Public Act 93-0632

SB1656 Enrolled                      LRB093 03244 RCE 03261 b

    AN ACT concerning the legislature.

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

    Section  5.  The Illinois Administrative Procedure Act is
amended by changing Section 1-20 as follows:

    (5 ILCS 100/1-20) (from Ch. 127, par. 1001-20)
    Sec.  1-20.   "Agency"   means   each   officer,   board,
commission,  and  agency created by the Constitution, whether
in the executive, legislative, or judicial  branch  of  State
government,  but  other than the circuit court; each officer,
department,   board,   commission,    agency,    institution,
authority,  university, and body politic and corporate of the
State; each administrative unit or corporate outgrowth of the
State government that is created by or pursuant  to  statute,
other  than  units  of  local  government and their officers,
school districts, and boards of election  commissioners;  and
each  administrative unit or corporate outgrowth of the above
and as may be created by executive  order  of  the  Governor.
"Agency", however, does not include the following:
         (1)  The  House  of  Representatives  and Senate and
    their  respective  standing   and   service   committees,
    including  without  limitation the Board of the Office of
    the Architect of the Capitol and  the  Architect  of  the
    Capitol  established  under  the  Legislative  Commission
    Reorganization Act of 1984.
         (2)  The Governor.
         (3)  The  justices  and  judges  of  the Supreme and
    Appellate Courts.
(Source: P.A. 87-823.)

    Section 10.  The Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
amended by changing Section 5-630 as follows:

    (20 ILCS 5/5-630) (was 20 ILCS 5/17)
    Sec. 5-630. Department  offices.  Each  department  shall
maintain a central office in the Capitol Building, Centennial
Building,  or  State Office Building at Springfield, in space
rooms provided by the Secretary of State, or  in  the  Armory
Building  at Springfield, in rooms provided by the Department
of Central Management  Services,  or  the  Architect  of  the
Capitol, excepting the Department of Agriculture, which shall
maintain  a  central  office  at  the  State  fair grounds at
Springfield, and  the  Department  of  Transportation,  which
shall  also  maintain  a  Division  of Aeronautics at Capital
Airport. The director of each department (see Section 5-10 of
this Law for  the  definition  of  "director")  may,  in  the
director's  discretion and with the approval of the Governor,
establish and maintain, at places  other  than  the  seat  of
government, branch offices for the conduct of any one or more
functions of the director's department.
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)

    Section   13.   The  Governor's  Office of Management and
Budget Act is amended by changing Section 5.1 as follows:

    (20 ILCS 3005/5.1) (from Ch. 127, par. 415)
    Sec. 5.1. Under such  regulations  as  the  Governor  may
prescribe, every State agency, other than  State colleges and
universities,  agencies  of legislative and judicial branches
of State government, and elected State executive officers not
including the  Governor,  shall  file  with  the  Legislative
Research   Unit   Illinois  Commission  on  Intergovernmental
Cooperation all applications for  federal  grants,  contracts
and  agreements.  The Legislative Research Unit Commission on
Intergovernmental Cooperation shall immediately  forward  all
such  materials  to the Office for the Office's approval. Any
application for federal funds which has not  received  Office
approval shall be considered void and any funds received as a
result  of  such application shall be returned to the federal
government before they are spent. Each State  agency  subject
to this Section shall, at least 45 days before submitting its
application  to  the  federal agency, report in detail to the
Legislative Research  Unit  Commission  on  Intergovernmental
Cooperation  what the grant is intended to accomplish and the
specific plans for  spending  the  federal  dollars  received
pursuant   to   the  grant.  The  Legislative  Research  Unit
Commission on Intergovernmental Cooperation shall immediately
forward such materials to the Office. The Office may  approve
the  submission  of  an  application to the federal agency in
less than 45 days after its receipt by the  Office  when  the
Office determines that the circumstances require an expedited
application.   Such  reports  of  applications  and  plans of
expenditure shall include but shall not be limited to:
    (1)  an estimate of both the direct and indirect costs in
non-federal revenues of participation in the federal program;
    (2)  the probable length of duration of  the  program,  a
schedule  of fund receipts and an estimate of the cost to the
State of maintaining the program  if  and  when  the  federal
financial assistance or grant is terminated;
    (3)  a  list  of  State  or  local agencies utilizing the
financial assistance as direct recipients or subgrantees;
    (4)  a description of each program proposed to be  funded
by the financial assistance or grant; and
    (5)  a  description of any financial, program or planning
commitment on the part of the State required by  the  federal
government  as  a  requirement  for  receipt of the financial
assistance or grant.
    All  State  agencies  subject  to  this   Section   shall
immediately  file with the Legislative Research Unit Illinois
Commission on Intergovernmental Cooperation,  any  awards  of
federal  funds  and  any  and all changes in the programs, in
awards, in program duration, in schedule  of  fund  receipts,
and  in  estimated  costs  to  the  State  of maintaining the
program if and when federal assistance is terminated,  or  in
direct  and indirect costs, of any grant under which they are
or expect to be  receiving  federal  funds.  The  Legislative
Research  Unit  Commission  on  Intergovernmental Cooperation
shall immediately forward such materials to the Office.
    The Office in cooperation with the  Legislative  Research
Unit   Commission   on  Intergovernmental  Cooperation  shall
develop standard forms and a system  of  identifying  numbers
for  the  applications  and reports required by this Section.
Upon receipt from the State agencies of each application  and
report,   the  Legislative  Research  Unit  Commission  shall
promptly  designate  the   appropriate   identifying   number
therefor  and communicate such number to the respective State
agency, the Comptroller and the Office.
    Each State agency subject to this Section  shall  include
in  each  report to the Comptroller of the receipt of federal
funds the identifying number applicable to  the  grant  under
which such funds are received.
(Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03.)

    Section  15.  The Illinois Construction Evaluation Act is
amended by changing Section 2 as follows:

    (20 ILCS 3015/2) (from Ch. 127, par. 3202)
    Sec. 2.  (a) There is  hereby  created  the  Construction
Evaluation  Council,  hereinafter  the "Council", which shall
consist  of  the  Architect  of  the  Capitol  the  Executive
Director of the Space Needs Commission, the Director  of  the
Governor's  Office  of  Management  and  Budget Bureau of the
Budget,  and  the  Director  of  the  Department  of  Central
Management Services or their designees.  The members  of  the
Council  shall select from among themselves one person to act
as chairman for a term of 2 years.
    (b)  Members of the Council shall serve without pay,  but
shall  be  reimbursed  for  necessary  and  reasonable  costs
incurred in the performance of their duties.
    (c)  The Council shall meet at the call of the chairman.
(Source: P.A. 84-859; revised 8-23-03.)

    Section 20.  The Capital Development Board Act is amended
by changing Section 1.1 as follows:

    (20 ILCS 3105/1.1) (from Ch. 127, par. 771.1)
    Sec.   1.1.    Nothing  herein  applies  to  the  design,
planning,  construction,  reconstruction,  improvement,   and
installation  of  capital facilities within the State Capitol
Building and other  areas  of  the  legislative  complex,  as
defined  in  Section  8A-15  of  the  Legislative  Commission
Reorganization  Act  of 1984, which functions shall be within
the exclusive jurisdiction of the Architect  of  the  Capitol
Space  Needs  Commission  created  by  "The Space Needs Act",
approved September 8, 1967, as  now and hereafter amended.
(Source: P.A. 79-835.)

    Section  25.   The  Government  Buildings   Energy   Cost
Reduction  Act  of  1991 is amended by changing Section 20 as
follows:

    (20 ILCS 3953/20) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 9820)
    Sec. 20.  Powers  and  duties.   The  Interagency  Energy
Conservation Committee shall have the authority:
    (a)  to prepare an annual assessment of opportunities for
energy cost reduction in State owned and leased buildings and
facilities  designated  by  the  committee.   Each assessment
shall be completed by September 15 of each year, beginning in
1992, shall be available to the public and shall include:
         (1)  data on energy consumption and costs  for  each
    State  building  and facility designated by the committee
    for  the  preceding  5  years  and   anticipated   energy
    consumption and cost data projected for the next 3 years;
         (2)  energy  conservation measures deployed in State
    buildings and  facilities  designated  by  the  committee
    during the preceding year;
         (3)  evaluation  studies  of the cost reductions and
    other benefits realized through the  deployment  of  such
    measures; and
         (4)  energy  conservation  opportunities  (based  on
    audits,   technical   analyses   or   other   methods  of
    determining such  opportunities)  and  associated  energy
    saving  operation  and maintenance procedures and capital
    projects for each State building or  facility  designated
    by the committee.
    (b)  to  conduct such surveys, audits, technical analyses
and other research or investigations as may be  necessary  to
support the preparation of the annual plan and the objectives
of this Act.
    (c)  to  review  all proposed capital projects and energy
cost operating budgets of State agencies  designated  by  the
committee  and  recommend  energy conservation measures which
would reduce  operating  costs  in  buildings  or  facilities
affected by such capital projects.
    (d)  to  develop,  after  study  of  existing or emerging
energy  conservation  technologies,  guidelines  as  may   be
necessary  or desirable to further the objectives of this Act
or to aid the work of the Committee.
    (e)  to provide, at  the  request  of  the  Secretary  of
State,  the Architect of the Capitol, Legislative Space Needs
Commission  or  any  other  officer  or   entity   of   State
government,  technical and consultative assistance concerning
energy cost management or conservation.
    (f)  to annually recommend to the  Governor  by  November
15,  beginning  in  1992, specific operations and maintenance
procedure modifications and capital projects for State  owned
and leased buildings and facilities designed to reduce energy
consumption and costs.
    (g)  to  issue  a  report  to  the  Governor  and General
Assembly by March 31 of each odd-numbered year, beginning  in
1993,  describing  the  status  of government building energy
cost reduction and management efforts in the  State,  listing
obstacles  to building energy efficiency improvement together
with  related  recommendations  for  statutory  change,   and
identifying  opportunities  for  public  sector  energy  cost
reductions   not  addressed  by  this  Act  or  the  programs
developed pursuant hereto.
(Source: P.A. 87-852.)

    Section  30.  The Pension Impact Note Act is  amended  by
changing Section 2 as follows:

    (25 ILCS 55/2) (from Ch. 63, par. 42.42)
    Sec. 2.  Pension impact notes.  The Illinois Economic and
Fiscal   Pension  Laws  Commission,  hereafter  in  this  Act
referred to as the  "Commission",  shall  prepare  a  written
pension system impact note in relation to any bill introduced
in  either  house  of  the General Assembly which proposes to
amend, revise, or  add  to  any  provision  of  the  Illinois
Pension   Code   or   the   State  Pension  Funds  Continuing
Appropriation Act.  Upon the introduction of any  such  bill,
the  Clerk  of the House or the Secretary of the Senate shall
forward the bill to the Commission, which shall prepare  such
a  note  within  7 calendar days after receiving the request.
The bill shall be held on second reading until the  note  has

been received.
    Copies  of each pension impact note shall be furnished by
the Commission to the presiding officer of  each  house,  the
minority  leader  of  each  house,  the Clerk of the House of
Representatives, the Secretary of the Senate, the sponsor  of
the  bill  which  is  the subject of the note, the member, if
any, who initiated the request for the note, the Chairman  of
the  House  Committee  on  Personnel  and  Pensions,  and the
Chairman of the Senate Committee on Insurance,  Pensions  and
Licensed Activities.
(Source: P.A. 89-113, eff. 7-7-95.)

    (25 ILCS 125/Act rep.)
    Section 35.  The Space Needs Act is repealed.

    Section  40.   The  Legislative Commission Reorganization
Act of 1984 is amended by changing Sections 1-3,  1-5,  3A-1,
4-1,  4-3,  4-4,  4-7,  4-9,  10-3, and 10-6, by changing and
resectioning Section 4-2 as Sections 4-2 and  4-2.1,  and  by
adding Article 8A as follows:

    (25 ILCS 130/1-3) (from Ch. 63, par. 1001-3)
    Sec.  1-3.  Legislative  support  services agencies.  The
Joint  Committee   on   Legislative   Support   Services   is
responsible  for establishing general policy and coordinating
activities among the legislative support  services  agencies.
The   legislative   support  services  agencies  include  the
following:
    (1)  Joint Committee on Administrative Rules;
    (2)  Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission;
    (3)  Illinois     Commission     on     Intergovernmental
Cooperation;
    (3) (4)  Legislative Information System;
    (4) (5)  Legislative Reference Bureau;
    (5) (6)  Legislative Audit Commission;
    (7)  Space Needs Commission;
    (6) (8)  Legislative Printing Unit;
    (7) (9)  Legislative Research Unit; and
    (10)  Citizens Assembly; and
    (11)  Pension Laws Commission
    (8)  Office of the Architect of the Capitol.
(Source: P.A. 89-113, eff. 7-7-95.)

    (25 ILCS 130/1-5) (from Ch. 63, par. 1001-5)
    Sec. 1-5. Composition of agencies; directors.
    (a)(1)  Each legislative support services  agency  listed
    in  Section  1-3 is hereafter in this Section referred to
    as the Agency.
    (2)  (Blank). The Citizens Assembly shall consist of  the
14  co-chairpersons  of  the  Citizens Councils created under
Article 11A.
    (2.1)  (Blank). The Pension Laws Commission shall consist
of 8 members of the General Assembly,  of  whom  2  shall  be
appointed  by  the  President  of  the  Senate,  2  shall  be
appointed  by  the  Minority Leader of the Senate, 2 shall be
appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and
2 shall be appointed by the Minority Leader of the  House  of
Representatives;  plus  8  public  members  with knowledge of
privately funded and operated pension plans, of whom 2  shall
be  appointed  by  the  President  of  the Senate, 2 shall be
appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate,  2  shall  be
appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and
2  shall  be appointed by the Minority Leader of the House of
Representatives. All appointments shall  be  in  writing  and
filed with the Secretary of State as a public record.
    Legislative  members of the Pension Laws Commission shall
be appointed during the month of January in each odd-numbered
year for 2-year terms beginning February 1.  Any  vacancy  on
the Commission shall be filled by appointment for the balance
of  the  term in the same manner as the original appointment.
A vacancy exists when a legislative member ceases to hold the
elected legislative office held at the time  of  appointment.
The  initial  legislative  members of the Commission shall be
appointed as soon as practicable after the effective date  of
this amendatory Act and shall serve until January 31, 1997.
    (2.5)  The  Board  of  the Office of the Architect of the
Capitol  shall  consist  of  the  Secretary   and   Assistant
Secretary  of the Senate and the Clerk and Assistant Clerk of
the House of Representatives.
    (3)  The  other  legislative  support  services  agencies
shall each consist of 12 members of the General Assembly,  of
whom  3  shall be appointed by the President of the Senate, 3
shall be appointed by the Minority Leader of  the  Senate,  3
shall   be   appointed   by  the  Speaker  of  the  House  of
Representatives, and 3 shall be  appointed  by  the  Minority
Leader  of  the  House  of Representatives.  All appointments
shall be in writing and filed with the Secretary of State  as
a public record.
    Members  shall  serve a 2-year two year term, and must be
appointed by the Joint Committee during the month of  January
in  each  odd-numbered  year  for terms beginning February 1.
Any vacancy in an Agency shall be filled by  appointment  for
the  balance  of  the term in the same manner as the original
appointment.  A vacancy shall exist when a member  no  longer
holds  the elected legislative office held at the time of the
appointment or at the termination of the member's legislative
service.
    (b)  (Blank).
    (c)  Every two years the members  of  each  Agency  shall
elect,  During  the  month  of  February of each odd-numbered
year, the Joint Committee  on  Legislative  Support  Services
shall  select from the members of each agency, other than the
Office of the Architect of the  Capitol,  2  co-chairmen  and
such  other  officers  as the Joint Committee deems they deem
necessary.  If members of the  Agency  cannot  agree  on  the
co-chairmen   by  March  1  of  the  odd-numbered  year,  the
co-chairmen shall be selected from among the members  by  the
Joint   Committee  on  Legislative  Support  Services.    The
co-chairmen of each Agency shall serve for a 2-year  two-year
term,  beginning February 1 of the odd-numbered year, and the
2 co-chairmen shall not be members of or identified with  the
same  house  or the same political party.  The co-chairmen of
the Board of the Office of the Architect of the Capitol shall
be the Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of the House  of
Representatives,  each  ex  officio.  If a co-chairman of the
Citizens Assembly is not a member of the General Assembly, he
shall be considered to be identified with the house  and  the
political  party  of  the  legislative  leader by whom he was
appointed.  The co-chairmen of the  Pension  Laws  Commission
shall be legislative members of the Commission.
    Each  Agency shall meet twice annually or more often upon
the call of the chair or any 9 members (or any 3  members  in
the  case  of the Office of the Architect of the Capitol).  A
quorum of the Agency shall  consist  of  a  majority  of  the
appointed members.
    (d)  Members   of   each   Agency   shall  serve  without
compensation, but shall be reimbursed for  expenses  incurred
in  carrying  out  the duties of the Agency pursuant to rules
and regulations adopted by the Joint Committee on Legislative
Support Services.
    (e)  Beginning February 1, 1985, and every  2  two  years
thereafter,  the  Joint  Committee  shall select an Executive
Director who shall be the chief executive officer  and  staff
director  of  each  Agency.   The  Executive  Director  shall
receive a salary as fixed by the Joint Committee and shall be
authorized  to  employ  and fix the compensation of necessary
professional, technical and secretarial staff  and  prescribe
their  duties,  sign  contracts,  and  issue vouchers for the
payment of obligations  pursuant  to  rules  and  regulations
adopted   by  the  Joint  Committee  on  Legislative  Support
Services.  The Executive Director and other employees of  the
Agency shall not be subject to the Personnel Code.
    The  executive director of the Office of the Architect of
the Capitol shall be known as the Architect of the Capitol.
(Source: P.A. 89-113, eff. 7-7-95.)

    (25 ILCS 130/3A-1)
    Sec. 3A-1. Economic and Fiscal Pension  Laws  Commission;
pension laws.
    (a)  The  Economic  and Fiscal Pension Laws Commission is
hereby established as a legislative support services  agency.
The  Commission is subject to the provisions of this Act.  It
shall have the powers, and perform the duties, and  delegated
to  it  under  this Act, the Pension Impact Note Act, and the
Illinois Pension Code and shall perform any  other  functions
that may be provided by law.
    (b)  The  Pension Laws Commission shall make a continuing
study of the laws and practices pertaining  to  pensions  and
related  retirement  and  disability  benefits for persons in
State or local government service  and  their  survivors  and
dependents,  shall  evaluate existing laws and practices, and
shall review and make recommendations on proposed changes  to
those laws and practices.
    (c)  The   Commission   shall   be  responsible  for  the
preparation of  Pension  Impact  Notes  as  provided  in  the
Pension Impact Note Act.
    (d)  The  Commission shall report to the General Assembly
annually or as it deems necessary or useful on the results of
its studies and the performance of its duties.
    (e)  The Commission may request assistance from any other
entity as necessary or useful  for  the  performance  of  its
duties.
    (f)  For purposes of the Successor Agency Act and Section
9b  of  the  State  Finance  Act,  the  Economic  and  Fiscal
Commission  is  the successor to the Pension Laws Commission.
The Economic and Fiscal Commission succeeds  to  and  assumes
all  powers,  duties,  rights,  responsibilities,  personnel,
assets,  liabilities,  and  indebtedness  of the Pension Laws
Commission. Any reference in any law, rule,  form,  or  other
document  to  the  Pension  Laws Commission is deemed to be a
reference to the Economic and Fiscal Commission. The Illinois
Economic and Fiscal Commission shall continue to perform  the
functions  and  duties  that are being transferred from it to
the Pension Laws Commission by this amendatory  Act  of  1995
until  the  Pension  Laws  Commission  has been appointed and
funded and is prepared to begin its operations.
(Source: P.A. 89-113, eff. 7-7-95; 90-14, eff. 7-1-97.)

    (25 ILCS 130/4-1) (from Ch. 63, par. 1004-1)
    Sec. 4-1.  For purposes of the Successor Agency  Act  and
Section 9b of the State Finance Act, the Legislative Research
Unit   is   the  successor  to  the  Illinois  Commission  on
Intergovernmental Cooperation. The Legislative Research  Unit
succeeds   to   and   assumes  all  powers,  duties,  rights,
responsibilities,   personnel,   assets,   liabilities,   and
indebtedness of the Illinois Commission on  Intergovernmental
Cooperation.  Any  reference in any law, rule, form, or other
document to  the  Illinois  Commission  on  Intergovernmental
Cooperation  is  deemed  to be a reference to the Legislative
Research Unit. The Illinois Commission  on  Intergovernmental
Cooperation,  hereinafter referred to as the "Commission", is
hereby established as a legislative support services  agency.
The  Commission shall perform the powers and duties delegated
to it under this Act and  such  other  functions  as  may  be
provided by law.
(Source: P.A. 83-1257.)

    (25 ILCS 130/4-2) (from Ch. 63, par. 1004-2)
    Sec.  4-2.  Intergovernmental functions.  It shall be the
function of the Legislative Research Unit this Commission:
    (1)  To carry forward the participation of this State  as
a member of the Council of State Governments.
    (2)  To  encourage and assist the legislative, executive,
administrative and judicial officials and employees  of  this
State   to   develop   and   maintain   friendly  contact  by
correspondence, by conference, and otherwise, with  officials
and employees of the other States, of the Federal Government,
and of local units of government.
    (3)  To  endeavor  to  advance  cooperation  between this
State  and  other  units  of  government  whenever  it  seems
advisable to do so  by  formulating  proposals  for,  and  by
facilitating:
         (a)  The adoption of compacts.
         (b)  The   enactment   of   uniform   or  reciprocal
    statutes.
         (c)  The   adoption   of   uniform   or   reciprocal
    administrative rules and regulations.
         (d)  The  informal   cooperation   of   governmental
    offices with one another.
         (e)  The   personal   cooperation   of  governmental
    officials and employees with one another individually.
         (f)  The interchange and clearance of  research  and
    information.
         (g)  Any other suitable process, and
         (h)  To  do  all such acts as will enable this State
    to do its part in forming a more perfect union among  the
    various   governments   in   the  United  States  and  in
    developing the Council  of  State  Governments  for  that
    purpose.
(Source: P.A. 87-961; revised 8-23-03.)

    (25 ILCS 130/4-2.1 new)
    Sec.   4-2.1.  Federal   program   functions.    (4)  The
Legislative  Research  Unit  Commission is established as the
information center for the General Assembly in the  field  of
federal-state  relations  and  as  State  Central Information
Reception Agency for the  purpose  of  receiving  information
from  federal  agencies  under  the  United  States Office of
Management and Budget circular A-98  and  the  United  States
Department  of the Treasury Circular TC-1082 or any successor
circulars promulgated under authority of  the  United  States
Inter-governmental  Cooperation  Act  of 1968. Its powers and
duties in this capacity include, but are not limited to:
         (a)  Compiling and maintaining  current  information
    on available and pending federal aid programs for the use
    of the General Assembly and legislative agencies;
         (b)  Analyzing   the  relationship  of  federal  aid
    programs with state and locally  financed  programs,  and
    assessing the impact of federal aid programs on the State
    generally;
         (c)  Reporting  annually  to the General Assembly on
    the adequacy of programs financed by federal aid  in  the
    State,  the  types  and nature of federal aid programs in
    which  State  agencies  or  local  governments  did   not
    participate, and to make recommendations on such matters;
         (d)  Cooperating   with  the  Governor's  Office  of
    Management and Budget Illinois Bureau of the  Budget  and
    with any State of Illinois offices located in Washington,
    D.C.,   in   obtaining   information  concerning  federal
    grant-in-aid legislation and proposals having  an  impact
    on the State of Illinois;
         (e)  Cooperating   with  the  Governor's  Office  of
    Management and Budget Bureau of the Budget in  developing
    forms    and   identifying   number   systems   for   the
    documentation  of  applications,  awards,  receipts   and
    expenditures of federal funds by State agencies;
         (f)  Receiving  from  every State agency, other than
    State colleges and universities, agencies of  legislative
    and  judicial  branches  of State government, and elected
    State executive officers not including the Governor,  all
    applications for federal grants, contracts and agreements
    and  notification  of any awards of federal funds and any
    and all changes in the programs, in  awards,  in  program
    duration,  in schedule of fund receipts, and in estimated
    costs to the State of maintaining the program if and when
    federal  assistance  is  terminated,  or  in  direct  and
    indirect costs, of any grant  under  which  they  are  or
    expect to be receiving federal funds;
         (g)  Forwarding   to   the   Governor's   Office  of
    Management and Budget Bureau of the Budget all  documents
    received   under   paragraph   (f)   after  assigning  an
    appropriate, State application identifier number  to  all
    applications; and
         (h)  Reporting such information as is received under
    subparagraph  (f) to the President and Minority Leader of
    the Senate and the Speaker and  Minority  Leader  of  the
    House    of    Representatives   and   their   respective
    appropriation staffs and to any  member  of  the  General
    Assembly on a monthly basis at the request of the member.
    The  State colleges and universities, the agencies of the
legislative and judicial branches of  State  government,  and
the  elected  State  executive  officers,  not  including the
Governor, shall  submit  to  the  Legislative  Research  Unit
Commission,   in  a  manner  prescribed  by  the  Legislative
Research  Unit  Commission,  summaries  of  applications  for
federal funds filed and grants of federal funds awarded.
(Source: P.A. 87-961; revised 8-23-03.)

    (25 ILCS 130/4-3) (from Ch. 63, par. 1004-3)
    Sec.  4-3. The Legislative Research Unit Commission shall
establish such committees as it  deems  advisable,  in  order
that  they  may  confer  and  formulate  proposals concerning
effective means to secure intergovernmental harmony, and  may
perform  other functions for the Unit Commission in obedience
to  its  decision.  Subject  to  the  approval  of  the  Unit
Commission, the member or  members  of  each  such  committee
shall  be  appointed  by the co-chairmen Chairman of the Unit
Commission. State officials or employees who are not  members
of  the  Unit Commission on Intergovernmental Cooperation may
be appointed as members of any such  committee,  but  private
citizens holding no governmental position in this State shall
not  be  eligible. The Unit Commission may provide such other
rules as it considers appropriate concerning  the  membership
and   the   functioning  of  any  such  committee.  The  Unit
Commission may provide for advisory boards for itself and for
its various committees, and may authorize private citizens to
serve on such boards.
(Source: P.A. 83-1257.)

    (25 ILCS 130/4-4) (from Ch. 63, par. 1004-4)
    Sec. 4-4.  The  General  Assembly  finds  that  the  most
efficient and productive use of federal block grant funds can
be   achieved   through   the   coordinated  efforts  of  the
Legislature, the Executive,  State  and  local  agencies  and
private  citizens.  Such coordination is possible through the
creation of an Advisory Committee on Block  Grants  empowered
to  review,  analyze  and  make  recommendations  through the
Legislative Research Unit Commission to the General  Assembly
and the Governor on the use of federally funded block grants.
    The  Legislative Research Unit Commission shall establish
an Advisory Committee on Block Grants.  The  primary  purpose
of  the  Advisory  Committee  shall  be  the oversight of the
distribution and use of federal block grant funds.
    The Advisory Committee shall consist of 4 public  members
appointed  by  the  Joint  Committee  on  Legislative Support
Services and the members of  the  Legislative  Research  Unit
Commission.  A  chairperson shall be chosen by the members of
the Advisory Committee.
(Source: P.A. 83-1257.)

    (25 ILCS 130/4-7) (from Ch. 63, par. 1004-7)
    Sec. 4-7. The Legislative Research Unit Commission  shall
report  to  the  Governor  and  to  the Legislature within 15
fifteen days after the convening of  each  General  Assembly,
and  at  such other time as it deems appropriate. The members
of all committees which it establishes  shall  serve  without
compensation  for  such service, but they shall be paid their
necessary expenses in carrying out  their  obligations  under
this  Act.  The  Unit  Commission may by contributions to the
Council of State Governments, participate with  other  states
in  maintaining  the  said  Council's  district  and  central
secretariats, and its other governmental services.
    The  requirement  for  reporting  to the General Assembly
shall be satisfied by filing copies of the  report  with  the
Speaker,  the  Minority  Leader and the Clerk of the House of
Representatives and the President, the  Minority  Leader  and
the  Secretary  of  the  Senate  and the Legislative Research
Unit, as required by Section 3.1 of "An Act to revise the law
in relation to the General Assembly", approved  February  25,
1874,  as amended, and filing such additional copies with the
State Government Report Distribution Center for  the  General
Assembly  as  is required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of
the State Library Act.
(Source: P.A. 83-1257.)
    (25 ILCS 130/4-9) (from Ch. 63, par. 1004-9)
    Sec. 4-9.  Intergovernmental Cooperation Conference Fund.
    (a)  There  is  hereby  created   the   Intergovernmental
Cooperation  Conference  Fund, hereinafter called the "Fund".
The Fund shall be outside the State treasury, but  the  State
Treasurer shall act as ex-officio custodian of the Fund.
    (b)  The  Legislative Research Unit Commission may charge
and collect fees from participants  at  conferences  held  in
connection  with  the  Unit's  Commission's  exercise  of its
powers and duties.  The fees shall be charged  in  an  amount
calculated  to cover the cost of the conferences and shall be
deposited in the Fund.
    (c)  Monies in the Fund shall be used to pay the costs of
the conferences. As soon as  may  be  practicable  after  the
close  of  business  on  June  30  of  each  year,  the  Unit
Commission   shall  notify  the  Comptroller  of  the  amount
remaining in the Fund which  is  not  necessary  to  pay  the
expenses of conferences held during the expiring fiscal year.
Such  amount  shall be transferred by the Comptroller and the
Treasurer from the Fund to the  General  Revenue  Fund.   If,
during   any   fiscal  year,  the  monies  in  the  Fund  are
insufficient to pay the costs of conferences held during that
fiscal year, the difference shall be paid from  other  monies
which may be available to the Commission.
(Source: P.A. 85-491.)

    (25 ILCS 130/Art. 8A heading new)
                         ARTICLE 8A

    (25 ILCS 130/8A-5 new)
    Sec. 8A-5.  Architect of the Capitol.
    (a)  The  Architect  of  the Capitol must be an architect
licensed under the Illinois Architecture Practice Act of 1989
and must have at least 5 years of experience in the field  of
architecture, historic preservation, or both.
    (b)  The  offices of the Architect of the Capitol and his
or her staff shall be located in Springfield, Illinois, in  a
building  or  facility  occupied  in  whole or in part by the
legislative branch.
    (c)  The Architect of the Capitol shall have  the  powers
and  duties provided by law and by the Board of the Office of
the Architect of the Capitol.

    (25 ILCS 130/8A-10 new)
    Sec. 8A-10.  Capitol Historic Preservation Board.
    (a)  The  Capitol  Historic  Preservation   Board   shall
consist of 10 persons.  One member shall be appointed by each
of  the  following:  the President and Minority Leader of the
Senate, the Speaker and  Minority  Leader  of  the  House  of
Representatives,  the  Governor,  the Secretary of State, the
Attorney General, the Chief Justice of the  Illinois  Supreme
Court,  and  the Mayor of the City of Springfield.  Knowledge
and experience in the  areas  of  architecture  and  historic
preservation   may   be  considered,  in  addition  to  other
appropriate qualifications,  in  appointing  members  of  the
Board.  In  addition,  the  Executive Director of the Capital
Development Board, ex officio, shall serve as a member.
    (b)  Appointed members of the Board  shall  serve  4-year
terms,  except  that  the  members initially appointed by the
President and Minority Leader of the Senate, the Speaker  and
Minority  Leader  of  the  House  of Representatives, and the
Governor shall  serve  2-year  terms.   Members  shall  serve
without  compensation  but  shall  be reimbursed for expenses
incurred in the performance of their duties.
    (c)  The Capitol Historic Preservation Board shall  serve
as an advisory body to the Architect of the Capitol and shall
perform  such  advisory  functions  as  provided  by  law  or
requested by the Architect of the Capitol or the Board of the
Office of the Architect of the Capitol.

    (25 ILCS 130/8A-15 new)
    Sec. 8A-15.  Master plan.
    (a)  The   term   "legislative  complex"  means  (i)  the
buildings and facilities located  in  Springfield,  Illinois,
and  occupied  in whole or in part by the General Assembly or
any of  its  support  service  agencies,  (ii)  the  grounds,
walkways,  and  tunnels  surrounding  or  connected  to those
buildings and facilities, and (iii)  the  off-street  parking
areas serving those buildings and facilities.
    (b)  The  Architect  of  the  Capitol  shall  prepare and
implement a long-range master plan  of  development  for  the
State  Capitol  Building  and  the  remaining portions of the
legislative   complex   that   addresses   the   improvement,
construction,     historic     preservation,     restoration,
maintenance, repair,  and  landscaping  needs  of  the  State
Capitol   Building   and   the   remaining  portions  of  the
legislative complex.  The  Architect  of  the  Capitol  shall
submit  the  master plan to the Capitol Historic Preservation
Board for its review and comment.  The Board must confine its
review and comment to those portions of the master plan  that
relate  to  areas  of  the legislative complex other than the
State  Capitol  Building.   The  Architect  may   incorporate
suggestions  of  the  Board into the master plan.  The master
plan must be submitted to and approved by the  Board  of  the
Office   of   the   Architect   of  the  Capitol  before  its
implementation.
    The Architect of the Capitol may change the  master  plan
and  shall  submit  changes in the master plan that relate to
areas of the legislative complex other than the State Capitol
Building to the Capitol Historic Preservation Board  for  its
review  and  comment.  All changes in the master plan must be
submitted to and approved by the Board of the Office  of  the
Architect of the Capitol before implementation.
    (c)  The  Architect of the Capitol must review the master
plan every 5 years or at the direction of the  Board  of  the
Office of the Architect of the Capitol. Changes in the master
plan  resulting  from  this review must be made in accordance
with the procedure provided in subsection (b).
    (d)  Notwithstanding any other law to the  contrary,  the
Architect  of  the Capitol has the sole authority to contract
for  all   materials   and   services   necessary   for   the
implementation  of  the  master  plan.  The Architect (i) may
comply with the procedures established by the Joint Committee
on Legislative Support Services under  Section  1-4  or  (ii)
upon  approval of the Board of the Office of the Architect of
the Capitol, may, but is  not  required  to,  comply  with  a
portion or all of the Illinois Procurement Code when entering
into   contracts  under  this  subsection.   The  Architect's
compliance with the Illinois Procurement Code  shall  not  be
construed to subject the Architect or any other entity of the
legislative  branch  to  the  Illinois  Procurement Code with
respect to any other contract.
    The Architect may enter into agreements with other  State
agencies  for  the  provision  of materials or performance of
services necessary for the implementation of the master plan.
    State officers and agencies providing normal,  day-to-day
repair,  maintenance,  or  landscaping or providing security,
commissary, utility,  parking,  banking,  tour  guide,  event
scheduling,  or  other operational services for buildings and
facilities within the legislative complex  immediately  prior
to  the  effective  date  of  this amendatory Act of the 93rd
General Assembly  shall  continue  to  provide  that  normal,
day-to-day  repair,  maintenance,  or  landscaping  or  those
services on the same basis, whether by contract or employees,
that  the  repair, maintenance, landscaping, or services were
provided immediately prior to  the  effective  date  of  this
amendatory  Act  of the 93rd General Assembly, subject to the
provisions of the master plan and as  otherwise  directed  by
the Architect of the Capitol.
    (e)  The   Architect   of   the   Capitol  shall  monitor
construction, preservation, restoration, maintenance, repair,
and landscaping work in the legislative complex and all other
activities  that  alter  the  historic   integrity   of   the
legislative complex.

    (25 ILCS 130/8A-20 new)
    Sec.  8A-20.   Space  allocation.   The  Architect of the
Capitol has the power and duty, subject to direction  by  the
Board  of the Office of the Architect of the Capitol, to make
space allocations for the use of the General Assembly and its
related agencies.

    (25 ILCS 130/8A-25 new)
    Sec. 8A-25.  Historic items.  In addition to any property
control activities required by  law,  the  Architect  of  the
Capitol  shall  maintain  an  inventory  and  registry of all
historic items in the legislative complex.  The Architect may
purchase or accept donations of historic  items  for  use  or
display in the legislative complex.

    (25 ILCS 130/8A-30 new)
    Sec.  8A-30.   Acquisition of land; contract review.  The
Architect of the Capitol, upon the approval of the  Board  of
the  Office of the Architect of the Capitol, may acquire land
in  Springfield,  Illinois,  within  the  area   bounded   by
Washington, Third, Cook, and Pasfield Streets for the purpose
of  providing  space  for  the operation and expansion of the
legislative complex or other State facilities.  The Architect
of the Capitol must review and either approve  or  disapprove
all  contracts  for the repair, rehabilitation, construction,
or alteration of all State buildings within the bounded area,
except the Supreme Court Building  and  the  Fourth  District
Appellate Court Building.

    (25 ILCS 130/8A-35 new)
    Sec.    8A-35.     Capitol    Restoration   Trust   Fund;
appropriations.
    (a)  The Capitol Restoration Trust Fund is created  as  a
special  fund within the State treasury.  The Fund may accept
deposits from any source, whether private or public, and  may
be  appropriated  only  for  the  use of the Architect of the
Capitol in the performance of his or her powers  and  duties.
The  Architect  of  the  Capitol  may seek private and public
funds for deposit into the Capitol Restoration Trust Fund.
    (b)  The Architect of the Capitol shall submit all budget
requests to implement the master plan that relate to areas of
the legislative complex other than the State Capitol Building
to the Capitol Historic Preservation  Board  for  review  and
comment.   The  Architect  of  the  Capitol  shall submit all
budget requests to the Board of the Office of  the  Architect
of the Capitol for approval.

    (25 ILCS 130/8A-40 new)
    Sec. 8A-40.  Annual report.  The Architect of the Capitol
annually  shall  report  to  the  Board  of the Office of the
Architect of the Capitol, the Capitol  Historic  Preservation
Board, and the appointing authorities of the Capitol Historic
Preservation  Board.   The  report  shall  summarize  (i) the
master plan, (ii) the master plan  projects  completed  since
the  previous  annual  report,  (iii) the projects, and their
estimated costs,  proposed or approved for the next  5  years
under  the  master  plan,  and (iv) the amount and sources of
moneys deposited into the Capitol Restoration Trust Fund from
sources other  than  the  State  since  the  previous  annual
report.

    (25 ILCS 130/8A-45 new)
    Sec.  8A-45.  State agency cooperation.  The Architect of
the Capitol may request and shall receive the cooperation  of
any  State  officer  or  agency  in  the  performance  of the
Architect's powers and duties.

    (25 ILCS 130/8A-50 new)
    Sec. 8A-50.  Rules.  The Architect  of  the  Capitol  may
promulgate  rules necessary for the performance of his or her
powers and duties, subject to approval by the  Board  of  the
Office of the Architect of the Capitol.

    (25 ILCS 130/8A-55 new)
    Sec.  8A-55.   Successor  agency.   For  purposes  of the
Successor Agency Act and Section 9b of the State Finance Act,
the Office of the Architect of the Capitol is  the  successor
to the Space Needs Commission. The Office of the Architect of
the  Capitol  succeeds  to  and  assumes  all powers, duties,
rights, responsibilities, personnel, assets, liabilities, and
indebtedness of the Space Needs Commission. Any reference  in
any  law,  rule,  form,  or other document to the Space Needs
Commission is deemed to be a reference to the Office  of  the
Architect of the Capitol.

    (25 ILCS 130/10-3) (from Ch. 63, par. 1010-3)
    Sec. 10-3. The Legislative Research Unit may administer a
legislative  staff  internship  program in cooperation with a
university  in  the  State  designated  by  the   Legislative
Research   Unit.    For   the  purpose  of  advising  in  the
administration  of  such  a  program,  there  is  created   a
sponsoring   committee   for  legislative  staff  internships
consisting of the chairman of the Legislative  Research  Unit
or a member designated by him, the President of the Senate or
a  Senator  designated  by  him,  the Speaker of the House of
Representatives or a Representative designated  by  him,  the
Minority Leader of the Senate or a Senator designated by him,
and  the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives or a
Representative designated by him, as plenary members, and  as
associate members, one person from the academic staff of each
university  designated  by the Legislative Research Unit as a
cooperating university and agreeing to cooperate, such person
to be appointed by the  ranking  academic  official  of  such
university.      Until  the  Legislative  Research  Unit,  by
resolution,   determines    otherwise,    such    cooperating
universities  are Northwestern University, Illinois Institute
of Technology, University of Chicago, University of Illinois,
Roosevelt University,  Western  Illinois  University,  Loyola
University  of  Chicago, Southern Illinois University, DePaul
University, Eastern Illinois  University,  Northern  Illinois
University,  Sangamon  State  University,  and Illinois State
University.  Associate members shall serve at the pleasure of
their respective  appointing  authorities.   Members  of  the
sponsoring  committee  shall  serve without compensation, but
shall be reimbursed for necessary expenses in connection with
the performance of their duties.
(Source: P.A. 83-1257; revised 11-6-02.)

    (25 ILCS 130/10-6) (from Ch. 63, par. 1010-6)
    Sec. 10-6. Each quarter of the calendar  year  month  the
Legislative  Research  Unit shall prepare and provide to each
member of the  General  Assembly  abstracts  and  indexes  of
reports  filed  with  it  as reports to the General Assembly.
With such abstracts and indexes the Legislative Research Unit
shall include a convenient form by which each member  of  the
General  Assembly  may  request,  from  the  State Government
Report Distribution Center in the State  Library,  copies  of
such  reports  as  the  member  may  wish to receive. For the
purpose of receiving reports filed  under  this  Section  the
Legislative  Research  Unit  shall  succeed to the powers and
duties formerly exercised by the Legislative Council.
(Source: P.A. 83-1257.)

    (25 ILCS 130/Art. 8 rep.)
    (25 ILCS 130/Art. 11A rep.)
    Section 45.  The  Legislative  Commission  Reorganization
Act of 1984 is amended by repealing Articles 8 and 11A.

    Section  50.   The  Legislative  Reference  Bureau Act is
amended by changing Section 6 as follows:

    (25 ILCS 135/6) (from Ch. 63, par. 30)
    Sec. 6. The Architect of the Capitol Secretary  of  State
shall  provide  the  Legislative  said  Reference Bureau with
suitable offices in the legislative complex,  as  defined  in
the  Legislative  Commission Reorganization Act of 1984 State
Capitol, convenient to the place of meeting  of  the  General
Assembly,  and  shall  further  provide said reference bureau
with the necessary furniture, stationery and supplies.
(Source: Laws 1913, p. 391.)

    Section 55.  The Legislative Information  System  Act  is
amended by changing Sections 4, 5.07, and 8 as follows:

    (25 ILCS 145/4) (from Ch. 63, par. 42.14)
    Sec.  4.  The Architect of the Capitol Secretary of State
shall furnish the System with suitable office  space  in  the
legislative complex, as defined in the Legislative Commission
Reorganization  Act  of  1984  State  Capitol,  situated in a
location convenient to the chambers of  the  Senate  and  the
House of Representatives.
    The   Secretary  of  State  shall,  as  State  librarian,
cooperate with the System by making accessible to the  System
the  library  collection and providing, on a loan basis, such
books, periodicals and  other  materials  as  relate  to  the
purposes of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 80-683.)

    (25 ILCS 145/5.07) (from Ch. 63, par. 42.15-7)
    Sec.  5.07.   To  make  a  biennial report to the General
Assembly, by April 1 of each odd-numbered  year,  summarizing
its   accomplishments  in  the  preceding  2  years  and  its
recommendations,  including  any  proposed   legislation   it
considers  necessary  or desirable to effectuate the purposes
of this Act.
    The requirement for reporting  to  the  General  Assembly
shall  be  satisfied  by filing copies of the report with the
Speaker, the Minority Leader and the Clerk of  the  House  of
Representatives  and  the  President, the Minority Leader and
the Secretary of the  Senate  and  the  Legislative  Research
Unit,  as  required  by  Section  3.1 of the General Assembly
Organization Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the
General Assembly", approved February 25,  1874,  as  amended,
and  filing  such additional copies with the State Government
Report Distribution Center for the  General  Assembly  as  is
required  under  paragraph  (t)  of  Section  7  of the State
Library Act.
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)

    (25 ILCS 145/8) (from Ch. 63, par. 42.18)
    Sec. 8.  The  System  may  utilize  the  services  of  an
advisory   committee   for   conceptualization,   design  and
implementation of applications considered or adopted  by  the
System.   The  advisory committee shall be comprised of (a) 8
legislative staff  assistants,  2  to  be  appointed  by  the
Speaker  of  the  House of Representatives, 2 by the Minority
Leader thereof, 2 by the President of the Senate and 2 by the
Minority Leader thereof, but at least one of the appointments
by  each  legislative  leader  must  be  from  the  staff  of
legislative appropriation committees;  (b)  one  professional
staff member from the Legislative Reference Bureau, appointed
by   the   Executive  Director  thereof;  and  one  from  the
Legislative  Research  Unit,  appointed  by   the   Executive
Director   thereof;   and   one  from  the  Intergovernmental
Cooperation Commission, appointed by the  Executive  Director
thereof  and  (c)  the  Executive Director of the Legislative
Information System, who shall serve as temporary chairman  of
the  advisory  committee until a permanent chairman is chosen
from among its members.  Members of  the  advisory  committee
shall have no vote on the Joint Committee.
(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)

    Section  60.   The  Legislative  Audit  Commission Act is
amended by changing Section 5 as follows:

    (25 ILCS 150/5) (from Ch. 63, par. 108)
    Sec. 5. The permanent office  of  the  Legislative  Audit
Commission shall be in the legislative complex, as defined in
the  Legislative  Commission Reorganization Act of 1984 State
Capitol  Complex,  wherein  the  Architect  of  the   Capitol
Secretary  of  State  shall  provide  suitable and sufficient
offices.
(Source: P.A. 78-884.)

    Section 65.  The Illinois Economic and Fiscal  Commission
Act is amended by changing Sections 3, 4, and 6.2 as follows:

    (25 ILCS 155/3) (from Ch. 63, par. 343)
    Sec. 3.  The Commission shall:
    (1)  Study  from  time  to time and report to the General
Assembly on economic development and trends in the State.
    (2)  Make such special economic and fiscal studies as  it
deems appropriate or desirable or as the General Assembly may
request.
    (3)  Based  on  its  studies, recommend such State fiscal
and economic policies as it deems appropriate or desirable to
improve the functioning of State government and  the  economy
of the various regions within the State.
    (4)  Prepare annually a State economic report.
    (5)  Provide  information for all appropriate legislative
organizations and personnel on economic trends in relation to
long range planning and budgeting.
    (6)  Study and make  such  recommendations  as  it  deems
appropriate  to  the  General  Assembly on local and regional
economic and fiscal policy and on federal fiscal policy as it
may affect Illinois.
    (7)  Review  capital  expenditures,  appropriations   and
authorizations  for  both  the State's general obligation and
revenue  bonding  authorities.  At  the  direction   of   the
Commission, specific reviews may include economic feasibility
reviews  of  existing  or  proposed  revenue bond projects to
determine the accuracy of the  original  estimate  of  useful
life of the projects, maintenance requirements and ability to
meet   debt  service  requirements  through  their  operating
expenses.
    (8)  Receive and review all executive agency and  revenue
bonding  authority  annual  and 3 year plans.  The Commission
shall prepare  a  consolidated  review  of  these  plans,  an
updated  assessment  of current State agency capital plans, a
report on the outstanding and unissued  bond  authorizations,
an  evaluation  of the State's ability to market further bond
issues and shall submit them as the "Legislative Capital Plan
Analysis" to the House and Senate  Appropriations  Committees
at  least  once a year.  The Commission shall annually submit
to the General Assembly on the first  Wednesday  of  April  a
report   on   the   State's  long-term  capital  needs,  with
particular emphasis upon and detail of the 5-year  period  in
the immediate future.
    (9)  Study  and make recommendations it deems appropriate
to the General Assembly on State bond financing,  bondability
guidelines,  and  debt  management.   At the direction of the
Commission,  specific  studies  and  reviews  may  take  into
consideration  short  and  long-run  implications  of   State
bonding and debt management policy.
    (10)  Comply  with  the  provisions  of  the  "State Debt
Impact Note Act" as now or hereafter amended.
    (11)  Comply with the provisions of  the  Pension  Impact
Note Act, as now or hereafter amended.
    (12)  By  August  1st  of  each year, the Commission must
prepare and cause to be published a summary report  of  State
appropriations  for  the  State  fiscal  year  beginning  the
previous  July  1st.   The  summary report must discuss major
categories of appropriations, the issues the General Assembly
faced  in   allocating   appropriations,   comparisons   with
appropriations  for  previous  State  fiscal years, and other
matters helpful in providing the citizens of Illinois with an
overall understanding of appropriations for that fiscal year.
The summary report must be  written  in  plain  language  and
designed  for readability.  Publication must be in newspapers
of general circulation in the various areas of the  State  to
ensure  distribution statewide.  The summary report must also
be published on the General Assembly's web site.
    The requirement for reporting  to  the  General  Assembly
shall  be  satisfied  by filing copies of the report with the
Speaker, the Minority Leader and the Clerk of  the  House  of
Representatives  and  the  President, the Minority Leader and
the Secretary of the  Senate  and  the  Legislative  Research
Unit,  as  required  by  Section  3.1 of the General Assembly
Organization Act "An Act to revise the law in relation to the
General Assembly", approved February 25,  1874,  as  amended,
and  filing  such additional copies with the State Government
Report Distribution Center for the  General  Assembly  as  is
required  under  paragraph  (t)  of  Section  7  of the State
Library Act.
(Source: P.A. 92-67, eff. 7-12-01.)

    (25 ILCS 155/4) (from Ch. 63, par. 344)
    Sec.  4.  (a)  The  Commission  shall  publish,  at   the
convening  of each regular session of the General Assembly, a
report  on  the  estimated  income  of  the  State  from  all
applicable revenue sources for the next ensuing  fiscal  year
and  of  any  other  funds estimated to be available for such
fiscal year. On  the  third  Wednesday  in  March  after  the
session  convenes,  the  Commission shall issue a revised and
updated  set  of  revenue  figures  reflecting   the   latest
available   information.   The  House  and  Senate  by  joint
resolution shall adopt or modify such  estimates  as  may  be
appropriate.   The  joint  resolution  shall  constitute  the
General Assembly's estimate, under paragraph (b) of Section 2
of Article VIII of the Constitution, of the  funds  estimated
to be available during the next fiscal year.
    (b)  On  the  third  Wednesday  in  March, the Commission
shall issue estimated:
         (1)  pension funding requirements under P.A. 86-273;
    and
         (2)  liabilities of the State employee group  health
    insurance program.
    These  estimated  costs  shall  be  for  the  fiscal year
beginning the following July 1.
    (c)  The  requirement  for  reporting  to   the   General
Assembly  shall  be  satisfied by filing copies of the report
with the Speaker, the Minority Leader and the  Clerk  of  the
House  of  Representatives  and  the  President, the Minority
Leader and the Secretary of the Senate  and  the  Legislative
Research  unit,  as  required  by  Section 3.1 of the General
Assembly Organization Act  "An  Act  to  revise  the  law  in
relation  to  the  General  Assembly",  approved February 25,
1874, as amended, and filing such additional copies with  the
State  Government  Report Distribution Center for the General
Assembly as is required under paragraph (t) of Section  7  of
the State Library Act.
(Source: P.A. 87-1142.)

    (25 ILCS 155/6.2) (from Ch. 63, par. 346.2)
    Sec. 6.2. Short title. This Act shall be known and may be
cited as the Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission Act.
(Source: P.A. 83-1257.)

    Section  70.   The State Finance Act is amended by adding
Sections 5.620 and 9b-5 as follows:

    (30 ILCS 105/5.620 new)
    Sec. 5.620.  The Capitol Restoration Trust Fund.

    (30 ILCS 105/9b-5 new)
    Sec. 9b-5. Appropriations for capital projects.
    (a)  Notwithstanding any other law  to  the  contrary,  a
construction  agency,  as defined in the Illinois Procurement
Code, that has unobligated  funds  appropriated  for  capital
projects relating to the legislative complex that it will not
expend  during  the  fiscal  year may enter into an agreement
with the Architect of the Capitol for the expenditure of  the
funds  by  the  Architect  of the Capitol on the improvement,
construction,     historic     preservation,     restoration,
maintenance,  repair,  and  landscaping  of   buildings   and
facilities  within  the  legislative  complex,  as defined in
Article 8A of the Legislative Commission  Reorganization  Act
of  1984, during the fiscal year, including any lapse period,
in which the funds  were  appropriated  to  the  construction
agency. The Architect of the Capitol shall file copies of the
agreement with the State Comptroller and the State Treasurer.
    (b)  Funds   subject   to   an  agreement  authorized  by
subsection (a) are deemed to have been  appropriated  to  the
Architect  of  the Capitol for the improvement, construction,
historic preservation, restoration, maintenance, repair,  and
landscaping   of   buildings   and   facilities   within  the
legislative  complex,  as  defined  in  Article  8A  of   the
Legislative  Commission  Reorganization  Act  of 1984, to the
same extent as if the  Architect  of  the  Capitol  and  that
purpose were specifically named in the appropriation law.

    (30 ILCS 500/30-43 rep.)
    Section  80.  The Illinois Procurement Code is amended by
repealing Section 30-43.

    Section  85.  The  State  Mandates  Act  is  amended   by
changing Section 4 as follows:

    (30 ILCS 805/4) (from Ch. 85, par. 2204)
    Sec.   4.  Collection   and  maintenance  of  information
concerning state mandates.
    (a)  The Department of Commerce and Economic  Opportunity
Community  Affairs,  hereafter referred to as the Department,
shall be responsible for:
         (1)  Collecting and maintaining information on State
    mandates, including information  required  for  effective
    implementation of the provisions of this Act.
         (2)  Reviewing  local  government  applications  for
    reimbursement  submitted under this Act in cases in which
    the General Assembly has appropriated funds to  reimburse
    local   governments   for   costs   associated  with  the
    implementation of a State mandate.   In  cases  in  which
    there  is  no  appropriation  for  reimbursement,  upon a
    request for determination of a mandate by a unit of local
    government, or more than one  unit  of  local  government
    filing  a single request, other than a school district or
    a  community  college  district,  the  Department   shall
    determine whether a Public Act constitutes a mandate and,
    if so, the Statewide cost of implementation.
         (3)  Hearing  complaints  or  suggestions from local
    governments  and  other  affected  organizations  as   to
    existing or proposed State mandates.
         (4)  Reporting  each  year  to  the Governor and the
    General  Assembly   regarding   the   administration   of
    provisions of this Act and changes proposed to this Act.
    The  Legislative  Research  Unit  Illinois  Commission on
Intergovernmental Cooperation shall conduct an annual  public
hearings   as   needed  hearing  to  review  the  information
collected and the  recommendations  made  by  the  Department
under  this  subsection  (a).  The Department shall cooperate
fully  with  the  Legislative   Research   Unit   Commission,
providing any information, supporting documentation and other
assistance   required   by   the  Legislative  Research  Unit
Commission to facilitate the conduct of the hearing.
    (b)  Within 2 years following the effective date of  this
Act,  the  Department  shall  collect  and  tabulate relevant
information as to the nature and scope of each existing State
mandate,  including  but  not  necessarily  limited  to   (i)
identity  of  type  of  local government and local government
agency or official to whom  the  mandate  is  directed;  (ii)
whether   or   not  an  identifiable  local  direct  cost  is
necessitated by the mandate and the estimated annual  amount;
(iii)  extent  of  State  financial participation, if any, in
meeting  identifiable  costs;  (iv)  State  agency,  if  any,
charged with supervising the implementation of  the  mandate;
and  (v) a brief description of the mandate and a citation of
its origin in statute or regulation.
    (c)  The resulting information from subsection (b)  shall
be published in a catalog available to members of the General
Assembly, State and local officials, and interested citizens.
As  new  mandates  are  enacted  they  shall  be added to the
catalog, and each January 31 the Department shall  list  each
new  mandate  enacted at the preceding session of the General
Assembly, and the estimated  additional  identifiable  direct
costs,  if  any  imposed  upon  local governments.  A revised
version of the catalog  shall  be  published  every  2  years
beginning with the publication date of the first catalog.
    (d)  Failure  of  the  General  Assembly  to  appropriate
adequate  funds  for  reimbursement  as  required by this Act
shall not relieve the Department  of  Commerce  and  Economic
Opportunity Community Affairs from its obligations under this
Section.
(Source: P.A. 89-304, eff. 8-11-95; 90-372, eff. 7-1-98.)

    Section  90.  The  Illinois  Pension  Code  is amended by
changing  Sections  3-109.3,  14-108.3,  15-158.3,  16-133.3,
22-803, 22-1001, 22-1002, and 22-1003 as follows:

    (40 ILCS 5/3-109.3)
    Sec. 3-109.3.  Self-managed plan.
    (a)  Purpose.  The General  Assembly  finds  that  it  is
important for municipalities to be able to attract and retain
the  most  qualified  police  officers  and  that in order to
attract and  retain  these  police  officers,  municipalities
should have the flexibility to provide a defined contribution
plan  as  an alternative for eligible employees who elect not
to  participate  in  a  defined  benefit  retirement  program
provided under this  Article.   Accordingly,  a  self-managed
plan  shall  be  provided,  which  shall  offer participating
employees the opportunity to accumulate assets for retirement
through a combination of employee and employer  contributions
that  may  be invested in mutual funds, collective investment
funds, or other investment  products  and  used  to  purchase
annuity contracts, either fixed or variable, or a combination
thereof.   The  plan  must  be  qualified  under the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986.
    (b)  Study by Commission; Adoption of plan.  The Illinois
Pension Laws Commission (or its successor, the  Economic  and
Fiscal Commission) shall study and evaluate the creation of a
statewide self-managed plan for eligible employees under this
Article.    The  Commission  shall  report  its  findings and
recommendations to the General Assembly no later than January
1, 2002.
    In accordance with the recommendations of the  Commission
and  any  action taken by the General Assembly in response to
those recommendations, a statewide self-managed plan shall be
adopted for eligible  employees  under  this  Article.    The
self-managed plan shall take effect as specified in the plan,
but  in no event earlier than July 1, 2002 or the date of its
approval by the  U.S.  Internal  Revenue  Service,  whichever
occurs later.
    The  self-managed  plan shall include a plan document and
shall provide for the adoption of such rules  and  procedures
as  are  necessary or desirable for the administration of the
self-managed plan.  Consistent with  fiduciary  duty  to  the
participants  and  beneficiaries of the self-managed plan, it
may provide  for  delegation  of  suitable  aspects  of  plan
administration to companies authorized to do business in this
State.
    (c)  Selection of service providers and funding vehicles.
The  principal  administrator  of the self-managed plan shall
solicit proposals  to  provide  administrative  services  and
funding vehicles for the self-managed plan from insurance and
annuity  companies  and  mutual  fund companies, banks, trust
companies, or other financial institutions authorized  to  do
business  in this State.  In reviewing the proposals received
and approving and contracting with no fewer  than  2  and  no
more  than  7  companies,  the  principal administrator shall
consider, among other things, the following criteria:
         (1)  the nature and  extent  of  the  benefits  that
    would be provided to the participants;
         (2)  the  reasonableness of the benefits in relation
    to the premium charged;
         (3)  the suitability of the benefits  to  the  needs
    and  interests  of  the  participating  employees and the
    employer;
         (4)  the ability of the company to provide  benefits
    under  the  contract  and  the financial stability of the
    company; and
         (5)  the efficacy of the contract in the recruitment
    and retention of employees.
    The principal  administrator  shall  periodically  review
each  approved  company.    A company may continue to provide
administrative  services  and  funding   vehicles   for   the
self-managed  plan  only  so  long  as  it continues to be an
approved  company   under   contract   with   the   principal
administrator.
    (d)  Employee Direction.  Employees who are participating
in  the  program  must  be  allowed to direct the transfer of
their account balances among the various  investment  options
offered,  subject  to applicable contractual provisions.  The
participant shall not be deemed  a  fiduciary  by  reason  of
providing  such  investment  direction.   A  person  who is a
fiduciary shall not be liable for  any  loss  resulting  from
such  investment  direction  and  shall not be deemed to have
breached any fiduciary duty by acting in accordance with that
direction.  The self-managed plan does not guarantee  any  of
the investments in the employee's account balances.
    (e)  Participation.   An  eligible  employee  must make a
written election in accordance with the provisions of Section
3-109.2 and the procedures established under the self-managed
plan.  Participation in the self-managed plan by an  eligible
employee  who  elects to participate in the self-managed plan
shall begin  on  the  first  day  of  the  first  pay  period
following  the  later  of the date the employee's election is
filed with the fund or the employer, but in no  event  sooner
than the effective date of the self-managed plan.
    A  police  officer  who has elected to participate in the
self-managed  plan   under   this   Section   must   continue
participation while employed in an eligible position, and may
not  participate in any other retirement program administered
by the municipality while employed as  a  police  officer  by
that  municipality.    Participation in the self-managed plan
under this Section shall constitute membership in an  Article
3 pension fund.
    (f)  No  Duplication  of Service Credit.  Notwithstanding
any other provision of this Article, a police officer may not
purchase or receive service or service credit  applicable  to
any  other  retirement  program  administered by a fund under
this Article for any period during which the  police  officer
was  a participant in the self-managed plan established under
this Section.
    (g)  Contributions.   The  self-managed  plan  shall   be
funded by contributions from participants in the self-managed
plan and employer contributions as provided in this Section.
    The   contribution   rate   for   a  participant  in  the
self-managed plan under this Section shall be  a  minimum  of
10%  of  his or her salary.  This required contribution shall
be made as an "employer pick-up" under Section 414(h) of  the
Internal  Revenue  Code  of  1986  or  any  successor Section
thereof.  An employee may make  additional  contributions  to
the  self-managed  plan  in  accordance with the terms of the
plan.
    The  self-managed  plan  shall   provide   for   employer
contributions  to  be  credited  to  each  self-managed  plan
participant  at a rate of 10% of the participating employee's
salary, less the amount of the employer contribution used  to
provide disability benefits for the employee.  The amounts so
credited  shall  be  paid into the participant's self-managed
plan accounts in the manner prescribed by the plan.
    An amount of employer contribution, not exceeding 1.5% of
the participating employee's salary, shall be  used  for  the
purpose of providing disability benefits to the participating
employee.  Prior to the beginning of each plan year under the
self-managed   plan,   the   principal   administrator  shall
determine, as a percentage of salary, the amount of  employer
contributions  to  be  allocated  during  that  plan year for
providing  disability   benefits   for   employees   in   the
self-managed plan.
    (h)  Vesting;   Withdrawal;   Return   to   Service.    A
participant  in the self-managed plan becomes fully vested in
the employer contributions credited to his or her account  in
the  self-managed  plan  on  the  earliest  to  occur  of the
following:
         (1)  completion of  6  years  of  service  with  the
    municipality; or
         (2)  the  death  of the participating employee while
    employed by the  municipality,  if  the  participant  has
    completed at least 1.5 years of service.
    A  participant  in  the  self-managed plan who receives a
distribution  of  his  or  her  vested   amounts   from   the
self-managed  plan  upon  or  after termination of employment
shall forfeit all service credit and accrued  rights  in  the
fund of his or her employer; if subsequently re-employed, the
participant  shall be considered a new employee.  If a former
participant  again  becomes  a  participating  employee   and
continues  as  such  for  at  least 2 years, all such rights,
service credit, and previous status as a participant shall be
restored upon repayment of the  amount  of  the  distribution
without interest.
    (i)  Benefit amounts.  If a participating employee who is
fully vested in employer contributions terminates employment,
the  participating  employee  shall  be entitled to a benefit
which is based on the account  values  attributable  to  both
employer and employee contributions and any investment return
thereon.
    If  a  participating  employee who is not fully vested in
employer contributions terminates  employment,  the  employee
shall  be  entitled  to a benefit based on the account values
attributable  to  the  employee's   contributions   and   any
investment  return  thereon, plus the following percentage of
employer contributions and any investment return thereon: 20%
after the second year; 40% after the third  year;  60%  after
the fourth year; 80% after the fifth year; and 100% after the
sixth  year.  The  remainder  of  employer  contributions and
investment return thereon shall be forfeited.   Any  employer
contributions  that  are forfeited shall be held in escrow by
the company investing those contributions and shall  be  used
as  directed  by  the  municipality for future allocations of
employer contributions or  for  the  restoration  of  amounts
previously  forfeited by former participants who again become
participating employees.
(Source: P.A. 91-939, eff. 2-1-01.)

    (40 ILCS 5/14-108.3)
    Sec. 14-108.3.  Early retirement incentives.
    (a)  To be eligible for the  benefits  provided  in  this
Section, a person must:
         (1)  be  a  member  of  this  System who, on any day
    during June, 2002, is (i) in active payroll status  in  a
    position  of  employment  with a department and an active
    contributor  to  this  System  with   respect   to   that
    employment,  and  terminates  that  employment before the
    retirement annuity under this Article begins, or (ii)  on
    layoff  status  from  such  a  position  with  a right of
    re-employment or recall to service,  or  (iii)  receiving
    benefits  under  Section  14-123, 14-123.1 or 14-124, but
    only if the member has not been receiving those  benefits
    for  a  continuous  period of more than 2 years as of the
    date of application;
         (2)  not have received any retirement annuity  under
    this Article beginning earlier than August 1, 2002;
         (3)  file  with  the Board on or before December 31,
    2002  a  written  application  requesting  the   benefits
    provided in this Section;
         (4)  terminate  employment  under  this  Article  no
    later  than  December  31,  2002 (or the date established
    under subsection (d), if applicable);
         (5)  by the date of termination of service, have  at
    least  8  years of creditable service under this Article,
    without the use of  any  creditable  service  established
    under this Section;
         (6)  by  the date of termination of service, have at
    least 5 years  of  membership  service  earned  while  an
    employee  under  this Article, which may include military
    service for which credit  is  established  under  Section
    14-105(b), service during the qualifying period for which
    credit   is  established  under  Section  14-104(a),  and
    service for which credit has been established by repaying
    a refund under Section  14-130,  but  shall  not  include
    service  for  which any other optional service credit has
    been established; and
         (7)  not receive any early retirement benefit  under
    Section 16-133.3 of this Code.
    (b)    An  eligible person may establish up to 5 years of
creditable service under this Article, in increments  of  one
month,  by  making  the contributions specified in subsection
(c).  In addition,  for  each  month  of  creditable  service
established  under this Section, a person's age at retirement
shall be deemed to be one month older than it actually is.
    The creditable service established under this Section may
be  used  for  all  purposes  under  this  Article  and   the
Retirement Systems Reciprocal Act, except for the computation
of  final average compensation under Section 14-103.12 or the
determination of compensation under this or any other Article
of this Code.
    The age enhancement established under  this  Section  may
not  be  used  to  enable  any  person  to  begin receiving a
retirement annuity calculated  under  Section  14-110  before
actually  attaining age 50 (without any age enhancement under
this Section).  The age enhancement  established  under  this
Section may be used for all other purposes under this Article
(including  calculation of a proportionate annuity payable by
this System under the  Retirement  Systems  Reciprocal  Act),
except  for  purposes  of  the level income option in Section
14-112, the reversionary annuity under  Section  14-113,  and
the required distributions under Section 14-121.1.
    The age enhancement established under this Section may be
used in determining benefits payable under Article 16 of this
Code  under  the  Retirement  Systems  Reciprocal Act, if the
person has at least 5 years of service credit in the  Article
16  system that was earned while participating in that system
as a teacher (as defined in Section  16-106)  employed  by  a
department   (as   defined   in   Section  14-103.04).    Age
enhancement  established  under  this   Section   shall   not
otherwise be used in determining benefits payable under other
Articles of this Code under the Retirement Systems Reciprocal
Act.
    (c)  For  all  creditable  service established under this
Section,  a  person  must  pay  to  the  System  an  employee
contribution to be determined by the  System,  based  on  the
member's  rate  of  compensation on June 1, 2002 (or the last
date before June 1, 2002 for which a rate can be  determined)
and  the  retirement  contribution  rate in effect on June 1,
2002 for the member (or for  members  with  the  same  social
security and alternative formula status as the member).
    If the member receives a lump sum payment for accumulated
vacation,  sick leave and personal leave upon withdrawal from
service, and the net amount of that lump sum  payment  is  at
least  as  great  as  the amount of the contribution required
under this Section, the entire contribution must be  paid  by
the  employee by payroll deduction.  If there is no such lump
sum payment, or if it is less than the contribution  required
under  this Section, the member shall make an initial payment
by payroll deduction, equal to the net amount of the lump sum
payment for accumulated vacation, sick  leave,  and  personal
leave,  and  have  the  remaining  amount  due  treated  as a
reduction from the retirement annuity  in  24  equal  monthly
installments  beginning  in the month in which the retirement
annuity takes effect.  The required contribution may be  paid
as  a  pre-tax  deduction  from  earnings.   For  federal and
Illinois tax  purposes,  the  monthly  amount  by  which  the
annuitant's  benefit  is  reduced  shall  not be treated as a
contribution by the annuitant, but rather as a  reduction  of
the annuitant's monthly benefit.
    (c-5)    The  reduction in retirement annuity provided in
subsection (c) of  Section  14-108  does  not  apply  to  the
annuity of a person who retires under this Section.  A person
who  has  received  any age enhancement or creditable service
under  this  Section  may  begin  to  receive  an   unreduced
retirement annuity upon attainment of age 55 with at least 25
years  of  creditable  service (including any age enhancement
and creditable service established under this Section).
    (d)  In order to ensure that the efficient  operation  of
State  government  is  not  jeopardized  by  the simultaneous
retirement of large numbers of key personnel, the director or
other head of a department may, for  key  employees  of  that
department,   extend  the  December  31,  2002  deadline  for
terminating employment  under  this  Article  established  in
subdivision  (a)(4)  of this Section to a date not later than
April 30, 2003 by so  notifying  the  System  in  writing  by
December 31, 2002.
    (e)  Notwithstanding  Section  14-111,  a  person who has
received any age enhancement or creditable service under this
Section and who reenters service under this Article (or as an
employee of a department under Article 16) other  than  as  a
temporary  employee thereby forfeits that age enhancement and
creditable service  and  is  entitled  to  a  refund  of  the
contributions made pursuant to this Section.
    (f)  The   System  shall  determine  the  amount  of  the
increase in unfunded accrued  liability  resulting  from  the
granting  of  early  retirement incentives under this Section
and shall report that amount to the Governor and the  Pension
Laws  Commission  (or  its successor, the Economic and Fiscal
Commission) on or before November 15, 2003.  The increase  in
liability  reported  under  this  subsection (f) shall not be
included  in  the   calculation   of   the   required   State
contribution under Section 14-131.
    (g)  The  System shall determine the amount of the annual
State  contribution  necessary  to  amortize   on   a   level
dollar-payment  basis,  over  a  period  of  10 years at 8.5%
interest,  compounded  annually,  an  amount  equal  to   the
increase  in  unfunded  accrued  liability  determined  under
subsection  (f)  minus $70,000,000.  The System shall certify
the amount of this annual State contribution to the Governor,
the State Comptroller, the Governor's  Office  of  Management
and  Budget  (formerly Bureau of the Budget), and the Pension
Laws Commission (or its successor, the  Economic  and  Fiscal
Commission) on or before November 15, 2003.
    In addition to the contributions otherwise required under
this  Article,  the  State  shall  appropriate and pay to the
System (1) an amount equal to  $70,000,000  in  State  fiscal
year  2004 and (2) in each of State fiscal years 2005 through
2013, an  amount  equal  to  the  annual  State  contribution
certified by the System under this subsection (g).
    (h)  The  Pension  Laws Commission (or its successor, the
Economic and Fiscal Commission) shall determine and report to
the General Assembly,  on  or  before  January  1,  2004  and
annually  thereafter  through  the year 2013, its estimate of
(1) the  annual  amount  of  payroll  savings  likely  to  be
realized  by the State as a result of the early retirement of
persons receiving  early  retirement  incentives  under  this
Section  and  (2) the net annual savings or cost to the State
from the program of early retirement incentives created under
this Section.
    The  System,  the  Department   of   Central   Management
Services,  the  Governor's  Office  of  Management and Budget
(formerly Bureau of the Budget), and  all  other  departments
shall  provide  to  the  Commission  any  assistance that the
Commission may request with respect to its reports under this
Section.  The Commission may require departments  to  provide
it  with  any  information  that it deems necessary or useful
with respect to its reports  under  this  Section,  including
without  limitation  information about (1) the final earnings
of  former  department  employees  who  elected  to   receive
benefits  under  this  Section,  (2)  the earnings of current
department employees holding the positions vacated by persons
who elected to receive benefits under this Section,  and  (3)
positions  vacated by persons who elected to receive benefits
under this Section that have not yet been refilled.
    (i)  The changes made to this Section by this  amendatory
Act  of the 92nd General Assembly do not apply to persons who
retired under this Section on or before May 1, 1992.
(Source: P.A. 92-566, eff. 6-25-02; revised 8-23-03.)

    (40 ILCS 5/15-158.3)
    Sec. 15-158.3.  Reports  on  cost  reduction;  effect  on
retirement at any age with 30 years of service.
    (a)  On  or  before  November  15,  2001 and on or before
November 15th of each year thereafter, the Board  shall  have
the  System's  actuary  prepare a report showing, on a fiscal
year by fiscal year basis, the actual rate  of  participation
in  the self-managed plan authorized by Section 15-158.2, (i)
by employees  of  the  System's  covered  higher  educational
institutions  who  were  hired on or after the implementation
date of the  self-managed  plan  and  (ii)  by  other  System
participants.
    The  actuary's  report  must  also quantify the extent to
which employee optional  retirement  plan  participation  has
reduced  the  State's  required  contributions to the System,
expressed both in dollars and  as  a  percentage  of  covered
payroll, in relation to what the State's contributions to the
System  would  have been (1) if the self-managed plan had not
been implemented, and (2) if 45% of employees of the System's
covered higher educational institutions who were hired on  or
after  the  implementation  date of the self-managed plan had
elected to participate in the self-managed plan  and  10%  of
other System participants had transferred to the self-managed
plan following its implementation.
    (b)  On  or before November 15th of 2001 and on or before
November 15th of each year thereafter, the Illinois Board  of
Higher     Education,     in     conjunction     with     the
Bureau of the Budget (now Governor's Office of Management and
Budget)  shall  prepare a report showing, on a fiscal year by
fiscal year basis, the amount by which the  costs  associated
with  compensable sick leave have been reduced as a result of
the termination of compensable  sick  leave  accrual  on  and
after  January  1,  1998  by  employees  of  higher education
institutions who are participants in the System.
    (c)  On or before November 15 of 2001 and  on  or  before
November  15th  of  each  year  thereafter, the Department of
Central Management Services shall prepare a  report  showing,
on  a  fiscal  year by fiscal year basis, the amount by which
the State's cost for  health  insurance  coverage  under  the
State  Employees  Group Insurance Act of 1971 for retirees of
the State's universities and their survivors has declined  as
a result of requiring some of those retirees and survivors to
contribute  to  the  cost  of  their  basic health insurance.
These year-by-year reductions in cost must be quantified both
in dollars and as a level percentage of  payroll  covered  by
the System.
    (d)  The reports required under subsections (a), (b), and
(c)  shall  be  disseminated  to  the Board, the Pension Laws
Commission (until it ceases to exist), the Illinois  Economic
and   Fiscal   Commission,   the  Illinois  Board  of  Higher
Education, and the Governor.
    (e)  The reports required under subsections (a), (b), and
(c)  shall  be  taken  into  account  by  the  Pension   Laws
Commission   (or  its  successor,  the  Economic  and  Fiscal
Commission)  in  making  any  recommendation  to  extend   by
legislation  beyond  December  31,  2002  the  provision that
allows a System participant to retire at any age with  30  or
more  years  of  service as authorized in Section 15-135.  If
that provision is extended beyond December 31, 2002,  and  if
the  most  recent  report under subsection (a) indicates that
actual State contributions  to  the  System  for  the  period
during which the self-managed plan has been in operation have
exceeded   the   projected   State  contributions  under  the
assumptions  in  clause  (2)  of  subsection  (a),  then  any
extension of the provision  beyond  December  31,  2002  must
require that the System's higher educational institutions and
agencies  cover  any  funding  deficiency  through  an annual
payment to the System out of appropriate resources  of  their
own.
(Source:  P.A.  90-9,  eff.  7-1-97;  90-766,  eff.  8-14-98;
revised 8-23-03.)

    (40 ILCS 5/16-133.3) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 16-133.3)
    Sec.  16-133.3.   Early  retirement  incentives for State
employees.
    (a)  To be eligible for the  benefits  provided  in  this
Section, a person must:
         (1)  be  a  member  of  this  System who, on any day
    during June, 2002, is (i) in active payroll status  as  a
    full-time  teacher employed by a department and an active
    contributor  to  this  System  with   respect   to   that
    employment, or (ii) on layoff status from such a position
    with  a  right  of re-employment or recall to service, or
    (iii) receiving a disability benefit under Section 16-149
    or  16-149.1,  but  only  if  the  member  has  not  been
    receiving that benefit for a continuous  period  of  more
    than 2 years as of the date of application;
         (2)  not  have received any retirement annuity under
    this Article beginning earlier than August 1, 2002;
         (3)  file with the Board on or before  December  31,
    2002   a  written  application  requesting  the  benefits
    provided in this Section;
         (4)  terminate  employment  under  this  Article  no
    later than December 31, 2002  (or  the  date  established
    under subsection (d), if applicable);
         (5)  by  the date of termination of service, have at
    least 8 years of creditable service under  this  Article,
    without  the  use  of  any creditable service established
    under this Section;
         (6)  by the date of termination of service, have  at
    least   5   years   of   service   credit   earned  while
    participating in the System as a teacher  employed  by  a
    department; and
         (7)  not  receive any early retirement benefit under
    Section 14-108.3 of this Code.
    For the purposes of this Section,  "department"  means  a
department  as  defined  in  Section 14-103.04 that employs a
teacher as defined in this Article.
    (b)  An eligible person may establish up to  5  years  of
creditable   service   under   this  Article  by  making  the
contributions specified in subsection (c).  In addition,  for
each  period  of  creditable  service  established under this
Section, a person's age at retirement shall be deemed  to  be
enhanced by an equivalent period.
    The creditable service established under this Section may
be   used  for  all  purposes  under  this  Article  and  the
Retirement Systems Reciprocal Act, except for the computation
of final average  salary,  the  determination  of  salary  or
compensation  under this Article or any other Article of this
Code,  or  the  determination  of  eligibility  for  or   the
computation of benefits under Section 16-133.2.
    The age enhancement established under this Section may be
used   for   all   purposes  under  this  Article  (including
calculation of a proportionate annuity payable by this System
under the Retirement  Systems  Reciprocal  Act),  except  for
purposes  of a retirement annuity under Section 16-133(a)(A),
a reversionary annuity under  Section  16-136,  the  required
distributions  under  Section 16-142.3, and the determination
of eligibility for  or  the  computation  of  benefits  under
Section  16-133.2.   Age  enhancement  established under this
Section may be used in  determining  benefits  payable  under
Article   14  of  this  Code  under  the  Retirement  Systems
Reciprocal Act (subject to the limitations on the use of  age
enhancement  provided  in  Section 14-108.3); age enhancement
established  under  this  Section  shall  not  be   used   in
determining  benefits  payable  under  other Articles of this
Code under the Retirement Systems Reciprocal Act.
    (c)  For all creditable service  established  under  this
Section,  a  person  must  pay  to  the  System  an  employee
contribution to be determined by the System, equal to 9.0% of
the member's highest annual salary rate that would be used in
the  determination  of  the  average  salary  for  retirement
annuity  purposes  if  the  member  retired immediately after
withdrawal, for each year of creditable  service  established
under this Section.
    If the member receives a lump sum payment for accumulated
vacation, sick leave, and personal leave upon withdrawal from
service,  and  the  net amount of that lump sum payment is at
least as great as the amount  of  the  contribution  required
under  this  Section, the entire contribution must be paid by
the employee by payroll deduction.  If there is no such  lump
sum  payment, or if it is less than the contribution required
under this Section, the member shall make an initial  payment
by payroll deduction, equal to the net amount of the lump sum
payment  for  accumulated  vacation, sick leave, and personal
leave, and  have  the  remaining  amount  due  treated  as  a
reduction  from  the  retirement  annuity in 24 equal monthly
installments beginning in the month in which  the  retirement
annuity  takes effect.  The required contribution may be paid
as a pre-tax deduction from earnings.
    (d)  In order to ensure that the efficient  operation  of
State  government  is  not  jeopardized  by  the simultaneous
retirement of large numbers of key personnel, the director or
other head of a department may, for  key  employees  of  that
department,   extend  the  December  31,  2002  deadline  for
terminating employment  under  this  Article  established  in
subdivision  (a)(4)  of this Section to a date not later than
April 30, 2003 by so  notifying  the  System  in  writing  by
December 31, 2002.
    (e)  A  person  who  has  received any age enhancement or
creditable  service  under  this  Section  and  who  reenters
contributing service under this Article or Article  14  shall
thereby  forfeit that age enhancement and creditable service,
and become entitled to a refund  of  the  contributions  made
pursuant to this Section.
    (f)  The   System  shall  determine  the  amount  of  the
increase in unfunded accrued  liability  resulting  from  the
granting  of  early  retirement incentives under this Section
and shall report that amount to the Governor and the  Pension
Laws  Commission  (or  its successor, the Economic and Fiscal
Commission) on or before November 15, 2003.  The increase  in
liability  reported  under  this  subsection (f) shall not be
included  in  the   calculation   of   the   required   State
contribution under Section 16-158.
    (g)  The  System shall determine the amount of the annual
State  contribution  necessary  to  amortize   on   a   level
dollar-payment  basis,  over  a  period  of  10 years at 8.5%
interest,  compounded  annually,  an  amount  equal  to   the
increase  in  unfunded  accrued  liability  determined  under
subsection  (f)  minus  $1,000,000.  The System shall certify
the amount of this annual State contribution to the Governor,
the State Comptroller, the Governor's  Office  of  Management
and  Budget  (formerly Bureau of the Budget), and the Pension
Laws Commission (or its successor, the  Economic  and  Fiscal
Commission) on or before November 15, 2003.
    In addition to the contributions otherwise required under
this  Article,  the  State  shall  appropriate and pay to the
System (1) an amount equal to $1,000,000 in State fiscal year
2004 and (2) in each of State fiscal years 2005 through 2013,
an amount equal to the annual State contribution certified by
the System under this subsection (g).
    (h)  The Pension Laws Commission (or its  successor,  the
Economic and Fiscal Commission) shall determine and report to
the  General  Assembly,  on  or  before  January  1, 2004 and
annually thereafter through the year 2013,  its  estimate  of
(1)  the  annual  amount  of  payroll  savings  likely  to be
realized by the State as a result of the early retirement  of
persons  receiving  early  retirement  incentives  under this
Section and (2) the net annual savings or cost to  the  State
from the program of early retirement incentives created under
this Section.
    The   System,   the   Department  of  Central  Management
Services, the Governor's  Office  of  Management  and  Budget
(formerly  Bureau  of  the Budget), and all other departments
shall provide to  the  Commission  any  assistance  that  the
Commission may request with respect to its reports under this
Section.   The  Commission may require departments to provide
it with any information that it  deems  necessary  or  useful
with  respect  to  its  reports under this Section, including
without limitation information about (1) the  final  earnings
of   former  department  employees  who  elected  to  receive
benefits under this Section,  (2)  the  earnings  of  current
department employees holding the positions vacated by persons
who  elected  to receive benefits under this Section, and (3)
positions vacated by persons who elected to receive  benefits
under this Section that have not yet been refilled.
    (i)  The  changes made to this Section by this amendatory
Act of the 92nd General Assembly do not apply to persons  who
retired under this Section on or before May 1, 1992.
(Source: P.A. 92-566, eff. 6-25-02; revised 8-23-03.)
    (40 ILCS 5/22-803)
    Sec. 22-803. Economic and Fiscal Pension Laws Commission.
The  Illinois State Board of Investment and all pension funds
and retirement systems subject to this Code  shall  cooperate
with  the  Economic  and  Fiscal  Pension Laws Commission and
shall  upon  request  provide  the   Commission   with   such
information  and other assistance as it may find necessary or
useful for the performance of its duties.
(Source: P.A. 89-113, eff. 7-7-95.)

    (40 ILCS 5/22-1001) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 22-1001)
    Sec. 22-1001. Submission of information.  By March  1  of
each  year,  the retirement systems created under Articles 2,
14, 15, 16  and  18  of  this  Code  shall  each  submit  the
following information to the Economic and Fiscal Pension Laws
Commission:
    (1)  the  most  recent actuarial valuation computed using
the  projected  unit  credit  actuarial   cost   method   for
retirement and ancillary benefits.
    (2)  a  full  disclosure  of  the provisions of the plan;
economic, mortality, termination, and demographic assumptions
used  for  the  valuation;  methods  used  to  determine  the
actuarial values; the impact of significant  changes  in  the
actuarial assumptions and methods; the most recent experience
review;  and other information affecting the plan's actuarial
status.
    (3)  the State's share of the amount  necessary  to  fund
the  normal  cost  plus  interest  on  the  unfunded  accrued
liability  for  the  next  fiscal  year  as determined by the
projected unit credit computations.
    (4)  a five-year history  of  the  system's  liabilities,
assets (valued at cost), and unfunded liabilities.
    (5)  the  July  1  market  value  of  system assets and a
five-year history of annual and annualized investment returns

of the system's total  portfolio  and  each  segment  of  the
portfolio; and
    (6)  measures  of  financial  status,  including ten-year
trends  of:  unfunded  liabilities,  funded   ratios,   quick
liability  ratios, current reserves, and other solvency tests
requested by the Commission.
    For plan years ending prior to  December  31,  1984,  the
historical  data submitted by the retirement systems pursuant
to items (4) and (6) above may be  based  on  a  cost  method
other  than  the projected unit credit actuarial cost method.
In submitting the data, the retirement systems shall  specify
the method used.
(Source: P.A. 89-113, eff. 7-7-95.)

    (40 ILCS 5/22-1002) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 22-1002)
    Sec. 22-1002.  Within 3 days of the Governor's submission
of the State Budget, the Director of the Governor's Office of
Management  and Budget Bureau of the Budget shall provide the
Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission and the Pension  Laws
Commission  with  the  recommendations  for  budgeted  annual
appropriations for each system as specified in the Governor's
budget recommendations.
(Source: P.A. 89-113, eff. 7-7-95; revised 8-23-03.)

    (40 ILCS 5/22-1003) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 22-1003)
    Sec.  22-1003.   The  Economic  and  Fiscal  Pension Laws
Commission shall receive the information specified in Section
22-1001 and Section 22-1002 of this  Act.   Commission  staff
shall  examine  the  information  and  submit a report of the
analysis thereof to the General Assembly.  The  report  shall
also  include  either  an  analysis  of  the  effect  of  the
different  economic  assumptions  used  by  the 5 systems, or
supplemental valuations using the same  economic  assumptions
for  all  5  systems.   The Commission shall compare (1) each
system's  required  actuarial  funding  computed  using   the
projected  unit  credit  actuarial  cost  method, and (2) the
required State contribution levels established by Public  Act
88-593.   The  report  shall  also identify the amount of the
required funding for each system expected to  come  from  (i)
budgeted    annual   appropriations   and   (ii)   continuing
appropriations  under  the  State  Pension  Funds  Continuing
Appropriation Act.
    The  Commission  shall   also   compute   multiple   year
projections  showing the effect on system liabilities and the
State's annual cost (1) if the  systems  were  to  be  funded
according  to  actuarial  recommendations that the Commission
deems reasonable, (2)  if  each  system  were  to  be  funded
according  to  recommendations  made by the system's actuary,
and (3) if the systems were to be  funded  according  to  the
required  State contribution levels established by Public Act
88-593;  including  (i)  comparisons  of  State  costs   with
projected  benefit  payments,  payroll, and the general funds
budget, and (ii) comparisons of unfunded liabilities,  funded
ratios,   solvency   tests,   and  projected  reserves.   The
Commission may conduct additional analyses and projections as
it deems useful.
(Source: P.A. 89-113, eff. 7-7-95.)

    Section 95.  The Midwestern Higher Education Compact  Act
is amended by changing Section 2a as follows:

    (45 ILCS 155/2a) (from Ch. 144, par. 2803)
    Sec.   2a.    The   Legislative  Research  Unit  Illinois
Commission  on  Intergovernmental  Cooperation  in  order  to
ensure the purposes of this Act as determined by  Section  1,
shall  in  January of 1993 and each January thereafter report
to the Governor and  General  Assembly.   This  report  shall
contain  a  program  evaluation and recommendations as to the
advisability of the continued participation  of  Illinois  in
the Midwestern Higher Education Compact.
(Source: P.A. 87-147.)

    Section   100.  The   Quad   Cities   Regional   Economic
Development  Authority  Act,  approved September 22, 1987, is
amended by changing Section 6 as follows:

    (70 ILCS 510/6) (from Ch. 85, par. 6206)
    Sec. 6.  Records  and  Reports  of  the  Authority.   The
secretary  shall  keep  a  record  of  the proceedings of the
Authority.  The treasurer of the Authority shall be custodian
of all Authority funds, and shall be bonded in such amount as
the other  members  of  the  Authority  may  designate.   The
accounts  and  bonds  of  the  Authority  shall be set up and
maintained in a manner approved by the Auditor  General,  and
the Authority shall file with the Auditor General a certified
annual  report  within 120 days after the close of its fiscal
year.  The Authority shall also file with the  Governor,  the
Secretary   of   the  Senate,  the  Clerk  of  the  House  of
Representatives, and the Legislative Research  Unit  Illinois
Commission  on  Intergovernmental  Cooperation, by March 1 of
each year, a written report covering its activities  and  any
activities  of  any  instrumentality  corporation established
pursuant to this Act for the previous fiscal  year.   In  its
report  to  be  filed  by  March 1, 1988, the Authority shall
present an economic development strategy for the Quad  Cities
region  for  the  year  beginning  July 1, 1988 and for the 4
years next ensuing.  In each annual  report  thereafter,  the
Authority   shall   make   modifications   in  such  economic
development strategy for the 4 years beginning  on  the  next
ensuing  July 1, to reflect changes in economic conditions or
other factors, including the policies of  the  Authority  and
the  State  of  Illinois.   It also shall present an economic
development strategy for the fifth year beginning  after  the
next  ensuing  July 1.  The strategy shall recommend specific
legislative and  administrative  action  by  the  State,  the
Authority,  units  of  local government or other governmental
agencies.  Such recommendations  may  include,  but  are  not
limited to, new programs, modifications to existing programs,
credit  enhancements  for  bonds issued by the Authority, and
amendments to this Act.  When filed, such report shall  be  a
public  record  and open for inspection at the offices of the
Authority during normal business hours.
(Source: P.A. 85-713.)

    Section   105.  The   Quad   Cities   Regional   Economic
Development Authority Act, certified December  30,  1987,  is
amended by changing Section 6 as follows:

    (70 ILCS 515/6) (from Ch. 85, par. 6506)
    Sec.  6.   Records  and  Reports  of  the Authority.  The
secretary shall keep a  record  of  the  proceedings  of  the
Authority.  The treasurer of the Authority shall be custodian
of all Authority funds, and shall be bonded in such amount as
the  other  members  of  the  Authority  may  designate.  The
accounts and bonds of the  Authority  shall  be  set  up  and
maintained  in  a manner approved by the Auditor General, and
the Authority shall file with the Auditor General a certified
annual report within 120 days after the close of  its  fiscal
year.   The  Authority shall also file with the Governor, the
Secretary  of  the  Senate,  the  Clerk  of  the   House   of
Representatives,  and  the Legislative Research Unit Illinois
Commission on Intergovernmental Cooperation, by  March  1  of
each  year,  a written report covering its activities and any
activities of  any  instrumentality  corporation  established
pursuant  to  this  Act for the previous fiscal year.  In its
report to be filed by March  1,  1988,  the  Authority  shall
present  an economic development strategy for the Quad Cities
region for the year beginning July 1,  1988  and  for  the  4
years  next  ensuing.   In each annual report thereafter, the
Authority  shall  make   modifications   in   such   economic
development  strategy  for  the 4 years beginning on the next
ensuing July 1, to reflect changes in economic conditions  or
other  factors,  including  the policies of the Authority and
the State of Illinois.  It also  shall  present  an  economic
development  strategy  for the fifth year beginning after the
next ensuing July 1.  The strategy shall  recommend  specific
legislative  and  administrative  action  by  the  State, the
Authority, units of local government  or  other  governmental
agencies.   Such  recommendations  may  include,  but are not
limited to, new programs, modifications to existing programs,
credit enhancements for bonds issued by  the  Authority,  and
amendments  to  this Act.  When filed, such report shall be a
public record and open for inspection at the offices  of  the
Authority during normal business hours.
(Source: P.A. 85-988.)

    Section  110.  The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by
changing Sections 3-13, 5-5, 5-5.5, 5-15, 9-6.1,  9-8,  11-5,
12-4.30, 12-5, and 12-8 as follows:

    (305 ILCS 5/3-13) (from Ch. 23, par. 3-13)
    Sec.    3-13.    Federal   program   -   Declaration   of
responsibilities: It is the position of this State  that  the
Federal  Government  should  meet  its  obligation to provide
financial aid  to  those  aged,  blind  or  disabled  persons
eligible  under  Article  III  hereof  so  as to assure those
persons a standard  of  living  compatible  with  health  and
well-being,  including any supplementary aid program provided
to meet special or emergency needs, and it is the position of
this State  that  the  Federal  Government  should  meet  its
obligation to provide continuing supplemental nutritional aid
for  such  persons  through the Federal Food Stamp Program or
through full reimbursement for expenditures made in  lieu  of
such Food Stamp Program.
    (a)  The    Illinois   Department   may,   from   federal
reimbursements   received   under    this    Section,    make
disbursements  to any attorney, or advocate working under the
supervision of an attorney, who  represents  a  recipient  of
assistance  under  Article  VI  of  this  Code  in  a program
administered by the Illinois Department, in an appeal of  any
claim  for  federal  Supplemental  Security  Income  benefits
before  an administrative law judge which is decided in favor
of such recipient.  The amount of such disbursement shall  be
equal  to  25%  of  the maximum federal Supplemental Security
Income grant payable to an individual for  a  period  of  one
year.   No  such disbursement shall be made unless a petition
and a copy of the favorable decision  is  submitted  by  such
attorney  or  advocate  to  the Illinois Department within 60
days of the date of such decision.  The disbursement shall be
made within 30 days after  the  petition  is  received.   The
Illinois  Department  shall  promulgate rules and regulations
necessary to implement this subsection.
    (b)  The Illinois  Department  shall  institute  a  State
program to fully supplement the federal Supplemental Security
Income  grants of all persons in the aged, blind, or disabled
categories who meet the eligibility and need requirements  of
this  Code,  after  having  given  prior notice to and having
consulted with the Citizens Assembly/Council  on  Public  Aid
under  the  procedures established by Section 12-4.11 hereof.
The amount or amounts of such supplementary payments shall be
established by the Director of the Illinois Department  in  a
manner  consistent  with the other provisions of this Article
III.
    (c)  The Illinois Department,  the  Comptroller  and  the
Treasurer,   are   authorized  to  disburse  to  the  Federal
Government amounts appropriated to  the  Illinois  Department
for  use  in furnishing aid to persons eligible under Article
III of this Code, to receive reimbursements from the  Federal
Government   therefor,   and   to   establish  administrative
procedures necessary for the accomplishment of such a payment
system.
(Source: P.A. 89-21, eff. 7-1-95.)

    (305 ILCS 5/5-5) (from Ch. 23, par. 5-5)
    Sec. 5-5.  Medical services. The Illinois Department,  by
rule,  shall  determine  the  quantity and quality of and the
rate of reimbursement for the medical  assistance  for  which
payment  will  be  authorized, and the medical services to be
provided, which may include all or part of the following: (1)
inpatient  hospital   services;   (2)   outpatient   hospital
services;  (3)  other  laboratory  and  X-ray  services;  (4)
skilled  nursing  home  services;  (5)  physicians'  services
whether  furnished  in  the  office,  the  patient's  home, a
hospital, a skilled nursing home, or elsewhere;  (6)  medical
care,  or  any  other  type  of  remedial  care  furnished by
licensed practitioners; (7) home health  care  services;  (8)
private  duty  nursing  service;  (9)  clinic  services; (10)
dental services; (11) physical therapy and related  services;
(12)  prescribed drugs, dentures, and prosthetic devices; and
eyeglasses prescribed by a physician skilled in the  diseases
of  the  eye,  or by an optometrist, whichever the person may
select; (13) other  diagnostic,  screening,  preventive,  and
rehabilitative  services;  (14) transportation and such other
expenses as may  be  necessary;  (15)  medical  treatment  of
sexual  assault  survivors,  as  defined in Section 1a of the
Sexual  Assault  Survivors  Emergency  Treatment   Act,   for
injuries  sustained  as  a  result  of  the  sexual  assault,
including  examinations  and  laboratory  tests  to  discover
evidence  which  may  be used in criminal proceedings arising
from the sexual assault; (16) the diagnosis and treatment  of
sickle  cell anemia; and (17) any other medical care, and any
other type of remedial care recognized under the laws of this
State, but not including abortions, or  induced  miscarriages
or  premature  births, unless, in the opinion of a physician,
such procedures are necessary for  the  preservation  of  the
life  of  the  woman  seeking  such  treatment,  or except an
induced premature birth intended to  produce  a  live  viable
child  and  such procedure is necessary for the health of the
mother or her unborn child. The Illinois Department, by rule,
shall  prohibit  any   physician   from   providing   medical
assistance  to anyone eligible therefor under this Code where
such  physician  has  been  found  guilty  of  performing  an
abortion procedure in a wilful and wanton manner upon a woman
who was not pregnant at the time such abortion procedure  was
performed.  The  term "any other type of remedial care" shall
include nursing care and nursing home service for persons who
rely on treatment by spiritual means alone through prayer for
healing.
    Notwithstanding any other provision of  this  Section,  a
comprehensive  tobacco  use  cessation  program that includes
purchasing prescription drugs or prescription medical devices
approved by the Food and Drug administration shall be covered
under the medical assistance program under this  Article  for
persons  who are otherwise eligible for assistance under this
Article.
    Notwithstanding any other provision  of  this  Code,  the
Illinois  Department  may  not  require,  as  a  condition of
payment  for  any  laboratory  test  authorized  under   this
Article,  that  a physician's handwritten signature appear on
the laboratory test order form.  The Illinois Department may,
however,  impose  other  appropriate  requirements  regarding
laboratory test order documentation.
    The Illinois Department of Public Aid shall  provide  the
following  services  to persons eligible for assistance under
this Article who are participating in education, training  or
employment  programs  operated  by  the  Department  of Human
Services as successor to the Department of Public Aid:
         (1)  dental services, which shall include but not be
    limited to prosthodontics; and
         (2)  eyeglasses prescribed by a physician skilled in
    the diseases of the eye, or by an optometrist,  whichever
    the person may select.
    The  Illinois  Department,  by  rule, may distinguish and
classify  the  medical  services  to  be  provided  only   in
accordance  with the classes of persons designated in Section
5-2.
    The Illinois Department shall authorize the provision of,
and  shall  authorize  payment  for,  screening  by  low-dose
mammography for the presence  of  occult  breast  cancer  for
women  35  years of age or older who are eligible for medical
assistance  under  this  Article,  as  follows:   a  baseline
mammogram for women 35 to 39  years  of  age  and  an  annual
mammogram for women 40 years of age or older.  All screenings
shall   include   a  physical  breast  exam,  instruction  on
self-examination and information regarding the  frequency  of
self-examination  and  its  value as a preventative tool.  As
used in this Section, "low-dose mammography" means the  x-ray
examination   of   the   breast   using  equipment  dedicated
specifically  for  mammography,  including  the  x-ray  tube,
filter, compression device, image  receptor,  and  cassettes,
with  an average radiation exposure delivery of less than one
rad mid-breast, with 2 views for each breast.
    Any medical or health  care  provider  shall  immediately
recommend,  to  any  pregnant  woman  who  is  being provided
prenatal services and  is  suspected  of  drug  abuse  or  is
addicted  as  defined  in the Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse
and Dependency Act,  referral  to  a  local  substance  abuse
treatment  provider  licensed  by  the  Department  of  Human
Services  or  to a licensed hospital which provides substance
abuse treatment services.  The Department of Public Aid shall
assure coverage for the cost of treatment of the  drug  abuse
or  addiction  for pregnant recipients in accordance with the
Illinois Medicaid Program in conjunction with the  Department
of Human Services.
    All  medical  providers  providing  medical assistance to
pregnant women under this Code shall receive information from
the Department on the availability of services under the Drug
Free  Families  with  a  Future  or  any  comparable  program
providing  case  management  services  for  addicted   women,
including  information  on  appropriate  referrals  for other
social services that may  be  needed  by  addicted  women  in
addition to treatment for addiction.
    The   Illinois   Department,   in  cooperation  with  the
Departments of Human Services (as successor to the Department
of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse) and Public Health, through
a  public  awareness  campaign,   may   provide   information
concerning  treatment  for  alcoholism  and  drug  abuse  and
addiction, prenatal health care, and other pertinent programs
directed at reducing the number of drug-affected infants born
to recipients of medical assistance.
    Neither  the  Illinois  Department  of Public Aid nor the
Department of Human Services  shall  sanction  the  recipient
solely on the basis of her substance abuse.
    The  Illinois Department shall establish such regulations
governing  the  dispensing  of  health  services  under  this
Article as it shall deem appropriate.  In  formulating  these
regulations  the  Illinois  Department shall consult with and
give substantial weight to the recommendations offered by the
Citizens Assembly/Council  on  Public  Aid.   The  Department
should  seek  the  advice  of  formal  professional  advisory
committees   appointed   by  the  Director  of  the  Illinois
Department for the purpose of  providing  regular  advice  on
policy  and administrative matters, information dissemination
and  educational  activities  for  medical  and  health  care
providers, and consistency  in  procedures  to  the  Illinois
Department.
    The  Illinois  Department  may  develop and contract with
Partnerships of medical providers to arrange medical services
for  persons  eligible  under  Section  5-2  of  this   Code.
Implementation  of  this  Section  may  be  by  demonstration
projects  in certain geographic areas.  The Partnership shall
be represented by a sponsor organization.  The Department, by
rule,  shall   develop   qualifications   for   sponsors   of
Partnerships.   Nothing in this Section shall be construed to
require  that  the  sponsor   organization   be   a   medical
organization.
    The  sponsor must negotiate formal written contracts with
medical  providers  for  physician  services,  inpatient  and
outpatient hospital care, home health services, treatment for
alcoholism and substance abuse, and other services determined
necessary by the Illinois Department by rule for delivery  by
Partnerships.   Physician  services must include prenatal and
obstetrical care.  The Illinois  Department  shall  reimburse
medical   services  delivered  by  Partnership  providers  to
clients in target  areas  according  to  provisions  of  this
Article  and  the  Illinois Health Finance Reform Act, except
that:
         (1)  Physicians participating in a  Partnership  and
    providing  certain services, which shall be determined by
    the Illinois Department, to persons in areas  covered  by
    the  Partnership  may receive an additional surcharge for
    such services.
         (2)  The  Department  may  elect  to  consider   and
    negotiate   financial   incentives   to   encourage   the
    development of Partnerships and the efficient delivery of
    medical care.
         (3)  Persons   receiving  medical  services  through
    Partnerships may  receive  medical  and  case  management
    services  above  the  level  usually  offered through the
    medical assistance program.
    Medical providers  shall  be  required  to  meet  certain
qualifications  to  participate in Partnerships to ensure the
delivery   of   high   quality   medical   services.    These
qualifications shall be determined by rule  of  the  Illinois
Department   and   may  be  higher  than  qualifications  for
participation in the medical assistance program.  Partnership
sponsors may prescribe reasonable  additional  qualifications
for  participation  by medical providers, only with the prior
written approval of the Illinois Department.
    Nothing in this Section shall limit the  free  choice  of
practitioners,  hospitals,  and  other  providers  of medical
services by clients. In order to ensure  patient  freedom  of
choice,  the Illinois Department shall immediately promulgate
all rules and  take  all  other  necessary  actions  so  that
provided   services  may  be  accessed  from  therapeutically
certified optometrists to the full  extent  of  the  Illinois
Optometric   Practice  Act  of  1987  without  discriminating
between service providers.
    The Department shall apply for a waiver from  the  United
States  Health Care Financing Administration to allow for the
implementation of Partnerships under this Section.
    The  Illinois  Department  shall  require   health   care
providers  to maintain records that document the medical care
and services provided to  recipients  of  Medical  Assistance
under  this  Article.   The Illinois Department shall require
health care providers to make available, when  authorized  by
the  patient,  in  writing,  the  medical records in a timely
fashion to other health care providers who  are  treating  or
serving  persons  eligible  for Medical Assistance under this
Article.   All  dispensers  of  medical  services  shall   be
required  to  maintain  and  retain business and professional
records sufficient  to  fully  and  accurately  document  the
nature,  scope,  details  and  receipt  of  the  health  care
provided  to  persons  eligible  for medical assistance under
this Code, in accordance with regulations promulgated by  the
Illinois Department.  The rules and regulations shall require
that  proof  of  the receipt of prescription drugs, dentures,
prosthetic devices and eyeglasses by eligible  persons  under
this Section accompany each claim for reimbursement submitted
by the dispenser of such medical services. No such claims for
reimbursement  shall  be approved for payment by the Illinois
Department without such proof of receipt, unless the Illinois
Department shall have put into effect and shall be  operating
a  system  of post-payment audit and review which shall, on a
sampling basis, be deemed adequate by the Illinois Department
to assure that such drugs, dentures, prosthetic  devices  and
eyeglasses for which payment is being made are actually being
received  by  eligible  recipients.  Within 90 days after the
effective date of this amendatory Act of 1984,  the  Illinois
Department  shall  establish  a  current  list of acquisition
costs  for  all  prosthetic  devices  and  any  other   items
recognized  as  medical  equipment  and supplies reimbursable
under this Article and shall update such list on a  quarterly
basis,  except that the acquisition costs of all prescription
drugs shall be updated no less frequently than every 30  days
as required by Section 5-5.12.
    The  rules  and  regulations  of  the Illinois Department
shall require that a written statement including the required
opinion  of  a  physician  shall  accompany  any  claim   for
reimbursement  for  abortions,  or  induced  miscarriages  or
premature   births.    This  statement  shall  indicate  what
procedures were used in providing such medical services.
    The Illinois Department shall require all  dispensers  of
medical  services,  other  than an individual practitioner or
group  of  practitioners,  desiring  to  participate  in  the
Medical Assistance program established under this Article  to
disclose all financial, beneficial, ownership, equity, surety
or  other  interests  in  any  and  all  firms, corporations,
partnerships,  associations,  business   enterprises,   joint
ventures,  agencies,  institutions  or  other  legal entities
providing any form of health  care  services  in  this  State
under this Article.
    The  Illinois  Department may require that all dispensers
of medical services desiring to participate  in  the  medical
assistance  program  established under this Article disclose,
under such terms and conditions as  the  Illinois  Department
may  by  rule  establish,  all  inquiries  from  clients  and
attorneys  regarding  medical  bills  paid  by  the  Illinois
Department,   which   inquiries   could   indicate  potential
existence of claims or liens for the Illinois Department.
    Enrollment  of  a  vendor  that  provides   non-emergency
medical  transportation,  defined  by the Department by rule,
shall be conditional for 180  days.  During  that  time,  the
Department   of   Public   Aid  may  terminate  the  vendor's
eligibility to participate in the medical assistance  program
without  cause.   That  termination  of  eligibility  is  not
subject to the Department's hearing process.
    The   Illinois   Department   shall  establish  policies,
procedures,  standards  and  criteria   by   rule   for   the
acquisition,   repair   and   replacement   of  orthotic  and
prosthetic devices and durable medical equipment.  Such rules
shall provide, but not be limited to, the following services:
(1) immediate  repair  or  replacement  of  such  devices  by
recipients  without  medical  authorization;  and (2) rental,
lease,  purchase  or  lease-purchase   of   durable   medical
equipment   in   a   cost-effective   manner,   taking   into
consideration  the  recipient's medical prognosis, the extent
of the recipient's needs, and the requirements and costs  for
maintaining  such  equipment.   Such  rules  shall  enable  a
recipient  to  temporarily  acquire  and  use  alternative or
substitute  devices   or   equipment   pending   repairs   or
replacements of any device or equipment previously authorized
for  such recipient by the Department. Rules under clause (2)
above shall not provide for  purchase  or  lease-purchase  of
durable medical equipment or supplies used for the purpose of
oxygen delivery and respiratory care.
    The  Department  shall  execute,  relative to the nursing
home prescreening project,  written  inter-agency  agreements
with  the  Department of Human Services and the Department on
Aging, to effect the following:  (i)  intake  procedures  and
common   eligibility  criteria  for  those  persons  who  are
receiving   non-institutional   services;   and   (ii)    the
establishment  and  development of non-institutional services
in areas of the State where they are not currently  available
or are undeveloped.
    The  Illinois  Department  shall  develop and operate, in
cooperation with other State Departments and agencies and  in
compliance  with  applicable  federal  laws  and regulations,
appropriate and effective systems of health  care  evaluation
and  programs  for  monitoring  of utilization of health care
services and facilities, as it affects persons  eligible  for
medical  assistance  under this Code. The Illinois Department
shall report regularly the results of the operation  of  such
systems  and  programs  to  the  Citizens Assembly/Council on
Public Aid to enable the Committee to ensure,  from  time  to
time, that these programs are effective and meaningful.
    The  Illinois  Department  shall  report  annually to the
General Assembly, no later than the second Friday in April of
1979 and each year thereafter, in regard to:
         (a)  actual statistics and trends in utilization  of
    medical services by public aid recipients;
         (b)  actual  statistics  and trends in the provision
    of the various medical services by medical vendors;
         (c)  current rate structures and proposed changes in
    those rate structures for the  various  medical  vendors;
    and
         (d)  efforts  at  utilization  review and control by
    the Illinois Department.
    The period covered by each report shall be  the  3  years
ending  on the June 30 prior to the report.  The report shall
include  suggested  legislation  for  consideration  by   the
General  Assembly.  The filing of one copy of the report with
the Speaker, one copy with the Minority Leader and  one  copy
with the Clerk of the House of Representatives, one copy with
the President, one copy with the Minority Leader and one copy
with   the  Secretary  of  the  Senate,  one  copy  with  the
Legislative Research Unit, and such  additional  copies  with
the  State  Government  Report  Distribution  Center  for the
General Assembly  as  is  required  under  paragraph  (t)  of
Section  7  of  the  State  Library Act and one copy with the
Citizens Assembly/Council on  Public  Aid  or  its  successor
shall be deemed sufficient to comply with this Section.
(Source:  P.A.  91-344,  eff.  1-1-00;  91-462,  eff. 8-6-99;
91-666, eff. 12-22-99;  92-16,  eff.  6-28-01;  92-651,  eff.
7-11-02; 92-789, eff. 8-6-02.)

    (305 ILCS 5/5-5.5) (from Ch. 23, par. 5-5.5)
    Sec. 5-5.5.  Elements of Payment Rate.
    (a)  The   Department  of  Public  Aid  shall  develop  a
prospective method for determining payment rates for  skilled
nursing  and intermediate care services in nursing facilities
composed of the following cost elements:
         (1)  Standard  Services,  with  the  cost  of   this
    component  being  determined  by  taking into account the
    actual costs to the facilities of these services  subject
    to cost ceilings to be defined in the Department's rules.
         (2)  Resident   Services,  with  the  cost  of  this
    component being determined by  taking  into  account  the
    actual costs, needs and utilization of these services, as
    derived  from  an assessment of the resident needs in the
    nursing facilities.  The  Department  shall  adopt  rules
    governing  reimbursement  for resident services as listed
    in Section 5-1.1.  Surveys  or  assessments  of  resident
    needs  under  this  Section shall include a review by the
    facility  of  the  results  of  such  assessments  and  a
    discussion of issues in dispute  with  authorized  survey
    staff,  unless  the facility elects not to participate in
    such  a  review  process.   Surveys  or  assessments   of
    resident  needs  under  this  Section  may  be  conducted
    semi-annually  and  payment  rates  relating  to resident
    services may be changed  on  a  semi-annual  basis.   The
    Illinois Department shall initiate a project, either on a
    pilot  basis  or  Statewide,  to  reimburse  the  cost of
    resident services based on a methodology  which  utilizes
    an assessment of resident needs to determine the level of
    reimbursement.  This  methodology shall be different from
    the payment criteria for resident  services  utilized  by
    the  Illinois  Department  on  July 1, 1981.  On March 1,
    1982, and each year thereafter, until such time when  the
    Illinois  Department  adopts the methodology used in such
    project for use  statewide  or  the  Illinois  Department
    reports  to  the  Citizens Assembly/Council on Public Aid
    that the methodology did not meet the Department's  goals
    and objectives and therefore is ceasing such project, the
    Illinois  Department shall report to the General Assembly
    on the implementation and progress of such  project.  The
    report shall include:
              (A)  A  statement  of the Illinois Department's
         goals and objectives for such project;
              (B)  A description of such  project,  including
         the  number  and type of nursing facilities involved
         in the project;
              (C)  A description of the methodology  used  in
         such project;
              (D)  A description of the Illinois Department's
         application of the methodology;
              (E)  A statement on the methodology's effect on
         the quality of care given to residents in the sample
         nursing facilities; and
              (F)  A statement on the cost of the methodology
         used  in  such project and a comparison of this cost
         with the cost of the current payment criteria.
         (3)  Ancillary Services, with the payment rate being
    developed for each individual type of  service.   Payment
    shall  be  made  only  when  authorized  under procedures
    developed by the Department of Public Aid.
         (4)  Nurse's Aide Training, with the  cost  of  this
    component  being  determined  by  taking into account the
    actual cost to the facilities of such training.
         (5)  Real  Estate  Taxes,  with  the  cost  of  this
    component being determined by  taking  into  account  the
    figures  contained  in  the most currently available cost
    reports (with no imposition of maximums) updated  to  the
    midpoint  of  the  current  rate  year for long term care
    services rendered between July 1, 1984 and June 30, 1985,
    and with the cost of this component being  determined  by
    taking  into  account the actual 1983 taxes for which the
    nursing  homes  were  assessed  (with  no  imposition  of
    maximums) updated to the midpoint  of  the  current  rate
    year for long term care services rendered between July 1,
    1985 and June 30, 1986.
    (b)  In  developing  a prospective method for determining
payment rates  for  skilled  nursing  and  intermediate  care
services  in nursing facilities, the Department of Public Aid
shall consider the following cost elements:
         (1)  Reasonable capital cost determined by utilizing
    incurred interest rate  and  the  current  value  of  the
    investment, including land, utilizing composite rates, or
    by  utilizing  such other reasonable cost related methods
    determined by the Department. However, beginning with the
    rate reimbursement period effective  July  1,  1987,  the
    Department   shall   be   prohibited  from  establishing,
    including, and implementing any  depreciation  factor  in
    calculating the capital cost element.
         (2)  Profit,  with  the actual amount being produced
    and accruing to the providers in the form of a return  on
    their  total investment, on the basis of their ability to
    economically and efficiently deliver a type  of  service.
    The  method  of  payment may assure the opportunity for a
    profit, but shall not guarantee or establish  a  specific
    amount as a cost.
    (c)  The Illinois Department may implement the amendatory
changes  to  this Section made by this amendatory Act of 1991
through the use of emergency rules  in  accordance  with  the
provisions  of  Section  5.02  of the Illinois Administrative
Procedure Act. For purposes of  the  Illinois  Administrative
Procedure  Act,  the  adoption  of  rules  to  implement  the
amendatory  changes  to  this Section made by this amendatory
Act of 1991 shall be deemed an emergency  and  necessary  for
the public interest, safety and welfare.
    (d)  No  later  than  January  1, 2001, the Department of
Public  Aid  shall  file  with   the   Joint   Committee   on
Administrative Rules, pursuant to the Illinois Administrative
Procedure Act, a proposed rule, or a proposed amendment to an
existing  rule,  regarding  payment for appropriate services,
including assessment, care planning, discharge planning,  and
treatment  provided  by  nursing  facilities to residents who
have a serious mental illness.
(Source: P.A. 91-799, eff. 6-13-00.)

    (305 ILCS 5/5-15) (from Ch. 23, par. 5-15)
    Sec. 5-15.  (a) The Illinois Department is authorized  to
contract  with  community  based  organizations  serving  low
income communities for a three year period to demonstrate how
and  the  extent  to  which  preventive  health  programs can
decrease utilization of medical care services and/or  improve
health status.
    (b)  As  used  in  this  Section  (1)  a  community based
organization   is   an   organization   established   as    a
not-for-profit   corporation  under  laws  of  the  State  of
Illinois which serves a defined geographic community  and  is
governed  by  members of that community; and (2) a preventive
health program is any program, service  or  intervention  the
purpose  of  which  is  to  identify,  resolve, or ameliorate
problems which  contribute  to  the  utilization  of  medical
services.
    (c)  The   Illinois   Department   is   authorized,   for
evaluation purposes, to release names of recipients and other
pertinent  identification and medical utilization information
to the community organizations under contract.
    (d)  Contractors shall maintain strict confidentiality of
information released by the Illinois Department by  following
guidelines  established  by  the  Illinois  Department, which
shall require that recipients sign a release for any  further
use or disclosure of such information.
    (e)  The Illinois Department shall report to the Citizens
Assembly/Council  on  Public  Aid  annually  on the costs and
benefits of preventive health care projects.
(Source: P.A. 86-651.)
    (305 ILCS 5/9-6.1) (from Ch. 23, par. 9-6.1)
    Sec.  9-6.1.  Housing  Education  Program.  The  Illinois
Department, upon consultation with and advice of the Citizens
Assembly/Council  on  Public  Aid,  shall  establish,  either
directly or by  contract,  a  pilot  project  for  a  housing
education  program  that  will  provide persons receiving aid
under Articles III, IV, V, and VI with  instructions  in  the
care  and maintenance of dwelling units, in the essentials of
adequate housekeeping, and the problems of urban  living.  If
in  accord  with Federal law and regulations governing grants
to this State for public aid  purposes,  the  Department  may
require  recipients  to  attend  a housing education program.
Non-recipients to whom services have been extended under  the
provisions  of Section 9-8 may also attend and participate in
a housing education program established hereunder.
(Source: P.A. 92-111, eff. 1-1-02.)

    (305 ILCS 5/9-8) (from Ch. 23, par. 9-8)
    Sec. 9-8. Extension of  Coverage.)   If  appropriate  and
sufficient   facilities   are  not  available  through  other
agencies, and  upon  consultation  with  and  advice  of  the
Citizens   Assembly/Council   on  Public  Aid,  the  Illinois
Department may extend those services provided in this Article
which relate to work  adjustment,  education,  training,  and
counseling  and  guidance  on  problems of child care, family
relationships, home and money management, transportation, and
health, to one or both of the following:
    (1)  persons and families who have been recipients of aid
within 1 year preceding their request for the  services,  and
who  are  likely  to  become  recipients  of aid again unless
needed services are provided;
    (2)  other persons and families who request the  services
and  whose  economic, personal or social situation is such as
to make it likely that without counseling, training or  other
services  financial  aid  could  reasonably be expected to be
required within 6 months.
    The services may be continued for such  time  as  may  be
necessary  to  overcome  the  conditions  which may result in
dependency upon financial aid but each case shall be reviewed
at least quarterly  to  assure  that  the  services  are  not
continued beyond a reasonable period of time.
    Any  extension of services under the foregoing provisions
shall be limited to a pilot county or counties, or other test
area, until  the  cost  and  effectiveness  of  the  services
provided  are  determined  to  be in the public interest. The
initiation in any county or the extension in any  county,  of
the services specified in the first paragraph of this Section
shall  require  prior  consultation  with  and  advice of the
Citizens Assembly/Council on Public Aid.
    Upon  consultation  with  and  advice  of  the   Citizens
Assembly/Council  on  Public Aid, The Illinois Department may
also extend the educational and vocational training  programs
provided  under  Section  9-5 or Section 9-7 to persons whose
income does not exceed the standard established to  determine
eligibility  for  aid  as  a  medically indigent person under
Article  V,  subject  to   the   minimum   quarterly   review
requirement   established   in   this   Section  for  persons
designated in subparagraphs (1) and (2).
(Source: P.A. 86-651.)

    (305 ILCS 5/11-5) (from Ch. 23, par. 11-5)
    Sec. 11-5.  Investigation  of  applications.  The  County
Department  or  local  governmental unit shall promptly, upon
receipt of an application, make the necessary  investigation,
as  prescribed  by  rule  of  the  Illinois  Department,  for
determining the eligibility of the applicant for aid.
    A  report of every investigation shall be made in writing
and become a part of the record in each case.
    The  Illinois  Department,  upon  consultation  with  and
advice of the Citizens Assembly/Council on Public Aid, may by
rule prescribe  the  circumstances  under  which  information
furnished  by  applicants in respect to their eligibility may
be presumed prima facie correct, subject  to  all  civil  and
criminal  penalties  and  recoveries provided in this Code if
the additional investigation establishes that  the  applicant
made false statements or was otherwise ineligible for aid.
(Source: P.A. 86-651.)

    (305 ILCS 5/12-4.30) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-4.30)
    Sec.   12-4.30.    Demonstration   programs.    Establish
demonstration   programs,   authorized  by  federal  law  and
pursuant to State regulations.  Such  demonstration  programs
shall  be  subject  to  the  prior  review  of  the  Citizens
Assembly/Citizens  Council on Public Aid and may include, but
shall not be limited to: cashing out  welfare  benefits  such
as,  but  not  limited  to,  food  stamps,  energy assistance
payments and medical  benefits;  providing  medical  benefits
through  the  purchase of health insurance; and capping grant
amounts at certain levels regardless of the number of persons
in the case.  Such demonstration programs may be  limited  to
particular geographic areas.
(Source: P.A. 85-1209.)

    (305 ILCS 5/12-5) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-5)
    Sec.  12-5.  Appropriations; uses; federal grants; report
to General Assembly.   From  the  sums  appropriated  by  the
General  Assembly,  the  Illinois  Department shall order for
payment by warrant from the State Treasury grants for  public
aid  under  Articles  III,  IV,  and  V, including grants for
funeral and burial expenses, and all costs of  administration
of   the  Illinois  Department  and  the  County  Departments
relating  thereto.  Moneys  appropriated  to   the   Illinois
Department  for public aid under Article VI may be used, with
the consent of the  Governor,  to  co-operate  with  federal,
State, and local agencies in the development of work projects
designed to provide suitable employment for persons receiving
public  aid  under  Article VI. The Illinois Department, with
the consent of the Governor, may be the agent  of  the  State
for   the  receipt  and  disbursement  of  federal  funds  or
commodities for public aid purposes under Article VI and  for
related  purposes  in  which the co-operation of the Illinois
Department is sought  by  the  federal  government,  and,  in
connection  therewith,  may  make necessary expenditures from
moneys appropriated for public aid under any Article of  this
Code  and  for administration.  The Illinois Department, with
the consent of the Governor, may be the agent  of  the  State
for the receipt and disbursement of federal funds pursuant to
the  Immigration  Reform and Control Act of 1986 and may make
necessary expenditures from monies  appropriated  to  it  for
operations,  administration, and grants, including payment to
the Health Insurance Reserve Fund for group  insurance  costs
at the rate certified by the Department of Central Management
Services.   All  amounts  received by the Illinois Department
pursuant to the Immigration Reform and Control  Act  of  1986
shall  be  deposited  in  the  Immigration Reform and Control
Fund.  All amounts received into the Immigration  Reform  and
Control  Fund  as  reimbursement  for  expenditures  from the
General Revenue Fund shall  be  transferred  to  the  General
Revenue Fund.
    All  grants  received  by  the  Illinois  Department  for
programs  funded  by  the Federal Social Services Block Grant
shall be deposited in the Social Services Block  Grant  Fund.
All  funds received into the Social Services Block Grant Fund
as reimbursement for expenditures from  the  General  Revenue
Fund  shall  be transferred to the General Revenue Fund.  All
funds received into the Social Services Block Grant fund  for
reimbursement  for  expenditure  out  of the Local Initiative
Fund shall be transferred into  the  Local  Initiative  Fund.
Any  other  federal  funds  received into the Social Services
Block Grant Fund shall be transferred to the Special Purposes
Trust Fund.  All  federal  funds  received  by  the  Illinois
Department  as  reimbursement  for  Employment  and  Training
Programs  for  expenditures  made  by the Illinois Department
from grants,  gifts,  or  legacies  as  provided  in  Section
12-4.18  or  made  by  an  entity  other  than  the  Illinois
Department   shall  be  deposited  into  the  Employment  and
Training  Fund,  except  that  federal  funds   received   as
reimbursement  as  a result of the appropriation made for the
costs of  providing  adult  education  to  public  assistance
recipients  under  the  "Adult  Education,  Public Assistance
Fund" shall be  deposited  into  the  General  Revenue  Fund;
provided,  however,  that  all  funds,  except those that are
specified in an interagency agreement  between  the  Illinois
Community College Board and the Illinois Department, that are
received  by  the  Illinois Department as reimbursement under
Title IV-A of the Social Security Act for  expenditures  that
are  made  by  the  Illinois  Community  College Board or any
public community college of this State shall be credited to a
special account that the State Treasurer shall establish  and
maintain  within  the  Employment  and  Training Fund for the
purpose  of  segregating  the  reimbursements  received   for
expenditures  made  by those entities.  As reimbursements are
deposited into the Employment and Training Fund, the Illinois
Department shall certify to the State Comptroller  and  State
Treasurer  the  amount  that is to be credited to the special
account established within that Fund as a  reimbursement  for
expenditures under Title IV-A of the Social Security Act made
by  the Illinois Community College Board or any of the public
community colleges.  All  amounts  credited  to  the  special
account  established and maintained within the Employment and
Training Fund as provided in this Section shall be  held  for
transfer  to  the  TANF  Opportunities  Fund  as  provided in
subsection  (d)  of  Section  12-10.3,  and  shall   not   be
transferred to any other fund or used for any other purpose.
    Any  or  all  federal funds received as reimbursement for
food and shelter assistance  under  the  Emergency  Food  and
Shelter   Program   authorized   by  Section  12-4.5  may  be
deposited,  with  the  consent  of  the  Governor,  into  the
Homelessness Prevention Fund.
    Eighty percent of  the  federal  financial  participation
funds  received  by  the  Illinois Department under the Title
IV-A  Emergency  Assistance  program  as  reimbursement   for
expenditures  made  from  the Illinois Department of Children
and Family Services appropriations for the costs of providing
services in behalf  of  Department  of  Children  and  Family
Services  clients shall be deposited into the DCFS Children's
Services Fund.
    All federal funds, except those covered by the  foregoing
3 paragraphs, received as reimbursement for expenditures from
the  General  Revenue  Fund shall be deposited in the General
Revenue Fund for administrative and distributive expenditures
properly chargeable by  federal  law  or  regulation  to  aid
programs  established  under  Articles  III  through  XII and
Titles IV, XVI, XIX and XX of  the  Federal  Social  Security
Act.   Any  other  federal  funds  received  by  the Illinois
Department under Sections 12-4.6, 12-4.18  and  12-4.19  that
are  required  by  Section 12-10 of this Code to be paid into
the Special Purposes Trust Fund shall be deposited  into  the
Special   Purposes  Trust  Fund.   Any  other  federal  funds
received by the Illinois Department  pursuant  to  the  Child
Support  Enforcement Program established by Title IV-D of the
Social Security Act shall be deposited in the  Child  Support
Enforcement  Trust  Fund as required under Section 12-10.2 of
this Code.  Any other federal funds received by the  Illinois
Department  for  medical assistance program expenditures made
under Title XIX of the Social Security Act and Article  V  of
this Code that are required by Section 5-4.21 of this Code to
be  paid  into the Medicaid Developmentally Disabled Provider
Participation Fee Trust Fund  shall  be  deposited  into  the
Medicaid  Developmentally Disabled Provider Participation Fee
Trust Fund.  Any other federal funds received by the Illinois
Department for medical assistance program  expenditures  made
under  Title  XIX of the Social Security Act and Article V of
this Code that are required by Section 5-4.31 of this Code to
be  paid  into  the  Medicaid   Long   Term   Care   Provider
Participation  Fee  Trust  Fund  shall  be deposited into the
Medicaid Long Term  Care  Provider  Participation  Fee  Trust
Fund.   Any  other  federal  funds  received  by the Illinois
Department for hospital inpatient, hospital ambulatory  care,
and  disproportionate  share hospital expenditures made under
Title XIX of the Social Security Act and Article  V  of  this
Code  that  are  required  by Section 14-2 of this Code to be
paid into the Hospital Services Trust Fund shall be deposited
into the Hospital Services Trust  Fund.   Any  other  federal
funds  received  by  the Illinois Department for expenditures
made under Title XIX of the Social Security Act and  Articles
V  and  VI  of this Code that are required by Section 15-2 of
this Code to be paid into  the  County  Provider  Trust  Fund
shall  be deposited into the County Provider Trust Fund.  Any
other federal funds received by the Illinois  Department  for
hospital    inpatient,    hospital   ambulatory   care,   and
disproportionate share hospital expenditures made under Title
XIX of the Social Security Act and Article  V  of  this  Code
that  are  required  by  Section 5A-8 of this Code to be paid
into the Hospital Provider Fund shall be deposited  into  the
Hospital  Provider Fund.  Any other federal funds received by
the  Illinois  Department  for  medical  assistance   program
expenditures  made under Title XIX of the Social Security Act
and Article V of this Code that are required by Section  5B-8
of this Code to be paid into the Long-Term Care Provider Fund
shall  be  deposited  into  the Long-Term Care Provider Fund.
Any other federal funds received by the  Illinois  Department
for  medical assistance program expenditures made under Title
XIX of the Social Security Act and Article  V  of  this  Code
that  are  required  by  Section 5C-7 of this Code to be paid
into the Developmentally Disabled Care Provider Fund shall be
deposited into the  Developmentally  Disabled  Care  Provider
Fund.   Any  other  federal  funds  received  by the Illinois
Department for trauma center  adjustment  payments  that  are
required  by Section 5-5.03 of this Code and made under Title
XIX of the Social Security Act and Article  V  of  this  Code
shall  be  deposited  into the Trauma Center Fund.  Any other
federal  funds  received  by  the  Illinois   Department   as
reimbursement  for  expenses  for early intervention services
paid from the  Early  Intervention  Services  Revolving  Fund
shall be deposited into that Fund.
    The  Illinois  Department shall consult with the Citizens
Assembly/Council on Public Aid in respect to the  expenditure
of  federal  funds from the Special Purposes Trust Fund under
Section 12-10 and the Local  Initiative  Fund  under  Section
12-10.1.   It shall report to the General Assembly at the end
of each fiscal quarter the amount of all funds  received  and
paid  into  the Social Service Block Grant Fund and the Local
Initiative Fund and the expenditures and  transfers  of  such
funds for services, programs and other purposes authorized by
law.   Such  report shall be filed with the Speaker, Minority
Leader and Clerk of the House, with the  President,  Minority
Leader  and Secretary of the Senate, with the Chairmen of the
House and Senate Appropriations Committees, the  House  Human
Resources Committee and the Senate Public Health, Welfare and
Corrections  Committee,  or the successor standing Committees
of each as provided by the rules of  the  House  and  Senate,
respectively, with the Legislative Research Unit and with the
State  Government  Report Distribution Center for the General
Assembly as is required under paragraph (t) of Section  7  of
the  State  Library  Act  and  one  copy  with  the  Citizens
Assembly/Council  on  Public  Aid  or  its successor shall be
deemed sufficient to comply with this Section.
(Source: P.A. 92-111, eff. 1-1-02.)

    (305 ILCS 5/12-8) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-8)
    Sec. 12-8.  Public Assistance Emergency Revolving Fund  -
Uses.    The  Public  Assistance  Emergency  Revolving  Fund,
established by Act approved July 8, 1955 shall be held by the
Illinois Department and  shall  be  used  for  the  following
purposes:
         1.  To provide immediate financial aid to applicants
    in  acute  need who have been determined eligible for aid
    under Articles III, IV, or V.
         2.  To provide emergency  aid  to  recipients  under
    said  Articles  who  have  failed to receive their grants
    because of mail box or other thefts, or who  are  victims
    of  a  burnout,  eviction, or other circumstances causing
    privation, in which cases  the  delays  incident  to  the
    issuance   of  grants  from  appropriations  would  cause
    hardship and suffering.
         3.  To provide  emergency  aid  for  transportation,
    meals  and  lodging  to  applicants  who  are referred to
    cities  other  than  where  they  reside   for   physical
    examinations  to establish blindness or disability, or to
    determine the incapacity of the  parent  of  a  dependent
    child.
         4.  To   provide  emergency  transportation  expense
    allowances to recipients engaged in  vocational  training
    and rehabilitation projects.
         5.  To  assist  public  aid  applicants in obtaining
    copies  of  birth   certificates,   death   certificates,
    marriage  licenses or other similar legal documents which
    may facilitate the verification of eligibility for public
    aid under this Code.
         6.  To provide  immediate  payments  to  current  or
    former  recipients of child support enforcement services,
    or refunds to responsible relatives,  for  child  support
    made  to  the Illinois Department under Title IV-D of the
    Social Security Act when such recipients of  services  or
    responsible relatives are legally entitled to all or part
    of  such child support payments under applicable State or
    federal law.
         7.  To provide payments to individuals or  providers
    of  transportation  to  and  from  medical  care  for the
    benefit of recipients under Articles III, IV, V, and VI.
    Disbursements  from  the  Public   Assistance   Emergency
Revolving Fund shall be made by the Illinois Department.
    Expenditures   from   the   Public  Assistance  Emergency
Revolving Fund shall  be  for  purposes  which  are  properly
chargeable to appropriations made to the Illinois Department,
or,  in  the  case  of  payments under subparagraph 6, to the
Child  Support  Enforcement  Trust  Fund,  except   that   no
expenditure  shall  be  made  for purposes which are properly
chargeable  to  appropriations  for  the  following  objects:
personal  services;  extra  help;  state   contributions   to
retirement  system;  state  contributions to Social Security;
state contributions for employee group insurance; contractual
services;   travel;   commodities;    printing;    equipment;
electronic  data  processing;  operation  of  auto equipment;
telecommunications services; library books; and refunds.  The
Illinois  Department  shall  reimburse  the Public Assistance
Emergency Revolving Fund  by  warrants  drawn  by  the  State
Comptroller  on the appropriation or appropriations which are
so chargeable, or, in the case of payments under subparagraph
6, by warrants drawn on the Child Support  Enforcement  Trust
Fund, payable to the Revolving Fund.
    The  Illinois  Department shall consult, in writing, with
the Citizens Assembly/Council on Public Aid with  respect  to
the  investment of funds from the Public Assistance Emergency
Revolving Fund outside the State Treasury in certificates  of
deposit or other interest-bearing accounts.
(Source: P.A. 92-111, eff. 1-1-02; 92-590, eff. 7-1-02.)

    Section  115.   The  Supreme  Court  Act  is  amended  by
changing Section 17 as follows:

    (705 ILCS 5/17) (from Ch. 37, par. 22)
    Sec.  17. The judges of the Supreme Court shall appoint a
librarian for the  Supreme  Court  Library,  located  at  the
Supreme  Court  Building  State  Capitol,  and  prescribe his
duties and fix his compensation to be paid as other  expenses
of  the  Supreme  Court  are  paid.  Such  librarian,  before
entering  upon  the  duties  of  his  office, shall give bond
payable to the People of the State of Illinois in  the  penal
sum  of  $5,000  with  security to be approved by 2 judges of
said court conditioned for the due preservation of the  books
belonging to the library, in his charge, and for the faithful
performance of his duties as such librarian.
(Source: Laws 1965, p. 766.)

    Section  999.   Effective date.  This Act takes effect on
February 1, 2004.