section 2-9, 3-11, 4-8, or |
5-415 of the Juvenile Court Act
of 1987.
|
The Department shall have the authority, responsibilities |
and duties that
a legal custodian of the child would have |
pursuant to subsection (9) of
Section 1-3 of the Juvenile Court |
Act of 1987. Whenever a child is taken
into temporary custody |
pursuant to an investigation under the Abused and
Neglected |
Child Reporting Act, or pursuant to a referral and acceptance
|
under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 of a minor in limited |
custody, the
Department, during the period of temporary custody |
and before the child
is brought before a judicial officer as |
required by Section 2-9, 3-11,
4-8, or 5-415 of the Juvenile |
Court Act of 1987, shall have
the authority, responsibilities |
and duties that a legal custodian of the child
would have under |
subsection (9) of Section 1-3 of the Juvenile Court Act of
|
1987.
|
The Department shall ensure that any child taken into |
custody
is scheduled for an appointment for a medical |
examination.
|
A parent, guardian or custodian of a child in the temporary |
custody of the
Department who would have custody of the child |
if he were not in the
temporary custody of the Department may |
deliver to the Department a signed
request that the Department |
surrender the temporary custody of the child.
The Department |
may retain temporary custody of the child for 10 days after
the |
|
receipt of the request, during which period the Department may |
cause to
be filed a petition pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act |
of 1987. If a
petition is so filed, the Department shall retain |
temporary custody of the
child until the court orders |
otherwise. If a petition is not filed within
the 10 day period, |
the child shall be surrendered to the custody of the
requesting |
parent, guardian or custodian not later than the expiration of
|
the 10 day period, at which time the authority and duties of |
the Department
with respect to the temporary custody of the |
child shall terminate.
|
(m-1) The Department may place children under 18 years of |
age in a secure
child care facility licensed by the Department |
that cares for children who are
in need of secure living |
arrangements for their health, safety, and well-being
after a |
determination is made by the facility director and the Director |
or the
Director's designate prior to admission to the facility |
subject to Section
2-27.1 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. |
This subsection (m-1) does not apply
to a child who is subject |
to placement in a correctional facility operated
pursuant to |
Section 3-15-2 of the Unified Code of Corrections, unless the
|
child is a youth in care ward who was placed in under the care |
of the Department before being
subject to placement in a |
correctional facility and a court of competent
jurisdiction has |
ordered placement of the child in a secure care facility.
|
(n) The Department may place children under 18 years of age |
in
licensed child care facilities when in the opinion of the |
|
Department,
appropriate services aimed at family preservation |
have been unsuccessful and
cannot ensure the child's health and |
safety or are unavailable and such
placement would be for their |
best interest. Payment
for board, clothing, care, training and |
supervision of any child placed in
a licensed child care |
facility may be made by the Department, by the
parents or |
guardians of the estates of those children, or by both the
|
Department and the parents or guardians, except that no |
payments shall be
made by the Department for any child placed |
in a licensed child care
facility for board, clothing, care, |
training and supervision of such a
child that exceed the |
average per capita cost of maintaining and of caring
for a |
child in institutions for dependent or neglected children |
operated by
the Department. However, such restriction on |
payments does not apply in
cases where children require |
specialized care and treatment for problems of
severe emotional |
disturbance, physical disability, social adjustment, or
any |
combination thereof and suitable facilities for the placement |
of such
children are not available at payment rates within the |
limitations set
forth in this Section. All reimbursements for |
services delivered shall be
absolutely inalienable by |
assignment, sale, attachment, garnishment or
otherwise.
|
(n-1) The Department shall provide or authorize child |
welfare services, aimed at assisting minors to achieve |
sustainable self-sufficiency as independent adults, for any |
minor eligible for the reinstatement of wardship pursuant to |
|
subsection (2) of Section 2-33 of the Juvenile Court Act of |
1987, whether or not such reinstatement is sought or allowed, |
provided that the minor consents to such services and has not |
yet attained the age of 21. The Department shall have |
responsibility for the development and delivery of services |
under this Section. An eligible youth may access services under |
this Section through the Department of Children and Family |
Services or by referral from the Department of Human Services. |
Youth participating in services under this Section shall |
cooperate with the assigned case manager in developing an |
agreement identifying the services to be provided and how the |
youth will increase skills to achieve self-sufficiency. A |
homeless shelter is not considered appropriate housing for any |
youth receiving child welfare services under this Section. The |
Department shall continue child welfare services under this |
Section to any eligible minor until the minor becomes 21 years |
of age, no longer consents to participate, or achieves |
self-sufficiency as identified in the minor's service plan. The |
Department of Children and Family Services shall create clear, |
readable notice of the rights of former foster youth to child |
welfare services under this Section and how such services may |
be obtained. The Department of Children and Family Services and |
the Department of Human Services shall disseminate this |
information statewide. The Department shall adopt regulations |
describing services intended to assist minors in achieving |
sustainable self-sufficiency as independent adults. |
|
(o) The Department shall establish an administrative |
review and appeal
process for children and families who request |
or receive child welfare
services from the Department. Youth in |
care who Children who are wards of the Department and
are |
placed by private child welfare agencies, and foster families |
with whom
those youth children are placed, shall be afforded |
the same procedural and appeal
rights as children and families |
in the case of placement by the Department,
including the right |
to an initial review of a private agency decision by
that |
agency. The Department shall ensure insure that any private |
child welfare
agency, which accepts youth in care wards of the |
Department for placement, affords those
rights to children and |
foster families. The Department shall accept for
|
administrative review and an appeal hearing a complaint made by |
(i) a child
or foster family concerning a decision following an |
initial review by a
private child welfare agency or (ii) a |
prospective adoptive parent who alleges
a violation of |
subsection (j-5) of this Section. An appeal of a decision
|
concerning a change in the placement of a child shall be |
conducted in an
expedited manner. A court determination that a |
current foster home placement is necessary and appropriate |
under Section 2-28 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 does not |
constitute a judicial determination on the merits of an |
administrative appeal, filed by a former foster parent, |
involving a change of placement decision.
|
(p) There is hereby created the Department of Children and |
|
Family
Services Emergency Assistance Fund from which the |
Department may provide
special financial assistance to |
families which are in economic crisis when
such assistance is |
not available through other public or private sources
and the |
assistance is deemed necessary to prevent dissolution of the |
family
unit or to reunite families which have been separated |
due to child abuse and
neglect. The Department shall establish |
administrative rules specifying
the criteria for determining |
eligibility for and the amount and nature of
assistance to be |
provided. The Department may also enter into written
agreements |
with private and public social service agencies to provide
|
emergency financial services to families referred by the |
Department.
Special financial assistance payments shall be |
available to a family no
more than once during each fiscal year |
and the total payments to a
family may not exceed $500 during a |
fiscal year.
|
(q) The Department may receive and use, in their entirety, |
for the
benefit of children any gift, donation or bequest of |
money or other
property which is received on behalf of such |
children, or any financial
benefits to which such children are |
or may become entitled while under
the jurisdiction or care of |
the Department.
|
The Department shall set up and administer no-cost, |
interest-bearing accounts in appropriate financial |
institutions
for children for whom the Department is legally |
responsible and who have been
determined eligible for Veterans' |
|
Benefits, Social Security benefits,
assistance allotments from |
the armed forces, court ordered payments, parental
voluntary |
payments, Supplemental Security Income, Railroad Retirement
|
payments, Black Lung benefits, or other miscellaneous |
payments. Interest
earned by each account shall be credited to |
the account, unless
disbursed in accordance with this |
subsection.
|
In disbursing funds from children's accounts, the |
Department
shall:
|
(1) Establish standards in accordance with State and |
federal laws for
disbursing money from children's |
accounts. In all
circumstances,
the Department's |
"Guardianship Administrator" or his or her designee must
|
approve disbursements from children's accounts. The |
Department
shall be responsible for keeping complete |
records of all disbursements for each account for any |
purpose.
|
(2) Calculate on a monthly basis the amounts paid from |
State funds for the
child's board and care, medical care |
not covered under Medicaid, and social
services; and |
utilize funds from the child's account, as
covered by |
regulation, to reimburse those costs. Monthly, |
disbursements from
all children's accounts, up to 1/12 of |
$13,000,000, shall be
deposited by the Department into the |
General Revenue Fund and the balance over
1/12 of |
$13,000,000 into the DCFS Children's Services Fund.
|
|
(3) Maintain any balance remaining after reimbursing |
for the child's costs
of care, as specified in item (2). |
The balance shall accumulate in accordance
with relevant |
State and federal laws and shall be disbursed to the child |
or his
or her guardian, or to the issuing agency.
|
(r) The Department shall promulgate regulations |
encouraging all adoption
agencies to voluntarily forward to the |
Department or its agent names and
addresses of all persons who |
have applied for and have been approved for
adoption of a |
hard-to-place child or child with a disability and the names of |
such
children who have not been placed for adoption. A list of |
such names and
addresses shall be maintained by the Department |
or its agent, and coded
lists which maintain the |
confidentiality of the person seeking to adopt the
child and of |
the child shall be made available, without charge, to every
|
adoption agency in the State to assist the agencies in placing |
such
children for adoption. The Department may delegate to an |
agent its duty to
maintain and make available such lists. The |
Department shall ensure that
such agent maintains the |
confidentiality of the person seeking to adopt the
child and of |
the child.
|
(s) The Department of Children and Family Services may |
establish and
implement a program to reimburse Department and |
private child welfare
agency foster parents licensed by the |
Department of Children and Family
Services for damages |
sustained by the foster parents as a result of the
malicious or |
|
negligent acts of foster children, as well as providing third
|
party coverage for such foster parents with regard to actions |
of foster
children to other individuals. Such coverage will be |
secondary to the
foster parent liability insurance policy, if |
applicable. The program shall
be funded through appropriations |
from the General Revenue Fund,
specifically designated for such |
purposes.
|
(t) The Department shall perform home studies and |
investigations and
shall exercise supervision over visitation |
as ordered by a court pursuant
to the Illinois Marriage and |
Dissolution of Marriage Act or the Adoption
Act only if:
|
(1) an order entered by an Illinois court specifically
|
directs the Department to perform such services; and
|
(2) the court has ordered one or both of the parties to
|
the proceeding to reimburse the Department for its |
reasonable costs for
providing such services in accordance |
with Department rules, or has
determined that neither party |
is financially able to pay.
|
The Department shall provide written notification to the |
court of the
specific arrangements for supervised visitation |
and projected monthly costs
within 60 days of the court order. |
The Department shall send to the court
information related to |
the costs incurred except in cases where the court
has |
determined the parties are financially unable to pay. The court |
may
order additional periodic reports as appropriate.
|
(u) In addition to other information that must be provided, |
|
whenever the Department places a child with a prospective |
adoptive parent or parents or in a licensed foster home,
group |
home, child care institution, or in a relative home, the |
Department
shall provide to the prospective adoptive parent or |
parents or other caretaker:
|
(1) available detailed information concerning the |
child's educational
and health history, copies of |
immunization records (including insurance
and medical card |
information), a history of the child's previous |
placements,
if any, and reasons for placement changes |
excluding any information that
identifies or reveals the |
location of any previous caretaker;
|
(2) a copy of the child's portion of the client service |
plan, including
any visitation arrangement, and all |
amendments or revisions to it as
related to the child; and
|
(3) information containing details of the child's |
individualized
educational plan when the child is |
receiving special education services.
|
The caretaker shall be informed of any known social or |
behavioral
information (including, but not limited to, |
criminal background, fire
setting, perpetuation of
sexual |
abuse, destructive behavior, and substance abuse) necessary to |
care
for and safeguard the children to be placed or currently |
in the home. The Department may prepare a written summary of |
the information required by this paragraph, which may be |
provided to the foster or prospective adoptive parent in |
|
advance of a placement. The foster or prospective adoptive |
parent may review the supporting documents in the child's file |
in the presence of casework staff. In the case of an emergency |
placement, casework staff shall at least provide known |
information verbally, if necessary, and must subsequently |
provide the information in writing as required by this |
subsection.
|
The information described in this subsection shall be |
provided in writing. In the case of emergency placements when |
time does not allow prior review, preparation, and collection |
of written information, the Department shall provide such |
information as it becomes available. Within 10 business days |
after placement, the Department shall obtain from the |
prospective adoptive parent or parents or other caretaker a |
signed verification of receipt of the information provided. |
Within 10 business days after placement, the Department shall |
provide to the child's guardian ad litem a copy of the |
information provided to the prospective adoptive parent or |
parents or other caretaker. The information provided to the |
prospective adoptive parent or parents or other caretaker shall |
be reviewed and approved regarding accuracy at the supervisory |
level.
|
(u-5) Effective July 1, 1995, only foster care placements |
licensed as
foster family homes pursuant to the Child Care Act |
of 1969 shall be eligible to
receive foster care payments from |
the Department.
Relative caregivers who, as of July 1, 1995, |
|
were approved pursuant to approved
relative placement rules |
previously promulgated by the Department at 89 Ill.
Adm. Code |
335 and had submitted an application for licensure as a foster |
family
home may continue to receive foster care payments only |
until the Department
determines that they may be licensed as a |
foster family home or that their
application for licensure is |
denied or until September 30, 1995, whichever
occurs first.
|
(v) The Department shall access criminal history record |
information
as defined in the Illinois Uniform Conviction |
Information Act and information
maintained in the adjudicatory |
and dispositional record system as defined in
Section 2605-355 |
of the
Department of State Police Law (20 ILCS 2605/2605-355)
|
if the Department determines the information is necessary to |
perform its duties
under the Abused and Neglected Child |
Reporting Act, the Child Care Act of 1969,
and the Children and |
Family Services Act. The Department shall provide for
|
interactive computerized communication and processing |
equipment that permits
direct on-line communication with the |
Department of State Police's central
criminal history data |
repository. The Department shall comply with all
certification |
requirements and provide certified operators who have been
|
trained by personnel from the Department of State Police. In |
addition, one
Office of the Inspector General investigator |
shall have training in the use of
the criminal history |
information access system and have
access to the terminal. The |
Department of Children and Family Services and its
employees |
|
shall abide by rules and regulations established by the |
Department of
State Police relating to the access and |
dissemination of
this information.
|
(v-1) Prior to final approval for placement of a child, the |
Department shall conduct a criminal records background check of |
the prospective foster or adoptive parent, including |
fingerprint-based checks of national crime information |
databases. Final approval for placement shall not be granted if |
the record check reveals a felony conviction for child abuse or |
neglect, for spousal abuse, for a crime against children, or |
for a crime involving violence, including rape, sexual assault, |
or homicide, but not including other physical assault or |
battery, or if there is a felony conviction for physical |
assault, battery, or a drug-related offense committed within |
the past 5 years. |
(v-2) Prior to final approval for placement of a child, the |
Department shall check its child abuse and neglect registry for |
information concerning prospective foster and adoptive |
parents, and any adult living in the home. If any prospective |
foster or adoptive parent or other adult living in the home has |
resided in another state in the preceding 5 years, the |
Department shall request a check of that other state's child |
abuse and neglect registry.
|
(w) Within 120 days of August 20, 1995 (the effective date |
of Public Act
89-392), the Department shall prepare and submit |
to the Governor and the
General Assembly, a written plan for |
|
the development of in-state licensed
secure child care |
facilities that care for children who are in need of secure
|
living
arrangements for their health, safety, and well-being. |
For purposes of this
subsection, secure care facility shall |
mean a facility that is designed and
operated to ensure that |
all entrances and exits from the facility, a building
or a |
distinct part of the building, are under the exclusive control |
of the
staff of the facility, whether or not the child has the |
freedom of movement
within the perimeter of the facility, |
building, or distinct part of the
building. The plan shall |
include descriptions of the types of facilities that
are needed |
in Illinois; the cost of developing these secure care |
facilities;
the estimated number of placements; the potential |
cost savings resulting from
the movement of children currently |
out-of-state who are projected to be
returned to Illinois; the |
necessary geographic distribution of these
facilities in |
Illinois; and a proposed timetable for development of such
|
facilities. |
(x) The Department shall conduct annual credit history |
checks to determine the financial history of children placed |
under its guardianship pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of |
1987. The Department shall conduct such credit checks starting |
when a youth in care ward turns 12 years old and each year |
thereafter for the duration of the guardianship as terminated |
pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. The Department |
shall determine if financial exploitation of the child's |
|
personal information has occurred. If financial exploitation |
appears to have taken place or is presently ongoing, the |
Department shall notify the proper law enforcement agency, the |
proper State's Attorney, or the Attorney General. |
(y) Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 96th General Assembly, a child with a disability who |
receives residential and educational services from the |
Department shall be eligible to receive transition services in |
accordance with Article 14 of the School Code from the age of |
14.5 through age 21, inclusive, notwithstanding the child's |
residential services arrangement. For purposes of this |
subsection, "child with a disability" means a child with a |
disability as defined by the federal Individuals with |
Disabilities Education Improvement Act of 2004. |
(z) The Department shall access criminal history record |
information as defined as "background information" in this |
subsection and criminal history record information as defined |
in the Illinois Uniform Conviction Information Act for each |
Department employee or Department applicant. Each Department |
employee or Department applicant shall submit his or her |
fingerprints to the Department of State Police in the form and |
manner prescribed by the Department of State Police. These |
fingerprints shall be checked against the fingerprint records |
now and hereafter filed in the Department of State Police and |
the Federal Bureau of Investigation criminal history records |
databases. The Department of State Police shall charge a fee |
|
for conducting the criminal history record check, which shall |
be deposited into the State Police Services Fund and shall not |
exceed the actual cost of the record check. The Department of |
State Police shall furnish, pursuant to positive |
identification, all Illinois conviction information to the |
Department of Children and Family Services. |
For purposes of this subsection: |
"Background information" means all of the following: |
(i) Upon the request of the Department of Children and |
Family Services, conviction information obtained from the |
Department of State Police as a result of a |
fingerprint-based criminal history records check of the |
Illinois criminal history records database and the Federal |
Bureau of Investigation criminal history records database |
concerning a Department employee or Department applicant. |
(ii) Information obtained by the Department of |
Children and Family Services after performing a check of |
the Department of State Police's Sex Offender Database, as |
authorized by Section 120 of the Sex Offender Community |
Notification Law, concerning a Department employee or |
Department applicant. |
(iii) Information obtained by the Department of |
Children and Family Services after performing a check of |
the Child Abuse and Neglect Tracking System (CANTS) |
operated and maintained by the Department. |
"Department employee" means a full-time or temporary |
|
employee coded or certified within the State of Illinois |
Personnel System. |
"Department applicant" means an individual who has |
conditional Department full-time or part-time work, a |
contractor, an individual used to replace or supplement staff, |
an academic intern, a volunteer in Department offices or on |
Department contracts, a work-study student, an individual or |
entity licensed by the Department, or an unlicensed service |
provider who works as a condition of a contract or an agreement |
and whose work may bring the unlicensed service provider into |
contact with Department clients or client records. |
(Source: P.A. 98-249, eff. 1-1-14; 98-570, eff. 8-27-13; |
98-756, eff. 7-16-14; 98-803, eff. 1-1-15; 99-143, eff. |
7-27-15.)
|
(20 ILCS 505/5a) (from Ch. 23, par. 5005a)
|
Sec. 5a.
Reimbursable services for which the Department of |
Children and
Family Services shall pay 100% of the reasonable |
cost pursuant to a written
contract negotiated between the |
Department and the agency furnishing the
services (which shall |
include but not be limited to the determination of
reasonable |
cost, the services being purchased and the duration of the
|
agreement) include, but are not limited to:
|
SERVICE ACTIVITIES
|
Adjunctive Therapy;
|
|
Supervision and Consultation;
|
Inspection and Monitoring for purposes of issuing
|
licenses;
|
Determination of Children who are eligible
|
for federal or other reimbursement;
|
Postage and Shipping;
|
Outside Printing, Artwork, etc.;
|
Subscriptions and Reference Publications;
|
Management and General Expense.
|
Reimbursement of administrative costs other than inspection |
and monitoring
for purposes of issuing licenses may not exceed |
20% of the costs
for other services.
|
The Department may offer services to any child or family |
with respect to whom a report of suspected child abuse or |
neglect has been called in to the hotline after completion of a |
family assessment as provided under subsection (a-5) of Section |
7.4 of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act and the |
Department has determined that services are needed to address |
the safety of the child and other family members and the risk |
of subsequent maltreatment. Acceptance of such services shall |
be voluntary. |
All Object Expenses, Service Activities and Administrative
|
Costs are allowable.
|
If a survey instrument is used in the rate setting process:
|
(a) with respect to any day care centers, it shall be |
limited to those
agencies which receive reimbursement from |
|
the State;
|
(b) the cost survey instrument shall be promulgated by |
rule;
|
(c) any requirements of the respondents shall be |
promulgated by rule;
|
(d) all screens, limits or other tests of |
reasonableness, allowability
and reimbursability shall be |
promulgated by rule;
|
(e) adjustments may be made by the Department to rates |
when it determines
that reported wage and salary levels are |
insufficient to attract capable
caregivers in sufficient |
numbers.
|
The Department of Children and Family Services may pay 100% |
of the
reasonable costs of research and valuation
focused |
exclusively on services to youth in care wards of the |
Department . Such research projects must be approved, in |
advance, by
the Director of the Department.
|
In addition to reimbursements otherwise provided for in |
this Section,
the Department of Human Services shall, in |
accordance with annual written
agreements, make
advance |
quarterly disbursements to local public agencies for child day |
care
services with funds appropriated from the Local Effort Day |
Care Fund.
|
Neither the Department of Children and Family Services nor |
the
Department of Human Services shall pay or approve |
reimbursement for
day care in a facility which is operating |
|
without a valid license or permit,
except in the case of day |
care homes or day care centers which are exempt from
the |
licensing requirements of the "Child Care Act of 1969".
|
(Source: P.A. 96-760, eff. 1-1-10.)
|
(20 ILCS 505/6b) (from Ch. 23, par. 5006b)
|
Sec. 6b. Case tracking system.
|
(1) The Department shall establish and
operate a case |
tracking system which shall be designed to monitor and evaluate
|
family preservation, family reunification and placement |
services.
|
(2) The Department shall establish and operate the case |
tracking system
for the Department clients for whom the |
Department is providing or paying
for such services. The |
Department shall work with the courts in the
development
of a |
cooperative case tracking system.
|
(3) The Department shall determine the basic elements and |
access and provide
for records of the case tracking system to |
not be open to the general public.
|
(4) The Department shall use the case tracking system to
|
determine whether any child reported to the Department under
|
Section 3.5 of the Intergovernmental Missing Child Recovery Act |
of 1984 matches
a youth in care Department ward and whether |
that child had been abandoned within the previous
2 months.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-213, eff. 1-1-96.)
|
|
(20 ILCS 505/7.5)
|
Sec. 7.5. Notice of post-adoption reunion services. |
(a) For purposes of this Section, "post-adoption reunion |
services" means services provided by the Department to |
facilitate contact between adoptees and their siblings when one |
or more is still in the Department's care or adopted elsewhere, |
with the notarized consent of the adoptive parents of a minor |
child, when such contact has been established to be necessary |
to the adoptee's best interests and when all involved parties, |
including the adoptive parent of a child under 21 years of age, |
have provided written consent for such contact. |
(b) The Department shall provide to all adoptive parents of |
children receiving monthly adoption assistance under |
subsection (j) of Section 5 of this Act a notice that includes |
a description of the Department's post-adoption reunion |
services and an explanation of how to access those services. |
The notice to adoptive parents shall be provided at least once |
per year until such time as the adoption assistance payments |
cease. |
The Department shall also provide to all youth in care |
wards of the Department , within 30 days after their 18th |
birthday, the notice described in this Section.
|
(c) The Department shall adopt a rule regarding the |
provision of search and reunion services to youth in care wards |
and former youth in care wards .
|
(Source: P.A. 94-1010, eff. 10-1-06.)
|
|
(20 ILCS 505/34.11)
|
Sec. 34.11. Lou Jones Grandparent Child Care Program.
|
(a) The General Assembly finds and declares the following:
|
(1) An increasing number of children under the age of |
18, including many
children who would otherwise be at risk |
of abuse or neglect, are in the care of
a grandparent or |
other nonparent relative.
|
(2) The principal causes of this increase include |
parental substance
abuse, chronic illness, child abuse, |
mental illness, military deployment, poverty, |
homelessness, deportation, and death, as well as concerted
|
efforts by families and by the child welfare service system |
to keep children
with relatives whenever possible.
|
(3) Grandparents and older relatives providing primary |
care for at-risk
children may experience unique resultant |
problems, such as financial stress due
to limited incomes, |
emotional difficulties dealing with the loss of the child's
|
parents or the child's unique behaviors, and decreased |
physical stamina coupled
with a much higher incidence of |
chronic illness.
|
(4) Many children being raised by nonparent relatives |
experience one or a
combination of emotional, behavioral, |
psychological, academic, or medical
problems, especially |
those born to a substance-abusing mother or at risk of
|
child abuse, neglect, or abandonment.
|
|
(5) Grandparents and other relatives providing primary |
care for children
lack appropriate information about the |
issues of kinship care, the special
needs (both physical |
and psychological) of children born to a substance-abusing
|
mother or at risk of child abuse, neglect, or abandonment, |
and the support
resources currently available to them.
|
(6) An increasing number of grandparents and other |
relatives age 60 or older are adopting or becoming the |
subsidized guardians of children placed in their care by |
the Department. Some of these children will experience the |
death of their adoptive parent or guardian before reaching |
the age of 18. For most of these children, no legal plan |
has been made for the child's future care and custody in |
the event of the caregiver's death or incapacity. |
(7) Grandparents and other relatives providing primary |
care for children lack appropriate information about |
future care and custody planning for children in their |
care. They also lack access to resources that may assist |
them in developing future legal care and custody plans for |
children in their legal custody.
|
(b) The Department may establish an informational and |
educational program
for grandparents and other relatives who |
provide primary care for children who
are at risk of child |
abuse, neglect, or abandonment or who were born to
|
substance-abusing mothers. As a part of the program, the |
Department may
develop, publish, and distribute an |
|
informational brochure for grandparents and
other relatives |
who provide primary care for children who are at risk of child
|
abuse, neglect, or abandonment or who were born to |
substance-abusing mothers.
The information provided under the |
program authorized by this Section may
include, but is not |
limited to the following:
|
(1) The most prevalent causes of kinship care, |
especially the risk of
(i) substance exposure, (ii) child |
abuse, neglect, or abandonment, (iii) chronic illness, |
(iv) mental illness, (v) military deployment, or (vi) |
death.
|
(2) The problems experienced by children being raised |
by nonparent
caregivers.
|
(3) The problems experienced by grandparents and other |
nonparent relatives
providing primary care for children |
who have special needs.
|
(4) The legal system as it relates to children and |
their nonparent primary
caregivers.
|
(5) The benefits available to children and their |
nonparent primary
caregivers.
|
(6) A list of support groups and resources located |
throughout the State.
|
The brochure may be distributed through hospitals, public |
health nurses,
child protective services, medical professional |
offices, elementary and
secondary schools, senior citizen |
centers, public libraries, community action
agencies selected |
|
by the Department, and the Department of Human Services.
|
The Kinship Navigator established under the Kinship |
Navigator Act shall coordinate the grandparent child care |
program under this Section with the programs and services |
established and administered by the Department of Human |
Services under the Kinship Navigator Act. |
(c) In addition to other provisions of this Section, the |
Department shall establish a program of information, social |
work services, and legal services for any person age 60 or over |
and any other person who may be in need of a future legal care |
and custody plan who adopt, have adopted, take guardianship of, |
or have taken guardianship of children previously in the |
Department's custody. This program shall also assist families |
of deceased adoptive parents and guardians. As part of the |
program, the Department shall:
|
(1) Develop a protocol for identification of persons |
age 60 or over and others who may be in need of future care |
and custody plans, including ill caregivers, who are |
adoptive parents, prospective adoptive parents, guardians, |
or prospective guardians of children who are or have been |
in Department custody.
|
(2) Provide outreach to caregivers before and after |
adoption and guardianship, and to the families of deceased |
caregivers, regarding Illinois legal options for future |
care and custody of children.
|
(3) Provide training for Department and private agency |
|
staff on methods of assisting caregivers before and after |
adoption and guardianship, and the families of older and |
ill caregivers, who wish to make future care and custody |
plans for children who have been youth in care wards of the |
Department and who are or will be adopted by or are or will |
be placed in the guardianship of those caregivers become |
wards of those caregivers .
|
(4) Ensure that all caregivers age 60 or over who will |
adopt or will become guardians of former youth in care |
children previously in Department custody have |
specifically designated future caregivers for children in |
their care. The Department shall document this |
designation, and the Department shall also document |
acceptance of this responsibility by any future caregiver. |
Documentation of future care designation shall be included |
in each child's case file and adoption or guardianship |
subsidy files as applicable to the child.
|
(5) Ensure that any designated future caregiver and the |
family of a deceased caregiver have information on the |
financial needs of the child and future resources that may |
be available to support the child, including any adoption |
assistance and subsidized guardianship for which the child |
is or may be eligible.
|
(6) With respect to programs of social work and legal |
services:
|
(i) Provide contracted social work services to |
|
older and ill caregivers, and the families of deceased |
caregivers, including those who will or have adopted or |
will take or have taken guardianship of children |
previously in Department custody. Social work services |
to caregivers will have the goal of securing a future |
care and custody plan for children in their care. Such |
services will include providing information to the |
caregivers and families on standby guardianship, |
guardianship, standby adoption, and adoption. The |
Department will assist the caregiver in developing a |
plan for the child if the caregiver becomes |
incapacitated or terminally ill, or dies while the |
child is a minor. The Department shall develop a form |
to document the information given to caregivers and to |
document plans for future custody, in addition to the |
documentation described in subsection (b) (4). This |
form shall be included in each child's case file and |
adoption or guardianship subsidy files as applicable |
to the child.
|
(ii) Through a program of contracted legal |
services, assist older and ill caregivers, and the |
families of deceased caregivers, with the goal of |
securing court-ordered future care and custody plans |
for children in their care. Court-ordered future care |
and custody plans may include: standby guardianship, |
successor guardianship, standby adoption, and |
|
successor adoption. The program will also study ways in |
which to provide timely and cost-effective legal |
services to older and ill caregivers, and to families |
of deceased caregivers in order to ensure permanency |
for children in their care.
|
(7) Ensure that future caregivers designated by |
adoptive parents or guardians, and the families of deceased |
caregivers, understand their rights and potential |
responsibilities and shall be able to provide adequate |
support and education for children who may become their |
legal responsibility.
|
(8) Ensure that future caregivers designated by |
adoptive parents and guardians, and the families of |
deceased caregivers, understand the problems of children |
who have experienced multiple caregivers and who may have |
experienced abuse, neglect, or abandonment or may have been |
born to substance-abusing mothers.
|
(9) Ensure that future caregivers designated by |
adoptive parents and guardians, and the families of |
deceased caregivers, understand the problems experienced |
by older and ill caregivers of children, including children |
with special needs, such as financial stress due to limited |
income and increased financial responsibility, emotional |
difficulties associated with the loss of a child's parent |
or the child's unique behaviors, the special needs of a |
child who may come into their custody or whose parent or |
|
guardian is already deceased, and decreased physical |
stamina and a higher rate of chronic illness and other |
health concerns.
|
(10) Provide additional services as needed to families |
in which a designated caregiver appointed by the court or a |
caregiver designated in a will or other legal document |
cannot or will not fulfill the responsibilities as adoptive |
parent, guardian, or legal custodian of the child.
|
(d) The Department shall consult with the Department on |
Aging and any other agency it deems appropriate as the |
Department develops the program required by subsection (c).
|
(e) Rulemaking authority to implement Public Act 95-1040, |
if any, is conditioned on the rules being adopted in accordance |
with all provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure |
Act and all rules and procedures of the Joint Committee on |
Administrative Rules; any purported rule not so adopted, for |
whatever reason, is unauthorized.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-1040, eff. 3-25-09; 96-276, eff. 8-11-09; |
96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
|
(20 ILCS 505/35.1) (from Ch. 23, par. 5035.1)
|
Sec. 35.1. The case and clinical records of patients in |
Department
supervised facilities, youth in care wards of the |
Department , children receiving or
applying for child welfare |
services, persons receiving or applying for
other services of |
the Department, and Department reports of injury or abuse to
|
|
children shall not be open to the general public. Such case and |
clinical
records and reports or the information contained |
therein shall be disclosed by
the Director of the Department
to |
juvenile authorities
when necessary for the discharge of their |
official duties
who request information concerning the minor
|
and who
certify in writing that the information will not be |
disclosed to any other
party except as provided under law or |
order of court. For purposes of this
Section, "juvenile |
authorities" means: (i) a judge of
the circuit court and |
members of the staff of the court designated by the
judge; (ii) |
parties to the proceedings under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 |
and
their attorneys; (iii) probation
officers and court |
appointed advocates for the juvenile authorized by the judge
|
hearing the case; (iv) any individual, public or private agency |
having custody
of the child pursuant to court order or pursuant |
to placement of the child by the Department; (v) any |
individual, public or private
agency providing education, |
medical or mental health service to the child when
the |
requested information is needed to determine the appropriate |
service or
treatment for the minor; (vi) any potential |
placement provider when such
release
is authorized by the court |
for the limited purpose of determining the
appropriateness of |
the potential placement; (vii) law enforcement officers and
|
prosecutors;
(viii) adult and juvenile prisoner review boards; |
(ix) authorized military
personnel; (x)
individuals authorized |
by court; (xi) the Illinois General Assembly or
any committee
|
|
or commission thereof. This Section does not apply
to
the |
Department's fiscal records, other records of a purely |
administrative
nature, or any forms, documents or other records |
required of facilities subject
to licensure by the Department |
except as may otherwise be provided under the
Child Care Act of |
1969. Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, upon |
request, a guardian ad litem or attorney appointed to represent |
a child who is the subject of an action pursuant to Article II |
of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 may obtain a copy of foster |
home licensing records, including all information related to |
licensing complaints and investigations, regarding a home in |
which the child is placed or regarding a home in which the |
Department plans to place the child. Any information contained |
in foster home licensing records that is protected from |
disclosure by federal or State law may be obtained only in |
compliance with that law. Nothing in this Section restricts the |
authority of a court to order release of licensing records for |
purposes of discovery or as otherwise authorized by law.
|
Nothing contained in this Act prevents the sharing or |
disclosure of
information or records relating or pertaining to |
juveniles subject to the
provisions of the Serious Habitual |
Offender Comprehensive Action Program when
that information is |
used to assist in the early identification and treatment of
|
habitual juvenile offenders.
|
Nothing contained in this Act prevents the sharing or |
disclosure of
information or records relating or pertaining to |
|
the death of a minor under the
care of or receiving services |
from the Department and under the jurisdiction of
the juvenile |
court with the juvenile court, the State's Attorney, and the
|
minor's attorney.
|
Nothing contained in this Section prohibits or prevents any |
individual
dealing with or providing services to a minor from |
sharing information with
another individual dealing with or |
providing services to a minor for the
purpose of coordinating |
efforts on behalf of the minor. The sharing of such
information |
is only for the purpose stated herein and is to be consistent |
with
the intent and purpose of the confidentiality provisions |
of the Juvenile Court
Act of 1987. This provision does not |
abrogate any recognized privilege.
Sharing information does |
not include copying of records, reports or case files
unless |
authorized herein.
|
Nothing in this Section prohibits or prevents the |
re-disclosure of records,
reports,
or other information that |
reveals malfeasance or nonfeasance on the part of the
|
Department, its employees, or its agents. Nothing in this |
Section prohibits
or prevents
the Department or a party in a |
proceeding under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987
from copying |
records, reports, or case files for the purpose of sharing |
those
documents with other parties to the litigation.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-779, eff. 1-1-17 .)
|
(20 ILCS 505/39.3) |
|
Sec. 39.3. Suggestion boxes. The Department must place in |
each residential treatment center that accepts youth in care |
wards of the Department a locked suggestion box into which |
residents may place comments and concerns to be addressed by |
the Department. Only employees of the Department shall have |
access to the contents of the locked suggestion boxes. An |
employee of the Department must check the locked suggestion |
boxes at least once per week.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-342, eff. 8-11-15.) |
Section 25. The Child Death Review Team Act is amended by |
changing Section 20 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 515/20)
|
Sec. 20. Reviews of child deaths.
|
(a) Every child death shall be reviewed by the team in the |
subregion which
has
primary case management responsibility. |
The deceased child must be one of the
following:
|
(1) A youth in care ward of the Department .
|
(2) The subject of an open service case maintained by |
the Department.
|
(3) The subject of a pending child abuse or neglect |
investigation.
|
(4) A child who was the subject of an abuse or neglect |
investigation at
any time
during the 12 months preceding |
the child's death.
|
|
(5) Any other child whose death is reported to the |
State central
register as a result of alleged child abuse |
or neglect which report is
subsequently indicated.
|
A child death review team may, at its discretion, review |
other sudden,
unexpected, or unexplained child deaths, and |
cases of serious or fatal injuries to a child identified under |
the Children's
Advocacy Center Act.
|
(b) A child death review team's purpose in conducting |
reviews of child
deaths
is to do the following:
|
(1) Assist in determining the cause and manner of the |
child's death, when
requested.
|
(2) Evaluate means by which the death might have been |
prevented.
|
(3) Report its findings to appropriate agencies and |
make recommendations
that may help to reduce the number of |
child deaths caused by abuse or neglect.
|
(4) Promote continuing education for professionals |
involved in
investigating, treating, and preventing child |
abuse and neglect as a means of
preventing child deaths due |
to abuse or neglect.
|
(5) Make specific recommendations to the Director and |
the Inspector
General of the Department concerning the |
prevention of child deaths due to
abuse or neglect and the |
establishment of protocols for investigating child
deaths.
|
(c) A child death review team shall review a child death as |
soon as
practical and not later than
90 days following
the
|
|
completion by the Department of the investigation of the death |
under the
Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act. When there |
has been no investigation
by the Department, the child death |
review team shall review a child's death
within 90 days after |
obtaining the information necessary to complete the review
from |
the coroner, pathologist, medical examiner, or law enforcement |
agency,
depending on the nature of the case. A child death
|
review
team shall meet at
least once in
each calendar quarter.
|
(d) The Director shall, within 90 days, review and reply to |
recommendations
made by a team under
item (5) of
subsection |
(b). With respect to each recommendation made by a team, the |
Director shall submit his or her reply both to the chairperson |
of that team and to the chairperson of the Executive Council. |
The Director's reply to each recommendation must include a |
statement as to whether the Director intends to implement the |
recommendation. |
The Director shall implement recommendations as feasible |
and
appropriate and shall respond in writing to explain the |
implementation or
nonimplementation of the recommendations. |
(e) Within 90 days after the Director submits a reply with |
respect to a recommendation as required by subsection (d), the |
Director must submit an additional report that sets forth in |
detail the way, if any, in which the Director will implement |
the recommendation and the schedule for implementing the |
recommendation. The Director shall submit this report to the |
chairperson of the team that made the recommendation and to the |
|
chairperson of the Executive Council. |
(f) Within 180 days after the Director submits a report |
under subsection (e) concerning the implementation of a |
recommendation, the Director shall submit a further report to |
the chairperson of the team that made the recommendation and to |
the chairperson of the Executive Council. This report shall set |
forth the specific changes in the Department's policies and |
procedures that have been made in response to the |
recommendation.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-405, eff. 6-1-08; 95-527, eff. 6-1-08; 95-876, |
eff. 8-21-08; 96-328, eff. 8-11-09.)
|
Section 30. The Administration of Psychotropic Medications |
to Children Act is amended by changing Section 10 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 535/10)
|
Sec. 10. Failure to comply with Department rules. The |
Department must establish and maintain rules designed to ensure |
compliance with any rules promulgated pursuant to Section 5 of |
this Act. Such rules shall include, but are not limited to, the |
following: |
(a) Standards and procedures for notifying physicians, |
residential treatment facilities, and psychiatric hospitals |
when they have violated any rule enacted or maintained pursuant |
to Section 5 of this Act. |
(b) Standards and procedures for issuing written warnings |
|
to physicians, residential treatment facilities, and |
psychiatric hospitals when they have violated any rule enacted |
or maintained pursuant to Section 5 of this Act. |
(c) Standards and procedures for notifying the Department |
of Financial and Professional Regulation when a physician has |
repeatedly violated any rule enacted or maintained pursuant to |
Section 5 of this Act after having received a written warning |
on one or more occasions. This subsection is not intended to |
limit the Department's authority to make a report to the |
Department of Financial and Professional Regulation when a |
physician has violated a rule and has not received a written |
warning when the Department determines it is in the minor's and |
society's interest to make the report. |
(d) Standards and procedures for notifying the Department |
of Public Health when any facility licensed by that Department |
has repeatedly violated any rule enacted or maintained pursuant |
to Section 5 of this Act after having received a written |
warning on one or more occasions. This subsection is not |
intended to limit the Department's authority to make a report |
to the Department of Public Health when a facility has violated |
a rule and has not received a written warning when the |
Department determines it is in the minor's and society's |
interest to make the report. |
(e) Standards and procedures for notifying the guardian ad |
litem appointed pursuant to Section 2-17 of the Juvenile Court |
Act of 1987, of a youth in care as defined in Section 4d of the |
|
Children and Family Services Act ward who has been administered |
psychotropic medication in violation of any rule enacted or |
maintained pursuant to Section 5 of this Act, where the |
guardian ad litem has requested notification and provides the |
Department with documentation verifying that pursuant to the |
Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Confidentiality |
Act, the court has entered an order granting the guardian ad |
litem authority to receive and review this information. |
(f) Standards and procedures for notifying the |
Department's licensing division when a residential facility or |
group home licensed by the Department has repeatedly violated |
any rule enacted or maintained pursuant to Section 5 of this |
Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-245, eff. 8-4-11.) |
Section 35. The Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Administrative Act is amended by changing Section |
69 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 1705/69)
|
Sec. 69.
Joint planning by the Department of Human Services |
and the
Department of Children and Family Services. The purpose |
of this Section is to
mandate that joint planning occur between |
the Department of Children and Family
Services and the |
Department of Human Services to ensure that the 2 agencies
|
coordinate their activities and effectively work together to |
|
provide youth in care as defined in Section 4d of the Children |
and Family Services Act who have wards with
developmental |
disabilities for whom the Department of Children and Family
|
Services is legally responsible a smooth transition to adult |
living upon
reaching the age of 21. The Department of Children |
and Family Services and the
Department of Human Services shall |
execute an interagency agreement by January
1, 1998 that |
outlines the terms of the coordination process. The Departments
|
shall consult with private providers of services to children in |
formulating the
interagency agreement.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-512, eff. 8-22-97; 90-655, eff. 7-30-98.)
|
Section 40. The State Finance Act is amended by changing |
Sections 16 and 24.5 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 105/16) (from Ch. 127, par. 152)
|
Sec. 16.
The item "travel" when used in an appropriation |
act, shall
include any expenditure directly incident to |
official travel by State
officers, commission members and |
employees , or by wards or charges of the
State , or youth in |
care as defined in Section 4d of the Children and Family |
Services Act , involving reimbursement to travelers, or direct |
payment to private
agencies providing transportation or |
related services.
Through June 30, 1994, the item "travel" may |
also include any
expenditure to, or approved by, the Department |
of Central Management
Services for video conferencing.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 87-817.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/24.5) (from Ch. 127, par. 160.5)
|
Sec. 24.5. "Awards and grants" includes payments for: |
Awards and
indemnities, pensions and annuities (other than |
amounts payable for personal
services as defined in Section |
14); shared revenue payments or grants to
local governments or |
to quasi-public agencies; and gratuitous payments to,
or |
charges incurred for the direct benefit of, natural persons who |
are not
wards of the State or youth in care as defined in |
Section 4d of the Children and Family Services Act . Payments to |
any local government as reimbursement for
costs incurred by it |
in performing an activity for which it is specifically
by |
statute made an agent of the State shall be chargeable to and |
classified
under the same item or account as though such costs |
were incurred directly
by the State.
|
(Source: P.A. 82-325.)
|
Section 45. The Counties Code is amended by changing |
Section 3-3013 as follows:
|
(55 ILCS 5/3-3013) (from Ch. 34, par. 3-3013)
|
Sec. 3-3013. Preliminary investigations; blood and urine |
analysis;
summoning jury; reports. Every coroner, whenever, as |
soon as he knows or is
informed that the dead body of any |
person is found, or lying within his
county, whose death is |
|
suspected of being:
|
(a) A sudden or violent death, whether apparently |
suicidal,
homicidal or accidental, including but not |
limited to deaths apparently
caused or contributed to by |
thermal, traumatic, chemical, electrical or
radiational |
injury, or a complication of any of them, or by drowning or
|
suffocation, or as a result of domestic violence as defined |
in the Illinois
Domestic
Violence Act of 1986;
|
(b) A maternal or fetal death due to abortion, or any |
death due to a
sex crime or a crime against nature;
|
(c) A death where the circumstances are suspicious, |
obscure,
mysterious or otherwise unexplained or where, in |
the written opinion of
the attending physician, the cause |
of death is not determined;
|
(d) A death where addiction to alcohol or to any drug |
may have been
a contributory cause; or
|
(e) A death where the decedent was not attended by a |
licensed
physician;
|
shall go to the place where the dead body is, and take charge |
of the
same and shall make a preliminary investigation into the |
circumstances
of the death. In the case of death without |
attendance by a licensed
physician the body may be moved with |
the coroner's consent from the
place of death to a mortuary in |
the same county. Coroners in their
discretion shall notify such |
physician as is designated in accordance
with Section 3-3014 to |
attempt to ascertain the cause of death, either by
autopsy or |
|
otherwise.
|
In cases of accidental death involving a motor vehicle in |
which the
decedent was (1) the operator or a suspected operator |
of a motor
vehicle, or (2) a pedestrian 16 years of age or |
older, the coroner shall
require that a blood specimen of at |
least 30 cc., and if medically
possible a urine specimen of at |
least 30 cc. or as much as possible up
to 30 cc., be withdrawn |
from the body of the decedent in a timely fashion after
the |
accident causing his death, by such physician as has been |
designated
in accordance with Section 3-3014, or by the coroner |
or deputy coroner or
a qualified person designated by such |
physician, coroner, or deputy coroner. If the county
does not |
maintain laboratory facilities for making such analysis, the
|
blood and urine so drawn shall be sent to the Department of |
State Police or any other accredited or State-certified |
laboratory
for analysis of the alcohol, carbon monoxide, and |
dangerous or
narcotic drug content of such blood and urine |
specimens. Each specimen
submitted shall be accompanied by |
pertinent information concerning the
decedent upon a form |
prescribed by such laboratory. Any
person drawing blood and |
urine and any person making any examination of
the blood and |
urine under the terms of this Division shall be immune from all
|
liability, civil or criminal, that might otherwise be incurred |
or
imposed.
|
In all other cases coming within the jurisdiction of the |
coroner and
referred to in subparagraphs (a) through (e) above, |
|
blood, and whenever
possible, urine samples shall be analyzed |
for the presence of alcohol
and other drugs. When the coroner |
suspects that drugs may have been
involved in the death, either |
directly or indirectly, a toxicological
examination shall be |
performed which may include analyses of blood, urine,
bile, |
gastric contents and other tissues. When the coroner suspects
a |
death is due to toxic substances, other than drugs, the coroner |
shall
consult with the toxicologist prior to collection of |
samples. Information
submitted to the toxicologist shall |
include information as to height,
weight, age, sex and race of |
the decedent as well as medical history,
medications used by |
and the manner of death of decedent.
|
When the coroner or medical examiner finds that the cause |
of death is due to homicidal means, the coroner or medical |
examiner shall cause blood and buccal specimens (tissue may be |
submitted if no uncontaminated blood or buccal specimen can be |
obtained), whenever possible, to be withdrawn from the body of |
the decedent in a timely fashion. For proper preservation of |
the specimens, collected blood and buccal specimens shall be |
dried and tissue specimens shall be frozen if available |
equipment exists. As soon as possible, but no later than 30 |
days after the collection of the specimens, the coroner or |
medical examiner shall release those specimens to the police |
agency responsible for investigating the death. As soon as |
possible, but no later than 30 days after the receipt from the |
coroner or medical examiner, the police agency shall submit the |
|
specimens using the agency case number to a National DNA Index |
System (NDIS) participating laboratory within this State, such |
as the Illinois Department of State Police, Division of |
Forensic Services, for analysis and categorizing into genetic |
marker groupings. The results of the analysis and categorizing |
into genetic marker groupings shall be provided to the Illinois |
Department of State Police and shall be maintained by the |
Illinois Department of State Police in the State central |
repository in the same manner, and subject to the same |
conditions, as provided in Section 5-4-3 of the Unified Code of |
Corrections. The requirements of this paragraph are in addition |
to any other findings, specimens, or information that the |
coroner or medical examiner is required to provide during the |
conduct of a criminal investigation.
|
In all counties, in cases of apparent
suicide, homicide, or |
accidental death or in other cases, within the
discretion of |
the coroner, the coroner may summon 8 persons of lawful age
|
from those persons drawn for petit jurors in the county. The |
summons shall
command these persons to present themselves |
personally at such a place and
time as the coroner shall |
determine, and may be in any form which the
coroner shall |
determine and may incorporate any reasonable form of request
|
for acknowledgement which the coroner deems practical and |
provides a
reliable proof of service. The summons may be served |
by first class mail.
From the 8 persons so summoned, the |
coroner shall select 6 to serve as the
jury for the inquest. |
|
Inquests may be continued from time
to time, as the coroner may |
deem necessary. The 6 jurors selected in
a given case may view |
the body of the deceased.
If at any continuation of an inquest |
one or more of the original jurors
shall be unable to continue |
to serve, the coroner shall fill the vacancy or
vacancies. A |
juror serving pursuant to this paragraph shall receive
|
compensation from the county at the same rate as the rate of |
compensation
that is paid to petit or grand jurors in the |
county. The coroner shall
furnish to each juror without fee at |
the time of his discharge a
certificate of the number of days |
in attendance at an inquest, and, upon
being presented with |
such certificate, the county treasurer shall pay to
the juror |
the sum provided for his services.
|
In counties which have a jury commission, in cases of |
apparent suicide or
homicide or of accidental death, the |
coroner may conduct an inquest. The jury commission shall |
provide
at least 8 jurors to the coroner, from whom the coroner |
shall select any 6
to serve as the jury for the inquest. |
Inquests may be continued from time
to time as the coroner may |
deem necessary. The 6 jurors originally chosen
in a given case |
may view the body of the deceased. If at any continuation
of an |
inquest one or more of the 6 jurors originally chosen shall be |
unable
to continue to serve, the coroner shall fill the vacancy |
or vacancies. At
the coroner's discretion, additional jurors to |
fill such vacancies shall be
supplied by the jury commission. A |
juror serving pursuant to this
paragraph in such county shall |
|
receive compensation from the county at the
same rate as the |
rate of compensation that is paid to petit or grand jurors
in |
the county.
|
In every case in which a fire is determined to be
a
|
contributing factor in a death, the coroner shall report the |
death to the
Office of the State Fire Marshal. The coroner |
shall provide a copy of the death certificate (i) within 30 |
days after filing the permanent death certificate and (ii) in a |
manner that is agreed upon by the coroner and the State Fire |
Marshal. |
In every case in which a drug overdose is determined to be |
the cause or a contributing factor in the death, the coroner or |
medical examiner shall report the death to the Department of |
Public Health. The Department of Public Health shall adopt |
rules regarding specific information that must be reported in |
the event of such a death. If possible, the coroner shall |
report the cause of the overdose. As used in this Section, |
"overdose" has the same meaning as it does in Section 414 of |
the Illinois Controlled Substances Act. The Department of |
Public Health shall issue a semiannual report to the General |
Assembly summarizing the reports received. The Department |
shall also provide on its website a monthly report of overdose |
death figures organized by location, age, and any other |
factors, the Department deems appropriate. |
In addition, in every case in which domestic violence is |
determined to be
a
contributing factor in a death, the coroner |
|
shall report the death to the
Department of State Police.
|
All deaths in State institutions and all deaths of wards of |
the State or youth in care as defined in Section 4d of the |
Children and Family Services Act in
private care facilities or |
in programs funded by the Department of Human
Services under |
its powers relating to mental health and developmental
|
disabilities or alcoholism and substance
abuse or funded by the |
Department of Children and Family Services shall
be reported to |
the coroner of the county in which the facility is
located. If |
the coroner has reason to believe that an investigation is
|
needed to determine whether the death was caused by |
maltreatment or
negligent care of the ward of the State or |
youth in care as defined in Section 4d of the Children and |
Family Services Act , the coroner may conduct a
preliminary |
investigation of the circumstances of such death as in cases of
|
death under circumstances set forth in paragraphs (a) through |
(e) of this
Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-354, eff. 1-1-16; 99-480, eff. 9-9-15; 99-642, |
eff. 7-28-16.)
|
Section 50. The School Code is amended by changing Section |
14-8.02a as follows:
|
(105 ILCS 5/14-8.02a)
|
Sec. 14-8.02a. Impartial due process hearing; civil |
action.
|
|
(a) This Section
shall apply to all impartial due process |
hearings requested on or after July
1, 2005. Impartial due |
process hearings requested before July 1, 2005 shall be |
governed by the rules described in Public Act 89-652. |
(a-5) For purposes of this Section and Section 14-8.02b of |
this Code, days shall be computed in accordance with Section |
1.11 of the Statute on Statutes.
|
(b) The State Board of Education shall establish an |
impartial due process
hearing system in accordance with this
|
Section and may, with the advice and approval of the Advisory |
Council on
Education of Children with Disabilities, promulgate |
rules and regulations
consistent with this Section to establish |
the rules and procedures for due process hearings.
|
(c) (Blank).
|
(d) (Blank).
|
(e) (Blank).
|
(f) An impartial due process hearing shall be convened upon |
the request of a
parent, student if at least 18 years of age or |
emancipated, or a
school district. A school district shall
make |
a request in writing to the State Board of Education and |
promptly mail a
copy of the request to the parents or student |
(if at least 18 years of age or emancipated) at the parent's or |
student's last
known address. A request made by the parent or |
student shall be made in writing to the superintendent of the |
school district where the student resides. The superintendent |
shall forward the request to the State Board of Education |
|
within 5 days after receipt of the request. The request shall |
be filed no more than 2 years following the date the person or |
school district knew or should have known of the event or |
events forming the basis for the request. The request shall, at |
a minimum, contain all of the following: |
(1) The name of the student, the address of the |
student's residence, and the name of the school the student |
is attending. |
(2) In the case of homeless children (as defined under |
the federal McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act (42 |
U.S.C. 11434a(2)), available contact information for the |
student and the name of the school the student is |
attending. |
(3) A description of the nature of the problem relating |
to the actual or proposed placement, identification, |
services, or evaluation of the student, including facts |
relating to the problem. |
(4) A proposed resolution of the problem to the extent |
known and available to the party at the time. |
(f-5) Within 3 days after receipt of the hearing request,
|
the State Board of
Education shall appoint a due process |
hearing officer using a rotating
appointment system and shall |
notify the hearing officer of his or her
appointment. |
For a school district other than a school district located |
in a municipality having a population exceeding 500,000, a |
hearing officer who is a current resident of the school |
|
district, special
education cooperative, or other public |
entity involved in the hearing shall recuse himself or herself. |
A hearing officer who is a former employee of the school |
district, special education cooperative, or other public |
entity involved in the hearing shall immediately disclose the |
former employment to the parties and shall recuse himself or |
herself, unless the parties otherwise agree in writing. A
|
hearing officer having a personal or professional interest that |
may conflict
with his or her objectivity in the hearing shall |
disclose the conflict to the parties and shall recuse himself |
or herself unless the parties otherwise agree in writing. For |
purposes of this subsection
an assigned hearing officer shall |
be considered to have a conflict of interest
if, at any time |
prior to the issuance of his or her written decision, he or she
|
knows or should know that he or she may receive remuneration |
from a party
to the hearing within 3 years following the |
conclusion of the due process
hearing. |
A party to a due process hearing shall be permitted one |
substitution
of hearing officer as a matter of right, in |
accordance with procedures
established by the rules adopted by |
the State Board of Education under this
Section. The State |
Board of Education shall randomly select and appoint
another |
hearing officer within 3 days after receiving notice that the |
appointed
hearing officer is ineligible to serve or upon |
receiving a proper request for
substitution of hearing officer. |
If a party withdraws its request for a due
process hearing |
|
after a hearing officer has been appointed, that hearing
|
officer shall retain jurisdiction over a subsequent hearing |
that involves the
same parties and is requested within one year |
from the date of withdrawal of
the previous request, unless |
that hearing
officer is unavailable.
|
Any party may raise
facts that constitute a conflict of |
interest for the hearing officer at any
time before or during |
the hearing and may move for recusal.
|
(g) Impartial due process hearings shall be conducted |
pursuant to this
Section and any rules and regulations |
promulgated by the State Board of Education
consistent with |
this Section and other governing laws and regulations. The |
hearing shall address only those issues properly raised in the |
hearing request under subsection (f) of this Section or, if |
applicable, in the amended hearing request under subsection |
(g-15) of this Section. The
hearing shall be closed to the |
public unless the parents request
that the hearing be open to |
the public. The parents involved in
the hearing shall have the |
right to have the student who is the subject of the
hearing |
present. The hearing shall be held at a time and place which |
are
reasonably convenient to the parties involved. Upon the |
request of
a party, the hearing officer shall hold the hearing |
at a location neutral to
the parties if the hearing officer |
determines that there is no cost for
securing the use of the |
neutral location. Once appointed, the impartial due
process |
hearing officer shall not communicate with the State Board of |
|
Education
or its employees concerning the
hearing, except that, |
where circumstances require, communications for
administrative |
purposes that do not deal with substantive or procedural |
matters
or issues on the merits are authorized, provided that |
the hearing officer
promptly notifies all parties of the |
substance of the communication as a matter
of record. |
(g-5) Unless the school district has previously provided |
prior written notice to the parent or student (if at least 18 |
years of age or emancipated) regarding the subject matter of |
the hearing request, the school district shall, within 10 days |
after receiving a hearing request initiated by a parent or |
student (if at least 18 years of age or emancipated), provide a |
written response to the request that shall include all of the |
following: |
(1) An explanation of why the school district proposed |
or refused to take the action or actions described in the |
hearing request. |
(2) A description of other options the IEP team |
considered and the reasons why those options were rejected. |
(3) A description of each evaluation procedure, |
assessment, record, report, or other evidence the school |
district used as the basis for the proposed or refused |
action or actions. |
(4) A description of the factors that are or were |
relevant to the school district's proposed or refused |
action or actions. |
|
(g-10) When the hearing request has been initiated by a |
school district, within 10 days after receiving the request, |
the parent or student (if at least 18 years of age or |
emancipated) shall provide the school district with a response |
that specifically addresses the issues raised in the school |
district's hearing request. The parent's or student's response |
shall be provided in writing, unless he or she is illiterate or |
has a disability that prevents him or her from providing a |
written response. The parent's or student's response may be |
provided in his or her native language, if other than English. |
In the event that illiteracy or another disabling condition |
prevents the parent or student from providing a written |
response, the school district shall assist the parent or |
student in providing the written response. |
(g-15) Within 15 days after receiving notice of the hearing |
request, the non-requesting party may challenge the |
sufficiency of the request by submitting its challenge in |
writing to the hearing officer. Within 5 days after receiving |
the challenge to the sufficiency of the request, the hearing |
officer shall issue a determination of the challenge in writing |
to the parties. In the event that the hearing officer upholds |
the challenge, the party who requested the hearing may, with |
the consent of the non-requesting party or hearing officer, |
file an amended request. Amendments are permissible for the |
purpose of raising issues beyond those in the initial hearing |
request. In addition, the party who requested the hearing may |
|
amend the request once as a matter of right by filing the |
amended request within 5 days after filing the initial request. |
An amended request, other than an amended request as a matter |
of right, shall be filed by the date determined by the hearing |
officer, but in no event any later than 5 days prior to the |
date of the hearing. If an amended request, other than an |
amended request as a matter of right, raises issues that were |
not part of the initial request, the applicable timeline for a |
hearing, including the timeline under subsection (g-20) of this |
Section, shall recommence. |
(g-20) Within 15 days after receiving a request for a |
hearing from a parent or student (if at least 18 years of age |
or emancipated) or, in the event that the school district |
requests a hearing, within 15 days after initiating the |
request, the school district shall convene a resolution meeting |
with the parent and relevant members of the IEP team who have |
specific knowledge of the facts contained in the request for |
the purpose of resolving the problem that resulted in the |
request. The resolution meeting shall include a representative |
of the school district who has decision-making authority on |
behalf of the school district. Unless the parent is accompanied |
by an attorney at the resolution meeting, the school district |
may not include an attorney representing the school district. |
The resolution meeting may not be waived unless agreed to |
in writing by the school district and the parent or student (if |
at least 18 years of age or emancipated) or the parent or |
|
student (if at least 18 years of age or emancipated) and the |
school district agree in writing to utilize mediation in place |
of the resolution meeting. If either party fails to cooperate |
in the scheduling or convening of the resolution meeting, the |
hearing officer may order an extension of the timeline for |
completion of the resolution meeting or, upon the motion of a |
party and at least 7 days after ordering the non-cooperating |
party to cooperate, order the dismissal of the hearing request |
or the granting of all relief set forth in the request, as |
appropriate. |
In the event that the school district and the parent or |
student (if at least 18 years of age or emancipated) agree to a |
resolution of the problem that resulted in the hearing request, |
the terms of the resolution shall be committed to writing and |
signed by the parent or student (if at least 18 years of age or |
emancipated) and the representative of the school district with |
decision-making authority. The agreement shall be legally |
binding and shall be enforceable in any State or federal court |
of competent jurisdiction. In the event that the parties |
utilize the resolution meeting process, the process shall |
continue until no later than the 30th day following the receipt |
of the hearing request by the non-requesting party (or as |
properly extended by order of the hearing officer) to resolve |
the issues underlying the request, at which time the timeline |
for completion of the impartial due process hearing shall |
commence. The State Board of Education may, by rule, establish |
|
additional procedures for the conduct of resolution meetings. |
(g-25) If mutually agreed to in writing, the parties to a |
hearing request may request State-sponsored mediation as a |
substitute for the resolution process described in subsection |
(g-20) of this Section or may utilize mediation at the close of |
the resolution process if all issues underlying the hearing |
request have not been resolved through the resolution process. |
(g-30) If mutually agreed to in writing, the parties to a |
hearing request may waive the resolution process described in |
subsection (g-20) of this Section. Upon signing a written |
agreement to waive the resolution process, the parties shall be |
required to forward the written waiver to the hearing officer |
appointed to the case within 2 business days following the |
signing of the waiver by the parties. The timeline for the |
impartial due process hearing shall commence on the date of the |
signing of the waiver by the parties. |
(g-35) The timeline for completing the impartial due |
process hearing, as set forth in subsection (h) of this |
Section, shall be initiated upon the occurrence of any one of |
the following events: |
(1) The unsuccessful completion of the resolution |
process as described in subsection (g-20) of this Section. |
(2) The mutual agreement of the parties to waive the |
resolution process as described in subsection (g-25) or |
(g-30) of this Section.
|
(g-40) The hearing officer shall convene a prehearing |
|
conference no later than 14
days before the scheduled date for |
the due process hearing for the general
purpose of aiding in |
the fair, orderly, and expeditious conduct of the hearing.
The |
hearing officer shall provide the parties with written notice |
of the
prehearing conference at least 7 days in advance of the |
conference. The
written notice shall require the parties to |
notify the hearing officer by a
date certain whether they |
intend to participate in the prehearing conference.
The hearing |
officer may conduct the prehearing conference in person or by
|
telephone. Each party shall at the prehearing conference (1) |
disclose whether
it is represented by legal counsel or intends |
to retain legal counsel; (2) clarify
matters it believes to be |
in dispute in the case and the specific relief
being sought; |
(3) disclose whether there are any additional evaluations for |
the student
that it intends to
introduce into the
hearing |
record that have not been previously disclosed to the other |
parties;
(4) disclose a list of all documents it intends to |
introduce into the hearing record,
including the date and a |
brief description of each document; and (5) disclose the names
|
of all witnesses it intends to call to testify at the hearing. |
The hearing
officer shall specify the order of presentation to |
be used at the hearing. If
the
prehearing conference is held by |
telephone, the parties shall transmit the
information required |
in this paragraph in such a manner that it is available to
all |
parties at the time of the prehearing conference. The State |
Board of
Education may, by
rule, establish additional |
|
procedures for the conduct of prehearing
conferences.
|
(g-45) The
impartial due process hearing officer shall not |
initiate or participate in any
ex parte communications with the |
parties, except to arrange the date, time,
and location of the |
prehearing conference, due process hearing, or other status |
conferences convened at the discretion of the hearing officer
|
and to
receive confirmation of whether a party intends to |
participate in the
prehearing conference. |
(g-50) The parties shall disclose and provide to each other
|
any evidence which they intend to submit into the hearing |
record no later than
5 days before the hearing. Any party to a |
hearing has the right to prohibit
the introduction of any |
evidence at the hearing that has not been disclosed to
that |
party at least 5 days before the hearing. The party requesting |
a hearing shall not be permitted at the hearing to raise issues |
that were not raised in the party's initial or amended request, |
unless otherwise permitted in this Section.
|
(g-55) All reasonable efforts must be made by the parties |
to present their respective cases at the hearing within a |
cumulative period of 7 days. When scheduling hearing dates, the |
hearing officer shall schedule the final day of the hearing no |
more than 30 calendar days after the first day of the hearing |
unless good cause is shown. This subsection (g-55) shall not be |
applied in a manner that (i) denies any party to the hearing a |
fair and reasonable allocation of time and opportunity to |
present its case in its entirety or (ii) deprives any party to |
|
the hearing of the safeguards accorded under the federal |
Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act of |
2004 (Public Law 108-446), regulations promulgated under the |
Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act of |
2004, or any other applicable law. The school district shall |
present evidence that the special education needs
of the child |
have been appropriately identified and that the special |
education
program and related services proposed to meet the |
needs of the child are
adequate, appropriate, and available. |
Any party to the hearing shall have the
right to (1) be |
represented
by counsel and be accompanied and advised by |
individuals with special knowledge
or training with respect to |
the problems of children with disabilities, at the
party's own |
expense; (2) present evidence and confront and cross-examine
|
witnesses; (3) move for the exclusion of witnesses from the |
hearing until they
are called to testify, provided, however, |
that this provision may not be
invoked to exclude the |
individual designated by a party to assist that party or
its |
representative in the presentation of the case; (4) obtain a |
written or
electronic verbatim record of
the proceedings within |
30 days of receipt of a written request from the parents
by the |
school district; and (5) obtain a written decision, including |
findings
of fact and conclusions of law, within 10 days after |
the conclusion of the
hearing.
If at issue, the school district |
shall present evidence that it has
properly identified and |
evaluated the nature and
severity of the student's suspected or |
|
identified disability and that, if the
student has been or |
should have been determined eligible for special education
and |
related services, that it is providing or has offered a free |
appropriate
public education to the student in the least |
restrictive environment,
consistent with
procedural safeguards |
and in accordance with an individualized educational
program.
|
At any time prior to the conclusion of the hearing, the |
impartial due
process hearing officer shall have the authority |
to require additional
information and order independent |
evaluations for the
student at the expense of the school |
district. The State Board of Education
and the school district |
shall share equally the costs of providing a written or
|
electronic verbatim record of the proceedings. Any party may |
request that the
due process hearing officer issue a subpoena |
to compel the testimony of
witnesses or the production of |
documents relevant to the
resolution of the hearing. Whenever a |
person refuses to comply with any
subpoena issued under this |
Section, the circuit court of the county in which
that hearing |
is pending, on application of the impartial hearing officer or |
the
party requesting the issuance of the subpoena, may compel |
compliance through
the contempt powers of
the court in the same |
manner as if the requirements of a subpoena issued by the
court |
had been disobeyed.
|
(h) The impartial hearing officer shall issue a written |
decision, including
findings of fact and conclusions of law, |
within 10 days after the
conclusion of the hearing and send by |
|
certified mail a copy of the decision to the parents
or student |
(if the student requests the hearing), the school
district, the |
director of special education, legal representatives of the
|
parties, and the State Board of Education. Unless the hearing |
officer has
granted specific extensions of time at the request |
of a party, a final
decision, including the clarification of a |
decision requested under this
subsection, shall be reached and |
mailed to the parties named above not later
than 45 days after |
the initiation of the timeline for conducting the hearing, as |
described in subsection (g-35) of this Section. The
decision |
shall specify the educational and related services that shall |
be
provided to the student in accordance with the student's |
needs and the timeline for which the school district shall |
submit evidence to the State Board of Education to demonstrate |
compliance with the hearing officer's decision in the event |
that the decision orders the school district to undertake |
corrective action.
The hearing officer shall retain |
jurisdiction for the sole purpose of
considering a request for |
clarification of the final decision submitted in
writing by a |
party to the impartial hearing officer within 5 days after |
receipt
of the decision.
A copy of the request for |
clarification shall specify the portions of the
decision for |
which clarification is sought and shall be mailed to all |
parties
of record and to the State Board of Education. The |
request shall
operate to stay implementation of those portions |
of the decision for which
clarification is sought, pending |
|
action on the request by the hearing officer,
unless the |
parties otherwise agree. The hearing officer shall issue a
|
clarification of the specified portion of the decision or issue |
a partial or
full denial of the request in writing within 10 |
days of receipt of the request
and mail copies to all parties |
to whom the decision was mailed. This
subsection does not |
permit a party to request, or authorize a hearing officer
to |
entertain, reconsideration of the decision itself. The statute |
of
limitations for seeking review of the decision shall be |
tolled from the date
the request is submitted until the date |
the hearing officer acts upon the
request. The hearing |
officer's decision shall be binding upon the school district
|
and the parents unless a civil action is commenced.
|
(i) Any party to an impartial due process hearing aggrieved |
by the final
written decision of the impartial due process |
hearing officer shall have the
right to commence a civil action |
with respect to the issues presented in the
impartial due |
process hearing. That civil action shall be brought in any
|
court of competent jurisdiction within
120 days after a copy of |
the
decision of the impartial due process hearing officer is |
mailed to the party as
provided in
subsection (h). The civil |
action authorized by this subsection shall not be
exclusive of |
any rights or causes of action otherwise
available. The |
commencement of a civil action under this subsection shall
|
operate as a supersedeas. In any action brought under this |
subsection the
Court shall receive the records of the impartial |
|
due process hearing, shall
hear additional evidence at the |
request of a party, and, basing its decision on
the |
preponderance of the evidence, shall grant such relief as the |
court
determines is appropriate. In any instance where a school |
district willfully
disregards applicable regulations or |
statutes regarding a child covered by this
Article, and which |
disregard has been detrimental to the child, the school
|
district shall be liable for any reasonable attorney's fees |
incurred by the
parent in connection with proceedings under |
this Section.
|
(j) During the pendency of any administrative or judicial |
proceeding
conducted
pursuant to this Section, including |
mediation (if the school district or other public entity |
voluntarily agrees to participate in mediation), unless the |
school district and the
parents or student (if at least 18 |
years of age or emancipated) otherwise agree, the student shall |
remain in
his or her present educational placement and continue |
in his or her present
eligibility status and special education |
and related services, if any. If mediation fails to resolve the |
dispute between the parties, the parent (or student if 18 years |
of age or older or emancipated) shall have 10 days after the |
mediation concludes to file a request for a due process hearing |
in order to continue to invoke the "stay-put" provisions of |
this subsection (j). If applying for initial admission to the
|
school district, the student shall, with the consent of the |
parents (if the student is not at least 18 years of age or |
|
emancipated), be placed in the school district program until |
all such proceedings
have been completed. The costs for any |
special education and related services
or placement incurred |
following 60 school days after the initial request for
|
evaluation shall be borne by the school district if the |
services or placement
is in accordance with the final |
determination as to the special education and
related services |
or placement that must be provided to the child, provided that
|
during that 60 day period there have been no delays caused by |
the child's
parent.
|
(k) Whenever the parents of a child of the type described |
in
Section 14-1.02 are not known, are unavailable, or the child |
is a youth in care as defined in Section 4d of the Children and |
Family Services Act ward of the
State , a person shall be |
assigned to serve as surrogate parent for the child in
matters |
relating to the identification, evaluation, and educational |
placement
of the child and the provision of a free appropriate |
public education to the
child. Persons shall be assigned as |
surrogate parents by the State
Superintendent of Education. The |
State Board of Education shall promulgate
rules and regulations |
establishing qualifications of those persons and their
|
responsibilities and the procedures to be followed in making |
assignments of
persons as surrogate parents.
Surrogate parents |
shall not be employees of the school district, an agency
|
created by joint agreement under Section 10-22.31, an agency |
involved in the
education or care of the student, or the State |
|
Board of Education.
Services of any person assigned as |
surrogate parent shall terminate if the
parent
becomes |
available unless otherwise requested by the parents. The |
assignment of a person as surrogate parent at no time
|
supersedes, terminates, or suspends the parents' legal |
authority
relative to the child. Any person participating in |
good faith as surrogate
parent on behalf of the child before |
school officials or a hearing officer
shall have immunity from |
civil or criminal liability that otherwise might
result by |
reason of that participation, except in cases of willful and
|
wanton misconduct.
|
(l) At all stages of the hearing the hearing officer shall |
require that
interpreters be made available by the school |
district for persons who are deaf
or for persons whose normally |
spoken language is other than English.
|
(m) If any provision of this Section or its application to |
any person or
circumstance is held invalid, the invalidity of |
that provision or application
does not affect other provisions |
or applications of the Section that can be
given effect without |
the invalid application or provision, and to this end the
|
provisions of this Section are severable, unless otherwise |
provided by this
Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-383, eff. 8-16-13.)
|
Section 55. The Child Care Act of 1969 is amended by |
changing Sections 2.31 and 7.3 and by adding Section 2.01b as |
|
follows: |
(225 ILCS 10/2.01b new) |
Sec. 2.01b. Youth in care. "Youth in care" has the meaning |
ascribed to that term in Section 4d of the Children and Family |
Services Act. |
(225 ILCS 10/2.31) |
Sec. 2.31. Secondary placement. "Secondary placement" |
means a placement, including but not limited to the placement |
of a youth in care ward of the Department , that occurs after a |
placement disruption or adoption dissolution. "Secondary |
placement" does not mean secondary placements arising due to |
the death of the adoptive parent of the child.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-49, eff. 7-15-15.)
|
(225 ILCS 10/7.3)
|
Sec. 7.3. Children placed by private child welfare agency.
|
(a) Before placing a child who is a youth in care ward of |
the Department in a foster
family
home, a private child welfare |
agency must ascertain (i) whether any other
children who
are |
youth in care wards of the Department have been placed in that |
home and (ii) whether
every such
child who has been placed in |
that home continues to reside in that home, unless
the child
|
has been transferred to another placement or is no longer a |
youth in care ward of the
Department . The
agency must keep a |
|
record of every other child welfare agency that has placed
such |
a
child in that foster family home; the record must include the |
name and
telephone number
of a contact person at each such |
agency.
|
(b) At least once every 30 days, a private child welfare |
agency that places youth in care
wards
of the Department in |
foster family homes must make a site visit to every such
home
|
where it has placed a youth in care ward . The purpose of the |
site visit is to verify that the
child
continues to reside in |
that home and to verify the child's safety and
well-being. The |
agency must document the verification in
its
records. If a |
private child welfare agency fails to comply with the
|
requirements of this
subsection, the Department must suspend |
all payments to the agency until the
agency
complies.
|
(c) The Department must periodically (but no less often |
than once every 6
months) review the child placement records of |
each private child welfare agency
that
places youth in care |
wards of the Department .
|
(d) If a child placed in a foster family home is missing, |
the foster parent
must
promptly report that fact to the |
Department or to the child welfare agency that
placed the
child |
in the home. If the foster parent fails to make such a report, |
the
Department shall
put the home on hold for the placement of |
other children and initiate
corrective action that may include |
revocation of
the foster parent's license to operate the foster |
family home.
A foster parent who knowingly and willfully fails |
|
to report a missing foster
child under this subsection is |
guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
|
(e) If a private child welfare agency determines that a |
youth in care ward of the
Department
whom it has placed in a |
foster family home no longer resides in that home, the
agency
|
must promptly report that fact to the Department. If the agency |
fails to make
such a
report, the Department shall
put the |
agency on hold for the placement of other children and initiate
|
corrective action that may include revocation of the agency's |
license.
|
(f) When a child is missing from a foster home, the |
Department or private
agency in charge of case management shall |
report regularly to the foster parent
concerning efforts to |
locate the missing child.
|
(g) The Department must strive to account for the status |
and whereabouts of
every
one of its youth in care wards who it |
determines is not residing in the authorized placement
in
which |
he or she was placed.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-343, eff. 7-24-03.)
|
Section 60. The Early Intervention Services System Act is |
amended by changing Section 12 as follows:
|
(325 ILCS 20/12) (from Ch. 23, par. 4162)
|
Sec. 12. Procedural safeguards. The lead agency shall adopt |
procedural safeguards that meet federal
requirements and |
|
ensure effective implementation of the safeguards
for families
|
by each
public agency involved in the provision of early |
intervention
services under this Act.
|
The procedural safeguards shall provide, at a minimum, the |
following:
|
(a) The timely administrative resolution of
State |
complaints, due process hearings, and mediations as |
defined by administrative rule.
|
(b) The right to confidentiality of personally |
identifiable information.
|
(c) The opportunity for parents and a guardian to |
examine and receive
copies of records relating to |
evaluations and assessments, screening, eligibility
|
determinations, and the development and implementation of |
the
Individualized Family Service Plan provision of early |
intervention services, individual complaints involving the |
child, or any part of the child's early intervention |
record.
|
(d) Procedures to protect the rights of the eligible |
infant or toddler
whenever the parents or guardians of the |
child are not known or unavailable
or the child is a youth |
in care as defined in Section 4d of the Children and Family |
Services Act ward of the State , including the assignment of |
an
individual (who shall not be an employee of the State |
agency or local
agency providing services) to act as a |
surrogate for the parents or guardian. The regional intake |
|
entity must make reasonable efforts to ensure the |
assignment of a surrogate parent not more than 30 days |
after a public agency determines that the child needs a |
surrogate parent.
|
(e) Timely written prior notice to the parents or |
guardian of the
eligible infant or toddler whenever the |
State agency or public or private
service provider proposes |
to initiate or change or refuses to initiate or
change the |
identification, evaluation, placement, or the provision of
|
appropriate early intervention services to the eligible |
infant or toddler.
|
(f) Written prior notice to fully inform the parents or |
guardians, in
their native language or mode of |
communication used by the parent, unless clearly not |
feasible to do so, in a comprehensible manner, of these |
procedural
safeguards.
|
(g) During the pendency of any State complaint |
procedure, due process hearing, or mediation involving a
|
complaint, unless the State agency and the parents or |
guardian otherwise
agree, the child shall continue to |
receive the appropriate early
intervention services |
currently being provided, or in the case of an
application |
for initial services, the child shall receive the services |
not in
dispute.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-41, eff. 6-28-13; 98-802, eff. 8-1-14.)
|
|
Section 65. The High Risk Youth Career Development Act is |
amended by changing Section 1 as follows:
|
(325 ILCS 25/1) (from Ch. 23, par. 6551)
|
Sec. 1. The Department of Human Services (acting as |
successor to the
Illinois Department of Public Aid under the |
Department of Human Services
Act), in cooperation with
the |
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, the Illinois |
State Board
of Education, the Department of Children and Family |
Services, the
Department of Employment Services and other |
appropriate State and local
agencies, may establish and |
administer, on an experimental basis and
subject to |
appropriation, community-based programs providing
|
comprehensive, long-term intervention strategies to increase |
future
employability and career development among high risk |
youth.
The Department of Human Services, and the other |
cooperating
agencies, shall
establish provisions for community |
involvement in the design, development,
implementation and |
administration of these programs. The programs
may provide the |
following services: teaching of basic literacy and
remedial |
reading and writing; vocational training programs which are
|
realistic in terms of producing lifelong skills necessary for |
career
development; and supportive services including |
transportation and child
care during the training period and |
for up to one year after placement in a
job. The programs shall |
be targeted to high risk youth residing in the
geographic areas |
|
served by the respective programs. "High risk" means that
a |
person is at least 16 years of age but not yet 21 years of age |
and
possesses one or more of the following characteristics:
|
(1) has a Has low income;
|
(2) is Is a member of a minority;
|
(3) is Is illiterate;
|
(4) is Is a school dropout drop out ;
|
(5) is Is homeless;
|
(6) is Is a person with a disability;
|
(7) is Is a parent; or
|
(8) is Is a youth in care as defined in Section 4d of the |
Children and Family Services Act ward of the State .
|
The Department of Human Services
and other cooperating |
State agencies
shall promulgate rules and
regulations, |
pursuant to the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, for the
|
implementation of this Act, including procedures and standards |
for
determining whether a person possesses any of the |
characteristics specified
in this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15.)
|
Section 70. The Safeguard Our Children Act is amended by |
changing Section 10 as follows: |
(325 ILCS 58/10)
|
Sec. 10. Duty to report. Any child or person in the care of |
the Department who is placed in a residential facility under |
|
contract with the Department pursuant to the Children and |
Family Services Act shall be reported as missing to the local |
law enforcement agency within whose jurisdiction the facility |
is located, if: |
(1) there is no contact between an employee of the |
residential facility and the child or person within a |
period of 12 hours; and |
(2) the child or person is absent from the residential |
facility without prior approval. |
The operator of the residential facility shall inform the |
child's or person's caseworker that the child or person has |
been reported as missing to the appropriate local law |
enforcement agency. The operator of the residential facility |
shall also report the child or person as missing to the |
National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and shall |
make a subsequent telephone notification to the sheriff of the |
county in which the residential facility is located. |
The operator of the residential facility making the missing |
person persons report to the local law enforcement agency |
within whose jurisdiction the facility is located shall report |
that the missing person is a youth in care as defined in |
Section 4d of the Children and Family Services Act ward of the |
Department and shall inform the law enforcement agency taking |
the report to include the following statement within the |
missing persons report, in the field of the Law Enforcement |
Agencies Data System (LEADS) known as "Miscellaneous": |
|
"This individual is a youth in the care ward of the |
Illinois Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) |
and, regardless of age, shall be released only to the |
custody of DCFS. Contact the 24-hour hotline: |
866.503.0184."
|
(Source: P.A. 99-351, eff. 1-1-16 .) |
Section 75. The Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code is amended by changing Section 3-503 as |
follows:
|
(405 ILCS 5/3-503) (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 3-503)
|
Sec. 3-503. Admission on application of parent or guardian.
|
(a) Any minor may be admitted to a mental health
facility |
for inpatient treatment upon application to the facility
|
director, if the facility director finds that the minor
has a |
mental illness or emotional disturbance of such severity that
|
hospitalization is necessary and that the minor is likely to |
benefit
from inpatient treatment. Except in cases of admission |
under
Section 3-504, prior to admission, a psychiatrist, |
clinical social worker, clinical professional counselor, or
|
clinical psychologist who has personally examined the minor |
shall state in
writing that the minor meets the standard for |
admission. The statement shall
set forth in detail the reasons |
for that conclusion and shall indicate what
alternatives to |
hospitalization have been explored.
|
|
(b) The application may be executed by a parent or guardian |
or, in
the absence of a parent or guardian, by a person in loco |
parentis.
Application may be made for a minor who is a youth in |
care as defined in Section 4d of the Children and Family |
Services Act ward of the State by the
Department of Children |
and Family Services or by the Department of
Corrections.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-804, eff. 8-12-08.)
|
Section 80. The Juvenile Court Act of 1987 is amended by |
changing Sections 2-10, 3-12, 3-21, 3-24, 4-9, 4-18, 4-21, |
5-615, and 5-715 as follows:
|
(705 ILCS 405/2-10) (from Ch. 37, par. 802-10)
|
Sec. 2-10. Temporary custody hearing. At the appearance of |
the
minor before the court at the temporary custody hearing, |
all
witnesses present shall be examined before the court in |
relation to any
matter connected with the allegations made in |
the petition.
|
(1) If the court finds that there is not probable cause to |
believe
that the minor is abused, neglected or dependent it |
shall release
the minor and dismiss the petition.
|
(2) If the court finds that there is probable cause to |
believe that
the minor is abused, neglected or dependent, the |
court shall state in writing
the factual basis supporting its |
finding and the minor, his or her parent,
guardian, custodian |
and other persons able to give relevant testimony
shall be |
|
examined before the court. The Department of Children and
|
Family Services shall give testimony concerning indicated |
reports of abuse
and neglect, of which they are aware of |
through the central registry,
involving the minor's parent, |
guardian or custodian. After such
testimony, the court may, |
consistent with
the health,
safety and best interests of the |
minor,
enter an order that the minor shall be released
upon the |
request of parent, guardian or custodian if the parent, |
guardian
or custodian appears to take custody. If it is |
determined that a parent's, guardian's, or custodian's |
compliance with critical services mitigates the necessity for |
removal of the minor from his or her home, the court may enter |
an Order of Protection setting forth reasonable conditions of |
behavior that a parent, guardian, or custodian must observe for |
a specified period of time, not to exceed 12 months, without a |
violation; provided, however, that the 12-month period shall |
begin anew after any violation. "Custodian" includes the |
Department of Children and Family Services, if it has been |
given custody of the child, or any other agency of the State |
which has been given custody or wardship of the child. |
Custodian shall include any agency of
the State which has been |
given custody or wardship of the child. If it is
consistent |
with the health, safety and best interests of the
minor, the
|
court may also prescribe shelter care and
order that the minor |
be kept in a suitable place designated by the court or in
a |
shelter care facility designated by the Department of Children |
|
and Family
Services or a licensed child welfare
agency; |
however, on and after January 1, 2015 (the effective date of |
Public Act 98-803) and before January 1, 2017, a minor charged |
with a
criminal offense under the Criminal Code of 1961 or the |
Criminal Code of 2012 or adjudicated delinquent
shall not be |
placed in the custody of or committed to the Department of
|
Children and Family Services by any court, except a minor less |
than 16
years of age and committed to the Department of |
Children and Family Services
under Section 5-710 of this Act or |
a minor for whom an independent
basis of
abuse, neglect, or |
dependency exists; and on and after January 1, 2017, a minor |
charged with a
criminal offense under the Criminal Code of 1961 |
or the Criminal Code of 2012 or adjudicated delinquent
shall |
not be placed in the custody of or committed to the Department |
of
Children and Family Services by any court, except a minor |
less than 15 years of age and committed to the Department of |
Children and Family Services
under Section 5-710 of this Act or |
a minor for whom an independent
basis of
abuse, neglect, or |
dependency exists.
An independent basis exists when the |
allegations or adjudication of abuse, neglect, or dependency do |
not arise from the same facts, incident, or circumstances which |
give rise to a charge or adjudication of delinquency.
|
In placing the minor, the Department or other
agency shall, |
to the extent
compatible with the court's order, comply with |
Section 7 of the Children and
Family Services Act.
In |
determining
the health, safety and best interests of the minor |
|
to prescribe shelter
care, the court must
find that it is a |
matter of immediate and urgent necessity for the safety
and |
protection
of the minor or of the person or property of another |
that the minor be placed
in a shelter care facility or that he |
or she is likely to flee the jurisdiction
of the court, and |
must further find that reasonable efforts have been made or
|
that, consistent with the health, safety and best interests of
|
the minor, no efforts reasonably can be made to
prevent or |
eliminate the necessity of removal of the minor from his or her
|
home. The court shall require documentation from the Department |
of Children and
Family Services as to the reasonable efforts |
that were made to prevent or
eliminate the necessity of removal |
of the minor from his or her home or the
reasons why no efforts |
reasonably could be made to prevent or eliminate the
necessity |
of removal. When a minor is placed in the home of a relative, |
the
Department of Children and Family Services shall complete a |
preliminary
background review of the members of the minor's |
custodian's household in
accordance with Section 4.3 of the |
Child Care Act of 1969 within 90 days of
that placement. If the |
minor is ordered placed in a shelter care facility of
the |
Department of Children and
Family Services or a licensed child |
welfare agency, the court shall, upon
request of the |
appropriate Department or other agency, appoint the
Department |
of Children and Family Services Guardianship Administrator or
|
other appropriate agency executive temporary custodian of the |
minor and the
court may enter such other orders related to the |
|
temporary custody as it
deems fit and proper, including the |
provision of services to the minor or
his family to ameliorate |
the causes contributing to the finding of probable
cause or to |
the finding of the existence of immediate and urgent necessity. |
Where the Department of Children and Family Services |
Guardianship Administrator is appointed as the executive |
temporary custodian, the Department of Children and Family |
Services shall file with the court and serve on the parties a |
parent-child visiting plan, within 10 days, excluding weekends |
and holidays, after the appointment. The parent-child visiting |
plan shall set out the time and place of visits, the frequency |
of visits, the length of visits, who shall be present at the |
visits, and where appropriate, the minor's opportunities to |
have telephone and mail communication with the parents. |
Where the Department of Children and Family Services |
Guardianship Administrator is
appointed as the executive |
temporary custodian, and when the child has siblings in care,
|
the Department of Children and Family Services shall file with |
the court and serve on the
parties a sibling placement and |
contact plan within 10 days, excluding weekends and
holidays, |
after the appointment. The sibling placement and contact plan |
shall set forth
whether the siblings are placed together, and |
if they are not placed together, what, if any,
efforts are |
being made to place them together. If the Department has |
determined that it is
not in a child's best interest to be |
placed with a sibling, the Department shall document in
the |
|
sibling placement and contact plan the basis for its |
determination. For siblings placed
separately, the sibling |
placement and contact plan shall set the time and place for |
visits,
the frequency of the visits, the length of visits, who |
shall be present for the visits, and
where appropriate, the |
child's opportunities to have contact with their siblings in |
addition to
in person contact. If the Department determines it |
is not in the best interest of a sibling to
have contact with a |
sibling, the Department shall document in the sibling placement |
and
contact plan the basis for its determination. The sibling |
placement and contact plan shall
specify a date for development |
of the Sibling Contact Support Plan, under subsection (f) of |
Section 7.4 of the Children and Family Services Act, and shall |
remain in effect until the Sibling Contact Support Plan is |
developed. |
For good cause, the court may waive the requirement to file |
the parent-child visiting plan or the sibling placement and |
contact plan, or extend the time for filing either plan. Any |
party may, by motion, request the court to review the |
parent-child visiting plan to determine whether it is |
reasonably calculated to expeditiously facilitate the |
achievement of the permanency goal. A party may, by motion, |
request the court to review the parent-child visiting plan or |
the sibling placement and contact plan to determine whether it |
is consistent with the minor's best interest. The court may |
refer the parties to mediation where available. The frequency, |
|
duration, and locations of visitation shall be measured by the |
needs of the child and family, and not by the convenience of |
Department personnel. Child development principles shall be |
considered by the court in its analysis of how frequent |
visitation should be, how long it should last, where it should |
take place, and who should be present. If upon motion of the |
party to review either plan and after receiving evidence, the |
court determines that the parent-child visiting plan is not |
reasonably calculated to expeditiously facilitate the |
achievement of the permanency goal or that the restrictions |
placed on parent-child contact or sibling placement or contact |
are contrary to the child's best interests, the court shall put |
in writing the factual basis supporting the determination and |
enter specific findings based on the evidence. The court shall |
enter an order for the Department to implement changes to the |
parent-child visiting plan or sibling placement or contact |
plan, consistent with the court's findings. At any stage of |
proceeding, any party may by motion request the court to enter |
any orders necessary to implement the parent-child visiting |
plan, sibling placement or contact plan or subsequently |
developed Sibling Contact Support Plan. Nothing under this |
subsection (2) shall restrict the court from granting |
discretionary authority to the Department to increase |
opportunities for additional parent-child contacts or sibling |
contacts, without further court orders. Nothing in this |
subsection (2) shall restrict the Department from immediately |
|
restricting or terminating parent-child contact or sibling |
contacts, without either amending the parent-child visiting |
plan or the sibling contact plan or obtaining a court order, |
where the Department or its assigns reasonably believe that |
continuation of the contact, as set out in the plan, would be |
contrary to the child's health, safety, and welfare. The |
Department shall file with the court and serve on the parties |
any amendments to the plan within 10 days, excluding weekends |
and holidays, of the change of the visitation. |
Acceptance of services shall not be considered an admission |
of any
allegation in a petition made pursuant to this Act, nor |
may a referral of
services be considered as evidence in any |
proceeding pursuant to this Act,
except where the issue is |
whether the Department has made reasonable
efforts to reunite |
the family. In making its findings that it is
consistent with |
the health, safety and best
interests of the minor to prescribe |
shelter care, the court shall state in
writing (i) the factual |
basis supporting its findings concerning the
immediate and |
urgent necessity for the protection of the minor or of the |
person
or property of another and (ii) the factual basis |
supporting its findings that
reasonable efforts were made to |
prevent or eliminate the removal of the minor
from his or her |
home or that no efforts reasonably could be made to prevent or
|
eliminate the removal of the minor from his or her home. The
|
parents, guardian, custodian, temporary custodian and minor |
shall each be
furnished a copy of such written findings. The |
|
temporary custodian shall
maintain a copy of the court order |
and written findings in the case record
for the child. The |
order together with the court's findings of fact in
support |
thereof shall be entered of record in the court.
|
Once the court finds that it is a matter of immediate and |
urgent necessity
for the protection of the minor that the minor |
be placed in a shelter care
facility, the minor shall not be |
returned to the parent, custodian or guardian
until the court |
finds that such placement is no longer necessary for the
|
protection of the minor.
|
If the child is placed in the temporary custody of the |
Department of
Children
and Family
Services for his or her |
protection, the court shall admonish the parents,
guardian,
|
custodian or responsible relative that the parents must |
cooperate with the
Department of Children and Family Services, |
comply
with the terms of the service plans, and correct the |
conditions which require
the child to be in care, or risk |
termination of their parental
rights. The court shall ensure, |
by inquiring in open court of each parent, guardian, custodian |
or responsible relative, that the parent, guardian, custodian |
or responsible relative has had the opportunity to provide the |
Department with all known names, addresses, and telephone |
numbers of each of the minor's living maternal and paternal |
adult relatives, including, but not limited to, grandparents, |
aunts, uncles, and siblings. The court shall advise the |
parents, guardian, custodian or responsible relative to inform |
|
the Department if additional information regarding the minor's |
adult relatives becomes available.
|
(3) If prior to the shelter care hearing for a minor |
described in Sections
2-3, 2-4, 3-3 and 4-3 the moving party is |
unable to serve notice on the
party respondent, the shelter |
care hearing may proceed ex parte. A shelter
care order from an |
ex parte hearing shall be endorsed with the date and
hour of |
issuance and shall be filed with the clerk's office and entered |
of
record. The order shall expire after 10 days from the time |
it is issued
unless before its expiration it is renewed, at a |
hearing upon appearance
of the party respondent, or upon an |
affidavit of the moving party as to all
diligent efforts to |
notify the party respondent by notice as herein
prescribed. The |
notice prescribed shall be in writing and shall be
personally |
delivered to the minor or the minor's attorney and to the last
|
known address of the other person or persons entitled to |
notice. The
notice shall also state the nature of the |
allegations, the nature of the
order sought by the State, |
including whether temporary custody is sought,
and the |
consequences of failure to appear and shall contain a notice
|
that the parties will not be entitled to further written |
notices or publication
notices of proceedings in this case, |
including the filing of an amended
petition or a motion to |
terminate parental rights, except as required by
Supreme Court |
Rule 11; and shall explain the
right of
the parties and the |
procedures to vacate or modify a shelter care order as
provided |
|
in this Section. The notice for a shelter care hearing shall be
|
substantially as follows:
|
NOTICE TO PARENTS AND CHILDREN
|
OF SHELTER CARE HEARING
|
On ................ at ........., before the Honorable |
................,
(address:) ................., the State |
of Illinois will present evidence
(1) that (name of child |
or children) ....................... are abused,
neglected |
or dependent for the following reasons:
|
..............................................
and (2) |
whether there is "immediate and urgent necessity" to remove |
the child
or children from the responsible relative.
|
YOUR FAILURE TO APPEAR AT THE HEARING MAY RESULT IN |
PLACEMENT of the
child or children in foster care until a |
trial can be held. A trial may
not be held for up to 90 |
days. You will not be entitled to further notices
of |
proceedings in this case, including the filing of an |
amended petition or a
motion to terminate parental rights.
|
At the shelter care hearing, parents have the following |
rights:
|
1. To ask the court to appoint a lawyer if they |
cannot afford one.
|
2. To ask the court to continue the hearing to |
allow them time to
prepare.
|
3. To present evidence concerning:
|
a. Whether or not the child or children were |
|
abused, neglected
or dependent.
|
b. Whether or not there is "immediate and |
urgent necessity" to remove
the child from home |
(including: their ability to care for the child,
|
conditions in the home, alternative means of |
protecting the child other
than removal).
|
c. The best interests of the child.
|
4. To cross examine the State's witnesses.
|
The Notice for rehearings shall be substantially as |
follows:
|
NOTICE OF PARENT'S AND CHILDREN'S RIGHTS
|
TO REHEARING ON TEMPORARY CUSTODY
|
If you were not present at and did not have adequate |
notice of the
Shelter Care Hearing at which temporary |
custody of ............... was
awarded to |
................, you have the right to request a full |
rehearing
on whether the State should have temporary |
custody of ................. To
request this rehearing, |
you must file with the Clerk of the Juvenile Court
|
(address): ........................, in person or by |
mailing a statement
(affidavit) setting forth the |
following:
|
1. That you were not present at the shelter care |
hearing.
|
2. That you did not get adequate notice (explaining |
|
how the notice
was inadequate).
|
3. Your signature.
|
4. Signature must be notarized.
|
The rehearing should be scheduled within 48 hours of |
your filing this
affidavit.
|
At the rehearing, your rights are the same as at the |
initial shelter care
hearing. The enclosed notice explains |
those rights.
|
At the Shelter Care Hearing, children have the |
following rights:
|
1. To have a guardian ad litem appointed.
|
2. To be declared competent as a witness and to |
present testimony
concerning:
|
a. Whether they are abused, neglected or |
dependent.
|
b. Whether there is "immediate and urgent |
necessity" to be
removed from home.
|
c. Their best interests.
|
3. To cross examine witnesses for other parties.
|
4. To obtain an explanation of any proceedings and |
orders of the
court.
|
(4) If the parent, guardian, legal custodian, responsible |
relative,
minor age 8 or over, or counsel of the minor did not |
have actual notice of
or was not present at the shelter care |
hearing, he or she may file an
affidavit setting forth these |
facts, and the clerk shall set the matter for
rehearing not |
|
later than 48 hours, excluding Sundays and legal holidays,
|
after the filing of the affidavit. At the rehearing, the court |
shall
proceed in the same manner as upon the original hearing.
|
(5) Only when there is reasonable cause to believe that the |
minor
taken into custody is a person described in subsection |
(3) of Section
5-105 may the minor be
kept or detained in a |
detention home or county or municipal jail. This
Section shall |
in no way be construed to limit subsection (6).
|
(6) No minor under 16 years of age may be confined in a |
jail or place
ordinarily used for the confinement of prisoners |
in a police station. Minors
under 18 years of age must be kept |
separate from confined adults and may
not at any time be kept |
in the same cell, room, or yard with adults confined
pursuant |
to the criminal law.
|
(7) If the minor is not brought before a judicial officer |
within the
time period as specified in Section 2-9, the minor |
must immediately be
released from custody.
|
(8) If neither the parent, guardian or custodian appears |
within 24
hours to take custody of a minor released upon |
request pursuant to
subsection (2) of this Section, then the |
clerk of the court shall set the
matter for rehearing not later |
than 7 days after the original order and
shall issue a summons |
directed to the parent, guardian or custodian to
appear. At the |
same time the probation department shall prepare a report
on |
the minor. If a parent, guardian or custodian does not appear |
at such
rehearing, the judge may enter an order prescribing |
|
that the minor be kept
in a suitable place designated by the |
Department of Children and Family
Services or a licensed child |
welfare agency.
|
(9) Notwithstanding any other provision of this
Section any |
interested party, including the State, the temporary
|
custodian, an agency providing services to the minor or family |
under a
service plan pursuant to Section 8.2 of the Abused and |
Neglected Child
Reporting Act, foster parent, or any of their |
representatives, on notice
to all parties entitled to notice, |
may file a motion that it is in the best
interests of the minor |
to modify or vacate a
temporary custody order on any of the |
following grounds:
|
(a) It is no longer a matter of immediate and urgent |
necessity that the
minor remain in shelter care; or
|
(b) There is a material change in the circumstances of |
the natural
family from which the minor was removed and the |
child can be cared for at
home without endangering the |
child's health or safety; or
|
(c) A person not a party to the alleged abuse, neglect |
or dependency,
including a parent, relative or legal |
guardian, is capable of assuming
temporary custody of the |
minor; or
|
(d) Services provided by the Department of Children and |
Family Services
or a child welfare agency or other service |
provider have been successful in
eliminating the need for |
temporary custody and the child can be cared for at
home |
|
without endangering the child's health or safety.
|
In ruling on the motion, the court shall determine whether |
it is consistent
with the health, safety and best interests of |
the minor to modify
or vacate a temporary custody order.
|
The clerk shall set the matter for hearing not later than |
14 days after
such motion is filed. In the event that the court |
modifies or vacates a
temporary custody order but does not |
vacate its finding of probable cause,
the court may order that |
appropriate services be continued or initiated in
behalf of the |
minor and his or her family.
|
(10) When the court finds or has found that there is |
probable cause to
believe a minor is an abused minor as |
described in subsection (2) of Section
2-3
and that there is an |
immediate and urgent necessity for the abused minor to be
|
placed in shelter care, immediate and urgent necessity shall be |
presumed for
any other minor residing in the same household as |
the abused minor provided:
|
(a) Such other minor is the subject of an abuse or |
neglect petition
pending before the court; and
|
(b) A party to the petition is seeking shelter care for |
such other minor.
|
Once the presumption of immediate and urgent necessity has |
been raised, the
burden of demonstrating the lack of immediate |
and urgent necessity shall be on
any party that is opposing |
shelter care for the other minor.
|
(11) The changes made to this Section by Public Act 98-61 |
|
apply to a minor who has been
arrested or taken into custody on |
or after January 1, 2014 (the effective date
of Public Act |
98-61). |
(Source: P.A. 98-61, eff. 1-1-14; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14; 98-803, |
eff. 1-1-15; 99-625, eff. 1-1-17; 99-642, eff. 7-28-16 .)
|
(705 ILCS 405/3-12) (from Ch. 37, par. 803-12)
|
Sec. 3-12. Shelter care hearing. At the appearance of the
|
minor before the court at the shelter care hearing, all
|
witnesses present shall be examined before the court in |
relation to any
matter connected with the allegations made in |
the petition.
|
(1) If the court finds that there is not probable cause to |
believe
that the minor is a person requiring authoritative |
intervention, it shall
release the minor and dismiss the |
petition.
|
(2) If the court finds that there is probable cause to |
believe that the
minor is a person requiring authoritative |
intervention, the minor, his or
her parent, guardian, custodian |
and other persons able to give relevant
testimony shall be |
examined before the court. After such testimony, the
court may |
enter an order that the minor shall be released upon the |
request
of a parent, guardian or custodian if the parent, |
guardian or custodian
appears to take custody. "Custodian" |
includes the Department of Children and Family Services, if it |
has been given custody of the child, or any other agency of the |
|
State which has been given custody or wardship of the child. |
Custodian shall include any agency of the State
which has been |
given custody or wardship of the child. The Court shall require
|
documentation by representatives of the Department of Children |
and Family
Services or the probation department as to the |
reasonable efforts that were
made to prevent or eliminate the |
necessity of removal of the minor from his
or her home, and |
shall consider the testimony of any person as to those
|
reasonable efforts. If the court finds that it is a
matter of |
immediate and urgent necessity for the protection of the minor
|
or of the person or property of another that the minor be
|
placed in a shelter care facility, or that he or she is likely |
to flee the
jurisdiction of the court, and further finds that |
reasonable efforts have
been made or good cause has been shown |
why reasonable efforts cannot
prevent or eliminate the |
necessity of removal of the minor from his or her
home, the |
court may prescribe shelter care and order that the minor be |
kept
in a suitable place designated by the court or in a |
shelter care facility
designated by the Department of Children |
and Family Services or a licensed
child welfare agency; |
otherwise it shall release the minor from custody.
If the court |
prescribes shelter care, then in placing the minor, the
|
Department or other agency shall, to the extent
compatible with |
the court's order, comply with Section 7 of the Children and
|
Family Services Act. If
the minor is ordered placed in a |
shelter care facility of the Department of
Children and Family |
|
Services or a licensed child welfare agency, the court
shall, |
upon request of the Department or other agency, appoint the
|
Department of Children and Family Services Guardianship |
Administrator or
other appropriate agency executive temporary |
custodian of the minor and the
court may enter such other |
orders related to the temporary custody as it
deems fit and |
proper, including the provision of services to the minor or
his |
family to ameliorate the causes contributing to the finding of |
probable
cause or to the finding of the existence of immediate |
and urgent necessity.
Acceptance of services shall not be |
considered an admission of any
allegation in a petition made |
pursuant to this Act, nor may a referral of
services be |
considered as evidence in any proceeding pursuant to this Act,
|
except where the issue is whether the Department has made |
reasonable
efforts to reunite the family. In making its |
findings that reasonable
efforts have been made or that good |
cause has been shown why reasonable
efforts cannot prevent or |
eliminate the necessity of removal of the minor
from his or her |
home, the court shall state in writing its findings
concerning |
the nature of the services that were offered or the efforts |
that
were made to prevent removal of the child and the apparent |
reasons that such
services or efforts could not prevent the |
need for removal. The parents,
guardian, custodian, temporary |
custodian and minor shall each be furnished
a copy of such |
written findings. The temporary custodian shall maintain a
copy |
of the court order and written findings in the case record for |
|
the
child.
|
The order together with the court's findings of fact and |
support thereof
shall be entered of record in the court.
|
Once the court finds that it is a matter of immediate and |
urgent necessity
for the protection of the minor that the minor |
be placed in a shelter care
facility, the minor shall not be |
returned to the parent, custodian or guardian
until the court |
finds that such placement is no longer necessary for the
|
protection of the minor.
|
(3) If prior to the shelter care hearing for a minor |
described in
Sections 2-3, 2-4, 3-3, and 4-3 the petitioner is |
unable to serve notice on the
party respondent, the shelter |
care hearing may proceed ex parte. A shelter
care order from an |
ex parte hearing shall be endorsed with the date and
hour of |
issuance and shall be filed with the clerk's office and entered |
of
record. The order shall expire after 10 days from the time |
it is issued
unless before its expiration it is renewed, at a |
hearing upon appearance
of the party respondent, or upon an |
affidavit of the moving party as to all
diligent efforts to |
notify the party respondent by notice as herein
prescribed. The |
notice prescribed shall be in writing and shall be
personally |
delivered to the minor or the minor's attorney and to the last
|
known address of the other person or persons entitled to |
notice. The
notice shall also state the nature of the |
allegations, the nature of the
order sought by the State, |
including whether temporary custody is sought,
and the |
|
consequences of failure to appear; and shall explain the right |
of
the parties and the procedures to vacate or modify a shelter |
care order as
provided in this Section. The notice for a |
shelter care hearing shall be
substantially as follows:
|
NOTICE TO PARENTS AND CHILDREN OF SHELTER CARE HEARING
|
On ................ at ........., before the Honorable
|
................, (address:) ................., the State of |
Illinois will
present evidence (1) that (name of child or |
children)
....................... are abused, neglected or |
dependent for the following reasons:
|
.............................................................
|
and (2) that there is "immediate and urgent necessity" to |
remove the child
or children from the responsible relative.
|
YOUR FAILURE TO APPEAR AT THE HEARING MAY RESULT IN |
PLACEMENT of the
child or children in foster care until a trial |
can be held. A trial may
not be held for up to 90 days.
|
At the shelter care hearing, parents have the following |
rights:
|
1. To ask the court to appoint a lawyer if they cannot |
afford one.
|
2. To ask the court to continue the hearing to allow |
them time to prepare.
|
3. To present evidence concerning:
|
a. Whether or not the child or children were |
abused, neglected or dependent.
|
b. Whether or not there is "immediate and urgent |
|
necessity" to remove
the child from home (including: |
their ability to care for the child,
conditions in the |
home, alternative means of protecting the child
other |
than removal).
|
c. The best interests of the child.
|
4. To cross examine the State's witnesses.
|
The Notice for rehearings shall be substantially as |
follows:
|
NOTICE OF PARENT'S AND CHILDREN'S RIGHTS
|
TO REHEARING ON TEMPORARY CUSTODY
|
If you were not present at and did not have adequate notice |
of the
Shelter Care Hearing at which temporary custody of |
............... was
awarded to ................, you have the |
right to request a full rehearing
on whether the State should |
have temporary custody of ................. To
request this |
rehearing, you must file with the Clerk of the Juvenile Court
|
(address): ........................, in person or by mailing a |
statement
(affidavit) setting forth the following:
|
1. That you were not present at the shelter care |
hearing.
|
2. That you did not get adequate notice (explaining how |
the notice
was inadequate).
|
3. Your signature.
|
4. Signature must be notarized.
|
The rehearing should be scheduled within one day of your |
filing this
affidavit.
|
|
At the rehearing, your rights are the same as at the |
initial shelter care
hearing. The enclosed notice explains |
those rights.
|
At the Shelter Care Hearing, children have the following |
rights:
|
1. To have a guardian ad litem appointed.
|
2. To be declared competent as a witness and to present |
testimony
concerning:
|
a. Whether they are abused, neglected or |
dependent.
|
b. Whether there is "immediate and urgent |
necessity" to be
removed from home.
|
c. Their best interests.
|
3. To cross examine witnesses for other parties.
|
4. To obtain an explanation of any proceedings and |
orders of the court.
|
(4) If the parent, guardian, legal custodian, responsible |
relative, or
counsel of the minor did not have actual notice of |
or was not present at
the shelter care hearing, he or she may |
file an affidavit setting forth
these facts, and the clerk |
shall set the matter for rehearing not later
than 48 hours, |
excluding Sundays and legal holidays, after the filing of
the |
affidavit. At the rehearing, the court shall proceed in the |
same manner
as upon the original hearing.
|
(5) Only when there is reasonable cause to believe that the |
minor taken
into custody is a person described in subsection |
|
(3) of Section 5-105 may the minor
be kept or
detained in a |
detention home or county or municipal jail. This Section
shall |
in no way be construed to limit subsection (6).
|
(6) No minor under 16 years of age may be confined in a |
jail or place
ordinarily used for the confinement of prisoners |
in a police station. Minors
under 18 years of age must be kept |
separate from confined adults and may
not at any time be kept |
in the same cell, room, or yard with adults confined
pursuant |
to the criminal law.
|
(7) If the minor is not brought before a judicial officer |
within the
time period specified in Section 3-11, the minor |
must immediately be
released from custody.
|
(8) If neither the parent, guardian or custodian appears |
within 24
hours to take custody of a minor released upon |
request pursuant to
subsection (2) of this Section, then the |
clerk of the court shall set the
matter for rehearing not later |
than 7 days after the original order and
shall issue a summons |
directed to the parent, guardian or custodian to
appear. At the |
same time the probation department shall prepare a report
on |
the minor. If a parent, guardian or custodian does not appear |
at such
rehearing, the judge may enter an order prescribing |
that the minor be kept
in a suitable place designated by the |
Department of Children and Family
Services or a licensed child |
welfare agency.
|
(9) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, |
any interested
party, including the State, the temporary |
|
custodian, an agency providing
services to the minor or family |
under a service plan pursuant to Section
8.2 of the Abused and |
Neglected Child Reporting Act, foster parent, or any
of their |
representatives, on notice to all parties entitled to notice, |
may
file a motion to modify or vacate a temporary custody order |
on any of the
following grounds:
|
(a) It is no longer a matter of immediate and urgent |
necessity that the
minor remain in shelter care; or
|
(b) There is a material change in the circumstances of |
the natural
family from which the minor was removed; or
|
(c) A person, including a parent, relative or legal |
guardian, is
capable of assuming temporary custody of the |
minor; or
|
(d) Services provided by the Department of Children and |
Family Services
or a child welfare agency or other service |
provider have been successful in
eliminating the need for |
temporary custody.
|
The clerk shall set the matter for hearing not later than |
14 days after
such motion is filed. In the event that the court |
modifies or vacates a
temporary custody order but does not |
vacate its finding of probable cause,
the court may order that |
appropriate services be continued or initiated in
behalf of the |
minor and his or her family.
|
(10) The changes made to this Section by Public Act 98-61 |
apply to a minor who has been
arrested or taken into custody on |
or after January 1, 2014 (the effective date
of Public Act |
|
98-61). |
(Source: P.A. 98-61, eff. 1-1-14; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14; 99-642, |
eff. 7-28-16.)
|
(705 ILCS 405/3-21) (from Ch. 37, par. 803-21)
|
Sec. 3-21. Continuance under supervision.
|
(1) The court may enter an
order of continuance under |
supervision (a) upon an admission or stipulation
by the |
appropriate respondent or minor respondent of the facts |
supporting
the petition and before proceeding to findings and |
adjudication, or after
hearing the evidence at the adjudicatory |
hearing but before noting in the
minutes of proceedings a |
finding of whether or not the minor is a person
requiring |
authoritative intervention; and (b) in the absence of objection
|
made in open court by the minor, his parent, guardian, |
custodian,
responsible relative, defense attorney or the |
State's Attorney.
|
(2) If the minor, his parent, guardian, custodian, |
responsible
relative, defense attorney or State's Attorney, |
objects in open court to
any such continuance and insists upon |
proceeding to findings and
adjudication, the court shall so |
proceed.
|
(3) Nothing in this Section limits the power of the court |
to order a
continuance of the hearing for the production of |
additional evidence or
for any other proper reason.
|
(4) When a hearing where a minor is alleged to be a minor |
|
requiring
authoritative intervention is continued pursuant to |
this Section, the court
may permit the minor to remain in his |
home subject to such conditions
concerning his conduct and |
supervision as the court may require by order.
|
(5) If a petition is filed charging a violation of a |
condition of the
continuance under supervision, the court shall |
conduct a hearing. If the court
finds that such condition of |
supervision has not been fulfilled the court may
proceed to |
findings and adjudication and disposition. The filing of a
|
petition for violation of a condition of the continuance under |
supervision
shall toll the period of continuance under |
supervision until the final
determination of the charge, and |
the term of the continuance under
supervision shall not run |
until the hearing and disposition of the petition for
|
violation; provided where the petition alleges conduct that |
does not constitute
a criminal offense, the hearing must be |
held within 15 days of the filing
of the petition unless a |
delay in such hearing has been occasioned by the
minor, in |
which case the delay shall continue the tolling of the period
|
of continuance under supervision for the period of such delay.
|
(6) The court must impose upon a minor under an order of |
continuance
under
supervision or an order of disposition under |
this Article III, as a condition
of the order, a fee of $25 for |
each month or partial month of supervision with
a probation |
officer. If the court determines the inability of the minor, or
|
the parent, guardian, or legal custodian of the minor to pay |
|
the fee, the
court may impose a lesser fee. The court may not |
impose the fee on a minor who
is placed in the guardianship or |
custody of the Department of Children and Family Services made |
a ward of the State under this Act. The fee may be imposed only |
upon
a minor who is actively supervised by the probation and |
court services
department. The fee must be collected by the |
clerk of the circuit court. The
clerk of the circuit court must |
pay all monies collected from this fee to the
county treasurer |
for deposit into the probation and court services fund under
|
Section 15.1 of the Probation and Probation Officers Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-329, eff. 8-9-01.)
|
(705 ILCS 405/3-24) (from Ch. 37, par. 803-24)
|
Sec. 3-24. Kinds of dispositional orders.
|
(1) The following kinds of orders of disposition may be |
made in respect to
wards of the court: A minor found to be |
requiring authoritative intervention
under Section 3-3 may be |
(a) committed to the Department of Children and Family
|
Services, subject to Section 5 of the Children and Family |
Services Act; (b)
placed under supervision and released to his |
or her parents, guardian or legal
custodian; (c) placed in |
accordance with Section 3-28 with or without also
being placed |
under supervision. Conditions of supervision may be modified or
|
terminated by the court if it deems that the best interests of |
the minor and
the public will be served thereby; (d) ordered |
partially or completely
emancipated in accordance with the |
|
provisions of the Emancipation of
Minors Act; or (e) subject to |
having his or her driver's license or driving
privilege |
suspended for such time as determined by the Court but only |
until he
or she attains 18 years of age.
|
(2) Any order of disposition may provide for protective |
supervision
under Section 3-25 and may include an order of |
protection under Section 3-26.
|
(3) Unless the order of disposition expressly so provides, |
it does
not operate to close proceedings on the pending |
petition, but is subject
to modification until final closing |
and discharge of the proceedings
under Section 3-32.
|
(4) In addition to any other order of disposition, the |
court may order
any person found to be a minor requiring |
authoritative intervention under
Section 3-3 to make |
restitution, in monetary or non-monetary form, under
the terms |
and conditions of Section 5-5-6 of the Unified Code of
|
Corrections, except that the "presentence hearing" referred to |
therein
shall be the dispositional hearing for purposes of this |
Section. The
parent, guardian or legal custodian of the minor |
may pay some or all of
such restitution on the minor's behalf.
|
(5) Any order for disposition where the minor is committed |
or placed in
accordance with Section 3-28 shall provide for the |
parents or guardian of
the estate of such minor to pay to the |
legal custodian or guardian of the
person of the minor such |
sums as are determined by the custodian or guardian
of the |
person of the minor as necessary for the minor's needs. Such |
|
payments
may not exceed the maximum amounts provided for by |
Section 9.1 of the
Children and Family Services Act.
|
(6) Whenever the order of disposition requires the minor to |
attend
school or participate in a program of training, the |
truant officer or
designated school official shall regularly |
report to the court if the minor
is a chronic or habitual |
truant under Section 26-2a of the School Code.
|
(7) The court must impose upon a minor under an order of |
continuance
under supervision or an order of disposition under |
this Article III, as a
condition of the order, a fee of $25 for |
each month or partial month of
supervision with a probation |
officer. If the court determines the inability of
the minor, or |
the parent, guardian, or legal custodian of the minor to pay |
the
fee, the court may impose a lesser fee. The court may not |
impose the fee on a
minor who is placed in the guardianship or |
custody of the Department of Children and Family Services made |
a ward of the State under this Act. The fee may be imposed
only |
upon a minor who is actively supervised by the probation and |
court
services department. The fee must be collected by the |
clerk of the circuit
court. The clerk of the circuit court must |
pay all monies collected from this
fee to the county treasurer |
for deposit into the probation and court services
fund under |
Section 15.1 of the Probation and Probation Officers Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
|
(705 ILCS 405/4-9) (from Ch. 37, par. 804-9)
|
|
Sec. 4-9. Shelter care hearing. At the appearance of the
|
minor before the court at the shelter care hearing, all
|
witnesses present shall be examined before the court in |
relation to any
matter connected with the allegations made in |
the petition.
|
(1) If the court finds that there is not probable cause to |
believe that
the minor is addicted, it shall release the minor |
and dismiss the petition.
|
(2) If the court finds that there is probable cause to |
believe that the
minor is addicted, the minor, his or
her |
parent, guardian, custodian and other persons able to give |
relevant
testimony shall be examined before the court. After |
such testimony, the
court may enter an order that the minor |
shall be released
upon the request of a parent, guardian or |
custodian if the parent, guardian
or custodian appears to take |
custody
and agrees to abide by a court order
which requires the |
minor and his or her parent, guardian, or legal custodian
to
|
complete an evaluation by an entity licensed by the Department |
of Human
Services, as the successor to
the Department of |
Alcoholism and Substance Abuse, and complete
any treatment |
recommendations indicated by the assessment. "Custodian" |
includes the Department of Children and Family Services, if it |
has been given custody of the child, or any other agency of the |
State which has been given custody or wardship of the child. |
Custodian shall
include any agency
of the State which has been |
given custody or wardship of the child.
|
|
The Court shall require
documentation by representatives |
of the Department of Children and Family
Services or the |
probation department as to the reasonable efforts that were
|
made to prevent or eliminate the necessity of removal of the |
minor from his
or her home, and shall consider the testimony of |
any person as to those
reasonable efforts. If the court finds |
that it is a
matter of immediate and urgent necessity for the |
protection of the minor
or of the person or property of another |
that the minor be or
placed in a shelter care facility or that |
he or she is likely to flee the
jurisdiction of the court, and |
further, finds that reasonable efforts
have been made or good |
cause has been shown why reasonable efforts cannot
prevent or |
eliminate the necessity of removal of the minor from his or her
|
home, the court may prescribe shelter care
and order that the |
minor be kept in a suitable place designated by the
court or in |
a shelter care facility designated by the Department of
|
Children and Family Services or a licensed child welfare |
agency, or
in a facility or program licensed by the Department |
of Human
Services for shelter and treatment services;
otherwise |
it shall release the minor from custody. If the court |
prescribes
shelter care, then in placing the minor, the |
Department or other agency shall,
to the extent compatible with |
the court's order, comply with Section 7 of the
Children and |
Family Services Act. If the minor is ordered placed in a |
shelter
care facility of the Department of Children and Family |
Services or a licensed
child welfare agency, or in
a facility |
|
or program licensed by the Department of Human
Services for
|
shelter and treatment
services, the court shall, upon request |
of the appropriate
Department or other agency, appoint the |
Department of Children and Family
Services Guardianship |
Administrator or other appropriate agency executive
temporary |
custodian of the minor and the court may enter such other |
orders
related to the temporary custody as it deems fit and |
proper, including
the provision of services to the minor or his |
family to ameliorate the
causes contributing to the finding of |
probable cause or to the finding of
the existence of immediate |
and urgent necessity. Acceptance of services
shall not be |
considered an admission of any allegation in a petition made
|
pursuant to this Act, nor may a referral of services be |
considered as
evidence in any proceeding pursuant to this Act, |
except where the issue is
whether the Department has made |
reasonable efforts to reunite the family.
In making its |
findings that reasonable efforts have been made or that good
|
cause has been shown why reasonable efforts cannot prevent or |
eliminate the
necessity of removal of the minor from his or her |
home, the court shall
state in writing its findings concerning |
the nature of the services that
were offered or the efforts |
that were made to prevent removal of the child
and the apparent |
reasons that such
services or efforts could not prevent the |
need for removal. The parents,
guardian, custodian, temporary |
custodian and minor shall each be furnished
a copy of such |
written findings. The temporary custodian shall maintain a
copy |
|
of the court order and written findings in the case record for |
the
child. The order together with the court's findings of fact |
in support
thereof shall be entered of record in the court.
|
Once the court finds that it is a matter of immediate and |
urgent necessity
for the protection of the minor that the minor |
be placed in a shelter care
facility, the minor shall not be |
returned to the parent, custodian or guardian
until the court |
finds that such placement is no longer necessary for the
|
protection of the minor.
|
(3) If neither the parent, guardian, legal custodian, |
responsible
relative nor counsel of the minor has had actual |
notice of or is present
at the shelter care hearing, he or she |
may file his or her
affidavit setting forth these facts, and |
the clerk shall set the matter for
rehearing not later than 24 |
hours, excluding Sundays and legal holidays,
after the filing |
of the affidavit. At the rehearing, the court shall
proceed in |
the same manner as upon the original hearing.
|
(4) If the minor is not brought before a judicial officer |
within the
time period as specified in Section 4-8, the minor |
must immediately be
released from custody.
|
(5) Only when there is reasonable cause to believe that the |
minor taken
into custody is a person described in subsection |
(3) of Section 5-105 may the minor be kept or
detained in a |
detention home or county or municipal jail. This Section
shall |
in no way be construed to limit subsection (6).
|
(6) No minor under 16 years of age may be confined in a |
|
jail or place
ordinarily used for the confinement of prisoners |
in a police station.
Minors under 18 years of age must be kept |
separate from confined adults and
may not at any time be kept |
in the same cell, room or yard with adults
confined pursuant to |
the criminal law.
|
(7) If neither the parent, guardian or custodian appears |
within 24
hours to take custody of a minor released upon |
request pursuant to
subsection (2) of this Section, then the |
clerk of the court shall set the
matter for rehearing not later |
than 7 days after the original order and
shall issue a summons |
directed to the parent, guardian or custodian to
appear. At the |
same time the probation department shall prepare a report
on |
the minor. If a parent, guardian or custodian does not appear |
at such
rehearing, the judge may enter an order prescribing |
that the minor be kept
in a suitable place designated by the |
Department of Children and Family
Services or a licensed child |
welfare agency.
|
(8) Any interested party, including the State, the |
temporary
custodian, an agency providing services to the minor |
or family under a
service plan pursuant to Section 8.2 of the |
Abused and Neglected Child
Reporting Act, foster parent, or any |
of their representatives, may file a
motion to modify or vacate |
a temporary custody order on any of the following
grounds:
|
(a) It is no longer a matter of immediate and urgent |
necessity that the
minor remain in shelter care; or
|
(b) There is a material change in the circumstances of |
|
the natural
family from which the minor was removed; or
|
(c) A person, including a parent, relative or legal |
guardian, is capable
of assuming temporary custody of the |
minor; or
|
(d) Services provided by the Department of Children and |
Family Services
or a child welfare agency or other service |
provider have been successful in
eliminating the need for |
temporary custody.
|
The clerk shall set the matter for hearing not later than |
14 days after
such motion is filed. In the event that the court |
modifies or vacates a
temporary custody order but does not |
vacate its finding of probable cause,
the court may order that |
appropriate services be continued or initiated in
behalf of the |
minor and his or her family.
|
(9) The changes made to this Section by Public Act 98-61 |
apply to a minor who has been
arrested or taken into custody on |
or after January 1, 2014 (the effective date
of Public Act |
98-61). |
(Source: P.A. 98-61, eff. 1-1-14; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14; revised |
10-6-16.)
|
(705 ILCS 405/4-18) (from Ch. 37, par. 804-18)
|
Sec. 4-18. Continuance under supervision.
|
(1) The court may enter an
order of continuance under |
supervision (a) upon an admission or stipulation
by the |
appropriate respondent or minor respondent of the facts |
|
supporting
the petition and before proceeding to findings and |
adjudication, or after
hearing the evidence at the adjudicatory |
hearing but before noting in the
minutes of the proceeding a |
finding of whether or not the minor is an
addict, and (b) in |
the absence of objection made in open court by the
minor, his |
parent, guardian, custodian, responsible relative, defense
|
attorney or the State's Attorney.
|
(2) If the minor, his parent, guardian, custodian, |
responsible
relative, defense attorney or State's Attorney, |
objects in open court to
any such continuance and insists upon |
proceeding to findings and
adjudication, the court shall so |
proceed.
|
(3) Nothing in this Section limits the power of the court |
to order a
continuance of the hearing for the production of |
additional evidence or
for any other proper reason.
|
(4) When a hearing is continued pursuant to this Section, |
the court
may permit the minor to remain in his home subject to |
such conditions
concerning his conduct and supervision as the |
court may require by order.
|
(5) If a petition is filed charging a violation of a |
condition of the
continuance under supervision, the court shall |
conduct a hearing. If the court
finds that such condition of |
supervision has not been fulfilled the court may
proceed to |
findings and adjudication and disposition. The filing of a
|
petition for violation of a condition of the continuance under |
supervision
shall toll the period of continuance under |
|
supervision until the final
determination of the charge, and |
the term of the continuance under
supervision shall not run |
until the hearing and disposition of the petition for
|
violation; provided where the petition alleges conduct that |
does not constitute
a criminal offense, the hearing must be |
held within 15 days of the filing
of the petition unless a |
delay in such hearing has been occasioned by the
minor, in |
which case the delay shall continue the tolling of the period
|
of continuance under supervision for the period of such delay.
|
(6) The court must impose upon a minor under an order of |
continuance
under
supervision or an order of disposition under |
this Article IV, as a condition
of the order, a fee of $25 for |
each month or partial month of supervision
with
a probation |
officer. If the court determines the inability of the minor, or
|
the parent, guardian, or legal custodian of the minor to pay |
the fee, the
court may impose a lesser fee. The court may not |
impose the fee on a minor who
is placed in the guardianship or |
custody of the Department of Children and Family Services made |
a ward of the State under this Act. The fee may be imposed only |
upon
a minor who is actively supervised by the probation and |
court services
department. The fee must be collected by the |
clerk of the circuit court. The
clerk of the circuit court must |
pay all monies collected from this fee to the
county treasurer |
for deposit into the probation and court services fund under
|
Section 15.1 of the Probation and Probation Officers Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-329, eff. 8-9-01.)
|
|
(705 ILCS 405/4-21) (from Ch. 37, par. 804-21)
|
Sec. 4-21. Kinds of dispositional orders.
|
(1) A minor found to be
addicted under Section 4-3 may be |
(a) committed to the Department of
Children and Family |
Services, subject to Section 5 of the Children and Family
|
Services Act; (b) placed
under supervision and released to his |
or her parents, guardian or legal
custodian; (c) placed in |
accordance with Section 4-25 with or without also
being placed |
under supervision. Conditions of supervision may be modified
or |
terminated by the court if it deems that the best interests of |
the minor and
the public will be served thereby; (d)
required |
to attend an approved alcohol or drug abuse treatment or |
counseling
program
on an inpatient or outpatient basis instead
|
of or in addition to the disposition otherwise provided for in |
this
paragraph; (e) ordered partially or completely |
emancipated in accordance
with the provisions of the |
Emancipation of Minors Act; or (f)
subject to having his or her |
driver's license or driving privilege
suspended for such time |
as determined by the Court but only until he or she
attains 18 |
years of age. No disposition
under this subsection shall |
provide for the minor's placement in a secure
facility.
|
(2) Any order of disposition may provide for protective |
supervision
under Section 4-22 and may include an order of |
protection under Section 4-23.
|
(3) Unless the order of disposition expressly so provides, |
|
it does
not operate to close proceedings on the pending |
petition, but is subject
to modification until final closing |
and discharge of the proceedings
under Section 4-29.
|
(4) In addition to any other order of disposition, the |
court may
order any minor found to be addicted under this |
Article as neglected with
respect to his or her own injurious |
behavior, to
make restitution, in monetary or non-monetary |
form, under the terms and
conditions of Section 5-5-6 of the |
Unified Code of
Corrections, except that the "presentence |
hearing" referred to therein
shall be the dispositional hearing |
for purposes of this Section. The parent,
guardian or legal |
custodian of the minor may pay some or all of such
restitution |
on the minor's behalf.
|
(5) Any order for disposition where the minor is placed in
|
accordance with Section 4-25 shall provide for the parents or |
guardian of
the estate of such minor to pay to the legal |
custodian or guardian of the
person of the minor such sums as |
are determined by the custodian or guardian
of the person of |
the minor as necessary for the minor's needs. Such payments
may |
not exceed the maximum amounts provided for by Section 9.1 of |
the
Children and Family Services Act.
|
(6) Whenever the order of disposition requires the minor to |
attend
school or participate in a program of training, the |
truant officer or
designated school official shall regularly |
report to the court if the minor
is a chronic or habitual |
truant under Section 26-2a of the School Code.
|
|
(7) The court must impose upon a minor under an order of |
continuance
under supervision or an order of disposition under |
this Article IV, as a
condition of the order, a fee of $25 for |
each month or partial month of
supervision with a
probation |
officer. If the court determines the inability of the minor, or |
the
parent, guardian, or legal custodian of the minor to pay |
the fee, the court
may impose a lesser fee. The court may not |
impose the fee on a minor who is placed in the guardianship or |
custody of the Department of Children and Family Services
made |
a ward of the State under this Act. The fee may be imposed only |
upon a
minor who is actively supervised by the probation and |
court services
department. The fee must be collected by the |
clerk of the circuit court.
The clerk of the circuit court must |
pay all monies collected from this fee to
the county treasurer |
for deposit into the probation and court services fund
under
|
Section 15.1 of the Probation and Probation Officers Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
|
(705 ILCS 405/5-615)
|
Sec. 5-615. Continuance under supervision.
|
(1) The court may enter an order of continuance under |
supervision for an
offense other than first degree murder, a |
Class X felony or a forcible felony: |
(a) upon an admission or stipulation by the appropriate |
respondent or minor
respondent of the facts supporting the
|
petition and before the court makes a finding of |
|
delinquency, and in the absence of objection made in open |
court by the
minor, his or her parent, guardian, or legal |
custodian, the minor's attorney or
the
State's Attorney; or
|
(b) upon a finding of delinquency and after considering |
the circumstances of the offense and the history, |
character, and condition of the minor, if the court is of |
the opinion that: |
(i) the minor is not likely to commit further |
crimes; |
(ii) the minor and the public would be best served |
if the minor were not to receive a criminal record; and |
(iii) in the best interests of justice an order of |
continuance under supervision is more appropriate than |
a sentence otherwise permitted under this Act. |
(2) (Blank).
|
(3) Nothing in this Section limits the power of the court |
to order a
continuance of the hearing for the production of |
additional evidence or for any
other proper reason.
|
(4) When a hearing where a minor is alleged to be a |
delinquent is
continued
pursuant to this Section, the period of |
continuance under supervision may not
exceed 24 months. The |
court may terminate a continuance under supervision at
any time |
if warranted by the conduct of the minor and the ends of |
justice or vacate the finding of delinquency or both.
|
(5) When a hearing where a minor is alleged to be |
delinquent is continued
pursuant to this Section, the court |
|
may, as conditions of the continuance under
supervision, |
require the minor to do any of the following:
|
(a) not violate any criminal statute of any |
jurisdiction;
|
(b) make a report to and appear in person before any |
person or agency as
directed by the court;
|
(c) work or pursue a course of study or vocational |
training;
|
(d) undergo medical or psychotherapeutic treatment |
rendered by a therapist
licensed under the provisions of |
the Medical Practice Act of 1987, the
Clinical Psychologist |
Licensing Act, or the Clinical Social Work and Social
Work |
Practice Act, or an entity licensed by the Department of |
Human Services as
a successor to the Department of |
Alcoholism and Substance Abuse, for the
provision of drug |
addiction and alcoholism treatment;
|
(e) attend or reside in a facility established for the |
instruction or
residence of persons on probation;
|
(f) support his or her dependents, if any;
|
(g) pay costs;
|
(h) refrain from possessing a firearm or other |
dangerous weapon, or an
automobile;
|
(i) permit the probation officer to visit him or her at |
his or her home or
elsewhere;
|
(j) reside with his or her parents or in a foster home;
|
(k) attend school;
|
|
(k-5) with the consent of the superintendent
of the
|
facility, attend an educational program at a facility other |
than the school
in which the
offense was committed if he
or |
she committed a crime of violence as
defined in
Section 2 |
of the Crime Victims Compensation Act in a school, on the
|
real
property
comprising a school, or within 1,000 feet of |
the real property comprising a
school;
|
(l) attend a non-residential program for youth;
|
(m) contribute to his or her own support at home or in |
a foster home;
|
(n) perform some reasonable public or community |
service;
|
(o) make restitution to the victim, in the same manner |
and under the same
conditions as provided in subsection (4) |
of Section 5-710, except that the
"sentencing hearing" |
referred
to in that Section shall be the adjudicatory |
hearing for purposes of this
Section;
|
(p) comply with curfew requirements as designated by |
the court;
|
(q) refrain from entering into a designated geographic |
area except upon
terms as the court finds appropriate. The |
terms may include consideration of
the purpose of the |
entry, the time of day, other persons accompanying the
|
minor, and advance approval by a probation officer;
|
(r) refrain from having any contact, directly or |
indirectly, with certain
specified persons or particular |
|
types of persons, including but not limited to
members of |
street gangs and drug users or dealers;
|
(r-5) undergo a medical or other procedure to have a |
tattoo symbolizing
allegiance to a street gang removed from |
his or her body;
|
(s) refrain from having in his or her body the presence |
of any illicit
drug
prohibited by the Cannabis Control Act, |
the Illinois Controlled Substances
Act, or the |
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, |
unless prescribed by a physician, and submit samples of his |
or her blood
or urine or both for tests to determine the |
presence of any illicit drug; or
|
(t) comply with any other conditions as may be ordered |
by the court.
|
(6) A minor whose case is continued under supervision under |
subsection (5)
shall be given a certificate setting forth the |
conditions imposed by the court.
Those conditions may be |
reduced, enlarged, or modified by the court on motion
of the |
probation officer or on its own motion, or that of the State's |
Attorney,
or, at the request of the minor after notice and |
hearing.
|
(7) If a petition is filed charging a violation of a |
condition of the
continuance under supervision, the court shall |
conduct a hearing. If the court
finds that a condition of |
supervision has not been fulfilled, the court may
proceed to |
findings, adjudication, and disposition or adjudication and |
|
disposition. The filing of a petition
for violation of a |
condition of the continuance under supervision shall toll
the |
period of continuance under supervision until the final |
determination of
the charge, and the term of the continuance |
under supervision shall not run
until the hearing and |
disposition of the petition for violation; provided
where the |
petition alleges conduct that does not constitute a criminal |
offense,
the hearing must be held within 30 days of the filing |
of the petition unless a
delay shall continue the tolling of |
the period of continuance under supervision
for the period of
|
the delay.
|
(8) When a hearing in which a minor is alleged to be a |
delinquent for
reasons that include a violation of Section |
21-1.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of |
2012
is continued under this Section, the court shall, as a |
condition of the
continuance under supervision, require the |
minor to perform community service
for not less than 30 and not |
more than 120 hours, if community service is
available in the |
jurisdiction. The community service shall include, but need
not |
be limited to, the cleanup and repair of the damage that was |
caused by the
alleged violation or similar damage to property |
located in the municipality or
county in which the alleged |
violation occurred. The condition may be in
addition to any |
other condition.
|
(8.5) When a hearing in which a minor is alleged to be a |
delinquent for
reasons
that include a violation of Section 3.02 |
|
or Section 3.03 of the Humane Care for
Animals Act or paragraph |
(d) of subsection (1)
of Section
21-1 of the Criminal Code of |
1961 or paragraph (4) of subsection (a) of Section 21-1 or the |
Criminal Code of 2012 is continued under this Section, the |
court
shall, as a
condition of the continuance under |
supervision, require the minor to undergo
medical or
|
psychiatric treatment rendered by a psychiatrist or |
psychological treatment
rendered by a
clinical psychologist. |
The condition may be in addition to any other
condition.
|
(9) When a hearing in which a minor is alleged to be a |
delinquent is
continued under this Section, the court, before |
continuing the case, shall make
a finding whether the offense |
alleged to have been committed either: (i) was
related to or in |
furtherance of the activities of an organized gang or was
|
motivated by the minor's membership in or allegiance to an |
organized gang, or
(ii) is a violation of paragraph (13) of |
subsection (a) of Section 12-2 or paragraph (2) of subsection |
(c) of Section 12-2 of the
Criminal Code of 1961 or the |
Criminal Code of 2012, a violation of any Section of Article 24 |
of the
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or a |
violation of any statute that involved the unlawful
use of a |
firearm. If the court determines the question in the |
affirmative the
court shall, as a condition of the continuance |
under supervision and as part of
or in addition to any other |
condition of the supervision,
require the minor to perform |
community service for not less than 30 hours,
provided that |
|
community service is available in the
jurisdiction and is |
funded and approved by the county board of the county where
the |
offense was committed. The community service shall include, but |
need not
be limited to, the cleanup and repair of any damage |
caused by an alleged
violation of Section 21-1.3 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 and similar |
damage to
property located in the municipality or county in |
which the alleged violation
occurred. When possible and |
reasonable, the community service shall be
performed in the |
minor's neighborhood. For the purposes of this Section,
|
"organized gang" has the meaning ascribed to it in Section 10 |
of the Illinois
Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act.
|
(10) The court shall impose upon a minor placed on |
supervision, as a
condition of the supervision, a fee of $50 |
for each month of supervision
ordered by the court, unless |
after determining the inability of the minor
placed on |
supervision to pay the fee, the court assesses a lesser amount. |
The
court may not impose the fee on a minor who is placed in the |
guardianship or custody of the Department of Children and |
Family Services made a ward of the State under
this Act while |
the minor is in placement. The fee shall be imposed only upon a
|
minor who is actively supervised by the probation and court |
services
department. A court may order the parent, guardian, or |
legal custodian of the
minor to pay some or all of the fee on |
the minor's behalf.
|
(11) If a minor is placed on supervision for a violation of
|
|
subsection (a-7) of Section 1 of the Prevention of Tobacco Use |
by Minors Act, the
court may, in its discretion, and upon
|
recommendation by the State's Attorney, order that minor and |
his or her parents
or legal
guardian to attend a smoker's |
education or youth diversion program as defined
in that Act if |
that
program is available in the jurisdiction where the |
offender resides.
Attendance at a smoker's education or youth |
diversion program
shall be time-credited against any community |
service time imposed for any
first violation of subsection |
(a-7) of Section 1 of that Act. In addition to any
other
|
penalty
that the court may impose for a violation of subsection |
(a-7) of Section 1 of
that Act, the
court, upon request by the |
State's Attorney, may in its discretion
require
the offender to |
remit a fee for his or her attendance at a smoker's
education |
or
youth diversion program.
|
For purposes of this Section, "smoker's education program" |
or "youth
diversion program" includes, but is not limited to, a |
seminar designed to
educate a person on the physical and |
psychological effects of smoking tobacco
products and the |
health consequences of smoking tobacco products that can be
|
conducted with a locality's youth diversion program.
|
In addition to any other penalty that the court may impose |
under this
subsection
(11):
|
(a) If a minor violates subsection (a-7) of Section 1 |
of the Prevention of
Tobacco Use by Minors Act, the court |
may
impose a sentence of 15 hours of
community service or a |
|
fine of $25 for a first violation.
|
(b) A second violation by a minor of subsection (a-7) |
of Section 1 of that Act
that occurs
within 12 months after |
the first violation is punishable by a fine of $50 and
25
|
hours of community service.
|
(c) A third or subsequent violation by a minor of |
subsection (a-7) of Section
1 of that Act
that
occurs |
within 12 months after the first violation is punishable by |
a $100
fine
and 30 hours of community service.
|
(d) Any second or subsequent violation not within the |
12-month time period
after the first violation is |
punishable as provided for a first violation.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; 98-62, eff. 1-1-14.)
|
(705 ILCS 405/5-715)
|
Sec. 5-715. Probation.
|
(1) The period of probation or conditional discharge shall |
not exceed 5
years or until the minor has attained the age of |
21 years, whichever is less,
except as provided in this Section |
for a minor who is found to be guilty
for an offense which is |
first degree murder. The juvenile court may terminate probation |
or
conditional discharge and discharge the minor at any time if |
warranted by the
conduct of the minor and the ends of justice; |
provided, however, that the
period of probation for a minor who |
is found to be guilty for an offense which
is first degree |
murder shall be at
least 5 years.
|
|
(1.5) The period of probation for a minor who is found |
guilty of aggravated criminal sexual assault, criminal sexual |
assault, or aggravated battery with a firearm shall be at least |
36 months. The period of probation for a minor who is found to |
be guilty of any other Class X felony shall be at least 24 |
months. The period of probation for a Class 1 or Class 2 |
forcible felony shall be at least 18 months. Regardless of the |
length of probation ordered by the court, for all offenses |
under this paragraph (1.5), the court shall schedule hearings |
to determine whether it is in the best interest of the minor |
and public safety to terminate probation after the minimum |
period of probation has been served. In such a hearing, there |
shall be a rebuttable presumption that it is in the best |
interest of the minor and public safety to terminate probation. |
(2) The court may as a condition of probation or of |
conditional discharge
require that the minor:
|
(a) not violate any criminal statute of any |
jurisdiction;
|
(b) make a report to and appear in person before any |
person or agency as
directed by the court;
|
(c) work or pursue a course of study or vocational |
training;
|
(d) undergo medical or psychiatric treatment, rendered |
by a psychiatrist
or
psychological treatment rendered by a |
clinical psychologist or social work
services rendered by a |
clinical social worker, or treatment for drug addiction
or |
|
alcoholism;
|
(e) attend or reside in a facility established for the |
instruction or
residence of persons on probation;
|
(f) support his or her dependents, if any;
|
(g) refrain from possessing a firearm or other |
dangerous weapon, or an
automobile;
|
(h) permit the probation officer to visit him or her at |
his or her home or
elsewhere;
|
(i) reside with his or her parents or in a foster home;
|
(j) attend school;
|
(j-5) with the consent of the superintendent
of the
|
facility,
attend an educational program at a facility other |
than the school
in which the
offense was committed if he
or |
she committed a crime of violence as
defined in
Section 2 |
of the Crime Victims Compensation Act in a school, on the
|
real
property
comprising a school, or within 1,000 feet of |
the real property comprising a
school;
|
(k) attend a non-residential program for youth;
|
(l) make restitution under the terms of subsection (4) |
of Section 5-710;
|
(m) contribute to his or her own support at home or in |
a foster home;
|
(n) perform some reasonable public or community |
service;
|
(o) participate with community corrections programs |
including unified
delinquency intervention services |
|
administered by the Department of Human
Services
subject to |
Section 5 of the Children and Family Services Act;
|
(p) pay costs;
|
(q) serve a term of home confinement. In addition to |
any other applicable
condition of probation or conditional |
discharge, the conditions of home
confinement shall be that |
the minor:
|
(i) remain within the interior premises of the |
place designated for his
or her confinement during the |
hours designated by the court;
|
(ii) admit any person or agent designated by the |
court into the minor's
place of confinement at any time |
for purposes of verifying the minor's
compliance with |
the conditions of his or her confinement; and
|
(iii) use an approved electronic monitoring device |
if ordered by the
court subject to Article 8A of |
Chapter V of the Unified Code of Corrections;
|
(r) refrain from entering into a designated geographic |
area except upon
terms as the court finds appropriate. The |
terms may include consideration of
the purpose of the |
entry, the time of day, other persons accompanying the
|
minor, and advance approval by a probation officer, if the |
minor has been
placed on probation, or advance approval by |
the court, if the minor has been
placed on conditional |
discharge;
|
(s) refrain from having any contact, directly or |
|
indirectly, with certain
specified persons or particular |
types of persons, including but not limited to
members of |
street gangs and drug users or dealers;
|
(s-5) undergo a medical or other procedure to have a |
tattoo symbolizing
allegiance to a street
gang removed from |
his or her body;
|
(t) refrain from having in his or her body the presence |
of any illicit
drug
prohibited by the Cannabis Control Act, |
the Illinois Controlled Substances
Act, or the |
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, |
unless prescribed
by a physician, and shall submit samples |
of his or her blood or urine or both
for tests to determine |
the presence of any illicit drug; or
|
(u) comply with other conditions as may be ordered by |
the court.
|
(3) The court may as a condition of probation or of |
conditional discharge
require that a minor found guilty on any |
alcohol, cannabis, methamphetamine, or
controlled substance |
violation, refrain from acquiring a driver's license
during the |
period of probation or conditional discharge. If the minor is |
in
possession of a permit or license, the court may require |
that the minor refrain
from driving or operating any motor |
vehicle during the period of probation or
conditional |
discharge, except as may be necessary in the course of the |
minor's
lawful
employment.
|
(3.5) The court shall, as a condition of probation or of |
|
conditional
discharge,
require that a minor found to be guilty |
and placed on probation for reasons
that include a
violation of |
Section 3.02 or Section 3.03 of the Humane Care for Animals Act |
or
paragraph
(4) of subsection (a) of Section 21-1 of the
|
Criminal Code of 2012 undergo medical or psychiatric treatment |
rendered by a
psychiatrist or psychological treatment rendered |
by a clinical psychologist.
The
condition may be in addition to |
any other condition.
|
(3.10) The court shall order that a minor placed on |
probation or
conditional discharge for a sex offense as defined |
in the Sex Offender
Management Board Act undergo and |
successfully complete sex offender treatment.
The treatment |
shall be in conformance with the standards developed under
the |
Sex Offender Management Board Act and conducted by a treatment |
provider
approved by the Board. The treatment shall be at the |
expense of the person
evaluated based upon that person's |
ability to pay for the treatment.
|
(4) A minor on probation or conditional discharge shall be |
given a
certificate setting forth the conditions upon which he |
or she is being
released.
|
(5) The court shall impose upon a minor placed on probation |
or conditional
discharge, as a condition of the probation or |
conditional discharge, a fee of
$50 for each month of probation |
or conditional discharge supervision ordered by
the court, |
unless after determining the inability of the minor placed on
|
probation or conditional discharge to pay the fee, the court |
|
assesses a lesser
amount. The court may not impose the fee on a |
minor who is placed in the guardianship or custody of the |
Department of Children and Family Services made a ward of the
|
State under this Act while the minor is in placement. The fee |
shall be
imposed only upon a minor who is actively supervised |
by the probation and court
services department. The court may |
order the parent, guardian, or legal
custodian of the minor to |
pay some or all of the fee on the minor's behalf.
|
(5.5) Jurisdiction over an offender may be transferred from |
the
sentencing court to the court of another circuit with the |
concurrence
of both courts. Further transfers or retransfers of |
jurisdiction are
also authorized in the same manner. The court |
to which jurisdiction has
been transferred shall have the same |
powers as the sentencing court.
The probation department within |
the circuit to which jurisdiction has
been transferred, or |
which has agreed to provide supervision, may
impose probation |
fees upon receiving the transferred offender, as
provided in |
subsection (i) of Section 5-6-3 of the Unified Code of |
Corrections. For all transfer cases, as defined in
Section 9b |
of the Probation and Probation Officers Act, the probation
|
department from the original sentencing court shall retain all
|
probation fees collected prior to the transfer. After the |
transfer, all
probation fees shall be paid to the probation |
department within the
circuit to which jurisdiction has been |
transferred. |
If the transfer case originated in another state and has |
|
been transferred under the Interstate Compact for Juveniles to |
the jurisdiction of an Illinois circuit court for supervision |
by an Illinois probation department, probation fees may be |
imposed only if permitted by the Interstate Commission for |
Juveniles. |
(6) The General Assembly finds that in order to protect the |
public, the
juvenile justice system must compel compliance with |
the conditions of probation
by responding to violations with |
swift, certain, and fair punishments and
intermediate |
sanctions. The Chief Judge of each circuit shall adopt a system
|
of structured, intermediate sanctions for violations of the |
terms and
conditions of a sentence of supervision, probation or |
conditional discharge,
under this
Act.
|
The court shall provide as a condition of a disposition of |
probation,
conditional discharge, or supervision, that the |
probation agency may invoke any
sanction from the list of |
intermediate sanctions adopted by the chief judge of
the |
circuit court for violations of the terms and conditions of the |
sentence of
probation, conditional discharge, or supervision, |
subject to the provisions of
Section 5-720 of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-575, eff. 1-1-14; 99-879, eff. 1-1-17 .)
|
Section 85. The Unified Code of Corrections is amended by |
changing Sections 5-5-10, 5-6-3, and 5-6-3.1 as follows:
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-5-10)
|
|
Sec. 5-5-10. Community service fee. When an offender or
|
defendant is ordered by the court to perform community service |
and the
offender is not otherwise assessed a fee for probation |
services, the court
shall impose a fee of $50
for each month |
the community service ordered
by the court is
supervised by a |
probation and court services department, unless after
|
determining the inability of the person sentenced to community |
service
to pay the fee, the court assesses a lesser fee. The |
court may not impose
a fee on a minor who is placed in the |
guardianship or custody of the Department of Children and |
Family Services made a ward of the State under the Juvenile
|
Court Act of 1987 while the minor is in placement. The fee |
shall be
imposed only on an offender who is actively supervised |
by the probation and
court services department. The fee shall |
be collected by the clerk of the
circuit court. The clerk of |
the circuit court shall pay all monies
collected from this fee |
to the county treasurer for deposit in the
probation and court |
services fund under Section 15.1 of the Probation
and Probation |
Officers Act.
|
A circuit court may not impose a probation fee in excess of
|
$25 per month unless: (1) the circuit court has adopted, by
|
administrative order issued by the chief judge, a standard |
probation fee
guide determining an offender's ability to pay,
|
under guidelines developed by the Administrative
Office of the |
Illinois Courts; and (2) the circuit court has authorized, by
|
administrative order issued by the chief judge, the creation of |
|
a Crime
Victim's Services Fund, to be administered by the Chief |
Judge or his or
her designee, for services to crime victims and |
their families. Of the
amount collected as a probation fee, not |
to exceed $5 of that fee
collected per month may be used to |
provide services to crime victims
and their families.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-475, eff. 8-8-03.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-6-3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-6-3) |
Sec. 5-6-3. Conditions of Probation and of Conditional |
Discharge.
|
(a) The conditions of probation and of conditional |
discharge shall be
that the person:
|
(1) not violate any criminal statute of any |
jurisdiction;
|
(2) report to or appear in person before such person or |
agency as
directed by the court;
|
(3) refrain from possessing a firearm or other |
dangerous weapon where the offense is a felony or, if a |
misdemeanor, the offense involved the intentional or |
knowing infliction of bodily harm or threat of bodily harm;
|
(4) not leave the State without the consent of the |
court or, in
circumstances in which the reason for the |
absence is of such an emergency
nature that prior consent |
by the court is not possible, without the prior
|
notification and approval of the person's probation
|
officer. Transfer of a person's probation or conditional |
|
discharge
supervision to another state is subject to |
acceptance by the other state
pursuant to the Interstate |
Compact for Adult Offender Supervision;
|
(5) permit the probation officer to visit
him at his |
home or elsewhere
to the extent necessary to discharge his |
duties;
|
(6) perform no less than 30 hours of community service |
and not more than
120 hours of community service, if |
community service is available in the
jurisdiction and is |
funded and approved by the county board where the offense
|
was committed, where the offense was related to or in |
furtherance of the
criminal activities of an organized gang |
and was motivated by the offender's
membership in or |
allegiance to an organized gang. The community service |
shall
include, but not be limited to, the cleanup and |
repair of any damage caused by
a violation of Section |
21-1.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of |
2012 and similar damage
to property located within the |
municipality or county in which the violation
occurred. |
When possible and reasonable, the community service should |
be
performed in the offender's neighborhood. For purposes |
of this Section,
"organized gang" has the meaning ascribed |
to it in Section 10 of the Illinois
Streetgang Terrorism |
Omnibus Prevention Act;
|
(7) if he or she is at least 17 years of age and has |
been sentenced to
probation or conditional discharge for a |
|
misdemeanor or felony in a county of
3,000,000 or more |
inhabitants and has not been previously convicted of a
|
misdemeanor or felony, may be required by the sentencing |
court to attend
educational courses designed to prepare the |
defendant for a high school diploma
and to work toward a |
high school diploma or to work toward passing high school |
equivalency testing or to work toward
completing a |
vocational training program approved by the court. The |
person on
probation or conditional discharge must attend a |
public institution of
education to obtain the educational |
or vocational training required by this
clause (7). The |
court shall revoke the probation or conditional discharge |
of a
person who wilfully fails to comply with this clause |
(7). The person on
probation or conditional discharge shall |
be required to pay for the cost of the
educational courses |
or high school equivalency testing if a fee is charged for |
those courses or testing. The court shall resentence the |
offender whose probation or conditional
discharge has been |
revoked as provided in Section 5-6-4. This clause (7) does
|
not apply to a person who has a high school diploma or has |
successfully passed high school equivalency testing. This |
clause (7) does not apply to a person who is determined by
|
the court to be a person with a developmental disability or |
otherwise mentally incapable of
completing the educational |
or vocational program;
|
(8) if convicted of possession of a substance |
|
prohibited
by the Cannabis Control Act, the Illinois |
Controlled Substances Act, or the Methamphetamine Control |
and Community Protection Act
after a previous conviction or |
disposition of supervision for possession of a
substance |
prohibited by the Cannabis Control Act or Illinois |
Controlled
Substances Act or after a sentence of probation |
under Section 10 of the
Cannabis
Control Act, Section 410 |
of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or Section 70 of |
the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act |
and upon a
finding by the court that the person is |
addicted, undergo treatment at a
substance abuse program |
approved by the court;
|
(8.5) if convicted of a felony sex offense as defined |
in the Sex
Offender
Management Board Act, the person shall |
undergo and successfully complete sex
offender treatment |
by a treatment provider approved by the Board and conducted
|
in conformance with the standards developed under the Sex
|
Offender Management Board Act;
|
(8.6) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in the |
Sex Offender Management Board Act, refrain from residing at |
the same address or in the same condominium unit or |
apartment unit or in the same condominium complex or |
apartment complex with another person he or she knows or |
reasonably should know is a convicted sex offender or has |
been placed on supervision for a sex offense; the |
provisions of this paragraph do not apply to a person |
|
convicted of a sex offense who is placed in a Department of |
Corrections licensed transitional housing facility for sex |
offenders; |
(8.7) if convicted for an offense committed on or after |
June 1, 2008 (the effective date of Public Act 95-464) that |
would qualify the accused as a child sex offender as |
defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the Criminal Code of |
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, refrain from |
communicating with or contacting, by means of the Internet, |
a person who is not related to the accused and whom the |
accused reasonably believes to be under 18 years of age; |
for purposes of this paragraph (8.7), "Internet" has the |
meaning ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of the Criminal |
Code of 2012; and a person is not related to the accused if |
the person is not: (i) the spouse, brother, or sister of |
the accused; (ii) a descendant of the accused; (iii) a |
first or second cousin of the accused; or (iv) a step-child |
or adopted child of the accused; |
(8.8) if convicted for an offense under Section 11-6, |
11-9.1, 11-14.4 that involves soliciting for a juvenile |
prostitute, 11-15.1, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or 11-21 |
of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, |
or any attempt to commit any of these offenses, committed |
on or after June 1, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act |
95-983): |
(i) not access or use a computer or any other |
|
device with Internet capability without the prior |
written approval of the offender's probation officer, |
except in connection with the offender's employment or |
search for employment with the prior approval of the |
offender's probation officer; |
(ii) submit to periodic unannounced examinations |
of the offender's computer or any other device with |
Internet capability by the offender's probation |
officer, a law enforcement officer, or assigned |
computer or information technology specialist, |
including the retrieval and copying of all data from |
the computer or device and any internal or external |
peripherals and removal of such information, |
equipment, or device to conduct a more thorough |
inspection; |
(iii) submit to the installation on the offender's |
computer or device with Internet capability, at the |
offender's expense, of one or more hardware or software |
systems to monitor the Internet use; and |
(iv) submit to any other appropriate restrictions |
concerning the offender's use of or access to a |
computer or any other device with Internet capability |
imposed by the offender's probation officer; |
(8.9) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in the |
Sex Offender
Registration Act committed on or after January |
1, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act 96-262), refrain |
|
from accessing or using a social networking website as |
defined in Section 17-0.5 of the Criminal Code of 2012;
|
(9) if convicted of a felony or of any misdemeanor |
violation of Section 12-1, 12-2, 12-3, 12-3.2, 12-3.4, or |
12-3.5 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of |
2012 that was determined, pursuant to Section 112A-11.1 of |
the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963, to trigger the |
prohibitions of 18 U.S.C. 922(g)(9), physically surrender |
at a time and place
designated by the court, his or her |
Firearm
Owner's Identification Card and
any and all |
firearms in
his or her possession. The Court shall return |
to the Department of State Police Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card Office the person's Firearm Owner's |
Identification Card;
|
(10) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in |
subsection (a-5) of Section 3-1-2 of this Code, unless the |
offender is a parent or guardian of the person under 18 |
years of age present in the home and no non-familial minors |
are present, not participate in a holiday event involving |
children under 18 years of age, such as distributing candy |
or other items to children on Halloween, wearing a Santa |
Claus costume on or preceding Christmas, being employed as |
a department store Santa Claus, or wearing an Easter Bunny |
costume on or preceding Easter; |
(11) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in |
Section 2 of the Sex Offender Registration Act committed on |
|
or after January 1, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act |
96-362) that requires the person to register as a sex |
offender under that Act, may not knowingly use any computer |
scrub software on any computer that the sex offender uses; |
and |
(12) if convicted of a violation of the Methamphetamine |
Control and Community Protection Act, the Methamphetamine
|
Precursor Control Act, or a methamphetamine related |
offense: |
(A) prohibited from purchasing, possessing, or |
having under his or her control any product containing |
pseudoephedrine unless prescribed by a physician; and |
(B) prohibited from purchasing, possessing, or |
having under his or her control any product containing |
ammonium nitrate. |
(b) The Court may in addition to other reasonable |
conditions relating to the
nature of the offense or the |
rehabilitation of the defendant as determined for
each |
defendant in the proper discretion of the Court require that |
the person:
|
(1) serve a term of periodic imprisonment under Article |
7 for a
period not to exceed that specified in paragraph |
(d) of Section 5-7-1;
|
(2) pay a fine and costs;
|
(3) work or pursue a course of study or vocational |
training;
|
|
(4) undergo medical, psychological or psychiatric |
treatment; or treatment
for drug addiction or alcoholism;
|
(5) attend or reside in a facility established for the |
instruction
or residence of defendants on probation;
|
(6) support his dependents;
|
(7) and in addition, if a minor:
|
(i) reside with his parents or in a foster home;
|
(ii) attend school;
|
(iii) attend a non-residential program for youth;
|
(iv) contribute to his own support at home or in a |
foster home;
|
(v) with the consent of the superintendent of the
|
facility, attend an educational program at a facility |
other than the school
in which the
offense was |
committed if he
or she is convicted of a crime of |
violence as
defined in
Section 2 of the Crime Victims |
Compensation Act committed in a school, on the
real
|
property
comprising a school, or within 1,000 feet of |
the real property comprising a
school;
|
(8) make restitution as provided in Section 5-5-6 of |
this Code;
|
(9) perform some reasonable public or community |
service;
|
(10) serve a term of home confinement. In addition to |
any other
applicable condition of probation or conditional |
discharge, the
conditions of home confinement shall be that |
|
the offender:
|
(i) remain within the interior premises of the |
place designated for
his confinement during the hours |
designated by the court;
|
(ii) admit any person or agent designated by the |
court into the
offender's place of confinement at any |
time for purposes of verifying
the offender's |
compliance with the conditions of his confinement; and
|
(iii) if further deemed necessary by the court or |
the
Probation or
Court Services Department, be placed |
on an approved
electronic monitoring device, subject |
to Article 8A of Chapter V;
|
(iv) for persons convicted of any alcohol, |
cannabis or controlled
substance violation who are |
placed on an approved monitoring device as a
condition |
of probation or conditional discharge, the court shall |
impose a
reasonable fee for each day of the use of the |
device, as established by the
county board in |
subsection (g) of this Section, unless after |
determining the
inability of the offender to pay the |
fee, the court assesses a lesser fee or no
fee as the |
case may be. This fee shall be imposed in addition to |
the fees
imposed under subsections (g) and (i) of this |
Section. The fee shall be
collected by the clerk of the |
circuit court, except as provided in an administrative |
order of the Chief Judge of the circuit court. The |
|
clerk of the circuit
court shall pay all monies |
collected from this fee to the county treasurer
for |
deposit in the substance abuse services fund under |
Section 5-1086.1 of
the Counties Code, except as |
provided in an administrative order of the Chief Judge |
of the circuit court. |
The Chief Judge of the circuit court of the county |
may by administrative order establish a program for |
electronic monitoring of offenders, in which a vendor |
supplies and monitors the operation of the electronic |
monitoring device, and collects the fees on behalf of |
the county. The program shall include provisions for |
indigent offenders and the collection of unpaid fees. |
The program shall not unduly burden the offender and |
shall be subject to review by the Chief Judge. |
The Chief Judge of the circuit court may suspend |
any additional charges or fees for late payment, |
interest, or damage to any device; and
|
(v) for persons convicted of offenses other than |
those referenced in
clause (iv) above and who are |
placed on an approved monitoring device as a
condition |
of probation or conditional discharge, the court shall |
impose
a reasonable fee for each day of the use of the |
device, as established by the
county board in |
subsection (g) of this Section, unless after |
determining the
inability of the defendant to pay the |
|
fee, the court assesses a lesser fee or
no fee as the |
case may be. This fee shall be imposed in addition to |
the fees
imposed under subsections (g) and (i) of this |
Section. The fee
shall be collected by the clerk of the |
circuit court, except as provided in an administrative |
order of the Chief Judge of the circuit court. The |
clerk of the circuit
court shall pay all monies |
collected from this fee
to the county treasurer who |
shall use the monies collected to defray the
costs of |
corrections. The county treasurer shall deposit the |
fee
collected in the probation and court services fund.
|
The Chief Judge of the circuit court of the county may |
by administrative order establish a program for |
electronic monitoring of offenders, in which a vendor |
supplies and monitors the operation of the electronic |
monitoring device, and collects the fees on behalf of |
the county. The program shall include provisions for |
indigent offenders and the collection of unpaid fees. |
The program shall not unduly burden the offender and |
shall be subject to review by the Chief Judge.
|
The Chief Judge of the circuit court may suspend |
any additional charges or fees for late payment, |
interest, or damage to any device. |
(11) comply with the terms and conditions of an order |
of protection issued
by the court pursuant to the Illinois |
Domestic Violence Act of 1986,
as now or hereafter amended, |
|
or an order of protection issued by the court of
another |
state, tribe, or United States territory. A copy of the |
order of
protection shall be
transmitted to the probation |
officer or agency
having responsibility for the case;
|
(12) reimburse any "local anti-crime program" as |
defined in Section 7
of the Anti-Crime Advisory Council Act |
for any reasonable expenses incurred
by the program on the |
offender's case, not to exceed the maximum amount of
the |
fine authorized for the offense for which the defendant was |
sentenced;
|
(13) contribute a reasonable sum of money, not to |
exceed the maximum
amount of the fine authorized for the
|
offense for which the defendant was sentenced, (i) to a |
"local anti-crime
program", as defined in Section 7 of the |
Anti-Crime Advisory Council Act, or (ii) for offenses under |
the jurisdiction of the Department of Natural Resources, to |
the fund established by the Department of Natural Resources |
for the purchase of evidence for investigation purposes and |
to conduct investigations as outlined in Section 805-105 of |
the Department of Natural Resources (Conservation) Law;
|
(14) refrain from entering into a designated |
geographic area except upon
such terms as the court finds |
appropriate. Such terms may include
consideration of the |
purpose of the entry, the time of day, other persons
|
accompanying the defendant, and advance approval by a
|
probation officer, if
the defendant has been placed on |
|
probation or advance approval by the
court, if the |
defendant was placed on conditional discharge;
|
(15) refrain from having any contact, directly or |
indirectly, with
certain specified persons or particular |
types of persons, including but not
limited to members of |
street gangs and drug users or dealers;
|
(16) refrain from having in his or her body the |
presence of any illicit
drug prohibited by the Cannabis |
Control Act, the Illinois Controlled
Substances Act, or the |
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, |
unless prescribed by a physician, and submit samples of
his |
or her blood or urine or both for tests to determine the |
presence of any
illicit drug;
|
(17) if convicted for an offense committed on or after |
June 1, 2008 (the effective date of Public Act 95-464) that |
would qualify the accused as a child sex offender as |
defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the Criminal Code of |
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, refrain from |
communicating with or contacting, by means of the Internet, |
a person who is related to the accused and whom the accused |
reasonably believes to be under 18 years of age; for |
purposes of this paragraph (17), "Internet" has the meaning |
ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of the Criminal Code of |
2012; and a person is related to the accused if the person |
is: (i) the spouse, brother, or sister of the accused; (ii) |
a descendant of the accused; (iii) a first or second cousin |
|
of the accused; or (iv) a step-child or adopted child of |
the accused; |
(18) if convicted for an offense committed on or after |
June 1, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act 95-983) that |
would qualify as a sex offense as defined in the Sex |
Offender Registration Act: |
(i) not access or use a computer or any other |
device with Internet capability without the prior |
written approval of the offender's probation officer, |
except in connection with the offender's employment or |
search for employment with the prior approval of the |
offender's probation officer; |
(ii) submit to periodic unannounced examinations |
of the offender's computer or any other device with |
Internet capability by the offender's probation |
officer, a law enforcement officer, or assigned |
computer or information technology specialist, |
including the retrieval and copying of all data from |
the computer or device and any internal or external |
peripherals and removal of such information, |
equipment, or device to conduct a more thorough |
inspection; |
(iii) submit to the installation on the offender's |
computer or device with Internet capability, at the |
subject's expense, of one or more hardware or software |
systems to monitor the Internet use; and |
|
(iv) submit to any other appropriate restrictions |
concerning the offender's use of or access to a |
computer or any other device with Internet capability |
imposed by the offender's probation officer; and |
(19) refrain from possessing a firearm or other |
dangerous weapon where the offense is a misdemeanor that |
did not involve the intentional or knowing infliction of |
bodily harm or threat of bodily harm. |
(c) The court may as a condition of probation or of |
conditional
discharge require that a person under 18 years of |
age found guilty of any
alcohol, cannabis or controlled |
substance violation, refrain from acquiring
a driver's license |
during
the period of probation or conditional discharge. If |
such person
is in possession of a permit or license, the court |
may require that
the minor refrain from driving or operating |
any motor vehicle during the
period of probation or conditional |
discharge, except as may be necessary in
the course of the |
minor's lawful employment.
|
(d) An offender sentenced to probation or to conditional |
discharge
shall be given a certificate setting forth the |
conditions thereof.
|
(e) Except where the offender has committed a fourth or |
subsequent
violation of subsection (c) of Section 6-303 of the |
Illinois Vehicle Code,
the court shall not require as a |
condition of the sentence of
probation or conditional discharge |
that the offender be committed to a
period of imprisonment in |
|
excess of 6 months.
This 6 month limit shall not include |
periods of confinement given pursuant to
a sentence of county |
impact incarceration under Section 5-8-1.2.
|
Persons committed to imprisonment as a condition of |
probation or
conditional discharge shall not be committed to |
the Department of
Corrections.
|
(f) The court may combine a sentence of periodic |
imprisonment under
Article 7 or a sentence to a county impact |
incarceration program under
Article 8 with a sentence of |
probation or conditional discharge.
|
(g) An offender sentenced to probation or to conditional |
discharge and
who during the term of either undergoes mandatory |
drug or alcohol testing,
or both, or is assigned to be placed |
on an approved electronic monitoring
device, shall be ordered |
to pay all costs incidental to such mandatory drug
or alcohol |
testing, or both, and all costs
incidental to such approved |
electronic monitoring in accordance with the
defendant's |
ability to pay those costs. The county board with
the |
concurrence of the Chief Judge of the judicial
circuit in which |
the county is located shall establish reasonable fees for
the |
cost of maintenance, testing, and incidental expenses related |
to the
mandatory drug or alcohol testing, or both, and all |
costs incidental to
approved electronic monitoring, involved |
in a successful probation program
for the county. The |
concurrence of the Chief Judge shall be in the form of
an |
administrative order.
The fees shall be collected by the clerk |
|
of the circuit court, except as provided in an administrative |
order of the Chief Judge of the circuit court. The clerk of
the |
circuit court shall pay all moneys collected from these fees to |
the county
treasurer who shall use the moneys collected to |
defray the costs of
drug testing, alcohol testing, and |
electronic monitoring.
The county treasurer shall deposit the |
fees collected in the
county working cash fund under Section |
6-27001 or Section 6-29002 of the
Counties Code, as the case |
may be.
The Chief Judge of the circuit court of the county may |
by administrative order establish a program for electronic |
monitoring of offenders, in which a vendor supplies and |
monitors the operation of the electronic monitoring device, and |
collects the fees on behalf of the county. The program shall |
include provisions for indigent offenders and the collection of |
unpaid fees. The program shall not unduly burden the offender |
and shall be subject to review by the Chief Judge.
|
The Chief Judge of the circuit court may suspend any |
additional charges or fees for late payment, interest, or |
damage to any device. |
(h) Jurisdiction over an offender may be transferred from |
the
sentencing court to the court of another circuit with the |
concurrence of
both courts. Further transfers or retransfers of
|
jurisdiction are also
authorized in the same manner. The court |
to which jurisdiction has been
transferred shall have the same |
powers as the sentencing court.
The probation department within |
the circuit to which jurisdiction has been transferred, or |
|
which has agreed to provide supervision, may impose probation |
fees upon receiving the transferred offender, as provided in |
subsection (i). For all transfer cases, as defined in Section |
9b of the Probation and Probation Officers Act, the probation |
department from the original sentencing court shall retain all |
probation fees collected prior to the transfer. After the |
transfer
all probation fees shall be paid to the probation |
department within the
circuit to which jurisdiction has been |
transferred.
|
(i) The court shall impose upon an offender
sentenced to |
probation after January 1, 1989 or to conditional discharge
|
after January 1, 1992 or to community service under the |
supervision of a
probation or court services department after |
January 1, 2004, as a condition of such probation or |
conditional
discharge or supervised community service, a fee of |
$50
for each month of probation or
conditional
discharge |
supervision or supervised community service ordered by the |
court, unless after
determining the inability of the person |
sentenced to probation or conditional
discharge or supervised |
community service to pay the
fee, the court assesses a lesser |
fee. The court may not impose the fee on a
minor who is placed |
in the guardianship or custody of the Department of Children |
and Family Services made a ward of the State under the Juvenile |
Court Act of 1987
while the minor is in placement.
The fee |
shall be imposed only upon
an offender who is actively |
supervised by the
probation and court services
department. The |
|
fee shall be collected by the clerk
of the circuit court. The |
clerk of the circuit court shall pay all monies
collected from |
this fee to the county treasurer for deposit in the
probation |
and court services fund under Section 15.1 of the
Probation and |
Probation Officers Act.
|
A circuit court may not impose a probation fee under this |
subsection (i) in excess of $25
per month unless the circuit |
court has adopted, by administrative
order issued by the chief |
judge, a standard probation fee guide
determining an offender's |
ability to pay Of the
amount collected as a probation fee, up |
to $5 of that fee
collected per month may be used to provide |
services to crime victims
and their families. |
The Court may only waive probation fees based on an |
offender's ability to pay. The probation department may |
re-evaluate an offender's ability to pay every 6 months, and, |
with the approval of the Director of Court Services or the |
Chief Probation Officer, adjust the monthly fee amount. An |
offender may elect to pay probation fees due in a lump sum.
Any |
offender that has been assigned to the supervision of a |
probation department, or has been transferred either under |
subsection (h) of this Section or under any interstate compact, |
shall be required to pay probation fees to the department |
supervising the offender, based on the offender's ability to |
pay.
|
This amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly deletes |
the $10 increase in the fee under this subsection that was |
|
imposed by Public Act 93-616. This deletion is intended to |
control over any other Act of the 93rd General Assembly that |
retains or incorporates that fee increase. |
(i-5) In addition to the fees imposed under subsection (i) |
of this Section, in the case of an offender convicted of a |
felony sex offense (as defined in the Sex Offender Management |
Board Act) or an offense that the court or probation department |
has determined to be sexually motivated (as defined in the Sex |
Offender Management Board Act), the court or the probation |
department shall assess additional fees to pay for all costs of |
treatment, assessment, evaluation for risk and treatment, and |
monitoring the offender, based on that offender's ability to |
pay those costs either as they occur or under a payment plan. |
(j) All fines and costs imposed under this Section for any |
violation of
Chapters 3, 4, 6, and 11 of the Illinois Vehicle |
Code, or a similar
provision of a local ordinance, and any |
violation of the Child Passenger
Protection Act, or a similar |
provision of a local ordinance, shall be
collected and |
disbursed by the circuit clerk as provided under Section 27.5
|
of the Clerks of Courts Act.
|
(k) Any offender who is sentenced to probation or |
conditional discharge for a felony sex offense as defined in |
the Sex Offender Management Board Act or any offense that the |
court or probation department has determined to be sexually |
motivated as defined in the Sex Offender Management Board Act |
shall be required to refrain from any contact, directly or |
|
indirectly, with any persons specified by the court and shall |
be available for all evaluations and treatment programs |
required by the court or the probation department.
|
(l) The court may order an offender who is sentenced to |
probation or conditional
discharge for a violation of an order |
of protection be placed under electronic surveillance as |
provided in Section 5-8A-7 of this Code. |
(Source: P.A. 98-575, eff. 1-1-14; 98-718, eff. 1-1-15; 99-143, |
eff. 7-27-15; 99-797, eff. 8-12-16.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-6-3.1) (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-6-3.1)
|
Sec. 5-6-3.1. Incidents and conditions of supervision.
|
(a) When a defendant is placed on supervision, the court |
shall enter
an order for supervision specifying the period of |
such supervision, and
shall defer further proceedings in the |
case until the conclusion of the
period.
|
(b) The period of supervision shall be reasonable under all |
of the
circumstances of the case, but may not be longer than 2 |
years, unless the
defendant has failed to pay the assessment |
required by Section 10.3 of the
Cannabis Control Act,
Section |
411.2 of the Illinois Controlled
Substances Act, or Section 80 |
of the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, in |
which case the court may extend supervision beyond 2 years.
|
Additionally, the court shall order the defendant to perform no |
less than 30
hours of community service and not more than 120 |
hours of community service, if
community service is available |
|
in the
jurisdiction and is funded and approved by the county |
board where the offense
was committed,
when the offense (1) was
|
related to or in furtherance of the criminal activities of an |
organized gang or
was motivated by the defendant's membership |
in or allegiance to an organized
gang; or (2) is a violation of |
any Section of Article 24 of the Criminal
Code of 1961 or the |
Criminal Code of 2012 where a disposition of supervision is not |
prohibited by Section
5-6-1 of this Code.
The
community service |
shall include, but not be limited to, the cleanup and repair
of |
any damage caused by violation of Section 21-1.3 of the |
Criminal Code of
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 and similar |
damages to property located within the municipality or county
|
in which the violation occurred. Where possible and reasonable, |
the community
service should be performed in the offender's |
neighborhood.
|
For the purposes of this
Section, "organized gang" has the |
meaning ascribed to it in Section 10 of the
Illinois Streetgang |
Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act.
|
(c) The court may in addition to other reasonable |
conditions
relating to the nature of the offense or the |
rehabilitation of the
defendant as determined for each |
defendant in the proper discretion of
the court require that |
the person:
|
(1) make a report to and appear in person before or |
participate with
the court or such courts, person, or |
social service agency as directed
by the court in the order |
|
of supervision;
|
(2) pay a fine and costs;
|
(3) work or pursue a course of study or vocational |
training;
|
(4) undergo medical, psychological or psychiatric |
treatment; or
treatment for drug addiction or alcoholism;
|
(5) attend or reside in a facility established for the |
instruction
or residence of defendants on probation;
|
(6) support his dependents;
|
(7) refrain from possessing a firearm or other |
dangerous weapon;
|
(8) and in addition, if a minor:
|
(i) reside with his parents or in a foster home;
|
(ii) attend school;
|
(iii) attend a non-residential program for youth;
|
(iv) contribute to his own support at home or in a |
foster home; or
|
(v) with the consent of the superintendent of the
|
facility, attend an educational program at a facility |
other than the school
in which the
offense was |
committed if he
or she is placed on supervision for a |
crime of violence as
defined in
Section 2 of the Crime |
Victims Compensation Act committed in a school, on the
|
real
property
comprising a school, or within 1,000 feet |
of the real property comprising a
school;
|
(9) make restitution or reparation in an amount not to |
|
exceed actual
loss or damage to property and pecuniary loss |
or make restitution under Section
5-5-6 to a domestic |
violence shelter. The court shall
determine the amount and |
conditions of payment;
|
(10) perform some reasonable public or community |
service;
|
(11) comply with the terms and conditions of an order |
of protection
issued by the court pursuant to the Illinois |
Domestic Violence Act of 1986 or
an order of protection |
issued by the court of another state, tribe, or United
|
States territory.
If the court has ordered the defendant to |
make a report and appear in
person under paragraph (1) of |
this subsection, a copy of the order of
protection shall be |
transmitted to the person or agency so designated
by the |
court;
|
(12) reimburse any "local anti-crime program" as |
defined in Section 7 of
the Anti-Crime Advisory Council Act |
for any reasonable expenses incurred by the
program on the |
offender's case, not to exceed the maximum amount of the
|
fine authorized for the offense for which the defendant was |
sentenced;
|
(13) contribute a reasonable sum of money, not to
|
exceed the maximum amount of the fine authorized for the |
offense for which
the defendant was sentenced, (i) to a |
"local anti-crime program", as defined
in Section 7 of the |
Anti-Crime Advisory Council Act, or (ii) for offenses under |
|
the jurisdiction of the Department of Natural Resources, to |
the fund established by the Department of Natural Resources |
for the purchase of evidence for investigation purposes and |
to conduct investigations as outlined in Section 805-105 of |
the Department of Natural Resources (Conservation) Law;
|
(14) refrain from entering into a designated |
geographic area except
upon such terms as the court finds |
appropriate. Such terms may include
consideration of the |
purpose of the entry, the time of day, other persons
|
accompanying the defendant, and advance approval by a |
probation officer;
|
(15) refrain from having any contact, directly or |
indirectly, with
certain specified persons or particular |
types of person, including but not
limited to members of |
street gangs and drug users or dealers;
|
(16) refrain from having in his or her body the |
presence of any illicit
drug prohibited by the Cannabis |
Control Act, the Illinois Controlled
Substances Act, or the |
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, |
unless prescribed by a physician, and submit samples of
his |
or her blood or urine or both for tests to determine the |
presence of any
illicit drug;
|
(17) refrain from operating any motor vehicle not |
equipped with an
ignition interlock device as defined in |
Section 1-129.1 of the Illinois
Vehicle Code; under this |
condition the court may allow a defendant who is not
|
|
self-employed to operate a vehicle owned by the defendant's |
employer that is
not equipped with an ignition interlock |
device in the course and scope of the
defendant's |
employment; and
|
(18) if placed on supervision for a sex offense as |
defined in subsection (a-5) of Section 3-1-2 of this Code, |
unless the offender is a parent or guardian of the person |
under 18 years of age present in the home and no |
non-familial minors are present, not participate in a |
holiday event involving
children
under 18 years of age, |
such as distributing candy or other items to children on
|
Halloween,
wearing a Santa Claus costume on or preceding |
Christmas, being employed as a
department store Santa |
Claus, or wearing an Easter Bunny costume on or
preceding
|
Easter. |
(c-5) If payment of restitution as ordered has not been |
made, the victim shall file a
petition notifying the sentencing |
court, any other person to whom restitution is owed, and
the |
State's Attorney of the status of the ordered restitution |
payments unpaid at least 90
days before the supervision |
expiration date. If payment as ordered has not been made, the
|
court shall hold a review hearing prior to the expiration date, |
unless the hearing
is voluntarily waived by the defendant with |
the knowledge that waiver may result in an
extension of the |
supervision period or in a revocation of supervision. If the |
court does not
extend supervision, it shall issue a judgment |
|
for the unpaid restitution and direct the clerk
of the circuit |
court to file and enter the judgment in the judgment and lien |
docket, without
fee, unless it finds that the victim has |
recovered a judgment against the
defendant for the amount |
covered by the restitution order. If the court issues a
|
judgment for the unpaid restitution, the court shall send to |
the defendant at his or her last known
address written |
notification that a civil judgment has been issued for the |
unpaid
restitution. |
(d) The court shall defer entering any judgment on the |
charges
until the conclusion of the supervision.
|
(e) At the conclusion of the period of supervision, if the |
court
determines that the defendant has successfully complied |
with all of the
conditions of supervision, the court shall |
discharge the defendant and
enter a judgment dismissing the |
charges.
|
(f) Discharge and dismissal upon a successful conclusion of |
a
disposition of supervision shall be deemed without |
adjudication of guilt
and shall not be termed a conviction for |
purposes of disqualification or
disabilities imposed by law |
upon conviction of a crime. Two years after the
discharge and |
dismissal under this Section, unless the disposition of
|
supervision was for a violation of Sections 3-707, 3-708, |
3-710, 5-401.3, or 11-503 of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a |
similar
provision of a local ordinance, or for a violation of |
Sections 12-3.2, 16-25,
or 16A-3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 |
|
or the Criminal Code of 2012, in which case it shall be 5
years |
after discharge and dismissal, a person may have his record
of |
arrest sealed or expunged as may be provided by law. However, |
any
defendant placed on supervision before January 1, 1980, may |
move for
sealing or expungement of his arrest record, as |
provided by law, at any
time after discharge and dismissal |
under this Section.
A person placed on supervision for a sexual |
offense committed against a minor
as defined in clause |
(a)(1)(L) of Section 5.2 of the Criminal Identification Act
or |
for a violation of Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code |
or a
similar provision of a local ordinance
shall not have his |
or her record of arrest sealed or expunged.
|
(g) A defendant placed on supervision and who during the |
period of
supervision undergoes mandatory drug or alcohol |
testing, or both, or is
assigned to be placed on an approved |
electronic monitoring device, shall be
ordered to pay the costs |
incidental to such mandatory drug or alcohol
testing, or both, |
and costs incidental to such approved electronic
monitoring in |
accordance with the defendant's ability to pay those costs.
The |
county board with the concurrence of the Chief Judge of the |
judicial
circuit in which the county is located shall establish |
reasonable fees for
the cost of maintenance, testing, and |
incidental expenses related to the
mandatory drug or alcohol |
testing, or both, and all costs incidental to
approved |
electronic monitoring, of all defendants placed on |
supervision.
The concurrence of the Chief Judge shall be in the |
|
form of an
administrative order.
The fees shall be collected by |
the clerk of the circuit court, except as provided in an |
administrative order of the Chief Judge of the circuit court. |
The clerk of
the circuit court shall pay all moneys collected |
from these fees to the county
treasurer who shall use the |
moneys collected to defray the costs of
drug testing, alcohol |
testing, and electronic monitoring.
The county treasurer shall |
deposit the fees collected in the
county working cash fund |
under Section 6-27001 or Section 6-29002 of the
Counties Code, |
as the case may be.
|
The Chief Judge of the circuit court of the county may by |
administrative order establish a program for electronic |
monitoring of offenders, in which a vendor supplies and |
monitors the operation of the electronic monitoring device, and |
collects the fees on behalf of the county. The program shall |
include provisions for indigent offenders and the collection of |
unpaid fees. The program shall not unduly burden the offender |
and shall be subject to review by the Chief Judge. |
The Chief Judge of the circuit court may suspend any |
additional charges or fees for late payment, interest, or |
damage to any device. |
(h) A disposition of supervision is a final order for the |
purposes
of appeal.
|
(i) The court shall impose upon a defendant placed on |
supervision
after January 1, 1992 or to community service under |
the supervision of a
probation or court services department |
|
after January 1, 2004, as a condition
of supervision or |
supervised community service, a fee of $50 for
each month of |
supervision or supervised community service ordered by the
|
court, unless after
determining the inability of the person |
placed on supervision or supervised
community service to pay |
the
fee, the court assesses a lesser fee. The court may not |
impose the fee on a
minor who is placed in the guardianship or |
custody of the Department of Children and Family Services made |
a ward of the State under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987
while |
the minor is in placement.
The fee shall be imposed only upon a
|
defendant who is actively supervised by the
probation and court |
services
department. The fee shall be collected by the clerk of |
the circuit court.
The clerk of the circuit court shall pay all |
monies collected from this fee
to the county treasurer for |
deposit in the probation and court services
fund pursuant to |
Section 15.1 of the Probation and
Probation Officers Act.
|
A circuit court may not impose a probation fee in excess of |
$25
per month unless the circuit court has adopted, by |
administrative
order issued by the chief judge, a standard |
probation fee guide
determining an offender's ability to pay. |
Of the
amount collected as a probation fee, not to exceed $5 of |
that fee
collected per month may be used to provide services to |
crime victims
and their families. |
The Court may only waive probation fees based on an |
offender's ability to pay. The probation department may |
re-evaluate an offender's ability to pay every 6 months, and, |
|
with the approval of the Director of Court Services or the |
Chief Probation Officer, adjust the monthly fee amount. An |
offender may elect to pay probation fees due in a lump sum.
Any |
offender that has been assigned to the supervision of a |
probation department, or has been transferred either under |
subsection (h) of this Section or under any interstate compact, |
shall be required to pay probation fees to the department |
supervising the offender, based on the offender's ability to |
pay.
|
(j) All fines and costs imposed under this Section for any
|
violation of Chapters 3, 4, 6, and 11 of the Illinois Vehicle |
Code, or a
similar provision of a local ordinance, and any |
violation of the Child
Passenger Protection Act, or a similar |
provision of a local ordinance, shall
be collected and |
disbursed by the circuit clerk as provided under Section
27.5 |
of the Clerks of Courts Act.
|
(k) A defendant at least 17 years of age who is placed on |
supervision
for a misdemeanor in a county of 3,000,000 or more |
inhabitants
and who has not been previously convicted of a |
misdemeanor or felony
may as a condition of his or her |
supervision be required by the court to
attend educational |
courses designed to prepare the defendant for a high school
|
diploma and to work toward a high school diploma or to work |
toward passing high school equivalency testing or to work
|
toward completing a vocational training program approved by the |
court. The
defendant placed on supervision must attend a public |
|
institution of education
to obtain the educational or |
vocational training required by this subsection
(k). The |
defendant placed on supervision shall be required to pay for |
the cost
of the educational courses or high school equivalency |
testing if a fee is charged for those courses
or testing. The |
court shall revoke the supervision of a person who wilfully |
fails
to comply with this subsection (k). The court shall |
resentence the defendant
upon revocation of supervision as |
provided in Section 5-6-4. This subsection
(k) does not apply |
to a defendant who has a high school diploma or has
|
successfully passed high school equivalency testing. This |
subsection (k) does not apply to a
defendant who is determined |
by the court to be a person with a developmental disability or
|
otherwise mentally incapable of completing the
educational or |
vocational program.
|
(l) The court shall require a defendant placed on |
supervision for
possession of a substance
prohibited by the |
Cannabis Control Act, the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, |
or the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act
|
after a previous conviction or disposition of supervision for |
possession of a
substance prohibited by the Cannabis Control |
Act, the Illinois Controlled
Substances Act, or the |
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act or a |
sentence of probation under Section 10 of the Cannabis
Control |
Act or Section 410 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act
|
and after a finding by the court that the person is addicted, |
|
to undergo
treatment at a substance abuse program approved by |
the court.
|
(m) The Secretary of State shall require anyone placed on |
court supervision
for a
violation of Section 3-707 of the |
Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar provision
of a local |
ordinance
to give proof of his or her financial
responsibility |
as
defined in Section 7-315 of the Illinois Vehicle Code. The |
proof shall be
maintained by the individual in a manner |
satisfactory to the Secretary of State
for
a
minimum period of |
3 years after the date the proof is first filed.
The proof |
shall be limited to a single action per arrest and may not be
|
affected by any post-sentence disposition. The Secretary of |
State shall
suspend the driver's license of any person
|
determined by the Secretary to be in violation of this |
subsection. |
(n) Any offender placed on supervision for any offense that |
the court or probation department has determined to be sexually |
motivated as defined in the Sex Offender Management Board Act |
shall be required to refrain from any contact, directly or |
indirectly, with any persons specified by the court and shall |
be available for all evaluations and treatment programs |
required by the court or the probation department.
|
(o) An offender placed on supervision for a sex offense as |
defined in the Sex Offender
Management Board Act shall refrain |
from residing at the same address or in the same condominium |
unit or apartment unit or in the same condominium complex or |
|
apartment complex with another person he or she knows or |
reasonably should know is a convicted sex offender or has been |
placed on supervision for a sex offense. The provisions of this |
subsection (o) do not apply to a person convicted of a sex |
offense who is placed in a Department of Corrections licensed |
transitional housing facility for sex offenders. |
(p) An offender placed on supervision for an offense |
committed on or after June 1, 2008
(the effective date of |
Public Act 95-464)
that would qualify the accused as a child |
sex offender as defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 shall |
refrain from communicating with or contacting, by means of the |
Internet, a person who is not related to the accused and whom |
the accused reasonably believes to be under 18 years of age. |
For purposes of this subsection (p), "Internet" has the meaning |
ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012; |
and a person is not related to the accused if the person is |
not: (i) the spouse, brother, or sister of the accused; (ii) a |
descendant of the accused; (iii) a first or second cousin of |
the accused; or (iv) a step-child or adopted child of the |
accused.
|
(q) An offender placed on supervision for an offense |
committed on or after June 1, 2008
(the effective date of |
Public Act 95-464)
that would qualify the accused as a child |
sex offender as defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 shall, if so |
|
ordered by the court, refrain from communicating with or |
contacting, by means of the Internet, a person who is related |
to the accused and whom the accused reasonably believes to be |
under 18 years of age. For purposes of this subsection (q), |
"Internet" has the meaning ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of |
the Criminal Code of 2012; and a person is related to the |
accused if the person is: (i) the spouse, brother, or sister of |
the accused; (ii) a descendant of the accused; (iii) a first or |
second cousin of the accused; or (iv) a step-child or adopted |
child of the accused.
|
(r) An offender placed on supervision for an offense under |
Section 11-6, 11-9.1, 11-14.4 that involves soliciting for a |
juvenile prostitute, 11-15.1, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or |
11-21 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of |
2012, or any attempt to commit any of these offenses, committed |
on or after June 1, 2009 ( the effective date of Public Act |
95-983) this amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly shall: |
(i) not access or use a computer or any other device |
with Internet capability without the prior written |
approval of the court, except in connection with the |
offender's employment or search for employment with the |
prior approval of the court; |
(ii) submit to periodic unannounced examinations of |
the offender's computer or any other device with Internet |
capability by the offender's probation officer, a law |
enforcement officer, or assigned computer or information |
|
technology specialist, including the retrieval and copying |
of all data from the computer or device and any internal or |
external peripherals and removal of such information, |
equipment, or device to conduct a more thorough inspection; |
(iii) submit to the installation on the offender's |
computer or device with Internet capability, at the |
offender's expense, of one or more hardware or software |
systems to monitor the Internet use; and |
(iv) submit to any other appropriate restrictions |
concerning the offender's use of or access to a computer or |
any other device with Internet capability imposed by the |
court. |
(s) An offender placed on supervision for an offense that |
is a sex offense as defined in Section 2 of the Sex Offender |
Registration Act that is committed on or after January 1, 2010 |
(the effective date of Public Act 96-362) that requires the |
person to register as a sex offender under that Act, may not |
knowingly use any computer scrub software on any computer that |
the sex offender uses. |
(t) An offender placed on supervision for a sex offense as |
defined in the Sex Offender
Registration Act committed on or |
after January 1, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act 96-262) |
shall refrain from accessing or using a social networking |
website as defined in Section 17-0.5 of the Criminal Code of |
2012. |
(u) Jurisdiction over an offender may be transferred from |
|
the sentencing court to the court of another circuit with the |
concurrence of both courts. Further transfers or retransfers of |
jurisdiction are also authorized in the same manner. The court |
to which jurisdiction has been transferred shall have the same |
powers as the sentencing court. The probation department within |
the circuit to which jurisdiction has been transferred may |
impose probation fees upon receiving the transferred offender, |
as provided in subsection (i). The probation department from |
the original sentencing court shall retain all probation fees |
collected prior to the transfer. |
(Source: P.A. 98-718, eff. 1-1-15; 98-940, eff. 1-1-15; 99-78, |
eff. 7-20-15; 99-143, eff. 7-27-15; 99-642, eff. 7-28-16; |
99-797, eff. 8-12-16; revised 9-1-16.) |
Section 90. The Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Confidentiality Act is amended by changing |
Section 9 as follows:
|
(740 ILCS 110/9) (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 809)
|
Sec. 9.
In the course of providing services and after the |
conclusion of the
provision of services, including for the |
purposes of treatment and care coordination, a therapist, |
integrated health system, or member of an interdisciplinary |
team may use, disclose, or re-disclose a record or |
communications
without consent to:
|
(1) the therapist's supervisor, a consulting |
|
therapist, members of a
staff team participating in the |
provision of services, a record custodian, a business |
associate, an integrated health system, a member of an |
interdisciplinary team,
or a person acting under the |
supervision and control of the therapist;
|
(2) persons conducting a peer review of the services |
being provided;
|
(3) the Institute for Juvenile Research and the |
Institute for the
Study of Developmental Disabilities;
|
(4) an attorney or advocate consulted by a therapist or |
agency which
provides services concerning the therapist's |
or agency's legal rights or
duties in relation to the |
recipient and the services being provided; and
|
(5) the Inspector General of the Department of Children |
and Family
Services when such records or communications are |
relevant to a pending
investigation authorized by Section |
35.5 of the Children and Family Services
Act where:
|
(A) the recipient was either (i) a parent, foster |
parent, or caretaker
who is an alleged perpetrator of |
abuse or neglect or the subject of a
dependency |
investigation or (ii) a victim of alleged abuse or |
neglect who was not a youth in care as defined in |
Section 4d of the Children and Family Services Act |
non-ward victim of alleged abuse or
neglect , and
|
(B) available information demonstrates that the |
mental health of the
recipient was or should have been |
|
an issue to the safety of the child.
|
In the course of providing services, a therapist, |
integrated health system, or member of an interdisciplinary |
team may disclose a record or
communications without consent to |
any department, agency, institution or
facility which has |
custody of the recipient pursuant to State statute or any
court |
order of commitment.
|
Information may be disclosed under this Section only to the |
extent that
knowledge of the record or communications is |
essential to the purpose for
which disclosure is made and only |
after the recipient is informed that such
disclosure may be |
made. A person to whom disclosure is made under this
Section |
shall not redisclose any information except as provided in this |
Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-378, eff. 8-16-13.)
|
Section 95. The Adoption Act is amended by changing |
Sections 1, 12.2, 18.3, and 18.9 as follows:
|
(750 ILCS 50/1) (from Ch. 40, par. 1501)
|
Sec. 1. Definitions. When used in this Act, unless the |
context
otherwise requires:
|
A. "Child" means a person under legal age subject to |
adoption under
this Act.
|
B. "Related child" means a child subject to adoption where |
either or both of
the adopting parents stands in any of the |
|
following relationships to the child
by blood, marriage, |
adoption, or civil union: parent, grand-parent, |
great-grandparent, brother, sister, step-parent,
|
step-grandparent, step-brother, step-sister, uncle, aunt, |
great-uncle,
great-aunt, first cousin, or second cousin. A |
person is related to the child as a first cousin or second |
cousin if they are both related to the same ancestor as either |
grandchild or great-grandchild. A child whose parent has |
executed
a consent to adoption, a surrender, or a waiver |
pursuant to Section 10 of this Act or whose parent has signed a |
denial of paternity pursuant to Section 12 of the Vital Records |
Act or Section 12a of this Act, or whose parent has had his or |
her parental rights
terminated, is not a related child to that |
person, unless (1) the consent is
determined to be void or is |
void pursuant to subsection O of Section 10 of this Act;
or (2) |
the parent of the child executed a consent to adoption by a |
specified person or persons pursuant to subsection A-1 of |
Section 10 of this Act and a court of competent jurisdiction |
finds that such consent is void; or (3) the order terminating |
the parental rights of the parent is vacated by a court of |
competent jurisdiction.
|
C. "Agency" for the purpose of this Act means a public |
child welfare agency
or a licensed child welfare agency.
|
D. "Unfit person" means any person whom the court shall |
find to be unfit
to have a child, without regard to the |
likelihood that the child will be
placed for adoption. The |
|
grounds of unfitness are any one or more
of the following, |
except that a person shall not be considered an unfit
person |
for the sole reason that the person has relinquished a child in
|
accordance with the Abandoned Newborn Infant Protection Act:
|
(a) Abandonment of the child.
|
(a-1) Abandonment of a newborn infant in a hospital.
|
(a-2) Abandonment of a newborn infant in any setting |
where the evidence
suggests that the parent intended to |
relinquish his or her parental rights.
|
(b) Failure to maintain a reasonable degree of |
interest, concern or
responsibility as to the child's |
welfare.
|
(c) Desertion of the child for more than 3 months next |
preceding the
commencement of the Adoption proceeding.
|
(d) Substantial neglect
of the
child if continuous or |
repeated.
|
(d-1) Substantial neglect, if continuous or repeated, |
of any child
residing in the household which resulted in |
the death of that child.
|
(e) Extreme or repeated cruelty to the child.
|
(f) There is a rebuttable presumption, which can be |
overcome only by clear and convincing evidence, that a |
parent is unfit if:
|
(1) Two or more findings of physical abuse have |
been entered regarding any children under Section 2-21 |
of the Juvenile Court Act
of 1987, the most recent of |
|
which was determined by the juvenile court
hearing the |
matter to be supported by clear and convincing |
evidence; or |
(2) The parent has been convicted or found not |
guilty by reason of insanity and the conviction or |
finding resulted from the death of any child by |
physical abuse; or
|
(3) There is a finding of physical child abuse |
resulting from the death of any
child under Section |
2-21 of the
Juvenile Court Act of 1987. |
No conviction or finding of delinquency pursuant to |
Article V of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 shall be |
considered a criminal conviction for the purpose of |
applying any presumption under this item (f).
|
(g) Failure to protect the child from conditions within |
his environment
injurious to the child's welfare.
|
(h) Other neglect of, or misconduct toward the child; |
provided that in
making a finding of unfitness the court |
hearing the adoption proceeding
shall not be bound by any |
previous finding, order or judgment affecting
or |
determining the rights of the parents toward the child |
sought to be adopted
in any other proceeding except such |
proceedings terminating parental rights
as shall be had |
under either this Act, the Juvenile Court Act or
the |
Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
|
(i) Depravity. Conviction of any one of the following
|
|
crimes shall create a presumption that a parent is depraved |
which can be
overcome only by clear and convincing |
evidence:
(1) first degree murder in violation of paragraph |
1 or
2 of subsection (a) of Section 9-1 of the Criminal |
Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 or conviction
of |
second degree murder in violation of subsection (a) of |
Section 9-2 of the
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal |
Code of 2012 of a parent of the child to be adopted; (2)
|
first degree murder or second degree murder of any child in
|
violation of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code |
of 2012; (3)
attempt or conspiracy to commit first degree |
murder or second degree murder
of any child in violation of |
the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012; (4)
|
solicitation to commit murder of any child, solicitation to
|
commit murder of any child for hire, or solicitation to |
commit second
degree murder of any child in violation of |
the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012; (5)
|
predatory criminal sexual assault of a child in violation |
of
Section 11-1.40 or 12-14.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 |
or the Criminal Code of 2012; (6) heinous battery of any |
child in violation of the Criminal Code of 1961; or (7) |
aggravated battery of any child in violation of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.
|
There is a rebuttable presumption that a parent is |
depraved if the parent
has been criminally convicted of at |
least 3 felonies under the laws of this
State or any other |
|
state, or under federal law, or the criminal laws of any
|
United States territory; and at least
one of these
|
convictions took place within 5 years of the filing of the |
petition or motion
seeking termination of parental rights.
|
There is a rebuttable presumption that a parent is |
depraved if that
parent
has
been criminally convicted of |
either first or second degree murder of any person
as |
defined in the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code |
of 2012 within 10 years of the filing date of
the petition |
or motion to terminate parental rights. |
No conviction or finding of delinquency pursuant to |
Article 5 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 shall be |
considered a criminal conviction for the purpose of |
applying any presumption under this item (i).
|
(j) Open and notorious adultery or fornication.
|
(j-1) (Blank).
|
(k) Habitual drunkenness or addiction to drugs, other |
than those
prescribed by a physician, for at least one year |
immediately
prior to the commencement of the unfitness |
proceeding.
|
There is a rebuttable presumption that a parent is |
unfit under this
subsection
with respect to any child to |
which that parent gives birth where there is a
confirmed
|
test result that at birth the child's blood, urine, or |
meconium contained any
amount of a controlled substance as |
defined in subsection (f) of Section 102 of
the Illinois |
|
Controlled Substances Act or metabolites of such |
substances, the
presence of which in the newborn infant was |
not the result of medical treatment
administered to the |
mother or the newborn infant; and the biological mother of
|
this child is the biological mother of at least one other |
child who was
adjudicated a neglected minor under |
subsection (c) of Section 2-3 of the
Juvenile Court Act of |
1987.
|
(l) Failure to demonstrate a reasonable degree of |
interest, concern or
responsibility as to the welfare of a |
new born child during the first 30
days after its birth.
|
(m) Failure by a parent (i) to make reasonable efforts |
to correct the
conditions that were the basis for the |
removal of the child from the
parent during any 9-month |
period following the adjudication of neglected or abused |
minor under Section 2-3 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 |
or dependent minor under Section 2-4 of that Act, or (ii) |
to make reasonable progress
toward the return of the
child |
to the parent during any 9-month period following the |
adjudication of
neglected or abused minor under Section 2-3 |
of the Juvenile Court
Act of 1987 or dependent minor under |
Section 2-4 of that Act.
If a service plan has been |
established as
required under
Section 8.2 of the Abused and |
Neglected Child Reporting Act to correct the
conditions |
that were the basis for the removal of the child from the |
parent
and if those services were available,
then, for |
|
purposes of this Act, "failure to make reasonable progress |
toward the
return of the child to the parent" includes the |
parent's failure to substantially fulfill his or her |
obligations
under
the service plan and correct the |
conditions that brought the child into care
during any |
9-month period
following the adjudication under Section |
2-3 or 2-4 of the Juvenile Court
Act of 1987. |
Notwithstanding any other provision, when a petition or |
motion seeks to terminate parental rights on the basis of |
item (ii) of this subsection (m), the petitioner shall file |
with the court and serve on the parties a pleading that |
specifies the 9-month period or periods relied on. The |
pleading shall be filed and served on the parties no later |
than 3 weeks before the date set by the court for closure |
of discovery, and the allegations in the pleading shall be |
treated as incorporated into the petition or motion. |
Failure of a respondent to file a written denial of the |
allegations in the pleading shall not be treated as an |
admission that the allegations are true.
|
(m-1) (Blank).
|
(n) Evidence of intent to forgo his or her parental |
rights,
whether or
not the child is a ward of the court, |
(1) as manifested
by his or her failure for a period of 12 |
months: (i) to visit the child,
(ii) to communicate with |
the child or agency, although able to do so and
not |
prevented from doing so by an agency or by court order, or |
|
(iii) to
maintain contact with or plan for the future of |
the child, although physically
able to do so, or (2) as |
manifested by the father's failure, where he
and the mother |
of the child were unmarried to each other at the time of |
the
child's birth, (i) to commence legal proceedings to |
establish his paternity
under the Illinois Parentage Act of |
1984, the Illinois Parentage Act of 2015, or the law of the |
jurisdiction of
the child's birth within 30 days of being |
informed, pursuant to Section 12a
of this Act, that he is |
the father or the likely father of the child or,
after |
being so informed where the child is not yet born, within |
30 days of
the child's birth, or (ii) to make a good faith |
effort to pay a reasonable
amount of the expenses related |
to the birth of the child and to provide a
reasonable |
amount for the financial support of the child, the court to
|
consider in its determination all relevant circumstances, |
including the
financial condition of both parents; |
provided that the ground for
termination provided in this |
subparagraph (n)(2)(ii) shall only be
available where the |
petition is brought by the mother or the husband of
the |
mother.
|
Contact or communication by a parent with his or her |
child that does not
demonstrate affection and concern does |
not constitute reasonable contact
and planning under |
subdivision (n). In the absence of evidence to the
|
contrary, the ability to visit, communicate, maintain |
|
contact, pay
expenses and plan for the future shall be |
presumed. The subjective intent
of the parent, whether |
expressed or otherwise, unsupported by evidence of
the |
foregoing parental acts manifesting that intent, shall not |
preclude a
determination that the parent has intended to |
forgo his or her
parental
rights. In making this |
determination, the court may consider but shall not
require |
a showing of diligent efforts by an authorized agency to |
encourage
the parent to perform the acts specified in |
subdivision (n).
|
It shall be an affirmative defense to any allegation |
under paragraph
(2) of this subsection that the father's |
failure was due to circumstances
beyond his control or to |
impediments created by the mother or any other
person |
having legal custody. Proof of that fact need only be by a
|
preponderance of the evidence.
|
(o) Repeated or continuous failure by the parents, |
although physically
and financially able, to provide the |
child with adequate food, clothing,
or shelter.
|
(p) Inability to discharge parental responsibilities |
supported by
competent evidence from a psychiatrist, |
licensed clinical social
worker, or clinical psychologist |
of mental
impairment, mental illness or an intellectual |
disability as defined in Section
1-116 of the Mental Health |
and Developmental Disabilities Code, or
developmental |
disability as defined in Section 1-106 of that Code, and
|
|
there is sufficient justification to believe that the |
inability to
discharge parental responsibilities shall |
extend beyond a reasonable
time period. However, this |
subdivision (p) shall not be construed so as to
permit a |
licensed clinical social worker to conduct any medical |
diagnosis to
determine mental illness or mental |
impairment.
|
(q) (Blank).
|
(r) The child is in the temporary custody or |
guardianship of the
Department of Children and Family |
Services, the parent is incarcerated as a
result of |
criminal conviction at the time the petition or motion for
|
termination of parental rights is filed, prior to |
incarceration the parent had
little or no contact with the |
child or provided little or no support for the
child, and |
the parent's incarceration will prevent the parent from |
discharging
his or her parental responsibilities for the |
child for a period in excess of 2
years after the filing of |
the petition or motion for termination of parental
rights.
|
(s) The child is in the temporary custody or |
guardianship of the
Department of Children and Family |
Services, the parent is incarcerated at the
time the |
petition or motion for termination of parental rights is |
filed, the
parent has been repeatedly incarcerated as a |
result of criminal convictions,
and the parent's repeated |
incarceration has prevented the parent from
discharging |
|
his or her parental responsibilities for the child.
|
(t) A finding that at birth the child's blood,
urine, |
or meconium contained any amount of a controlled substance |
as
defined in subsection (f) of Section 102 of the Illinois |
Controlled Substances
Act, or a metabolite of a controlled |
substance, with the exception of
controlled substances or |
metabolites of such substances, the presence of which
in |
the newborn infant was the result of medical treatment |
administered to the
mother or the newborn infant, and that |
the biological mother of this child is
the biological |
mother of at least one other child who was adjudicated a
|
neglected minor under subsection (c) of Section 2-3 of the |
Juvenile Court Act
of 1987, after which the biological |
mother had the opportunity to enroll in
and participate in |
a clinically appropriate substance abuse
counseling, |
treatment, and rehabilitation program.
|
E. "Parent" means a person who is the legal mother or legal |
father of the child as defined in subsection X or Y of this |
Section. For the purpose of this Act, a parent who has executed |
a consent to adoption, a surrender, or a waiver pursuant to |
Section 10 of this Act, who has signed a Denial of Paternity |
pursuant to Section 12 of the Vital Records Act or Section 12a |
of this Act, or whose parental rights have been terminated by a |
court, is not a parent of the child who was the subject of the |
consent, surrender, waiver, or denial unless (1) the consent is |
void pursuant to subsection O of Section 10 of this Act; or (2) |
|
the person executed a consent to adoption by a specified person |
or persons pursuant to subsection A-1 of Section 10 of this Act |
and a court of competent jurisdiction finds that the consent is |
void; or (3) the order terminating the parental rights of the |
person is vacated by a court of competent jurisdiction.
|
F. A person is available for adoption when the person is:
|
(a) a child who has been surrendered for adoption to an |
agency and to
whose adoption the agency has thereafter |
consented;
|
(b) a child to whose adoption a person authorized by |
law, other than his
parents, has consented, or to whose |
adoption no consent is required pursuant
to Section 8 of |
this Act;
|
(c) a child who is in the custody of persons who intend |
to adopt him
through placement made by his parents;
|
(c-1) a child for whom a parent has signed a specific |
consent pursuant
to subsection O of Section 10;
|
(d) an adult who meets the conditions set forth in |
Section 3 of this
Act; or
|
(e) a child who has been relinquished as defined in |
Section 10 of the
Abandoned Newborn Infant Protection Act.
|
A person who would otherwise be available for adoption |
shall not be
deemed unavailable for adoption solely by reason |
of his or her death.
|
G. The singular includes the plural and the plural includes
|
the singular and the "male" includes the "female", as the |
|
context of this
Act may require.
|
H. (Blank).
|
I. "Habitual residence" has the meaning ascribed to it in |
the federal Intercountry Adoption Act of 2000 and regulations |
promulgated thereunder.
|
J. "Immediate relatives" means the biological parents, the |
parents of
the biological parents and siblings of the |
biological parents.
|
K. "Intercountry adoption" is a process by which a child |
from a country
other than the United States is adopted by |
persons who are habitual residents of the United States, or the |
child is a habitual resident of the United States who is |
adopted by persons who are habitual residents of a country |
other than the United States.
|
L. (Blank).
|
M. "Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children" is a |
law enacted by all
states and certain territories for the |
purpose of establishing uniform procedures for handling
the |
interstate placement of children in foster homes, adoptive |
homes, or
other child care facilities.
|
N. (Blank).
|
O. "Preadoption requirements" means any conditions or |
standards established by the laws or administrative rules of |
this State that must be met by a prospective adoptive parent
|
prior to the placement of a child in an adoptive home.
|
P. "Abused child" means a child whose parent or immediate |
|
family member,
or any person responsible for the child's |
welfare, or any individual
residing in the same home as the |
child, or a paramour of the child's parent:
|
(a) inflicts, causes to be inflicted, or allows to be |
inflicted upon
the child physical injury, by other than |
accidental means, that causes
death, disfigurement, |
impairment of physical or emotional health, or loss
or |
impairment of any bodily function;
|
(b) creates a substantial risk of physical injury to |
the child by
other than accidental means which would be |
likely to cause death,
disfigurement, impairment of |
physical or emotional health, or loss or
impairment of any |
bodily function;
|
(c) commits or allows to be committed any sex offense |
against the child,
as sex offenses are defined in the |
Criminal Code of 2012
and extending those definitions of |
sex offenses to include children under
18 years of age;
|
(d) commits or allows to be committed an act or acts of |
torture upon
the child; or
|
(e) inflicts excessive corporal punishment.
|
Q. "Neglected child" means any child whose parent or other |
person
responsible for the child's welfare withholds or denies |
nourishment or
medically indicated treatment including food or |
care denied solely on the
basis of the present or anticipated |
mental or physical impairment as determined
by a physician |
acting alone or in consultation with other physicians or
|
|
otherwise does not provide the proper or necessary support, |
education
as required by law, or medical or other remedial care |
recognized under State
law as necessary for a child's |
well-being, or other care necessary for his
or her well-being, |
including adequate food, clothing and shelter; or who
is |
abandoned by his or her parents or other person responsible for |
the child's
welfare.
|
A child shall not be considered neglected or abused for the
|
sole reason that the child's parent or other person responsible |
for his
or her welfare depends upon spiritual means through |
prayer alone for the
treatment or cure of disease or remedial |
care as provided under Section 4
of the Abused and Neglected |
Child Reporting Act.
A child shall not be considered neglected |
or abused for the sole reason that
the child's parent or other |
person responsible for the child's welfare failed
to vaccinate, |
delayed vaccination, or refused vaccination for the child
due |
to a waiver on religious or medical grounds as permitted by |
law.
|
R. "Putative father" means a man who may be a child's |
father, but who (1) is
not married to the child's mother on or |
before the date that the child was or
is to be born and (2) has |
not established paternity of the child in a court
proceeding |
before the filing of a petition for the adoption of the child. |
The
term includes a male who is less than 18 years of age. |
"Putative father" does
not mean a man who is the child's father |
as a result of criminal sexual abuse
or assault as defined |
|
under Article 11 of the Criminal Code of 2012.
|
S. "Standby adoption" means an adoption in which a parent
|
consents to custody and termination of parental rights to |
become
effective upon the occurrence of a future event, which |
is either the death of
the
parent or the request of the parent
|
for the entry of a final judgment of adoption.
|
T. (Blank).
|
T-5. "Biological parent", "birth parent", or "natural |
parent" of a child are interchangeable terms that mean a person |
who is biologically or genetically related to that child as a |
parent. |
U. "Interstate adoption" means the placement of a minor |
child with a prospective adoptive parent for the purpose of |
pursuing an adoption for that child that is subject to the |
provisions of the Interstate Compact on Placement of Children. |
V. (Blank). |
W. (Blank). |
X. "Legal father" of a child means a man who is recognized |
as or presumed to be that child's father: |
(1) because of his marriage to or civil union with the |
child's parent at the time of the child's birth or within |
300 days prior to that child's birth, unless he signed a |
denial of paternity pursuant to Section 12 of the Vital |
Records Act or a waiver pursuant to Section 10 of this Act; |
or |
(2) because his paternity of the child has been |
|
established pursuant to the Illinois Parentage Act, the |
Illinois Parentage Act of 1984, or the Gestational |
Surrogacy Act; or |
(3) because he is listed as the child's father or |
parent on the child's birth certificate, unless he is |
otherwise determined by an administrative or judicial |
proceeding not to be the parent of the child or unless he |
rescinds his acknowledgment of paternity pursuant to the |
Illinois Parentage Act of 1984; or |
(4) because his paternity or adoption of the child has |
been established by a court of competent jurisdiction. |
The definition in this subsection X shall not be construed |
to provide greater or lesser rights as to the number of parents |
who can be named on a final judgment order of adoption or |
Illinois birth certificate that otherwise exist under Illinois |
law. |
Y. "Legal mother" of a child means a woman who is |
recognized as or presumed to be that child's mother: |
(1) because she gave birth to the child except as |
provided in the Gestational Surrogacy Act; or |
(2) because her maternity of the child has been |
established pursuant to the Illinois Parentage Act of 1984 |
or the Gestational Surrogacy Act; or |
(3) because her maternity or adoption of the child has |
been established by a court of competent jurisdiction; or |
(4) because of her marriage to or civil union with the |
|
child's other parent at the time of the child's birth or |
within 300 days prior to the time of birth; or |
(5) because she is listed as the child's mother or |
parent on the child's birth certificate unless she is |
otherwise determined by an administrative or judicial |
proceeding not to be the parent of the child. |
The definition in this subsection Y shall not be construed |
to provide greater or lesser rights as to the number of parents |
who can be named on a final judgment order of adoption or |
Illinois birth certificate that otherwise exist under Illinois |
law. |
Z. "Department" means the Illinois Department of Children |
and Family Services. |
AA. "Placement disruption" means a circumstance where the |
child is removed from an adoptive placement before the adoption |
is finalized. |
BB. "Secondary placement" means a placement, including but |
not limited to the placement of a youth in care as defined in |
Section 4d of the Children and Family Services Act ward of the |
Department , that occurs after a placement disruption or an |
adoption dissolution. "Secondary placement" does not mean |
secondary placements arising due to the death of the adoptive |
parent of the child. |
CC. "Adoption dissolution" means a circumstance where the |
child is removed from an adoptive placement after the adoption |
is finalized. |
|
DD. "Unregulated placement" means the secondary placement |
of a child that occurs without the oversight of the courts, the |
Department, or a licensed child welfare agency. |
EE. "Post-placement and post-adoption support services" |
means support services for placed or adopted children and |
families that include, but are not limited to, counseling for |
emotional, behavioral, or developmental needs. |
(Source: P.A. 98-455, eff. 1-1-14; 98-532, eff. 1-1-14; 98-804, |
eff. 1-1-15; 99-49, eff. 7-15-15; 99-85, eff. 1-1-16; 99-642, |
eff. 7-28-16; 99-836, eff. 1-1-17 .)
|
(750 ILCS 50/12.2) |
Sec. 12.2. Adoptive parent rights and responsibilities. |
Prior to finalization of an adoption pursuant to this Act, any |
prospective adoptive parent in a private adoption who is not |
being provided with adoption services by a licensed child |
welfare agency pursuant to the Child Care Act of 1969, who is |
not adopting a related child, and who is not adopting a child |
who is a youth in care as defined in Section 4d of the Children |
and Family Services Act ward of the Department of Children and |
Family Services shall be provided with the following form: |
Adoptive Parents Rights and Responsibilities-Private Form |
THIS FORM DOES NOT CONSTITUTE LEGAL ADVICE. LEGAL ADVICE IS |
DEPENDENT ON THE SPECIFIC CIRCUMSTANCES OF EACH SITUATION AND |
JURISDICTION. THE INFORMATION IN THIS FORM CANNOT REPLACE THE |
ADVICE OF AN ATTORNEY LICENSED IN YOUR STATE. |
|
As an adoptive parent in the State of Illinois, you have |
the right: |
1. To be treated with dignity and respect. |
2. To make decisions free from pressure or coercion, |
including your decision to accept or reject the placement of a |
particular child. |
3. To be informed of the rights of birth parents. |
4. To know that the birth parent shall have the right to |
request to receive counseling before and after signing a Final |
and Irrevocable Consent to Adoption ("Consent"), a Final and |
Irrevocable Consent to Adoption by a Specified Person or |
Persons: Non-DCFS Case ("Specified Consent"), or a Consent to |
Adoption of Unborn Child ("Unborn Consent"). You may agree to |
pay for the cost of counseling in a manner consistent with |
Illinois law, but you are not required to do so. |
5. To receive a written schedule of fees and refund |
policies from the entity who will handle the investigation of |
your adoption for the Court. |
6. To explore the possibility of a subsidy for a child with |
special needs who is not a youth in care as defined in Section |
4d of the Children and Family Services Act ward of the Illinois |
Department of Children and Family Services . The Department may |
provide a subsidy if the child meets certain criteria. If you |
adopt a child who is eligible for supplemental security income |
(SSI), or who meets other special needs criteria, your child |
may be subsidy eligible. You should discuss eligibility for a |
|
subsidy with your attorney before the adoption is finalized, as |
this option is only available before the entry of a Judgment |
Order for Adoption. |
7. To share information and connect in the future with the |
birth parent(s) of your child. The birth parent(s), you, and |
the adopted person have the right to voluntarily share medical, |
background, and identifying information, including information |
on the original birth certificate. This can be done through the |
Illinois Adoption Registry and Medical Information Exchange or |
through the birth parent completing a Birth Parent Preference |
Form. Please visit http://www.dph.illinois.gov and search for |
adoption or www.newillinoisadoptionlaw.com. |
8. To access the Confidential Intermediary program, which |
provides a way for a court appointed person to connect and/or |
exchange information between adopted persons, adoptive parents |
and birth parents, and other biological family members, |
provided in most cases that mutual consent is given. Please |
visit www.ci-illinois.org or call (800) 526-9022(x29). |
As an adoptive parent in the State of Illinois, it is your |
responsibility: |
1. To work cooperatively and honestly with the person or |
entity handling your investigation and appointed by the court, |
including disclosing information requested by that person or |
entity. |
2. To pay the agreed-upon fees to the investigating person |
or entity promptly. |
|
3. To keep the person or entity handling your investigation |
informed of any new pertinent information about your family. |
4. To cooperate with post-placement monitoring and |
support. |
5. To consult with your attorney prior to offering any |
financial assistance to the birth parent or parents. |
6. To obtain training in parenting an adopted child, which |
may include on-line and in-person training on adoption related |
topics.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-833, eff. 1-1-17 .)
|
(750 ILCS 50/18.3) (from Ch. 40, par. 1522.3)
|
Sec. 18.3. (a) The agency, Department of Children and |
Family Services,
Court Supportive Services, Juvenile Division |
of the Circuit Court, and any
other party to the
surrender of a |
child for adoption or in an adoption proceeding shall inform |
any birth parent or parents relinquishing a child for
purposes |
of
adoption after the effective date of this Act of the |
opportunity to register with the Illinois Adoption Registry and |
Medical Information Exchange and to utilize the Illinois |
confidential intermediary program and shall obtain a written |
confirmation that acknowledges the birth parent's receipt of |
such information.
|
The birth parent shall be informed in writing that if |
contact or exchange of identifying
information with the adult |
adopted or surrendered person
is to occur, that adult adopted |
|
or surrendered person must be 21 years of age or
over except as |
referenced in paragraph (d) of this Section.
|
(b) Any birth parent, birth sibling,
adopted or surrendered |
person, adoptive parent, or legal
guardian indicating their |
desire to receive
identifying or medical information shall be |
informed
of the existence of the Registry and assistance shall |
be given to such
person to
legally
record his or her
name with |
the Registry.
|
(c) The agency, Department of Children and Family Services, |
Court
Supportive Services, Juvenile Division of the Circuit |
Court, and any other organization involved in the
surrender of |
a child for adoption in an adoption proceeding which has
|
written statements from an adopted or surrendered person and |
the birth
parent or a birth sibling indicating a desire to |
share
identifying information or establish contact shall |
supply such information to the mutually
consenting parties, |
except that no identifying information shall be
supplied to |
consenting birth siblings if any such sibling is
under 21
years |
of age. However, both the Registry having an Information |
Exchange
Authorization and the organization having a written |
statement requesting the sharing of
identifying information or |
contact shall communicate with each other to determine if
the |
adopted or surrendered person or the
birth parent or
birth
|
sibling has signed a form at a later date indicating a change |
in his or
her desires regarding the sharing of information or |
contact.
|
|
(d) On and after January 1, 2000, any licensed child |
welfare agency which
provides post-adoption search assistance |
to adoptive parents, adopted persons,
surrendered persons,
|
birth parents, or other birth relatives shall require that any |
person requesting
post-adoption search assistance complete an |
Illinois Adoption Registry
Application prior to the |
commencement of the search. However, former youth in care as |
defined in Section 4d of the Children and Family Services Act |
wards of the Department of Children and Family Services between |
the ages of 18 and 21 who have been surrendered or adopted and |
who are seeking contact or an exchange of information with |
siblings shall not be required to complete an Illinois Adoption |
Registry Application prior to commencement of the search, |
provided that the search is performed consistent with |
applicable Sections of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-895, eff. 5-21-10; 97-1076, eff. 8-24-12.)
|
(750 ILCS 50/18.9) |
Sec. 18.9. Post-placement and post-adoption support |
services. |
(a) It is the public policy of this State to find |
permanency for children through adoption and to prevent |
placement disruption, adoption dissolution, and secondary |
placement. Access to post-placement and post-adoption support |
services to provide support and resources for youth in care as |
defined in Section 4d of the Children and Family Services Act |
|
wards of the State , foster families, and adoptive families is |
essential to promote permanency. Public awareness of |
post-placement and post-adoption services and the ability of |
families to utilize effective services are essential to |
permanency. |
(b) The Department shall establish and maintain |
post-placement and post-adoption support services. |
(c) The Department shall post information about the |
Department's post-placement and post-adoption support services |
on the Department's website and shall provide the information |
to every licensed child welfare agency, every out of State |
placement agency or entity approved under Section 4.1 of this |
Act, and any entity providing adoption support services in the |
Illinois courts. The Department's post-placement and |
post-adoption support services shall be referenced in |
information regarding adoptive parents' rights and |
responsibilities that the Department publishes and provides to |
adoptive parents under this Act. The Department shall establish |
and maintain a toll-free number to advise the public about its |
post-placement and post-adoption support services and post the |
number on its website. |
(d) Every licensed child welfare agency, every entity |
approved under Section 4.1 of this Act, and any entity |
providing adoption support services in the Illinois courts |
shall provide the Department's website address and link to the |
Department's post-placement and post-adoption services |
|
information set forth in subsection (c) of this Section, |
including the Department's toll-free number, to every adoptive |
parent with whom they work in Illinois. This information shall |
be provided prior to placement. |
(e) Beginning one year after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, the Department |
shall report annually to the General Assembly on January 15 the |
following information for the preceding year: |
(1) a description of all post-placement and |
post-adoption support services the Department provides; |
(2) without identifying the names of the recipients of |
the services, the number of foster parents, prospective |
adoptive parents, and adoptive families in Illinois who |
have received the Department's post-placement and |
post-adoption support services and the type of services |
provided; |
(3) the number of families who have contacted the |
Department about its post-placement and post-adoption |
services due to a potential placement disruption, adoption |
dissolution, secondary placement, or unregulated |
placement, but for whom the Department declined to provide |
post-placement and post-adoption support services and the |
reasons that services were denied; and |
(4) the number of placement disruptions, adoption |
dissolutions, unregulated placements, and secondary |
placements, and for each one: |
|
(A) the type of placement or adoption, including |
whether the child who was the subject of the placement |
was a youth in care as defined in Section 4d of the |
Children and Family Services Act ward of the |
Department , and if the child was not a youth in care |
ward , whether the adoption was a private, agency, |
agency-assisted, interstate, or intercountry adoption; |
(B) if the placement or adoption was intercountry, |
the country of birth of the child; |
(C) whether the child who was the subject of the |
placement disruption, adoption dissolution, |
unregulated placement, or secondary placement entered |
State custody; |
(D) the length of the placement prior to the |
placement disruption, adoption dissolution, |
unregulated placement, or secondary placement; |
(E) the age of the child at the time of the |
placement disruption, adoption dissolution, |
unregulated placement, or secondary placement; |
(F) the reason, if known, for the placement |
disruption, adoption dissolution, unregulated |
placement, or secondary placement; and |
(G) if a licensed child welfare agency or any |
approved out of State placing entity participated in |
the initial placement, and, if applicable, the name of |
the agency or approved out of State placing entity.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 99-49, eff. 7-15-15.)
|
Section 999. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
|
|
INDEX
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Statutes amended in order of appearance
| | 5 ILCS 179/10 | | | 5 ILCS 350/1 | from Ch. 127, par. 1301 | | 20 ILCS 5/5-535 | was 20 ILCS 5/6.15 | | 20 ILCS 505/4d new | | | 20 ILCS 505/5 | from Ch. 23, par. 5005 | | 20 ILCS 505/5a | from Ch. 23, par. 5005a | | 20 ILCS 505/6b | from Ch. 23, par. 5006b | | 20 ILCS 505/7.5 | | | 20 ILCS 505/34.11 | | | 20 ILCS 505/35.1 | from Ch. 23, par. 5035.1 | | 20 ILCS 505/39.3 | | | 20 ILCS 515/20 | | | 20 ILCS 535/10 | | | 20 ILCS 1705/69 | | | 30 ILCS 105/16 | from Ch. 127, par. 152 | | 30 ILCS 105/24.5 | from Ch. 127, par. 160.5 | | 55 ILCS 5/3-3013 | from Ch. 34, par. 3-3013 | | 105 ILCS 5/14-8.02a | | | 225 ILCS 10/2.01b new | | | 225 ILCS 10/2.31 | | | 225 ILCS 10/7.3 | | | 325 ILCS 20/12 | from Ch. 23, par. 4162 | | 325 ILCS 25/1 | from Ch. 23, par. 6551 | |
| 325 ILCS 58/10 | | | 405 ILCS 5/3-503 | from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 3-503 | | 705 ILCS 405/2-10 | from Ch. 37, par. 802-10 | | 705 ILCS 405/3-12 | from Ch. 37, par. 803-12 | | 705 ILCS 405/3-21 | from Ch. 37, par. 803-21 | | 705 ILCS 405/3-24 | from Ch. 37, par. 803-24 | | 705 ILCS 405/4-9 | from Ch. 37, par. 804-9 | | 705 ILCS 405/4-18 | from Ch. 37, par. 804-18 | | 705 ILCS 405/4-21 | from Ch. 37, par. 804-21 | | 705 ILCS 405/5-615 | | | 705 ILCS 405/5-715 | | | 730 ILCS 5/5-5-10 | | | 730 ILCS 5/5-6-3 | from Ch. 38, par. 1005-6-3 | | 730 ILCS 5/5-6-3.1 | from Ch. 38, par. 1005-6-3.1 | | 740 ILCS 110/9 | from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 809 | | 750 ILCS 50/1 | from Ch. 40, par. 1501 | | 750 ILCS 50/12.2 | | | 750 ILCS 50/18.3 | from Ch. 40, par. 1522.3 | | 750 ILCS 50/18.9 | |
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