|
appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives;
|
(2) 2 members of the House of Representatives, |
appointed by the Minority Leader of the House of |
Representatives;
|
(3) 2 members of the Senate, appointed by the |
President of the Senate;
|
(4) 2 members of the Senate, appointed by the Minority |
Leader of the Senate;
|
(5) one representative of an entity representing |
retail merchants, appointed by the Governor;
|
(6) one representative of an entity representing |
manufacturers, appointed by the Governor;
|
(7) one representative of an entity representing |
mayors, appointed by the Governor;
|
(8) one representative of the State Chamber of |
Commerce, appointed by the Governor;
|
(9) one representative of the American Federation of |
Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, appointed |
by the Governor;
|
(10) one representative of a labor union representing |
warehouse workers, appointed by the Governor; |
(11) one representative of a worker advocacy |
organization representing warehouse workers, appointed by |
the Governor; and
|
(12) the Director of Labor or his or her designee, who |
shall serve as the ex officio chair.
|
|
(b) The members of the Task Force shall serve without |
compensation.
|
(c) The Department of Labor shall provide administrative |
support to the Task Force.
|
Section 3-10. Reports. The Task Force must provide |
quarterly updates of its findings, discussions, and decisions |
to the Governor and the General Assembly. The Task Force shall |
submit a final report of its recommendations to the Governor |
and the General Assembly no later than January 1, 2025. |
Section 3-90. Repeal. The Task Force is dissolved and this |
Act is repealed on January 1, 2026. |
ARTICLE 5 |
Section 5-5. The Illinois Administrative Procedure Act is |
amended by adding Section 5-45.35 as follows: |
(5 ILCS 100/5-45.35 new) |
Sec. 5-45.35. Emergency rulemaking; Hate Crimes and Bias |
Incident Prevention and Response Fund and Local Chambers of |
Commerce Recovery Grants. To provide for the expeditious and |
timely implementation of this amendatory Act of the 102nd |
General Assembly, emergency rules implementing Section 6z-138 |
of the State Finance Act may be adopted in accordance with |
|
Section 5-45 by the Department of Human Rights and emergency |
rules implementing Section 605-1105 of the Department of |
Commerce and Economic Opportunity Law of the Civil |
Administrative Code of Illinois may be adopted in accordance |
with Section 5-45 by the Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity. The adoption of emergency rules authorized by |
Section 5-45 and this Section is deemed to be necessary for the |
public interest, safety, and welfare. |
This Section is repealed one year after the effective date |
of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly. |
Section 5-10. The State Employees Group Insurance Act of |
1971 is amended by changing Section 11 as follows:
|
(5 ILCS 375/11) (from Ch. 127, par. 531)
|
Sec. 11. The amount of contribution in any fiscal year |
from funds other than
the General Revenue Fund or the Road Fund |
shall be at the same contribution
rate as the General Revenue |
Fund or the Road Fund except that, in State Fiscal Year 2009, |
no contributions shall be required from the FY09 Budget Relief |
Fund . Contributions and payments
for life insurance shall be |
deposited in the Group Insurance Premium Fund.
Contributions |
and payments for health coverages and other benefits shall be
|
deposited in the Health Insurance Reserve Fund. Federal funds |
which are
available for cooperative extension purposes shall |
also be charged for the
contributions which are made for |
|
retired employees formerly employed in the
Cooperative |
Extension Service. In the case of departments or any division
|
thereof receiving a fraction of its requirements for |
administration from the
Federal Government, the contributions |
hereunder shall be such fraction of the
amount determined |
under the provisions hereof and the
remainder shall be |
contributed by the State.
|
Every department which has members paid from funds other |
than the General
Revenue Fund shall cooperate with the |
Department of Central Management Services
and the
Governor's |
Office of Management and Budget in order to assure that the |
specified
proportion of the State's cost for group life |
insurance, the program of health
benefits and other employee |
benefits is paid by such funds; except that
contributions |
under this Act need not be paid from any other
fund where both |
the Director of Central Management Services and the Director |
of
the
Governor's Office of Management and Budget have |
designated in writing that the necessary
contributions are |
included in the General Revenue Fund contribution amount.
|
Universities having employees who are totally
compensated |
out of the following funds or sources are not required to |
submit the contribution described in this Section for such |
employees :
|
(1) income funds, as described in Sections 6a-1, |
6a-1a, 6a-1b, 6a-1c, 6a-1d, 6a-1e, 6a-1f, 6a-1g, and 6d of |
the State Finance Act, including tuition, laboratory, and |
|
library fees and any interest earned on those fees Income |
Funds ;
|
(2) local auxiliary funds, as described in the |
Legislative Audit Commission's University Guidelines, as |
published on November 17, 2020, including the following: |
(i) funds from auxiliary enterprises, which are |
operations that support the overall objectives of the |
university but are not directly related to |
instruction, research, or service organizational |
units; |
(ii) funds from auxiliary activities, which are |
functions that are self-supporting, in whole or in |
part, and are directly related to instruction, |
research, or service units; Local auxiliary funds; and
|
(3) the Agricultural Premium Fund as established by |
Section 5.01 of the State Finance Act;
|
(4) appropriations from the General Revenue Fund, |
Education Assistance Fund, or other State appropriations |
that are made for the purposes of instruction, research, |
public service, or economic development; |
(5) funds to the University of Illinois Hospital for |
health care professional services that are performed by |
University of Illinois faculty or University of Illinois |
health care programs established under the University of |
Illinois Hospital Act; or |
(6) funds designated for the Cooperative Extension |
|
Service, as defined in Section 3 of the County Cooperative |
Extension Law. |
shall not be required to submit such contribution for such |
employees.
|
If an employee of a university is partially compensated |
from the funds or sources of funds identified in paragraphs |
(1) through (6) above, universities shall be required to |
submit a pro rata contribution for the portion of the |
employee's compensation that is derived out of funds or |
sources other than those identified in paragraphs (1) through |
(6) above. |
The Department of Central Management Services may conduct |
a post-payment review of university reimbursements to assess |
or address any discrepancies. Universities shall cooperate |
with the Department of Central Management Services during any |
post-payment review, that may require universities to provide |
documentation to support payment calculations or funding |
sources used for calculating reimbursements. The Department of |
Central Management Services reserves the right to reconcile |
any discrepancies in reimbursement subtotals or total |
obligations and to notify universities of all final |
reconciliations, which shall include the Department of Central |
Management Services calculations and the amount of any credits |
or obligations that may be due. |
For each employee of the Illinois Toll Highway Authority |
person covered under this Act whose eligibility for such
|
|
coverage is as an annuitant based upon the person's status as |
the recipient of a benefit
under the Illinois Pension Code, |
which benefit is based in whole or in part
upon service with |
the Toll Highway Authority , the Authority shall annually
|
contribute an amount, as determined by the Director of the
|
Department of Central Management Services, that represents the
|
average employer's share of the cost of retiree coverage per
|
participating employee in the State Employees Group Insurance
|
Program a pro rata share of the State's cost for the benefits |
of that
person .
|
(Source: P.A. 102-1071, eff. 6-10-22.)
|
Section 5-12. The Children and Family Services Act is |
amended by adding Section 45 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 505/45 new) |
Sec. 45. Title IV-E funds for legal services to foster |
youth and families. |
(a) Findings and purpose. The General Assembly finds the |
following: |
(1) Child welfare court proceedings are serious and |
life changing. Children and youth are subject to court |
decisions that may forever change their family |
composition, as well as their connections to culture and |
heritage. |
(2) The gravity of child welfare proceedings and the |
|
rights and liabilities at stake necessitate the provision |
of quality legal representation for children and youth |
throughout the duration of child welfare proceedings. |
(3) Legal representation serves to protect and advance |
the interests of children and youth in court and provides |
confidential attorney-client privilege to ensure children |
feel safe sharing with attorneys information that |
otherwise may go unvoiced. |
(4) As the agency responsible for administering the |
State's approved Title IV-E State Plan, the Department of |
Children and Family Services is the only State agency with |
the authority to seek federal matching funds under Title |
IV-E of the Social Security Act for children who are |
candidates for foster care, children who are in foster |
care, and parents who are participating in foster care |
legal proceedings. |
(5) It is the intent of the General Assembly to ensure |
the Department leverages and maximizes federal resources |
to support the provision of quality legal representation |
to children and families to improve outcomes in the child |
welfare system. |
(b) Definitions. As used in this Section: |
"Child's lawyer" means a lawyer who is appointed by the |
court to serve as a child's lawyer in a proceeding pending |
under Article II of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 in |
accordance with the duties prescribed by State statute, court |
|
rules, standards of practice, and the Illinois Rules of |
Professional Conduct, including, but not limited to, |
diligence, communication, confidentiality, and the |
responsibilities to zealously assert the client's position |
under the rules of the adversary system and to abide by the |
client's decisions concerning the objectives of |
representation, as provided for in the Illinois Rules of |
Professional Conduct. |
"Respondent's lawyer" means a lawyer who provides legal |
representation to a parent, guardian, legal custodian, or |
responsible relative who is named as a party-respondent in a |
proceeding pending under Article II of the Juvenile Court Act |
of 1987 in accordance with the duties prescribed by State |
statute, court rules, standards of practice, and the Illinois |
Rules of Professional Conduct, including, but not limited to, |
diligence, communication, confidentiality, and the |
responsibilities to zealously assert the client's position |
under the rules of the adversary system and to abide by the |
client's decisions concerning the objectives of |
representation, as provided for in the Illinois Rules of |
Professional Conduct. |
(c) The Department shall pursue claiming Title IV-E |
administrative costs for independent legal representation by |
an attorney for a child who is a candidate for Title IV-E |
foster care, or who is in foster care, and the child's parent |
to prepare for and participate in all stages of foster care |
|
legal proceedings. Federal reimbursements for these |
administrative costs must be deposited into the Due Process |
for Youth and Families Fund created under subsection (d). |
(d) The Due Process for Youth and Families Fund is created |
as a special fund in the State treasury. The Fund shall consist |
of any moneys appropriated to the Department from federal |
Title IV-E reimbursements for administrative costs as |
described in subsection (c) and any other moneys deposited |
into the Fund in accordance with this Section. Subject to |
appropriation, moneys in the Fund shall be disbursed for fees |
and costs incurred by organizations or law practitioners that |
provide services as a child's lawyer or respondent's lawyer as |
those terms are defined in subsection (b) and for no other |
purpose. All interest earned on moneys in the Fund shall be |
deposited into the Fund. The Department and the State |
Treasurer may accept funds as provided under Title IV-E of the |
Social Security Act for deposit into the Fund. Annual requests |
for appropriations for the purpose of providing independent |
legal representation under this Section shall be made in |
separate and distinct line-items. |
(e) Units of local government and public and private |
agencies may apply for and receive federal or State funds from |
the Department in accordance with the purposes of this |
Section. |
Section 5-13. The Department of Commerce and Economic |
|
Opportunity Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois |
is amended by adding Section 605-1105 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 605/605-1105 new) |
Sec. 605-1105. Local chambers of commerce recovery grants. |
(a) Upon receipt or availability of the State or federal |
funds described in subsection (b), and subject to |
appropriation of those funds for the purposes described in |
this Section, the Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity shall establish a program to award grants to local |
chambers of commerce. The Department shall award an aggregate |
amount of $5,000,000 in grants under this Section to eligible |
chambers of commerce. Each eligible chamber of commerce that |
applies to the Department for a grant under this Section shall |
certify to the Department the difference between the chamber |
of commerce's total annual revenue in calendar year 2019 and |
the chamber of commerce's total annual revenue in calendar |
year 2020. The maximum amount that may be awarded to any |
eligible chamber of commerce during the first round of grants |
is one-sixth of the certified amount. In determining grant |
amounts awarded under this Act, the Department may consider |
any awards that the chamber of commerce has received from the |
Back to Business Grant Program or the Business Interruption |
Grant Program. If the entire amount of moneys appropriated for |
the purposes of this Section has not been allocated after a |
first round of grants is made, the Department may award |
|
additional funds to eligible chambers of commerce from the |
remaining funds. Grants awarded under this Section shall not |
be used to make any direct lobbying expenditure, as defined in |
subsection (c) of Section 4911 of the Internal Revenue Code, |
or to engage in any political campaign activity described in |
Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. |
(b) The Department may use State funds and federal funds |
that are allocated to the State under the authority of |
legislation passed in response to the COVID-19 pandemic to |
provide grants under this Section. Those federal funds |
include, but are not limited to, funds allocated to the State |
under the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021. Any federal moneys |
used for this purpose shall be used in accordance with the |
federal legislation authorizing the use of those funds and |
related federal guidance as well as any other applicable State |
and federal laws. |
(c) The Department may adopt any rules necessary to |
implement and administer the grant program created by this |
Section. The emergency rulemaking process may be used to |
promulgate the initial rules of the program following the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General |
Assembly. |
(d) As used in this Section, "eligible chamber of |
commerce" means a voluntary membership, dues-paying |
organization of business and professional persons dedicated to |
improving the economic climate and business development of the |
|
community, area, or region in which the organization is |
located and that: |
(1) operates as an approved not-for-profit |
corporation; |
(2) is tax-exempt under Section 501(c)(3) or Section |
501(c)(6) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986; |
(3) has an annual revenue of $1,000,000 or less; and |
(4) has experienced an identifiable negative economic |
impact resulting from or exacerbated by the public health |
emergency or served a community disproportionately |
impacted by a public health emergency. |
Section 5-15. The Illinois Lottery Law is amended by |
changing Section 9.1 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 1605/9.1) |
Sec. 9.1. Private manager and management agreement. |
(a) As used in this Section: |
"Offeror" means a person or group of persons that responds |
to a request for qualifications under this Section. |
"Request for qualifications" means all materials and |
documents prepared by the Department to solicit the following |
from offerors: |
(1) Statements of qualifications. |
(2) Proposals to enter into a management agreement, |
including the identity of any prospective vendor or |
|
vendors that the offeror intends to initially engage to |
assist the offeror in performing its obligations under the |
management agreement. |
"Final offer" means the last proposal submitted by an |
offeror in response to the request for qualifications, |
including the identity of any prospective vendor or vendors |
that the offeror intends to initially engage to assist the |
offeror in performing its obligations under the management |
agreement. |
"Final offeror" means the offeror ultimately selected by |
the Governor to be the private manager for the Lottery under |
subsection (h) of this Section. |
(b) By September 15, 2010, the Governor shall select a |
private manager for the total management of the Lottery with |
integrated functions, such as lottery game design, supply of |
goods and services, and advertising and as specified in this |
Section. |
(c) Pursuant to the terms of this subsection, the |
Department shall endeavor to expeditiously terminate the |
existing contracts in support of the Lottery in effect on July |
13, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act 96-37) in |
connection with the selection of the private manager. As part |
of its obligation to terminate these contracts and select the |
private manager, the Department shall establish a mutually |
agreeable timetable to transfer the functions of existing |
contractors to the private manager so that existing Lottery |
|
operations are not materially diminished or impaired during |
the transition. To that end, the Department shall do the |
following: |
(1) where such contracts contain a provision |
authorizing termination upon notice, the Department shall |
provide notice of termination to occur upon the mutually |
agreed timetable for transfer of functions; |
(2) upon the expiration of any initial term or renewal |
term of the current Lottery contracts, the Department |
shall not renew such contract for a term extending beyond |
the mutually agreed timetable for transfer of functions; |
or |
(3) in the event any current contract provides for |
termination of that contract upon the implementation of a |
contract with the private manager, the Department shall |
perform all necessary actions to terminate the contract on |
the date that coincides with the mutually agreed timetable |
for transfer of functions. |
If the contracts to support the current operation of the |
Lottery in effect on July 13, 2009 (the effective date of |
Public Act 96-34) are not subject to termination as provided |
for in this subsection (c), then the Department may include a |
provision in the contract with the private manager specifying |
a mutually agreeable methodology for incorporation. |
(c-5) The Department shall include provisions in the |
management agreement whereby the private manager shall, for a |
|
fee, and pursuant to a contract negotiated with the Department |
(the "Employee Use Contract"), utilize the services of current |
Department employees to assist in the administration and |
operation of the Lottery. The Department shall be the employer |
of all such bargaining unit employees assigned to perform such |
work for the private manager, and such employees shall be |
State employees, as defined by the Personnel Code. Department |
employees shall operate under the same employment policies, |
rules, regulations, and procedures, as other employees of the |
Department. In addition, neither historical representation |
rights under the Illinois Public Labor Relations Act, nor |
existing collective bargaining agreements, shall be disturbed |
by the management agreement with the private manager for the |
management of the Lottery. |
(d) The management agreement with the private manager |
shall include all of the following: |
(1) A term not to exceed 10 years, including any |
renewals. |
(2) A provision specifying that the Department: |
(A) shall exercise actual control over all |
significant business decisions; |
(A-5) has the authority to direct or countermand |
operating decisions by the private manager at any |
time; |
(B) has ready access at any time to information |
regarding Lottery operations; |
|
(C) has the right to demand and receive |
information from the private manager concerning any |
aspect of the Lottery operations at any time; and |
(D) retains ownership of all trade names, |
trademarks, and intellectual property associated with |
the Lottery. |
(3) A provision imposing an affirmative duty on the |
private manager to provide the Department with material |
information and with any information the private manager |
reasonably believes the Department would want to know to |
enable the Department to conduct the Lottery. |
(4) A provision requiring the private manager to |
provide the Department with advance notice of any |
operating decision that bears significantly on the public |
interest, including, but not limited to, decisions on the |
kinds of games to be offered to the public and decisions |
affecting the relative risk and reward of the games being |
offered, so the Department has a reasonable opportunity to |
evaluate and countermand that decision. |
(5) A provision providing for compensation of the |
private manager that may consist of, among other things, a |
fee for services and a performance based bonus as |
consideration for managing the Lottery, including terms |
that may provide the private manager with an increase in |
compensation if Lottery revenues grow by a specified |
percentage in a given year. |
|
(6) (Blank). |
(7) A provision requiring the deposit of all Lottery |
proceeds to be deposited into the State Lottery Fund |
except as otherwise provided in Section 20 of this Act. |
(8) A provision requiring the private manager to |
locate its principal office within the State. |
(8-5) A provision encouraging that at least 20% of the |
cost of contracts entered into for goods and services by |
the private manager in connection with its management of |
the Lottery, other than contracts with sales agents or |
technical advisors, be awarded to businesses that are a |
minority-owned business, a women-owned business, or a |
business owned by a person with disability, as those terms |
are defined in the Business Enterprise for Minorities, |
Women, and Persons with Disabilities Act. |
(9) A requirement that so long as the private manager |
complies with all the conditions of the agreement under |
the oversight of the Department, the private manager shall |
have the following duties and obligations with respect to |
the management of the Lottery: |
(A) The right to use equipment and other assets |
used in the operation of the Lottery. |
(B) The rights and obligations under contracts |
with retailers and vendors. |
(C) The implementation of a comprehensive security |
program by the private manager. |
|
(D) The implementation of a comprehensive system |
of internal audits. |
(E) The implementation of a program by the private |
manager to curb compulsive gambling by persons playing |
the Lottery. |
(F) A system for determining (i) the type of |
Lottery games, (ii) the method of selecting winning |
tickets, (iii) the manner of payment of prizes to |
holders of winning tickets, (iv) the frequency of |
drawings of winning tickets, (v) the method to be used |
in selling tickets, (vi) a system for verifying the |
validity of tickets claimed to be winning tickets, |
(vii) the basis upon which retailer commissions are |
established by the manager, and (viii) minimum |
payouts. |
(10) A requirement that advertising and promotion must |
be consistent with Section 7.8a of this Act. |
(11) A requirement that the private manager market the |
Lottery to those residents who are new, infrequent, or |
lapsed players of the Lottery, especially those who are |
most likely to make regular purchases on the Internet as |
permitted by law. |
(12) A code of ethics for the private manager's |
officers and employees. |
(13) A requirement that the Department monitor and |
oversee the private manager's practices and take action |
|
that the Department considers appropriate to ensure that |
the private manager is in compliance with the terms of the |
management agreement, while allowing the manager, unless |
specifically prohibited by law or the management |
agreement, to negotiate and sign its own contracts with |
vendors. |
(14) A provision requiring the private manager to |
periodically file, at least on an annual basis, |
appropriate financial statements in a form and manner |
acceptable to the Department. |
(15) Cash reserves requirements. |
(16) Procedural requirements for obtaining the prior |
approval of the Department when a management agreement or |
an interest in a management agreement is sold, assigned, |
transferred, or pledged as collateral to secure financing. |
(17) Grounds for the termination of the management |
agreement by the Department or the private manager. |
(18) Procedures for amendment of the agreement. |
(19) A provision requiring the private manager to |
engage in an open and competitive bidding process for any |
procurement having a cost in excess of $50,000 that is not |
a part of the private manager's final offer. The process |
shall favor the selection of a vendor deemed to have |
submitted a proposal that provides the Lottery with the |
best overall value. The process shall not be subject to |
the provisions of the Illinois Procurement Code, unless |
|
specifically required by the management agreement. |
(20) The transition of rights and obligations, |
including any associated equipment or other assets used in |
the operation of the Lottery, from the manager to any |
successor manager of the lottery, including the |
Department, following the termination of or foreclosure |
upon the management agreement. |
(21) Right of use of copyrights, trademarks, and |
service marks held by the Department in the name of the |
State. The agreement must provide that any use of them by |
the manager shall only be for the purpose of fulfilling |
its obligations under the management agreement during the |
term of the agreement. |
(22) The disclosure of any information requested by |
the Department to enable it to comply with the reporting |
requirements and information requests provided for under |
subsection (p) of this Section. |
(e) Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the |
Department shall select a private manager through a |
competitive request for qualifications process consistent with |
Section 20-35 of the Illinois Procurement Code, which shall |
take into account: |
(1) the offeror's ability to market the Lottery to |
those residents who are new, infrequent, or lapsed players |
of the Lottery, especially those who are most likely to |
make regular purchases on the Internet; |
|
(2) the offeror's ability to address the State's |
concern with the social effects of gambling on those who |
can least afford to do so; |
(3) the offeror's ability to provide the most |
successful management of the Lottery for the benefit of |
the people of the State based on current and past business |
practices or plans of the offeror; and |
(4) the offeror's poor or inadequate past performance |
in servicing, equipping, operating or managing a lottery |
on behalf of Illinois, another State or foreign government |
and attracting persons who are not currently regular |
players of a lottery. |
(f) The Department may retain the services of an advisor |
or advisors with significant experience in financial services |
or the management, operation, and procurement of goods, |
services, and equipment for a government-run lottery to assist |
in the preparation of the terms of the request for |
qualifications and selection of the private manager. Any |
prospective advisor seeking to provide services under this |
subsection (f) shall disclose any material business or |
financial relationship during the past 3 years with any |
potential offeror, or with a contractor or subcontractor |
presently providing goods, services, or equipment to the |
Department to support the Lottery. The Department shall |
evaluate the material business or financial relationship of |
each prospective advisor. The Department shall not select any |
|
prospective advisor with a substantial business or financial |
relationship that the Department deems to impair the |
objectivity of the services to be provided by the prospective |
advisor. During the course of the advisor's engagement by the |
Department, and for a period of one year thereafter, the |
advisor shall not enter into any business or financial |
relationship with any offeror or any vendor identified to |
assist an offeror in performing its obligations under the |
management agreement. Any advisor retained by the Department |
shall be disqualified from being an offeror.
The Department |
shall not include terms in the request for qualifications that |
provide a material advantage whether directly or indirectly to |
any potential offeror, or any contractor or subcontractor |
presently providing goods, services, or equipment to the |
Department to support the Lottery, including terms contained |
in previous responses to requests for proposals or |
qualifications submitted to Illinois, another State or foreign |
government when those terms are uniquely associated with a |
particular potential offeror, contractor, or subcontractor. |
The request for proposals offered by the Department on |
December 22, 2008 as "LOT08GAMESYS" and reference number |
"22016176" is declared void. |
(g) The Department shall select at least 2 offerors as |
finalists to potentially serve as the private manager no later |
than August 9, 2010. Upon making preliminary selections, the |
Department shall schedule a public hearing on the finalists' |
|
proposals and provide public notice of the hearing at least 7 |
calendar days before the hearing. The notice must include all |
of the following: |
(1) The date, time, and place of the hearing. |
(2) The subject matter of the hearing. |
(3) A brief description of the management agreement to |
be awarded. |
(4) The identity of the offerors that have been |
selected as finalists to serve as the private manager. |
(5) The address and telephone number of the |
Department. |
(h) At the public hearing, the Department shall (i) |
provide sufficient time for each finalist to present and |
explain its proposal to the Department and the Governor or the |
Governor's designee, including an opportunity to respond to |
questions posed by the Department, Governor, or designee and |
(ii) allow the public and non-selected offerors to comment on |
the presentations. The Governor or a designee shall attend the |
public hearing. After the public hearing, the Department shall |
have 14 calendar days to recommend to the Governor whether a |
management agreement should be entered into with a particular |
finalist. After reviewing the Department's recommendation, the |
Governor may accept or reject the Department's recommendation, |
and shall select a final offeror as the private manager by |
publication of a notice in the Illinois Procurement Bulletin |
on or before September 15, 2010. The Governor shall include in |
|
the notice a detailed explanation and the reasons why the |
final offeror is superior to other offerors and will provide |
management services in a manner that best achieves the |
objectives of this Section. The Governor shall also sign the |
management agreement with the private manager. |
(i) Any action to contest the private manager selected by |
the Governor under this Section must be brought within 7 |
calendar days after the publication of the notice of the |
designation of the private manager as provided in subsection |
(h) of this Section. |
(j) The Lottery shall remain, for so long as a private |
manager manages the Lottery in accordance with provisions of |
this Act, a Lottery conducted by the State, and the State shall |
not be authorized to sell or transfer the Lottery to a third |
party. |
(k) Any tangible personal property used exclusively in |
connection with the lottery that is owned by the Department |
and leased to the private manager shall be owned by the |
Department in the name of the State and shall be considered to |
be public property devoted to an essential public and |
governmental function. |
(l) The Department may exercise any of its powers under |
this Section or any other law as necessary or desirable for the |
execution of the Department's powers under this Section. |
(m) Neither this Section nor any management agreement |
entered into under this Section prohibits the General Assembly |
|
from authorizing forms of gambling that are not in direct |
competition with the Lottery. The forms of gambling authorized |
by Public Act 101-31 constitute authorized forms of gambling |
that are not in direct competition with the Lottery. |
(n) The private manager shall be subject to a complete |
investigation in the third, seventh, and tenth years of the |
agreement (if the agreement is for a 10-year term) by the |
Department in cooperation with the Auditor General to |
determine whether the private manager has complied with this |
Section and the management agreement. The private manager |
shall bear the cost of an investigation or reinvestigation of |
the private manager under this subsection. |
(o) The powers conferred by this Section are in addition |
and supplemental to the powers conferred by any other law. If |
any other law or rule is inconsistent with this Section, |
including, but not limited to, provisions of the Illinois |
Procurement Code, then this Section controls as to any |
management agreement entered into under this Section. This |
Section and any rules adopted under this Section contain full |
and complete authority for a management agreement between the |
Department and a private manager. No law, procedure, |
proceeding, publication, notice, consent, approval, order, or |
act by the Department or any other officer, Department, |
agency, or instrumentality of the State or any political |
subdivision is required for the Department to enter into a |
management agreement under this Section. This Section contains |
|
full and complete authority for the Department to approve any |
contracts entered into by a private manager with a vendor |
providing goods, services, or both goods and services to the |
private manager under the terms of the management agreement, |
including subcontractors of such vendors. |
Upon receipt of a written request from the Chief |
Procurement Officer, the Department shall provide to the Chief |
Procurement Officer a complete and un-redacted copy of the |
management agreement or any contract that is subject to the |
Department's approval authority under this subsection (o). The |
Department shall provide a copy of the agreement or contract |
to the Chief Procurement Officer in the time specified by the |
Chief Procurement Officer in his or her written request, but |
no later than 5 business days after the request is received by |
the Department. The Chief Procurement Officer must retain any |
portions of the management agreement or of any contract |
designated by the Department as confidential, proprietary, or |
trade secret information in complete confidence pursuant to |
subsection (g) of Section 7 of the Freedom of Information Act. |
The Department shall also provide the Chief Procurement |
Officer with reasonable advance written notice of any contract |
that is pending Department approval. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section to the |
contrary, the Chief Procurement Officer shall adopt |
administrative rules, including emergency rules, to establish |
a procurement process to select a successor private manager if |
|
a private management agreement has been terminated. The |
selection process shall at a minimum take into account the |
criteria set forth in items (1) through (4) of subsection (e) |
of this Section and may include provisions consistent with |
subsections (f), (g), (h), and (i) of this Section. The Chief |
Procurement Officer shall also implement and administer the |
adopted selection process upon the termination of a private |
management agreement. The Department, after the Chief |
Procurement Officer certifies that the procurement process has |
been followed in accordance with the rules adopted under this |
subsection (o), shall select a final offeror as the private |
manager and sign the management agreement with the private |
manager. |
Through June 30, 2022, except as provided in Sections |
21.5, 21.6, 21.7, 21.8, 21.9, 21.10, 21.11, 21.12, and 21.13 |
of this Act and Section 25-70 of the Sports Wagering Act, the |
Department shall distribute all proceeds of lottery tickets |
and shares sold in the following priority and manner: |
(1) The payment of prizes and retailer bonuses. |
(2) The payment of costs incurred in the operation and |
administration of the Lottery, including the payment of |
sums due to the private manager under the management |
agreement with the Department. |
(3) On the last day of each month or as soon thereafter |
as possible, the State Comptroller shall direct and the |
State Treasurer shall transfer from the State Lottery Fund |
|
to the Common School Fund an amount that is equal to the |
proceeds transferred in the corresponding month of fiscal |
year 2009, as adjusted for inflation, to the Common School |
Fund. |
(4) On or before September 30 of each fiscal year, |
deposit any estimated remaining proceeds from the prior |
fiscal year , subject to payments under items (1), (2), and |
(3), into the Capital Projects Fund . Beginning in fiscal |
year 2019, the amount deposited shall be increased or |
decreased each year by the amount the estimated payment |
differs from the amount determined from each year-end |
financial audit. Only remaining net deficits from prior |
fiscal years may reduce the requirement to deposit these |
funds, as determined by the annual financial audit. |
Beginning July 1, 2022, the Department shall distribute |
all proceeds of lottery tickets and shares sold in the manner |
and priority described in Section 9.3 of this Act , except that |
the Department shall make the deposit into the Capital |
Projects Fund that would have occurred under item (4) of this |
subsection (o) on or before September 30, 2022, but for the |
changes made to this subsection by Public Act 102-699 . |
(p) The Department shall be subject to the following |
reporting and information request requirements: |
(1) the Department shall submit written quarterly |
reports to the Governor and the General Assembly on the |
activities and actions of the private manager selected |
|
under this Section; |
(2) upon request of the Chief Procurement Officer, the |
Department shall promptly produce information related to |
the procurement activities of the Department and the |
private manager requested by the Chief Procurement |
Officer; the Chief Procurement Officer must retain |
confidential, proprietary, or trade secret information |
designated by the Department in complete confidence |
pursuant to subsection (g) of Section 7 of the Freedom of |
Information Act; and |
(3) at least 30 days prior to the beginning of the |
Department's fiscal year, the Department shall prepare an |
annual written report on the activities of the private |
manager selected under this Section and deliver that |
report to the Governor and General Assembly. |
(Source: P.A. 101-31, eff. 6-28-19; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19; |
101-561, eff. 8-23-19; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21; 102-699, eff. |
4-19-22.) |
Section 5-20. The State Finance Act is amended by changing |
Section 6z-130, as added by Public Act 102-699, and Sections |
6z-114, 8g-1, and 8.27 and by adding Sections 5.990, 5.991, |
and 6z-138 as follows: |
(30 ILCS 105/5.990 new) |
Sec. 5.990. The Hate Crimes and Bias Incident Prevention |
|
and Response Fund. |
(30 ILCS 105/5.991 new) |
Sec. 5.991. The Due Process for Youth and Families Fund. |
(30 ILCS 105/6z-114) |
Sec. 6z-114. The Ronald McDonald House Charities Fund; |
creation. The Ronald McDonald House Charities Fund is created |
as a special fund in the State treasury. From appropriations |
to the Department of Human Services from the Fund, the |
Department shall Subject to appropriation, moneys in the Fund |
shall be used to make grants to Ronald McDonald House |
Charities for services in Illinois.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-73, eff. 7-9-21.) |
(30 ILCS 105/6z-134) |
Sec. 6z-134 6z-130 . Statewide 9-8-8 Trust Fund. |
(a) The Statewide 9-8-8 Trust Fund is created as a special |
fund in the State treasury. Moneys in the Fund shall be used by |
the Department of Human Services for the purposes of |
establishing and maintaining a statewide 9-8-8 suicide |
prevention and mental health crisis system pursuant to the |
National Suicide Hotline Designation Act of 2020, the Federal |
Communication Commission's rules adopted on July 16, 2020, and |
national guidelines for crisis care. The Fund shall consist |
of: |
|
(1) appropriations by the General Assembly; |
(2) grants and gifts intended for deposit in the Fund; |
(3) interest, premiums, gains, or other earnings on
|
the Fund; |
(4) moneys received from any other source that are
|
deposited in or transferred into the Fund. |
(b) Moneys in the Fund: |
(1) do not revert at the end of any State fiscal year
|
but remain available for the purposes of the Fund in |
subsequent State fiscal years; and |
(2) are not subject to transfer to any other Fund or
to |
transfer, assignment, or reassignment for any other use or |
purpose outside of those specified in this Section. |
(c) An annual report of Fund deposits and expenditures |
shall be made to the General Assembly and the Federal |
Communications Commission. |
(d) (Blank). In addition to any other transfers that may |
be provided for by law, on July 1, 2022, or as soon thereafter |
as practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $5,000,000 from the |
Statewide 9-1-1 Fund to the Statewide 9-8-8 Trust Fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-699, eff. 4-19-22; revised 8-1-22.) |
(30 ILCS 105/6z-138 new) |
Sec. 6z-138. Hate Crimes and Bias Incident Prevention and |
Response Fund. |
|
(a) The Hate Crimes and Bias Incident Prevention and |
Response Fund is created as a special fund in the State |
treasury. The Fund may accept moneys from any lawful source. |
Any interest earned on moneys in the Fund shall be deposited |
into the Fund. |
(b) Subject to appropriation, moneys in the Hate Crimes |
and Bias Incident Prevention and Response Fund shall be used |
by the Department of Human Rights, in its capacity as |
administrator and fiscal agent for the Commission on |
Discrimination and Hate Crimes, for operational and |
administrative expenditures related to, as well as the award |
of grants that support the eradication of, hate crimes and |
bias incidents. |
(c) The Department of Human Rights shall adopt rules |
establishing requirements for the distribution of grant moneys |
and the determination of which persons or entities are |
eligible for grants and may adopt any other rules necessary to |
implement this Section and administer the Fund.
|
(30 ILCS 105/8.27) (from Ch. 127, par. 144.27)
|
Sec. 8.27. All receipts from federal financial |
participation in the
Foster Care and Adoption Services program |
under Title IV-E of the federal
Social Security Act, including |
receipts
for related indirect costs,
shall be deposited into |
in the DCFS Children's Services Fund or the Due Process for |
Youth and Families Fund as provided in Section 45 of the |
|
Children and Family Services Act .
|
Beginning on July 20, 2010 (the effective date of Public |
Act 96-1127), any funds paid to the State by the federal |
government under Title XIX and Title XXI of the Social |
Security Act for child welfare services delivered by community |
mental health providers, certified and paid as Medicaid |
providers by the Department of Children and Family Services, |
for child welfare services relating to Medicaid-eligible |
clients and families served consistent with the purposes of |
the Department of
Children and Family Services, including |
services delivered as a result of the conversion of such |
providers from a comprehensive rate to a fee-for-service |
payment methodology, and any subsequent revenue maximization |
initiatives performed by such providers, and any interest |
earned thereon, shall be deposited directly into the DCFS |
Children's Services Fund. Such funds shall be used for the |
provision of child welfare services provided to eligible |
individuals identified by the Department of Children and |
Family Services. Child welfare services are defined in Section |
5 of the Children and Family Services Act.
|
All receipts from federal financial participation in the |
Child Welfare
Services program under Title IV-B of the federal |
Social Security Act,
including receipts for related indirect |
costs, shall be deposited into the
DCFS Children's Services |
Fund for those moneys received as reimbursement for
services |
provided on or after July 1, 1994.
|
|
For services provided on or after July 1, 2007, all |
federal funds received pursuant to the John H. Chafee Foster |
Care Independence Program shall be deposited into the DCFS |
Children's Services Fund. |
Except as otherwise provided in this Section, moneys in |
the Fund may be used by the Department, pursuant to
|
appropriation by the General Assembly, for the ordinary and |
contingent
expenses of the Department.
|
In accordance with subsection (q) of Section 5 of the |
Children and Family
Services Act, disbursements from |
individual children's accounts shall be
deposited into the |
DCFS Children's Services Fund.
|
Receipts from public and unsolicited private grants, fees |
for training, and royalties earned from the publication of |
materials owned by or licensed to the Department of Children |
and Family Services shall be deposited into the DCFS |
Children's Services Fund. |
(Source: P.A. 102-1071, eff. 6-10-22.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/8g-1) |
Sec. 8g-1. Fund transfers. |
(a) (Blank).
|
(b) (Blank). |
(c) (Blank). |
(d) (Blank). |
(e) (Blank). |
|
(f) (Blank). |
(g) (Blank). |
(h) (Blank). |
(i) (Blank). |
(j) (Blank). |
(k) (Blank). |
(l) (Blank). |
(m) (Blank). |
(n) (Blank). |
(o) (Blank). |
(p) (Blank). |
(q) (Blank). |
(r) (Blank). |
(s) (Blank). |
(t) (Blank). |
(u) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on July 1, 2021, or as soon thereafter as |
practical, only as directed by the Director of the Governor's |
Office of Management and Budget, the State Comptroller shall |
direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of |
$5,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the DoIT Special |
Projects Fund, and on June 1, 2022, or as soon thereafter as |
practical, but no later than June 30, 2022, the State |
Comptroller shall direct and the State Treasurer shall |
transfer the sum so transferred from the DoIT Special Projects |
Fund to the General Revenue Fund. |
|
(v) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on July 1, 2021, or as soon thereafter as |
practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $500,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Governor's Administrative Fund. |
(w) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on July 1, 2021, or as soon thereafter as |
practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $500,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Grant Accountability and Transparency |
Fund. |
(x) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, at a time or times during Fiscal Year 2022 |
as directed by the Governor, the State Comptroller shall |
direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer up to a total of |
$20,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Illinois |
Sports Facilities Fund to be credited to the Advance Account |
within the Fund. |
(y) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on June 15, 2021, or as soon thereafter as |
practical, but no later than June 30, 2021, the State |
Comptroller shall direct and the State Treasurer shall |
transfer the sum of $100,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund |
to the Technology Management Revolving Fund. |
(z) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on April 19, 2022 ( the effective date of |
|
Public Act 102-699) this amendatory Act of the 102nd General |
Assembly , or as soon thereafter as practical, but no later |
than June 30, 2022, the State Comptroller shall direct and the |
State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $148,000,000 from |
the General Revenue Fund to the Build Illinois Bond Fund. |
(aa) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on April 19, 2022 ( the effective date of |
Public Act 102-699) this amendatory Act of the 102nd General |
Assembly , or as soon thereafter as practical, but no later |
than June 30, 2022, the State Comptroller shall direct and the |
State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $180,000,000 from |
the General Revenue Fund to the Rebuild Illinois Projects |
Fund. |
(bb) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on July 1, 2022, or as soon thereafter as |
practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $500,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Governor's Administrative Fund. |
(cc) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on July 1, 2022, or as soon thereafter as |
practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $500,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Grant Accountability and Transparency |
Fund. |
(dd) (z) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided by law, on April 19, 2022 ( the effective date of |
|
Public Act 102-700) this amendatory Act of the 102nd General |
Assembly , or as soon thereafter as practical, but no later |
than June 30, 2022, the State Comptroller shall direct and the |
State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $685,000,000 from |
the General Revenue Fund to the Income Tax Refund Fund. Moneys |
from this transfer shall be used for the purpose of making the |
one-time rebate payments provided under Section 212.1 of the |
Illinois Income Tax Act. |
(ee) (aa) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided by law, beginning on April 19, 2022 ( the effective |
date of Public Act 102-700) this amendatory Act of the 102nd |
General Assembly and until December 31, 2023, at the direction |
of the Department of Revenue, the State Comptroller shall |
direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Income Tax Refund Fund any amounts needed |
beyond the amounts transferred in subsection (dd) (z) to make |
payments of the one-time rebate payments provided under |
Section 212.1 of the Illinois Income Tax Act. |
(ff) (z) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on April 19, 2022 ( the effective date of |
Public Act 102-700) this amendatory Act of the 102nd General |
Assembly , or as soon thereafter as practical, but no later |
than June 30, 2022, the State Comptroller shall direct and the |
State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $720,000,000 from |
the General Revenue Fund to the Budget Stabilization Fund. |
(gg) (aa) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
|
provided for by law, on July 1, 2022, or as soon thereafter as |
practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $280,000,000 from the |
General Revenue Fund to the Budget Stabilization Fund. |
(hh) (bb) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on July 1, 2022, or as soon thereafter as |
practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $200,000,000 from the |
General Revenue Fund to the Pension Stabilization Fund. |
(ii) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on January 1, 2023, or as soon thereafter |
as practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $850,000,000 from the |
General Revenue Fund to the Budget Stabilization Fund. |
(jj) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, at a time or times during Fiscal Year 2023 |
as directed by the Governor, the State Comptroller shall |
direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer up to a total of |
$400,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Large |
Business Attraction Fund. |
(kk) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on January 1, 2023, or as soon thereafter |
as practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $72,000,000 from the |
General Revenue Fund to the Disaster Response and Recovery |
Fund. |
|
(Source: P.A. 101-10, eff. 6-5-19; 101-636, eff. 6-10-20; |
102-16, eff. 6-17-21; 102-699, eff. 4-19-22; 102-700, Article |
40, Section 40-5, eff. 4-19-22; 102-700, Article 80, Section |
80-5, eff. 4-19-22; revised 6-23-22.) |
Section 5-25. The Budget Stabilization Act is amended by |
changing Section 15 as follows: |
(30 ILCS 122/15)
|
Sec. 15. Transfers to Budget Stabilization Fund.
In |
furtherance of the State's objective for the Budget |
Stabilization
Fund to have resources representing 7.5% 5% of |
the State's annual general
funds revenues:
|
(a) For each fiscal year when the General Assembly's
|
appropriations and transfers or diversions as required by law
|
from general funds do not exceed 99% of the
estimated general |
funds revenues pursuant to subsection (a)
of Section 10, the |
Comptroller shall transfer from the
General Revenue Fund as |
provided by this Section a total
amount equal to 0.5% of the |
estimated general funds revenues
to the Budget Stabilization |
Fund.
|
(b) For each fiscal year when the General Assembly's
|
appropriations and transfers or diversions as required by law
|
from general funds do not exceed 98% of the
estimated general |
funds revenues pursuant to subsection (b)
of Section 10, the |
Comptroller shall transfer from the
General Revenue Fund as |
|
provided by this Section a total
amount equal to 1% of the |
estimated general funds revenues to
the Budget Stabilization |
Fund.
|
(c) The Comptroller shall transfer 1/12 of the total
|
amount to be transferred each fiscal year under this Section
|
into the Budget Stabilization Fund on the first day of each
|
month of that fiscal year or as soon thereafter as possible.
|
The balance of the Budget Stabilization Fund shall not exceed |
7.5%
5% of the total of general funds revenues estimated for |
that
fiscal year except as provided by subsection (d) of this |
Section.
|
(d) If the balance of the Budget Stabilization Fund
|
exceeds 7.5% 5% of the total general funds revenues estimated |
for that
fiscal year, the additional transfers are not |
required unless there are
outstanding liabilities under |
Section 25 of the State Finance Act from prior
fiscal years. If |
there are such outstanding Section 25 liabilities, then the
|
Comptroller shall continue to transfer 1/12 of the total |
amount identified
for transfer to the Budget Stabilization |
Fund on the first day of each month
of that fiscal year or as |
soon thereafter as possible to be reserved for
those Section |
25 liabilities. Nothing in this Act prohibits the General
|
Assembly from appropriating additional moneys into the Budget |
Stabilization
Fund.
|
(e) On or before August 31 of each fiscal year, the amount
|
determined to be transferred to the Budget Stabilization Fund |
|
shall be
reconciled to actual general funds revenues for that |
fiscal year. The
final transfer for each fiscal year shall be |
adjusted so that the
total amount transferred under this |
Section is equal to the percentage specified in subsection
(a) |
or (b) of this Section, as applicable, based on actual
general |
funds revenues calculated consistently with subsection (c) of
|
Section 10 of this Act for each fiscal year.
|
(f) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2006 and for each |
fiscal
year thereafter, the budget proposal to the General |
Assembly shall identify
liabilities incurred in a
prior fiscal |
year under Section 25 of the State Finance Act and the budget
|
proposal shall provide
funding as allowable pursuant to |
subsection (d) of this Section, if
applicable.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-660, eff. 7-1-04; 94-839, eff. 6-6-06.) |
Section 5-27. If and only if House Bill 4285 of the 102nd |
General Assembly becomes law as amended by Senate Amendment |
No. 2, the Illinois Procurement Code is amended by changing |
Section 20-20 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-20)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 102-721 )
|
Sec. 20-20. Small purchases.
|
(a) Amount. Any individual procurement of supplies or
|
services not exceeding $100,000 and any procurement of
|
construction not exceeding
$100,000, or any individual |
|
procurement of professional or artistic services not exceeding |
$100,000 may be made without competitive source selection.
|
Procurements shall not be artificially
divided so as to |
constitute a small purchase under this Section. Any |
procurement of construction not exceeding $100,000 may be made |
by an alternative competitive source selection. The |
construction agency shall establish rules for an alternative |
competitive source selection process. This Section does not |
apply to construction-related professional services contracts |
awarded in accordance with the provisions of the |
Architectural, Engineering, and Land Surveying Qualifications |
Based Selection Act.
|
(b) Adjustment. Each July 1, the small purchase maximum
|
established in subsection (a)
shall be adjusted for inflation |
as determined by the Consumer
Price Index for All Urban |
Consumers as determined by the United States
Department of |
Labor and rounded to the nearest $100.
|
(c) Based upon rules proposed by the Board and rules |
promulgated by the
chief procurement officers, the small |
purchase maximum established in
subsection
(a) may be |
modified.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-43, eff. 8-9-17.)
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 102-721 )
|
Sec. 20-20. Small purchases.
|
(a) Amount. Any individual procurement of supplies or
|
|
services not exceeding $100,000 and any procurement of
|
construction not exceeding $100,000 $250,000 , or any |
individual procurement of professional or artistic services |
not exceeding $100,000 may be made without competitive source |
selection.
Procurements shall not be artificially
divided so |
as to constitute a small purchase under this Section. Any |
procurement of construction not exceeding $100,000 $250,000 |
may be made by an alternative competitive source selection. |
The construction agency shall establish rules for an |
alternative competitive source selection process. This Section |
does not apply to construction-related professional services |
contracts awarded in accordance with the provisions of the |
Architectural, Engineering, and Land Surveying Qualifications |
Based Selection Act.
|
(b) Adjustment. Each July 1, the small purchase maximum
|
established in subsection (a)
shall be adjusted for inflation |
as determined by the Consumer
Price Index for All Urban |
Consumers as determined by the United States
Department of |
Labor and rounded to the nearest $100.
|
(c) Based upon rules proposed by the Board and rules |
promulgated by the
chief procurement officers, the small |
purchase maximum established in
subsection
(a) may be |
modified.
|
(d) Certification. All small purchases with an annual |
value that exceeds $50,000 shall be accompanied by Standard |
Illinois Certifications in a form prescribed by each Chief |
|
Procurement Officer. |
(Source: P.A. 102-721, eff. 1-1-23; 10200HB4285sam002.)
|
Section 5-28. The Build Illinois Act is amended by |
changing Section 10-6 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 750/10-6) (from Ch. 127, par. 2710-6)
|
Sec. 10-6. Large Business Attraction Fund.
|
(a) There is created the Large Business Attraction Fund to
|
be held as part of the State Treasury. The Department is
|
authorized to make loans from the Fund for the purposes
|
established under this Article. The State Treasurer shall have
|
custody of the Fund and may invest in securities constituting
|
direct obligations of the United States Government, in
|
obligations the principal of and interest on which are
|
guaranteed by the United States Government, or in certificates
|
of deposit of any State or national bank that are fully
secured |
by obligations guaranteed as to principal and interest
by the |
United States Government. The purpose of the Fund is
to offer |
loans to finance large firms considering the location
of a |
proposed plant in the State and to provide financing to
carry |
out the purposes and provisions of paragraph (h) of
Section |
10-3. Financing shall be in the
form of a loan, mortgage, or |
other debt instrument. All loans
shall be conditioned on the |
project receiving financing from
participating lenders or |
other sources. Loan proceeds shall
be available for project |
|
costs associated with an expansion
of business capacity and |
employment, except for debt refinancing.
Targeted companies |
for the program shall primarily
consist of established |
industrial and service companies with
proven records of |
earnings that will sell their product to
markets beyond |
Illinois and have proven multistate
location options. New |
ventures shall be considered only if
the entity is protected |
with adequate security with regard to
its financing and |
operation. The limitations and conditions
with respect to the |
use of this Fund shall not apply in
carrying out the purposes |
and provisions of paragraph (h) of Section 10-3.
|
(b) Deposits into the Fund shall include, but are
not |
limited to:
|
(1) Any appropriations, grants, or gifts made to
the |
Fund.
|
(2) Any income received from interest on investments
|
of amounts from the Fund not currently needed to meet
the |
obligations of the Fund.
|
(c) The State Comptroller and the State Treasurer shall |
from time to
time, upon the written direction of the Governor, |
transfer from the Fund to
the General Revenue Fund or the |
Budget Stabilization Fund, those amounts that the Governor |
determines are in
excess of the amounts required to meet the |
obligations of the Fund. Any amounts transferred to the Budget |
Stabilization Fund may be transferred back to the Large |
Business Attraction Fund by the State Comptroller and the |
|
State Treasurer, upon the written direction of the Governor.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-372, eff. 7-1-98.)
|
Section 5-30. The Illinois Police Training Act is amended |
by changing Section 6 as follows:
|
(50 ILCS 705/6) (from Ch. 85, par. 506)
|
Sec. 6. Powers and duties of the Board; selection and |
certification of schools. The Board shall select
and certify |
schools within the State of
Illinois for the purpose of |
providing basic training for probationary law enforcement
|
officers, probationary county corrections officers, and
court |
security officers and
of providing advanced or in-service |
training for permanent law enforcement officers
or permanent
|
county corrections officers, which schools may be either |
publicly or
privately owned and operated. In addition, the |
Board has the following
power and duties:
|
a. To require law enforcement agencies to furnish such |
reports and
information as the Board deems necessary to |
fully implement this Act.
|
b. To establish appropriate mandatory minimum |
standards
relating to the training of probationary local |
law enforcement officers
or probationary county |
corrections officers, and in-service training of permanent |
law enforcement officers.
|
c. To provide appropriate certification to those |
|
probationary
officers who successfully complete the |
prescribed minimum standard basic
training course.
|
d. To review and approve annual training curriculum |
for county sheriffs.
|
e. To review and approve applicants to ensure that no |
applicant is admitted
to a certified academy unless the |
applicant is a person of good character
and has not been |
convicted of, found guilty of, entered a plea of guilty |
to, or entered a plea of nolo contendere to a felony |
offense, any of the
misdemeanors in Sections 11-1.50, |
11-6, 11-6.5, 11-6.6, 11-9.1, 11-9.1B, 11-14, 11-14.1, |
11-30, 12-2, 12-3.2, 12-3.4, 12-3.5, 16-1,
17-1, 17-2, |
26.5-1, 26.5-2, 26.5-3, 28-3, 29-1, any misdemeanor in |
violation of any Section of Part E of Title III of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or |
subsection (a) of Section 17-32 of the Criminal Code of |
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or Section 5 or 5.2 of |
the Cannabis Control Act, or a crime involving
moral
|
turpitude under the laws of this State or any other state |
which if
committed in this State would be punishable as a |
felony or a crime of
moral turpitude, or any felony or |
misdemeanor in violation of federal law or the law of any |
state that is the equivalent of any of the offenses |
specified therein. The Board may appoint investigators who |
shall enforce
the duties conferred upon the Board by this |
Act.
|
|
For purposes of this paragraph e, a person is |
considered to have been convicted of, found guilty of, or |
entered a plea of guilty to, plea of nolo contendere to |
regardless of whether the adjudication of guilt or |
sentence is withheld or not entered thereon. This includes |
sentences of supervision, conditional discharge, or first |
offender probation, or any similar disposition provided |
for by law. |
f. To establish statewide standards for minimum |
standards regarding regular mental health screenings for |
probationary and permanent police officers, ensuring that |
counseling sessions and screenings remain confidential. |
g. To review and ensure all law enforcement officers |
remain in compliance with this Act, and any administrative |
rules adopted under this Act. |
h. To suspend any certificate for a definite period, |
limit or restrict any certificate, or revoke any |
certificate. |
i. The Board and the Panel shall have power to secure |
by its subpoena and bring before it any person or entity in |
this State and to take testimony either orally or by |
deposition or both with the same fees and mileage and in |
the same manner as prescribed by law in judicial |
proceedings in civil cases in circuit courts of this |
State. The Board and the Panel shall also have the power to |
subpoena the production of documents, papers, files, |
|
books, documents, and records, whether in physical or |
electronic form, in support of the charges and for |
defense, and in connection with a hearing or |
investigation. |
j. The Executive Director, the administrative law |
judge designated by the Executive Director, and each |
member of the Board and the Panel shall have the power to |
administer oaths to witnesses at any hearing that the |
Board is authorized to conduct under this Act and any |
other oaths required or authorized to be administered by |
the Board under this Act. |
k. In case of the neglect or refusal of any person to |
obey a subpoena issued by the Board and the Panel, any |
circuit court, upon application of the Board and the |
Panel, through the Illinois Attorney General, may order |
such person to appear before the Board and the Panel give |
testimony or produce evidence, and any failure to obey |
such order is punishable by the court as a contempt |
thereof. This order may be served by personal delivery, by |
email, or by mail to the address of record or email address |
of record. |
l. The Board shall have the power to administer state |
certification examinations. Any and all records related to |
these examinations, including, but not limited to, test |
questions, test formats, digital files, answer responses, |
answer keys, and scoring information shall be exempt from |
|
disclosure. |
m. To make grants, subject to appropriation, to units
|
of local government and public institutions of higher |
education for the purposes of hiring and retaining law |
enforcement officers. |
(Source: P.A. 101-187, eff. 1-1-20; 101-652, Article 10, |
Section 10-143, eff. 7-1-21; 101-652, Article 25, Section |
25-40, eff. 1-1-22; 102-687, eff. 12-17-21; 102-694, eff. |
1-7-22.) |
Section 5-35. The Liquor Control Act of 1934 is amended by |
adding Section 3-4.1 as follows: |
(235 ILCS 5/3-4.1 new) |
Sec. 3-4.1. Obtaining evidence. The State Commission has |
the power to expend sums that the Executive Director deems |
necessary for the purchase of evidence and for the employment |
of persons to obtain evidence. The sums shall be advanced to |
employees authorized by the Executive Director to expend |
funds, on vouchers signed by the Executive Director. |
In addition, the Executive Director is authorized to |
maintain one or more commercial checking accounts with any |
State banking corporation or corporations organized under or |
subject to the Illinois Banking Act for the deposit and |
withdrawal of moneys to be used solely for the purchase of |
evidence and for the employment of persons to obtain evidence. |
|
No check may be written on nor any withdrawal made from such an |
account except on the written signature of 2 persons |
designated by the Executive Director to write those checks and |
make those withdrawals. The balance of moneys on deposit in |
any such account shall not exceed $25,000 at any time, nor |
shall any one check written on or single withdrawal made from |
any such account exceed $25,000. |
Section 5-36. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
changing Sections 4-1.6 as follows:
|
(305 ILCS 5/4-1.6) (from Ch. 23, par. 4-1.6)
|
Sec. 4-1.6. Need. Income available to the family as |
defined by the
Illinois Department by rule, or to the child
in |
the case of a child removed from his or her home, when added to
|
contributions in money, substance or services from other |
sources,
including income available from parents absent from |
the home or from a
stepparent, contributions made for the |
benefit of the parent or other
persons necessary to provide |
care and supervision to the child, and
contributions from |
legally responsible relatives, must be equal to or less than |
the grant amount established by Department regulation for such
|
a person. For purposes of eligibility for aid under this |
Article, the Department shall (a) disregard all earned income |
between the grant amount and 50% of the Federal Poverty Level |
and (b) disregard the value of all assets held by the family.
|
|
In considering income to be taken into account, |
consideration shall
be given to any expenses reasonably |
attributable to the earning of such
income. Three-fourths of |
the earned income of a household eligible for aid under this |
Article shall be disregarded when determining the level of |
assistance for which a household is eligible. All The first |
$100 of child support , whether it be current support, past |
support owed, or future support, that is collected on or after |
January 1, 2023 on behalf of a family in a month for one child |
and the first $200 of child support collected on behalf of a |
family in a month for 2 or more children shall be passed |
through to the family and disregarded in determining the |
amount of the assistance grant provided to the family under |
this Article. Any amount of child support that would be |
disregarded in determining the amount of the assistance grant |
shall be disregarded in determining eligibility for cash |
assistance provided under this Article. The Illinois |
Department may also permit all or any
portion of earned or |
other income to be set aside for the future
identifiable needs |
of a child. The Illinois Department
may provide by rule and |
regulation for the exemptions thus permitted or
required. The |
eligibility of any applicant for or recipient of public
aid |
under this Article is not affected by the payment of any grant |
under
the "Senior Citizens and Persons with Disabilities |
Property Tax Relief Act" or any distributions or items of |
income
described under subparagraph (X) of
paragraph (2) of |
|
subsection (a) of Section 203 of the Illinois Income Tax
Act.
|
The Illinois Department may, by rule, set forth criteria |
under which an
assistance unit is ineligible for cash |
assistance under this Article for a
specified number of months |
due to the receipt of a lump sum payment.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-114, eff. 7-29-13; 99-143, eff. 7-27-15; |
99-899, eff. 1-1-17 .)
|
Section 5-37. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
changing Section 5A-12.7 as follows: |
(305 ILCS 5/5A-12.7) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2026) |
Sec. 5A-12.7. Continuation of hospital access payments on |
and after July 1, 2020. |
(a) To preserve and improve access to hospital services, |
for hospital services rendered on and after July 1, 2020, the |
Department shall, except for hospitals described in subsection |
(b) of Section 5A-3, make payments to hospitals or require |
capitated managed care organizations to make payments as set |
forth in this Section. Payments under this Section are not due |
and payable, however, until: (i) the methodologies described |
in this Section are approved by the federal government in an |
appropriate State Plan amendment or directed payment preprint; |
and (ii) the assessment imposed under this Article is |
determined to be a permissible tax under Title XIX of the |
|
Social Security Act. In determining the hospital access |
payments authorized under subsection (g) of this Section, if a |
hospital ceases to qualify for payments from the pool, the |
payments for all hospitals continuing to qualify for payments |
from such pool shall be uniformly adjusted to fully expend the |
aggregate net amount of the pool, with such adjustment being |
effective on the first day of the second month following the |
date the hospital ceases to receive payments from such pool. |
(b) Amounts moved into claims-based rates and distributed |
in accordance with Section 14-12 shall remain in those |
claims-based rates. |
(c) Graduate medical education. |
(1) The calculation of graduate medical education |
payments shall be based on the hospital's Medicare cost |
report ending in Calendar Year 2018, as reported in the |
Healthcare Cost Report Information System file, release |
date September 30, 2019. An Illinois hospital reporting |
intern and resident cost on its Medicare cost report shall |
be eligible for graduate medical education payments. |
(2) Each hospital's annualized Medicaid Intern |
Resident Cost is calculated using annualized intern and |
resident total costs obtained from Worksheet B Part I, |
Columns 21 and 22 the sum of Lines 30-43, 50-76, 90-93, |
96-98, and 105-112 multiplied by the percentage that the |
hospital's Medicaid days (Worksheet S3 Part I, Column 7, |
Lines 2, 3, 4, 14, 16-18, and 32) comprise of the |
|
hospital's total days (Worksheet S3 Part I, Column 8, |
Lines 14, 16-18, and 32). |
(3) An annualized Medicaid indirect medical education |
(IME) payment is calculated for each hospital using its |
IME payments (Worksheet E Part A, Line 29, Column 1) |
multiplied by the percentage that its Medicaid days |
(Worksheet S3 Part I, Column 7, Lines 2, 3, 4, 14, 16-18, |
and 32) comprise of its Medicare days (Worksheet S3 Part |
I, Column 6, Lines 2, 3, 4, 14, and 16-18). |
(4) For each hospital, its annualized Medicaid Intern |
Resident Cost and its annualized Medicaid IME payment are |
summed, and, except as capped at 120% of the average cost |
per intern and resident for all qualifying hospitals as |
calculated under this paragraph, is multiplied by the |
applicable reimbursement factor as described in this |
paragraph, to determine the hospital's final graduate |
medical education payment. Each hospital's average cost |
per intern and resident shall be calculated by summing its |
total annualized Medicaid Intern Resident Cost plus its |
annualized Medicaid IME payment and dividing that amount |
by the hospital's total Full Time Equivalent Residents and |
Interns. If the hospital's average per intern and resident |
cost is greater than 120% of the same calculation for all |
qualifying hospitals, the hospital's per intern and |
resident cost shall be capped at 120% of the average cost |
for all qualifying hospitals. |
|
(A) For the period of July 1, 2020 through |
December 31, 2022, the applicable reimbursement factor |
shall be 22.6%. |
(B) For the period of January 1, 2023 through |
December 31, 2026, the applicable reimbursement factor |
shall be 35% for all qualified safety-net hospitals, |
as defined in Section 5-5e.1 of this Code, and all |
hospitals with 100 or more Full Time Equivalent |
Residents and Interns, as reported on the hospital's |
Medicare cost report ending in Calendar Year 2018, and |
for all other qualified hospitals the applicable |
reimbursement factor shall be 30%. |
(d) Fee-for-service supplemental payments. For the period |
of July 1, 2020 through December 31, 2022, each Illinois |
hospital shall receive an annual payment equal to the amounts |
below, to be paid in 12 equal installments on or before the |
seventh State business day of each month, except that no |
payment shall be due within 30 days after the later of the date |
of notification of federal approval of the payment |
methodologies required under this Section or any waiver |
required under 42 CFR 433.68, at which time the sum of amounts |
required under this Section prior to the date of notification |
is due and payable. |
(1) For critical access hospitals, $385 per covered |
inpatient day contained in paid fee-for-service claims and |
$530 per paid fee-for-service outpatient claim for dates |
|
of service in Calendar Year 2019 in the Department's |
Enterprise Data Warehouse as of May 11, 2020. |
(2) For safety-net hospitals, $960 per covered |
inpatient day contained in paid fee-for-service claims and |
$625 per paid fee-for-service outpatient claim for dates |
of service in Calendar Year 2019 in the Department's |
Enterprise Data Warehouse as of May 11, 2020. |
(3) For long term acute care hospitals, $295 per |
covered inpatient day contained in paid fee-for-service |
claims for dates of service in Calendar Year 2019 in the |
Department's Enterprise Data Warehouse as of May 11, 2020. |
(4) For freestanding psychiatric hospitals, $125 per |
covered inpatient day contained in paid fee-for-service |
claims and $130 per paid fee-for-service outpatient claim |
for dates of service in Calendar Year 2019 in the |
Department's Enterprise Data Warehouse as of May 11, 2020. |
(5) For freestanding rehabilitation hospitals, $355 |
per covered inpatient day contained in paid |
fee-for-service claims for dates of service in Calendar |
Year 2019 in the Department's Enterprise Data Warehouse as |
of May 11, 2020. |
(6) For all general acute care hospitals and high |
Medicaid hospitals as defined in subsection (f), $350 per |
covered inpatient day for dates of service in Calendar |
Year 2019 contained in paid fee-for-service claims and |
$620 per paid fee-for-service outpatient claim in the |
|
Department's Enterprise Data Warehouse as of May 11, 2020. |
(7) Alzheimer's treatment access payment. Each |
Illinois academic medical center or teaching hospital, as |
defined in Section 5-5e.2 of this Code, that is identified |
as the primary hospital affiliate of one of the Regional |
Alzheimer's Disease Assistance Centers, as designated by |
the Alzheimer's Disease Assistance Act and identified in |
the Department of Public Health's Alzheimer's Disease |
State Plan dated December 2016, shall be paid an |
Alzheimer's treatment access payment equal to the product |
of the qualifying hospital's State Fiscal Year 2018 total |
inpatient fee-for-service days multiplied by the |
applicable Alzheimer's treatment rate of $226.30 for |
hospitals located in Cook County and $116.21 for hospitals |
located outside Cook County. |
(d-2) Fee-for-service supplemental payments. Beginning |
January 1, 2023, each Illinois hospital shall receive an |
annual payment equal to the amounts listed below, to be paid in |
12 equal installments on or before the seventh State business |
day of each month, except that no payment shall be due within |
30 days after the later of the date of notification of federal |
approval of the payment methodologies required under this |
Section or any waiver required under 42 CFR 433.68, at which |
time the sum of amounts required under this Section prior to |
the date of notification is due and payable. The Department |
may adjust the rates in paragraphs (1) through (7) to comply |
|
with the federal upper payment limits, with such adjustments |
being determined so that the total estimated spending by |
hospital class, under such adjusted rates, remains |
substantially similar to the total estimated spending under |
the original rates set forth in this subsection. |
(1) For critical access hospitals, as defined in |
subsection (f), $750 per covered inpatient day contained |
in paid fee-for-service claims and $750 per paid |
fee-for-service outpatient claim for dates of service in |
Calendar Year 2019 in the Department's Enterprise Data |
Warehouse as of August 6, 2021. |
(2) For safety-net hospitals, as described in |
subsection (f), $1,350 per inpatient day contained in paid |
fee-for-service claims and $1,350 per paid fee-for-service |
outpatient claim for dates of service in Calendar Year |
2019 in the Department's Enterprise Data Warehouse as of |
August 6, 2021. |
(3) For long term acute care hospitals, $550 per |
covered inpatient day contained in paid fee-for-service |
claims for dates of service in Calendar Year 2019 in the |
Department's Enterprise Data Warehouse as of August 6, |
2021. |
(4) For freestanding psychiatric hospitals, $200 per |
covered inpatient day contained in paid fee-for-service |
claims and $200 per paid fee-for-service outpatient claim |
for dates of service in Calendar Year 2019 in the |
|
Department's Enterprise Data Warehouse as of August 6, |
2021. |
(5) For freestanding rehabilitation hospitals, $550 |
per covered inpatient day contained in paid |
fee-for-service claims and $125 per paid fee-for-service |
outpatient claim for dates of service in Calendar Year |
2019 in the Department's Enterprise Data Warehouse as of |
August 6, 2021. |
(6) For all general acute care hospitals and high |
Medicaid hospitals as defined in subsection (f), $500 per |
covered inpatient day for dates of service in Calendar |
Year 2019 contained in paid fee-for-service claims and |
$500 per paid fee-for-service outpatient claim in the |
Department's Enterprise Data Warehouse as of August 6, |
2021. |
(7) For public hospitals, as defined in subsection |
(f), $275 per covered inpatient day contained in paid |
fee-for-service claims and $275 per paid fee-for-service |
outpatient claim for dates of service in Calendar Year |
2019 in the Department's Enterprise Data Warehouse as of |
August 6, 2021. |
(8) Alzheimer's treatment access payment. Each |
Illinois academic medical center or teaching hospital, as |
defined in Section 5-5e.2 of this Code, that is identified |
as the primary hospital affiliate of one of the Regional |
Alzheimer's Disease Assistance Centers, as designated by |
|
the Alzheimer's Disease Assistance Act and identified in |
the Department of Public Health's Alzheimer's Disease |
State Plan dated December 2016, shall be paid an |
Alzheimer's treatment access payment equal to the product |
of the qualifying hospital's Calendar Year 2019 total |
inpatient fee-for-service days, in the Department's |
Enterprise Data Warehouse as of August 6, 2021, multiplied |
by the applicable Alzheimer's treatment rate of $244.37 |
for hospitals located in Cook County and $312.03 for |
hospitals located outside Cook County. |
(e) The Department shall require managed care |
organizations (MCOs) to make directed payments and |
pass-through payments according to this Section. Each calendar |
year, the Department shall require MCOs to pay the maximum |
amount out of these funds as allowed as pass-through payments |
under federal regulations. The Department shall require MCOs |
to make such pass-through payments as specified in this |
Section. The Department shall require the MCOs to pay the |
remaining amounts as directed Payments as specified in this |
Section. The Department shall issue payments to the |
Comptroller by the seventh business day of each month for all |
MCOs that are sufficient for MCOs to make the directed |
payments and pass-through payments according to this Section. |
The Department shall require the MCOs to make pass-through |
payments and directed payments using electronic funds |
transfers (EFT), if the hospital provides the information |
|
necessary to process such EFTs, in accordance with directions |
provided monthly by the Department, within 7 business days of |
the date the funds are paid to the MCOs, as indicated by the |
"Paid Date" on the website of the Office of the Comptroller if |
the funds are paid by EFT and the MCOs have received directed |
payment instructions. If funds are not paid through the |
Comptroller by EFT, payment must be made within 7 business |
days of the date actually received by the MCO. The MCO will be |
considered to have paid the pass-through payments when the |
payment remittance number is generated or the date the MCO |
sends the check to the hospital, if EFT information is not |
supplied. If an MCO is late in paying a pass-through payment or |
directed payment as required under this Section (including any |
extensions granted by the Department), it shall pay a penalty, |
unless waived by the Department for reasonable cause, to the |
Department equal to 5% of the amount of the pass-through |
payment or directed payment not paid on or before the due date |
plus 5% of the portion thereof remaining unpaid on the last day |
of each 30-day period thereafter. Payments to MCOs that would |
be paid consistent with actuarial certification and enrollment |
in the absence of the increased capitation payments under this |
Section shall not be reduced as a consequence of payments made |
under this subsection. The Department shall publish and |
maintain on its website for a period of no less than 8 calendar |
quarters, the quarterly calculation of directed payments and |
pass-through payments owed to each hospital from each MCO. All |
|
calculations and reports shall be posted no later than the |
first day of the quarter for which the payments are to be |
issued. |
(f)(1) For purposes of allocating the funds included in |
capitation payments to MCOs, Illinois hospitals shall be |
divided into the following classes as defined in |
administrative rules: |
(A) Beginning July 1, 2020 through December 31, 2022, |
critical access hospitals. Beginning January 1, 2023, |
"critical access hospital" means a hospital designated by |
the Department of Public Health as a critical access |
hospital, excluding any hospital meeting the definition of |
a public hospital in subparagraph (F). |
(B) Safety-net hospitals, except that stand-alone |
children's hospitals that are not specialty children's |
hospitals will not be included. For the calendar year |
beginning January 1, 2023, and each calendar year |
thereafter, assignment to the safety-net class shall be |
based on the annual safety-net rate year beginning 15 |
months before the beginning of the first Payout Quarter of |
the calendar year. |
(C) Long term acute care hospitals. |
(D) Freestanding psychiatric hospitals. |
(E) Freestanding rehabilitation hospitals. |
(F) Beginning January 1, 2023, "public hospital" means |
a hospital that is owned or operated by an Illinois |
|
Government body or municipality, excluding a hospital |
provider that is a State agency, a State university, or a |
county with a population of 3,000,000 or more. |
(G) High Medicaid hospitals. |
(i) As used in this Section, "high Medicaid |
hospital" means a general acute care hospital that: |
(I) For the payout periods July 1, 2020 |
through December 31, 2022, is not a safety-net |
hospital or critical access hospital and that has |
a Medicaid Inpatient Utilization Rate above 30% or |
a hospital that had over 35,000 inpatient Medicaid |
days during the applicable period. For the period |
July 1, 2020 through December 31, 2020, the |
applicable period for the Medicaid Inpatient |
Utilization Rate (MIUR) is the rate year 2020 MIUR |
and for the number of inpatient days it is State |
fiscal year 2018. Beginning in calendar year 2021, |
the Department shall use the most recently |
determined MIUR, as defined in subsection (h) of |
Section 5-5.02, and for the inpatient day |
threshold, the State fiscal year ending 18 months |
prior to the beginning of the calendar year. For |
purposes of calculating MIUR under this Section, |
children's hospitals and affiliated general acute |
care hospitals shall be considered a single |
hospital. |
|
(II) For the calendar year beginning January |
1, 2023, and each calendar year thereafter, is not |
a public hospital, safety-net hospital, or |
critical access hospital and that qualifies as a |
regional high volume hospital or is a hospital |
that has a Medicaid Inpatient Utilization Rate |
(MIUR) above 30%. As used in this item, "regional |
high volume hospital" means a hospital which ranks |
in the top 2 quartiles based on total hospital |
services volume, of all eligible general acute |
care hospitals, when ranked in descending order |
based on total hospital services volume, within |
the same Medicaid managed care region, as |
designated by the Department, as of January 1, |
2022. As used in this item, "total hospital |
services volume" means the total of all Medical |
Assistance hospital inpatient admissions plus all |
Medical Assistance hospital outpatient visits. For |
purposes of determining regional high volume |
hospital inpatient admissions and outpatient |
visits, the Department shall use dates of service |
provided during State Fiscal Year 2020 for the |
Payout Quarter beginning January 1, 2023. The |
Department shall use dates of service from the |
State fiscal year ending 18 month before the |
beginning of the first Payout Quarter of the |
|
subsequent annual determination period. |
(ii) For the calendar year beginning January 1, |
2023, the Department shall use the Rate Year 2022 |
Medicaid inpatient utilization rate (MIUR), as defined |
in subsection (h) of Section 5-5.02. For each |
subsequent annual determination, the Department shall |
use the MIUR applicable to the rate year ending |
September 30 of the year preceding the beginning of |
the calendar year. |
(H) General acute care hospitals. As used under this |
Section, "general acute care hospitals" means all other |
Illinois hospitals not identified in subparagraphs (A) |
through (G). |
(2) Hospitals' qualification for each class shall be |
assessed prior to the beginning of each calendar year and the |
new class designation shall be effective January 1 of the next |
year. The Department shall publish by rule the process for |
establishing class determination. |
(g) Fixed pool directed payments. Beginning July 1, 2020, |
the Department shall issue payments to MCOs which shall be |
used to issue directed payments to qualified Illinois |
safety-net hospitals and critical access hospitals on a |
monthly basis in accordance with this subsection. Prior to the |
beginning of each Payout Quarter beginning July 1, 2020, the |
Department shall use encounter claims data from the |
Determination Quarter, accepted by the Department's Medicaid |
|
Management Information System for inpatient and outpatient |
services rendered by safety-net hospitals and critical access |
hospitals to determine a quarterly uniform per unit add-on for |
each hospital class. |
(1) Inpatient per unit add-on. A quarterly uniform per |
diem add-on shall be derived by dividing the quarterly |
Inpatient Directed Payments Pool amount allocated to the |
applicable hospital class by the total inpatient days |
contained on all encounter claims received during the |
Determination Quarter, for all hospitals in the class. |
(A) Each hospital in the class shall have a |
quarterly inpatient directed payment calculated that |
is equal to the product of the number of inpatient days |
attributable to the hospital used in the calculation |
of the quarterly uniform class per diem add-on, |
multiplied by the calculated applicable quarterly |
uniform class per diem add-on of the hospital class. |
(B) Each hospital shall be paid 1/3 of its |
quarterly inpatient directed payment in each of the 3 |
months of the Payout Quarter, in accordance with |
directions provided to each MCO by the Department. |
(2) Outpatient per unit add-on. A quarterly uniform |
per claim add-on shall be derived by dividing the |
quarterly Outpatient Directed Payments Pool amount |
allocated to the applicable hospital class by the total |
outpatient encounter claims received during the |
|
Determination Quarter, for all hospitals in the class. |
(A) Each hospital in the class shall have a |
quarterly outpatient directed payment calculated that |
is equal to the product of the number of outpatient |
encounter claims attributable to the hospital used in |
the calculation of the quarterly uniform class per |
claim add-on, multiplied by the calculated applicable |
quarterly uniform class per claim add-on of the |
hospital class. |
(B) Each hospital shall be paid 1/3 of its |
quarterly outpatient directed payment in each of the 3 |
months of the Payout Quarter, in accordance with |
directions provided to each MCO by the Department. |
(3) Each MCO shall pay each hospital the Monthly |
Directed Payment as identified by the Department on its |
quarterly determination report. |
(4) Definitions. As used in this subsection: |
(A) "Payout Quarter" means each 3 month calendar |
quarter, beginning July 1, 2020. |
(B) "Determination Quarter" means each 3 month |
calendar quarter, which ends 3 months prior to the |
first day of each Payout Quarter. |
(5) For the period July 1, 2020 through December 2020, |
the following amounts shall be allocated to the following |
hospital class directed payment pools for the quarterly |
development of a uniform per unit add-on: |
|
(A) $2,894,500 for hospital inpatient services for |
critical access hospitals. |
(B) $4,294,374 for hospital outpatient services |
for critical access hospitals. |
(C) $29,109,330 for hospital inpatient services |
for safety-net hospitals. |
(D) $35,041,218 for hospital outpatient services |
for safety-net hospitals. |
(6) For the period January 1, 2023 through December |
31, 2023, the Department shall establish the amounts that |
shall be allocated to the hospital class directed payment |
fixed pools identified in this paragraph for the quarterly |
development of a uniform per unit add-on. The Department |
shall establish such amounts so that the total amount of |
payments to each hospital under this Section in calendar |
year 2023 is projected to be substantially similar to the |
total amount of such payments received by the hospital |
under this Section in calendar year 2021, adjusted for |
increased funding provided for fixed pool directed |
payments under subsection (g) in calendar year 2022, |
assuming that the volume and acuity of claims are held |
constant. The Department shall publish the directed |
payment fixed pool amounts to be established under this |
paragraph on its website by November 15, 2022. |
(A) Hospital inpatient services for critical |
access hospitals. |
|
(B) Hospital outpatient services for critical |
access hospitals. |
(C) Hospital inpatient services for public |
hospitals. |
(D) Hospital outpatient services for public |
hospitals. |
(E) Hospital inpatient services for safety-net |
hospitals. |
(F) Hospital outpatient services for safety-net |
hospitals. |
(7) Semi-annual rate maintenance review. The |
Department shall ensure that hospitals assigned to the |
fixed pools in paragraph (6) are paid no less than 95% of |
the annual initial rate for each 6-month period of each |
annual payout period. For each calendar year, the |
Department shall calculate the annual initial rate per day |
and per visit for each fixed pool hospital class listed in |
paragraph (6), by dividing the total of all applicable |
inpatient or outpatient directed payments issued in the |
preceding calendar year to the hospitals in each fixed |
pool class for the calendar year, plus any increase |
resulting from the annual adjustments described in |
subsection (i), by the actual applicable total service |
units for the preceding calendar year which were the basis |
of the total applicable inpatient or outpatient directed |
payments issued to the hospitals in each fixed pool class |
|
in the calendar year, except that for calendar year 2023, |
the service units from calendar year 2021 shall be used. |
(A) The Department shall calculate the effective |
rate, per day and per visit, for the payout periods of |
January to June and July to December of each year, for |
each fixed pool listed in paragraph (6), by dividing |
50% of the annual pool by the total applicable |
reported service units for the 2 applicable |
determination quarters. |
(B) If the effective rate calculated in |
subparagraph (A) is less than 95% of the annual |
initial rate assigned to the class for each pool under |
paragraph (6), the Department shall adjust the payment |
for each hospital to a level equal to no less than 95% |
of the annual initial rate, by issuing a retroactive |
adjustment payment for the 6-month period under review |
as identified in subparagraph (A). |
(h) Fixed rate directed payments. Effective July 1, 2020, |
the Department shall issue payments to MCOs which shall be |
used to issue directed payments to Illinois hospitals not |
identified in paragraph (g) on a monthly basis. Prior to the |
beginning of each Payout Quarter beginning July 1, 2020, the |
Department shall use encounter claims data from the |
Determination Quarter, accepted by the Department's Medicaid |
Management Information System for inpatient and outpatient |
services rendered by hospitals in each hospital class |
|
identified in paragraph (f) and not identified in paragraph |
(g). For the period July 1, 2020 through December 2020, the |
Department shall direct MCOs to make payments as follows: |
(1) For general acute care hospitals an amount equal |
to $1,750 multiplied by the hospital's category of service |
20 case mix index for the determination quarter multiplied |
by the hospital's total number of inpatient admissions for |
category of service 20 for the determination quarter. |
(2) For general acute care hospitals an amount equal |
to $160 multiplied by the hospital's category of service |
21 case mix index for the determination quarter multiplied |
by the hospital's total number of inpatient admissions for |
category of service 21 for the determination quarter. |
(3) For general acute care hospitals an amount equal |
to $80 multiplied by the hospital's category of service 22 |
case mix index for the determination quarter multiplied by |
the hospital's total number of inpatient admissions for |
category of service 22 for the determination quarter. |
(4) For general acute care hospitals an amount equal |
to $375 multiplied by the hospital's category of service |
24 case mix index for the determination quarter multiplied |
by the hospital's total number of category of service 24 |
paid EAPG (EAPGs) for the determination quarter. |
(5) For general acute care hospitals an amount equal |
to $240 multiplied by the hospital's category of service |
27 and 28 case mix index for the determination quarter |
|
multiplied by the hospital's total number of category of |
service 27 and 28 paid EAPGs for the determination |
quarter. |
(6) For general acute care hospitals an amount equal |
to $290 multiplied by the hospital's category of service |
29 case mix index for the determination quarter multiplied |
by the hospital's total number of category of service 29 |
paid EAPGs for the determination quarter. |
(7) For high Medicaid hospitals an amount equal to |
$1,800 multiplied by the hospital's category of service 20 |
case mix index for the determination quarter multiplied by |
the hospital's total number of inpatient admissions for |
category of service 20 for the determination quarter. |
(8) For high Medicaid hospitals an amount equal to |
$160 multiplied by the hospital's category of service 21 |
case mix index for the determination quarter multiplied by |
the hospital's total number of inpatient admissions for |
category of service 21 for the determination quarter. |
(9) For high Medicaid hospitals an amount equal to $80 |
multiplied by the hospital's category of service 22 case |
mix index for the determination quarter multiplied by the |
hospital's total number of inpatient admissions for |
category of service 22 for the determination quarter. |
(10) For high Medicaid hospitals an amount equal to |
$400 multiplied by the hospital's category of service 24 |
case mix index for the determination quarter multiplied by |
|
the hospital's total number of category of service 24 paid |
EAPG outpatient claims for the determination quarter. |
(11) For high Medicaid hospitals an amount equal to |
$240 multiplied by the hospital's category of service 27 |
and 28 case mix index for the determination quarter |
multiplied by the hospital's total number of category of |
service 27 and 28 paid EAPGs for the determination |
quarter. |
(12) For high Medicaid hospitals an amount equal to |
$290 multiplied by the hospital's category of service 29 |
case mix index for the determination quarter multiplied by |
the hospital's total number of category of service 29 paid |
EAPGs for the determination quarter. |
(13) For long term acute care hospitals the amount of |
$495 multiplied by the hospital's total number of |
inpatient days for the determination quarter. |
(14) For psychiatric hospitals the amount of $210 |
multiplied by the hospital's total number of inpatient |
days for category of service 21 for the determination |
quarter. |
(15) For psychiatric hospitals the amount of $250 |
multiplied by the hospital's total number of outpatient |
claims for category of service 27 and 28 for the |
determination quarter. |
(16) For rehabilitation hospitals the amount of $410 |
multiplied by the hospital's total number of inpatient |
|
days for category of service 22 for the determination |
quarter. |
(17) For rehabilitation hospitals the amount of $100 |
multiplied by the hospital's total number of outpatient |
claims for category of service 29 for the determination |
quarter. |
(18) Effective for the Payout Quarter beginning |
January 1, 2023, for the directed payments to hospitals |
required under this subsection, the Department shall |
establish the amounts that shall be used to calculate such |
directed payments using the methodologies specified in |
this paragraph. The Department shall use a single, uniform |
rate, adjusted for acuity as specified in paragraphs (1) |
through (12), for all categories of inpatient services |
provided by each class of hospitals and a single uniform |
rate, adjusted for acuity as specified in paragraphs (1) |
through (12), for all categories of outpatient services |
provided by each class of hospitals. The Department shall |
establish such amounts so that the total amount of |
payments to each hospital under this Section in calendar |
year 2023 is projected to be substantially similar to the |
total amount of such payments received by the hospital |
under this Section in calendar year 2021, adjusted for |
increased funding provided for fixed pool directed |
payments under subsection (g) in calendar year 2022, |
assuming that the volume and acuity of claims are held |
|
constant. The Department shall publish the directed |
payment amounts to be established under this subsection on |
its website by November 15, 2022. |
(19) Each hospital shall be paid 1/3 of their |
quarterly inpatient and outpatient directed payment in |
each of the 3 months of the Payout Quarter, in accordance |
with directions provided to each MCO by the Department. |
20 Each MCO shall pay each hospital the Monthly |
Directed Payment amount as identified by the Department on |
its quarterly determination report. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this subsection, if |
the Department determines that the actual total hospital |
utilization data that is used to calculate the fixed rate |
directed payments is substantially different than anticipated |
when the rates in this subsection were initially determined |
for unforeseeable circumstances (such as the COVID-19 pandemic |
or some other public health emergency), the Department may |
adjust the rates specified in this subsection so that the |
total directed payments approximate the total spending amount |
anticipated when the rates were initially established. |
Definitions. As used in this subsection: |
(A) "Payout Quarter" means each calendar quarter, |
beginning July 1, 2020. |
(B) "Determination Quarter" means each calendar |
quarter which ends 3 months prior to the first day of |
each Payout Quarter. |
|
(C) "Case mix index" means a hospital specific |
calculation. For inpatient claims the case mix index |
is calculated each quarter by summing the relative |
weight of all inpatient Diagnosis-Related Group (DRG) |
claims for a category of service in the applicable |
Determination Quarter and dividing the sum by the |
number of sum total of all inpatient DRG admissions |
for the category of service for the associated claims. |
The case mix index for outpatient claims is calculated |
each quarter by summing the relative weight of all |
paid EAPGs in the applicable Determination Quarter and |
dividing the sum by the sum total of paid EAPGs for the |
associated claims. |
(i) Beginning January 1, 2021, the rates for directed |
payments shall be recalculated in order to spend the |
additional funds for directed payments that result from |
reduction in the amount of pass-through payments allowed under |
federal regulations. The additional funds for directed |
payments shall be allocated proportionally to each class of |
hospitals based on that class' proportion of services. |
(1) Beginning January 1, 2024, the fixed pool directed |
payment amounts and the associated annual initial rates |
referenced in paragraph (6) of subsection (f) for each |
hospital class shall be uniformly increased by a ratio of |
not less than, the ratio of the total pass-through |
reduction amount pursuant to paragraph (4) of subsection |
|
(j), for the hospitals comprising the hospital fixed pool |
directed payment class for the next calendar year, to the |
total inpatient and outpatient directed payments for the |
hospitals comprising the hospital fixed pool directed |
payment class paid during the preceding calendar year. |
(2) Beginning January 1, 2024, the fixed rates for the |
directed payments referenced in paragraph (18) of |
subsection (h) for each hospital class shall be uniformly |
increased by a ratio of not less than, the ratio of the |
total pass-through reduction amount pursuant to paragraph |
(4) of subsection (j), for the hospitals comprising the |
hospital directed payment class for the next calendar |
year, to the total inpatient and outpatient directed |
payments for the hospitals comprising the hospital fixed |
rate directed payment class paid during the preceding |
calendar year. |
(j) Pass-through payments. |
(1) For the period July 1, 2020 through December 31, |
2020, the Department shall assign quarterly pass-through |
payments to each class of hospitals equal to one-fourth of |
the following annual allocations: |
(A) $390,487,095 to safety-net hospitals. |
(B) $62,553,886 to critical access hospitals. |
(C) $345,021,438 to high Medicaid hospitals. |
(D) $551,429,071 to general acute care hospitals. |
(E) $27,283,870 to long term acute care hospitals. |
|
(F) $40,825,444 to freestanding psychiatric |
hospitals. |
(G) $9,652,108 to freestanding rehabilitation |
hospitals. |
(2) For the period of July 1, 2020 through December |
31, 2020, the pass-through payments shall at a minimum |
ensure hospitals receive a total amount of monthly |
payments under this Section as received in calendar year |
2019 in accordance with this Article and paragraph (1) of |
subsection (d-5) of Section 14-12, exclusive of amounts |
received through payments referenced in subsection (b). |
(3) For the calendar year beginning January 1, 2023, |
the Department shall establish the annual pass-through |
allocation to each class of hospitals and the pass-through |
payments to each hospital so that the total amount of |
payments to each hospital under this Section in calendar |
year 2023 is projected to be substantially similar to the |
total amount of such payments received by the hospital |
under this Section in calendar year 2021, adjusted for |
increased funding provided for fixed pool directed |
payments under subsection (g) in calendar year 2022, |
assuming that the volume and acuity of claims are held |
constant. The Department shall publish the pass-through |
allocation to each class and the pass-through payments to |
each hospital to be established under this subsection on |
its website by November 15, 2022. |
|
(4) For the calendar years beginning January 1, 2021, |
January 1, 2022, and January 1, 2024, and each calendar |
year thereafter, each hospital's pass-through payment |
amount shall be reduced proportionally to the reduction of |
all pass-through payments required by federal regulations. |
(k) At least 30 days prior to each calendar year, the |
Department shall notify each hospital of changes to the |
payment methodologies in this Section, including, but not |
limited to, changes in the fixed rate directed payment rates, |
the aggregate pass-through payment amount for all hospitals, |
and the hospital's pass-through payment amount for the |
upcoming calendar year. |
(l) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Section, |
the Department may adopt rules to change the methodology for |
directed and pass-through payments as set forth in this |
Section, but only to the extent necessary to obtain federal |
approval of a necessary State Plan amendment or Directed |
Payment Preprint or to otherwise conform to federal law or |
federal regulation. |
(m) As used in this subsection, "managed care |
organization" or "MCO" means an entity which contracts with |
the Department to provide services where payment for medical |
services is made on a capitated basis, excluding contracted |
entities for dual eligible or Department of Children and |
Family Services youth populations.
|
(n) In order to address the escalating infant mortality |
|
rates among minority communities in Illinois, the State shall, |
subject to appropriation, create a pool of funding of at least |
$50,000,000 annually to be disbursed among safety-net |
hospitals that maintain perinatal designation from the |
Department of Public Health. The funding shall be used to |
preserve or enhance OB/GYN services or other specialty |
services at the receiving hospital, with the distribution of |
funding to be established by rule and with consideration to |
perinatal hospitals with safe birthing levels and quality |
metrics for healthy mothers and babies. |
(o) In order to address the growing challenges of |
providing stable access to healthcare in rural Illinois, |
including perinatal services, behavioral healthcare including |
substance use disorder services (SUDs) and other specialty |
services, and to expand access to telehealth services among |
rural communities in Illinois, the Department of Healthcare |
and Family Services, subject to appropriation, shall |
administer a program to provide at least $10,000,000 in |
financial support annually to critical access hospitals for |
delivery of perinatal and OB/GYN services, behavioral |
healthcare including SUDS, other specialty services and |
telehealth services. The funding shall be used to preserve or |
enhance perinatal and OB/GYN services, behavioral healthcare |
including SUDS, other specialty services, as well as the |
explanation of telehealth services by the receiving hospital, |
with the distribution of funding to be established by rule. |
|
(p) For calendar year 2023, the final amounts, rates, and |
payments under subsections (c), (d-2), (g), (h), and (j) shall |
be established by the Department, so that the sum of the total |
estimated annual payments under subsections (c), (d-2), (g), |
(h), and (j) for each hospital class for calendar year 2023, is |
no less than: |
(1) $858,260,000 to safety-net hospitals. |
(2) $86,200,000 to critical access hospitals. |
(3) $1,765,000,000 to high Medicaid hospitals. |
(4) $673,860,000 to general acute care hospitals. |
(5) $48,330,000 to long term acute care hospitals. |
(6) $89,110,000 to freestanding psychiatric hospitals. |
(7) $24,300,000 to freestanding rehabilitation |
hospitals. |
(8) $32,570,000 to public hospitals. |
(q) Hospital Pandemic Recovery Stabilization Payments. |
The Department shall disburse a pool of $460,000,000 in |
stability payments to hospitals prior to April 1, 2023. The |
allocation of the pool shall be based on the hospital directed |
payment classes and directed payments issued, during Calendar |
Year 2022 with added consideration to safety net hospitals, as |
defined in subdivision (f)(1)(B) of this Section, and critical |
access hospitals. |
(Source: P.A. 101-650, eff. 7-7-20; 102-4, eff. 4-27-21; |
102-16, eff. 6-17-21; 102-886, eff. 5-17-22.) |
|
Section 5-40. The Illinois Human Rights Act is amended by |
changing Section 7-101 as follows:
|
(775 ILCS 5/7-101) (from Ch. 68, par. 7-101)
|
Sec. 7-101. Powers and Duties. In addition to other powers |
and duties
prescribed in this Act, the Department shall have |
the following powers:
|
(A) Rules and Regulations. To adopt, promulgate, amend, |
and rescind rules
and regulations not inconsistent with the |
provisions of this Act pursuant
to the Illinois Administrative |
Procedure Act.
|
(B) Charges. To issue, receive, investigate, conciliate, |
settle, and dismiss
charges filed in conformity with this Act.
|
(C) Compulsory Process. To request subpoenas as it deems |
necessary for
its investigations.
|
(D) Complaints. To file complaints with the Commission in |
conformity
with this Act.
|
(E) Judicial Enforcement. To seek temporary relief and to |
enforce orders
of the Commission in conformity with this Act.
|
(F) Equal Employment Opportunities. To take such action as |
may be authorized
to provide for equal employment |
opportunities and affirmative action.
|
(G) Recruitment; Research; Public Communication; Advisory |
Councils. To
engage in such recruitment, research and public |
communication and create
such advisory councils as may be |
authorized to effectuate the purposes of
this Act.
|
|
(H) Coordination with other Agencies. To coordinate its
|
activities with federal, state, and local agencies in |
conformity with this Act.
|
(I) Public Grants; Private Gifts. |
(1) To accept public grants and private
gifts as may |
be authorized. |
(2) To design grant programs and award grants to |
eligible recipients.
|
(J) Education and Training. To implement a formal and |
unbiased program
of education and training for all employees |
assigned to investigate and
conciliate charges under Articles |
7A and 7B. The training program shall
include the following:
|
(1) substantive and procedural aspects of the |
investigation and
conciliation positions;
|
(2) current issues in human rights law and practice;
|
(3) lectures by specialists in substantive areas |
related to human
rights matters;
|
(4) orientation to each operational unit of the |
Department and Commission;
|
(5) observation of experienced Department |
investigators and attorneys
conducting conciliation |
conferences, combined with the opportunity to
discuss |
evidence presented and rulings made;
|
(6) the use of hypothetical cases requiring the |
Department investigator
and conciliation conference |
attorney to issue judgments as a means to
evaluating |
|
knowledge and writing ability;
|
(7) writing skills;
|
(8) computer skills, including but not limited to word |
processing and
document management.
|
A formal, unbiased and ongoing professional development |
program
including, but not limited to, the above-noted areas |
shall be implemented
to keep Department investigators and |
attorneys informed of recent
developments and issues and to |
assist them in maintaining and enhancing
their professional |
competence.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-74, eff. 7-20-15.)
|
ARTICLE 10 |
Section 10-5. The State Officials and Employees Ethics Act |
is amended by changing Section 20-10 as follows: |
(5 ILCS 430/20-10)
|
Sec. 20-10. Offices of Executive Inspectors General.
|
(a) Five independent Offices of the Executive Inspector |
General are
created,
one each for the Governor, the Attorney |
General, the Secretary of State, the
Comptroller, and the |
Treasurer. Each Office shall be under the direction and
|
supervision
of an Executive Inspector General and shall be a |
fully independent office with
separate
appropriations.
|
(b) The Governor, Attorney General, Secretary of State, |
|
Comptroller, and
Treasurer shall each appoint an Executive |
Inspector General, without regard to
political affiliation and |
solely on the basis of integrity and
demonstrated ability.
|
Appointments shall be made by and with the advice and consent |
of the
Senate by three-fifths of the elected members |
concurring by record vote.
Any nomination not acted upon by |
the Senate within 60 session days of the
receipt thereof shall |
be deemed to have received the advice and consent of
the |
Senate. If, during a recess of the Senate, there is a vacancy |
in an office
of Executive Inspector General, the appointing |
authority shall make a
temporary appointment until the next |
meeting of the Senate when the
appointing authority shall make |
a nomination to fill that office. No person
rejected for an |
office of Executive Inspector General shall, except by the
|
Senate's request, be nominated again for that office at the |
same session of
the Senate or be appointed to that office |
during a recess of that Senate.
|
Nothing in this Article precludes the appointment by the |
Governor, Attorney
General,
Secretary of State, Comptroller, |
or Treasurer of any other inspector general
required or
|
permitted by law. The Governor, Attorney General, Secretary of |
State,
Comptroller, and
Treasurer
each may appoint an existing |
inspector general as the Executive Inspector
General
required |
by this
Article, provided that such an inspector general is |
not prohibited by law,
rule,
jurisdiction, qualification, or |
interest from serving as the Executive
Inspector General
|
|
required by
this Article.
An appointing authority may not |
appoint a relative as an Executive Inspector
General.
|
Each Executive Inspector General shall have the following |
qualifications:
|
(1) has not been convicted of any felony under the |
laws of this State,
another State, or the United States;
|
(2) has earned a baccalaureate degree from an |
institution of higher
education; and
|
(3) has 5 or more years of cumulative service (A) with |
a federal,
State, or
local law enforcement agency, at |
least 2 years of which have been in a
progressive |
investigatory capacity; (B)
as a
federal, State, or local |
prosecutor; (C)
as a
senior manager or executive of a |
federal, State, or local
agency; (D) as a member, an |
officer,
or a State
or federal judge; or (E) representing |
any combination of items (A) through (D).
|
The term of each initial Executive Inspector General shall
|
commence upon qualification and shall run through June 30, |
2008. The
initial appointments shall be made within 60 days |
after the effective
date of this Act.
|
After the initial term, each Executive Inspector General |
shall serve
for 5-year terms commencing on July 1 of the year |
of appointment
and running through June 30 of the fifth |
following year. An
Executive Inspector General may be |
reappointed to one or more
subsequent terms.
|
A vacancy occurring other than at the end of a term shall |
|
be filled
by the appointing authority only for the balance of |
the term of the Executive
Inspector General whose office is |
vacant.
|
Terms shall run regardless of whether the position is |
filled.
|
(c) The Executive Inspector General appointed by the |
Attorney General shall
have jurisdiction over the Attorney |
General and all officers and employees of,
and vendors and |
others doing business with,
State agencies within the |
jurisdiction of the Attorney General. The Executive
Inspector |
General appointed by the Secretary of State shall have |
jurisdiction
over the Secretary of State and all officers and |
employees of, and vendors and
others doing business with, |
State agencies within the
jurisdiction of the Secretary of |
State. The Executive Inspector General
appointed by the |
Comptroller shall have jurisdiction over the Comptroller and
|
all officers and employees of, and vendors and others doing |
business with,
State agencies within the jurisdiction of the |
Comptroller. The
Executive Inspector General appointed by the |
Treasurer shall have jurisdiction
over the Treasurer and all |
officers and employees of, and vendors and others
doing |
business with, State agencies within the jurisdiction
of the |
Treasurer. The Executive Inspector General appointed by the |
Governor
shall have jurisdiction over (i) the Governor, (ii) |
the Lieutenant Governor, (iii) all
officers and employees of, |
and vendors and others doing business with,
executive branch |
|
State agencies under the jurisdiction of the
Executive Ethics |
Commission and not within the jurisdiction of the
Attorney
|
General, the Secretary of State, the Comptroller, or the |
Treasurer, and (iv) all board members and employees of the |
Regional Transit Boards and all vendors and others doing |
business with the Regional Transit Boards.
|
The jurisdiction of each Executive Inspector General is to |
investigate
allegations of fraud, waste, abuse, mismanagement, |
misconduct, nonfeasance,
misfeasance,
malfeasance, or |
violations of this Act or violations of other related
laws and |
rules.
|
Each Executive Inspector General shall have jurisdiction |
over complainants in violation of subsection (e) of Section |
20-63 for disclosing a summary report prepared by the |
respective Executive Inspector General. |
(d) The compensation for each Executive Inspector General |
shall be
determined by the Executive Ethics Commission and |
shall be provided made from appropriations made to the |
Comptroller for this purpose. For terms of office beginning on |
or after July 1, 2023, each Executive Inspector General shall |
receive, on July 1 of each year, beginning on July 1, 2024, an |
increase in salary based on a cost of living adjustment as |
authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General |
Assembly. Subject to Section 20-45 of this Act, each
Executive |
Inspector General has full
authority
to organize his or her |
Office of the Executive Inspector General, including the
|
|
employment and determination of the compensation of staff, |
such as deputies,
assistants, and other employees, as |
appropriations permit. A separate
appropriation
shall be made |
for each Office of Executive Inspector General.
|
(e) No Executive Inspector General or employee of the |
Office of
the Executive Inspector General may, during his or |
her term of appointment or
employment:
|
(1) become a candidate for any elective office;
|
(2) hold any other elected or appointed public office
|
except for appointments on governmental advisory boards
or |
study commissions or as otherwise expressly authorized by |
law;
|
(3) be actively involved in the affairs of any |
political party or
political organization; or
|
(4) advocate for the appointment of another person to |
an appointed or elected office or position or actively |
participate in any campaign for any
elective office.
|
In this subsection an appointed public office means a |
position authorized by
law that is filled by an appointing |
authority as provided by law and does not
include employment |
by hiring in the ordinary course of business.
|
(e-1) No Executive Inspector General or employee of the |
Office of the
Executive Inspector General may, for one year |
after the termination of his or
her appointment or employment:
|
(1) become a candidate for any elective office;
|
(2) hold any elected public office; or
|
|
(3) hold any appointed State, county, or local |
judicial office.
|
(e-2) The requirements of item (3) of subsection (e-1) may |
be waived by the
Executive Ethics Commission.
|
(f) An Executive Inspector General may be removed only for |
cause and may
be removed only by the appointing constitutional |
officer. At the time of the
removal,
the appointing |
constitutional officer must report to the Executive Ethics
|
Commission the
justification for the
removal.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-221, eff. 8-9-19; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21.) |
Section 10-10. The Firearm Owners Identification Card Act |
is amended by changing Section 10 as follows:
|
(430 ILCS 65/10) (from Ch. 38, par. 83-10)
|
Sec. 10. Appeals; hearing; relief from firearm |
prohibitions. |
(a) Whenever an application for a Firearm Owner's |
Identification
Card is denied or whenever such a Card is |
revoked or seized
as provided for in Section 8 of this Act, the |
aggrieved party may
(1) file a record challenge with the |
Director regarding the record upon which the decision to deny |
or revoke the Firearm Owner's Identification Card was based |
under subsection (a-5); or (2) appeal
to the Director of the |
Illinois State Police through December 31, 2022, or beginning |
January 1, 2023, the Firearm Owner's Identification Card |
|
Review Board for a hearing seeking relief from
such denial or |
revocation unless the denial or revocation
was based upon a |
forcible felony, stalking, aggravated stalking, domestic
|
battery, any violation of the Illinois Controlled Substances |
Act, the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, |
or the
Cannabis Control Act that is classified as a Class 2 or |
greater felony,
any
felony violation of Article 24 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or any
|
adjudication as a delinquent minor for the commission of an
|
offense that if committed by an adult would be a felony, in |
which case the
aggrieved party may petition the circuit court |
in writing in the county of
his or her residence for a hearing |
seeking relief from such denial or revocation.
|
(a-5) There is created a Firearm Owner's Identification |
Card Review Board to consider any appeal under subsection (a) |
beginning January 1, 2023, other than an appeal directed to |
the circuit court and except when the applicant is challenging |
the record upon which the decision to deny or revoke was based |
as provided in subsection (a-10). |
(0.05) In furtherance of the policy of this Act that |
the Board shall exercise its powers and duties in an |
independent manner, subject to the provisions of this Act |
but free from the direction, control, or influence of any |
other agency or department of State government. All |
expenses and liabilities incurred by the Board in the |
performance of its responsibilities hereunder shall be |
|
paid from funds which shall be appropriated to the Board |
by the General Assembly for the ordinary and contingent |
expenses of the Board. |
(1) The Board shall consist of 7 members appointed by |
the Governor, with the advice and consent of the Senate, |
with 3 members residing within the First Judicial District |
and one member residing within each of the 4 remaining |
Judicial Districts. No more than 4 members shall be |
members of the same political party. The Governor shall |
designate one member as the chairperson. The Board shall |
consist of: |
(A) one member with at least 5 years of service as |
a federal or State judge; |
(B) one member with at least 5 years of experience |
serving as an attorney with the United States |
Department of Justice, or as a State's Attorney or |
Assistant State's Attorney; |
(C) one member with at least 5 years of experience |
serving as a State or federal public defender or |
assistant public defender; |
(D) three members with at least 5 years of |
experience as a federal, State, or local law |
enforcement agent or as an employee with investigative |
experience or duties related to criminal justice under |
the United States Department of Justice, Drug |
Enforcement Administration, Department of Homeland |
|
Security, Federal Bureau of Investigation, or a State |
or local law enforcement agency; and |
(E) one member with at least 5 years of experience |
as a licensed physician or clinical psychologist with |
expertise in the diagnosis and treatment of mental |
illness. |
(2) The terms of the members initially appointed after |
January 1, 2022 (the effective date of Public Act 102-237) |
shall be as follows: one of
the initial members shall be |
appointed for a term of one year, 3 shall be
appointed for |
terms of 2 years, and 3 shall be appointed for terms of 4 |
years. Thereafter, members shall hold office for 4 years, |
with terms expiring on the second Monday in January |
immediately following the expiration of their terms and |
every 4 years thereafter. Members may be reappointed. |
Vacancies in the office of member shall be filled in the |
same manner as the original appointment, for the remainder |
of the unexpired term. The Governor may remove a member |
for incompetence, neglect of duty, malfeasance, or |
inability to serve. Members shall receive compensation in |
an amount equal to the compensation of members of the |
Executive Ethics Commission and , beginning July 1, 2023, |
shall be compensated from appropriations provided to the |
Comptroller for this purpose. Members may be reimbursed, |
from funds appropriated for such a purpose, for reasonable |
expenses actually incurred in the performance of their |
|
Board duties. The Illinois State Police shall designate an |
employee to serve as Executive Director of the Board and |
provide logistical and administrative assistance to the |
Board. |
(3) The Board shall meet at least quarterly each year |
and at the call of the chairperson as often as necessary to |
consider appeals of decisions made with respect to |
applications for a Firearm Owner's Identification Card |
under this Act. If necessary to ensure the participation |
of a member, the Board shall allow a member to participate |
in a Board meeting by electronic communication. Any member |
participating electronically shall be deemed present for |
purposes of establishing a quorum and voting. |
(4) The Board shall adopt rules for the review of |
appeals and the conduct of hearings. The Board shall |
maintain a record of its decisions and all materials |
considered in making its decisions. All Board decisions |
and voting records shall be kept confidential and all |
materials considered by the Board shall be exempt from |
inspection except upon order of a court. |
(5) In considering an appeal, the Board shall review |
the materials received concerning the denial or revocation |
by the Illinois State Police. By a vote of at least 4 |
members, the Board may request additional information from |
the Illinois State Police or the applicant or the |
testimony of the Illinois State Police or the applicant. |
|
The Board may require that the applicant submit electronic |
fingerprints to the Illinois State Police for an updated |
background check if the Board determines it lacks |
sufficient information to determine eligibility. The Board |
may consider information submitted by the Illinois State |
Police, a law enforcement agency, or the applicant. The |
Board shall review each denial or revocation and determine |
by a majority of members whether an applicant should be |
granted relief under subsection (c). |
(6) The Board shall by order issue summary decisions. |
The Board shall issue a decision within 45 days of |
receiving all completed appeal documents from the Illinois |
State Police and the applicant. However, the Board need |
not issue a decision within 45 days if: |
(A) the Board requests information from the |
applicant, including, but not limited to, electronic |
fingerprints to be submitted to the Illinois State |
Police, in accordance with paragraph (5) of this |
subsection, in which case the Board shall make a |
decision within 30 days of receipt of the required |
information from the applicant; |
(B) the applicant agrees, in writing, to allow the |
Board additional time to consider an appeal; or |
(C) the Board notifies the applicant and the |
Illinois State Police that the Board needs an |
additional 30 days to issue a decision. The Board may |
|
only issue 2 extensions under this subparagraph (C). |
The Board's notification to the applicant and the |
Illinois State Police shall include an explanation for |
the extension. |
(7) If the Board determines that the applicant is |
eligible for relief under subsection (c), the Board shall |
notify the applicant and the Illinois State Police that |
relief has been granted and the Illinois State Police |
shall issue the Card. |
(8) Meetings of the Board shall not be subject to the |
Open Meetings Act and records of the Board shall not be |
subject to the Freedom of Information Act. |
(9) The Board shall report monthly to the Governor and |
the General Assembly on the number of appeals received and |
provide details of the circumstances in which the Board |
has determined to deny Firearm Owner's Identification |
Cards under this subsection (a-5). The report shall not |
contain any identifying information about the applicants. |
(a-10) Whenever an applicant or cardholder is not seeking |
relief from a firearms prohibition under subsection (c) but |
rather does not believe the applicant is appropriately denied |
or revoked and is challenging the record upon which the |
decision to deny or revoke the Firearm Owner's Identification |
Card was based, or whenever the Illinois State Police fails to |
act on an application within 30 days of its receipt, the |
applicant shall file such challenge with the Director. The |
|
Director shall render a decision within 60 business days of |
receipt of all information supporting the challenge. The |
Illinois State Police shall adopt rules for the review of a |
record challenge. |
(b) At least 30 days before any hearing in the circuit |
court, the
petitioner shall serve the
relevant State's |
Attorney with a copy of the petition. The State's Attorney
may |
object to the petition and present evidence. At the hearing, |
the court
shall
determine whether substantial justice has been |
done. Should the court
determine that substantial justice has |
not been done, the court shall issue an
order directing the |
Illinois State Police to issue a Card. However, the court |
shall not issue the order if the petitioner is otherwise |
prohibited from obtaining, possessing, or using a firearm |
under
federal law.
|
(c) Any person prohibited from possessing a firearm under |
Sections 24-1.1
or 24-3.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012 or |
acquiring a Firearm Owner's
Identification Card under Section |
8 of this Act may apply to
the Firearm Owner's Identification |
Card Review Board
or petition the circuit court in the county |
where the petitioner resides,
whichever is applicable in |
accordance with subsection (a) of this Section,
requesting |
relief
from such prohibition and the Board or court may grant |
such relief if it
is
established by the applicant to the |
court's or the Board's satisfaction
that:
|
(0.05) when in the circuit court, the State's Attorney |
|
has been served
with a written
copy of the
petition at |
least 30 days before any such hearing in the circuit court |
and at
the hearing the
State's Attorney was afforded an |
opportunity to present evidence and object to
the |
petition;
|
(1) the applicant has not been convicted of a forcible |
felony under the
laws of this State or any other |
jurisdiction within 20 years of the
applicant's |
application for a Firearm Owner's Identification Card, or |
at
least 20 years have passed since the end of any period |
of imprisonment
imposed in relation to that conviction;
|
(2) the circumstances regarding a criminal conviction, |
where applicable,
the applicant's criminal history and his |
reputation are such that the applicant
will not be likely |
to act in a manner dangerous to public safety;
|
(3) granting relief would not be contrary to the |
public interest; and |
(4) granting relief would not be contrary to federal |
law.
|
(c-5) (1) An active law enforcement officer employed by a |
unit of government or a Department of Corrections employee |
authorized to possess firearms who is denied, revoked, or has |
his or her Firearm Owner's Identification Card seized under |
subsection (e) of Section 8 of this Act may apply to the |
Firearm Owner's Identification Card Review Board requesting |
relief if the officer or employee did not act in a manner |
|
threatening to the officer or employee, another person, or the |
public as determined by the treating clinical psychologist or |
physician, and as a result of his or her work is referred by |
the employer for or voluntarily seeks mental health evaluation |
or treatment by a licensed clinical psychologist, |
psychiatrist, or qualified examiner, and: |
(A) the officer or employee has not received treatment |
involuntarily at a mental health facility, regardless of |
the length of admission; or has not been voluntarily |
admitted to a mental health facility for more than 30 days |
and not for more than one incident within the past 5 years; |
and |
(B) the officer or employee has not left the mental |
institution against medical advice. |
(2) The Firearm Owner's Identification Card Review Board |
shall grant expedited relief to active law enforcement |
officers and employees described in paragraph (1) of this |
subsection (c-5) upon a determination by the Board that the |
officer's or employee's possession of a firearm does not |
present a threat to themselves, others, or public safety. The |
Board shall act on the request for relief within 30 business |
days of receipt of: |
(A) a notarized statement from the officer or employee |
in the form prescribed by the Board detailing the |
circumstances that led to the hospitalization; |
(B) all documentation regarding the admission, |
|
evaluation, treatment and discharge from the treating |
licensed clinical psychologist or psychiatrist of the |
officer; |
(C) a psychological fitness for duty evaluation of the |
person completed after the time of discharge; and |
(D) written confirmation in the form prescribed by the |
Board from the treating licensed clinical psychologist or |
psychiatrist that the provisions set forth in paragraph |
(1) of this subsection (c-5) have been met, the person |
successfully completed treatment, and their professional |
opinion regarding the person's ability to possess |
firearms. |
(3) Officers and employees eligible for the expedited |
relief in paragraph (2) of this subsection (c-5) have the |
burden of proof on eligibility and must provide all |
information required. The Board may not consider granting |
expedited relief until the proof and information is received. |
(4) "Clinical psychologist", "psychiatrist", and |
"qualified examiner" shall have the same meaning as provided |
in Chapter I of the Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code. |
(c-10) (1) An applicant, who is denied, revoked, or has |
his or her Firearm Owner's Identification Card seized under |
subsection (e) of Section 8 of this Act based upon a |
determination of a developmental disability or an intellectual |
disability may apply to the Firearm Owner's Identification |
|
Card Review Board requesting relief. |
(2) The Board shall act on the request for relief within 60 |
business days of receipt of written certification, in the form |
prescribed by the Board, from a physician or clinical |
psychologist, or qualified examiner, that the aggrieved |
party's developmental disability or intellectual disability |
condition is determined by a physician, clinical psychologist, |
or qualified to be mild. If a fact-finding conference is |
scheduled to obtain additional information concerning the |
circumstances of the denial or revocation, the 60 business |
days the Director has to act shall be tolled until the |
completion of the fact-finding conference. |
(3) The Board may grant relief if the aggrieved party's |
developmental disability or intellectual disability is mild as |
determined by a physician, clinical psychologist, or qualified |
examiner and it is established by the applicant to the Board's |
satisfaction that: |
(A) granting relief would not be contrary to the |
public interest; and |
(B) granting relief would not be contrary to federal |
law. |
(4) The Board may not grant relief if the condition is |
determined by a physician, clinical psychologist, or qualified |
examiner to be moderate, severe, or profound. |
(5) The changes made to this Section by Public Act 99-29 |
apply to requests for
relief pending on or before July 10, 2015 |
|
(the effective date of Public Act 99-29), except that the |
60-day period for the Director to act on requests pending |
before the effective date shall begin
on July 10, 2015 (the |
effective date of Public Act 99-29). All appeals as provided |
in subsection (a-5) pending on January 1, 2023 shall be |
considered by the Board. |
(d) When a minor is adjudicated delinquent for an offense |
which if
committed by an adult would be a felony, the court |
shall notify the Illinois State Police.
|
(e) The court shall review the denial of an application or |
the revocation of
a Firearm Owner's Identification Card of a |
person who has been adjudicated
delinquent for an offense that |
if
committed by an adult would be a felony if an
application |
for relief has been filed at least 10 years after the |
adjudication
of delinquency and the court determines that the |
applicant should be
granted relief from disability to obtain a |
Firearm Owner's Identification Card.
If the court grants |
relief, the court shall notify the Illinois State
Police that |
the disability has
been removed and that the applicant is |
eligible to obtain a Firearm Owner's
Identification Card.
|
(f) Any person who is subject to the disabilities of 18 |
U.S.C. 922(d)(4) and 922(g)(4) of the federal Gun Control Act |
of 1968 because of an adjudication or commitment that occurred |
under the laws of this State or who was determined to be |
subject to the provisions of subsections (e), (f), or (g) of |
Section 8 of this Act may apply to the Illinois State Police |
|
requesting relief from that prohibition. The Board shall grant |
the relief if it is established by a preponderance of the |
evidence that the person will not be likely to act in a manner |
dangerous to public safety and that granting relief would not |
be contrary to the public interest. In making this |
determination, the Board shall receive evidence concerning (i) |
the circumstances regarding the firearms disabilities from |
which relief is sought; (ii) the petitioner's mental health |
and criminal history records, if any; (iii) the petitioner's |
reputation, developed at a minimum through character witness |
statements, testimony, or other character evidence; and (iv) |
changes in the petitioner's condition or circumstances since |
the disqualifying events relevant to the relief sought. If |
relief is granted under this subsection or by order of a court |
under this Section, the Director shall as soon as practicable |
but in no case later than 15 business days, update, correct, |
modify, or remove the person's record in any database that the |
Illinois State Police makes available to the National Instant |
Criminal Background Check System and notify the United States |
Attorney General that the basis for the record being made |
available no longer applies. The Illinois State Police shall |
adopt rules for the administration of this Section. |
(Source: P.A. 102-237, eff. 1-1-22; 102-538, eff. 8-20-21; |
102-645, eff. 1-1-22; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22.)
|
ARTICLE 15 |
|
Section 15-5. The Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is |
amended by changing Sections 5-120, 5-300, 5-310, 5-315, |
5-320, 5-325, 5-330, 5-335, 5-340, 5-345, 5-350, 5-355, 5-357, |
5-360, 5-362, 5-365, 5-375, 5-395, 5-400, 5-405, 5-410, 5-415, |
and 5-420 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-120) (was 20 ILCS 5/5.13g)
|
Sec. 5-120. In the Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity. Two Assistant Directors Director of Commerce and |
Economic Opportunity.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-300) (was 20 ILCS 5/9)
|
Sec. 5-300. Officers' qualifications and salaries. The |
executive
and administrative officers, whose offices are |
created by this Act,
must have the qualifications prescribed |
by law and shall receive annual
salaries, payable in equal |
monthly installments, as designated in the
Sections following |
this Section and preceding Section 5-500.
If set by the |
Governor, those annual salaries may not exceed 85% of the
|
Governor's annual salary. Notwithstanding any other provision |
of law, for terms beginning after January 18, 2019 ( the |
effective date of Public Act 100-1179) and before January 16, |
2023 this amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly , the |
annual salary of the director or secretary and assistant |
|
director or assistant secretary of each department created |
under Section 5-15 shall be an amount equal to 15% more than |
the annual salary of the respective officer in effect as of |
December 31, 2018. The calculation of the 2018 salary base for |
this adjustment shall not include any cost of living |
adjustments, as authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of |
the 86th General Assembly, for the period beginning July 1, |
2009 to June 30, 2019. Beginning July 1, 2019 and each July 1 |
thereafter, the directors, secretaries, assistant directors, |
and assistant secretaries shall receive an increase in salary |
based on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by Senate |
Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, for terms |
beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the directors, |
secretaries, assistant directors, and assistant secretaries |
shall receive annual salaries, payable in equal monthly |
installments, and increases in salary, as designated in the |
Sections following this Section and preceding Section 5-500.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-310) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.21)
|
Sec. 5-310. In the Department on Aging. For terms |
beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Director of Aging |
shall receive an annual salary of $165,000 or as set by the |
Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each |
July 1 thereafter, the Director shall receive an increase in |
|
salary based on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by |
Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. For |
terms ending before December 31, 2019, the Director of Aging |
shall receive
an annual salary as set by the
Compensation |
Review Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-315) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.02)
|
Sec. 5-315. In the Department of Agriculture. For terms |
beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Director of |
Agriculture shall receive an annual salary of $180,000 or as |
set by the Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and |
on each July 1 thereafter, the Director shall receive an |
increase in salary based on a cost of living adjustment as |
authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General |
Assembly. For terms ending before December 31, 2019, the |
Director of Agriculture
shall receive an annual salary as set |
by the Compensation Review Board.
|
For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the |
Assistant Director of Agriculture shall receive an annual |
salary of $156,600 or as set by the Governor, whichever is |
higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the |
Assistant Director of Agriculture shall receive an increase in |
salary based on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by |
Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. |
For terms ending before December 31, 2019, the Assistant |
|
Director of Agriculture shall receive
an annual salary as set |
by the Compensation Review Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-320) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.19)
|
Sec. 5-320. In the Department of Central Management |
Services. For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, |
the Director of Central Management Services shall receive an |
annual salary of $195,000 or as set by the Governor, whichever |
is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the |
Director of Central Management Services shall receive an |
increase in salary based on a cost of living adjustment as |
authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General |
Assembly. For terms ending before December 31, 2019, the |
Director of Central Management Services shall receive an |
annual salary as
set by the Compensation
Review Board.
|
For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, each |
Assistant Director of Central Management Services shall |
receive an annual salary of $165,750 or as set by the Governor, |
whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 |
thereafter, the Assistant Directors shall receive an increase |
in salary based on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by |
Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. For |
terms ending before December 31, 2019, each Assistant Director |
of Central Management Services shall receive an
annual salary |
as set by
the Compensation Review Board.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-325) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.16)
|
Sec. 5-325. In the Department of Children and Family |
Services. For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, |
the Director of Children and Family Services shall receive an |
annual salary of $200,000 or as set by the Governor, whichever |
is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the |
Director shall receive an increase in salary based on a cost of |
living adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 |
of the 86th General Assembly. For terms ending before December |
31, 2019, the Director of Children and Family Services shall |
receive an annual salary
as set by the Compensation Review
|
Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-330) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.18)
|
Sec. 5-330. In the Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity. For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, |
the Director of Commerce and Economic Opportunity shall |
receive an annual salary of $195,000 or as set by the Governor, |
whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 |
thereafter, the Director shall receive an increase in salary |
based on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by Senate |
Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. For terms |
ending before December 31, 2019, the
Director of Commerce and |
|
Economic Opportunity shall receive an annual salary as set by |
the Compensation Review
Board.
|
For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, each |
Assistant Director of Commerce and Economic Opportunity shall |
receive an annual salary of $165,750 or as set by the Governor, |
whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 |
thereafter, the Assistant Directors shall receive an increase |
in salary based on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by |
Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. For |
terms ending before December 31, 2019, the Assistant Director |
of Commerce and Economic Opportunity shall receive
an annual |
salary as set by the
Compensation Review Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-335) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.11a)
|
Sec. 5-335. In the Department of Corrections. For terms |
beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Director of |
Corrections shall receive an annual salary of $200,000 or as |
set by the Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and |
on each July 1 thereafter, the Director shall receive an |
increase in salary based on a cost of living adjustment as |
authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General |
Assembly. For terms ending before December 31, 2019, the |
Director of Corrections
shall receive an annual salary as set |
by the Compensation Review Board.
|
For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the |
|
Assistant Director of Corrections shall receive an annual |
salary of $170,000 or as set by the Governor, whichever is |
higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the |
Assistant Director shall receive an increase in salary based |
on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint |
Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. For terms ending |
before December 31, 2019, the Assistant Director of |
Corrections shall receive
an annual salary as set by the
|
Compensation Review Board for the Assistant Director of |
Corrections-Adult Division.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-340) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.30)
|
Sec. 5-340. In the Department of Employment Security. For |
terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Director of
|
Employment Security shall receive an annual salary of $195,000 |
or as set by the Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, |
2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the Director shall |
receive an increase in salary based on a cost of living |
adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the |
86th General Assembly. For terms ending before December 31, |
2019, the Director of
Employment Security shall receive an |
annual salary as set by the Compensation Review Board.
|
Each member of the Board of Review shall receive $15,000.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-345) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.15)
|
Sec. 5-345. In the Department of Financial and |
Professional Regulation. For terms beginning on or after |
January 16, 2023, the Secretary of Financial and Professional |
Regulation shall receive an annual salary of $195,000 or as |
set by the Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and |
on each July 1 thereafter, the Secretary shall receive an |
increase in salary based on a cost of living adjustment as |
authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General |
Assembly. For terms ending before December 31, 2019, the |
Secretary of Financial and Professional Regulation shall |
receive an annual salary as set by the Compensation Review |
Board.
|
For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the |
Director of Financial Institutions, the Director of |
Professional Regulation, the Director of Banking, and the |
Director of Real Estate shall each receive an annual salary of |
$180,000 or as set by the Governor, whichever is higher. On |
July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the Directors |
shall receive an increase in salary based on a cost of living |
adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the |
86th General Assembly. For terms ending before December 31, |
2019, the Director of Financial Institutions, the Director of |
Professional Regulation, the Director of Banking, and the |
Director of Real Estate shall receive
an annual salary as set |
by the Compensation Review Board.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-350) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.24)
|
Sec. 5-350. In the Department of Human Rights. For terms |
beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Director of Human |
Rights shall receive an annual salary of $165,000 or as set by |
the Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each |
July 1 thereafter, the Director shall receive an increase in |
salary based on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by |
Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. For |
terms ending before December 31, 2019, the Director of Human |
Rights
shall receive an annual salary as
set by the |
Compensation Review Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-355) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.05a)
|
Sec. 5-355. In the Department of Human Services. For terms |
beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Secretary of Human
|
Services shall receive an annual salary of $200,000 or as set |
by the Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on |
each July 1 thereafter, the Secretary shall receive an |
increase in salary based on a cost of living adjustment as |
authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General |
Assembly. For terms ending before December 31, 2019, the |
Secretary of Human
Services shall receive an annual salary as |
set by the Compensation
Review Board.
|
|
For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the |
Assistant Secretaries of Human Services shall receive an |
annual salary of $170,000 or as set by the Governor, whichever |
is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the |
Assistant Secretaries shall receive an increase in salary |
based on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by Senate |
Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. For terms |
ending before December 31, 2019, the Assistant Secretaries of |
Human Services shall each receive an annual
salary as set by |
the Compensation Review Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-357) |
Sec. 5-357. In the Department of Innovation and |
Technology. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, for |
terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Secretary of |
Innovation and Technology shall receive an annual salary of |
$200,000 or as set by the Governor, whichever is higher, and |
the Assistant Secretary of Innovation and Technology shall |
receive an annual salary of $170,000 or as set by the Governor, |
whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 |
thereafter, the Secretary and the Assistant Secretary shall |
each receive an increase in salary based on a cost of living |
adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the |
86th General Assembly. The Secretary of Innovation and |
Technology and the Assistant Secretary of Innovation and |
|
Technology shall each receive an annual salary as set by law.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-611, eff. 7-20-18.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-360) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.10)
|
Sec. 5-360. In the Department of Insurance. For terms |
beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Director of |
Insurance shall receive an annual salary of $180,000 or as set |
by the Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on |
each July 1 thereafter, the Director shall receive an increase |
in salary based on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by |
Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. For |
terms ending before December 31, 2019, the Director of |
Insurance
shall receive an annual salary as set by the |
Compensation Review Board.
|
For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the |
Assistant Director of Insurance shall receive an annual salary |
of $156,600 or as set by the Governor, whichever is higher. On |
July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the Director shall |
receive an increase in salary based on a cost of living |
adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the |
86th General Assembly. For terms ending before December 31, |
2019, the Assistant Director of Insurance shall receive
an |
annual salary as set by the Compensation Review Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-362)
|
|
Sec. 5-362. In the Department of Juvenile Justice. For |
terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Director of |
Juvenile Justice shall receive an annual salary of $165,000 or |
as set by the Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, |
and on each July 1 thereafter, the Director shall receive an |
increase in salary based on a cost of living adjustment as |
authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General |
Assembly. For terms ending before December 31, 2019, the |
Director of Juvenile Justice shall receive an annual salary as |
set by the Compensation Review Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-365) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.03)
|
Sec. 5-365. In the Department of Labor. For terms |
beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Director of Labor |
shall receive an annual salary of $180,000 or as set by the |
Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each |
July 1 thereafter, the Director shall receive an increase in |
salary based on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by |
Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. For |
terms ending before December 31, 2019, the Director of Labor |
shall
receive an annual salary as set by the Compensation |
Review Board.
|
For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the |
Assistant Director of Labor shall receive an annual salary of |
$156,600 or as set by the Governor, whichever is higher. On |
|
July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the Assistant |
Director shall receive an increase in salary based on a cost of |
living adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 |
of the 86th General Assembly. For terms ending before December |
31, 2019, the Assistant Director of Labor shall receive
an |
annual salary as set by the Compensation Review Board.
|
The Chief Safety Inspector shall receive $24,700 from the |
third Monday
in January, 1979 to the third Monday in January, |
1980, and $25,000
thereafter, or as set by the Compensation |
Review Board, whichever is greater.
|
The Superintendent of Occupational Safety and Health shall |
receive
$27,500, or as set by the Compensation Review Board, |
whichever is greater.
|
The Superintendent of Women's and Children's Employment |
shall receive
$22,000 from the third Monday in January, 1979 |
to the third Monday in January,
1980, and $22,500 thereafter, |
or as set by the
Compensation Review Board, whichever is |
greater.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-375) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.09)
|
Sec. 5-375. In the Department of Natural Resources. For |
terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Director of |
Natural Resources shall receive an annual salary of $180,000 |
or as set by the Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, |
2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the Director shall |
|
receive an increase in salary based on a cost of living |
adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the |
86th General Assembly. For terms ending before December 31, |
2019, the Director of Natural Resources shall receive an
|
annual salary as set by
the Compensation Review Board.
|
For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the |
Assistant Director of Natural
Resources shall receive an |
annual salary of $156,600 or as set by the Governor, whichever |
is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the |
Assistant Director shall receive an increase in salary based |
on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint |
Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. For terms ending |
before December 31, 2019, the Assistant Director of Natural
|
Resources shall receive an annual salary as set by the |
Compensation Review Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-395) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.17)
|
Sec. 5-395. In the Department of Healthcare and Family |
Services. For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, |
the Director of Healthcare and Family Services shall receive |
an annual salary of $195,000 or as set by the Governor, |
whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 |
thereafter, the Director shall receive an increase in salary |
based on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by Senate |
Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. For terms |
|
ending before December 31, 2019, the Director of Healthcare |
and Family Services
shall receive an annual salary as set by |
the Compensation Review Board.
|
For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the |
Assistant Director shall receive an annual salary of $165,750 |
or as set by the Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, |
2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the Assistant Director |
shall receive an increase in salary based on a cost of living |
adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the |
86th General Assembly. For terms ending before December 31, |
2019, the Assistant Director of Healthcare and Family Services |
shall receive
an annual salary as set by the Compensation |
Review Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-400) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.07)
|
Sec. 5-400. In the Department of Public Health. For terms |
beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Director of Public |
Health shall receive an annual salary of $200,000 or as set by |
the Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each |
July 1 thereafter, the Director shall receive an increase in |
salary based on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by |
Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. For |
terms ending before December 31, 2019, the Director of Public |
Health shall receive
an annual salary as set by the |
Compensation Review Board.
|
|
For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the |
Assistant Director shall receive an annual salary of $170,000 |
or as set by the Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, |
2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the Assistant Director |
shall receive an increase in salary based on a cost of living |
adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the |
86th General Assembly. For terms ending before December 31, |
2019, the Assistant Director of Public Health shall receive
an |
annual salary as set by the Compensation Review Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-405) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.12)
|
Sec. 5-405. In the Department of Revenue. For terms |
beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Director of |
Revenue shall receive an annual salary of $195,000 or as set by |
the Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each |
July 1 thereafter, the Director shall receive an increase in |
salary based on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by |
Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. For |
terms ending before December 31, 2019, the Director of Revenue
|
shall receive an annual salary as set by the Compensation |
Review Board.
|
For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the |
Assistant Director of Revenue shall receive an annual salary |
of $165,750 or as set by the Governor, whichever is higher. On |
July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the Assistant |
|
Director shall receive an increase in salary based on a cost of |
living adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 |
of the 86th General Assembly. For terms ending before December |
31, 2019, the Assistant Director of Revenue shall receive an |
annual salary as set by the Compensation Review Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-410) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.11)
|
Sec. 5-410. In the Illinois State Police. For terms |
beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Director of the |
Illinois State
Police shall receive an annual salary of |
$200,000 or as set by the Governor, whichever is higher. On |
July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the Director shall |
receive an increase in salary based on a cost of living |
adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the |
86th General Assembly. For terms ending before December 31, |
2019, the Director of the Illinois State
Police shall receive |
an annual salary as set by the Compensation Review Board.
|
F
|
(Source: P.A. 102-538, eff. 8-20-21; revised 12-16-22.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-415) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.05)
|
Sec. 5-415. In the Department of Transportation. For terms |
beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Secretary of
|
Transportation shall receive an annual salary of $200,000 or |
as set by the Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, |
|
and on each July 1 thereafter, the Secretary shall receive an |
increase in salary based on a cost of living adjustment as |
authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General |
Assembly. For terms ending before December 31, 2019, the |
Secretary of
Transportation shall receive an annual salary as |
set by the Compensation Review Board.
|
For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the |
Assistant Secretary of Transportation shall receive an annual |
salary of $170,000 or as set by the Governor, whichever is |
higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the |
Assistant Secretary shall receive an increase in salary based |
on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint |
Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. For terms ending |
before December 31, 2019, the Assistant Secretary of |
Transportation shall receive
an annual salary as set by the |
Compensation Review Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-420) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.22)
|
Sec. 5-420. In the Department of Veterans' Affairs. For |
terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Director of
|
Veterans' Affairs shall receive an annual salary of $200,000 |
or as set by the Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, |
2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the Director shall |
receive an increase in salary based on a cost of living |
adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the |
|
86th General Assembly. For terms ending before December 31, |
2019, the Director of
Veterans' Affairs shall receive an |
annual salary as set by the Compensation Review Board.
|
For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the |
Assistant Director of
Veterans' Affairs shall receive an |
annual salary of $170,000 or as set by the Governor, whichever |
is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the |
Assistant Director shall receive an increase in salary based |
on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint |
Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. For terms ending |
before December 31, 2019, the Assistant Director of Veterans' |
Affairs shall receive
an annual salary as set by the |
Compensation Review Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
Section 15-10. The Electric Vehicle Act is amended by |
changing Section 15 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 627/15) |
Sec. 15. Electric Vehicle Coordinator. The Governor, with |
the advice and consent of the Senate, shall appoint a person |
within the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency to serve |
as the Electric Vehicle Coordinator for the State of Illinois. |
This person may be an existing employee with other duties. The |
Electric Vehicle Coordinator shall receive an annual salary as |
set by the Governor and beginning July 1, 2022 shall be |
|
compensated from appropriations provided made to the |
Comptroller for this purpose. On July 1, 2023 and each July 1 |
thereafter, the Electric Vehicle Coordinator shall receive an |
increase in salary based on a cost of living adjustment as |
authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General |
Assembly. This person may be an existing employee with other |
duties. The Coordinator shall act as a point person for |
electric vehicle-related and electric vehicle charging-related |
policies and activities in Illinois, including, but not |
limited to, the issuance of electric vehicle rebates for |
consumers and electric vehicle charging rebates for |
organizations and companies.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-444, eff. 8-20-21; 102-662, eff. 9-15-21; |
102-699, eff. 4-19-22.) |
Section 15-15. The Illinois Lottery Law is amended by |
changing Section 5 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 1605/5) (from Ch. 120, par. 1155)
|
Sec. 5. (a) The Department shall be under
the supervision |
and direction
of a Director, who
shall be a person qualified by
|
training and experience to perform the duties required by this |
Act. The
Director shall be appointed by the Governor, by and |
with the advice
and consent of the Senate. The term of office |
of the Director shall
expire on the third Monday of January in |
odd numbered years provided that
he or she shall hold office |
|
until a successor is appointed and qualified. For terms ending |
before December 31, 2019, the annual salary of the Director is |
$142,000. For terms beginning after January 18, 2019 ( the |
effective date of Public Act 100-1179) and before January 16, |
2023 this amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly , the |
annual salary of the Director shall be as provided in Section |
5-300 of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, for terms |
beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Director shall |
receive an annual salary of $180,000 or as set by the Governor, |
whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 |
thereafter, the Director shall receive an increase in salary |
based on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by Senate |
Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly.
|
Any vacancy occurring in the office of the Director shall |
be
filled in the same manner as the original appointment. In |
case of a vacancy during the recess of the Senate, the Governor |
shall make a temporary appointment until the next meeting of |
the Senate, when the Governor shall nominate some person to |
fill the office, and any person so nominated who is confirmed |
by the Senate shall hold office during the remainder of the |
term and until his or her successor is appointed and |
qualified.
|
During the absence or inability to act of the Director, or |
in the case of a vacancy in the office of Director until a |
successor is appointed and qualified, the Governor may |
|
designate some person as Acting Director of the Lottery to |
execute the powers and discharge the duties vested by law in |
that office. A person who is designated as an Acting Director |
shall not continue in office for more than 60 calendar days |
unless the Governor files a message with the Secretary of the |
Senate nominating that person to fill the office. After 60 |
calendar days, the office is considered vacant and shall be |
filled only under this Section. No person who has been |
appointed by the Governor to serve as Acting Director shall, |
except at the Senate's request, be designated again as an |
Acting Director at the same session of that Senate, subject to |
the provisions of this Section. A person appointed as an |
Acting Director is not required to meet the requirements of |
paragraph (1) of subsection (b) of this Section. In no case may |
the Governor designate a person to serve as Acting Director if |
that person has prior to the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 97th General Assembly exercised any of the duties |
and functions of the office of Director without having been |
nominated by the Governor to serve as Director. |
(b) The Director shall devote his or her entire time and |
attention to the
duties of the office and shall not be engaged |
in any other profession or
occupation.
|
The Director shall: |
(1) be qualified by training and experience to direct |
a lottery, including, at a minimum, 5 years of senior |
executive-level experience in the successful advertising, |
|
marketing, and selling of consumer products, 4 years of |
successful experience directing a lottery on behalf of a |
governmental entity, or 5 years of successful senior-level |
management experience at a lottery on behalf of a |
governmental entity; |
(2) have significant and meaningful management and |
regulatory experience; and |
(3) have a good reputation, particularly as a person |
of honesty, independence, and integrity. |
The Director shall not during his or her term of |
appointment: become a candidate for any elective office; hold |
any other elected or appointed public office; be actively |
involved in the affairs of any political party or political |
organization; advocate for the appointment of another person |
to an appointed or elected office or position; or actively |
participate in any campaign for any elective office. The |
Director may be appointed to serve on a governmental advisory |
or board study commission or as otherwise expressly authorized |
by law. |
(c) No person shall perform the duties and functions of |
the Director, or otherwise exercise the authority of the |
Director, unless the same shall have been appointed by the |
Governor pursuant to this Section. |
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
Section 15-20. The Military Code of Illinois is amended by |
|
changing Section 17 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 1805/17) (from Ch. 129, par. 220.17)
|
Sec. 17.
The Adjutant General and the Assistant Adjutants |
General
shall give their entire time to their military duties. |
For terms ending before December 31, 2019, the Adjutant |
General
shall receive an annual salary as
set by the |
Compensation Review Board, and each Assistant
Adjutant General |
shall receive an annual salary as set by the Compensation |
Review Board.
For terms beginning after January 18, 2019 ( the |
effective date of Public Act 100-1179) and before January 16, |
2023 this amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly , the |
annual salaries for the Adjutant General and the Assistant |
Adjutants General shall be an amount equal to 15% more than the |
respective officer's annual salary as of December 31, 2018. |
The calculation of the 2018 salary base for this adjustment |
shall not include any cost of living adjustments, as |
authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General |
Assembly, for the period beginning July 1, 2009 to June 30, |
2019. On Beginning July 1, 2019 and each July 1 thereafter |
through July 1, 2022 , the Adjutant General and the Assistant |
Adjutants General shall receive an increase in salary based on |
a cost of living adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint |
Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, for terms |
beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Adjutant General |
|
shall receive an annual salary of $165,000 or as set by the |
Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each |
July 1 thereafter, the Adjutant General shall receive an |
increase in salary based on a cost of living adjustment as |
authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General |
Assembly. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, for terms |
beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Assistant |
Adjutants General shall receive an annual salary of $140,250 |
or as set by the Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, |
2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the Assistant Adjutants |
General shall receive an increase in salary based on a cost of |
living adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 |
of the 86th General Assembly. |
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
Section 15-25. The State Fire Marshal Act is amended by |
changing Section 1 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 2905/1) (from Ch. 127 1/2, par. 1)
|
Sec. 1. There is hereby created the Office of the State |
Fire
Marshal, hereinafter referred to as the Office.
|
The Office shall be under an executive director who shall |
be
appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent of the |
Senate.
|
The executive director of the Office shall be known as the |
|
State Fire
Marshal. For terms ending before December 31, 2019, |
the State Fire Marshal shall receive an annual salary as set by
|
the
Compensation Review Board.
For terms beginning after |
January 18, 2019 ( the effective date of Public Act 100-1179) |
and before January 16, 2023 this amendatory Act of the 100th |
General Assembly , the State Fire Marshal's annual salary shall |
be an amount equal to 15% more than the State Fire Marshal's |
annual salary as of December 31, 2018. The calculation of the |
2018 salary base for this adjustment shall not include any |
cost of living adjustments, as authorized by Senate Joint |
Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly, for the period |
beginning July 1, 2009 to June 30, 2019. On Beginning July 1, |
2019 and each July 1 thereafter through July 1, 2022 , the State |
Fire Marshal shall receive an increase in salary based on a |
cost of living adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint |
Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, for terms |
beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the State Fire Marshal |
shall receive an annual salary of $165,000 or as set by the |
Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each |
July 1 thereafter, the State Fire Marshal shall receive an |
increase in salary based on a cost of living adjustment as |
authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General |
Assembly. |
The Office of the State Fire Marshal shall have a division |
that shall assume the duties of the Division of Fire
|
|
Prevention, Department of Law Enforcement, and a division that |
shall assume the duties of Illinois Fire
Protection Personnel |
Standards and Education Commission. Each division
shall be |
headed by a division manager who shall be employed by the Fire |
Marshal, subject to the Personnel
Code, and shall be |
responsible to the Fire Marshal.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1179, eff. 1-18-19.)
|
Section 15-30. The Illinois Emergency Management Agency |
Act is amended by changing Section 5 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 3305/5) (from Ch. 127, par. 1055)
|
Sec. 5. Illinois Emergency Management Agency.
|
(a) There is created within the executive branch of the |
State Government an
Illinois Emergency Management Agency and a |
Director of the Illinois Emergency
Management Agency, herein |
called the "Director" who shall be the head thereof.
The |
Director shall be appointed by the Governor, with the advice |
and consent of
the Senate, and shall serve for a term of 2 |
years beginning on the third Monday
in January of the |
odd-numbered year, and until a successor is appointed and
has |
qualified; except that the term of the first Director |
appointed under this
Act shall expire on the third Monday in |
January, 1989. The Director shall not
hold any other |
remunerative public office. For terms ending before December |
31, 2019, the Director shall receive an annual
salary as set by |
|
the
Compensation Review Board. For terms beginning after |
January 18, 2019 (the effective date of Public Act 100-1179) |
and before January 16, 2023 , the annual salary of the Director |
shall be as provided in Section 5-300 of the Civil |
Administrative Code of Illinois. Notwithstanding any other |
provision of law, for terms beginning on or after January 16, |
2023, the Director shall receive an annual salary of $180,000 |
or as set by the Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, |
2023, and on each July 1 thereafter, the Director shall |
receive an increase in salary based on a cost of living |
adjustment as authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the |
86th General Assembly.
|
For terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the |
Assistant Director of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency |
shall receive an annual salary of $156,600 or as set by the |
Governor, whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each |
July 1 thereafter, the Assistant Director shall receive an |
increase in salary based on a cost of living adjustment as |
authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General |
Assembly. |
(b) The Illinois Emergency Management Agency shall obtain, |
under the
provisions of the Personnel Code, technical, |
clerical, stenographic and other
administrative personnel, and |
may make expenditures within the appropriation
therefor as may |
be necessary to carry out the purpose of this Act. The agency
|
created by this Act is intended to be a successor to the agency |
|
created under
the Illinois Emergency Services and Disaster |
Agency Act of 1975 and the
personnel, equipment, records, and |
appropriations of that agency are
transferred to the successor |
agency as of June 30, 1988 (the effective date of this Act).
|
(c) The Director, subject to the direction and control of |
the Governor,
shall be the executive head of the Illinois |
Emergency Management Agency and
the State Emergency Response |
Commission and shall be responsible under the
direction of the |
Governor, for carrying out the program for emergency
|
management of this State. The Director shall also maintain |
liaison
and cooperate with
the emergency management |
organizations of this State and other states and of
the |
federal government.
|
(d) The Illinois Emergency Management Agency shall take an |
integral part in
the development and revision of political |
subdivision emergency operations
plans prepared under |
paragraph (f) of Section 10. To this end it shall employ
or |
otherwise secure the services of professional and technical |
personnel
capable of providing expert assistance to the |
emergency services and disaster
agencies. These personnel |
shall consult with emergency services and disaster
agencies on |
a regular basis and shall make field examinations of the |
areas,
circumstances, and conditions that particular political |
subdivision emergency
operations plans are intended to apply.
|
(e) The Illinois Emergency Management Agency and political |
subdivisions
shall be encouraged to form an emergency |
|
management advisory committee composed
of private and public |
personnel representing the emergency management phases of
|
mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery.
The Local |
Emergency Planning Committee, as created under the Illinois
|
Emergency
Planning and Community Right to Know Act, shall |
serve as
an advisory
committee to the emergency services and |
disaster agency or agencies serving
within the boundaries
of |
that Local Emergency Planning Committee planning district for:
|
(1) the development of emergency operations plan |
provisions for hazardous
chemical
emergencies; and
|
(2) the assessment of emergency response capabilities |
related to hazardous
chemical
emergencies.
|
(f) The Illinois Emergency Management Agency shall:
|
(1) Coordinate the overall emergency management |
program of the State.
|
(2) Cooperate with local governments, the federal |
government, and any
public or private agency or entity in |
achieving any purpose of this Act and
in implementing |
emergency management programs for mitigation, |
preparedness,
response, and recovery.
|
(2.5) Develop a comprehensive emergency preparedness |
and response plan for any nuclear
accident in accordance |
with Section 65 of the Nuclear Safety
Law of 2004 and in |
development of the
Illinois
Nuclear Safety Preparedness |
program in accordance with Section 8 of the
Illinois |
Nuclear Safety Preparedness Act.
|
|
(2.6) Coordinate with the Department of Public Health
|
with respect to planning for and responding to public |
health emergencies.
|
(3) Prepare, for issuance by the Governor, executive |
orders,
proclamations, and regulations as necessary or |
appropriate in coping with
disasters.
|
(4) Promulgate rules and requirements for political |
subdivision
emergency operations plans that are not |
inconsistent with and are at least
as stringent as |
applicable federal laws and regulations.
|
(5) Review and approve, in accordance with Illinois |
Emergency Management
Agency rules, emergency operations
|
plans for those political subdivisions required to have an |
emergency services
and disaster agency pursuant to this |
Act.
|
(5.5) Promulgate rules and requirements for the |
political subdivision
emergency management
exercises, |
including, but not limited to, exercises of the emergency |
operations
plans.
|
(5.10) Review, evaluate, and approve, in accordance |
with Illinois
Emergency
Management
Agency rules, political |
subdivision emergency management exercises for those
|
political subdivisions
required to have an emergency |
services and disaster agency pursuant to this
Act.
|
(6) Determine requirements of the State and its |
political
subdivisions
for food, clothing, and other |
|
necessities in event of a disaster.
|
(7) Establish a register of persons with types of |
emergency
management
training and skills in mitigation, |
preparedness, response, and recovery.
|
(8) Establish a register of government and private |
response
resources
available for use in a disaster.
|
(9) Expand the Earthquake Awareness Program and its |
efforts to
distribute earthquake preparedness materials to |
schools, political
subdivisions, community groups, civic |
organizations, and the media.
Emphasis will be placed on |
those areas of the State most at risk from an
earthquake. |
Maintain the list of all school districts, hospitals,
|
airports, power plants, including nuclear power plants, |
lakes, dams,
emergency response facilities of all types, |
and all other major public or
private structures which are |
at the greatest risk of damage from
earthquakes under |
circumstances where the damage would cause subsequent
harm |
to the surrounding communities and residents.
|
(10) Disseminate all information, completely and |
without
delay, on water
levels for rivers and streams and |
any other data pertaining to potential
flooding supplied |
by the Division of Water Resources within the Department |
of
Natural Resources to all political subdivisions to the |
maximum extent possible.
|
(11) Develop agreements, if feasible, with medical |
supply and
equipment
firms to
supply resources as are |
|
necessary to respond to an earthquake or any other
|
disaster as defined in this Act. These resources will be |
made available
upon notifying the vendor of the disaster. |
Payment for the resources will
be in accordance with |
Section 7 of this Act. The Illinois Department of
Public |
Health shall determine which resources will be required |
and requested.
|
(11.5) In coordination with the Illinois State Police, |
develop and
implement a community outreach program to |
promote awareness among the State's
parents and children |
of child abduction prevention and response.
|
(12) Out of funds appropriated for these purposes, |
award capital and
non-capital grants to Illinois hospitals |
or health care facilities located
outside of a city with a |
population in excess of 1,000,000 to be used for
purposes |
that include, but are not limited to, preparing to respond |
to mass
casualties and disasters, maintaining and |
improving patient safety and
quality of care, and |
protecting the confidentiality of patient information.
No |
single grant for a capital expenditure shall exceed |
$300,000.
No single grant for a non-capital expenditure |
shall exceed $100,000.
In awarding such grants, preference |
shall be given to hospitals that serve
a significant |
number of Medicaid recipients, but do not qualify for
|
disproportionate share hospital adjustment payments under |
the Illinois Public
Aid Code. To receive such a grant, a |
|
hospital or health care facility must
provide funding of |
at least 50% of the cost of the project for which the grant
|
is being requested.
In awarding such grants the Illinois |
Emergency Management Agency shall consider
the |
recommendations of the Illinois Hospital Association.
|
(13) Do all other things necessary, incidental or |
appropriate
for the implementation of this Act.
|
(g) The Illinois Emergency Management Agency is authorized |
to make grants to various higher education institutions, |
public K-12 school districts, area vocational centers as |
designated by the State Board of Education, inter-district |
special education cooperatives, regional safe schools, and |
nonpublic K-12 schools for safety and security improvements. |
For the purpose of this subsection (g), "higher education |
institution" means a public university, a public community |
college, or an independent, not-for-profit or for-profit |
higher education institution located in this State. Grants |
made under this subsection (g) shall be paid out of moneys |
appropriated for that purpose from the Build Illinois Bond |
Fund. The Illinois Emergency Management Agency shall adopt |
rules to implement this subsection (g). These rules may |
specify: (i) the manner of applying for grants; (ii) project |
eligibility requirements; (iii) restrictions on the use of |
grant moneys; (iv) the manner in which the various higher |
education institutions must account for the use of grant |
moneys; and (v) any other provision that the Illinois |
|
Emergency Management Agency determines to be necessary or |
useful for the administration of this subsection (g). |
(g-5) The Illinois Emergency Management Agency is |
authorized to make grants to not-for-profit organizations |
which are exempt from federal income taxation under section |
501(c)(3) of the Federal Internal Revenue Code for eligible |
security improvements that assist the organization in |
preventing, preparing for, or responding to acts of terrorism. |
The Director shall establish procedures and forms by which |
applicants may apply for a grant and procedures for |
distributing grants to recipients. The procedures shall |
require each applicant to do the following: |
(1) identify and substantiate prior threats or attacks |
by a terrorist organization, network, or cell against the |
not-for-profit organization; |
(2) indicate the symbolic or strategic value of one or |
more sites that renders the site a possible target of |
terrorism; |
(3) discuss potential consequences to the organization |
if the site is damaged, destroyed, or disrupted by a |
terrorist act; |
(4) describe how the grant will be used to integrate |
organizational preparedness with broader State and local |
preparedness efforts; |
(5) submit a vulnerability assessment conducted by |
experienced security, law enforcement, or military |
|
personnel, and a description of how the grant award will |
be used to address the vulnerabilities identified in the |
assessment; and |
(6) submit any other relevant information as may be |
required by the Director. |
The Agency is authorized to use funds appropriated for the |
grant program described in this subsection (g-5) to administer |
the program. |
(h) Except as provided in Section 17.5 of this Act, any |
moneys received by the Agency from donations or sponsorships |
unrelated to a disaster shall be deposited in the Emergency |
Planning and Training Fund and used by the Agency, subject to |
appropriation, to effectuate planning and training activities. |
Any moneys received by the Agency from donations during a |
disaster and intended for disaster response or recovery shall |
be deposited into the Disaster Response and Recovery Fund and |
used for disaster response and recovery pursuant to the |
Disaster Relief Act. |
(i) The Illinois Emergency Management Agency may by rule |
assess and collect reasonable fees for attendance at |
Agency-sponsored conferences to enable the Agency to carry out |
the requirements of this Act. Any moneys received under this |
subsection shall be deposited in the Emergency Planning and |
Training Fund and used by the Agency, subject to |
appropriation, for planning and training activities. |
(j) The Illinois Emergency Management Agency is authorized |
|
to make grants to other State agencies, public universities, |
units of local government, and statewide mutual aid |
organizations to enhance statewide emergency preparedness and |
response. |
(Source: P.A. 102-16, eff. 6-17-21; 102-538, eff. 8-20-21; |
102-813, eff. 5-13-22.)
|
Section 15-35. The Environmental Protection Act is amended |
by changing Section 4 as follows:
|
(415 ILCS 5/4) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1004)
|
Sec. 4. Environmental Protection Agency; establishment; |
duties.
|
(a) There is established in the Executive Branch of the |
State Government an
agency to be known as the Environmental |
Protection Agency. This Agency shall
be under the supervision |
and direction of a Director who shall be appointed by
the |
Governor with the advice and consent of the Senate. The term of |
office
of the Director shall expire on the third Monday of |
January in odd numbered
years, provided that he or she shall |
hold office until a successor is appointed
and has qualified. |
For terms ending before December 31, 2019, the Director shall
|
receive an annual salary as set by
the Compensation Review |
Board. For terms beginning after January 18, 2019 (the |
effective date of Public Act 100-1179) and before January 16, |
2023 , the Director's annual salary shall be an amount equal to |
|
15% more than the Director's annual salary as of December 31, |
2018. The calculation of the 2018 salary base for this |
adjustment shall not include any cost of living adjustments, |
as authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th |
General Assembly, for the period beginning July 1, 2009 to |
June 30, 2019. Beginning July 1, 2019 and each July 1 |
thereafter, the Director shall receive an increase in salary |
based on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by Senate |
Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, for terms |
beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Director shall |
receive an annual salary of $180,000 or as set by the Governor, |
whichever is higher. On July 1, 2023, and on each July 1 |
thereafter, the Director shall receive an increase in salary |
based on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by Senate |
Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. The |
Director, in accord with the Personnel Code, shall employ and
|
direct such personnel, and shall provide for such laboratory |
and other
facilities, as may be necessary to carry out the |
purposes of this Act. In
addition, the Director may by |
agreement secure such services as he or she
may deem necessary |
from any other department, agency, or unit of the State
|
Government, and may employ and compensate such consultants and |
technical
assistants as may be required.
|
(b) The Agency shall have the duty to collect and |
disseminate such
information, acquire such technical data, and |
|
conduct such experiments
as may be required to carry out the |
purposes of this Act, including
ascertainment of the quantity |
and nature of discharges from any
contaminant source and data |
on those sources, and to operate and arrange
for the operation |
of devices for the monitoring of environmental quality.
|
(c) The Agency shall have authority to conduct a program |
of
continuing surveillance and of regular or periodic |
inspection of actual
or potential contaminant or noise |
sources, of public water supplies, and
of refuse disposal |
sites.
|
(d) In accordance with constitutional limitations,
the |
Agency shall have authority to enter at all reasonable times
|
upon any private or public property for the purpose of:
|
(1) Inspecting and investigating to ascertain possible |
violations of
this Act, any rule or regulation adopted |
under this Act, any permit or
term or condition of a |
permit, or any Board order; or
|
(2) In accordance with the provisions of this Act, |
taking whatever
preventive or corrective action, including |
but not limited to removal or
remedial action, that is |
necessary or appropriate whenever there is a
release or a |
substantial threat of a release of (A) a hazardous
|
substance or pesticide or (B) petroleum from an |
underground storage tank.
|
(e) The Agency shall have the duty to investigate |
violations of this
Act, any rule or regulation adopted under |
|
this Act, any permit or
term or condition of a permit, or any |
Board order;
to issue administrative citations as provided in |
Section 31.1 of this
Act; and to take such summary enforcement |
action as is provided
for by Section 34 of this Act.
|
(f) The Agency shall appear before the Board in any |
hearing upon a
petition for variance or time-limited water |
quality standard, the denial of a permit, or the validity or |
effect
of a rule or regulation of the Board, and shall have the |
authority to
appear before the Board in any hearing under the |
Act.
|
(g) The Agency shall have the duty to administer, in |
accord with
Title X of this Act, such permit and certification |
systems as may be
established by this Act or by regulations |
adopted thereunder.
The Agency may enter into written |
delegation agreements with any department,
agency, or unit of |
State or local government under which all or portions
of this |
duty may be delegated for public water supply storage and |
transport
systems, sewage collection and transport systems, |
air pollution control
sources with uncontrolled emissions of |
100 tons per year or less and
application of algicides to |
waters of the State. Such delegation
agreements will require |
that the work to be performed thereunder will be
in accordance |
with Agency criteria, subject to Agency review, and shall
|
include such financial and program auditing by the Agency as |
may be required.
|
(h) The Agency shall have authority to require the |
|
submission of
complete plans and specifications from any |
applicant for a permit
required by this Act or by regulations |
thereunder, and to require the
submission of such reports |
regarding actual or potential violations of
this Act, any rule |
or regulation adopted under this Act, any permit or
term or |
condition of a permit, or any Board order, as may be necessary |
for the purposes of
this Act.
|
(i) The Agency shall have authority to make |
recommendations to the
Board for the adoption of regulations |
under Title VII of the Act.
|
(j) The Agency shall have the duty to represent the State |
of
Illinois in any and all matters pertaining to plans, |
procedures, or
negotiations for interstate compacts or other |
governmental arrangements
relating to environmental |
protection.
|
(k) The Agency shall have the authority to accept, |
receive, and
administer on behalf of the State any grants, |
gifts, loans, indirect cost
reimbursements, or other funds |
made available to the State from any source
for purposes of |
this Act or for air or water pollution control, public water
|
supply, solid waste disposal, noise abatement, or other |
environmental
protection activities, surveys, or programs. Any |
federal funds received by the
Agency pursuant to this |
subsection shall be deposited in a trust fund with the
State |
Treasurer and held and disbursed by him in accordance with |
Treasurer as
Custodian of Funds Act, provided that such monies |
|
shall be used only for the
purposes for which they are |
contributed and any balance remaining shall be
returned to the |
contributor.
|
The Agency is authorized to promulgate such regulations |
and enter
into such contracts as it may deem necessary for |
carrying out the
provisions of this subsection.
|
(l) The Agency is hereby designated as water pollution |
agency for
the state for all purposes of the Federal Water |
Pollution Control Act, as
amended; as implementing agency for |
the State for all purposes of the Safe
Drinking Water Act, |
Public Law 93-523, as now or hereafter amended, except
Section |
1425 of that Act; as air pollution agency for the state for all
|
purposes of the Clean Air Act of 1970, Public Law 91-604, |
approved December 31,
1970, as amended; and as solid waste |
agency for the state for all purposes of
the Solid Waste |
Disposal Act, Public Law 89-272, approved October 20, 1965,
|
and amended by the Resource Recovery Act of 1970, Public Law |
91-512, approved
October 26, 1970, as amended, and amended by |
the Resource Conservation and
Recovery Act of 1976, (P.L. |
94-580) approved October 21, 1976, as amended; as
noise |
control agency for the state for all purposes of the Noise |
Control Act of
1972, Public Law 92-574, approved October 27, |
1972, as amended; and as
implementing agency for the State for |
all purposes of the Comprehensive
Environmental Response, |
Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (P.L. 96-510),
as |
amended; and otherwise as pollution control agency for the |
|
State pursuant
to federal laws integrated with the foregoing |
laws, for financing purposes or
otherwise. The Agency is |
hereby authorized to take all action necessary or
appropriate |
to secure to the State the benefits of such federal Acts, |
provided
that the Agency shall transmit to the United States |
without change any
standards adopted by the Pollution Control |
Board pursuant to Section 5(c) of
this Act. This subsection |
(l) of Section 4 shall not be construed to bar or
prohibit the |
Environmental Protection Trust Fund Commission from accepting,
|
receiving, and administering on behalf of the State any |
grants, gifts,
loans or other funds for which the Commission |
is eligible pursuant to the
Environmental Protection Trust |
Fund Act. The Agency is hereby designated as
the State agency |
for all purposes of administering the requirements of Section
|
313 of the federal Emergency Planning and Community |
Right-to-Know Act of 1986.
|
Any municipality, sanitary district, or other political |
subdivision,
or any Agency of the State or interstate Agency, |
which makes application
for loans or grants under such federal |
Acts shall notify the Agency of
such application; the Agency |
may participate in proceedings under such
federal Acts.
|
(m) The Agency shall have authority, consistent with |
Section 5(c)
and other provisions of this Act, and for |
purposes of Section 303(e) of
the Federal Water Pollution |
Control Act, as now or hereafter amended,
to engage in |
planning processes and activities and to develop
plans in |
|
cooperation with units of local government, state agencies and
|
officers, and other appropriate persons in connection with the
|
jurisdiction or duties of each such unit, agency, officer or |
person.
Public hearings shall be held on the planning process, |
at which any
person shall be permitted to appear and be heard, |
pursuant to procedural
regulations promulgated by the Agency.
|
(n) In accordance with the powers conferred upon the |
Agency by
Sections 10(g), 13(b), 19, 22(d) and 25 of this Act, |
the Agency shall
have authority to establish and enforce |
minimum standards for the
operation of laboratories relating |
to analyses and laboratory tests for
air pollution, water |
pollution, noise emissions, contaminant discharges
onto land |
and sanitary, chemical, and mineral quality of water
|
distributed by a public water supply. The Agency may enter |
into formal
working agreements with other departments or |
agencies of state
government under which all or portions of |
this authority may be
delegated to the cooperating department |
or agency.
|
(o) The Agency shall have the authority to issue |
certificates of
competency to persons and laboratories meeting |
the minimum standards
established by the Agency in accordance |
with Section 4(n) of this Act
and to promulgate and enforce |
regulations relevant to the issuance and
use of such |
certificates. The Agency may enter into formal working
|
agreements with other departments or agencies of state |
government under
which all or portions of this authority may |
|
be delegated to the
cooperating department or agency.
|
(p) Except as provided in Section 17.7, the Agency shall |
have the
duty to analyze samples as required
from each public |
water supply to determine compliance with the
contaminant |
levels specified by the Pollution Control Board. The maximum
|
number of samples which the Agency shall be required to |
analyze for
microbiological quality shall be 6 per month, but |
the Agency may, at its
option, analyze a larger number each |
month for any supply. Results of
sample analyses for |
additional required bacteriological testing,
turbidity, |
residual chlorine and radionuclides are to be provided to the
|
Agency in accordance with Section 19. Owners of water supplies |
may enter
into agreements with the Agency to provide for |
reduced Agency
participation in sample analyses.
|
(q) The Agency shall have the authority to provide notice |
to any
person who may be liable pursuant to Section 22.2(f) of |
this Act for a
release or a substantial threat of a release of |
a hazardous substance or
pesticide. Such notice shall include |
the identified response action and an
opportunity for such |
person to perform the response action.
|
(r) The Agency may enter into written delegation |
agreements with any
unit of local government under which it |
may delegate all or portions of its
inspecting, investigating |
and enforcement functions. Such delegation
agreements shall |
require that work performed thereunder be in accordance
with |
Agency criteria and subject to Agency review.
Notwithstanding |
|
any other provision of law to the contrary, no unit of
local |
government shall be liable for any injury resulting from the |
exercise
of its authority pursuant to such a delegation |
agreement unless the injury
is proximately caused by the |
willful and wanton negligence of an agent or
employee of the |
unit of local government, and any policy of insurance
coverage |
issued to a unit of local government may provide for the denial |
of
liability and the nonpayment of claims based upon injuries |
for which the unit
of local government is not liable pursuant |
to this subsection (r).
|
(s) The Agency shall have authority to take whatever |
preventive or
corrective action is necessary or appropriate, |
including but not limited to
expenditure of monies |
appropriated from the Build Illinois Bond Fund for removal or |
remedial action, whenever
any hazardous substance or pesticide |
is released or
there is a substantial threat of such a release |
into the environment. The
State, the Director, and any State |
employee shall be indemnified for any
damages or injury |
arising out of or resulting from any action taken under
this |
subsection. The Director of the Agency is authorized to enter |
into
such contracts and agreements as are necessary
to carry |
out the Agency's duties under this subsection.
|
(t) The Agency shall have authority to distribute grants, |
subject to
appropriation by the General Assembly, to units of |
local government for financing and construction of
wastewater |
facilities in both incorporated and unincorporated areas. With |
|
respect to all monies appropriated
from the Build Illinois |
Bond Fund for wastewater facility grants, the Agency shall |
make
distributions in conformity with the rules and |
regulations established
pursuant to the Anti-Pollution Bond |
Act, as now or hereafter amended.
|
(u) Pursuant to the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, |
the
Agency shall have the authority to adopt such rules as are |
necessary or
appropriate for the Agency to implement Section |
31.1 of this Act.
|
(v) (Blank.)
|
(w) Neither the State, nor the Director, nor the Board, |
nor any State
employee shall be liable for any damages or |
injury arising out of or
resulting from any action taken under |
subsection (s).
|
(x)(1) The Agency shall have authority to distribute |
grants, subject to
appropriation by the General Assembly, to |
units of local government for
financing and construction of |
public water supply facilities. With respect
to all monies |
appropriated from the Build Illinois Bond Fund for public |
water supply grants, such grants shall be
made in accordance |
with rules promulgated by the Agency.
Such rules shall include |
a requirement for a local match of 30% of the
total project |
cost for projects funded through such grants.
|
(2) The Agency shall not terminate a grant to a unit of |
local government
for the financing and construction of public |
water supply facilities unless
and until the Agency adopts |
|
rules that set forth precise and complete
standards, pursuant |
to Section 5-20 of the Illinois Administrative
Procedure Act, |
for the termination of such grants. The Agency shall not
make |
determinations on whether specific grant conditions are |
necessary to
ensure the integrity of a project or on whether |
subagreements shall be
awarded, with respect to grants for the |
financing and construction of
public water supply facilities, |
unless and until the Agency adopts rules
that set forth |
precise and complete standards, pursuant to Section 5-20
of |
the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, for making such
|
determinations. The Agency shall not issue a stop-work order |
in relation to
such grants unless and until the Agency adopts |
precise and complete standards,
pursuant to Section 5-20 of |
the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, for
determining |
whether to issue a stop-work order.
|
(y) The Agency shall have authority to release any person |
from further
responsibility for preventive or corrective |
action under this Act following
successful completion of |
preventive or corrective action undertaken by such
person upon |
written request by the person.
|
(z) To the extent permitted by any applicable federal law |
or regulation, for all work performed for State construction |
projects which are funded in whole or in part by a capital |
infrastructure bill enacted by the 96th General Assembly by |
sums appropriated to the Environmental Protection Agency, at |
least 50% of the total labor hours must be performed by actual |
|
residents of the State of Illinois. For purposes of this |
subsection, "actual residents of the State of Illinois" means |
persons domiciled in the State of Illinois. The Department of |
Labor shall promulgate rules providing for the enforcement of |
this subsection. |
(aa) The Agency may adopt rules requiring the electronic |
submission of any information required to be submitted to the |
Agency pursuant to any State or federal law or regulation or |
any court or Board order. Any rules adopted under this |
subsection (aa) must include, but are not limited to, |
identification of the information to be submitted |
electronically. |
(Source: P.A. 102-1071, eff. 6-10-22.)
|
Section 15-40. The Reimagine Public Safety Act is amended |
by changing Section 35-20 as follows: |
(430 ILCS 69/35-20)
|
Sec. 35-20. Office of Firearm Violence Prevention. |
(a) On or before October 1, 2021, an Office of Firearm |
Violence Prevention is established within the Illinois |
Department of Human Services. The Assistant Secretary of |
Violence Prevention shall report his or her actions to the |
Secretary of Human Services and the Office of the Governor. |
The Office shall have the authority to coordinate and |
integrate all programs and services listed in this Act and |
|
other programs and services the Governor establishes by |
executive order to maximize an integrated approach to reducing |
Illinois' firearm violence epidemic and ultimately ending this |
public health crisis. |
(b) The Department of Human Services and the Office of |
Firearm Violence Prevention shall have grant making, |
operational, and procurement authority to distribute funds to |
violence prevention organizations, youth development |
organizations, high-risk youth intervention organizations, |
approved technical assistance and training providers, |
evaluation and assessment organizations, and other entities |
necessary to execute the functions established in this Act and |
other programs and services the Governor establishes by |
executive order for the Department and the Office. |
(c) The Assistant Secretary of Firearm Violence Prevention |
shall be appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent |
of the Senate. The Assistant Secretary of Firearm Violence |
Prevention shall receive an annual salary of $170,000 or as |
set by the Governor, whichever is higher, and, beginning July |
1, 2023, shall be compensated from appropriations provided to |
the Comptroller for this purpose. On July 1, 2023, and on each |
July 1 thereafter, the Assistant Secretary shall receive an |
increase in salary based on a cost of living adjustment as |
authorized by Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General |
Assembly. The Assistant Secretary of Firearm Violence |
Prevention shall report to the Secretary of Human Services and |
|
also report his or her actions to the Office of the Governor. |
(d) For Illinois municipalities with a 1,000,000 or more |
population, the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall |
determine the 10 most violent neighborhoods. When possible, |
this shall be determined by measuring the number of per capita |
fatal and nonfatal firearm-shot victims, excluding |
self-inflicted incidents, from January 1, 2016 through |
December 31, 2020. These 10 communities shall qualify for |
grants under this Act and coordination of other State services |
from the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention. The Office |
shall, after identifying the top 10 neighborhoods, identify an |
additional 7 eligible neighborhoods by considering the number |
of victims in rank order in addition to the per capita rate. If |
appropriate, and subject to appropriation, the Office shall |
have the authority to consider adding up to 5 additional |
eligible neighborhoods or clusters of contiguous neighborhoods |
utilizing the same data sets so as to maximize the potential |
impact for firearm violence reduction. For Illinois |
municipalities with less than 1,000,000 residents and more |
than 35,000 residents, the Office of Firearm Violence |
Prevention shall identify the 10 municipalities or contiguous |
geographic areas that have the greatest concentrated firearm |
violence victims. When possible, this shall be determined by |
measuring the number of fatal and nonfatal firearm-shot |
victims, excluding self-inflicted incidents, from January 1, |
2016 through December 31, 2020 divided by the number of |
|
residents for each municipality or area. These 10 |
municipalities or contiguous geographic areas and up to 5 |
additional municipalities or contiguous geographic areas |
identified by the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall |
qualify for grants under this Act and coordination of other |
State services from the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention. |
The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall consider |
factors listed in subsection (a) of Section 35-40 to determine |
up to 5 additional municipalities or contiguous geographic |
areas that qualify for grants under this Act. The Office of |
Firearm Violence Prevention may, subject to appropriation, |
identify up to 5 additional neighborhoods, municipalities, |
contiguous geographic areas, or other local |
government-identified boundary areas to receive funding under |
this Act after considering additional risk factors that |
contribute to community firearm violence. The data analysis to |
identify new eligible neighborhoods and municipalities shall |
be updated to reflect eligibility based on the most recently |
available 5 full years of data no more frequently than once |
every 3 years. |
(e) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall issue |
a report to the General Assembly no later than January 1 of |
each year that identifies communities within Illinois |
municipalities of 1,000,000 or more residents and |
municipalities with less than 1,000,000 residents and more |
than 35,000 residents that are experiencing concentrated |
|
firearm violence, explaining the investments that are being |
made to reduce concentrated firearm violence, and making |
further recommendations on how to end Illinois' firearm |
violence epidemic.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-16, eff. 6-17-21; 102-679, eff. 12-10-21.)
|
ARTICLE 20 |
Section 20-5. The Illinois Power Agency Act is amended by |
changing Section 1-70 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 3855/1-70)
|
Sec. 1-70. Agency officials. |
(a) The Agency shall have a Director who meets the |
qualifications specified in Section 5-222 of the Civil |
Administrative Code of Illinois. |
(b) Within the Illinois Power Agency, the Agency shall |
establish a Planning and Procurement Bureau and may establish |
a Resource Development Bureau. Each Bureau shall report to the |
Director. |
(c) The Chief of the Planning and Procurement Bureau shall |
be appointed by the Director, at the Director's sole |
discretion, and (i) shall have at least 5 years of direct |
experience in electricity supply planning and procurement and |
(ii) shall also hold an advanced degree in risk management, |
law, business, or a related field. |
|
(d) The Chief of the Resource Development Bureau may be |
appointed by the Director and (i) shall have at least 5 years |
of direct experience in electric generating project |
development and (ii) shall also hold an advanced degree in |
economics, engineering, law, business, or a related field. |
(e) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, for terms |
beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the Director shall |
receive an annual salary of $165,000. On July 1, 2023, and on |
each July 1 thereafter, the Director shall receive an increase |
in salary based on a cost of living adjustment as authorized by |
Senate Joint Resolution 192 of the 86th General Assembly. For |
terms ending before December 31, 2019, the Director shall |
receive an annual salary of $100,000 or as set by the Executive |
Ethics Commission based on a review of comparable State agency |
director salaries, whichever is higher. No annual salary for |
the Director or a Bureau Chief shall exceed the amount of |
salary set by law for the Governor that is in effect on July 1 |
of that fiscal year. |
(f) The Director and each Bureau Chief Bureau Chiefs shall |
not, for 2 years prior to appointment or for 2 years after he |
or she leaves his or her position, be employed by an electric |
utility, independent power producer, power marketer, or |
alternative retail electric supplier regulated by the |
Commission or the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. |
(g) The Director and Bureau Chiefs are prohibited from: |
(i) owning, directly or indirectly, 5% or more of the voting |
|
capital stock of an electric utility, independent power |
producer, power marketer, or alternative retail electric |
supplier; (ii) being in any chain of successive ownership of |
5% or more of the voting capital stock of any electric utility, |
independent power producer, power marketer, or alternative |
retail electric supplier; (iii) receiving any form of |
compensation, fee, payment, or other consideration from an |
electric utility, independent power producer, power marketer, |
or alternative retail electric supplier, including legal fees, |
consulting fees, bonuses, or other sums. These limitations do |
not apply to any compensation received pursuant to a defined |
benefit plan or other form of deferred compensation, provided |
that the individual has otherwise severed all ties to the |
utility, power producer, power marketer, or alternative retail |
electric supplier.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-662, eff. 9-15-21.) |
ARTICLE 25 |
Section 25-5. The Commission on Equity and Inclusion Act |
is amended by changing Section 40-5 as follows: |
(30 ILCS 574/40-5)
|
Sec. 40-5. Commission on Equity and Inclusion.
|
(a) There is hereby created the Commission on Equity and |
Inclusion, which shall consist of 7 members appointed by the |
|
Governor with the advice and consent of the Senate. No more |
than 4 members shall be of the same political party. The |
Governor shall designate one member as chairperson , who shall |
be the chief administrative and executive officer of the |
Commission, and shall have general supervisory authority over |
all personnel of the Commission .
|
(b) Of the members first appointed, 4 shall be appointed |
for a term to expire on the third Monday of January, 2023, and |
3 (including the Chairperson) shall be appointed for a term to |
expire on the third Monday of January, 2025.
|
Thereafter, each member shall serve for a term of 4 years |
and until his or her successor is appointed and qualified; |
except that any member chosen to fill a vacancy occurring |
otherwise than by expiration of a term shall be appointed only |
for the unexpired term of the member whom he or she shall |
succeed and until his or her successor is appointed and |
qualified.
|
(c) In case of a vacancy on the Commission during the |
recess of the Senate, the Governor shall make a temporary |
appointment until the next meeting of the Senate, when he or |
she shall appoint a person to fill the vacancy. Any person so |
nominated who is confirmed by the Senate shall hold office |
during the remainder of the term and until his or her successor |
is appointed and qualified. Vacancies in the Commission shall |
not impair the right of the remaining members to exercise all |
the powers of the Commission.
|
|
(d) The Chairperson of the Commission shall be compensated |
at the rate of $128,000 per year, or as otherwise set by this |
Section, during his or her service as Chairperson, and each |
other member shall be compensated at the rate of $121,856 per |
year, or as otherwise set by this Section. In addition, all |
members of the Commission shall be reimbursed for expenses |
actually and necessarily incurred by them in the performance |
of their duties.
Members of the Commission are eligible to |
receive pension under the State Employees' Retirement System |
of Illinois as provided under Article 14 of the Illinois |
Pension Code. |
(e) The Commission shall have an Executive Director who is |
appointed by the Governor and who shall be the chief |
administrative and operational officer of the Commission, |
shall direct and supervise its administrative affairs and |
general management, and perform such other duties as may be |
prescribed from time to time by the Commission. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, beginning on the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General |
Assembly, the Executive Director shall receive an annual |
salary as set by the Governor. |
The Executive Director or any committee of the Commission |
may carry out such responsibilities of the Commission as the |
Commission by resolution may delegate. The Executive Director |
shall attend all meetings of the Commission; however, no |
action of the Commission shall be invalid on account of the |
|
absence of the Executive Director from a meeting. The |
Executive Director may employ and determine the compensation |
of staff, as appropriations permit. |
(f) The budget established for the Commission for any |
given fiscal year shall be no less than that established for |
the Human Rights Commission for that same fiscal year.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-657, eff. 1-1-22 .) |
ARTICLE 30 |
Section 30-5. The Salaries Act is amended by changing |
Section 1 as follows:
|
(5 ILCS 290/1) (from Ch. 53, par. 1)
|
Sec. 1.
There shall be allowed and paid an annual
salary in |
lieu of all other salaries, fees, perquisites, benefit of
|
compensation in any form whatsoever, to each of the officers |
herein named, the
following respectively : .
|
(1) For terms beginning before January 9, 2023: |
To the Governor,
a salary set by the Compensation |
Review Board, together with the use and occupancy of |
the executive mansion.
|
To the Lieutenant Governor,
a salary set by the |
Compensation Review Board.
|
To the Secretary of State,
a salary set by the |
Compensation Review Board.
|
|
To the Comptroller,
a salary set by the |
Compensation Review Board.
|
To the Treasurer,
a salary set by the Compensation |
Review Board.
|
To the Attorney General,
a salary set by the |
Compensation Review Board.
|
(2) For terms beginning on or after January 9, 2023: |
To the Governor, a salary of $205,700 or as set by |
the Compensation Review Board, whichever is greater, |
together with the use and occupancy of the executive |
mansion. |
To the Lieutenant Governor, a salary of $160,900 |
or as set by the Compensation Review Board, whichever |
is greater. |
To the Secretary of State, a salary of $183,300 or |
as set by the Compensation Review Board, whichever is |
greater. |
To the Comptroller, a salary of $160,900 or as set |
by the Compensation Review Board, whichever is |
greater. |
To the Treasurer, a salary of $160,900 or as set by |
the Compensation Review Board, whichever is greater. |
To the Attorney General, a salary of $183,300 or |
as set by the Compensation Review Board, whichever is |
greater. |
(Source: P.A. 89-657, eff. 8-14-96.)
|
|
ARTICLE 35 |
Section 35-5. The General Assembly Compensation Act is |
amended by changing Section 1 as follows: |
(25 ILCS 115/1) (from Ch. 63, par. 14) |
Sec. 1. Each member of the General Assembly shall receive |
an annual salary
of $28,000 or as set by the Compensation |
Review Board, whichever is
greater. Beginning with the 103rd |
General Assembly, each member of the General Assembly shall |
receive an annual salary of $85,000 or as set by the |
Compensation Review Board, whichever is greater. The
following |
named officers, committee chairmen and committee minority |
spokesmen
shall receive additional amounts per year for
their |
services as such officers, committee chairmen and committee
|
minority spokesmen respectively, as set by the Compensation
|
Review Board or, as follows, whichever is greater: Beginning |
the second
Wednesday in January 1989, the Speaker and the |
minority leader of the
House of Representatives and the
|
President and the minority leader of the Senate, $16,000 each; |
the
majority leader in the House of Representatives $13,500;
5 |
assistant
majority leaders and 5 assistant minority leaders in |
the Senate,
$12,000
each; 6 assistant majority leaders and 6 |
assistant minority leaders in
the House of Representatives, |
$10,500 each; 2 Deputy
Majority leaders in the House of |
|
Representatives $11,500 each; and 2 Deputy
Minority leaders in |
the House of Representatives, $11,500 each; the majority
|
caucus chairman and minority caucus chairman in the Senate, |
$12,000 each;
and beginning the second Wednesday in January, |
1989, the majority
conference chairman and the minority |
conference chairman
in the House of Representatives, $10,500 |
each; beginning
the second Wednesday in January, 1989, the |
chairman and minority spokesman
of each standing committee of |
the Senate, except the Rules Committee, the
Committee on |
Committees, and the Committee on Assignment of Bills, $6,000
|
each; and beginning the second Wednesday in January, 1989, the |
chairman and
minority spokesman of each standing and select |
committee of the House of
Representatives, $6,000 each; and |
beginning fiscal year 2020, the majority leader in the Senate, |
an amount equal to the majority leader in the House. For any |
General Assembly in which the majority party in the House of |
Representatives has 71 or more elected Representatives, the |
majority party shall have one additional majority officer who |
shall have the title of speaker pro tempore and who shall |
receive an amount equal to the majority leader in the House and |
one majority officer who shall receive an amount equal to an |
assistant majority leader in the House of Representatives. For |
any General Assembly in which the majority party in the Senate |
has 36 or more elected Senators, the majority party shall have |
one additional majority officer who shall receive an amount |
equal to the majority leader in the House and one majority |
|
officer who shall receive an amount equal to an assistant |
majority leader in the Senate. A member who serves in more than |
one
position as an officer, committee chairman, or committee |
minority spokesman
shall receive only one additional amount |
based on the position paying the
highest additional amount. |
Prior to the 103rd General Assembly, the
compensation provided |
for in this Section to be paid per year to members
of the |
General Assembly, including the additional sums payable per |
year
to officers of the General Assembly shall be paid in 12 |
equal monthly
installments. The first such installment is |
payable on January 31,
1977. All subsequent equal monthly |
installments are payable on the last
working day of the month. |
Prior to the 103rd General Assembly, a member who has held |
office any part of a
month is entitled to compensation for an |
entire month. |
Beginning with the 103rd General Assembly, the |
compensation provided for in this Section to be paid per year |
to members of the General Assembly, including additional sums |
payable per year to officers of the General Assembly, shall be |
paid bi-monthly. Members who resign before completing the |
entire term in office shall be compensated on a prorated |
basis. Members completing the term of a vacancy shall be |
compensated on a prorated basis. |
Mileage shall be paid at the rate of 20 cents per mile |
before January
9, 1985, and at the mileage allowance rate in |
effect under regulations
promulgated pursuant to 5 U.S.C. |
|
5707(b)(2) beginning January 9, 1985, for the number
of actual |
highway miles necessarily and conveniently traveled by the
|
most feasible route to be present upon convening of the |
sessions of the
General Assembly by such member in each and |
every trip during each
session in going to and returning from |
the seat of government, to be
computed by the Comptroller. A |
member traveling by public
transportation for such purposes, |
however, shall be paid his actual cost
of that transportation |
instead of on the mileage rate if his cost of
public |
transportation exceeds the amount to which he would be |
entitled
on a mileage basis. No member may be paid, whether on |
a mileage basis
or for actual costs of public transportation, |
for more than one such
trip for each week the General Assembly |
is actually in session. Each
member shall also receive an |
allowance of $36 per day for lodging and
meals while in |
attendance at sessions
of the General Assembly before January |
9, 1985; beginning January 9,
1985, such food and lodging |
allowance shall be equal to the amount per day
permitted to be |
deducted for such expenses under the Internal Revenue Code;
|
however, beginning May 31, 1995, no allowance for food and |
lodging while in
attendance at sessions is authorized for |
periods of time after the last day in
May of each calendar |
year, except (i) if the General Assembly is convened in
|
special session by either the Governor or the presiding |
officers of both
houses, as provided by subsection (b) of |
Section 5 of Article IV of the
Illinois Constitution or (ii) if |
|
the
General Assembly is convened to consider bills vetoed, |
item vetoed, reduced, or
returned with specific |
recommendations for change by the Governor as provided
in |
Section 9 of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution. For |
fiscal year 2011 and for session days in fiscal years 2012, |
2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2019 only (i) the |
allowance for lodging and meals is $111 per day and (ii) |
mileage for automobile travel shall be reimbursed at a rate of |
$0.39 per mile. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the |
contrary, beginning in fiscal year 2012, travel reimbursement |
for
General Assembly members on non-session days shall be
|
calculated using the guidelines set forth by the Legislative
|
Travel Control Board, except that fiscal year 2012, 2013, |
2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2019 mileage reimbursement |
is set at a rate of $0.39 per mile. |
If a member dies having received only a portion of the |
amount payable
as compensation, the unpaid balance shall be |
paid to the surviving
spouse of such member, or, if there be |
none, to the estate of such member. |
(Source: P.A. 101-10, eff. 6-5-19; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21; |
102-664, eff. 1-1-22 .) |
ARTICLE 40 |
Section 40-5. The Legislative Materials Act is amended by |
|
changing Section 1 as follows:
|
(25 ILCS 105/1) (from Ch. 63, par. 801)
|
Sec. 1. Fees.
|
(a) The Clerk of the House of Representatives may |
establish a
schedule of reasonable fees to be charged for |
providing
copies of daily and bound journals, committee |
documents, committee tape
recordings, transcripts of committee |
proceedings, and committee notices, for
providing copies of |
bills on a continuing or individual basis, and for
providing |
tape recordings and transcripts of floor debates and other
|
proceedings of the House.
|
(b) The Secretary of the Senate may establish a schedule |
of reasonable
fees to be charged for providing copies of daily |
and bound
journals, committee notices, for providing copies of |
bills on a continuing or
individual basis, and for providing |
tape recordings and transcripts of floor
debates and other |
proceedings of the Senate.
|
(c) The Clerk of the House of Representatives and the |
Secretary of the
Senate may establish a schedule of reasonable |
fees to be charged for providing
live audio of floor debates |
and other proceedings of the House of
Representatives and the |
Senate. The Clerk and the Secretary shall have
complete |
discretion over the distribution of live audio under this |
subsection
(c), including discretion over the conditions under |
which live audio shall be
distributed, except that live audio |
|
shall be distributed to the General
Assembly and its staffs. |
Nothing in this subsection (c) shall be construed to
create an |
obligation on the part of the Clerk or Secretary to provide |
live
audio to any person or entity other than to the General |
Assembly and its
staffs.
|
(c-5) The Clerk of the House of Representatives, to the |
extent authorized
by the House Rules, and the Secretary of the |
Senate, to the extent authorized by the Rules of the Senate, |
may establish a schedule of reasonable fees to be charged
to |
members for the preparation, filing, and reproduction of |
non-substantive
resolutions.
|
(c-10) Through December 31, 2010, the Clerk of the House |
of
Representatives may sell to a member of the House of |
Representatives one or
more of the chairs that comprise member |
seating in the House chamber. The
Clerk must charge the |
original cost of the chairs.
|
(c-15) Through December 31, 2010, the Secretary of the |
Senate may sell to
a member of the Senate one or more of the |
chairs that comprise member seating
in the Senate chamber. The |
Secretary must charge the original cost of the
chairs.
|
(d) Receipts from all fees and charges established under |
this
Section shall be deposited by the
Clerk and the Secretary |
into the General Assembly
Operations Revolving Fund, a special |
fund in the State treasury. Amounts in
the Fund may be |
appropriated for the operations of the offices of the Clerk
of |
the House of Representatives and the Secretary of the Senate, |
|
including
the replacement of items sold under subsections |
(c-10) and (c-15).
|
(Source: P.A. 95-21, eff. 8-3-07.)
|
ARTICLE 99 |
Section 99-997. Severability. The provisions of this Act |
are severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
|
Section 99-999. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law, except that Section 5-27 takes effect upon |
becoming law or on the date House Bill 4285 of the 102nd |
General Assembly takes effect, whichever is later and Section |
5-36 takes effect July 1, 2024.
|