|
agent for the Department of Central
Management Services. The |
System may use the same processes for collecting the
|
contributions required by this subsection that it uses to |
collect the
contributions received from those employees under |
Section 15-157 of the
Illinois Pension Code. An employer may |
agree to pick up or pay the
contributions required under this |
subsection on behalf of the employee;
such contributions shall |
be deemed to have been paid by the employee.
|
The State Universities Retirement System shall promptly |
deposit all moneys
collected under this subsection (a) into the |
Community College Health Insurance
Security Fund created in |
Section 6.9 of this Act. The moneys collected under
this |
Section shall be used only for the purposes authorized in |
Section 6.9 of
this Act and shall not be considered to be |
assets of the State Universities
Retirement System. |
Contributions made under this Section are not transferable
to |
other pension funds or retirement systems and are not |
refundable upon
termination of service.
|
(b) Beginning January 1, 1999, every community college |
district
(other than a community college district subject to |
Article VII of the Public
Community College Act) or association
|
of community college boards that is an employer under the State |
Universities
Retirement System shall contribute toward the |
cost of the community college
health benefits provided under |
Section 6.9 of this Act an amount equal to 0.50%
of the salary |
paid to its full-time employees who participate in the State
|
Universities Retirement System and are not members as defined |
in Section 3 of
this Act.
|
These contributions shall be paid by the employer to the |
State Universities
Retirement System as service agent for the |
Department of Central Management
Services. The System may use |
the same processes for collecting the
contributions required by |
this subsection that it uses to collect the
contributions |
received from those employers under Section 15-155 of the
|
Illinois Pension Code.
|
The State Universities Retirement System shall promptly |
|
deposit all moneys
collected under this subsection (b) into the |
Community College Health Insurance
Security Fund created in |
Section 6.9 of this Act. The moneys collected under
this |
Section shall be used only for the purposes authorized in |
Section 6.9 of
this Act and shall not be considered to be |
assets of the State Universities
Retirement System. |
Contributions made under this Section are not transferable
to |
other pension funds or retirement systems and are not |
refundable upon
termination of service.
|
(c) On or before November 15 of each year, the Board of |
Trustees of the
State Universities Retirement System shall |
certify to the Governor, the
Director of Central Management |
Services, and the State
Comptroller its estimate of the total |
amount of contributions to be paid under
subsection (a) of this |
Section for the next fiscal year. Beginning in fiscal year |
2008, the amount certified shall be decreased or increased each |
year by the amount that the actual active employee |
contributions either fell short of or exceeded the estimate |
used by the Board in making the certification for the previous |
fiscal year. The State Universities Retirement System shall |
calculate the amount of actual active employee contributions in |
fiscal years 1999 through 2005. Based upon this calculation, |
the fiscal year 2008 certification shall include an amount |
equal to the cumulative amount that the actual active employee |
contributions either fell short of or exceeded the estimate |
used by the Board in making the certification for those fiscal |
years. The certification
shall include a detailed explanation |
of the methods and information that the
Board relied upon in |
preparing its estimate. As soon as possible after the
effective |
date of this Section, the Board shall submit its estimate for |
fiscal
year 1999.
|
(d) Beginning in fiscal year 1999, on the first day of each |
month, or as
soon thereafter as may be practical, the State |
Treasurer and the State
Comptroller shall transfer from the |
General Revenue Fund to the Community
College Health Insurance |
Security Fund 1/12 of the annual amount appropriated
for that |
|
fiscal year to the State Comptroller for deposit into the |
Community
College Health Insurance Security Fund under Section |
1.4 of the State Pension
Funds Continuing Appropriation Act.
|
(e) Except where otherwise specified in this Section, the |
definitions
that apply to Article 15 of the Illinois Pension |
Code apply to this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-497, eff. 8-18-97; 91-887, eff. 7-6-00.)
|
(5 ILCS 375/10) (from Ch. 127, par. 530)
|
Sec. 10. Payments by State; premiums.
|
(a) The State shall pay the cost of basic non-contributory |
group life
insurance and, subject to member paid contributions |
set by the Department or
required by this Section, the basic |
program of group health benefits on each
eligible member, |
except a member, not otherwise
covered by this Act, who has |
retired as a participating member under Article 2
of the |
Illinois Pension Code but is ineligible for the retirement |
annuity under
Section 2-119 of the Illinois Pension Code, and |
part of each eligible member's
and retired member's premiums |
for health insurance coverage for enrolled
dependents as |
provided by Section 9. The State shall pay the cost of the |
basic
program of group health benefits only after benefits are |
reduced by the amount
of benefits covered by Medicare for all |
members and dependents
who are eligible for benefits under |
Social Security or
the Railroad Retirement system or who had |
sufficient Medicare-covered
government employment, except that |
such reduction in benefits shall apply only
to those members |
and dependents who (1) first become eligible
for such Medicare |
coverage on or after July 1, 1992; or (2) are
Medicare-eligible |
members or dependents of a local government unit which began
|
participation in the program on or after July 1, 1992; or (3) |
remain eligible
for, but no longer receive Medicare coverage |
which they had been receiving on
or after July 1, 1992. The |
Department may determine the aggregate level of the
State's |
contribution on the basis of actual cost of medical services |
adjusted
for age, sex or geographic or other demographic |
|
characteristics which affect
the costs of such programs.
|
The cost of participation in the basic program of group |
health benefits
for the dependent or survivor of a living or |
deceased retired employee who was
formerly employed by the |
University of Illinois in the Cooperative Extension
Service and |
would be an annuitant but for the fact that he or she was made
|
ineligible to participate in the State Universities Retirement |
System by clause
(4) of subsection (a) of Section 15-107 of the |
Illinois Pension Code shall not
be greater than the cost of |
participation that would otherwise apply to that
dependent or |
survivor if he or she were the dependent or survivor of an
|
annuitant under the State Universities Retirement System.
|
(a-1) Beginning January 1, 1998, for each person who |
becomes a new SERS
annuitant and participates in the basic |
program of group health benefits, the
State shall contribute |
toward the cost of the annuitant's
coverage under the basic |
program of group health benefits an amount equal
to 5% of that |
cost for each full year of creditable service upon which the
|
annuitant's retirement annuity is based, up to a maximum of |
100% for an
annuitant with 20 or more years of creditable |
service.
The remainder of the cost of a new SERS annuitant's |
coverage under the basic
program of group health benefits shall |
be the responsibility of the
annuitant. In the case of a new |
SERS annuitant who has elected to receive an alternative |
retirement cancellation payment under Section 14-108.5 of the |
Illinois Pension Code in lieu of an annuity, for the purposes |
of this subsection the annuitant shall be deemed to be |
receiving a retirement annuity based on the number of years of |
creditable service that the annuitant had established at the |
time of his or her termination of service under SERS.
|
(a-2) Beginning January 1, 1998, for each person who |
becomes a new SERS
survivor and participates in the basic |
program of group health benefits, the
State shall contribute |
toward the cost of the survivor's
coverage under the basic |
program of group health benefits an amount equal
to 5% of that |
cost for each full year of the deceased employee's or deceased
|
|
annuitant's creditable service in the State Employees' |
Retirement System of
Illinois on the date of death, up to a |
maximum of 100% for a survivor of an
employee or annuitant with |
20 or more years of creditable service. The
remainder of the |
cost of the new SERS survivor's coverage under the basic
|
program of group health benefits shall be the responsibility of |
the survivor. In the case of a new SERS survivor who was the |
dependent of an annuitant who elected to receive an alternative |
retirement cancellation payment under Section 14-108.5 of the |
Illinois Pension Code in lieu of an annuity, for the purposes |
of this subsection the deceased annuitant's creditable service |
shall be determined as of the date of termination of service |
rather than the date of death.
|
(a-3) Beginning January 1, 1998, for each person who |
becomes a new SURS
annuitant and participates in the basic |
program of group health benefits, the
State shall contribute |
toward the cost of the annuitant's
coverage under the basic |
program of group health benefits an amount equal
to 5% of that |
cost for each full year of creditable service upon which the
|
annuitant's retirement annuity is based, up to a maximum of |
100% for an
annuitant with 20 or more years of creditable |
service.
The remainder of the cost of a new SURS annuitant's |
coverage under the basic
program of group health benefits shall |
be the responsibility of the
annuitant.
|
(a-4) (Blank).
|
(a-5) Beginning January 1, 1998, for each person who |
becomes a new SURS
survivor and participates in the basic |
program of group health benefits, the
State shall contribute |
toward the cost of the survivor's coverage under the
basic |
program of group health benefits an amount equal to 5% of that |
cost for
each full year of the deceased employee's or deceased |
annuitant's creditable
service in the State Universities |
Retirement System on the date of death, up to
a maximum of 100% |
for a survivor of an
employee or annuitant with 20 or more |
years of creditable service. The
remainder of the cost of the |
new SURS survivor's coverage under the basic
program of group |
|
health benefits shall be the responsibility of the survivor.
|
(a-6) Beginning July 1, 1998, for each person who becomes a |
new TRS
State annuitant and participates in the basic program |
of group health benefits,
the State shall contribute toward the |
cost of the annuitant's coverage under
the basic program of |
group health benefits an amount equal to 5% of that cost
for |
each full year of creditable service
as a teacher as defined in |
paragraph (2), (3), or (5) of Section 16-106 of the
Illinois |
Pension Code
upon which the annuitant's retirement annuity is |
based, up to a maximum of
100%;
except that
the State |
contribution shall be 12.5% per year (rather than 5%) for each |
full
year of creditable service as a regional superintendent or |
assistant regional
superintendent of schools. The
remainder of |
the cost of a new TRS State annuitant's coverage under the |
basic
program of group health benefits shall be the |
responsibility of the
annuitant.
|
(a-7) Beginning July 1, 1998, for each person who becomes a |
new TRS
State survivor and participates in the basic program of |
group health benefits,
the State shall contribute toward the |
cost of the survivor's coverage under the
basic program of |
group health benefits an amount equal to 5% of that cost for
|
each full year of the deceased employee's or deceased |
annuitant's creditable
service
as a teacher as defined in |
paragraph (2), (3), or (5) of Section 16-106 of the
Illinois |
Pension Code
on the date of death, up to a maximum of 100%;
|
except that the State contribution shall be 12.5% per year |
(rather than 5%) for
each full year of the deceased employee's |
or deceased annuitant's creditable
service as a regional |
superintendent or assistant regional superintendent of
|
schools.
The remainder of
the cost of the new TRS State |
survivor's coverage under the basic program of
group health |
benefits shall be the responsibility of the survivor.
|
(a-8) A new SERS annuitant, new SERS survivor, new SURS
|
annuitant, new SURS survivor, new TRS State
annuitant, or new |
TRS State survivor may waive or terminate coverage in
the |
program of group health benefits. Any such annuitant or |
|
survivor
who has waived or terminated coverage may enroll or |
re-enroll in the
program of group health benefits only during |
the annual benefit choice period,
as determined by the |
Director; except that in the event of termination of
coverage |
due to nonpayment of premiums, the annuitant or survivor
may |
not re-enroll in the program.
|
(a-9) No later than May 1 of each calendar year, the |
Director
of Central Management Services shall certify in |
writing to the Executive
Secretary of the State Employees' |
Retirement System of Illinois the amounts
of the Medicare |
supplement health care premiums and the amounts of the
health |
care premiums for all other retirees who are not Medicare |
eligible.
|
A separate calculation of the premiums based upon the |
actual cost of each
health care plan shall be so certified.
|
The Director of Central Management Services shall provide |
to the
Executive Secretary of the State Employees' Retirement |
System of
Illinois such information, statistics, and other data |
as he or she
may require to review the premium amounts |
certified by the Director
of Central Management Services.
|
(b) State employees who become eligible for this program on |
or after January
1, 1980 in positions normally requiring actual |
performance of duty not less
than 1/2 of a normal work period |
but not equal to that of a normal work period,
shall be given |
the option of participating in the available program. If the
|
employee elects coverage, the State shall contribute on behalf |
of such employee
to the cost of the employee's benefit and any |
applicable dependent supplement,
that sum which bears the same |
percentage as that percentage of time the
employee regularly |
works when compared to normal work period.
|
(c) The basic non-contributory coverage from the basic |
program of
group health benefits shall be continued for each |
employee not in pay status or
on active service by reason of |
(1) leave of absence due to illness or injury,
(2) authorized |
educational leave of absence or sabbatical leave, or (3)
|
military leave with pay and benefits. This coverage shall |
|
continue until
expiration of authorized leave and return to |
active service, but not to exceed
24 months for leaves under |
item (1) or (2). This 24-month limitation and the
requirement |
of returning to active service shall not apply to persons |
receiving
ordinary or accidental disability benefits or |
retirement benefits through the
appropriate State retirement |
system or benefits under the Workers' Compensation
or |
Occupational Disease Act.
|
(d) The basic group life insurance coverage shall continue, |
with
full State contribution, where such person is (1) absent |
from active
service by reason of disability arising from any |
cause other than
self-inflicted, (2) on authorized educational |
leave of absence or
sabbatical leave, or (3) on military leave |
with pay and benefits.
|
(e) Where the person is in non-pay status for a period in |
excess of
30 days or on leave of absence, other than by reason |
of disability,
educational or sabbatical leave, or military |
leave with pay and benefits, such
person may continue coverage |
only by making personal
payment equal to the amount normally |
contributed by the State on such person's
behalf. Such payments |
and coverage may be continued: (1) until such time as
the |
person returns to a status eligible for coverage at State |
expense, but not
to exceed 24 months, (2) until such person's |
employment or annuitant status
with the State is terminated, or |
(3) for a maximum period of 4 years for
members on military |
leave with pay and benefits and military leave without pay
and |
benefits (exclusive of any additional service imposed pursuant |
to law).
|
(f) The Department shall establish by rule the extent to |
which other
employee benefits will continue for persons in |
non-pay status or who are
not in active service.
|
(g) The State shall not pay the cost of the basic |
non-contributory
group life insurance, program of health |
benefits and other employee benefits
for members who are |
survivors as defined by paragraphs (1) and (2) of
subsection |
(q) of Section 3 of this Act. The costs of benefits for these
|
|
survivors shall be paid by the survivors or by the University |
of Illinois
Cooperative Extension Service, or any combination |
thereof.
However, the State shall pay the amount of the |
reduction in the cost of
participation, if any, resulting from |
the amendment to subsection (a) made
by this amendatory Act of |
the 91st General Assembly.
|
(h) Those persons occupying positions with any department |
as a result
of emergency appointments pursuant to Section 8b.8 |
of the Personnel Code
who are not considered employees under |
this Act shall be given the option
of participating in the |
programs of group life insurance, health benefits and
other |
employee benefits. Such persons electing coverage may |
participate only
by making payment equal to the amount normally |
contributed by the State for
similarly situated employees. Such |
amounts shall be determined by the
Director. Such payments and |
coverage may be continued until such time as the
person becomes |
an employee pursuant to this Act or such person's appointment |
is
terminated.
|
(i) Any unit of local government within the State of |
Illinois
may apply to the Director to have its employees, |
annuitants, and their
dependents provided group health |
coverage under this Act on a non-insured
basis. To participate, |
a unit of local government must agree to enroll
all of its |
employees, who may select coverage under either the State group
|
health benefits plan or a health maintenance organization that |
has
contracted with the State to be available as a health care |
provider for
employees as defined in this Act. A unit of local |
government must remit the
entire cost of providing coverage |
under the State group health benefits plan
or, for coverage |
under a health maintenance organization, an amount determined
|
by the Director based on an analysis of the sex, age, |
geographic location, or
other relevant demographic variables |
for its employees, except that the unit of
local government |
shall not be required to enroll those of its employees who are
|
covered spouses or dependents under this plan or another group |
policy or plan
providing health benefits as long as (1) an |
|
appropriate official from the unit
of local government attests |
that each employee not enrolled is a covered spouse
or |
dependent under this plan or another group policy or plan, and |
(2) at least
85% of the employees are enrolled and the unit of |
local government remits
the entire cost of providing coverage |
to those employees, except that a
participating school district |
must have enrolled at least 85% of its full-time
employees who |
have not waived coverage under the district's group health
plan |
by participating in a component of the district's cafeteria |
plan. A
participating school district is not required to enroll |
a full-time employee
who has waived coverage under the |
district's health plan, provided that an
appropriate official |
from the participating school district attests that the
|
full-time employee has waived coverage by participating in a |
component of the
district's cafeteria plan. For the purposes of |
this subsection, "participating
school district" includes a |
unit of local government whose primary purpose is
education as |
defined by the Department's rules.
|
Employees of a participating unit of local government who |
are not enrolled
due to coverage under another group health |
policy or plan may enroll in
the event of a qualifying change |
in status, special enrollment, special
circumstance as defined |
by the Director, or during the annual Benefit Choice
Period. A |
participating unit of local government may also elect to cover |
its
annuitants. Dependent coverage shall be offered on an |
optional basis, with the
costs paid by the unit of local |
government, its employees, or some combination
of the two as |
determined by the unit of local government. The unit of local
|
government shall be responsible for timely collection and |
transmission of
dependent premiums.
|
The Director shall annually determine monthly rates of |
payment, subject
to the following constraints:
|
(1) In the first year of coverage, the rates shall be |
equal to the
amount normally charged to State employees for |
elected optional coverages
or for enrolled dependents |
coverages or other contributory coverages, or
contributed |
|
by the State for basic insurance coverages on behalf of its
|
employees, adjusted for differences between State |
employees and employees
of the local government in age, |
sex, geographic location or other relevant
demographic |
variables, plus an amount sufficient to pay for the |
additional
administrative costs of providing coverage to |
employees of the unit of
local government and their |
dependents.
|
(2) In subsequent years, a further adjustment shall be |
made to reflect
the actual prior years' claims experience |
of the employees of the unit of
local government.
|
In the case of coverage of local government employees under |
a health
maintenance organization, the Director shall annually |
determine for each
participating unit of local government the |
maximum monthly amount the unit
may contribute toward that |
coverage, based on an analysis of (i) the age,
sex, geographic |
location, and other relevant demographic variables of the
|
unit's employees and (ii) the cost to cover those employees |
under the State
group health benefits plan. The Director may |
similarly determine the
maximum monthly amount each unit of |
local government may contribute toward
coverage of its |
employees' dependents under a health maintenance organization.
|
Monthly payments by the unit of local government or its |
employees for
group health benefits plan or health maintenance |
organization coverage shall
be deposited in the Local |
Government Health Insurance Reserve Fund.
|
The Local Government Health Insurance Reserve Fund shall be |
a continuing
fund not subject to fiscal year limitations. All |
revenues arising from the administration of the health benefits |
program established under this Section shall be deposited into |
the Local Government Health Insurance Reserve Fund. All |
expenditures from this Fund
shall be used for payments for |
health care benefits for local government and rehabilitation |
facility
employees, annuitants, and dependents, and to |
reimburse the Department or
its administrative service |
organization for all expenses incurred in the
administration of |
|
benefits. No other State funds may be used for these
purposes.
|
A local government employer's participation or desire to |
participate
in a program created under this subsection shall |
not limit that employer's
duty to bargain with the |
representative of any collective bargaining unit
of its |
employees.
|
(j) Any rehabilitation facility within the State of |
Illinois may apply
to the Director to have its employees, |
annuitants, and their eligible
dependents provided group |
health coverage under this Act on a non-insured
basis. To |
participate, a rehabilitation facility must agree to enroll all
|
of its employees and remit the entire cost of providing such |
coverage for
its employees, except that the rehabilitation |
facility shall not be
required to enroll those of its employees |
who are covered spouses or
dependents under this plan or |
another group policy or plan providing health
benefits as long |
as (1) an appropriate official from the rehabilitation
facility |
attests that each employee not enrolled is a covered spouse or
|
dependent under this plan or another group policy or plan, and |
(2) at least
85% of the employees are enrolled and the |
rehabilitation facility remits
the entire cost of providing |
coverage to those employees. Employees of a
participating |
rehabilitation facility who are not enrolled due to coverage
|
under another group health policy or plan may enroll
in the |
event of a qualifying change in status, special enrollment, |
special
circumstance as defined by the Director, or during the |
annual Benefit Choice
Period. A participating rehabilitation |
facility may also elect
to cover its annuitants. Dependent |
coverage shall be offered on an optional
basis, with the costs |
paid by the rehabilitation facility, its employees, or
some |
combination of the 2 as determined by the rehabilitation |
facility. The
rehabilitation facility shall be responsible for |
timely collection and
transmission of dependent premiums.
|
The Director shall annually determine quarterly rates of |
payment, subject
to the following constraints:
|
(1) In the first year of coverage, the rates shall be |
|
equal to the amount
normally charged to State employees for |
elected optional coverages or for
enrolled dependents |
coverages or other contributory coverages on behalf of
its |
employees, adjusted for differences between State |
employees and
employees of the rehabilitation facility in |
age, sex, geographic location
or other relevant |
demographic variables, plus an amount sufficient to pay
for |
the additional administrative costs of providing coverage |
to employees
of the rehabilitation facility and their |
dependents.
|
(2) In subsequent years, a further adjustment shall be |
made to reflect
the actual prior years' claims experience |
of the employees of the
rehabilitation facility.
|
Monthly payments by the rehabilitation facility or its |
employees for
group health benefits shall be deposited in the |
Local Government Health
Insurance Reserve Fund.
|
(k) Any domestic violence shelter or service within the |
State of Illinois
may apply to the Director to have its |
employees, annuitants, and their
dependents provided group |
health coverage under this Act on a non-insured
basis. To |
participate, a domestic violence shelter or service must agree |
to
enroll all of its employees and pay the entire cost of |
providing such coverage
for its employees. A participating |
domestic violence shelter may also elect
to cover its |
annuitants. Dependent coverage shall be offered on an optional
|
basis, with
employees, or some combination of the 2 as |
determined by the domestic violence
shelter or service. The |
domestic violence shelter or service shall be
responsible for |
timely collection and transmission of dependent premiums.
|
The Director shall annually determine rates of payment,
|
subject to the following constraints:
|
(1) In the first year of coverage, the rates shall be |
equal to the
amount normally charged to State employees for |
elected optional coverages
or for enrolled dependents |
coverages or other contributory coverages on
behalf of its |
employees, adjusted for differences between State |
|
employees and
employees of the domestic violence shelter or |
service in age, sex, geographic
location or other relevant |
demographic variables, plus an amount sufficient
to pay for |
the additional administrative costs of providing coverage |
to
employees of the domestic violence shelter or service |
and their dependents.
|
(2) In subsequent years, a further adjustment shall be |
made to reflect
the actual prior years' claims experience |
of the employees of the domestic
violence shelter or |
service.
|
Monthly payments by the domestic violence shelter or |
service or its employees
for group health insurance shall be |
deposited in the Local Government Health
Insurance Reserve |
Fund.
|
(l) A public community college or entity organized pursuant |
to the
Public Community College Act may apply to the Director |
initially to have
only annuitants not covered prior to July 1, |
1992 by the district's health
plan provided health coverage |
under this Act on a non-insured basis. The
community college |
must execute a 2-year contract to participate in the
Local |
Government Health Plan.
Any annuitant may enroll in the event |
of a qualifying change in status, special
enrollment, special |
circumstance as defined by the Director, or during the
annual |
Benefit Choice Period.
|
The Director shall annually determine monthly rates of |
payment subject to
the following constraints: for those |
community colleges with annuitants
only enrolled, first year |
rates shall be equal to the average cost to cover
claims for a |
State member adjusted for demographics, Medicare
|
participation, and other factors; and in the second year, a |
further adjustment
of rates shall be made to reflect the actual |
first year's claims experience
of the covered annuitants.
|
(l-5) The provisions of subsection (l) become inoperative |
on July 1, 1999.
|
(m) The Director shall adopt any rules deemed necessary for
|
implementation of this amendatory Act of 1989 (Public Act |
|
86-978).
|
(Source: P.A. 92-16, eff. 6-28-01; 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(5 ILCS 375/13.1) (from Ch. 127, par. 533.1)
|
Sec. 13.1. (a) All contributions, appropriations, |
interest, and dividend
payments to fund the program of health |
benefits and other employee benefits , and all other revenues |
arising from the administration of any employee health benefits |
program,
shall be deposited in a trust fund outside the State |
Treasury, with the State
Treasurer as ex-officio custodian, to |
be known as the Health Insurance Reserve
Fund.
|
(b) Upon the adoption of a self-insurance health plan, any |
monies
attributable to the group health insurance program shall |
be deposited in or
transferred to the Health Insurance Reserve |
Fund for use by the Department.
As of the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of 1986, the Department
shall certify to |
the Comptroller the amount of money in the Group Insurance
|
Premium Fund attributable to the State group health insurance |
program and the
Comptroller shall transfer such money from the |
Group Insurance Premium Fund
to the Health Insurance Reserve |
Fund. Contributions by the State to the
Health Insurance |
Reserve Fund to meet the requirements of this Act, as
|
established by the Director, from the General Revenue Fund and |
the Road
Fund to the Health Insurance Reserve Fund shall be by |
annual
appropriations, and all other contributions to meet the |
requirements of the
programs of health benefits or other |
employee benefits shall be deposited
in the Health Insurance |
Reserve Fund. The Department shall draw the
appropriation from |
the General Revenue Fund and the Road Fund from time to
time as |
necessary to make expenditures authorized under this Act.
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The Director may employ such assistance and services and |
may purchase
such goods as may be necessary for the proper |
development and
administration of any of the benefit programs |
authorized by this Act. The
Director may promulgate rules and |
regulations in regard to the
administration of these programs.
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All monies received by the Department for deposit in or |
|
transfer to the
Health Insurance Reserve Fund, through |
appropriation or otherwise, shall be
used to provide for the |
making of payments to claimants and providers and
to reimburse |
the Department for all expenses directly incurred relating to
|
Department development and administration of the program of |
health benefits
and other employee benefits.
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Any administrative service organization administering any |
self-insurance
health plan and paying claims and benefits under |
authority of this Act may
receive, pursuant to written |
authorization and direction of the Director,
an initial |
transfer and periodic transfers of funds from the Health
|
Insurance Reserve Fund in amounts determined by the Director |
who may
consider the amount recommended by the administrative |
service organization.
Notwithstanding any other statute, such |
transferred funds shall be
retained by the administrative |
service organization in a separate
account provided by any bank |
as defined by the Illinois Banking
Act. The Department may |
promulgate regulations further defining the banks
authorized |
to accept such funds and all methodology for transfer of such
|
funds. Any interest earned by monies in such
account shall |
inure to the Health Insurance Reserve Fund, shall remain
in |
such account and shall be used exclusively to pay claims and |
benefits
under this Act. Such transferred funds shall be used |
exclusively for
administrative service organization payment of |
claims to claimants and
providers under the self-insurance |
health plan by the drawing of checks
against such account. The |
administrative service organization may not use
such |
transferred funds, or interest accrued thereon, for any other |
purpose
including, but not limited to, reimbursement of |
administrative expenses or
payments of administration fees due |
the organization pursuant to its
contract or contracts with the |
Department of Central Management Services.
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The account of the administrative service organization |
established under
this Section, any transfers from the Health |
Insurance Reserve Fund to
such account and the use of such |
account and funds shall be subject
to (1) audit by the |
|
Department or private contractor authorized by the
Department |
to conduct audits, and (2) post audit pursuant to the
Illinois |
State Auditing Act.
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(c) The Director, with the advice and consent of the |
Commission, shall
establish premiums for optional coverage for |
dependents of eligible members
for the health plans. The |
eligible members
shall be responsible for their portion of such |
optional
premium. The State shall
contribute an amount per |
month for each eligible member who has
enrolled one or more |
dependents under the health plans. Such contribution
shall be |
made directly to the Health Insurance
Reserve Fund. Those |
employees described in subsection (b) of Section 9 of this
Act |
shall be allowed to continue in the health plan by
making |
personal payments with the premiums to be deposited
in the |
Health Insurance Reserve Fund.
|
(d) The Health Insurance Reserve Fund shall be a continuing |
fund not subject
to fiscal year limitations. All expenditures |
from that fund shall be at
the direction of the Director and |
shall be only for the purpose of:
|
(1) the payment of administrative expenses incurred by |
the Department
for the program of health benefits or other |
employee benefit programs,
including but not limited to the |
costs of audits or actuarial
consultations, professional |
and contractual services, electronic data
processing |
systems and services, and expenses in connection with the
|
development and administration of such programs;
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(2) the payment of administrative expenses incurred by |
the Administrative
Service Organization;
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(3) the payment of health benefits;
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(4) refunds to employees for erroneous payments of |
their selected
dependent coverage;
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(5) payment of premium for stop-loss or re-insurance;
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(6) payment of premium to health maintenance |
organizations pursuant to
Section 6.1 of this Act;
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(7) payment of adoption program benefits; and
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(8) payment of other benefits offered to members and |
|
dependents under
this Act.
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(Source: P.A. 91-390, eff. 7-30-99.)
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Section 5-10. The Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is |
amended by adding Section 605-812 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 605/605-812 new)
|
Sec. 605-812. Employment opportunities grant program. |
(a) The Department shall administer a grant program to |
expand employment opportunities for targeted populations in |
eligible grant areas in Illinois. The goal of the program shall |
be to expand the number of people in targeted populations who |
enter and complete building trades apprenticeship programs and |
achieve journey-level status within a building trades union. |
(b) All successful grant applicants shall be required to |
partner with a joint labor and management-sponsored |
apprenticeship program or programs. All successful grant |
applicants must provide participating individuals with paid |
employment opportunities while participating in the program. |
(c) The Department shall establish criteria for (i) |
prioritizing grant requests from eligible grant applicants and |
(ii) determining what project activities qualify for funding. |
Entities eligible to apply for grant funding shall include: |
community-based organizations and educational institutions. |
These eligible entities shall have the following capabilities: |
a demonstrated expertise in serving targeted populations; |
knowledge of the construction industry; demonstrated success |
in placing clients in employment; previous experience offering |
employment services for targeted populations; and expertise in |
preparing workers for employment in the building trades. |
(d) The Department shall determine the targeted |
populations to be served by the program. The Department shall |
establish geographic boundaries of eligible grant areas. |
(e) The Department shall require all successful grant |
applicants to report quarterly on implementation of planned |
|
activities and success in reaching key milestones. Successful |
grant applicants must also maintain and report |
individual-level information on types of services received and |
resulting outcomes, including placement into specific |
apprenticeship programs. |
(f) The Department shall report to the Governor and the |
General Assembly on December 31, 2007 and on December 31 of |
each year thereafter as long as grant-funded activities are |
provided on the activities undertaken by all successful grant |
applicants. The report shall include an evaluation of those |
activities and their success in assisting participating |
individuals to enter and complete building trades |
apprenticeship programs and achieve journey-level status.
|
Section 5-15. The Renewable Energy, Energy Efficiency, and |
Coal Resources
Development Law of 1997 is amended by changing |
Section 6-4 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 687/6-4)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 16, 2007)
|
Sec. 6-4. Renewable Energy Resources Trust Fund.
|
(a) A fund to be called the Renewable Energy Resources
|
Trust Fund is hereby established in the State Treasury.
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(b) The Renewable Energy Resources Trust Fund shall be
|
administered by the Department to provide grants, loans, and
|
other incentives to foster investment in and the development
|
and use of renewable energy resources as provided in Section
|
6-3 of this Law or pursuant to the Illinois Renewable Fuels |
Development Program Act .
|
(c) All funds used by the Department for the Renewable
|
Energy Resources Program shall be subject to appropriation by
|
the General Assembly.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-561, eff. 12-16-97.)
|
Section 5-20. The Illinois Renewable Fuels Development |
Program Act is amended by changing Section 20 as follows: |
|
(20 ILCS 689/20)
|
Sec. 20. Grants. Subject to appropriation from the Build |
Illinois Bond
Fund ,
the
Director is authorized to award grants |
to eligible applicants. The annual
aggregate
amount of grants |
awarded shall not exceed $20,000,000
$15,000,000 .
|
(Source: P.A. 93-15, eff. 6-11-03; 93-618, eff. 12-11-03.)
|
Section 5-25. The Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Administrative Act is amended by changing Section |
18.4 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 1705/18.4)
|
Sec. 18.4. Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust Fund; |
reimbursement.
|
(a) The Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust Fund is |
hereby created
in the State Treasury.
|
(b) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, effective |
in the first fiscal year following repayment of interfund |
transfers under subsection (b-1), amounts
the first |
$73,000,000 paid to the State by the federal government under |
Title XIX
or Title XXI of the Social Security Act for services |
delivered by community
mental health services providers, and |
any interest earned thereon, shall be
deposited as follows: |
(1) The first $75,000,000 shall be deposited directly |
into the Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust Fund to be |
used for the purchase of community mental health services; |
(2) The next $4,500,000 shall be deposited directly |
into the Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust Fund to be |
used by the Department of Human Services' Division of |
Mental Health for the oversight and administration of |
community mental health services and up to $1,000,000 of |
this amount may be used for support of community mental |
health service initiatives; and |
(3) Any additional amounts shall be deposited 50% into |
the Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust Fund to be used |
|
for the purchase of community mental health services and |
50% into the General Revenue Fund.
directly into the |
Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust Fund. The next |
$25,000,000 shall be deposited into the General Revenue |
Fund. Amounts received in excess of $98,000,000 in any |
State fiscal year after fiscal year 2006 shall be deposited |
50% into the General Revenue Fund and 50% into the |
Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust Fund. The |
Department shall analyze the budgeting and programmatic |
impact of this funding allocation and report to the |
Governor and the General Assembly the results of this |
analysis and any recommendations for change, no later than |
December 31, 2005.
|
(b-1) For State fiscal year 2005, the first $73,000,000 in |
any funds paid to the State by the federal government under |
Title XIX or Title XXI of the Social Security Act for services |
delivered by community mental health services providers, and |
any interest earned thereon, shall be deposited directly into |
the Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust Fund before any |
deposits are made into the General Revenue Fund. The next |
$25,000,000, less any deposits made prior to the effective date |
of this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly, shall be |
deposited into the General Revenue Fund. Amounts received in |
excess of $98,000,000 shall be deposited 50% into the General |
Revenue Fund and 50% into the Community Mental Health Medicaid |
Trust Fund. At the direction of the Director of Healthcare and |
Family Services
Public Aid , on April 1, 2005, or as soon |
thereafter as practical, the Comptroller shall direct and the |
State Treasurer shall transfer amounts not to exceed |
$14,000,000 into the Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust
|
Fund from the Public Aid Recoveries Trust Fund. |
(b-2) For State fiscal year 2006, and in subsequent fiscal |
years until any transfers under subsection (b-1) are repaid, |
the first $73,000,000 in any funds paid to the State by the |
federal government under Title XIX or Title XXI of the Social |
Security Act for services delivered by community mental health |
|
services providers, and any interest earned thereon, shall be |
deposited directly into the Community Mental Health Medicaid
|
Trust Fund. Then the next $14,000,000, or such amount as was |
transferred under subsection (b-1) at the direction of the |
Director of Healthcare and Family Services
Public Aid , shall be |
deposited into the Public Aid Recoveries Trust Fund. The next |
$11,000,000 shall be deposited into the General Revenue Fund.
|
Any additional amounts received shall be deposited in |
accordance with subsection (b)
50% into the General Revenue |
Fund and 50% into the Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust |
Fund .
|
(c) The Department shall reimburse community mental health |
services
providers for Medicaid-reimbursed mental health
|
services provided to eligible
individuals. Moneys in the |
Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust Fund may be
used for |
that purpose.
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(d) As used in this Section:
|
"Medicaid-reimbursed mental health services" means |
services provided by a
community mental health provider under |
an agreement with the Department that
is eligible for |
reimbursement under the federal Title XIX program or Title XXI
|
program.
|
" Community mental health provider
Provider " means a |
community agency that is funded by the Department to
provide a |
Medicaid-reimbursed service.
|
" Service
Services " means a mental health service
services
|
provided pursuant to the provisions of administrative rules |
adopted by the Department and funded by the Department of Human |
Services' Division of Mental Health.
under one of the
following |
programs:
|
(1) Medicaid Clinic Option;
|
(2) Medicaid Rehabilitation Option;
|
(3) Targeted Case Management.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-841, eff. 7-30-04; 94-58, eff. 6-17-05.)
|
Section 5-35. The Illinois Global Partnership Act is |
|
amended by changing Section 50 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 3948/50)
|
Sec. 50. Finances; audits; annual report. |
(a) IGP may accept funds, grants, gifts, and services from |
the government of the United States or its agencies, from this |
State or its departments, agencies, or instrumentalities, from |
any other governmental unit, and from private and civic sources |
for the purpose of funding any projects authorized by this Act. |
IGP may receive appropriations. |
(b) Services of personnel, use of equipment and office |
space, and other necessary services may be accepted from |
members of the board as part of IGP's financial support. |
(c) State funds appropriated for the operations and |
functions of IGP for fiscal year 2011 and each fiscal year |
thereafter should not exceed 60% of IGP's funding from all |
sources for the fiscal year.
|
(d) The board shall arrange for the annual financial audit |
of IGP by one or more independent certified public accountants |
in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. |
The annual audit results shall be included in the annual report |
required under subsection (e).
|
(e) IGP shall report annually on its activities and |
finances to the Governor and the members of the General |
Assembly.
|
(f) Payments by the IGP to the Department of Agriculture as |
reimbursement for employee costs as provided in Section 45 and |
for proportionate lease payments for office space for employees |
shall be deposited into the Agricultural Premium Fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-388, eff. 7-29-05.) |
Section 5-36. The I-FLY Act is amended by changing Sections |
10, 15, 20, and 25 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 3958/10)
|
Sec. 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
|
|
"Air carrier" means an entity that provides commercial |
passenger air
transportation.
|
"Commission" means the Air Service Commission.
|
"Department" means the Department of Transportation.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-585, eff. 8-22-03.)
|
(20 ILCS 3958/15)
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Sec. 15. I-FLY Fund.
|
(a) The I-FLY Fund is created as a special fund in the |
State
treasury. Moneys may be deposited into the Fund from: (1) |
appropriations made
by the General Assembly and units of local |
government to the Fund, (2) federal
moneys designated for the |
Fund, and (3) any grants or gifts designated for the
Fund.
|
(b) The moneys in the Fund shall be used by the Department
|
Commission , subject to
appropriation, for air carrier |
recruitment ,
and retention program grants ,
and for
planning |
grants , and Commission expenses .
|
(Source: P.A. 93-585, eff. 8-22-03.)
|
(20 ILCS 3958/20)
|
Sec. 20. Air Service Commission. There is created the Air |
Service
Commission. The Commission shall consist of 5 members, |
each of whom has airport
management or air carrier experience, |
or both. The members shall be appointed
by the
Governor, with |
the advice and consent of the Senate, each one from a different
|
geographical region of the State outside of Cook County. The |
Governor shall
designate
one of the members as the chairperson.
|
Members shall serve for a term of 4 years, except that, for |
the initial
members
appointed, one shall serve for a term of 5 |
years, one for a term of 4 years,
one
for a term
of 3 years, one |
for a term of 2 years, and one for a term of one year. Initial
|
terms shall
commence on July 1, 2003. Each member shall serve |
until a successor is
appointed and
qualified. Vacancies shall |
be filled in the same manner as
initial appointments. The |
members shall not receive a salary but shall be
reimbursed for
|
the necessary expenses incurred in the performance of their |
|
duties.
|
The Commission shall administer this Act and is authorized |
to do all
things
reasonable and necessary to accomplish the |
goals of the I-FLY Program in cooperation with the Department .
|
(Source: P.A. 93-585, eff. 8-22-03.)
|
(20 ILCS 3958/25)
|
Sec. 25. I-FLY Program.
|
(a) The Department
Commission shall establish
the I-FLY |
Program , in cooperation with the Commission . The
Program shall |
consist of the following components:
|
(1) air carrier recruitment and retention
grants as |
described in subsection (c); and
|
(2) planning grants under subsection (d).
|
The Department
Commission may make grants under this Act |
only to airports that are
located
completely outside of Cook |
County.
|
(b) During any one-year period, an airport may receive a |
grant for only
one of the 2 components specified in subsection |
(a).
|
(c) Air carrier recruitment and retention program grants.
|
(1) An airport may receive an air carrier
recruitment |
and retention program grant from the Department
Commission
|
only if:
|
(A) it is capable of supporting
takeoffs and |
landings by aircraft that have at least 19
passenger |
seats or have made improvements or
commitments to the |
Department
Commission to provide this capability; and
|
(B) it has a commitment from an air
carrier to |
start or continue air service to the community
that the |
airport serves subject to financial support
from the |
State and from the airport or unit of local
government |
that the airport serves. The commitment must specify |
that the air
carrier would not
provide or continue to |
provide service to the community if
financial |
assistance were not available.
|
|
(2) An application for an air carrier
recruitment and |
retention program grant must contain commitments from the
|
airport or the unit of local government in which the |
airport is located
as to the amount of the total project |
cost, the contribution
from the unit of local government or |
airport, the method
in which the contribution from the |
airport or unit of local
government will be generated, and |
the requested State
contribution.
|
(3) The air carrier recruitment and retention program |
grant shall be used
to
guarantee the financial viability of |
air carriers providing reasonable air
service at the
|
airport.
A grant under this subsection (c) to a particular |
airport may
be in only one of the following 3 forms:
|
(A) A grant may be used to guarantee that an air |
carrier shall
receive an agreed amount of revenue per |
flight.
|
(B) A grant may be used to guarantee a reduced or
|
subsidized consumer ticket price.
|
(C) A grant may be used to guarantee a profit goal |
established by the
air
carrier and airport.
|
(4) During the first year of a grant under this |
subsection
(c), the grant shall pay 80% of the total
cost |
of the guarantee and the airport or unit of local |
government in which
the
airport is
located shall pay 20% of |
the total cost of the guarantee. During the second
year
of |
a grant under this subsection
(c), the grant shall pay 50% |
of the total
cost of the guarantee and the airport or the |
unit of local government in which
the
airport is
located |
shall pay 50% of the total
cost of the guarantee.
|
(5) The total State funding for a
grant under this |
subsection (c) to a particular airport may not exceed
|
$1,000,000 in any year.
|
(6) An airport that has received a 2-year grant
under |
this subsection (c) may apply for another grant for an
|
additional 2-year period; however, the Department
|
Commission shall, in determining
whether to make a grant |
|
for an additional 2-year period, give priority to other
|
airports that have not previously
received a grant under |
this subsection (c). The Department
Commission shall also
|
give priority in making grants under this subsection (c) to |
airports at which
the Department
Commission determines |
that a 2-year grant may result in
the creation of stable |
and reliable commercial air
service without an additional |
grant.
|
(d) Planning grants. An airport may apply for and receive a |
planning
grant to conduct feasibility studies or business plans
|
designed to study the recruitment, retention, or expansion of
|
an air carrier at the airport. To be
eligible for a grant under |
this subsection (d), the airport
must have the potential for |
initial or expanded air service
as the Department
Commission
|
determines through its evaluation process.
The grant shall pay |
70% of the total cost of the feasibility studies or
business
|
plans and the airport or the unit of local government in which |
the
airport is located shall pay 30% of the total cost of the |
feasibility studies
or
business plans. An airport may receive |
only one planning
grant.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-585, eff. 8-22-03.)
|
Section 5-37. The Compensation Review Act is amended by |
changing Section 2 as follows:
|
(25 ILCS 120/2) (from Ch. 63, par. 902)
|
Sec. 2. There is created the Compensation Review Board, |
hereinafter referred
to as the Board , as an independent |
commission within the legislative branch of State government .
|
The Board shall consist of l2 members, appointed 3 each by |
the Speaker
of the House of Representatives, the Minority |
Leader thereof, the President
of the Senate, and the Minority |
Leader thereof. Members shall be adults
and be residents of |
Illinois. Members may not be members or employees or
former |
members or employees of the judicial, executive or legislative |
branches
of State government; nor may members be persons |
|
registered under the Lobbyist
Registration Act. Any member may |
be reappointed for a consecutive term. The
respective |
appointing legislative leader may remove any such appointed
|
member prior to the expiration of his term on the Board for |
official
misconduct, incompetence or neglect of duty.
|
Members shall serve without compensation but shall receive |
an allowance
for living expenses incurred in the performance of |
their official duties in
an amount per day equal to the amount |
permitted to be deducted for such
expenses by members of the |
General Assembly under the federal Internal
Revenue Code, as |
now or hereafter amended. The rate for reimbursement of
mileage |
expenses shall be equal to the amount established from time to |
time
for members of the General Assembly. |
The Board may, without regard to the
Personnel Code, employ |
and fix the compensation or remuneration of
employees and |
contract for personal and professional services as it considers |
necessary or desirable. The General Assembly
shall appropriate |
to the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability
|
the funds necessary to operate the Board , and the Commission |
shall prepare and submit vouchers on behalf of the Board and |
provide other fiscal services to the Board as the Board |
requests and directs; but the Commission shall not exercise any |
authority or control over the Board or its employees or |
contractors .
|
(Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99; 91-798, eff. 7-9-00.)
|
Section 5-40. The State Finance Act is amended by changing |
Sections 6p-5, 6z-32, 6z-63, 6z-64, 8.3, 8.16c, 8.43, 8.44, |
8.55, 8g, 8h, and 13.2 and by adding Sections 5.663 and 8.45 as |
follows:
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.663 new)
|
Sec. 5.663. The Pension Stabilization Fund.
|
(30 ILCS 105/6p-5)
|
Sec. 6p-5. Efficiency Initiatives Revolving Fund. Amounts |
|
designated by the Director of Central Management Services and |
approved
by
the Governor as savings from the efficiency |
initiatives authorized by Section
405-292 of the Department of |
Central Management Services Law of the Civil
Administrative |
Code of Illinois shall be paid
into
the Efficiency Initiatives |
Revolving Fund. State agencies shall pay these
amounts into the |
Efficiency Initiatives Revolving Fund from the line item
|
appropriations where the cost savings are anticipated to occur. |
The money in
this fund shall be used by the Department for |
expenses incurred in connection
with the efficiency |
initiatives authorized by Section 405-292 of the
Department
of |
Central Management Services Law of the Civil Administrative |
Code of
Illinois or for payment of Facilities Management |
Revolving Fund billings issued to the Department, as authorized |
under Section 6z-65 . On or before August 31, 2004, and each |
August 31 thereafter, the
Department of Central Management |
Services shall transfer excess balances in the
Efficiency |
Initiatives Revolving Fund to the General Revenue Fund. As used |
in
this Section, "excess balances" means amounts in excess of |
the amount necessary
to fund current and anticipated efficiency |
initiatives.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/6z-32)
|
Sec. 6z-32. Conservation 2000.
|
(a) The Conservation 2000 Fund and the Conservation 2000 |
Projects Fund are
created as special funds in the State |
Treasury. These funds
shall be used to establish a |
comprehensive program to protect Illinois' natural
resources |
through cooperative partnerships between State government and |
public
and private landowners. Moneys in these Funds may be
|
used, subject to appropriation, by the Environmental |
Protection Agency and the
Departments of Agriculture, Natural |
Resources, and
Transportation for purposes relating to natural |
resource protection,
recreation, tourism, and compatible |
agricultural and economic development
activities. Without |
|
limiting these general purposes, moneys in these Funds may
be |
used, subject to appropriation, for the following specific |
purposes:
|
(1) To foster sustainable agriculture practices and |
control soil erosion
and sedimentation, including grants |
to Soil and Water Conservation Districts
for conservation |
practice cost-share grants and for personnel, educational, |
and
administrative expenses.
|
(2) To establish and protect a system of ecosystems in |
public and private
ownership through conservation |
easements, incentives to public and private
landowners, |
including technical assistance and grants, and
land |
acquisition provided these mechanisms are all voluntary on |
the part of the
landowner and do not involve the use of |
eminent domain.
|
(3) To develop a systematic and long-term program to |
effectively measure
and monitor natural resources and |
ecological conditions through investments in
technology |
and involvement of scientific experts.
|
(4) To initiate strategies to enhance, use, and |
maintain Illinois' inland
lakes through education, |
technical assistance, research, and financial
incentives.
|
(5) To conduct an extensive review of existing Illinois |
water laws.
|
(b) The State Comptroller and State Treasurer shall |
automatically transfer
on the last day of each month, beginning |
on September 30, 1995 and ending on
June 30, 2009,
from the |
General Revenue Fund to the Conservation 2000 Fund,
an
amount |
equal to 1/10 of the amount set forth below in fiscal year 1996 |
and
an amount equal to 1/12 of the amount set forth below in |
each of the other
specified fiscal years:
|
|
Fiscal Year |
Amount |
|
1996 |
$ 3,500,000 |
|
1997 |
$ 9,000,000 |
|
1998 |
$10,000,000 |
|
1999 |
$11,000,000 |
|
|
|
2000 |
$12,500,000 |
|
2001 through 2004 |
$14,000,000 |
|
2005
| $7,000,000 |
|
2006
| $11,000,000
|
|
2007
| $0
|
|
2008
2007 through 2009 ..................
| $14,000,000
|
|
(c) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the |
contrary and in addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on the last day of each month beginning on |
July 31, 2006 and ending on June 30, 2007, or as soon |
thereafter as may be practical, the State Comptroller shall |
direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer $1,000,000 from |
the Open Space Lands Acquisition and Development Fund to the |
Conservation 2000 Fund.
|
(d)
(c) There shall be deposited into the Conservation 2000 |
Projects Fund such
bond proceeds and other moneys as may, from |
time to time, be provided by law.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04; 94-91, eff. 7-1-05.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/6z-63)
|
Sec. 6z-63. The Professional Services Fund. |
(a) The Professional Services Fund is created as a |
revolving fund in the State treasury. The following moneys |
shall be deposited into the Fund: |
(1) amounts authorized for transfer to the Fund from |
the General Revenue Fund and other State funds (except for |
funds classified by the Comptroller as federal trust funds |
or State trust funds) pursuant to State law or Executive |
Order; |
(2) federal funds received by the Department of Central |
Management Services (the "Department") as a result of |
expenditures from the Fund; |
(3) interest earned on moneys in the Fund; and |
(4) receipts or inter-fund transfers resulting from |
billings issued by the Department to State agencies for the |
cost of professional services rendered by the Department |
|
that are not compensated through the specific fund |
transfers authorized by this Section. |
(b) Moneys in the Fund may be used by the Department for |
reimbursement or payment for: |
(1) providing professional services to State agencies |
or other State entities; |
(2) rendering other services to State agencies at the |
Governor's direction or to other State entities upon |
agreement between the Director of Central Management |
Services and the appropriate official or governing body of |
the other State entity; or |
(3) providing for payment of administrative and other |
expenses incurred by the Department in providing |
professional services. |
(c) State agencies or other State entities may direct the |
Comptroller to process inter-fund
transfers or make payment |
through the voucher and warrant process to the Professional |
Services Fund in satisfaction of billings issued under |
subsection (a) of this Section. |
(d) Reconciliation. For the fiscal year beginning on July |
1, 2004 only, the Director of Central Management Services (the |
"Director") shall order that each State agency's payments and |
transfers made to the Fund be reconciled with actual Fund costs |
for professional services provided by the Department on no less |
than an annual basis. The Director may require reports from |
State agencies as deemed necessary to perform this |
reconciliation. |
(e) The following amounts are authorized for transfer into |
the
Professional Services Fund for the fiscal year beginning |
July 1, 2004: |
General Revenue Fund ...........................$5,440,431 |
Road Fund ........................................$814,468 |
Motor Fuel Tax Fund ..............................$263,500 |
Child Support Administrative Fund ................$234,013 |
Professions Indirect Cost Fund ...................$276,800 |
Capital Development Board Revolving Fund .........$207,610 |
|
Bank & Trust Company Fund ........................$200,214 |
State Lottery Fund ...............................$193,691 |
Insurance Producer Administration Fund ...........$174,672 |
Insurance Financial Regulation Fund ..............$168,327 |
Illinois Clean Water Fund ........................$124,675 |
Clean Air Act (CAA) Permit Fund ...................$91,803 |
Statistical Services Revolving Fund ...............$90,959 |
Financial Institution Fund .......................$109,428 |
Horse Racing Fund .................................$71,127 |
Health Insurance Reserve Fund .....................$66,577 |
Solid Waste Management Fund .......................$61,081 |
Guardianship and Advocacy Fund .....................$1,068 |
Agricultural Premium Fund ............................$493 |
Wildlife and Fish Fund ...............................$247 |
Radiation Protection Fund .........................$33,277 |
Nuclear Safety Emergency Preparedness Fund ........$25,652 |
Tourism Promotion Fund ............................$6,814
|
All of these transfers shall be made on July 1, 2004, or as |
soon thereafter as practical. These transfers shall be made |
notwithstanding any other provision of State law to the |
contrary.
|
(e-5) Notwithstanding any other provision of State law to |
the contrary, on or after July 1, 2005 and through June 30, |
2006, in addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, at the direction of and upon notification from the |
Director of Central Management Services, the State Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer amounts |
into the Professional Services Fund from the designated funds |
not exceeding the following totals:
|
Food and Drug Safety Fund ..........................$3,249 |
Financial Institution Fund ........................$12,942 |
General Professions Dedicated Fund .................$8,579 |
Illinois Department of Agriculture |
Laboratory
Services Revolving Fund ...........$1,963 |
Illinois Veterans' Rehabilitation Fund ............$11,275 |
State Boating Act Fund ............................$27,000 |
|
State Parks Fund ..................................$22,007 |
Agricultural Premium Fund .........................$59,483 |
Fire Prevention Fund ..............................$29,862 |
Mental Health Fund ................................$78,213 |
Illinois State Pharmacy Disciplinary Fund ..........$2,744 |
Radiation Protection Fund .........................$16,034 |
Solid Waste Management Fund .......................$37,669 |
Illinois Gaming Law Enforcement Fund ...............$7,260 |
Subtitle D Management Fund .........................$4,659 |
Illinois State Medical Disciplinary Fund ...........$8,602 |
Department of Children and |
Family Services Training Fund .................$29,906 |
Facility Licensing Fund ............................$1,083 |
Youth Alcoholism and Substance |
Abuse Prevention Fund ..........................$2,783 |
Plugging and Restoration Fund ......................$1,105 |
State Crime Laboratory Fund ........................$1,353 |
Motor Vehicle Theft Prevention Trust Fund ..........$9,190 |
Weights and Measures Fund ..........................$4,932 |
Solid Waste Management Revolving |
Loan Fund ......................................$2,735 |
Illinois School Asbestos Abatement Fund ............$2,166 |
Violence Prevention Fund ...........................$5,176 |
Capital Development Board Revolving Fund ..........$14,777 |
DCFS Children's Services Fund ..................$1,256,594 |
State Police DUI Fund ..............................$1,434 |
Illinois Health Facilities Planning Fund ...........$3,191 |
Emergency Public Health Fund .......................$7,996 |
Fair and Exposition Fund ...........................$3,732 |
Nursing Dedicated and Professional Fund ............$5,792 |
Optometric Licensing and Disciplinary Board Fund ...$1,032 |
Underground Resources Conservation Enforcement Fund .$1,221 |
State Rail Freight Loan Repayment Fund .............$6,434 |
Drunk and Drugged Driving Prevention Fund ..........$5,473 |
Illinois Affordable Housing Trust Fund ...........$118,222 |
Community Water Supply Laboratory Fund ............$10,021 |
|
Used Tire Management Fund .........................$17,524 |
Natural Areas Acquisition Fund ....................$15,501 |
Open Space Lands Acquisition |
and Development Fund ..........................$49,105 |
Working Capital Revolving Fund ...................$126,344 |
State Garage Revolving Fund .......................$92,513 |
Statistical Services Revolving Fund ..............$181,949 |
Paper and Printing Revolving Fund ..................$3,632 |
Air Transportation Revolving Fund ..................$1,969 |
Communications Revolving Fund ....................$304,278 |
Environmental Laboratory Certification Fund ........$1,357 |
Public Health Laboratory Services Revolving Fund ...$5,892 |
Provider Inquiry Trust Fund ........................$1,742 |
Lead Poisoning Screening, |
Prevention, and Abatement Fund .................$8,200 |
Drug Treatment Fund ...............................$14,028 |
Feed Control Fund ..................................$2,472 |
Plumbing Licensure and Program Fund ................$3,521 |
Insurance Premium Tax Refund Fund ..................$7,872 |
Tax Compliance and Administration Fund .............$5,416 |
Appraisal Administration Fund ......................$2,924 |
Trauma Center Fund ................................$40,139 |
Alternate Fuels Fund ...............................$1,467 |
Illinois State Fair Fund ..........................$13,844 |
State Asset Forfeiture Fund ........................$8,210 |
Federal Asset Forfeiture Fund ......................$6,471 |
Department of Corrections Reimbursement |
and Education Fund ............................$78,965 |
Health Facility Plan Review Fund ...................$3,444 |
LEADS Maintenance Fund .............................$6,075 |
State Offender DNA Identification |
System Fund ....................................$1,712 |
Illinois Historic Sites Fund .......................$4,511 |
Public Pension Regulation Fund .....................$2,313 |
Workforce, Technology, and Economic |
Development Fund ...............................$5,357 |
|
Renewable Energy Resources Trust Fund .............$29,920 |
Energy Efficiency Trust Fund .......................$8,368 |
Pesticide Control Fund .............................$6,687 |
Conservation 2000 Fund ............................$30,764 |
Wireless Carrier Reimbursement Fund ...............$91,024 |
International Tourism Fund ........................$13,057 |
Public Transportation Fund .......................$701,837 |
Horse Racing Fund .................................$18,589 |
Death Certificate Surcharge Fund ...................$1,901 |
State Police Wireless Service |
Emergency Fund .................................$1,012 |
Downstate Public Transportation Fund .............$112,085 |
Motor Carrier Safety Inspection Fund ...............$6,543 |
State Police Whistleblower Reward |
and Protection Fund ............................$1,894 |
Illinois Standardbred Breeders Fund ................$4,412 |
Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders Fund ................$6,635 |
Illinois Clean Water Fund .........................$17,579 |
Independent Academic Medical Center Fund ...........$5,611 |
Child Support Administrative Fund ................$432,527 |
Corporate Headquarters Relocation |
Assistance Fund ................................$4,047 |
Local Initiative Fund .............................$58,762 |
Tourism Promotion Fund ............................$88,072 |
Digital Divide Elimination Fund ...................$11,593 |
Presidential Library and Museum Operating Fund .....$4,624 |
Metro-East Public Transportation Fund .............$47,787 |
Medical Special Purposes Trust Fund ...............$11,779 |
Dram Shop Fund ....................................$11,317 |
Illinois State Dental Disciplinary Fund ............$1,986 |
Hazardous Waste Research Fund ......................$1,333 |
Real Estate License Administration Fund ...........$10,886 |
Traffic and Criminal Conviction |
Surcharge Fund ................................$44,798 |
Criminal Justice Information |
Systems Trust Fund .............................$5,693 |
|
Design Professionals Administration |
and Investigation Fund .........................$2,036 |
State Surplus Property Revolving Fund ..............$6,829 |
Illinois Forestry Development Fund .................$7,012 |
State Police Services Fund ........................$47,072 |
Youth Drug Abuse Prevention Fund ...................$1,299 |
Metabolic Screening and Treatment Fund ............$15,947 |
Insurance Producer Administration Fund ............$30,870 |
Coal Technology Development Assistance Fund .......$43,692 |
Rail Freight Loan Repayment Fund ...................$1,016 |
Low-Level Radioactive Waste |
Facility
Development and Operation Fund ......$1,989 |
Environmental Protection Permit and Inspection Fund .$32,125 |
Park and Conservation Fund ........................$41,038 |
Local Tourism Fund ................................$34,492 |
Illinois Capital Revolving Loan Fund ..............$10,624 |
Illinois Equity Fund ...............................$1,929 |
Large Business Attraction Fund .....................$5,554 |
Illinois Beach Marina Fund .........................$5,053 |
International and Promotional Fund .................$1,466 |
Public Infrastructure Construction |
Loan Revolving Fund ............................$3,111 |
Insurance Financial Regulation Fund ...............$42,575 |
Total
$4,975,487
|
(e-7) Notwithstanding any other provision of State law to |
the contrary, on or after July 1, 2006 and through June 30, |
2007, in addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, at the direction of and upon notification from the |
Director of Central Management Services, the State Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer amounts |
into the Professional Services Fund from the designated funds |
not exceeding the following totals: |
Food and Drug Safety Fund ..........................$3,300 |
Financial Institution Fund ........................$13,000 |
General Professions Dedicated Fund .................$8,600 |
Illinois Department of Agriculture |
|
Laboratory Services Revolving Fund .............$2,000 |
Illinois Veterans' Rehabilitation Fund ............$11,300 |
State Boating Act Fund ............................$27,200 |
State Parks Fund ..................................$22,100 |
Agricultural Premium Fund .........................$59,800 |
Fire Prevention Fund ..............................$30,000 |
Mental Health Fund ................................$78,700 |
Illinois State Pharmacy Disciplinary Fund ..........$2,800 |
Radiation Protection Fund .........................$16,100 |
Solid Waste Management Fund .......................$37,900 |
Illinois Gaming Law Enforcement Fund ...............$7,300 |
Subtitle D Management Fund .........................$4,700 |
Illinois State Medical Disciplinary Fund ...........$8,700 |
Facility Licensing Fund ............................$1,100 |
Youth Alcoholism and |
Substance Abuse Prevention Fund ................$2,800 |
Plugging and Restoration Fund ......................$1,100 |
State Crime Laboratory Fund ........................$1,400 |
Motor Vehicle Theft Prevention Trust Fund ..........$9,200 |
Weights and Measures Fund ..........................$5,000 |
Illinois School Asbestos Abatement Fund ............$2,200 |
Violence Prevention Fund ...........................$5,200 |
Capital Development Board Revolving Fund ..........$14,900 |
DCFS Children's Services Fund ..................$1,294,000 |
State Police DUI Fund ..............................$1,400 |
Illinois Health Facilities Planning Fund ...........$3,200 |
Emergency Public Health Fund .......................$8,000 |
Fair and Exposition Fund ...........................$3,800 |
Nursing Dedicated and Professional Fund ............$5,800 |
Optometric Licensing and Disciplinary Board Fund ...$1,000 |
Underground Resources Conservation |
Enforcement Fund ...............................$1,200 |
State Rail Freight Loan Repayment Fund .............$6,500 |
Drunk and Drugged Driving Prevention Fund ..........$5,500 |
Illinois Affordable Housing Trust Fund ...........$118,900 |
Community Water Supply Laboratory Fund ............$10,100 |
|
Used Tire Management Fund .........................$17,600 |
Natural Areas Acquisition Fund ....................$15,600 |
Open Space Lands Acquisition |
and Development Fund ..........................$49,400 |
Working Capital Revolving Fund ...................$127,100 |
State Garage Revolving Fund .......................$93,100 |
Statistical Services Revolving Fund ..............$183,000 |
Paper and Printing Revolving Fund ..................$3,700 |
Air Transportation Revolving Fund ..................$2,000 |
Communications Revolving Fund ....................$306,100 |
Environmental Laboratory Certification Fund ........$1,400 |
Public Health Laboratory Services |
Revolving Fund .................................$5,900 |
Provider Inquiry Trust Fund ........................$1,800 |
Lead Poisoning Screening, Prevention, |
and Abatement Fund .............................$8,200 |
Drug Treatment Fund ...............................$14,100 |
Feed Control Fund ..................................$2,500 |
Plumbing Licensure and Program Fund ................$3,500 |
Insurance Premium Tax Refund Fund ..................$7,900 |
Tax Compliance and Administration Fund .............$5,400 |
Appraisal Administration Fund ......................$2,900 |
Trauma Center Fund ................................$40,400 |
Alternate Fuels Fund ..............................$1,500
|
Illinois State Fair Fund ..........................$13,900 |
State Asset Forfeiture Fund ........................$8,300 |
Department of Corrections |
Reimbursement and Education Fund ..............$79,400 |
Health Facility Plan Review Fund ...................$3,500 |
LEADS Maintenance Fund .............................$6,100 |
State Offender DNA Identification System Fund ......$1,700 |
Illinois Historic Sites Fund .......................$4,500 |
Public Pension Regulation Fund .....................$2,300 |
Workforce, Technology, and Economic |
Development Fund ...............................$5,400 |
Renewable Energy Resources Trust Fund .............$30,100 |
|
Energy Efficiency Trust Fund .......................$8,400 |
Pesticide Control Fund .............................$6,700 |
Conservation 2000 Fund ............................$30,900 |
Wireless Carrier Reimbursement Fund ...............$91,600 |
International Tourism Fund ........................$13,100 |
Public Transportation Fund .......................$705,900 |
Horse Racing Fund .................................$18,700 |
Death Certificate Surcharge Fund ...................$1,900 |
State Police Wireless Service Emergency Fund .......$1,000 |
Downstate Public Transportation Fund .............$112,700 |
Motor Carrier Safety Inspection Fund ...............$6,600 |
State Police Whistleblower |
Reward and Protection Fund .....................$1,900 |
Illinois Standardbred Breeders Fund ................$4,400 |
Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders Fund ................$6,700 |
Illinois Clean Water Fund .........................$17,700 |
Child Support Administrative Fund ................$435,100 |
Tourism Promotion Fund ............................$88,600 |
Digital Divide Elimination Fund ...................$11,700 |
Presidential Library and Museum Operating Fund .....$4,700 |
Metro-East Public Transportation Fund .............$48,100 |
Medical Special Purposes Trust Fund ...............$11,800 |
Dram Shop Fund ....................................$11,400 |
Illinois State Dental Disciplinary Fund ............$2,000 |
Hazardous Waste Research Fund ......................$1,300 |
Real Estate License Administration Fund ...........$10,900 |
Traffic and Criminal Conviction Surcharge Fund ....$45,100 |
Criminal Justice Information Systems Trust Fund ....$5,700 |
Design Professionals Administration |
and Investigation Fund .........................$2,000 |
State Surplus Property Revolving Fund ..............$6,900 |
State Police Services Fund ........................$47,300 |
Youth Drug Abuse Prevention Fund ...................$1,300 |
Metabolic Screening and Treatment Fund ............$16,000 |
Insurance Producer Administration Fund ............$31,100 |
Coal Technology Development Assistance Fund .......$43,900 |
|
Low-Level Radioactive Waste Facility |
Development and Operation Fund .................$2,000 |
Environmental Protection Permit |
and Inspection Fund ...........................$32,300 |
Park and Conservation Fund ........................$41,300 |
Local Tourism Fund ................................$34,700 |
Illinois Capital Revolving Loan Fund ..............$10,700 |
Illinois Equity Fund ...............................$1,900 |
Large Business Attraction Fund .....................$5,600 |
Illinois Beach Marina Fund .........................$5,100 |
International and Promotional Fund .................$1,500 |
Public Infrastructure Construction |
Loan Revolving Fund ............................$3,100 |
Insurance Financial Regulation Fund ..............$42,800
|
Total $4,918,200
|
(e-10) Notwithstanding any other provision of State law to |
the contrary and in addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on the first day of each calendar quarter |
of the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2005, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, the State Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer from each designated fund |
into the Professional Services Fund amounts equal to one-fourth |
of each of the following totals:
|
General Revenue Fund ...........................$4,440,000 |
Road Fund ......................................$5,324,411 |
Total $9,764,411
|
(e-15) Notwithstanding any other provision of State law to |
the contrary and in addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, the State Comptroller shall direct and the |
State Treasurer shall transfer from the funds specified into |
the Professional Services Fund according to the schedule |
specified herein as follows:
|
General Revenue Fund ..........................$4,466,000
|
Road Fund .....................................$5,355,500
|
Total $9,821,500
|
One-fourth of the specified amount shall be transferred on |
|
each of July 1 and October 1, 2006, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, and one-half of the specified amount |
shall be transferred on January 1, 2007, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter.
|
(f) The term "professional services" means services |
rendered on behalf of State agencies and other State entities
|
pursuant to Section 405-293 of the Department of Central |
Management Services Law of the Civil Administrative Code of |
Illinois.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04; 94-91, eff. 7-1-05.) |
(30 ILCS 105/6z-64) |
Sec. 6z-64. The Workers' Compensation Revolving Fund. |
(a) The Workers' Compensation Revolving Fund is created as |
a revolving fund in the State treasury. The following moneys |
shall be deposited into the Fund: |
(1) amounts authorized for transfer to the Fund from |
the General Revenue Fund and other State funds (except for |
funds classified by the Comptroller as federal trust funds |
or State trust funds) pursuant to State law or Executive |
Order; |
(2) federal funds received by the Department of Central |
Management Services (the "Department") as a result of |
expenditures from the Fund; |
(3) interest earned on moneys in the Fund; |
(4) receipts or inter-fund transfers resulting from |
billings issued by the Department to State agencies and |
universities for the cost of workers' compensation |
services rendered by the Department that are not |
compensated through the specific fund transfers authorized |
by this Section, if any; |
(5) amounts received from a State agency or university |
for workers' compensation payments for temporary total |
disability, as provided in Section 405-105 of the |
Department of Central Management Services Law of the Civil |
Administrative Code of Illinois; and |
|
(6) amounts recovered through subrogation in workers' |
compensation and workers' occupational disease cases. |
(b) Moneys in the Fund may be used by the Department for |
reimbursement or payment for: |
(1) providing workers' compensation services to State |
agencies and State universities; or |
(2) providing for payment of administrative and other |
expenses incurred by the Department in providing workers' |
compensation services. |
(c) State agencies may direct the Comptroller to process |
inter-fund
transfers or make payment through the voucher and |
warrant process to the Workers' Compensation Revolving Fund in |
satisfaction of billings issued under subsection (a) of this |
Section. |
(d) Reconciliation. For the fiscal year beginning on July |
1, 2004 only, the Director of Central Management Services (the |
"Director") shall order that each State agency's payments and |
transfers made to the Fund be reconciled with actual Fund costs |
for workers' compensation services provided by the Department |
and attributable to the State agency and relevant fund on no |
less than an annual basis. The Director may require reports |
from State agencies as deemed necessary to perform this |
reconciliation. |
(d-5) Notwithstanding any other provision of State law to |
the contrary, on or after July 1, 2005 and until June 30, 2006, |
in addition to any other transfers that may be provided for by |
law, at the direction of and upon notification of the Director |
of Central Management Services, the State Comptroller shall |
direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer amounts into the |
Workers' Compensation Revolving Fund from the designated funds |
not exceeding the following totals: |
Mental Health Fund ............................$17,694,000 |
Statistical Services Revolving Fund ............$1,252,600 |
Department of Corrections Reimbursement |
and Education Fund .........................$1,198,600 |
Communications Revolving Fund ....................$535,400 |
|
Child Support Administrative Fund ................$441,900 |
Health Insurance Reserve Fund ....................$238,900 |
Fire Prevention Fund .............................$234,100 |
Park and Conservation Fund .......................$142,000 |
Motor Fuel Tax Fund ..............................$132,800 |
Illinois Workers' Compensation |
Commission Operations Fund ...................$123,900 |
State Boating Act Fund ...........................$112,300 |
Public Utility Fund ..............................$106,500 |
State Lottery Fund ...............................$101,300 |
Traffic and Criminal Conviction |
Surcharge Fund ................................$88,500 |
State Surplus Property Revolving Fund .............$82,700 |
Natural Areas Acquisition Fund ....................$65,600 |
Securities Audit and Enforcement Fund .............$65,200 |
Agricultural Premium Fund .........................$63,400 |
Capital Development Fund ..........................$57,500 |
State Gaming Fund .................................$54,300 |
Underground Storage Tank Fund .....................$53,700 |
Illinois State Medical Disciplinary Fund ..........$53,000 |
Personal Property Tax Replacement Fund ............$53,000 |
General Professions Dedicated Fund ...............$51,900
|
Total $23,003,100
|
(d-10) Notwithstanding any other provision of State law to |
the contrary and in addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on the first day of each calendar quarter |
of the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2005, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, the State Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer from each designated fund |
into the Workers' Compensation Revolving Fund amounts equal to |
one-fourth of each of the following totals: |
General Revenue Fund ......................... $34,000,000 |
Road Fund .................................... $25,987,000 |
Total $59,987,000
|
(d-12) Notwithstanding any other provision of State law to |
the contrary and in addition to any other transfers that may be |
|
provided for by law, on the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 94th General Assembly, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, the State Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer from each designated fund |
into the Workers' Compensation Revolving Fund the following |
amounts: |
General Revenue Fund ..........................$10,000,000 |
Road Fund ......................................$5,000,000 |
Total $15,000,000
|
(d-15) Notwithstanding any other provision of State law to |
the contrary and in addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on July 1, 2006, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, the State Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer from each designated fund |
into the Workers' Compensation Revolving Fund the following |
amounts: |
General Revenue Fund .........................$44,028,200
|
Road Fund ....................................$28,084,000
|
Total $72,112,200
|
(d-20) Notwithstanding any other provision of State law to |
the contrary, on or after July 1, 2006 and until June 30, 2007, |
in addition to any other transfers that may be provided for by |
law, at the direction of and upon notification of the Director |
of Central Management Services, the State Comptroller shall |
direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer amounts into the |
Workers' Compensation Revolving Fund from the designated funds |
not exceeding the following totals: |
Mental Health Fund ............................$19,121,800 |
Statistical Services Revolving Fund ............$1,353,700 |
Department of Corrections Reimbursement |
and Education Fund .........................$1,295,300 |
Communications Revolving Fund ....................$578,600 |
Child Support Administrative Fund ................$477,600 |
Health Insurance Reserve Fund ....................$258,200 |
Fire Prevention Fund .............................$253,000 |
Park and Conservation Fund .......................$153,500 |
|
Motor Fuel Tax Fund ..............................$143,500 |
Illinois Workers' Compensation |
Commission Operations Fund ...................$133,900 |
State Boating Act Fund ...........................$121,400 |
Public Utility Fund ..............................$115,100 |
State Lottery Fund ...............................$109,500 |
Traffic and Criminal Conviction Surcharge Fund ....$95,700 |
State Surplus Property Revolving Fund .............$89,400 |
Natural Areas Acquisition Fund ....................$70,800 |
Securities Audit and Enforcement Fund .............$70,400 |
Agricultural Premium Fund .........................$68,500 |
State Gaming Fund .................................$58,600 |
Underground Storage Tank Fund .....................$58,000 |
Illinois State Medical Disciplinary Fund ..........$57,200 |
Personal Property Tax Replacement Fund ............$57,200 |
General Professions Dedicated Fund ...............$56,100
|
Total $24,797,000
|
(e) The term "workers' compensation services" means |
services, claims expenses, and related administrative costs |
incurred in performing the duties under
Sections 405-105 and |
405-411 of the Department of Central Management Services Law of |
the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04; 94-91, eff. 7-1-05.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/8.3) (from Ch. 127, par. 144.3)
|
Sec. 8.3. Money in the Road Fund shall, if and when the |
State of
Illinois incurs any bonded indebtedness for the |
construction of
permanent highways, be set aside and used for |
the purpose of paying and
discharging annually the principal |
and interest on that bonded
indebtedness then due and payable, |
and for no other purpose. The
surplus, if any, in the Road Fund |
after the payment of principal and
interest on that bonded |
indebtedness then annually due shall be used as
follows:
|
first -- to pay the cost of administration of Chapters |
2 through 10 of
the Illinois Vehicle Code, except the cost |
of administration of Articles I and
II of Chapter 3 of that |
|
Code; and
|
secondly -- for expenses of the Department of |
Transportation for
construction, reconstruction, |
improvement, repair, maintenance,
operation, and |
administration of highways in accordance with the
|
provisions of laws relating thereto, or for any purpose |
related or
incident to and connected therewith, including |
the separation of grades
of those highways with railroads |
and with highways and including the
payment of awards made |
by the Illinois Workers' Compensation Commission under the |
terms of
the Workers' Compensation Act or Workers' |
Occupational Diseases Act for
injury or death of an |
employee of the Division of Highways in the
Department of |
Transportation; or for the acquisition of land and the
|
erection of buildings for highway purposes, including the |
acquisition of
highway right-of-way or for investigations |
to determine the reasonably
anticipated future highway |
needs; or for making of surveys, plans,
specifications and |
estimates for and in the construction and maintenance
of |
flight strips and of highways necessary to provide access |
to military
and naval reservations, to defense industries |
and defense-industry
sites, and to the sources of raw |
materials and for replacing existing
highways and highway |
connections shut off from general public use at
military |
and naval reservations and defense-industry sites, or for |
the
purchase of right-of-way, except that the State shall |
be reimbursed in
full for any expense incurred in building |
the flight strips; or for the
operating and maintaining of |
highway garages; or for patrolling and
policing the public |
highways and conserving the peace; or for the operating |
expenses of the Department relating to the administration |
of public transportation programs; or for any of
those |
purposes or any other purpose that may be provided by law.
|
Appropriations for any of those purposes are payable from |
the Road
Fund. Appropriations may also be made from the Road |
Fund for the
administrative expenses of any State agency that |
|
are related to motor
vehicles or arise from the use of motor |
vehicles.
|
Beginning with fiscal year 1980 and thereafter, no Road |
Fund monies
shall be appropriated to the following Departments |
or agencies of State
government for administration, grants, or |
operations; but this
limitation is not a restriction upon |
appropriating for those purposes any
Road Fund monies that are |
eligible for federal reimbursement;
|
1. Department of Public Health;
|
2. Department of Transportation, only with respect to |
subsidies for
one-half fare Student Transportation and |
Reduced Fare for Elderly;
|
3. Department of Central Management
Services, except |
for expenditures
incurred for group insurance premiums of |
appropriate personnel;
|
4. Judicial Systems and Agencies.
|
Beginning with fiscal year 1981 and thereafter, no Road |
Fund monies
shall be appropriated to the following Departments |
or agencies of State
government for administration, grants, or |
operations; but this
limitation is not a restriction upon |
appropriating for those purposes any
Road Fund monies that are |
eligible for federal reimbursement:
|
1. Department of State Police, except for expenditures |
with
respect to the Division of Operations;
|
2. Department of Transportation, only with respect to |
Intercity Rail
Subsidies and Rail Freight Services.
|
Beginning with fiscal year 1982 and thereafter, no Road |
Fund monies
shall be appropriated to the following Departments |
or agencies of State
government for administration, grants, or |
operations; but this
limitation is not a restriction upon |
appropriating for those purposes any
Road Fund monies that are |
eligible for federal reimbursement: Department
of Central |
Management Services, except for awards made by
the Illinois |
Workers' Compensation Commission under the terms of the |
Workers' Compensation Act
or Workers' Occupational Diseases |
Act for injury or death of an employee of
the Division of |
|
Highways in the Department of Transportation.
|
Beginning with fiscal year 1984 and thereafter, no Road |
Fund monies
shall be appropriated to the following Departments |
or agencies of State
government for administration, grants, or |
operations; but this
limitation is not a restriction upon |
appropriating for those purposes any
Road Fund monies that are |
eligible for federal reimbursement:
|
1. Department of State Police, except not more than 40% |
of the
funds appropriated for the Division of Operations;
|
2. State Officers.
|
Beginning with fiscal year 1984 and thereafter, no Road |
Fund monies
shall be appropriated to any Department or agency |
of State government
for administration, grants, or operations |
except as provided hereafter;
but this limitation is not a |
restriction upon appropriating for those
purposes any Road Fund |
monies that are eligible for federal
reimbursement. It shall |
not be lawful to circumvent the above
appropriation limitations |
by governmental reorganization or other
methods. |
Appropriations shall be made from the Road Fund only in
|
accordance with the provisions of this Section.
|
Money in the Road Fund shall, if and when the State of |
Illinois
incurs any bonded indebtedness for the construction of |
permanent
highways, be set aside and used for the purpose of |
paying and
discharging during each fiscal year the principal |
and interest on that
bonded indebtedness as it becomes due and |
payable as provided in the
Transportation Bond Act, and for no |
other
purpose. The surplus, if any, in the Road Fund after the |
payment of
principal and interest on that bonded indebtedness |
then annually due
shall be used as follows:
|
first -- to pay the cost of administration of Chapters |
2 through 10
of the Illinois Vehicle Code; and
|
secondly -- no Road Fund monies derived from fees, |
excises, or
license taxes relating to registration, |
operation and use of vehicles on
public highways or to |
fuels used for the propulsion of those vehicles,
shall be |
appropriated or expended other than for costs of |
|
administering
the laws imposing those fees, excises, and |
license taxes, statutory
refunds and adjustments allowed |
thereunder, administrative costs of the
Department of |
Transportation, including, but not limited to, the |
operating expenses of the Department relating to the |
administration of public transportation programs, payment |
of debts and liabilities incurred
in construction and |
reconstruction of public highways and bridges,
acquisition |
of rights-of-way for and the cost of construction,
|
reconstruction, maintenance, repair, and operation of |
public highways and
bridges under the direction and |
supervision of the State, political
subdivision, or |
municipality collecting those monies, and the costs for
|
patrolling and policing the public highways (by State, |
political
subdivision, or municipality collecting that |
money) for enforcement of
traffic laws. The separation of |
grades of such highways with railroads
and costs associated |
with protection of at-grade highway and railroad
crossing |
shall also be permissible.
|
Appropriations for any of such purposes are payable from |
the Road
Fund or the Grade Crossing Protection Fund as provided |
in Section 8 of
the Motor Fuel Tax Law.
|
Except as provided in this paragraph, beginning with fiscal |
year 1991 and
thereafter, no Road Fund monies
shall be |
appropriated to the Department of State Police for the purposes |
of
this Section in excess of its total fiscal year 1990 Road |
Fund
appropriations for those purposes unless otherwise |
provided in Section 5g of
this Act.
For fiscal years 2003,
|
2004, 2005, and 2006 , and 2007 only, no Road Fund monies shall
|
be appropriated to the
Department of State Police for the |
purposes of this Section in excess of
$97,310,000.
It shall not |
be lawful to circumvent this limitation on
appropriations by |
governmental reorganization or other methods unless
otherwise |
provided in Section 5g of this Act.
|
In fiscal year 1994, no Road Fund monies shall be |
appropriated
to the
Secretary of State for the purposes of this |
|
Section in excess of the total
fiscal year 1991 Road Fund |
appropriations to the Secretary of State for
those purposes, |
plus $9,800,000. It
shall not be
lawful to circumvent
this |
limitation on appropriations by governmental reorganization or |
other
method.
|
Beginning with fiscal year 1995 and thereafter, no Road |
Fund
monies
shall be appropriated to the Secretary of State for |
the purposes of this
Section in excess of the total fiscal year |
1994 Road Fund
appropriations to
the Secretary of State for |
those purposes. It shall not be lawful to
circumvent this |
limitation on appropriations by governmental reorganization
or |
other methods.
|
Beginning with fiscal year 2000, total Road Fund |
appropriations to the
Secretary of State for the purposes of |
this Section shall not exceed the
amounts specified for the |
following fiscal years:
|
|
Fiscal Year 2000 |
$80,500,000; |
|
Fiscal Year 2001 |
$80,500,000; |
|
Fiscal Year 2002 |
$80,500,000; |
|
Fiscal Year 2003 |
$130,500,000; |
|
Fiscal Year 2004 |
$130,500,000; |
|
Fiscal Year 2005 |
$130,500,000;
|
|
Fiscal Year 2006
| $130,500,000;
|
|
Fiscal Year 2007
| $130,500,000;
|
|
Fiscal Year 2008
2007 and |
$30,500,000. |
|
each year thereafter |
|
It shall not be lawful to circumvent this limitation on |
appropriations by
governmental reorganization or other |
methods.
|
No new program may be initiated in fiscal year 1991 and
|
thereafter that is not consistent with the limitations imposed |
by this
Section for fiscal year 1984 and thereafter, insofar as |
appropriation of
Road Fund monies is concerned.
|
Nothing in this Section prohibits transfers from the Road |
Fund to the
State Construction Account Fund under Section 5e of |
this Act; nor to the
General Revenue Fund, as authorized by |
|
this amendatory Act of
the 93rd
General Assembly.
|
The additional amounts authorized for expenditure in this |
Section by Public Acts 92-0600, 93-0025, and 93-0839 , and 94-91
|
shall be repaid to the Road Fund
from the General Revenue Fund |
in the next succeeding fiscal year that the
General Revenue |
Fund has a positive budgetary balance, as determined by
|
generally accepted accounting principles applicable to |
government.
|
The additional amounts authorized for expenditure by the |
Secretary of State
and
the Department of State Police in this |
Section by this amendatory Act of the
94th General Assembly and |
the 93rd General
Assembly shall be repaid to the Road Fund from |
the General Revenue Fund in the
next
succeeding fiscal year |
that the General Revenue Fund has a positive budgetary
balance,
|
as determined by generally accepted accounting principles |
applicable to
government.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03; 93-721, eff. 1-1-05; 93-839, |
eff. 7-30-04; 94-91, eff. 7-1-05.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/8.16c)
|
Sec. 8.16c. Appropriations related to efficiency |
initiatives. Appropriations for processing contracted |
assistance, the
purchase
of commodities and equipment, the |
retention of staff, and all other expenses
incident to |
efficiency initiatives authorized by Section 405-292 of the
|
Department of Central Management Services Law of the Civil |
Administrative Code
of Illinois are payable from the Efficiency
|
Initiatives Revolving Fund. Facilities Management Revolving |
Fund billings issued to the Department of Central Management |
Services, as authorized by Section 6z-65, are also payable from |
the Efficiency Initiatives Revolving Fund. Until there are |
sufficient funds in the Efficiency
Initiatives Revolving Fund |
to carry out the purposes of this amendatory Act of
the 93rd |
General Assembly, the State agencies subject to Section 405-292 |
of the
Department of Central Management Services Law of the |
Civil Administrative Code
of Illinois shall, on written |
|
approval
of the Director of Central Management Services, pay |
the costs associated with
the efficiency initiative authorized |
by that Section from current appropriations as if those |
expenses were
duly incurred by the respective agencies.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/8.43) |
Sec. 8.43. Special fund transfers. |
(a) In order to maintain the integrity of special funds and |
improve stability in the General Revenue Fund, the following |
transfers are authorized from the designated funds into the |
General Revenue Fund: |
SECRETARY OF STATE SPECIAL LICENSE |
PLATE FUND ...........................................$856,000 |
SECURITIES INVESTORS EDUCATION FUND ......$3,271,000 |
SECURITIES AUDIT & ENFORCEMENT FUND .....$17,014,000 |
DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS SERVICES SPECIAL |
OPERATIONS FUND ......................................$524,000 |
SECRETARY OF STATE SPECIAL SERVICES FUND .........$600,000 |
SECRETARY OF STATE DUI ADMINISTRATION FUND ......$582,000 |
FOOD & DRUG SAFETY FUND ....................$817,000 |
TRANSPORTATION REGULATORY FUND ................$2,379,000 |
FINANCIAL INSTITUTION FUND ...............$2,003,000 |
GENERAL PROFESSIONS DEDICATED FUND ...........$497,000 |
DRIVERS EDUCATION FUND ...............$2,967,000 |
STATE BOATING ACT FUND ..............$1,072,000 |
AGRICULTURAL PREMIUM FUND ...................$7,777,000 |
PUBLIC UTILITY FUND ...................$8,202,000 |
RADIATION PROTECTION FUND ....................$750,000 |
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT FUND ..........$10,084,000 |
SUBTITLE D MANAGEMENT FUND ....................$3,006,000 |
PLUGGING AND RESTORATION FUND ...... $1,255,000 |
REGISTERED CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS |
ADMINISTRATION AND DISCIPLINARY FUND ..............$819,000 |
WEIGHTS AND MEASURES FUND ............... $1,800,000 |
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT REVOLVING LOAN FUND .......$647,000 |
|
RESPONSE CONTRACTORS INDEMNIFICATION FUND ........$107,000 |
CAPITAL DEVELOPMENT BOARD REVOLVING LOAN FUND ..$1,229,000 |
PROFESSIONS INDIRECT COST FUND ................$39,000 |
ILLINOIS HEALTH FACILITIES PLANNING FUND ...$2,351,000 |
OPTOMETRIC LICENSING AND DISCIPLINARY |
BOARD FUND .........................................$1,121,000 |
STATE RAIL FREIGHT LOAN REPAYMENT FUND .$3,500,000 |
ILLINOIS TAX INCREMENT FUND ..............$1,500,000 |
USED TIRE MANAGEMENT FUND ...................$3,278,000 |
AUDIT EXPENSE FUND ......................$1,237,000 |
INSURANCE PREMIUM TAX REFUND FUND .............$2,500,000 |
CORPORATE FRANCHISE TAX REFUND FUND .........$1,650,000 |
TAX COMPLIANCE AND ADMINISTRATION FUND ........$9,513,000 |
APPRAISAL ADMINISTRATION FUND ..................$1,107,000 |
STATE ASSET FORFEITURE FUND ........ $1,500,000 |
FEDERAL ASSET FORFEITURE FUND ............$3,943,000 |
DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS REIMBURSEMENT |
AND EDUCATION FUND ................................$14,500,000 |
LEADS MAINTENANCE FUND ...$2,000,000 |
STATE OFFENDER DNA IDENTIFICATION SYSTEM FUND ....$250,000 |
WORKFORCE, TECHNOLOGY, AND ECONOMIC |
DEVELOPMENT FUND ......................$267,819.60
$1,500,000 |
RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCES TRUST FUND .$9,510,000 |
ENERGY EFFICIENCY TRUST FUND .........$3,040,000 |
CONSERVATION 2000 FUND ...............$7,439,000 |
HORSE RACING FUND .....................$2,500,000 |
STATE POLICE WIRELESS SERVICE EMERGENCY FUND .$500,000 |
WHISTLEBLOWER REWARD AND PROTECTION FUND .......$750,000 |
TOBACCO SETTLEMENT RECOVERY FUND .............$19,300,000 |
PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM FUND ..$500,000 |
MEDICAL SPECIAL PURPOSES TRUST FUND ......$967,000 |
DRAM SHOP FUND ...............................$1,517,000 |
DESIGN PROFESSIONALS ADMINISTRATION AND |
INVESTIGATION FUND ............................$1,172,000 |
ILLINOIS FORESTRY DEVELOPMENT FUND .....$1,257,000 |
STATE POLICE SERVICES FUND .....................$250,000 |
|
METABOLIC SCREENING AND TREATMENT FUND ....$3,435,000 |
INSURANCE PRODUCER ADMINISTRATION FUND .....$12,727,000 |
LOW-LEVEL RADIOACTIVE WASTE FACILITY |
DEVELOPMENT AND OPERATION FUND ............$2,202,000 |
LOW-LEVEL RADIOACTIVE WASTE FACILITY CLOSURE,
|
POST-CLOSURE CARE AND COMPENSATION FUND ......$6,000,000 |
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION PERMIT AND |
INSPECTION FUND ...............................$874,000 |
PARK AND CONSERVATION FUND ....................$1,000,000 |
PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE CONSTRUCTION LOAN |
REVOLVING FUND ..................................$1,822,000 |
LOBBYIST REGISTRATION ADMINISTRATION FUND ......$327,000 |
DIVISION OF CORPORATIONS REGISTERED |
LIMITED LIABILITY PARTNERSHIP FUND ............$356,000 |
WORKING CAPITAL REVOLVING FUND |
(30 ILCS 105/6) ...................................$12,000,000 |
All of these transfers shall be made on the effective date |
of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, or as soon |
thereafter as practical. These transfers shall be made |
notwithstanding any other provision of State law to the |
contrary. |
(b) On and after the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 93rd General Assembly through June 30, 2005, when any of |
the funds listed in subsection (a) have insufficient cash from |
which the State Comptroller may make expenditures properly |
supported by appropriations from the fund, then the State |
Treasurer and State Comptroller shall transfer from the General |
Revenue Fund to the fund only such amount as is immediately |
necessary to satisfy outstanding expenditure obligations on a |
timely basis, subject to the provisions of the State Prompt |
Payment Act. Any amounts transferred from the General Revenue |
Fund to a fund pursuant to this subsection (b) from time to |
time shall be re-transferred by the State Comptroller and the |
State Treasurer from the receiving fund into the General |
Revenue Fund as soon as and to the extent that deposits are |
made into or receipts are collected by the receiving fund. In |
|
all events, the full amounts of all transfers from the General |
Revenue Fund to receiving funds shall be re-transferred to the |
General Revenue Fund no later than June 30, 2005.
|
(c) The sum of $57,700,000 shall be transferred, pursuant |
to appropriation, from the State Pensions Fund to the |
designated retirement systems (as defined in Section 8.12 of |
the State Finance Act) on the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 93rd General Assembly, or as soon thereafter as |
practical. On April 16, 2005, or as soon thereafter as |
practical, there shall be transferred, pursuant to |
appropriation, from the State Pensions Fund to the designated |
retirement systems (as defined in Section 8.12 of the State |
Finance Act) the lesser of (i) an amount equal to the balance |
in the State Pensions Fund on April 16, 2005, minus an amount |
equal to 75% of the total amount of fiscal year 2005 |
appropriations from the State Pensions Fund that were |
appropriated to the State Treasurer for administration of the |
Uniform Disposition of Unclaimed Property Act or (ii) |
$35,000,000. These transfers are intended to be all or part of |
the transfer required under Section 8.12 of the State Finance |
Act for fiscal year 2005. |
(d) The sum of $49,775,000 shall be transferred from the |
School Technology Revolving Loan Fund to the Common School Fund |
on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd |
General Assembly, or as soon thereafter as practical, |
notwithstanding any other provision of State law to the |
contrary.
|
(e) The sum of $80,000,000 shall be transferred from the |
General Revenue Fund to the State Pensions Fund on the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General |
Assembly, or as soon thereafter as practical.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.) |
(30 ILCS 105/8.44) |
Sec. 8.44. Special fund transfers. |
(a) In order to maintain the integrity of special funds and
|
|
improve stability in the General Revenue Fund, the following
|
transfers are authorized from the designated funds into the
|
General Revenue Fund: |
Aeronautics Fund ......................................$2,186
|
Aggregate Operations Regulatory Fund .................$32,750
|
Agrichemical Incident Response Trust Fund ...........$419,830
|
Agricultural Master Fund .............................$17,827
|
Air Transportation Revolving Fund ...................$181,478
|
Airport Land Loan Revolving Fund ..................$1,669,970
|
Alternate Fuels Fund ..............................$1,056,833
|
Alternative Compliance Market Account Fund ...........$53,120
|
Appraisal Administration Fund .......................$250,000
|
Armory Rental Fund ..................................$111,538
|
Assisted Living and Shared Housing Regulatory Fund ...$24,493
|
Bank and Trust Company Fund .......................$3,800,000
|
Capital Development Board Revolving Fund ............$453,054
|
Care Provider Fund for Persons
|
with a Developmental Disability ...................$2,378,270
|
Charter Schools Revolving Loan Fund .................$650,721
|
Child Support Administrative Fund .................$1,117,266
|
Coal Mining Regulatory Fund .........................$127,583
|
Communications Revolving Fund ....................$12,999,839
|
Community Health Center Care Fund ...................$104,480
|
Community Water Supply Laboratory Fund ..............$716,232
|
Continuing Legal Education Trust Fund ................$23,419
|
Corporate Franchise Tax Refund Fund .................$500,000
|
Court of Claims Administration and Grant Fund ........$24,949
|
Criminal Justice Information Projects Fund ...........$18,212
|
DCFS Special Purposes Trust Fund .....................$77,835
|
Death Certificate Surcharge Fund ..................$1,134,341
|
Department of Business Services
|
Special Operations Fund ...........................$2,000,000
|
Department of Children and Family Services
|
Training Fund .....................................$1,408,106
|
Department of Corrections
|
Reimbursement and Education Fund ..................$2,208,323
|
|
Department of Insurance State Trust Fund .............$18,009
|
Department of Labor Special State Trust Fund ........$359,895
|
Department on Aging State Projects Fund ..............$10,059
|
Design Professionals Administration
|
and Investigation Fund ...............................$51,701
|
DHS Recoveries Trust Fund .........................$1,591,834
|
DHS State Projects Fund ..............................$89,917
|
Division of Corporations
|
Registered Limited Liability Partnership Fund .......$150,000
|
DNR Special Projects Fund ...........................$301,649
|
Dram Shop Fund ......................................$110,554
|
Drivers Education Fund ...............................$30,152
|
Drug Rebate Fund .................................$17,315,821
|
Drug Traffic Prevention Fund .........................$22,123
|
Drug Treatment Fund .................................$160,030
|
Drunk and Drugged Driving Prevention Fund ............$51,220
|
Drycleaner Environmental Response Trust Fund ......$1,137,971
|
DuQuoin State Fair Harness Racing Trust Fund ..........$3,368
|
Early Intervention Services Revolving Fund ........$1,044,935
|
Economic Research and Information Fund ...............$49,005
|
Educational Labor Relations Board
|
Fair Share Trust Fund ................................$40,933
|
Efficiency Initiatives Revolving Fund .............$6,178,298
|
Emergency Planning and Training Fund .................$28,845
|
Emergency Public Health Fund ........................$139,997
|
Emergency Response Reimbursement Fund ................$15,873
|
EMS Assistance Fund ..................................$40,923
|
Energy Assistance Contribution Fund ..................$89,692
|
Energy Efficiency Trust Fund ......................$1,300,938
|
Environmental Laboratory Certification Fund ..........$62,039
|
Environmental Protection Permit and Inspection Fund .$180,571
|
Environmental Protection Trust Fund ...............$2,228,031
|
EPA Court Trust Fund ................................$338,646
|
EPA Special State Projects Trust Fund ...............$284,263
|
Explosives Regulatory Fund ...........................$23,125
|
Facilities Management Revolving Fund ..............$4,803,971
|
|
Facility Licensing Fund ..............................$22,958
|
Family Care Fund .....................................$22,585
|
Federal Asset Forfeiture Fund .........................$1,871
|
Feed Control Fund ...................................$478,234
|
Fertilizer Control Fund .............................$207,398
|
Financial Institution Fund ........................$2,448,690
|
Firearm Owner's Notification Fund .....................$3,960
|
Food and Drug Safety Fund ...........................$421,401
|
General Professions Dedicated Fund ................$3,975,808
|
Good Samaritan Energy Trust Fund ......................$7,191
|
Governor's Grant Fund .................................$1,592
|
Group Workers' Compensation Pool Insolvency Fund ....$136,547
|
Guardianship and Advocacy Fund .......................$27,289
|
Hazardous Waste Occupational Licensing Fund ..........$14,939
|
Hazardous Waste Research Fund .......................$125,209
|
Health Facility Plan Review Fund ....................$165,972
|
Hearing Instrument Dispenser
|
Examining and Disciplinary Fund .....................$102,842
|
Home Inspector Administration Fund ..................$244,503
|
IEMA State Projects Fund .................................$13
|
Illinois Beach Marina Fund ..........................$177,801
|
Illinois Capital Revolving Loan Fund ..............$4,024,106
|
Illinois Clean Water Fund .........................$1,835,796
|
Illinois Community College Board
|
Contracts and Grants Fund .................................$9
|
Illinois Department of Agriculture
|
Laboratory Services Revolving Fund ..................$174,795
|
Illinois Equity Fund ................................$119,193
|
Illinois Executive Mansion Trust Fund ................$56,154
|
Illinois Forestry Development Fund ................$1,389,096
|
Illinois Future Teacher Corps Scholarship Fund ........$4,836
|
Illinois Gaming Law Enforcement Fund ................$650,646
|
Illinois Habitat Endowment Trust Fund .............$3,641,262
|
Illinois Health Facilities Planning Fund .............$23,066
|
Illinois Historic Sites Fund ........................$134,366
|
Illinois National Guard Armory Construction Fund .....$31,469
|
|
Illinois Rural Rehabilitation Fund ....................$8,190
|
Illinois School Asbestos Abatement Fund .............$183,191
|
Illinois State Fair Fund .............................$50,176
|
Illinois State Podiatric Disciplinary Fund ..........$317,239
|
Illinois Student Assistance Commission
|
Contracts and Grants Fund .............................$5,589
|
Illinois Tourism Tax Fund ...........................$647,749
|
Illinois Underground Utility Facilities
|
Damage Prevention Fund ................................$2,175
|
Illinois Veterans' Rehabilitation Fund ..............$218,940
|
Industrial Hygiene Regulatory and Enforcement Fund ....$3,564
|
Innovations in Long-Term Care
|
Quality Demonstration Grants Fund ...................$565,494
|
Insurance Financial Regulation Fund .................$800,000
|
ISAC Accounts Receivable Fund ........................$26,374
|
ISBE GED Testing Fund ...............................$146,196
|
ISBE Teacher Certificate Institute Fund .............$122,117
|
J.J. Wolf Memorial for Conservation Investigation Fund .$8,137
|
Kaskaskia Commons Permanent Fund .....................$79,813
|
Land Reclamation Fund ................................$30,582
|
Large Business Attraction Fund ......................$340,777
|
Lawyers' Assistance Program Fund ....................$198,207
|
LEADS Maintenance Fund ...............................$76,981
|
Lieutenant Governor's Grant Fund ........................$188
|
Livestock Management Facilities Fund .................$47,800
|
Local Initiative Fund .............................$1,940,646
|
Local Tourism Fund ..................................$132,876
|
Long Term Care Monitor/Receiver Fund ................$427,850
|
Monetary Award Program Reserve Fund .................$879,700
|
McCormick Place Expansion Project Fund ....................$0
|
Medicaid Buy-In Program Revolving Fund ..............$318,894
|
Medicaid Fraud and Abuse Prevention Fund .............$60,306
|
Medical Special Purposes Trust Fund .................$930,668
|
Military Affairs Trust Fund ..........................$68,468
|
Motor Carrier Safety Inspection Fund ................$147,477
|
Motor Fuel and Petroleum Standards Fund ..............$19,673
|
|
Motor Vehicle Review Board Fund .....................$250,000
|
Motor Vehicle Theft Prevention Trust Fund .........$1,415,361
|
Narcotics Profit Forfeiture Fund .....................$39,379
|
Natural Heritage Endowment Trust Fund ...............$557,264
|
Natural Heritage Fund .................................$3,336
|
Natural Resources Information Fund ...................$64,596
|
Natural Resources Restoration Trust Fund .............$63,002
|
Off-Highway Vehicle Trails Fund .....................$244,815
|
Oil Spill Response Fund .............................$167,547
|
Paper and Printing Revolving Fund ....................$48,476
|
Park and Conservation Fund ........................$3,050,154
|
Pawnbroker Regulation Fund ...........................$94,131
|
Pesticide Control Fund ..............................$420,223
|
Petroleum Resources Revolving Fund ...................$85,540
|
Police Training Board Services Fund ...................$1,540
|
Pollution Control Board Fund .........................$23,004
|
Pollution Control Board Trust Fund ..................$410,651
|
Post Transplant Maintenance and Retention Fund .......$75,100
|
Presidential Library and Museum Operating Fund ......$727,250
|
Professional Regulation Evidence Fund .................$2,817
|
Professional Services Fund ...........................$46,222
|
Provider Inquiry Trust Fund .........................$207,098
|
Public Aid Recoveries Trust Fund ..................$7,610,631
|
Public Health Laboratory Services Revolving Fund .....$92,276
|
Public Health Special State Projects Fund ...........$816,202
|
Public Health Water Permit Fund ......................$17,624
|
Public Infrastructure Construction
|
Loan Revolving Fund ..................................$63,802
|
Public Pension Regulation Fund ......................$222,433
|
Racing Board Fingerprint License Fund ................$16,835
|
Radiation Protection Fund ...........................$212,010
|
Real Estate License Administration Fund ...........$1,500,000
|
Regulatory Evaluation and Basic Enforcement Fund .....$64,221
|
Regulatory Fund ......................................$55,246
|
Renewable Energy Resources Trust Fund ................$14,033
|
Response Contractors Indemnification Fund ...............$126
|
|
Rural/Downstate Health Access Fund ....................$4,644
|
Savings and Residential Finance Regulatory Fund ...$5,200,000
|
School District Emergency Financial Assistance Fund .$2,130,848
|
School Technology Revolving Loan Fund ................$19,158
|
Second Injury Fund ..................................$151,493
|
Secretary of State Interagency Grant Fund ............$40,900
|
Secretary of State Special License Plate Fund .......$520,200
|
Secretary of State Special Services Fund ..........$2,500,000
|
Securities Audit and Enforcement Fund .............$3,400,000
|
Securities Investors Education Fund .................$100,000
|
Self-Insurers Administration Fund ...................$286,964
|
Sex Offender Registration Fund ........................$7,647
|
Sexual Assault Services Fund .........................$12,210
|
Small Business Environmental Assistance Fund .........$13,686
|
Snowmobile Trail Establishment Fund ...................$3,124
|
Solid Waste Management Fund .......................$6,587,173
|
Sports Facilities Tax Trust Fund ..................$1,112,590
|
State Appellate Defender Special State Projects Fund .$23,820
|
State Asset Forfeiture Fund ..........................$71,988
|
State Boating Act Fund ..............................$401,824
|
State College and University Trust Fund .............$139,439
|
State Crime Laboratory Fund ..........................$44,965
|
State Fair Promotional Activities Fund ................$8,734
|
State Garage Revolving Fund .........................$639,662
|
State Offender DNA Identification System Fund ........$81,740
|
State Off-Set Claims Fund .........................$1,487,926
|
State Parks Fund ..................................$1,045,889
|
State Police Motor Vehicle Theft Prevention Fund ....$164,843
|
State Police Vehicle Fund ............................$22,899
|
State Police Whistleblower Reward and Protection Fund .$199,699
|
State Rail Freight Loan Repayment Fund ............$1,147,727
|
State Surplus Property Revolving Fund ...............$388,284
|
State Whistleblower Reward and Protection Fund ........$1,592
|
State's Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor's County Fund .$70,101
|
Statewide Grand Jury Prosecution Fund .................$7,645
|
Statistical Services Revolving Fund ...............$4,847,783
|
|
Subtitle D Management Fund ..........................$169,744
|
Tanning Facility Permit Fund .........................$64,571
|
Tax Compliance and Administration Fund ..............$429,377
|
Tax Recovery Fund ...................................$113,591
|
Teacher Certificate Fee Revolving Fund ..............$982,399
|
Toxic Pollution Prevention Fund ......................$28,534
|
Underground Resources Conservation Enforcement Fund .$294,251
|
University Grant Fund ................................$23,881
|
Used Tire Management Fund .........................$1,918,500
|
Watershed Park Fund ..................................$19,786
|
Weights and Measures Fund .........................$1,078,121
|
Workers' Compensation Benefit Trust Fund ............$266,574
|
Workers' Compensation Revolving Fund ................$520,285
|
Working Capital Revolving Fund ....................$1,404,868
|
Youth Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Prevention Fund .$29,995
|
Youth Drug Abuse Prevention Fund .......................$4,091 |
All of these transfers shall be made in equal quarterly |
installments with the first made on the effective date
of this |
amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly, or as soon
|
thereafter as practical, and with the remaining transfers to be |
made on October 1, January 1, and April 1, or as soon |
thereafter as practical. These transfers shall be made
|
notwithstanding any other provision of State law to the
|
contrary. |
The Governor may direct the State Comptroller and the State |
Treasurer to reverse the transfers previously authorized by |
statute to the General Revenue Fund and retransfer from the |
General Revenue Fund, if applicable, all or a portion of the |
transfers made pursuant to this subsection (a) to the following |
funds: |
(1) the Drycleaner Environmental Response Trust Fund; |
(2) the Educational Labor Relations Board Fair Share |
Trust Fund; |
(3) the Environmental Protection Trust Fund; |
(4) the Facilities Management Revolving Fund; |
(5) the Illinois Forestry Development Fund; |
|
(6) the Illinois Habitat Endowment Trust Fund; |
(7) the Innovations in Long-Term Care Quality |
Demonstration Grants Fund; |
(8) the Kaskaskia Commons Permanent Fund; |
(9) the Land Reclamation Fund; |
(10) the Lawyers' Assistance Program Fund; |
(11) the Local Initiative Fund; |
(12) the Petroleum Resources Revolving Fund; |
(13) the Sports Facilities Tax Trust Fund; |
(14) the State Garage Revolving Fund; |
(15) the State Off-Set Claims Fund; and |
(16) the DCFS Special Purposes Trust Fund.
|
(b) On and after the effective date of this amendatory Act
|
of the 94th General Assembly through June 30, 2006, when any of
|
the funds listed in subsection (a) have insufficient cash from
|
which the State Comptroller may make expenditures properly
|
supported by appropriations from the fund, then the State
|
Treasurer and State Comptroller shall transfer from the General
|
Revenue Fund to the fund only such amount as is immediately
|
necessary to satisfy outstanding expenditure obligations on a
|
timely basis, subject to the provisions of the State Prompt
|
Payment Act. All or a portion of the
Any amounts transferred |
from the General Revenue
Fund to a fund pursuant to this |
subsection (b) from time to
time may
shall be re-transferred by |
the State Comptroller and the
State Treasurer from the |
receiving fund into the General
Revenue Fund as soon as and to |
the extent that deposits are
made into or receipts are |
collected by the receiving fund. In
all events, the full |
amounts of all transfers from the General
Revenue Fund to |
receiving funds shall be re-transferred to the
General Revenue |
Fund no later than June 30, 2006. |
(c) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, on July 1, |
2005, or as soon thereafter as may be practical, the State |
Comptroller and the State Treasurer shall transfer $5,000,000 |
from the Communications Revolving Fund to the Hospital Basic |
Services Prevention Fund.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 94-91, eff. 7-1-05.) |
(30 ILCS 105/8.45 new)
|
Sec. 8.45. Special fund transfers. |
(a) In order to maintain the integrity of special funds and
|
improve stability in the General Revenue Fund, the following
|
transfers are authorized from the designated funds into the
|
General Revenue Fund: |
Food and Drug Safety Fund .......................$421,000
|
Grade Crossing Prevention Fund ................$4,000,000
|
General Professions Dedicated Fund ............$5,000,000
|
Economic Research and Information Fund ...........$25,000
|
Illinois Department of Agriculture |
Laboratory Services Revolving Fund ..........$100,000
|
Drivers Education Fund ..........................$900,000
|
State Parks Fund ..............................$1,046,000
|
Illinois State Pharmacy Disciplinary Fund .....$3,000,000
|
Public Utility Fund .............................$440,000
|
Solid Waste Management Fund .....................$200,000
|
Illinois Gaming Law Enforcement Fund ............$652,000
|
Subtitle D Management Fund ......................$300,000
|
Community Health Center Care Fund ...............$100,000
|
School District Emergency Financial |
Assistance Fund ...........................$1,325,000
|
Explosives Regulatory Fund .......................$23,000
|
Aggregate Operations Regulatory Fund .............$33,000
|
Coal Mining Regulatory Fund ......................$50,000
|
Registered Certified Public Accountants' |
Administration and Disciplinary Fund ......$1,000,000
|
Agrichemical Incident Response Trust Fund .......$200,000
|
Motor Vehicle Theft Prevention Trust Fund .......$500,000
|
Weights and Measures Fund .......................$600,000
|
Division of Corporations Registered Limited |
Liability Partnership Fund ..................$555,000
|
Local Government Health Insurance |
Reserve Fund ..............................$1,000,000
|
|
IPTIP Administrative Trust Fund .................$700,000
|
Professions Indirect Cost Fund ..................$500,000
|
State Police DUI Fund ...........................$150,000
|
Asbestos Abatement Fund .........................$500,000
|
Savings and Residential Finance |
Regulatory Fund ...........................$6,000,000
|
Fair and Exposition Fund ........................$200,000
|
State Police Vehicle Fund .......................$144,000
|
Department of Labor Special |
State Trust Fund ............................$162,000
|
Nursing Dedicated and Professional Fund .......$3,000,000
|
Underground Resources Conservation |
Enforcement Fund ............................$100,000
|
Mandatory Arbitration Fund ......................$906,000
|
Income Tax Refund Fund .......................$44,000,000
|
Long Term Care Monitor/Receiver Fund ............$300,000
|
Community Water Supply Laboratory Fund ..........$200,000
|
Used Tire Management Fund .....................$1,000,000
|
Natural Areas Acquisition Fund ................$5,000,000
|
State Garage Revolving Fund .....................$691,300
|
Statistical Services Revolving Fund .............$231,600
|
Paper and Printing Revolving Fund .................$9,900
|
Air Transportation Revolving Fund ...............$100,000
|
Tax Recovery Fund ...............................$150,000
|
Communications Revolving Fund .................$1,076,800
|
Facilities Management Revolving Fund ............$111,900
|
Professional Services Fund ....................$1,064,800
|
Treasurer's Rental Fee Fund .....................$100,000
|
Workers' Compensation Revolving Fund ............$530,800
|
Audit Expense Fund ............................$1,800,000
|
Securities Audit and Enforcement Fund ...........$695,000
|
Department of Business Services |
Special Operations Fund ...................$7,650,000
|
Innovations in Long-Term Care Quality |
Demonstration Grants Fund ...................$300,000
|
State Treasurer's Bank Services Trust Fund ....$5,000,000
|
|
Corporate Franchise Tax Refund Fund ...........$1,400,000
|
Tax Compliance and Administration Fund ..........$429,400
|
Appraisal Administration Fund .................$1,000,000
|
Trauma Center Fund ............................$5,000,000
|
Public Aid Recoveries Trust Fund ..............$8,611,000
|
State Asset Forfeiture Fund .....................$250,000
|
Health Facility Plan Review Fund ................$166,000
|
LEADS Maintenance Fund ...........................$77,000
|
Illinois Historic Sites Fund ....................$134,400
|
Public Pension Regulation Fund ...................$50,000
|
Pawnbroker Regulation Fund ......................$100,000
|
Charter Schools Revolving Loan Fund ...........$1,200,000
|
Attorney General Whistleblower |
Reward and Protection Fund ................$1,000,000
|
Wireless Carrier Reimbursement Fund ...........$8,000,000
|
International Tourism Fund ....................$3,000,000
|
Real Estate Recovery Fund .......................$200,000
|
Death Certificate Surcharge Fund ..............$1,000,000
|
Auction Recovery Fund ............................$50,000
|
Motor Carrier Safety Inspection Fund ............$150,000
|
State Police Whistleblower Reward |
and Protection Fund .........................$750,000
|
Post Transplant Maintenance and Retention Fund ...$75,000
|
Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund .............$19,900,000
|
Medicaid Buy-In Program Revolving Fund ..........$319,000
|
Home Inspector Administration Fund ..............$200,000
|
Tourism Promotion Fund ........................$4,000,000
|
Lawyers' Assistance Program Fund .................$67,200
|
Presidential Library and Museum |
Operating Fund ..............................$750,000
|
Dram Shop Fund ..................................$112,000
|
Illinois State Dental Disciplinary Fund .........$250,000
|
Real Estate License Administration Fund .......$5,000,000
|
Traffic and Criminal Conviction Surcharge Fund ..$250,000
|
Design Professionals Administration |
and Investigation Fund ......................$100,000
|
|
State Surplus Property Revolving Fund .............$6,300
|
State Police Services Fund ......................$200,000
|
Health Insurance Reserve Fund ................$21,000,000
|
DHS Recoveries Trust Fund .....................$3,591,800
|
Insurance Producer Administration Fund ........$2,000,000
|
State Treasurer Court Ordered Escrow Fund .......$250,000
|
Environmental Protection Permit and |
Inspection Fund .............................$181,000
|
Illinois State Podiatric Disciplinary Fund ......$250,000
|
Illinois Beach Marina Fund ......................$100,000
|
International and Promotional Fund ...............$70,000
|
Insurance Financial Regulation Fund ...........$5,000,000
|
TOTAL $200,084,200
|
All of these transfers shall be made in equal quarterly |
installments with the first made on July 1, 2006, or as soon
|
thereafter as practical, and with the remaining transfers to be |
made on October 1, January 1, and April 1, or as soon |
thereafter as practical. These transfers shall be made
|
notwithstanding any other provision of State law to the
|
contrary.
|
(b) On and after the effective date of this amendatory Act
|
of the 94th General Assembly through June 30, 2007, when any of
|
the funds listed in subsection (a) have insufficient cash from
|
which the State Comptroller may make expenditures properly
|
supported by appropriations from the fund, then the State
|
Treasurer and State Comptroller shall transfer from the General
|
Revenue Fund to the fund only such amount as is immediately
|
necessary to satisfy outstanding expenditure obligations on a
|
timely basis, subject to the provisions of the State Prompt
|
Payment Act. All or a portion of the amounts transferred from |
the General Revenue
Fund to a fund pursuant to this subsection |
(b) from time to
time may be re-transferred by the State |
Comptroller and the
State Treasurer from the receiving fund |
into the General
Revenue Fund as soon as and to the extent that |
deposits are
made into or receipts are collected by the |
receiving fund.
|
|
(30 ILCS 105/8.55) |
Sec. 8.55. Interfund transfers. On or after July 1, 2004 |
and until June 30, 2005
2006 , in addition to any other |
transfers that may be provided for by law, at the direction of |
and upon notification from the Director of Healthcare and |
Family Services (formerly Director of Public Aid ) , the State |
Comptroller shall direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer |
amounts into the General Revenue Fund from the designated funds |
not exceeding the following totals: |
Hospital Provider Fund ........................$36,000,000 |
Health and Human Services Medicaid Trust Fund .$124,000,000. |
Transfers of moneys under this Section may not exceed a |
total of $80,000,000 in any State fiscal year.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-841, eff. 7-30-04; revised 12-15-05.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/8g)
|
Sec. 8g. Fund transfers.
|
(a) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, as
soon as may be practical after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of
the 91st General Assembly, the |
State Comptroller shall direct and the State
Treasurer shall |
transfer the sum of $10,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund
|
to the Motor Vehicle License Plate Fund created by Senate Bill |
1028 of the 91st
General Assembly.
|
(b) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, as
soon as may be practical after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of
the 91st General Assembly, the |
State Comptroller shall direct and the State
Treasurer shall |
transfer the sum of $25,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund
|
to the Fund for Illinois' Future created by Senate Bill 1066 of |
the 91st
General Assembly.
|
(c) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law,
on August 30 of each fiscal year's license period, |
the Illinois Liquor Control
Commission shall direct and the |
State Comptroller and State Treasurer shall
transfer from the |
|
General Revenue Fund to the Youth Alcoholism and Substance
|
Abuse Prevention Fund an amount equal to the number of retail |
liquor licenses
issued for that fiscal year multiplied by $50.
|
(d) The payments to programs required under subsection (d) |
of Section 28.1
of the Horse Racing Act of 1975 shall be made, |
pursuant to appropriation, from
the special funds referred to |
in the statutes cited in that subsection, rather
than directly |
from the General Revenue Fund.
|
Beginning January 1, 2000, on the first day of each month, |
or as soon
as may be practical thereafter, the State |
Comptroller shall direct and the
State Treasurer shall transfer |
from the General Revenue Fund to each of the
special funds from |
which payments are to be made under Section 28.1(d) of the
|
Horse Racing Act of 1975 an amount equal to 1/12 of the annual |
amount required
for those payments from that special fund, |
which annual amount shall not exceed
the annual amount for |
those payments from that special fund for the calendar
year |
1998. The special funds to which transfers shall be made under |
this
subsection (d) include, but are not necessarily limited |
to, the Agricultural
Premium Fund; the Metropolitan Exposition |
Auditorium and Office Building Fund;
the Fair and Exposition |
Fund; the Standardbred Breeders Fund; the Thoroughbred
|
Breeders Fund; and the Illinois Veterans' Rehabilitation Fund.
|
(e) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law,
as soon as may be practical after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of
the 91st General Assembly, but |
in no event later than June 30, 2000, the State
Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of
|
$15,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Fund for |
Illinois' Future.
|
(f) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law,
as soon as may be practical after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of
the 91st General Assembly, but |
in no event later than June 30, 2000, the State
Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of
|
$70,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Long-Term Care |
|
Provider
Fund.
|
(f-1) In fiscal year 2002, in addition to any other |
transfers that may
be provided for by law, at the direction of |
and upon notification from the
Governor, the State Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall
transfer amounts not |
exceeding a total of $160,000,000 from the General
Revenue Fund |
to the Long-Term Care Provider Fund.
|
(g) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law,
on July 1, 2001, or as soon thereafter as may be |
practical, the State
Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of
$1,200,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Violence Prevention Fund.
|
(h) In each of fiscal years 2002 through 2004, but not
|
thereafter, in
addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, the State
Comptroller shall direct and the |
State Treasurer shall transfer $5,000,000
from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Tourism Promotion Fund.
|
(i) On or after July 1, 2001 and until May 1, 2002, in |
addition to any
other transfers that may be provided for by |
law, at the direction of and upon
notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the
State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts not exceeding a total of |
$80,000,000
from the General Revenue Fund to the Tobacco |
Settlement Recovery Fund.
Any amounts so transferred shall be |
re-transferred by the State Comptroller
and the State Treasurer |
from the Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund to the
General |
Revenue Fund at the direction of and upon notification from the
|
Governor, but in any event on or before June 30, 2002.
|
(i-1) On or after July 1, 2002 and until May 1, 2003, in |
addition to any
other transfers that may be provided for by |
law, at the direction of and upon
notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the
State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts not exceeding a total of |
$80,000,000
from the General Revenue Fund to the Tobacco |
Settlement Recovery Fund.
Any amounts so transferred shall be |
re-transferred by the State Comptroller
and the State Treasurer |
|
from the Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund to the
General |
Revenue Fund at the direction of and upon notification from the
|
Governor, but in any event on or before June 30, 2003.
|
(j) On or after July 1, 2001 and no later than June 30, |
2002, in addition to
any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, at the direction of and
upon notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the
State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts not to exceed the following |
sums into
the Statistical Services Revolving Fund:
|
|
From the General Revenue Fund ................. |
$8,450,000 |
|
From the Public Utility Fund .................. |
1,700,000 |
|
From the Transportation Regulatory Fund ....... |
2,650,000 |
|
From the Title III Social Security and |
|
|
Employment Fund .............................. |
3,700,000 |
|
From the Professions Indirect Cost Fund ....... |
4,050,000 |
|
From the Underground Storage Tank Fund ........ |
550,000 |
|
From the Agricultural Premium Fund ............ |
750,000 |
|
From the State Pensions Fund .................. |
200,000 |
|
From the Road Fund ............................ |
2,000,000 |
|
From the Health Facilities |
|
|
Planning Fund ................................ |
1,000,000 |
|
From the Savings and Residential Finance |
|
|
Regulatory Fund .............................. |
130,800 |
|
From the Appraisal Administration Fund ........ |
28,600 |
|
From the Pawnbroker Regulation Fund ........... |
3,600 |
|
From the Auction Regulation |
|
|
Administration Fund .......................... |
35,800 |
|
From the Bank and Trust Company Fund .......... |
634,800 |
|
From the Real Estate License |
|
|
Administration Fund .......................... |
313,600 |
|
(k) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law,
as soon as may be practical after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of
the 92nd General Assembly, the |
State Comptroller shall direct and the State
Treasurer shall |
transfer the sum of $2,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund
to |
the Teachers Health Insurance Security Fund.
|
|
(k-1) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by
law, on July 1, 2002, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, the State
Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of
$2,000,000 from |
the General Revenue Fund to the Teachers Health Insurance
|
Security Fund.
|
(k-2) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by
law, on July 1, 2003, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, the State
Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of
$2,000,000 from |
the General Revenue Fund to the Teachers Health Insurance
|
Security Fund.
|
(k-3) On or after July 1, 2002 and no later than June 30, |
2003, in
addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, at the
direction of and upon notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller
shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts not to exceed the
following |
sums into the Statistical Services Revolving Fund:
|
|
Appraisal Administration Fund ................. |
$150,000 |
|
General Revenue Fund .......................... |
10,440,000 |
|
Savings and Residential Finance |
|
|
Regulatory Fund ........................... |
200,000 |
|
State Pensions Fund ........................... |
100,000 |
|
Bank and Trust Company Fund ................... |
100,000 |
|
Professions Indirect Cost Fund ................ |
3,400,000 |
|
Public Utility Fund ........................... |
2,081,200 |
|
Real Estate License Administration Fund ....... |
150,000 |
|
Title III Social Security and |
|
|
Employment Fund ........................... |
1,000,000 |
|
Transportation Regulatory Fund ................ |
3,052,100 |
|
Underground Storage Tank Fund ................. |
50,000 |
|
(l) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on
July 1, 2002, or as soon as may be practical |
thereafter, the State Comptroller
shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $3,000,000 from
the General |
Revenue Fund to the Presidential Library and Museum Operating
|
|
Fund.
|
(m) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on
July 1, 2002 and on the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 93rd
General Assembly, or as soon |
thereafter as may be practical, the State Comptroller
shall |
direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of |
$1,200,000 from
the General Revenue Fund to the Violence |
Prevention Fund.
|
(n) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law,
on July 1,
2003, or as soon thereafter as may be |
practical, the State Comptroller shall
direct and the
State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $6,800,000 from the General |
Revenue
Fund to
the DHS Recoveries Trust Fund.
|
(o) On or after July 1, 2003, and no later than June 30, |
2004, in
addition to any
other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, at the direction of and upon
notification
from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer
shall
transfer amounts not to exceed the following |
sums into the Vehicle Inspection
Fund:
|
|
From the Underground Storage Tank Fund ....... |
$35,000,000. |
|
(p) On or after July 1, 2003 and until May 1, 2004, in |
addition to any
other
transfers that may be provided for by |
law, at the direction of and upon
notification from
the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall
transfer
amounts not exceeding a total of |
$80,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to
the
Tobacco |
Settlement Recovery Fund. Any amounts so transferred shall be
|
re-transferred
from the Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund to the |
General Revenue Fund at the
direction of and upon notification |
from the Governor, but in any event on or
before June
30, 2004.
|
(q) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on
July 1,
2003, or as soon as may be practical |
thereafter, the State Comptroller shall
direct and the
State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $5,000,000 from the General |
Revenue
Fund to
the Illinois Military Family Relief Fund.
|
(r) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
|
for by law, on
July 1,
2003, or as soon as may be practical |
thereafter, the State Comptroller shall
direct and the
State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $1,922,000 from the General |
Revenue
Fund to
the Presidential Library and Museum Operating |
Fund.
|
(s) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on
or after
July 1, 2003, the State Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall
transfer the
sum of |
$4,800,000 from the Statewide Economic Development Fund to the |
General
Revenue Fund.
|
(t) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on
or after
July 1, 2003, the State Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall
transfer the
sum of |
$50,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Budget |
Stabilization
Fund.
|
(u) On or after July 1, 2004 and until May 1, 2005, in |
addition to any other transfers that may be provided for by |
law, at the direction of and upon notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts not exceeding a total of |
$80,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Tobacco |
Settlement Recovery Fund. Any amounts so transferred shall be |
retransferred by the State Comptroller and the State Treasurer |
from the Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund to the General |
Revenue Fund at the direction of and upon notification from the |
Governor, but in any event on or before June 30, 2005.
|
(v) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on July 1, 2004, or as soon thereafter as may be |
practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $1,200,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Violence Prevention Fund. |
(w) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on July 1, 2004, or as soon thereafter as may be |
practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $6,445,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Presidential Library and Museum Operating |
|
Fund.
|
(x) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on January 15, 2005, or as soon thereafter as may |
be practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer to the General Revenue Fund the |
following sums: |
From the State Crime Laboratory Fund, $200,000; |
From the State Police Wireless Service Emergency Fund, |
$200,000; |
From the State Offender DNA Identification System |
Fund, $800,000; and |
From the State Police Whistleblower Reward and |
Protection Fund, $500,000.
|
(y) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the |
contrary, in addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law on June 30, 2005, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, the State Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer the remaining balance from |
the designated funds into the General Revenue Fund and any |
future deposits that would otherwise be made into these funds |
must instead be made into the General Revenue Fund:
|
(1) the Keep Illinois Beautiful Fund;
|
(2) the
Metropolitan Fair and Exposition Authority |
Reconstruction Fund; |
(3) the
New Technology Recovery Fund; |
(4) the Illinois Rural Bond Bank Trust Fund; |
(5) the ISBE School Bus Driver Permit Fund; |
(6) the
Solid Waste Management Revolving Loan Fund; |
(7)
the State Postsecondary Review Program Fund; |
(8) the
Tourism Attraction Development Matching Grant |
Fund; |
(9) the
Patent and Copyright Fund; |
(10) the
Credit Enhancement Development Fund; |
(11) the
Community Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Services Provider Participation Fee Trust |
Fund; |
|
(12) the
Nursing Home Grant Assistance Fund; |
(13) the
By-product Material Safety Fund; |
(14) the
Illinois Student Assistance Commission Higher |
EdNet Fund; |
(15) the
DORS State Project Fund; |
(16) the School Technology Revolving Fund; |
(17) the
Energy Assistance Contribution Fund; |
(18) the
Illinois Building Commission Revolving Fund; |
(19) the
Illinois Aquaculture Development Fund; |
(20) the
Homelessness Prevention Fund; |
(21) the
DCFS Refugee Assistance Fund; |
(22) the
Illinois Century Network Special Purposes |
Fund; and |
(23) the
Build Illinois Purposes Fund.
|
(z) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on July 1, 2005, or as soon as may be practical |
thereafter, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $1,200,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Violence Prevention Fund.
|
(aa) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on July 1, 2005, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, the State Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $9,000,000 from |
the General Revenue Fund to the Presidential Library and Museum |
Operating Fund.
|
(bb) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on July 1, 2005, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, the State Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $6,803,600 from |
the General Revenue Fund to the Securities Audit and |
Enforcement Fund.
|
(cc) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on or after July 1, 2005 and until May 1, |
2006, at the direction of and upon notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts not exceeding a total of |
|
$80,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Tobacco |
Settlement Recovery Fund. Any amounts so transferred shall be |
re-transferred by the State Comptroller and the State Treasurer |
from the Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund to the General |
Revenue Fund at the direction of and upon notification from the |
Governor, but in any event on or before June 30, 2006.
|
(dd)
(y) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on April 1, 2005, or as soon thereafter as |
may be practical, at the direction of the Director of Public |
Aid (now Director of Healthcare and Family Services) , the State |
Comptroller shall direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer |
from the Public Aid Recoveries Trust Fund amounts not to exceed |
$14,000,000 to the Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust Fund. |
(ee) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, on July 1, |
2006, or as soon thereafter as practical, the State Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer the |
remaining balance from the Illinois Civic Center Bond Fund to |
the Illinois Civic Center Bond Retirement and Interest Fund. |
(ff) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on and after July 1, 2006 and until June |
30, 2007, at the direction of and upon notification from the |
Director of the Governor's Office of Management and Budget, the |
State Comptroller shall direct and the State Treasurer shall |
transfer amounts not exceeding a total of $1,900,000 from the |
General Revenue Fund to the Illinois Capital Revolving Loan |
Fund. |
(gg) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on and after July 1, 2006 and until May 1, |
2007, at the direction of and upon notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts not exceeding a total of |
$80,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Tobacco |
Settlement Recovery Fund. Any amounts so transferred shall be |
retransferred by the State Comptroller and the State Treasurer |
from the Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund to the General |
Revenue Fund at the direction of and upon notification from the |
|
Governor, but in any event on or before June 30, 2007. |
(hh) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on and after July 1, 2006 and until June |
30, 2007, at the direction of and upon notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts from the Illinois Affordable |
Housing Trust Fund to the designated funds not exceeding the |
following amounts: |
DCFS Children's Services Fund .................$2,200,000
|
Department of Corrections Reimbursement |
and Education Fund ........................$1,500,000
|
Supplemental Low-Income Energy |
Assistance Fund ..............................$75,000
|
(ii) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on or before August 31, 2006, the Governor |
and the State Comptroller may agree to transfer the surplus |
cash balance from the General Revenue Fund to the Budget |
Stabilization Fund and the Pension Stabilization Fund in equal |
proportions. The determination of the amount of the surplus |
cash balance shall be made by the Governor, with the |
concurrence of the State Comptroller, after taking into account |
the June 30, 2006 balances in the general funds and the actual |
or estimated spending from the general funds during the lapse |
period. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the maximum amount that |
may be transferred under this subsection (ii) is $50,000,000. |
(jj) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on July 1, 2006, or as soon thereafter as |
practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $8,250,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Presidential Library and Museum Operating |
Fund. |
(kk) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on July 1, 2006, or as soon thereafter as |
practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $1,400,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Violence Prevention Fund.
|
|
(ll) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on the first day of each calendar quarter |
of the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2006, or as soon |
thereafter as practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer from the General Revenue |
Fund amounts equal to one-fourth of $20,000,000 to the |
Renewable Energy Resources Trust Fund. |
(mm) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on July 1, 2006, or as soon thereafter as |
practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $1,320,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the I-FLY Fund. |
(nn) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on July 1, 2006, or as soon thereafter as |
practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $3,000,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the African-American HIV/AIDS Response Fund. |
(oo) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, on and after July 1, 2006 and until June |
30, 2007, at the direction of and upon notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts identified as net receipts |
from the sale of all or part of the Illinois Student Assistance |
Commission loan portfolio from the Student Loan Operating Fund |
to the General Revenue Fund. The maximum amount that may be |
transferred pursuant to this Section is $38,800,000. In |
addition, no transfer may be made pursuant to this Section that |
would have the effect of reducing the available balance in the |
Student Loan Operating Fund to an amount less than the amount |
remaining unexpended and unreserved from the total |
appropriations from the Fund estimated to be expended for the |
fiscal year. The State Treasurer and Comptroller shall transfer |
the amounts designated under this Section as soon as may be |
practical after receiving the direction to transfer from the |
Governor.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-32, eff. 6-20-03; 93-648, eff. 1-8-04; 93-839, |
|
eff. 7-30-04; 93-1067, eff. 1-15-05; 94-58, eff. 6-17-05; |
94-91, eff. 7-1-05; revised 12-15-05.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/8h)
|
Sec. 8h. Transfers to General Revenue Fund. |
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b), (c), (d), or (e),
|
notwithstanding any other
State law to the contrary, the |
Governor
may, through June 30, 2007, from time to time direct |
the State Treasurer and Comptroller to transfer
a specified sum |
from any fund held by the State Treasurer to the General
|
Revenue Fund in order to help defray the State's operating |
costs for the
fiscal year. The total transfer under this |
Section from any fund in any
fiscal year shall not exceed the |
lesser of (i) 8% of the revenues to be deposited
into the fund |
during that fiscal year or (ii) an amount that leaves a |
remaining fund balance of 25% of the July 1 fund balance of |
that fiscal year. In fiscal year 2005 only, prior to |
calculating the July 1, 2004 final balances, the Governor may |
calculate and direct the State Treasurer with the Comptroller |
to transfer additional amounts determined by applying the |
formula authorized in Public Act 93-839 to the funds balances |
on July 1, 2003.
No transfer may be made from a fund under this |
Section that would have the
effect of reducing the available |
balance in the fund to an amount less than
the amount remaining |
unexpended and unreserved from the total appropriation
from |
that fund estimated to be expended for that fiscal year. This |
Section does not apply to any
funds that are restricted by |
federal law to a specific use, to any funds in
the Motor Fuel |
Tax Fund, the Intercity Passenger Rail Fund, the Hospital |
Provider Fund, the Medicaid Provider Relief Fund, the Teacher |
Health Insurance Security Fund, the Reviewing Court |
Alternative Dispute Resolution Fund, or the Voters' Guide Fund, |
the Foreign Language Interpreter Fund, the Lawyers' Assistance |
Program Fund, the Supreme Court Federal Projects Fund, the |
Supreme Court Special State Projects Fund, or the Low-Level |
Radioactive Waste Facility Development and Operation Fund, or |
|
the Hospital Basic Services Preservation Fund, or to any
funds |
to which subsection (f) of Section 20-40 of the Nursing and |
Advanced Practice Nursing Act applies. No transfers may be made |
under this Section from the Pet Population Control Fund. |
Notwithstanding any
other provision of this Section, for fiscal |
year 2004,
the total transfer under this Section from the Road |
Fund or the State
Construction Account Fund shall not exceed |
the lesser of (i) 5% of the revenues to be deposited
into the |
fund during that fiscal year or (ii) 25% of the beginning |
balance in the fund.
For fiscal year 2005 through fiscal year |
2007, no amounts may be transferred under this Section from the |
Road Fund, the State Construction Account Fund, the Criminal |
Justice Information Systems Trust Fund, the Wireless Service |
Emergency Fund, or the Mandatory Arbitration Fund.
|
In determining the available balance in a fund, the |
Governor
may include receipts, transfers into the fund, and |
other
resources anticipated to be available in the fund in that |
fiscal year.
|
The State Treasurer and Comptroller shall transfer the |
amounts designated
under this Section as soon as may be |
practicable after receiving the direction
to transfer from the |
Governor.
|
(b) This Section does not apply to: (i) the Ticket For The |
Cure Fund ; (ii)
or to any fund established under the Community |
Senior Services and Resources Act; or (iii)
(ii) on or after |
January 1, 2006 ( the effective date of Public Act 94-511)
this |
amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly , the Child Labor |
and Day and Temporary Labor Enforcement Fund. |
(c) This Section does not apply to the Demutualization |
Trust Fund established under the Uniform Disposition of |
Unclaimed Property Act.
|
(d)
(c) This Section does not apply to moneys set aside in |
the Illinois State Podiatric Disciplinary Fund for podiatric |
scholarships and residency programs under the Podiatric |
Scholarship and Residency Act. |
(e) Subsection (a) does not apply to, and no transfer may |
|
be made under this Section from, the Pension Stabilization |
Fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-32, eff. 6-20-03; 93-659, eff. 2-3-04; 93-674, |
eff. 6-10-04; 93-714, eff. 7-12-04; 93-801, eff. 7-22-04; |
93-839, eff. 7-30-04; 93-1054, eff. 11-18-04; 93-1067, eff. |
1-15-05; 94-91, eff. 7-1-05; 94-120, eff. 7-6-05; 94-511, eff. |
1-1-06; 94-535, eff. 8-10-05; 94-639, eff. 8-22-05; 94-645, |
eff. 8-22-05; 94-648, eff. 1-1-06; 94-686, eff. 11-2-05; |
94-691, eff. 11-2-05; 94-726, eff. 1-20-06; revised 1-23-06.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/13.2) (from Ch. 127, par. 149.2)
|
Sec. 13.2. Transfers among line item appropriations.
|
(a) Transfers among line item appropriations from the same
|
treasury fund for the objects specified in this Section may be |
made in
the manner provided in this Section when the balance |
remaining in one or
more such line item appropriations is |
insufficient for the purpose for
which the appropriation was |
made.
|
(a-1) No transfers may be made from one
agency to another |
agency, nor may transfers be made from one institution
of |
higher education to another institution of higher education.
|
(a-2) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, |
transfers may be made only among the objects of expenditure |
enumerated
in this Section, except that no funds may be |
transferred from any
appropriation for personal services, from |
any appropriation for State
contributions to the State |
Employees' Retirement System, from any
separate appropriation |
for employee retirement contributions paid by the
employer, nor |
from any appropriation for State contribution for
employee |
group insurance. During State fiscal year 2005, an agency may |
transfer amounts among its appropriations within the same |
treasury fund for personal services, employee retirement |
contributions paid by employer, and State Contributions to |
retirement systems; notwithstanding and in addition to the |
transfers authorized in subsection (c) of this Section, the |
fiscal year 2005 transfers authorized in this sentence may be |
|
made in an amount not to exceed 2% of the aggregate amount |
appropriated to an agency within the same treasury fund. During |
State fiscal year 2007, the Departments of Children and Family |
Services, Corrections, Human Services, and Juvenile Justice |
may transfer amounts among their respective appropriations |
within the same treasury fund for personal services, employee |
retirement contributions paid by employer, and State |
contributions to retirement systems. Notwithstanding, and in |
addition to, the transfers authorized in subsection (c) of this |
Section, these transfers may be made in an amount not to exceed |
2% of the aggregate amount appropriated to an agency within the |
same treasury fund.
|
(a-3) Further, if an agency receives a separate
|
appropriation for employee retirement contributions paid by |
the employer,
any transfer by that agency into an appropriation |
for personal services
must be accompanied by a corresponding |
transfer into the appropriation for
employee retirement |
contributions paid by the employer, in an amount
sufficient to |
meet the employer share of the employee contributions
required |
to be remitted to the retirement system.
|
(b) In addition to the general transfer authority provided |
under
subsection (c), the following agencies have the specific |
transfer authority
granted in this subsection:
|
The Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services
|
Public Aid is authorized to make transfers
representing savings |
attributable to not increasing grants due to the
births of |
additional children from line items for payments of cash grants |
to
line items for payments for employment and social services |
for the purposes
outlined in subsection (f) of Section 4-2 of |
the Illinois Public Aid Code.
|
The Department of Children and Family Services is |
authorized to make
transfers not exceeding 2% of the aggregate |
amount appropriated to it within
the same treasury fund for the |
following line items among these same line
items: Foster Home |
and Specialized Foster Care and Prevention, Institutions
and |
Group Homes and Prevention, and Purchase of Adoption and |
|
Guardianship
Services.
|
The Department on Aging is authorized to make transfers not
|
exceeding 2% of the aggregate amount appropriated to it within |
the same
treasury fund for the following Community Care Program |
line items among these
same line items: Homemaker and Senior |
Companion Services, Alternative Senior Services, Case |
Coordination
Units, and Adult Day Care Services.
|
The State Treasurer is authorized to make transfers among |
line item
appropriations
from the Capital Litigation Trust |
Fund, with respect to costs incurred in
fiscal years 2002 and |
2003 only, when the balance remaining in one or
more such
line |
item appropriations is insufficient for the purpose for which |
the
appropriation was
made, provided that no such transfer may |
be made unless the amount transferred
is no
longer required for |
the purpose for which that appropriation was made.
|
(c) The sum of such transfers for an agency in a fiscal |
year shall not
exceed 2% of the aggregate amount appropriated |
to it within the same treasury
fund for the following objects: |
Personal Services; Extra Help; Student and
Inmate |
Compensation; State Contributions to Retirement Systems; State
|
Contributions to Social Security; State Contribution for |
Employee Group
Insurance; Contractual Services; Travel; |
Commodities; Printing; Equipment;
Electronic Data Processing; |
Operation of Automotive Equipment;
Telecommunications |
Services; Travel and Allowance for Committed, Paroled
and |
Discharged Prisoners; Library Books; Federal Matching Grants |
for
Student Loans; Refunds; Workers' Compensation, |
Occupational Disease, and
Tort Claims; and, in appropriations |
to institutions of higher education,
Awards and Grants. |
Notwithstanding the above, any amounts appropriated for
|
payment of workers' compensation claims to an agency to which |
the authority
to evaluate, administer and pay such claims has |
been delegated by the
Department of Central Management Services |
may be transferred to any other
expenditure object where such |
amounts exceed the amount necessary for the
payment of such |
claims.
|
|
(c-1) Special provisions for State fiscal year 2003. |
Notwithstanding any
other provision of this Section to the |
contrary, for State fiscal year 2003
only, transfers among line |
item appropriations to an agency from the same
treasury fund |
may be made provided that the sum of such transfers for an |
agency
in State fiscal year 2003 shall not exceed 3% of the |
aggregate amount
appropriated to that State agency for State |
fiscal year 2003 for the following
objects: personal services, |
except that no transfer may be approved which
reduces the |
aggregate appropriations for personal services within an |
agency;
extra help; student and inmate compensation; State
|
contributions to retirement systems; State contributions to |
social security;
State contributions for employee group |
insurance; contractual services; travel;
commodities; |
printing; equipment; electronic data processing; operation of
|
automotive equipment; telecommunications services; travel and |
allowance for
committed, paroled, and discharged prisoners; |
library books; federal matching
grants for student loans; |
refunds; workers' compensation, occupational disease,
and tort |
claims; and, in appropriations to institutions of higher |
education,
awards and grants.
|
(c-2) Special provisions for State fiscal year 2005. |
Notwithstanding subsections (a), (a-2), and (c), for State |
fiscal year 2005 only, transfers may be made among any line |
item appropriations from the same or any other treasury fund |
for any objects or purposes, without limitation, when the |
balance remaining in one or more such line item appropriations |
is insufficient for the purpose for which the appropriation was |
made, provided that the sum of those transfers by a State |
agency shall not exceed 4% of the aggregate amount appropriated |
to that State agency for fiscal year 2005.
|
(d) Transfers among appropriations made to agencies of the |
Legislative
and Judicial departments and to the |
constitutionally elected officers in the
Executive branch |
require the approval of the officer authorized in Section 10
of |
this Act to approve and certify vouchers. Transfers among |
|
appropriations
made to the University of Illinois, Southern |
Illinois University, Chicago State
University, Eastern |
Illinois University, Governors State University, Illinois
|
State University, Northeastern Illinois University, Northern |
Illinois
University, Western Illinois University, the Illinois |
Mathematics and Science
Academy and the Board of Higher |
Education require the approval of the Board of
Higher Education |
and the Governor. Transfers among appropriations to all other
|
agencies require the approval of the Governor.
|
The officer responsible for approval shall certify that the
|
transfer is necessary to carry out the programs and purposes |
for which
the appropriations were made by the General Assembly |
and shall transmit
to the State Comptroller a certified copy of |
the approval which shall
set forth the specific amounts |
transferred so that the Comptroller may
change his records |
accordingly. The Comptroller shall furnish the
Governor with |
information copies of all transfers approved for agencies
of |
the Legislative and Judicial departments and transfers |
approved by
the constitutionally elected officials of the |
Executive branch other
than the Governor, showing the amounts |
transferred and indicating the
dates such changes were entered |
on the Comptroller's records.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-600, eff. 6-28-02; 92-885, eff. 1-13-03; |
93-680, eff. 7-1-04; 93-839, eff. 7-30-04; revised 12-15-05.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.344 rep.)
|
Section 5-45. The State Finance Act is amended by repealing |
Section 5.344 on September 1, 2006. |
Section 5-46. The Budget Stabilization Act is amended by |
changing Sections 10 and 15 and adding Sections 20 and 25 as |
follows: |
(30 ILCS 122/10)
|
Sec. 10. Budget limitations.
|
(a) In addition to Section 50-5 of the State Budget Law
of |
|
the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois, the General
|
Assembly's appropriations and transfers or diversions as |
required by
law from general funds shall not exceed
99%
99.5%
|
of the estimated general funds revenues for the fiscal
year |
when revenue estimates of the State's general funds
revenues |
exceed the prior fiscal year's estimated general
funds revenues |
by more than 4%.
|
(b) The General Assembly's appropriations and transfers or
|
diversions as required by law from general
funds shall not |
exceed 98%
99% of the estimated general funds
revenues for the |
fiscal year when revenue estimates of the
State's general funds |
revenues exceed the prior fiscal year's
estimated general funds |
revenues by more than 4% for 2 or
more consecutive fiscal |
years.
|
(c) For the purpose of this Act, "estimated general funds |
revenues"
include, for each budget year, all taxes, fees, and |
other revenues
expected to be deposited into the State's |
general funds, including
recurring transfers from other State |
funds into the general funds.
|
Year-over-year comparisons used to determine the |
percentage growth
factor of estimated general funds revenues |
shall exclude the sum of the
following: (i) expected revenues |
resulting from new taxes or fees or
from tax or fee increases |
during the first year of the change, (ii)
expected revenues |
resulting from one-time receipts or non-recurring
transfers |
in, (iii) expected proceeds resulting from borrowing, and
(iv) |
increases in federal grants that must be completely |
appropriated
based on the terms of the grants.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-660, eff. 7-1-04 .) |
(30 ILCS 122/15)
|
Sec. 15. Transfers to Budget Stabilization Fund.
In |
furtherance of the State's objective for the Budget |
Stabilization
Fund to have resources representing 5% of the |
State's annual general
funds revenues:
|
(a) For each fiscal year when the General Assembly's
|
|
appropriations and transfers or diversions as required by law
|
from general funds do not exceed 99%
99.5% of the
estimated |
general funds revenues pursuant to subsection (a)
of Section |
10, the Comptroller shall transfer from the
General Revenue |
Fund as provided by this Section a total
amount equal to 0.5%
|
.5% of the estimated general funds revenues
to the Budget |
Stabilization Fund.
|
(b) For each fiscal year when the General Assembly's
|
appropriations and transfers or diversions as required by law
|
from general funds do not exceed 98%
99% of the
estimated |
general funds revenues pursuant to subsection (b)
of Section |
10, the Comptroller shall transfer from the
General Revenue |
Fund as provided by this Section a total
amount equal to 1% of |
the estimated general funds revenues to
the Budget |
Stabilization Fund.
|
(c) The Comptroller shall transfer 1/12 of the total
amount |
to be transferred each fiscal year under this Section
into the |
Budget Stabilization Fund on the first day of each
month of |
that fiscal year or as soon thereafter as possible.
The balance |
of the Budget Stabilization Fund shall not exceed
5% of the |
total of general funds revenues estimated for that
fiscal year |
except as provided by subsection (d) of this Section.
|
(d) If the balance of the Budget Stabilization Fund
exceeds |
5% of the total general funds revenues estimated for that
|
fiscal year, the additional transfers are not required unless |
there are
outstanding liabilities under Section 25 of the State |
Finance Act from prior
fiscal years. If there are such |
outstanding Section 25 liabilities, then the
Comptroller shall |
continue to transfer 1/12 of the total amount identified
for |
transfer to the Budget Stabilization Fund on the first day of |
each month
of that fiscal year or as soon thereafter as |
possible to be reserved for
those Section 25 liabilities. |
Nothing in this Act prohibits the General
Assembly from |
appropriating additional moneys into the Budget Stabilization
|
Fund.
|
(e) On or before August 31 of each fiscal year, the amount
|
|
determined to be transferred to the Budget Stabilization Fund |
shall be
reconciled to actual general funds revenues for that |
fiscal year. The
final transfer for each fiscal year shall be |
adjusted so that the
total amount transferred under this |
Section is equal to the percentage specified in subsection
(a) |
or (b) of this Section 10 of this Act , as applicable, based on |
actual
general funds revenues calculated consistently with |
subsection (c) of
Section 10 of this Act for each fiscal year.
|
(f) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2006 and for each |
fiscal
year thereafter, the budget proposal to the General |
Assembly shall identify
liabilities incurred in a
prior fiscal |
year under Section 25 of the State Finance Act and the budget
|
proposal shall provide
funding as allowable pursuant to |
subsection (d) of this Section, if
applicable.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-660, eff. 7-1-04 .) |
(30 ILCS 122/20 new) |
Sec. 20. Pension Stabilization Fund. |
(a) The Pension Stabilization Fund is hereby created as a |
special fund in the State treasury. Moneys in the fund shall be |
used for the sole purpose of making payments to the designated |
retirement systems as provided in Section 25.
|
(b) For each fiscal year when the General Assembly's
|
appropriations and transfers or diversions as required by law
|
from general funds do not exceed 99% of the
estimated general |
funds revenues pursuant to subsection (a)
of Section 10, the |
Comptroller shall transfer from the
General Revenue Fund as |
provided by this Section a total
amount equal to 0.5% of the |
estimated general funds revenues
to the Pension Stabilization |
Fund. |
(c) For each fiscal year when the General Assembly's
|
appropriations and transfers or diversions as required by law
|
from general funds do not exceed 98% of the
estimated general |
funds revenues pursuant to subsection (b)
of Section 10, the |
Comptroller shall transfer from the
General Revenue Fund as |
provided by this Section a total
amount equal to 1.0% of the |
|
estimated general funds revenues
to the Pension Stabilization |
Fund. |
(d) The Comptroller shall transfer 1/12 of the total
amount |
to be transferred each fiscal year under this Section
into the |
Pension Stabilization Fund on the first day of each
month of |
that fiscal year or as soon thereafter as possible; except that |
the final transfer of the fiscal year shall be made as soon as |
practical after the August 31 following the end of the fiscal |
year. |
Before the final transfer for a fiscal year is made, the |
Comptroller shall reconcile the estimated general funds |
revenues used in calculating the other transfers under this |
Section for that fiscal year with the actual general funds |
revenues for that fiscal year. The
final transfer for the |
fiscal year shall be adjusted so that the
total amount |
transferred under this Section for that fiscal year is equal to |
the percentage specified in subsection
(b) or (c) of this |
Section, whichever is applicable, of the actual
general funds |
revenues for that fiscal year. The actual general funds |
revenues for the fiscal year shall be calculated in a manner |
consistent with subsection (c) of
Section 10 of this Act.
|
(30 ILCS 122/25 new)
|
Sec. 25. Transfers from the Pension Stabilization Fund. |
(a) As used in this Section, "designated retirement |
systems" means: |
(1) the State Employees' Retirement System of
|
Illinois; |
(2) the Teachers' Retirement System of the State of
|
Illinois; |
(3) the State Universities Retirement System; |
(4) the Judges Retirement System of Illinois; and |
(5) the General Assembly Retirement System. |
(b) As soon as may be practical after any money is |
deposited into the Pension Stabilization Fund, the State |
Comptroller shall apportion the deposited amount among the |
|
designated retirement systems and the State Comptroller and |
State Treasurer shall pay the apportioned amounts to the |
designated retirement systems. The amount deposited shall be |
apportioned among the designated retirement systems in the same |
proportion as their respective portions of the
total actuarial |
reserve deficiency of the designated retirement systems, as |
most
recently determined by the Governor's Office of Management |
and
Budget. Amounts received by a designated retirement system |
under this Section shall be used for funding the unfunded |
liabilities of the retirement system. Payments under this |
Section are authorized by the continuing appropriation under |
Section 1.7 of the State Pension Funds Continuing Appropriation |
Act. |
(c) At the request of the State Comptroller, the Governor's |
Office of Management and Budget shall
determine the individual |
and total actuarial reserve deficiencies of the
designated |
retirement systems. For this purpose, the
Governor's Office of |
Management and Budget shall consider the
latest available audit |
and actuarial reports of each of the
retirement systems and the |
relevant reports and statistics of
the Public Pension Division |
of the Department of
Financial and Professional Regulation. |
(d) Payments to the designated retirement systems under |
this Section shall be in addition to, and not in lieu of, any |
State contributions required under Section 2-124, 14-131, |
15-155, 16-158, or 18-131 of the Illinois Pension Code. |
Section 5-55. The Illinois Income Tax Act is amended by |
changing Section 901 as follows:
|
(35 ILCS 5/901) (from Ch. 120, par. 9-901)
|
Sec. 901. Collection Authority.
|
(a) In general.
|
The Department shall collect the taxes imposed by this Act. |
The Department
shall collect certified past due child support |
amounts under Section 2505-650
of the Department of Revenue Law |
(20 ILCS 2505/2505-650). Except as
provided in subsections (c) |
|
and (e) of this Section, money collected
pursuant to |
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act shall be
|
paid into the General Revenue Fund in the State treasury; money
|
collected pursuant to subsections (c) and (d) of Section 201 of |
this Act
shall be paid into the Personal Property Tax |
Replacement Fund, a special
fund in the State Treasury; and |
money collected under Section 2505-650 of the
Department of |
Revenue Law (20 ILCS 2505/2505-650) shall be paid
into the
|
Child Support Enforcement Trust Fund, a special fund outside |
the State
Treasury, or
to the State
Disbursement Unit |
established under Section 10-26 of the Illinois Public Aid
|
Code, as directed by the Department of Healthcare and Family |
Services
Public
Aid .
|
(b) Local Governmental Distributive Fund.
|
Beginning August 1, 1969, and continuing through June 30, |
1994, the Treasurer
shall transfer each month from the General |
Revenue Fund to a special fund in
the State treasury, to be |
known as the "Local Government Distributive Fund", an
amount |
equal to 1/12 of the net revenue realized from the tax imposed |
by
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act during |
the preceding month.
Beginning July 1, 1994, and continuing |
through June 30, 1995, the Treasurer
shall transfer each month |
from the General Revenue Fund to the Local Government
|
Distributive Fund an amount equal to 1/11 of the net revenue |
realized from the
tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of |
Section 201 of this Act during the
preceding month. Beginning |
July 1, 1995, the Treasurer shall transfer each
month from the |
General Revenue Fund to the Local Government Distributive Fund
|
an amount equal to the net of (i) 1/10 of the net revenue |
realized from the
tax imposed by
subsections (a) and (b) of |
Section 201 of the Illinois Income Tax Act during
the preceding |
month
(ii) minus, beginning July 1, 2003 and ending June 30, |
2004, $6,666,666, and
beginning July 1,
2004,
zero. Net revenue |
realized for a month shall be defined as the
revenue from the |
tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this
|
Act which is deposited in the General Revenue Fund, the |
|
Educational Assistance
Fund and the Income Tax Surcharge Local |
Government Distributive Fund during the
month minus the amount |
paid out of the General Revenue Fund in State warrants
during |
that same month as refunds to taxpayers for overpayment of |
liability
under the tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of |
Section 201 of this Act.
|
(c) Deposits Into Income Tax Refund Fund.
|
(1) Beginning on January 1, 1989 and thereafter, the |
Department shall
deposit a percentage of the amounts |
collected pursuant to subsections (a)
and (b)(1), (2), and |
(3), of Section 201 of this Act into a fund in the State
|
treasury known as the Income Tax Refund Fund. The |
Department shall deposit 6%
of such amounts during the |
period beginning January 1, 1989 and ending on June
30, |
1989. Beginning with State fiscal year 1990 and for each |
fiscal year
thereafter, the percentage deposited into the |
Income Tax Refund Fund during a
fiscal year shall be the |
Annual Percentage. For fiscal years 1999 through
2001, the |
Annual Percentage shall be 7.1%.
For fiscal year 2003, the |
Annual Percentage shall be 8%.
For fiscal year 2004, the |
Annual Percentage shall be 11.7%. Upon the effective date |
of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, the |
Annual Percentage shall be 10% for fiscal year 2005. For |
fiscal year 2006, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.75%. For |
fiscal year 2007, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.75%. For |
all other
fiscal years, the
Annual Percentage shall be |
calculated as a fraction, the numerator of which
shall be |
the amount of refunds approved for payment by the |
Department during
the preceding fiscal year as a result of |
overpayment of tax liability under
subsections (a) and |
(b)(1), (2), and (3) of Section 201 of this Act plus the
|
amount of such refunds remaining approved but unpaid at the |
end of the
preceding fiscal year, minus the amounts |
transferred into the Income Tax
Refund Fund from the |
Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund, and
the denominator of |
which shall be the amounts which will be collected pursuant
|
|
to subsections (a) and (b)(1), (2), and (3) of Section 201 |
of this Act during
the preceding fiscal year; except that |
in State fiscal year 2002, the Annual
Percentage shall in |
no event exceed 7.6%. The Director of Revenue shall
certify |
the Annual Percentage to the Comptroller on the last |
business day of
the fiscal year immediately preceding the |
fiscal year for which it is to be
effective.
|
(2) Beginning on January 1, 1989 and thereafter, the |
Department shall
deposit a percentage of the amounts |
collected pursuant to subsections (a)
and (b)(6), (7), and |
(8), (c) and (d) of Section 201
of this Act into a fund in |
the State treasury known as the Income Tax
Refund Fund. The |
Department shall deposit 18% of such amounts during the
|
period beginning January 1, 1989 and ending on June 30, |
1989. Beginning
with State fiscal year 1990 and for each |
fiscal year thereafter, the
percentage deposited into the |
Income Tax Refund Fund during a fiscal year
shall be the |
Annual Percentage. For fiscal years 1999, 2000, and 2001, |
the
Annual Percentage shall be 19%.
For fiscal year 2003, |
the Annual Percentage shall be 27%. For fiscal year
2004, |
the Annual Percentage shall be 32%.
Upon the effective date |
of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, the |
Annual Percentage shall be 24% for fiscal year 2005.
For |
fiscal year 2006, the Annual Percentage shall be 20%. For |
fiscal year 2007, the Annual Percentage shall be 17.5%. For |
all other fiscal years, the Annual
Percentage shall be |
calculated
as a fraction, the numerator of which shall be |
the amount of refunds
approved for payment by the |
Department during the preceding fiscal year as
a result of |
overpayment of tax liability under subsections (a) and |
(b)(6),
(7), and (8), (c) and (d) of Section 201 of this |
Act plus the
amount of such refunds remaining approved but |
unpaid at the end of the
preceding fiscal year, and the |
denominator of
which shall be the amounts which will be |
collected pursuant to subsections (a)
and (b)(6), (7), and |
(8), (c) and (d) of Section 201 of this Act during the
|
|
preceding fiscal year; except that in State fiscal year |
2002, the Annual
Percentage shall in no event exceed 23%. |
The Director of Revenue shall
certify the Annual Percentage |
to the Comptroller on the last business day of
the fiscal |
year immediately preceding the fiscal year for which it is |
to be
effective.
|
(3) The Comptroller shall order transferred and the |
Treasurer shall
transfer from the Tobacco Settlement |
Recovery Fund to the Income Tax Refund
Fund (i) $35,000,000 |
in January, 2001, (ii) $35,000,000 in January, 2002, and
|
(iii) $35,000,000 in January, 2003.
|
(d) Expenditures from Income Tax Refund Fund.
|
(1) Beginning January 1, 1989, money in the Income Tax |
Refund Fund
shall be expended exclusively for the purpose |
of paying refunds resulting
from overpayment of tax |
liability under Section 201 of this Act, for paying
rebates |
under Section 208.1 in the event that the amounts in the |
Homeowners'
Tax Relief Fund are insufficient for that |
purpose,
and for
making transfers pursuant to this |
subsection (d).
|
(2) The Director shall order payment of refunds |
resulting from
overpayment of tax liability under Section |
201 of this Act from the
Income Tax Refund Fund only to the |
extent that amounts collected pursuant
to Section 201 of |
this Act and transfers pursuant to this subsection (d)
and |
item (3) of subsection (c) have been deposited and retained |
in the
Fund.
|
(3) As soon as possible after the end of each fiscal |
year, the Director
shall
order transferred and the State |
Treasurer and State Comptroller shall
transfer from the |
Income Tax Refund Fund to the Personal Property Tax
|
Replacement Fund an amount, certified by the Director to |
the Comptroller,
equal to the excess of the amount |
collected pursuant to subsections (c) and
(d) of Section |
201 of this Act deposited into the Income Tax Refund Fund
|
during the fiscal year over the amount of refunds resulting |
|
from
overpayment of tax liability under subsections (c) and |
(d) of Section 201
of this Act paid from the Income Tax |
Refund Fund during the fiscal year.
|
(4) As soon as possible after the end of each fiscal |
year, the Director shall
order transferred and the State |
Treasurer and State Comptroller shall
transfer from the |
Personal Property Tax Replacement Fund to the Income Tax
|
Refund Fund an amount, certified by the Director to the |
Comptroller, equal
to the excess of the amount of refunds |
resulting from overpayment of tax
liability under |
subsections (c) and (d) of Section 201 of this Act paid
|
from the Income Tax Refund Fund during the fiscal year over |
the amount
collected pursuant to subsections (c) and (d) of |
Section 201 of this Act
deposited into the Income Tax |
Refund Fund during the fiscal year.
|
(4.5) As soon as possible after the end of fiscal year |
1999 and of each
fiscal year
thereafter, the Director shall |
order transferred and the State Treasurer and
State |
Comptroller shall transfer from the Income Tax Refund Fund |
to the General
Revenue Fund any surplus remaining in the |
Income Tax Refund Fund as of the end
of such fiscal year; |
excluding for fiscal years 2000, 2001, and 2002
amounts |
attributable to transfers under item (3) of subsection (c) |
less refunds
resulting from the earned income tax credit.
|
(5) This Act shall constitute an irrevocable and |
continuing
appropriation from the Income Tax Refund Fund |
for the purpose of paying
refunds upon the order of the |
Director in accordance with the provisions of
this Section.
|
(e) Deposits into the Education Assistance Fund and the |
Income Tax
Surcharge Local Government Distributive Fund.
|
On July 1, 1991, and thereafter, of the amounts collected |
pursuant to
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act, |
minus deposits into the
Income Tax Refund Fund, the Department |
shall deposit 7.3% into the
Education Assistance Fund in the |
State Treasury. Beginning July 1, 1991,
and continuing through |
January 31, 1993, of the amounts collected pursuant to
|
|
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of the Illinois Income |
Tax Act, minus
deposits into the Income Tax Refund Fund, the |
Department shall deposit 3.0%
into the Income Tax Surcharge |
Local Government Distributive Fund in the State
Treasury. |
Beginning February 1, 1993 and continuing through June 30, |
1993, of
the amounts collected pursuant to subsections (a) and |
(b) of Section 201 of the
Illinois Income Tax Act, minus |
deposits into the Income Tax Refund Fund, the
Department shall |
deposit 4.4% into the Income Tax Surcharge Local Government
|
Distributive Fund in the State Treasury. Beginning July 1, |
1993, and
continuing through June 30, 1994, of the amounts |
collected under subsections
(a) and (b) of Section 201 of this |
Act, minus deposits into the Income Tax
Refund Fund, the |
Department shall deposit 1.475% into the Income Tax Surcharge
|
Local Government Distributive Fund in the State Treasury.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-32, eff. 6-20-03; 93-839, eff. 7-30-04; 94-91, |
eff. 7-1-05; revised 12-15-05.)
|
Section 5-60. The Cigarette Tax Act is amended by changing |
Section 2 as follows:
|
(35 ILCS 130/2) (from Ch. 120, par. 453.2)
|
Sec. 2. Tax imposed; rate; collection, payment, and |
distribution;
discount. |
(a) A tax is imposed upon any person engaged in business as |
a
retailer of cigarettes in this State at the rate of 5 1/2 |
mills per
cigarette sold, or otherwise disposed of in the |
course of such business in
this State. In addition to any other |
tax imposed by this Act, a tax is
imposed upon any person |
engaged in business as a retailer of cigarettes in
this State |
at a rate of 1/2 mill per cigarette sold or otherwise disposed
|
of in the course of such business in this State on and after |
January 1,
1947, and shall be paid into the Metropolitan Fair |
and Exposition Authority
Reconstruction Fund or as otherwise |
provided in Section 29. On and after December 1, 1985, in |
addition to any
other tax imposed by this Act, a tax is imposed |
|
upon any person engaged in
business as a retailer of cigarettes |
in this State at a rate of 4 mills per
cigarette sold or |
otherwise disposed of in the course of such business in
this |
State. Of the additional tax imposed by this amendatory Act of |
1985,
$9,000,000 of the moneys received by the Department of |
Revenue pursuant to
this Act shall be paid each month into the |
Common School Fund. On and after
the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1989, in addition to any other tax
imposed by |
this Act, a tax is imposed upon any person engaged in business |
as a
retailer of cigarettes at the rate of 5 mills per |
cigarette sold or
otherwise disposed of in the course of such |
business in this State.
On and after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1993, in addition
to any other tax imposed by |
this Act, a tax is imposed upon any person engaged
in business |
as a retailer of cigarettes at the rate of 7 mills per |
cigarette
sold or otherwise disposed of in the course of such |
business in this State.
On and after December 15, 1997, in |
addition
to any other tax imposed by this Act, a tax is imposed |
upon any person engaged
in business as a retailer of cigarettes |
at the rate of 7 mills per cigarette
sold or otherwise disposed |
of in the course of such business of this State.
All of the |
moneys received by the Department of Revenue pursuant to this |
Act
and the Cigarette Use Tax Act from the additional taxes |
imposed by this
amendatory Act of 1997, shall be paid each |
month into the Common School Fund.
On and after July 1, 2002, |
in addition to any other tax imposed by this Act,
a tax is |
imposed upon any person engaged in business as a retailer of
|
cigarettes at the rate of 20.0 mills per cigarette sold or |
otherwise disposed
of
in the course of such business in this |
State.
The payment of such taxes shall be evidenced by a stamp |
affixed to
each original package of cigarettes, or an |
authorized substitute for such stamp
imprinted on each original |
package of such cigarettes underneath the sealed
transparent |
outside wrapper of such original package, as hereinafter |
provided.
However, such taxes are not imposed upon any activity |
in such business in
interstate commerce or otherwise, which |
|
activity may not under
the Constitution and statutes of the |
United States be made the subject of
taxation by this State.
|
Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
the 92nd General
Assembly and through June 30, 2006 ,
all of the |
moneys received by the Department of Revenue pursuant to this |
Act
and the Cigarette Use Tax Act, other than the moneys that |
are dedicated to the Common
School Fund, shall be distributed |
each month as follows: first, there shall be
paid into the |
General Revenue Fund an amount which, when added to the amount
|
paid into the Common School Fund for that month, equals |
$33,300,000, except that in the month of August of 2004, this |
amount shall equal $83,300,000; then, from
the moneys |
remaining, if any amounts required to be paid into the General
|
Revenue Fund in previous months remain unpaid, those amounts |
shall be paid into
the General Revenue Fund;
then, beginning on |
April 1, 2003, from the moneys remaining, $5,000,000 per
month |
shall be paid into the School Infrastructure Fund; then, if any |
amounts
required to be paid into the School Infrastructure Fund |
in previous months
remain unpaid, those amounts shall be paid |
into the School Infrastructure
Fund;
then the moneys remaining, |
if any, shall be paid into the Long-Term Care
Provider Fund.
To |
the extent that more than $25,000,000 has been paid into the |
General
Revenue Fund and Common School Fund per month for the |
period of July 1, 1993
through the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1994 from combined
receipts
of the Cigarette |
Tax Act and the Cigarette Use Tax Act, notwithstanding the
|
distribution provided in this Section, the Department of |
Revenue is hereby
directed to adjust the distribution provided |
in this Section to increase the
next monthly payments to the |
Long Term Care Provider Fund by the amount paid to
the General |
Revenue Fund and Common School Fund in excess of $25,000,000 |
per
month and to decrease the next monthly payments to the |
General Revenue Fund and
Common School Fund by that same excess |
amount.
|
Beginning on July 1, 2006, all of the moneys received by |
the Department of Revenue pursuant to this Act and the |
|
Cigarette Use Tax Act, other than the moneys that are dedicated |
to the Common School Fund, shall be distributed each month as |
follows: first, there shall be paid into the General Revenue |
Fund an amount that, when added to the amount paid into the |
Common School Fund for that month, equals $29,200,000; then, |
from the moneys remaining, if any amounts required to be paid |
into the General Revenue Fund in previous months remain unpaid, |
those amounts shall be paid into the General Revenue Fund; then |
from the moneys remaining, $5,000,000 per month shall be paid |
into the School Infrastructure Fund; then, if any amounts |
required to be paid into the School Infrastructure Fund in |
previous months remain unpaid, those amounts shall be paid into |
the School Infrastructure Fund; then the moneys remaining, if |
any, shall be paid into the Long-Term Care Provider Fund.
|
When any tax imposed herein terminates or has terminated, |
distributors
who have bought stamps while such tax was in |
effect and who therefore paid
such tax, but who can show, to |
the Department's satisfaction, that they
sold the cigarettes to |
which they affixed such stamps after such tax had
terminated |
and did not recover the tax or its equivalent from purchasers,
|
shall be allowed by the Department to take credit for such |
absorbed tax
against subsequent tax stamp purchases from the |
Department by such
distributor.
|
The impact of the tax levied by this Act is imposed upon |
the retailer
and shall be prepaid or pre-collected by the |
distributor for the purpose of
convenience and facility only, |
and the amount of the tax shall be added to
the price of the |
cigarettes sold by such distributor. Collection of the tax
|
shall be evidenced by a stamp or stamps affixed to each |
original package of
cigarettes, as hereinafter provided.
|
Each distributor shall collect the tax from the retailer at |
or before
the time of the sale, shall affix the stamps as |
hereinafter required, and
shall remit the tax collected from |
retailers to the Department, as
hereinafter provided. Any |
distributor who fails to properly collect and pay
the tax |
imposed by this Act shall be liable for the tax. Any |
|
distributor having
cigarettes to which stamps have been affixed |
in his possession for sale on the
effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1989 shall not be required to pay the
|
additional tax imposed by this amendatory Act of 1989 on such |
stamped
cigarettes. Any distributor having cigarettes to which |
stamps have been affixed
in his or her possession for sale at |
12:01 a.m. on the effective date of this
amendatory Act of |
1993, is required to pay the additional tax imposed by this
|
amendatory Act of 1993 on such stamped cigarettes. This |
payment, less the
discount provided in subsection (b), shall be |
due when the distributor first
makes a purchase of cigarette |
tax stamps after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of |
1993, or on the first due date of a return under this Act
after |
the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1993, whichever |
occurs
first. Any distributor having cigarettes to which stamps |
have been affixed
in his possession for sale on December 15, |
1997
shall not be required to pay the additional tax imposed by |
this amendatory Act
of 1997 on such stamped cigarettes.
|
Any distributor having cigarettes to which stamps have been |
affixed in his
or her
possession for sale on July 1, 2002 shall |
not be required to pay the additional
tax imposed by this |
amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly on those
stamped
|
cigarettes.
|
The amount of the Cigarette Tax imposed by this Act shall |
be separately
stated, apart from the price of the goods, by |
both distributors and
retailers, in all advertisements, bills |
and sales invoices.
|
(b) The distributor shall be required to collect the taxes |
provided
under paragraph (a) hereof, and, to cover the costs of |
such collection,
shall be allowed a discount during any year |
commencing July 1st and ending
the following June 30th in |
accordance with the schedule set out
hereinbelow, which |
discount shall be allowed at the time of purchase of the
stamps |
when purchase is required by this Act, or at the time when the |
tax
is remitted to the Department without the purchase of |
stamps from the
Department when that method of paying the tax |
|
is required or authorized by
this Act. Prior to December 1, |
1985, a discount equal to 1 2/3% of
the amount of the tax up to |
and including the first $700,000 paid hereunder by
such |
distributor to the Department during any such year; 1 1/3% of |
the next
$700,000 of tax or any part thereof, paid hereunder by |
such distributor to the
Department during any such year; 1% of |
the next $700,000 of tax, or any part
thereof, paid hereunder |
by such distributor to the Department during any such
year, and |
2/3 of 1% of the amount of any additional tax paid hereunder by |
such
distributor to the Department during any such year shall |
apply. On and after
December 1, 1985, a discount equal to 1.75% |
of the amount of the tax payable
under this Act up to and |
including the first $3,000,000 paid hereunder by such
|
distributor to the Department during any such year and 1.5% of |
the amount of
any additional tax paid hereunder by such |
distributor to the Department during
any such year shall apply.
|
Two or more distributors that use a common means of |
affixing revenue tax
stamps or that are owned or controlled by |
the same interests shall be
treated as a single distributor for |
the purpose of computing the discount.
|
(c) The taxes herein imposed are in addition to all other |
occupation or
privilege taxes imposed by the State of Illinois, |
or by any political
subdivision thereof, or by any municipal |
corporation.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04; 94-91, eff. 7-1-05.)
|
Section 5-65. The Motor Fuel Tax Law is amended by changing |
Section 8 as follows:
|
(35 ILCS 505/8) (from Ch. 120, par. 424)
|
Sec. 8. Except as provided in Section 8a, subdivision
|
(h)(1) of Section 12a, Section 13a.6, and items
13, 14, 15, and |
16 of Section 15, all money received by the Department under
|
this Act, including payments made to the Department by
member |
jurisdictions participating in the International Fuel Tax |
Agreement,
shall be deposited in a special fund in the State |
|
treasury, to be known as the
"Motor Fuel Tax Fund", and shall |
be used as follows:
|
(a) 2 1/2 cents per gallon of the tax collected on special |
fuel under
paragraph (b) of Section 2 and Section 13a of this |
Act shall be transferred
to the State Construction Account Fund |
in the State Treasury;
|
(b) $420,000 shall be transferred each month to the State |
Boating Act
Fund to be used by the Department of Natural |
Resources for the purposes
specified in Article X of the Boat |
Registration and Safety Act;
|
(c) $2,250,000 shall be transferred each month to the Grade |
Crossing
Protection Fund to be used as follows: not less than |
$6,000,000 each fiscal
year shall be used for the construction |
or reconstruction of rail highway grade
separation structures; |
$2,250,000 in fiscal year 2004 and each fiscal
year
thereafter |
shall be transferred to the Transportation
Regulatory Fund and |
shall be accounted for as part of the rail carrier
portion of |
such funds and shall be used to pay the cost of administration
|
of the Illinois Commerce Commission's railroad safety program |
in connection
with its duties under subsection (3) of Section |
18c-7401 of the Illinois
Vehicle Code, with the remainder to be |
used by the Department of Transportation
upon order of the |
Illinois Commerce Commission, to pay that part of the
cost |
apportioned by such Commission to the State to cover the |
interest
of the public in the use of highways, roads, streets, |
or
pedestrian walkways in the
county highway system, township |
and district road system, or municipal
street system as defined |
in the Illinois Highway Code, as the same may
from time to time |
be amended, for separation of grades, for installation,
|
construction or reconstruction of crossing protection or |
reconstruction,
alteration, relocation including construction |
or improvement of any
existing highway necessary for access to |
property or improvement of any
grade crossing including the |
necessary highway approaches thereto of any
railroad across the |
highway or public road, or for the installation,
construction, |
reconstruction, or maintenance of a pedestrian walkway over or
|
|
under a railroad right-of-way, as provided for in and in
|
accordance with Section 18c-7401 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
|
The Commission shall not order more than $2,000,000 per year in |
Grade
Crossing Protection Fund moneys for pedestrian walkways.
|
In entering orders for projects for which payments from the |
Grade Crossing
Protection Fund will be made, the Commission |
shall account for expenditures
authorized by the orders on a |
cash rather than an accrual basis. For purposes
of this |
requirement an "accrual basis" assumes that the total cost of |
the
project is expended in the fiscal year in which the order |
is entered, while a
"cash basis" allocates the cost of the |
project among fiscal years as
expenditures are actually made. |
To meet the requirements of this subsection,
the Illinois |
Commerce Commission shall develop annual and 5-year project |
plans
of rail crossing capital improvements that will be paid |
for with moneys from
the Grade Crossing Protection Fund. The |
annual project plan shall identify
projects for the succeeding |
fiscal year and the 5-year project plan shall
identify projects |
for the 5 directly succeeding fiscal years. The Commission
|
shall submit the annual and 5-year project plans for this Fund |
to the Governor,
the President of the Senate, the Senate |
Minority Leader, the Speaker of the
House of Representatives, |
and the Minority Leader of the House of
Representatives on
the |
first Wednesday in April of each year;
|
(d) of the amount remaining after allocations provided for |
in
subsections (a), (b) and (c), a sufficient amount shall be |
reserved to
pay all of the following:
|
(1) the costs of the Department of Revenue in |
administering this
Act;
|
(2) the costs of the Department of Transportation in |
performing its
duties imposed by the Illinois Highway Code |
for supervising the use of motor
fuel tax funds apportioned |
to municipalities, counties and road districts;
|
(3) refunds provided for in Section 13 of this Act and |
under the terms
of the International Fuel Tax Agreement |
referenced in Section 14a;
|
|
(4) from October 1, 1985 until June 30, 1994, the |
administration of the
Vehicle Emissions Inspection Law, |
which amount shall be certified monthly by
the |
Environmental Protection Agency to the State Comptroller |
and shall promptly
be transferred by the State Comptroller |
and Treasurer from the Motor Fuel Tax
Fund to the Vehicle |
Inspection Fund, and for the period July 1, 1994 through
|
June 30, 2000, one-twelfth of $25,000,000 each month, for |
the period July 1, 2000 through June 30, 2003,
one-twelfth |
of
$30,000,000
each month,
and $15,000,000 on July 1, 2003, |
and $15,000,000 on January 1, 2004, and $15,000,000
on
each
|
July
1 and October 1, or as soon thereafter as may be |
practical, during the period July 1, 2004 through June 30, |
2008
2006 ,
for the administration of the Vehicle Emissions |
Inspection Law of
1995, to be transferred by the State |
Comptroller and Treasurer from the Motor
Fuel Tax Fund into |
the Vehicle Inspection Fund;
|
(5) amounts ordered paid by the Court of Claims; and
|
(6) payment of motor fuel use taxes due to member |
jurisdictions under
the terms of the International Fuel Tax |
Agreement. The Department shall
certify these amounts to |
the Comptroller by the 15th day of each month; the
|
Comptroller shall cause orders to be drawn for such |
amounts, and the Treasurer
shall administer those amounts |
on or before the last day of each month;
|
(e) after allocations for the purposes set forth in |
subsections
(a), (b), (c) and (d), the remaining amount shall |
be apportioned as follows:
|
(1) Until January 1, 2000, 58.4%, and beginning January |
1, 2000, 45.6%
shall be deposited as follows:
|
(A) 37% into the State Construction Account Fund, |
and
|
(B) 63% into the Road Fund, $1,250,000 of which |
shall be reserved each
month for the Department of |
Transportation to be used in accordance with
the |
provisions of Sections 6-901 through 6-906 of the |
|
Illinois Highway Code;
|
(2) Until January 1, 2000, 41.6%, and beginning January |
1, 2000, 54.4%
shall be transferred to the Department of |
Transportation to be
distributed as follows:
|
(A) 49.10% to the municipalities of the State,
|
(B) 16.74% to the counties of the State having |
1,000,000 or more inhabitants,
|
(C) 18.27% to the counties of the State having less |
than 1,000,000 inhabitants,
|
(D) 15.89% to the road districts of the State.
|
As soon as may be after the first day of each month the |
Department of
Transportation shall allot to each municipality |
its share of the amount
apportioned to the several |
municipalities which shall be in proportion
to the population |
of such municipalities as determined by the last
preceding |
municipal census if conducted by the Federal Government or
|
Federal census. If territory is annexed to any municipality |
subsequent
to the time of the last preceding census the |
corporate authorities of
such municipality may cause a census |
to be taken of such annexed
territory and the population so |
ascertained for such territory shall be
added to the population |
of the municipality as determined by the last
preceding census |
for the purpose of determining the allotment for that
|
municipality. If the population of any municipality was not |
determined
by the last Federal census preceding any |
apportionment, the
apportionment to such municipality shall be |
in accordance with any
census taken by such municipality. Any |
municipal census used in
accordance with this Section shall be |
certified to the Department of
Transportation by the clerk of |
such municipality, and the accuracy
thereof shall be subject to |
approval of the Department which may make
such corrections as |
it ascertains to be necessary.
|
As soon as may be after the first day of each month the |
Department of
Transportation shall allot to each county its |
share of the amount
apportioned to the several counties of the |
State as herein provided.
Each allotment to the several |
|
counties having less than 1,000,000
inhabitants shall be in |
proportion to the amount of motor vehicle
license fees received |
from the residents of such counties, respectively,
during the |
preceding calendar year. The Secretary of State shall, on or
|
before April 15 of each year, transmit to the Department of
|
Transportation a full and complete report showing the amount of |
motor
vehicle license fees received from the residents of each |
county,
respectively, during the preceding calendar year. The |
Department of
Transportation shall, each month, use for |
allotment purposes the last
such report received from the |
Secretary of State.
|
As soon as may be after the first day of each month, the |
Department
of Transportation shall allot to the several |
counties their share of the
amount apportioned for the use of |
road districts. The allotment shall
be apportioned among the |
several counties in the State in the proportion
which the total |
mileage of township or district roads in the respective
|
counties bears to the total mileage of all township and |
district roads
in the State. Funds allotted to the respective |
counties for the use of
road districts therein shall be |
allocated to the several road districts
in the county in the |
proportion which the total mileage of such township
or district |
roads in the respective road districts bears to the total
|
mileage of all such township or district roads in the county. |
After
July 1 of any year, no allocation shall be made for any |
road district
unless it levied a tax for road and bridge |
purposes in an amount which
will require the extension of such |
tax against the taxable property in
any such road district at a |
rate of not less than either .08% of the value
thereof, based |
upon the assessment for the year immediately prior to the year
|
in which such tax was levied and as equalized by the Department |
of Revenue
or, in DuPage County, an amount equal to or greater |
than $12,000 per mile of
road under the jurisdiction of the |
road district, whichever is less. If any
road district has |
levied a special tax for road purposes
pursuant to Sections |
6-601, 6-602 and 6-603 of the Illinois Highway Code, and
such |
|
tax was levied in an amount which would require extension at a
|
rate of not less than .08% of the value of the taxable property |
thereof,
as equalized or assessed by the Department of Revenue,
|
or, in DuPage County, an amount equal to or greater than |
$12,000 per mile of
road under the jurisdiction of the road |
district, whichever is less,
such levy shall, however, be |
deemed a proper compliance with this
Section and shall qualify |
such road district for an allotment under this
Section. If a |
township has transferred to the road and bridge fund
money |
which, when added to the amount of any tax levy of the road
|
district would be the equivalent of a tax levy requiring |
extension at a
rate of at least .08%, or, in DuPage County, an |
amount equal to or greater
than $12,000 per mile of road under |
the jurisdiction of the road district,
whichever is less, such |
transfer, together with any such tax levy,
shall be deemed a |
proper compliance with this Section and shall qualify
the road |
district for an allotment under this Section.
|
In counties in which a property tax extension limitation is |
imposed
under the Property Tax Extension Limitation Law, road |
districts may retain
their entitlement to a motor fuel tax |
allotment if, at the time the property
tax
extension limitation |
was imposed, the road district was levying a road and
bridge |
tax at a rate sufficient to entitle it to a motor fuel tax |
allotment
and continues to levy the maximum allowable amount |
after the imposition of the
property tax extension limitation. |
Any road district may in all circumstances
retain its |
entitlement to a motor fuel tax allotment if it levied a road |
and
bridge tax in an amount that will require the extension of |
the tax against the
taxable property in the road district at a |
rate of not less than 0.08% of the
assessed value of the |
property, based upon the assessment for the year
immediately |
preceding the year in which the tax was levied and as equalized |
by
the Department of Revenue or, in DuPage County, an amount |
equal to or greater
than $12,000 per mile of road under the |
jurisdiction of the road district,
whichever is less.
|
As used in this Section the term "road district" means any |
|
road
district, including a county unit road district, provided |
for by the
Illinois Highway Code; and the term "township or |
district road"
means any road in the township and district road |
system as defined in the
Illinois Highway Code. For the |
purposes of this Section, "road
district" also includes park |
districts, forest preserve districts and
conservation |
districts organized under Illinois law and "township or
|
district road" also includes such roads as are maintained by |
park
districts, forest preserve districts and conservation |
districts. The
Department of Transportation shall determine |
the mileage of all township
and district roads for the purposes |
of making allotments and allocations of
motor fuel tax funds |
for use in road districts.
|
Payment of motor fuel tax moneys to municipalities and |
counties shall
be made as soon as possible after the allotment |
is made. The treasurer
of the municipality or county may invest |
these funds until their use is
required and the interest earned |
by these investments shall be limited
to the same uses as the |
principal funds.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-16, eff. 6-28-01; 92-30, eff. 7-1-01; 93-32, |
eff. 6-20-03; 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
Section 5-70. The Illinois Pension Code is amended by |
changing Sections 2-124, 14-108.6, 14-131, 15-155, 16-158, and |
18-131 as follows:
|
(40 ILCS 5/2-124) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 2-124)
|
Sec. 2-124. Contributions by State.
|
(a) The State shall make contributions to the System by
|
appropriations of amounts which, together with the |
contributions of
participants, interest earned on investments, |
and other income
will meet the cost of maintaining and |
administering the System on a 90%
funded basis in accordance |
with actuarial recommendations.
|
(b) The Board shall determine the amount of State
|
contributions required for each fiscal year on the basis of the
|
|
actuarial tables and other assumptions adopted by the Board and |
the
prescribed rate of interest, using the formula in |
subsection (c).
|
(c) For State fiscal years 2011 through 2045, the minimum |
contribution
to the System to be made by the State for each |
fiscal year shall be an amount
determined by the System to be |
sufficient to bring the total assets of the
System up to 90% of |
the total actuarial liabilities of the System by the end of
|
State fiscal year 2045. In making these determinations, the |
required State
contribution shall be calculated each year as a |
level percentage of payroll
over the years remaining to and |
including fiscal year 2045 and shall be
determined under the |
projected unit credit actuarial cost method.
|
For State fiscal years 1996 through 2005, the State |
contribution to
the System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be
increased in equal annual increments |
so that by State fiscal year 2011, the
State is contributing at |
the rate required under this Section.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2006 is |
$4,157,000.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2007 is |
$5,220,300.
|
For each of State fiscal years 2008 through 2010, the State |
contribution to
the System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be
increased in equal annual increments |
from the required State contribution for State fiscal year |
2007, so that by State fiscal year 2011, the
State is |
contributing at the rate otherwise required under this Section.
|
Beginning in State fiscal year 2046, the minimum State |
contribution for
each fiscal year shall be the amount needed to |
maintain the total assets of
the System at 90% of the total |
actuarial liabilities of the System.
|
Amounts received by the System pursuant to Section 25 of |
the Budget Stabilization Act in any fiscal year do not reduce |
|
and do not constitute payment of any portion of the minimum |
State contribution required under this Article in that fiscal |
year. Such amounts shall not reduce, and shall not be included |
in the calculation of, the required State contributions under |
this Article in any future year until the System has reached a |
funding ratio of at least 90%. A reference in this Article to |
the "required State contribution" or any substantially similar |
term does not include or apply to any amounts payable to the |
System under Section 25 of the Budget Stabilization Act.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, the |
required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2005 and for |
fiscal year 2008 and each fiscal year thereafter, as
calculated |
under this Section and
certified under Section 2-134, shall not |
exceed an amount equal to (i) the
amount of the required State |
contribution that would have been calculated under
this Section |
for that fiscal year if the System had not received any |
payments
under subsection (d) of Section 7.2 of the General |
Obligation Bond Act, minus
(ii) the portion of the State's |
total debt service payments for that fiscal
year on the bonds |
issued for the purposes of that Section 7.2, as determined
and |
certified by the Comptroller, that is the same as the System's |
portion of
the total moneys distributed under subsection (d) of |
Section 7.2 of the General
Obligation Bond Act. In determining |
this maximum for State fiscal years 2008 through 2010, however, |
the amount referred to in item (i) shall be increased, as a |
percentage of the applicable employee payroll, in equal |
increments calculated from the sum of the required State |
contribution for State fiscal year 2007 plus the applicable |
portion of the State's total debt service payments for fiscal |
year 2007 on the bonds issued for the purposes of Section 7.2 |
of the General
Obligation Bond Act, so that, by State fiscal |
year 2011, the
State is contributing at the rate otherwise |
required under this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-2, eff. 4-7-03; 94-4, eff. 6-1-05.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/14-108.6) |
|
Sec. 14-108.6. Alternative retirement cancellation |
payment. |
(a) To be eligible for the alternative retirement |
cancellation payment provided in this Section, a person
must: |
(1) be a member of this System who, as of June 1, 2006
|
July 1, 2005 , was
(i) in active payroll status as an |
employee in a position listed in subsection (b) of this |
Section
and continuously employed in a position listed in |
subsection (b) on and after January 1, 2006
2005 and (ii) |
an active contributor to this System with respect to that |
employment; |
(2) have not previously received any retirement |
annuity under this Article; |
(3) in the case of persons employed in a position title |
listed under paragraph (1) of subsection (b), be among the |
first 500 persons to file with the Board on or before |
August 31, 2006
September 30, 2005 a written
application |
requesting the alternative retirement cancellation payment |
provided in this Section; |
(4) in the case of persons employed in a position title |
listed under paragraph (2) of subsection (b), have received |
written authorization from the director or other head of |
his or her department and filed that authorization with the |
system on or before August 1, 2006
September 1, 2005 ; |
(5) if there is a QILDRO in effect against the person, |
file with the Board the written consent of all alternate |
payees under the QILDRO to the election of an alternative |
retirement cancellation payment under this Section;
and |
(6) terminate employment under this Article within one |
month after approval of the person's application |
requesting the alternative retirement cancellation |
payment, but in no event later than September 30, 2006
|
October 31,
2005 . |
(b)(1) Position titles eligible for the alternative |
retirement cancellation payment provided in this Section are: |
911 Analyst III;
Brickmason;
Account Clerk I and II;
|
|
Budget Analyst I and II;
Account Technician I and II;
|
Budget Operations Director;
Accountant;
Budget Principal;
|
Accountant Advanced;
Building Services Worker;
Accountant |
Supervisor;
Building/Grounds Laborer;
Accounting Fiscal |
Administrative Career Trainee;
Building/Grounds Lead 1 and |
2;
Accounts Payable Processing Analyst;
Building/Grounds |
Maintenance Worker;
Accounts Payable Specialist;
|
Building/Grounds Supervisor;
Accounts Processing Analyst;
|
Bureau Chief;
Actuarial Assistant;
Business Administrative |
Specialist;
Administrative and Technology Director;
|
Business Analyst I through IV;
Administrative Assistant I |
through III;
Business Manager;
Administrative Clerk;
|
Buyer;
Administrative Coordinator;
Buyer Assistant;
|
Administrator;
Capital Budget Analyst I and II;
|
Administrator of Capital Programs;
Capital Budget |
Director;
Administrator of Construction Administration;
|
Capital Programs Analyst I and II;
Administrator of |
Contract Administration;
Capital Programs Technician;
|
Administrator of Fair Employment Practices;
Carpenter;
|
Administrator of Fiscal;
Carpenter Foreman;
Administrator |
of Information Management;
Cartographer I through III;
|
Administrator of Information Systems;
Chief - Police;
|
Administrator of Personnel;
Chief Veterans Technician;
|
Administrator of Professional Services;
Circuit |
Provisioning Specialist;
Administrator of Public Affairs;
|
Civil Engineer IV
I through IX;
Administrator of |
Quality-Based Selection;
Civil Engineer Trainee;
|
Administrator of Strategic Planning and Training;
Clerical |
Trainee;
Appeals & Orders Coordinator;
Communications |
Director;
Appraisal Specialist 1 through 3;
Community |
Planner 3;
Assignment Coordinator;
Commander;
Assistant |
Art-in-Architecture Coordinator;
Compliance Specialist;
|
Assistant Chief - Police;
Conservation Education |
Representative;
Assistant Internal Auditor;
Conservation |
Grant Administrator 1 through 3;
Assistant Manager;
|
Construction Supervisor I and II;
Assistant Personnel |
|
Officer;
Consumer Policy Analyst;
Assistant Professor |
Scientist;
Consumer Program Coordinator;
Assistant |
Reimbursement Officer;
Contract Executive;
Assistant |
Steward;
Coordinator of Administrative Services;
Associate |
Director for Administrative Services;
Coordinator of |
Art-in-Architecture;
Associate Museum Director;
|
Corrections Clerk I through III;
Associate Professor |
Scientist;
Corrections Maintenance Supervisor; Corrections |
Caseworker Supervisor; Corrections Food Service |
Supervisor;
Auto Parts Warehouse Specialist;
Corrections |
Maintenance Worker;
Auto Parts Warehouser;
Curator I |
through III;
Automotive Attendant I and II;
Data Processing |
Administrative Specialist;
Automotive Mechanic;
Data |
Processing Assistant;
Automotive Shop Supervisor;
Data |
Processing Operator;
Baker;
Data Processing Specialist;
|
Barber;
Data Processing Supervisor 1 through 3;
|
Beautician;
Data Processing Technician;
Brickmason;
Deputy |
Chief Counsel;
Director of Licensing;
Desktop Technician;
|
Director of Security;
Human Resources Officer;
Division |
Chief;
Human Resources Representative;
Division Director;
|
Human Resources Specialist;
Economic Analyst I through IV;
|
Human Resources Trainee;
Electrical Engineer;
Human |
Services Casework Manager;
Electrical Engineer I through |
V;
Human Services Grant Coordinator 2 and 3;
Electrical |
Equipment Installer/Repairer;
Iconographer;
Electrical |
Equipment Installer/Repairer Lead Worker;
Industry and |
Commercial Development Representative 1 and 2;
|
Electrician;
Industry Services Consultant 1 and 2;
|
Electronics Technician;
Information Services Intern;
|
Elevator Operator;
Information Services Specialist I and |
II;
Endangered Species Secretary;
Information Systems |
Analyst I through III;
Engineering Aide;
Information |
Systems Manager;
Engineering Analyst I through IV;
|
Information Systems Planner;
Engineering Manager I and II;
|
Institutional Maintenance Worker;
Engineering Technician I |
through V;
Instrument Designer;
Environmental Scientist I |
|
and II;
Insurance Analyst I through IV;
Executive I through |
VI;
Executive Assistant;
Intermittent Clerk;
Executive |
Assistant I through IV;
Intermittent Laborer Maintenance;
|
Executive Secretary 1 through 3;
Intern;
Federal Funding |
and Public Safety Director;
Internal Auditor 1;
Financial & |
Budget Assistant;
Internal Communications Officer;
|
Financial & Budget Supervisor;
International Marketing |
Representative 1;
Financial Management Director;
IT |
Manager;
Fiscal Executive;
Janitor I and II;
Fiscal |
Officer;
Junior State Veterinarian;
Gas Engineer I through |
IV;
Junior Supervisor Scientist;
General Counsel and |
Regulatory Director;
Laboratory Manager II;
General |
Services Administrator I;
Labor Maintenance Lead Worker;
|
General Services Technician;
Laborer;
Geographic |
Information Specialist 1 and 2;
Laborer (Building);
|
Geologist I through IV;
Laborer (Maintenance);
Graphic |
Arts Design Supervisor;
Landscape Architect;
Graphic Arts |
Designer;
Landscape Architect I through IV;
Graphic Arts |
Technician;
Landscape Planner;
Grounds Supervisor;
Laundry |
Manager I;
Highway Construction Supervisor I;
Legislative |
Liaison I and II;
Historical Research Editor 2;
Liability |
Claims Adjuster 1 and 2;
Historical Research Specialist;
|
Librarian 1 and 2;
Horse Custodian;
Library Aide I through |
III;
Horse Identifier;
Library Associate;
Hourly |
Assistant;
Library Technical Assistant;
Human Resource |
Coordinator;
Licensing Assistant;
Human Resources Analyst;
|
Line Technician I through II;
Human Resources Assistant;
|
Local History Service Representative;
Human Resources |
Associate;
Local Housing Advisor 2 and 3;
Human Resources |
Manager;
Local Revenue and Fiscal Advisor 3;
Machinist;
|
Locksmith;
Maintenance Equipment Operator;
Operations |
Communications Specialist Trainee;
Maintenance Worker;
|
Operations Technician;
Maintenance Worker Power Plant;
|
Painter;
Management Information Technician;
Paralegal |
Assistant;
Management Operations Analyst 1 and 2;
|
Performance Management Analyst;
Management Secretary I;
|
|
Personnel Manager;
Management Systems Specialist;
|
Photogrammetrist I through IV;
Management Technician I |
through IV;
Physician;
Manager;
Physician Specialist |
Operations A through D;
Manpower Planner 1 through 3;
|
Planning Director;
Medical Administrator III and V;
Plant |
Maintenance Engineer 1 and 2;
Methods & Processes Advisor |
1, 2 and III;
Plumber;
Methods & Processes Career Associate |
1 and 2;
Policy Advisor;
Microfilm Operator I through III;
|
Policy Analyst I through IV;
Military Administrative |
Assistant I;
Power Shovel Operator (Maintenance);
Military |
Administrative Clerk;
Principal Economist;
Military |
Administrative Officer-Legal;
Principal Scientist;
|
Military Administrative Specialist;
Private Secretary 1 |
and 2;
Military Community Relations Specialist;
Private |
Secretary I and II;
Military Cooperative Agreement |
Specialist;
Procurement Representative;
Military Crash, |
Fire, Rescue I through III;
Professor & Scientist;
Military |
Energy Manager;
Program Manager;
Military Engineer |
Technician;
Program Specialist;
Military Environmental |
Specialist I through III;
Project Coordinator;
Military |
Facilities Engineer;
Project Designer;
Military Facilities |
Officer I;
Project Manager I through III;
Military |
Maintenance Engineer;
Project Manager;
Military Museum |
Director;
Project Manager/Technical Specialist I thru III;
|
Military Program Supervisor;
Project Specialist I through |
IV;
Military Property Custodian II;
Projects Director;
|
Military Real Property Clerk;
Property & Supply Clerk I |
through III;
Motorist Assistance Specialist;
Property |
Control Officer;
Museum Director;
Public Administration |
Intern;
Museum Security Head I through III;
Public |
Information Coordinator;
Museum Technician I through III;
|
Public Information Officer;
Network Control Center |
Specialist;
Public Information Officer 2 through 4;
|
Network Control Center Technician 2;
Public Service |
Administrator;
Network Engineer I through IV;
Race Track |
Maintenance 1 and 2;
Office Administration Specialist;
|
|
Radio Technician Program Coordinator;
Office Administrator |
1 through 5;
Realty Specialist I through V;
Office Aide;
|
Receptionist;
Office Assistant;
Regional Manager;
Office |
Associate;
Regulatory Accountant IV;
Office Clerk;
|
Reimbursement Officer 1 and 2;
Office Coordinator;
|
Representative I and II;
Office Manager;
Representative |
Trainee;
Office Occupations Trainee;
School Construction |
Manager;
Office Specialist;
Secretary I and IV;
Operations |
Communications Specialist I and II;
Security Guard;
Senior |
Economic Analyst;
Security Supervisor; Senior Editor;
|
Systems Developer I through IV;
Senior Electrical |
Engineer;
Systems Developer Trainee;
Senior Financial & |
Budget Assistant;
Systems Engineer I through IV;
Senior Gas |
Engineer;
Systems Engineer Trainee;
Senior Policy Analyst;
|
Tariff & Order Coordinator;
Senior Programs Analyst;
|
Tariff Administrator III;
Senior Project Consultant;
|
Tariff Analyst IV;
Senior Project Manager;
Teacher of |
Barbering;
Senior Public Information Officer;
Teacher of |
Beauty Culture;
Senior Public Service Administrator;
|
Technical Advisor 2 and 3;
Senior Rate Analyst;
Technical |
Advisor I through VII;
Senior Technical Assistant;
|
Technical Analyst; Technical Manager VII
I through IX;
|
Senior Technical Supervisor;
Technical Assistant;
Senior |
Technology Specialist;
Technical Manager 1;
Senior |
Transportation Industry Analyst;
Technical Manager I |
through X;
Sewage Plant Operator;
Technical Specialist;
|
Sign Hanger;
Technical Support Specialist;
Sign Hanger |
Foreman;
Technical Specialist I thru III;
Sign Painter;
|
Technician Trainee;
Sign Shop Foreman;
Telecom Systems |
Analyst;
Silk Screen Operator;
Telecom Systems Consultant;
|
Senior Administrative Assistant;
Telecom Systems |
Technician 1 and 2;
Site Superintendent;
Telecommunication |
Supervisor;
Software Architect;
Tinsmith;
Special |
Assistant;
Trades Tender;
Special Assistant to the |
Executive Director;
Training Coordinator;
Staff |
Development Specialist I;
Transportation Counsel;
Staff |
|
Development Technician II;
Transportation Industry Analyst |
III;
State Police Captain;
Transportation Industry |
Customer Service;
State Police Lieutenant;
Transportation |
Officer;
State Police Major;
Transportation Policy Analyst |
III and IV;
State Police Master Sergeant;
Urban Planner I |
through VI;
Stationary Engineer;
Utility Engineer I and II;
|
Stationary Engineer Assistant Chief;
Veteran Secretary;
|
Stationary Engineer Chief;
Veteran Technician;
Stationary |
Fireman;
Water Engineer I through IV;
Statistical Research |
Specialist 1 through 3;
Water Plant Operator;
Statistical |
Research Supervisor;
Web and Publications Manager;
|
Statistical Research Technician;
Steamfitter;
Steward;
|
Steward Secretary;
Storekeeper I through III;
Stores |
Clerk;
Student Intern;
Student Worker;
Supervisor;
|
Supervisor & Assistant Scientist;
Supervisor & Associate |
Scientist;
Switchboard Operator 1 through 3; |
Administrative Assistant to the Superintendent; Assistant |
Legal Advisor; Legal Assistant; Senior Human Resources |
Specialist; Principal Internal Auditor; Division |
Administrator; Division Supervisor; and Private Secretary |
I through III ; Actuary 1 through 3; Agriculture Marketing |
Reporter; Apiary Inspector; App/Dry Goods Specialist I |
through III; Appraisal Specialist Trainer; Check Issuance |
Machine Operator; Check Issuance Machine Supervisor; |
Corrections Leisure Activity Specialist 2 through 4; |
Corrections Supply Supervisor I through III; Guard 1 |
through 3; Guard Supervisor; Information Tech/Com System |
Specialist 1 and 2; Police Officer I and II; Property & |
Supply Clerk I through III; Reproductive Services |
Supervisor 1; Reproductive Services Tech 1 through 3; |
Security Guard 1; Security Officer; Security Officer |
Chief; Security Officer Lieutenant; Security Officer Sgt; |
and Volunteer Services Coordinator I through III . |
(2) In addition, any position titles with the Speaker |
of the House of Representatives, the Minority Leader of the |
House of Representatives, the President of the Senate, the |
|
Minority Leader of the Senate, the Attorney General, the |
Secretary of State, the Comptroller, the Treasurer, the |
Auditor General, the Supreme Court, the Court of Claims, |
and each legislative agency are eligible for the |
alternative retirement cancellation payment provided in |
this Section. |
(c) In lieu of any retirement annuity or other benefit |
provided under this Article, a person who qualifies for and |
elects to receive the alternative retirement cancellation |
payment under this Section shall be entitled to receive a |
one-time lump sum retirement cancellation payment equal to the |
amount of his or her contributions to the System (including any |
employee contributions for optional service credit and |
including any employee contributions paid by the employer or |
credited to the employee during disability) as of the date of |
termination, with regular interest, multiplied by 2.
|
(d) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, a |
person who receives an alternative retirement cancellation |
payment under this Section thereby forfeits the right to any |
other retirement or disability benefit or refund under this |
Article, and no widow's, survivor's, or death benefit deriving |
from that person shall be payable under this Article. Upon |
accepting an alternative retirement cancellation payment under |
this Section, the person's creditable service and all other |
rights in the System are terminated for all purposes, except |
for the purpose of determining State group life and health |
benefits for the person and his or her survivors as provided |
under the State Employees Group Insurance Act of 1971. |
(e) To the extent permitted by federal law, a person who |
receives an alternative retirement cancellation payment under |
this Section may direct the System to pay all or a portion of |
that payment as a rollover into another retirement plan or |
account qualified under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as |
amended. |
(f) Notwithstanding Section 14-111, a person who has |
received an alternative retirement cancellation payment under |
|
this Section and who reenters
service under this Article other |
than as a temporary employee must repay to the System the |
amount by which that alternative retirement cancellation |
payment exceeded the amount of his or her refundable employee |
contributions within 60 days of resuming employment under this |
System. For the purposes of re-establishing creditable service |
that was terminated upon election of the alternative retirement |
cancellation payment, the portion of the alternative |
retirement cancellation payment representing refundable |
employee contributions shall be deemed a refund repayable in |
accordance with Section 14-130. |
(g) The Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability shall determine
and report to the Governor and |
the General
Assembly, on or before January 1, 2008
2007 , its |
estimate of (1) the annual amount of payroll savings likely to |
be
realized by the State as a result of the early termination |
of persons receiving
the alternative retirement cancellation |
payment under this Section and (2) the net annual savings
or |
cost to the State from the program of alternative retirement |
cancellation payments under this Section. |
The System, the Department of Central Management Services, |
the
Governor's Office of Management and Budget, and all other |
departments shall provide to the Commission any
assistance that |
the Commission may request with respect to its report 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 alternative |
retirement cancellation payments under
this Section, (2) the |
earnings of current department employees holding the
positions |
vacated by persons who elected to receive alternative |
retirement cancellation payments under this
Section, and (3) |
positions vacated by persons who elected to receive alternative |
retirement cancellation payments
under this Section that have |
not yet been refilled.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 94-109, eff. 7-1-05.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/14-131)
(from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 14-131)
|
Sec. 14-131. Contributions by State.
|
(a) The State shall make contributions to the System by |
appropriations of
amounts which, together with other employer |
contributions from trust, federal,
and other funds, employee |
contributions, investment income, and other income,
will be |
sufficient to meet the cost of maintaining and administering |
the System
on a 90% funded basis in accordance with actuarial |
recommendations.
|
For the purposes of this Section and Section 14-135.08, |
references to State
contributions refer only to employer |
contributions and do not include employee
contributions that |
are picked up or otherwise paid by the State or a
department on |
behalf of the employee.
|
(b) The Board shall determine the total amount of State |
contributions
required for each fiscal year on the basis of the |
actuarial tables and other
assumptions adopted by the Board, |
using the formula in subsection (e).
|
The Board shall also determine a State contribution rate |
for each fiscal
year, expressed as a percentage of payroll, |
based on the total required State
contribution for that fiscal |
year (less the amount received by the System from
|
appropriations under Section 8.12 of the State Finance Act and |
Section 1 of the
State Pension Funds Continuing Appropriation |
Act, if any, for the fiscal year
ending on the June 30 |
immediately preceding the applicable November 15
certification |
deadline), the estimated payroll (including all forms of
|
compensation) for personal services rendered by eligible |
employees, and the
recommendations of the actuary.
|
For the purposes of this Section and Section 14.1 of the |
State Finance Act,
the term "eligible employees" includes |
employees who participate in the System,
persons who may elect |
to participate in the System but have not so elected,
persons |
who are serving a qualifying period that is required for |
|
participation,
and annuitants employed by a department as |
described in subdivision (a)(1) or
(a)(2) of Section 14-111.
|
(c) Contributions shall be made by the several departments |
for each pay
period by warrants drawn by the State Comptroller |
against their respective
funds or appropriations based upon |
vouchers stating the amount to be so
contributed. These amounts |
shall be based on the full rate certified by the
Board under |
Section 14-135.08 for that fiscal year.
From the effective date |
of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General
Assembly through the |
payment of the final payroll from fiscal year 2004
|
appropriations, the several departments shall not make |
contributions
for the remainder of fiscal year 2004 but shall |
instead make payments
as required under subsection (a-1) of |
Section 14.1 of the State Finance Act.
The several departments |
shall resume those contributions at the commencement of
fiscal |
year 2005.
|
(d) If an employee is paid from trust funds or federal |
funds, the
department or other employer shall pay employer |
contributions from those funds
to the System at the certified |
rate, unless the terms of the trust or the
federal-State |
agreement preclude the use of the funds for that purpose, in
|
which case the required employer contributions shall be paid by |
the State.
From the effective date of this amendatory
Act of |
the 93rd General Assembly through the payment of the final
|
payroll from fiscal year 2004 appropriations, the department or |
other
employer shall not pay contributions for the remainder of |
fiscal year
2004 but shall instead make payments as required |
under subsection (a-1) of
Section 14.1 of the State Finance |
Act. The department or other employer shall
resume payment of
|
contributions at the commencement of fiscal year 2005.
|
(e) For State fiscal years 2011 through 2045, the minimum |
contribution
to the System to be made by the State for each |
fiscal year shall be an amount
determined by the System to be |
sufficient to bring the total assets of the
System up to 90% of |
the total actuarial liabilities of the System by the end
of |
State fiscal year 2045. In making these determinations, the |
|
required State
contribution shall be calculated each year as a |
level percentage of payroll
over the years remaining to and |
including fiscal year 2045 and shall be
determined under the |
projected unit credit actuarial cost method.
|
For State fiscal years 1996 through 2005, the State |
contribution to
the System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be
increased in equal annual increments |
so that by State fiscal year 2011, the
State is contributing at |
the rate required under this Section; except that
(i) for State |
fiscal year 1998, for all purposes of this Code and any other
|
law of this State, the certified percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll
shall be 5.052% for employees earning eligible |
creditable service under Section
14-110 and 6.500% for all |
other employees, notwithstanding any contrary
certification |
made under Section 14-135.08 before the effective date of this
|
amendatory Act of 1997, and (ii)
in the following specified |
State fiscal years, the State contribution to
the System shall |
not be less than the following indicated percentages of the
|
applicable employee payroll, even if the indicated percentage |
will produce a
State contribution in excess of the amount |
otherwise required under this
subsection and subsection (a):
|
9.8% in FY 1999;
10.0% in FY 2000;
10.2% in FY 2001;
10.4% in FY |
2002;
10.6% in FY 2003; and
10.8% in FY 2004.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution to the System for State |
fiscal year 2006 is $203,783,900.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution to the System for State |
fiscal year 2007 is $344,164,400.
|
For each of State fiscal years 2008 through 2010, the State |
contribution to
the System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be
increased in equal annual increments |
from the required State contribution for State fiscal year |
2007, so that by State fiscal year 2011, the
State is |
contributing at the rate otherwise required under this Section.
|
Beginning in State fiscal year 2046, the minimum State |
|
contribution for
each fiscal year shall be the amount needed to |
maintain the total assets of
the System at 90% of the total |
actuarial liabilities of the System.
|
Amounts received by the System pursuant to Section 25 of |
the Budget Stabilization Act in any fiscal year do not reduce |
and do not constitute payment of any portion of the minimum |
State contribution required under this Article in that fiscal |
year. Such amounts shall not reduce, and shall not be included |
in the calculation of, the required State contributions under |
this Article in any future year until the System has reached a |
funding ratio of at least 90%. A reference in this Article to |
the "required State contribution" or any substantially similar |
term does not include or apply to any amounts payable to the |
System under Section 25 of the Budget Stabilization Act.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, the |
required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2005 and for |
fiscal year 2008 and each fiscal year thereafter, as
calculated |
under this Section and
certified under Section 14-135.08, shall |
not exceed an amount equal to (i) the
amount of the required |
State contribution that would have been calculated under
this |
Section for that fiscal year if the System had not received any |
payments
under subsection (d) of Section 7.2 of the General |
Obligation Bond Act, minus
(ii) the portion of the State's |
total debt service payments for that fiscal
year on the bonds |
issued for the purposes of that Section 7.2, as determined
and |
certified by the Comptroller, that is the same as the System's |
portion of
the total moneys distributed under subsection (d) of |
Section 7.2 of the General
Obligation Bond Act. In determining |
this maximum for State fiscal years 2008 through 2010, however, |
the amount referred to in item (i) shall be increased, as a |
percentage of the applicable employee payroll, in equal |
increments calculated from the sum of the required State |
contribution for State fiscal year 2007 plus the applicable |
portion of the State's total debt service payments for fiscal |
year 2007 on the bonds issued for the purposes of Section 7.2 |
of the General
Obligation Bond Act, so that, by State fiscal |
|
year 2011, the
State is contributing at the rate otherwise |
required under this Section.
|
(f) After the submission of all payments for eligible |
employees
from personal services line items in fiscal year 2004 |
have been made,
the Comptroller shall provide to the System a |
certification of the sum
of all fiscal year 2004 expenditures |
for personal services that would
have been covered by payments |
to the System under this Section if the
provisions of this |
amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly had not been
|
enacted. Upon
receipt of the certification, the System shall |
determine the amount
due to the System based on the full rate |
certified by the Board under
Section 14-135.08 for fiscal year |
2004 in order to meet the State's
obligation under this |
Section. The System shall compare this amount
due to the amount |
received by the System in fiscal year 2004 through
payments |
under this Section and under Section 6z-61 of the State Finance |
Act.
If the amount
due is more than the amount received, the |
difference shall be termed the
"Fiscal Year 2004 Shortfall" for |
purposes of this Section, and the
Fiscal Year 2004 Shortfall |
shall be satisfied under Section 1.2 of the State
Pension Funds |
Continuing Appropriation Act. If the amount due is less than |
the
amount received, the
difference shall be termed the "Fiscal |
Year 2004 Overpayment" for purposes of
this Section, and the |
Fiscal Year 2004 Overpayment shall be repaid by
the System to |
the Pension Contribution Fund as soon as practicable
after the |
certification.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-2, eff. 4-7-03; 93-665, eff. 3-5-04; 94-4, |
eff. 6-1-05.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/15-155) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 15-155)
|
Sec. 15-155. Employer contributions.
|
(a) The State of Illinois shall make contributions by |
appropriations of
amounts which, together with the other |
employer contributions from trust,
federal, and other funds, |
employee contributions, income from investments,
and other |
income of this System, will be sufficient to meet the cost of
|
|
maintaining and administering the System on a 90% funded basis |
in accordance
with actuarial recommendations.
|
The Board shall determine the amount of State contributions |
required for
each fiscal year on the basis of the actuarial |
tables and other assumptions
adopted by the Board and the |
recommendations of the actuary, using the formula
in subsection |
(a-1).
|
(a-1) For State fiscal years 2011 through 2045, the minimum |
contribution
to the System to be made by the State for each |
fiscal year shall be an amount
determined by the System to be |
sufficient to bring the total assets of the
System up to 90% of |
the total actuarial liabilities of the System by the end of
|
State fiscal year 2045. In making these determinations, the |
required State
contribution shall be calculated each year as a |
level percentage of payroll
over the years remaining to and |
including fiscal year 2045 and shall be
determined under the |
projected unit credit actuarial cost method.
|
For State fiscal years 1996 through 2005, the State |
contribution to
the System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be
increased in equal annual increments |
so that by State fiscal year 2011, the
State is contributing at |
the rate required under this Section.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2006 is |
$166,641,900.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2007 is |
$252,064,100.
|
For each of State fiscal years 2008 through 2010, the State |
contribution to
the System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be
increased in equal annual increments |
from the required State contribution for State fiscal year |
2007, so that by State fiscal year 2011, the
State is |
contributing at the rate otherwise required under this Section.
|
Beginning in State fiscal year 2046, the minimum State |
contribution for
each fiscal year shall be the amount needed to |
|
maintain the total assets of
the System at 90% of the total |
actuarial liabilities of the System.
|
Amounts received by the System pursuant to Section 25 of |
the Budget Stabilization Act in any fiscal year do not reduce |
and do not constitute payment of any portion of the minimum |
State contribution required under this Article in that fiscal |
year. Such amounts shall not reduce, and shall not be included |
in the calculation of, the required State contributions under |
this Article in any future year until the System has reached a |
funding ratio of at least 90%. A reference in this Article to |
the "required State contribution" or any substantially similar |
term does not include or apply to any amounts payable to the |
System under Section 25 of the Budget Stabilization Act.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, the |
required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2005 and for |
fiscal year 2008 and each fiscal year thereafter, as
calculated |
under this Section and
certified under Section 15-165, shall |
not exceed an amount equal to (i) the
amount of the required |
State contribution that would have been calculated under
this |
Section for that fiscal year if the System had not received any |
payments
under subsection (d) of Section 7.2 of the General |
Obligation Bond Act, minus
(ii) the portion of the State's |
total debt service payments for that fiscal
year on the bonds |
issued for the purposes of that Section 7.2, as determined
and |
certified by the Comptroller, that is the same as the System's |
portion of
the total moneys distributed under subsection (d) of |
Section 7.2 of the General
Obligation Bond Act. In determining |
this maximum for State fiscal years 2008 through 2010, however, |
the amount referred to in item (i) shall be increased, as a |
percentage of the applicable employee payroll, in equal |
increments calculated from the sum of the required State |
contribution for State fiscal year 2007 plus the applicable |
portion of the State's total debt service payments for fiscal |
year 2007 on the bonds issued for the purposes of Section 7.2 |
of the General
Obligation Bond Act, so that, by State fiscal |
year 2011, the
State is contributing at the rate otherwise |
|
required under this Section.
|
(b) If an employee is paid from trust or federal funds, the |
employer
shall pay to the Board contributions from those funds |
which are
sufficient to cover the accruing normal costs on |
behalf of the employee.
However, universities having employees |
who are compensated out of local
auxiliary funds, income funds, |
or service enterprise funds are not required
to pay such |
contributions on behalf of those employees. The local auxiliary
|
funds, income funds, and service enterprise funds of |
universities shall not be
considered trust funds for the |
purpose of this Article, but funds of alumni
associations, |
foundations, and athletic associations which are affiliated |
with
the universities included as employers under this Article |
and other employers
which do not receive State appropriations |
are considered to be trust funds for
the purpose of this |
Article.
|
(b-1) The City of Urbana and the City of Champaign shall |
each make
employer contributions to this System for their |
respective firefighter
employees who participate in this |
System pursuant to subsection (h) of Section
15-107. The rate |
of contributions to be made by those municipalities shall
be |
determined annually by the Board on the basis of the actuarial |
assumptions
adopted by the Board and the recommendations of the |
actuary, and shall be
expressed as a percentage of salary for |
each such employee. The Board shall
certify the rate to the |
affected municipalities as soon as may be practical.
The |
employer contributions required under this subsection shall be |
remitted by
the municipality to the System at the same time and |
in the same manner as
employee contributions.
|
(c) Through State fiscal year 1995: The total employer |
contribution shall
be apportioned among the various funds of |
the State and other employers,
whether trust, federal, or other |
funds, in accordance with actuarial procedures
approved by the |
Board. State of Illinois contributions for employers receiving
|
State appropriations for personal services shall be payable |
from appropriations
made to the employers or to the System. The |
|
contributions for Class I
community colleges covering earnings |
other than those paid from trust and
federal funds, shall be |
payable solely from appropriations to the Illinois
Community |
College Board or the System for employer contributions.
|
(d) Beginning in State fiscal year 1996, the required State |
contributions
to the System shall be appropriated directly to |
the System and shall be payable
through vouchers issued in |
accordance with subsection (c) of Section 15-165, except as |
provided in subsection (g).
|
(e) The State Comptroller shall draw warrants payable to |
the System upon
proper certification by the System or by the |
employer in accordance with the
appropriation laws and this |
Code.
|
(f) Normal costs under this Section means liability for
|
pensions and other benefits which accrues to the System because |
of the
credits earned for service rendered by the participants |
during the
fiscal year and expenses of administering the |
System, but shall not
include the principal of or any |
redemption premium or interest on any bonds
issued by the Board |
or any expenses incurred or deposits required in
connection |
therewith.
|
(g) If the amount of a participant's earnings for any |
academic year used to determine the final rate of earnings |
exceeds the amount of his or her earnings with the same |
employer for the previous academic year by more than 6%, the |
participant's employer shall pay to the System, in addition to |
all other payments required under this Section and in |
accordance with guidelines established by the System, the |
present value of the increase in benefits resulting from the |
portion of the increase in earnings that is in excess of 6%. |
This present value shall be computed by the System on the basis |
of the actuarial assumptions and tables used in the most recent |
actuarial valuation of the System that is available at the time |
of the computation. The employer contributions required under |
this subsection (g) shall be paid in the form of a lump sum |
within 30 days after receipt of the bill after the participant |
|
begins receiving benefits under this Article.
|
The provisions of this subsection (g) do not apply to |
earnings increases paid to participants under contracts or |
collective bargaining agreements entered into, amended, or |
renewed before the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
94th General Assembly.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-2, eff. 4-7-03; 94-4, eff. 6-1-05.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/16-158)
(from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 16-158)
|
Sec. 16-158. Contributions by State and other employing |
units.
|
(a) The State shall make contributions to the System by |
means of
appropriations from the Common School Fund and other |
State funds of amounts
which, together with other employer |
contributions, employee contributions,
investment income, and |
other income, will be sufficient to meet the cost of
|
maintaining and administering the System on a 90% funded basis |
in accordance
with actuarial recommendations.
|
The Board shall determine the amount of State contributions |
required for
each fiscal year on the basis of the actuarial |
tables and other assumptions
adopted by the Board and the |
recommendations of the actuary, using the formula
in subsection |
(b-3).
|
(a-1) Annually, on or before November 15, the Board shall |
certify to the
Governor the amount of the required State |
contribution for the coming fiscal
year. The certification |
shall include a copy of the actuarial recommendations
upon |
which it is based.
|
On or before May 1, 2004, the Board shall recalculate and |
recertify to
the Governor the amount of the required State |
contribution to the System for
State fiscal year 2005, taking |
into account the amounts appropriated to and
received by the |
System under subsection (d) of Section 7.2 of the General
|
Obligation Bond Act.
|
On or before July 1, 2005, the Board shall recalculate and |
recertify
to the Governor the amount of the required State
|
|
contribution to the System for State fiscal year 2006, taking |
into account the changes in required State contributions made |
by this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly.
|
(b) Through State fiscal year 1995, the State contributions |
shall be
paid to the System in accordance with Section 18-7 of |
the School Code.
|
(b-1) Beginning in State fiscal year 1996, on the 15th day |
of each month,
or as soon thereafter as may be practicable, the |
Board shall submit vouchers
for payment of State contributions |
to the System, in a total monthly amount of
one-twelfth of the |
required annual State contribution certified under
subsection |
(a-1).
From the
effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
93rd General Assembly
through June 30, 2004, the Board shall |
not submit vouchers for the
remainder of fiscal year 2004 in |
excess of the fiscal year 2004
certified contribution amount |
determined under this Section
after taking into consideration |
the transfer to the System
under subsection (a) of Section |
6z-61 of the State Finance Act.
These vouchers shall be paid by |
the State Comptroller and
Treasurer by warrants drawn on the |
funds appropriated to the System for that
fiscal year.
|
If in any month the amount remaining unexpended from all |
other appropriations
to the System for the applicable fiscal |
year (including the appropriations to
the System under Section |
8.12 of the State Finance Act and Section 1 of the
State |
Pension Funds Continuing Appropriation Act) is less than the |
amount
lawfully vouchered under this subsection, the |
difference shall be paid from the
Common School Fund under the |
continuing appropriation authority provided in
Section 1.1 of |
the State Pension Funds Continuing Appropriation Act.
|
(b-2) Allocations from the Common School Fund apportioned |
to school
districts not coming under this System shall not be |
diminished or affected by
the provisions of this Article.
|
(b-3) For State fiscal years 2011 through 2045, the minimum |
contribution
to the System to be made by the State for each |
fiscal year shall be an amount
determined by the System to be |
sufficient to bring the total assets of the
System up to 90% of |
|
the total actuarial liabilities of the System by the end of
|
State fiscal year 2045. In making these determinations, the |
required State
contribution shall be calculated each year as a |
level percentage of payroll
over the years remaining to and |
including fiscal year 2045 and shall be
determined under the |
projected unit credit actuarial cost method.
|
For State fiscal years 1996 through 2005, the State |
contribution to the
System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be increased
in equal annual increments |
so that by State fiscal year 2011, the State is
contributing at |
the rate required under this Section; except that in the
|
following specified State fiscal years, the State contribution |
to the System
shall not be less than the following indicated |
percentages of the applicable
employee payroll, even if the |
indicated percentage will produce a State
contribution in |
excess of the amount otherwise required under this subsection
|
and subsection (a), and notwithstanding any contrary |
certification made under
subsection (a-1) before the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of 1998:
10.02% in FY 1999;
10.77% |
in FY 2000;
11.47% in FY 2001;
12.16% in FY 2002;
12.86% in FY |
2003; and
13.56% in FY 2004.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2006 is |
$534,627,700.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2007 is |
$738,014,500.
|
For each of State fiscal years 2008 through 2010, the State |
contribution to
the System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be
increased in equal annual increments |
from the required State contribution for State fiscal year |
2007, so that by State fiscal year 2011, the
State is |
contributing at the rate otherwise required under this Section.
|
Beginning in State fiscal year 2046, the minimum State |
contribution for
each fiscal year shall be the amount needed to |
maintain the total assets of
the System at 90% of the total |
|
actuarial liabilities of the System.
|
Amounts received by the System pursuant to Section 25 of |
the Budget Stabilization Act in any fiscal year do not reduce |
and do not constitute payment of any portion of the minimum |
State contribution required under this Article in that fiscal |
year. Such amounts shall not reduce, and shall not be included |
in the calculation of, the required State contributions under |
this Article in any future year until the System has reached a |
funding ratio of at least 90%. A reference in this Article to |
the "required State contribution" or any substantially similar |
term does not include or apply to any amounts payable to the |
System under Section 25 of the Budget Stabilization Act.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, the |
required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2005 and for |
fiscal year 2008 and each fiscal year thereafter, as
calculated |
under this Section and
certified under subsection (a-1), shall |
not exceed an amount equal to (i) the
amount of the required |
State contribution that would have been calculated under
this |
Section for that fiscal year if the System had not received any |
payments
under subsection (d) of Section 7.2 of the General |
Obligation Bond Act, minus
(ii) the portion of the State's |
total debt service payments for that fiscal
year on the bonds |
issued for the purposes of that Section 7.2, as determined
and |
certified by the Comptroller, that is the same as the System's |
portion of
the total moneys distributed under subsection (d) of |
Section 7.2 of the General
Obligation Bond Act. In determining |
this maximum for State fiscal years 2008 through 2010, however, |
the amount referred to in item (i) shall be increased, as a |
percentage of the applicable employee payroll, in equal |
increments calculated from the sum of the required State |
contribution for State fiscal year 2007 plus the applicable |
portion of the State's total debt service payments for fiscal |
year 2007 on the bonds issued for the purposes of Section 7.2 |
of the General
Obligation Bond Act, so that, by State fiscal |
year 2011, the
State is contributing at the rate otherwise |
required under this Section.
|
|
(c) Payment of the required State contributions and of all |
pensions,
retirement annuities, death benefits, refunds, and |
other benefits granted
under or assumed by this System, and all |
expenses in connection with the
administration and operation |
thereof, are obligations of the State.
|
If members are paid from special trust or federal funds |
which are
administered by the employing unit, whether school |
district or other
unit, the employing unit shall pay to the |
System from such
funds the full accruing retirement costs based |
upon that
service, as determined by the System. Employer |
contributions, based on
salary paid to members from federal |
funds, may be forwarded by the distributing
agency of the State |
of Illinois to the System prior to allocation, in an
amount |
determined in accordance with guidelines established by such
|
agency and the System.
|
(d) Effective July 1, 1986, any employer of a teacher as |
defined in
paragraph (8) of Section 16-106 shall pay the |
employer's normal cost
of benefits based upon the teacher's |
service, in addition to
employee contributions, as determined |
by the System. Such employer
contributions shall be forwarded |
monthly in accordance with guidelines
established by the |
System.
|
However, with respect to benefits granted under Section |
16-133.4 or
16-133.5 to a teacher as defined in paragraph (8) |
of Section 16-106, the
employer's contribution shall be 12% |
(rather than 20%) of the member's
highest annual salary rate |
for each year of creditable service granted, and
the employer |
shall also pay the required employee contribution on behalf of
|
the teacher. For the purposes of Sections 16-133.4 and |
16-133.5, a teacher
as defined in paragraph (8) of Section |
16-106 who is serving in that capacity
while on leave of |
absence from another employer under this Article shall not
be |
considered an employee of the employer from which the teacher |
is on leave.
|
(e) Beginning July 1, 1998, every employer of a teacher
|
shall pay to the System an employer contribution computed as |
|
follows:
|
(1) Beginning July 1, 1998 through June 30, 1999, the |
employer
contribution shall be equal to 0.3% of each |
teacher's salary.
|
(2) Beginning July 1, 1999 and thereafter, the employer
|
contribution shall be equal to 0.58% of each teacher's |
salary.
|
The school district or other employing unit may pay these |
employer
contributions out of any source of funding available |
for that purpose and
shall forward the contributions to the |
System on the schedule established
for the payment of member |
contributions.
|
These employer contributions are intended to offset a |
portion of the cost
to the System of the increases in |
retirement benefits resulting from this
amendatory Act of 1998.
|
Each employer of teachers is entitled to a credit against |
the contributions
required under this subsection (e) with |
respect to salaries paid to teachers
for the period January 1, |
2002 through June 30, 2003, equal to the amount paid
by that |
employer under subsection (a-5) of Section 6.6 of the State |
Employees
Group Insurance Act of 1971 with respect to salaries |
paid to teachers for that
period.
|
The additional 1% employee contribution required under |
Section 16-152 by
this amendatory Act of 1998 is the |
responsibility of the teacher and not the
teacher's employer, |
unless the employer agrees, through collective bargaining
or |
otherwise, to make the contribution on behalf of the teacher.
|
If an employer is required by a contract in effect on May |
1, 1998 between the
employer and an employee organization to |
pay, on behalf of all its full-time
employees
covered by this |
Article, all mandatory employee contributions required under
|
this Article, then the employer shall be excused from paying |
the employer
contribution required under this subsection (e) |
for the balance of the term
of that contract. The employer and |
the employee organization shall jointly
certify to the System |
the existence of the contractual requirement, in such
form as |
|
the System may prescribe. This exclusion shall cease upon the
|
termination, extension, or renewal of the contract at any time |
after May 1,
1998.
|
(f) If the amount of a teacher's salary for any school year |
used to determine final average salary exceeds the amount of |
his or her salary with the same employer for the previous |
school year by more than 6%, the teacher's employer shall pay |
to the System, in addition to all other payments required under |
this Section and in accordance with guidelines established by |
the System, the present value of the increase in benefits |
resulting from the portion of the increase in salary that is in |
excess of 6%. This present value shall be computed by the |
System on the basis of the actuarial assumptions and tables |
used in the most recent actuarial valuation of the System that |
is available at the time of the computation. The employer |
contributions required under this subsection (f) shall be paid |
in the form of a lump sum within 30 days after receipt of the |
bill after the teacher begins receiving benefits under this |
Article.
|
The provisions of this subsection (f) do not apply to |
salary increases paid to teachers under contracts or collective |
bargaining agreements entered into, amended, or renewed before |
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General |
Assembly.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-2, eff. 4-7-03; 93-665, eff. 3-5-04; 94-4, |
eff. 6-1-05.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/18-131) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 18-131)
|
Sec. 18-131. Financing; employer contributions.
|
(a) The State of Illinois shall make contributions to this |
System by
appropriations of the amounts which, together with |
the contributions of
participants, net earnings on |
investments, and other income, will meet the
costs of |
maintaining and administering this System on a 90% funded basis |
in
accordance with actuarial recommendations.
|
(b) The Board shall determine the amount of State |
|
contributions
required for each fiscal year on the basis of the |
actuarial tables and other
assumptions adopted by the Board and |
the prescribed rate of interest, using
the formula in |
subsection (c).
|
(c) For State fiscal years 2011 through 2045, the minimum |
contribution
to the System to be made by the State for each |
fiscal year shall be an amount
determined by the System to be |
sufficient to bring the total assets of the
System up to 90% of |
the total actuarial liabilities of the System by the end of
|
State fiscal year 2045. In making these determinations, the |
required State
contribution shall be calculated each year as a |
level percentage of payroll
over the years remaining to and |
including fiscal year 2045 and shall be
determined under the |
projected unit credit actuarial cost method.
|
For State fiscal years 1996 through 2005, the State |
contribution to
the System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be
increased in equal annual increments |
so that by State fiscal year 2011, the
State is contributing at |
the rate required under this Section.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2006 is |
$29,189,400.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2007 is |
$35,236,800.
|
For each of State fiscal years 2008 through 2010, the State |
contribution to
the System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be
increased in equal annual increments |
from the required State contribution for State fiscal year |
2007, so that by State fiscal year 2011, the
State is |
contributing at the rate otherwise required under this Section.
|
Beginning in State fiscal year 2046, the minimum State |
contribution for
each fiscal year shall be the amount needed to |
maintain the total assets of
the System at 90% of the total |
actuarial liabilities of the System.
|
Amounts received by the System pursuant to Section 25 of |
|
the Budget Stabilization Act in any fiscal year do not reduce |
and do not constitute payment of any portion of the minimum |
State contribution required under this Article in that fiscal |
year. Such amounts shall not reduce, and shall not be included |
in the calculation of, the required State contributions under |
this Article in any future year until the System has reached a |
funding ratio of at least 90%. A reference in this Article to |
the "required State contribution" or any substantially similar |
term does not include or apply to any amounts payable to the |
System under Section 25 of the Budget Stabilization Act.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, the |
required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2005 and for |
fiscal year 2008 and each fiscal year thereafter, as
calculated |
under this Section and
certified under Section 18-140, shall |
not exceed an amount equal to (i) the
amount of the required |
State contribution that would have been calculated under
this |
Section for that fiscal year if the System had not received any |
payments
under subsection (d) of Section 7.2 of the General |
Obligation Bond Act, minus
(ii) the portion of the State's |
total debt service payments for that fiscal
year on the bonds |
issued for the purposes of that Section 7.2, as determined
and |
certified by the Comptroller, that is the same as the System's |
portion of
the total moneys distributed under subsection (d) of |
Section 7.2 of the General
Obligation Bond Act. In determining |
this maximum for State fiscal years 2008 through 2010, however, |
the amount referred to in item (i) shall be increased, as a |
percentage of the applicable employee payroll, in equal |
increments calculated from the sum of the required State |
contribution for State fiscal year 2007 plus the applicable |
portion of the State's total debt service payments for fiscal |
year 2007 on the bonds issued for the purposes of Section 7.2 |
of the General
Obligation Bond Act, so that, by State fiscal |
year 2011, the
State is contributing at the rate otherwise |
required under this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-2, eff. 4-7-03; 94-4, eff. 6-1-05.)
|
|
Section 5-71. The State Pension Funds Continuing |
Appropriation Act is amended by adding Section 1.7 as follows: |
(40 ILCS 15/1.7 new)
|
Sec. 1.7. Appropriations from the Pension Stabilization |
Fund. |
(a) All of the moneys deposited from time to time into the |
Pension Stabilization Fund are hereby appropriated, on a |
continuing basis, to the State Comptroller for the purpose of |
making distributions to the designated retirement systems as |
provided in Section 25 of the Budget Stabilization Act. |
(b) The appropriations made under this Section are in |
addition to, and do not affect, the amounts subject to |
appropriation under any other Section of this Act.
|
Section 5-72. The Regional Transportation Authority Act is |
amended by changing Section 4.13 as follows:
|
(70 ILCS 3615/4.13) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 704.13)
|
Sec. 4.13. Annual Capital Improvement Plan.
|
(a) With respect to each calendar year, the Authority shall |
prepare as
part of its Five Year Program an Annual Capital |
Improvement Plan (the
"Plan") which shall describe its intended |
development and implementation of
the Strategic Capital |
Improvement Program. The Plan shall include the
following |
information:
|
(i) a list of projects for which approval is sought |
from the Governor,
with a description of each project |
stating at a minimum the project cost, its
category, its |
location and the entity responsible for its |
implementation;
|
(ii) a certification by
the Authority that the |
Authority and the Service Boards have applied for
all |
grants, loans and other moneys made available by the |
federal government
or the State of Illinois during the |
preceding federal and State fiscal
years for financing its |
|
capital development activities;
|
(iii) a certification that, as of September 30 of the |
preceding calendar
year or any later date, the balance of |
all federal capital grant funds and
all other funds to be |
used as matching funds therefor which were committed
to or |
possessed by the Authority or a Service Board but which had |
not been
obligated was less than $350,000,000, or a greater |
amount as authorized in
writing by the Governor (for |
purposes of this subsection (a),
"obligated" means |
committed to be paid by the Authority or a Service Board
|
under a contract with a nongovernmental entity in |
connection with the
performance of a project or committed |
under a force account plan
approved by the federal |
government);
|
(iv) a certification that the Authority has adopted a |
balanced budget
with respect to such calendar year under |
Section 4.01 of this Act;
|
(v) a schedule of all bonds or notes
previously issued |
for Strategic Capital Improvement Projects and all debt
|
service payments to be made with respect to all such bonds |
and the
estimated additional debt service payments through |
June 30 of the following
calendar year expected to result |
from bonds to be sold prior thereto;
|
(vi) a long-range summary of the Strategic Capital |
Improvement
Program describing the projects to be funded |
through the Program with
respect to project cost, category, |
location, and implementing entity, and
presenting a |
financial plan including an estimated time schedule for
|
obligating funds for the performance of approved projects, |
issuing bonds,
expending bond proceeds and paying debt |
service throughout the duration of
the Program; and
|
(vii) the source of funding for each project in the |
Plan. For any project
for which full funding has not yet |
been secured and which is not subject to
a federal full |
funding contract, the Authority must identify alternative,
|
dedicated funding sources available to complete the |
|
project. The Governor
may waive this requirement on a |
project by project basis.
|
(b) The Authority shall submit the Plan with respect to any |
calendar
year to the Governor on or before January 15 of that |
year, or as soon as
possible thereafter; provided, however, |
that the Plan shall be adopted on
the affirmative votes of 9 of |
the then Directors. The Plan may be revised
or amended at any |
time, but any revision in the projects approved shall
require |
the Governor's approval.
|
(c) The Authority shall seek approval from the Governor |
only through the
Plan or an amendment thereto. The Authority |
shall not request approval of the
Plan from the Governor in any |
calendar year in which it is unable to make the
certifications |
required under items (ii), (iii) and (iv) of subsection (a).
In |
no event shall the Authority seek approval of the Plan from the |
Governor for
projects in an aggregate amount exceeding the |
proceeds of
authorization for bonds or notes
for Strategic |
Capital Improvement Projects issued under Section 4.04 of this
|
Act.
|
(d) The Governor may approve the Plan for which
approval is |
requested. The Governor's approval is limited to
the amount of |
the project cost stated in the Plan. The Governor shall not
|
approve the Plan in a calendar year if the Authority is unable |
to make
the certifications required under items (ii), (iii) and |
(iv)
of subsection (a). In no event shall the Governor approve |
the Plan for
projects in an aggregate amount exceeding the |
proceeds of
authorization for
bonds or notes for Strategic |
Capital Improvement Projects issued under
Section 4.04 of this |
Act.
|
(e) With respect to capital improvements, only those |
capital improvements
which are in a Plan approved by the |
Governor shall be financed with the
proceeds of bonds or notes |
issued for Strategic Capital Improvement Projects.
|
(f) Before the Authority or a Service Board obligates any |
funds for a
project for which the Authority or Service Board |
intends to use the proceeds
of bonds or notes for Strategic |
|
Capital Improvement Projects, but which project
is not included |
in an approved Plan, the Authority must notify the Governor of
|
the intended obligation. No project costs incurred prior to |
approval of the
Plan including that project may be paid from |
the proceeds of bonds or notes for
Strategic Capital |
Improvement Projects issued under Section 4.04 of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-37, eff. 7-1-99.)
|
Section 5-73. The School Code is amended by changing |
Section 3-12 as follows:
|
(105 ILCS 5/3-12) (from Ch. 122, par. 3-12)
|
Sec. 3-12. Institute fund. |
(a) All certificate
registration fees and
a portion of |
renewal and duplicate fees
shall be kept by the regional |
superintendent as described in Section 21-16 of
this Code, |
together with a record of the
names of the persons paying them. |
Such fees shall be deposited
into the institute fund and
shall |
be used by the regional superintendent
to defray expenses |
associated with the
work of
the regional professional |
development review committees established pursuant to
|
paragraph (2) of subsection (g) of Section 21-14 of this Code |
to advise the
regional
superintendent, upon his or her request, |
and to hear appeals relating to the
renewal of
teaching |
certificates, in accordance with Section 21-14 of this Code; to |
defray
expenses
connected with improving the technology |
necessary for the efficient processing
of
certificates;
to |
defray expenses incidental to
teachers' institutes,
workshops |
or meetings of a professional nature that are designed to |
promote the
professional growth of teachers or for the purpose |
of defraying the expense of
any general or special meeting of |
teachers or school personnel of the region,
which has been |
approved by the regional superintendent.
|
(b) In addition to the use of moneys in the institute fund |
to defray expenses under subsection (a) of this Section, the |
State Superintendent of Education, as authorized under Section |
|
2-3.105 of this Code, shall use moneys in the institute fund to |
defray all costs associated with the administration of teaching |
certificates within a city having a population exceeding |
500,000.
|
(c) The regional superintendent shall on or before January |
1 of each year
publish in a newspaper of general circulation |
published in the region or
shall post in each school building |
under his jurisdiction an accounting of
(1) the balance on hand |
in the Institute fund at the beginning of the
previous year; |
(2) all receipts within the previous year deposited in the
|
fund, with the sources from which they were derived; (3) the |
amount
distributed from the fund and the purposes for which |
such distributions
were made; and (4) the balance on hand in |
the fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-102, eff. 7-12-99.)
|
Section 5-75. The Riverboat Gambling Act is amended by |
changing Section 13 as follows:
|
(230 ILCS 10/13) (from Ch. 120, par. 2413)
|
Sec. 13. Wagering tax; rate; distribution.
|
(a) Until January 1, 1998, a tax is imposed on the adjusted |
gross
receipts received from gambling games authorized under |
this Act at the rate of
20%.
|
(a-1) From January 1, 1998 until July 1, 2002, a privilege |
tax is
imposed on persons engaged in the business of conducting |
riverboat gambling
operations, based on the adjusted gross |
receipts received by a licensed owner
from gambling games |
authorized under this Act at the following rates:
|
15% of annual adjusted gross receipts up to and |
including $25,000,000;
|
20% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$25,000,000 but not
exceeding $50,000,000;
|
25% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$50,000,000 but not
exceeding $75,000,000;
|
30% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
|
$75,000,000 but not
exceeding $100,000,000;
|
35% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$100,000,000.
|
(a-2) From July 1, 2002 until July 1, 2003, a privilege tax |
is imposed on
persons engaged in the business of conducting |
riverboat gambling operations,
other than licensed managers |
conducting riverboat gambling operations on behalf
of the |
State, based on the adjusted gross receipts received by a |
licensed
owner from gambling games authorized under this Act at |
the following rates:
|
15% of annual adjusted gross receipts up to and |
including $25,000,000;
|
22.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$25,000,000 but not
exceeding $50,000,000;
|
27.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$50,000,000 but not
exceeding $75,000,000;
|
32.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$75,000,000 but not
exceeding $100,000,000;
|
37.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$100,000,000 but not
exceeding $150,000,000;
|
45% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$150,000,000 but not
exceeding $200,000,000;
|
50% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$200,000,000.
|
(a-3) Beginning July 1, 2003, a privilege tax is imposed on |
persons engaged
in the business of conducting riverboat |
gambling operations, other than
licensed managers conducting |
riverboat gambling operations on behalf of the
State, based on |
the adjusted gross receipts received by a licensed owner from
|
gambling games authorized under this Act at the following |
rates:
|
15% of annual adjusted gross receipts up to and |
including $25,000,000;
|
27.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$25,000,000 but not
exceeding $37,500,000;
|
32.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
|
$37,500,000 but not
exceeding $50,000,000;
|
37.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$50,000,000 but not
exceeding $75,000,000;
|
45% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$75,000,000 but not
exceeding $100,000,000;
|
50% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$100,000,000 but not
exceeding $250,000,000;
|
70% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$250,000,000.
|
An amount equal to the amount of wagering taxes collected |
under this
subsection (a-3) that are in addition to the amount |
of wagering taxes that
would have been collected if the |
wagering tax rates under subsection (a-2)
were in effect shall |
be paid into the Common School Fund.
|
The privilege tax imposed under this subsection (a-3) shall |
no longer be
imposed beginning on the earlier of (i) July 1, |
2005; (ii) the first date
after June 20, 2003 that riverboat |
gambling operations are conducted
pursuant to a dormant |
license; or (iii) the first day that riverboat gambling
|
operations are conducted under the authority of an owners |
license that is in
addition to the 10 owners licenses initially |
authorized under this Act.
For the purposes of this subsection |
(a-3), the term "dormant license"
means an owners license that |
is authorized by this Act under which no
riverboat gambling |
operations are being conducted on June 20, 2003.
|
(a-4) Beginning on the first day on which the tax imposed |
under
subsection (a-3) is no longer imposed, a privilege tax is |
imposed on persons
engaged in the business of conducting |
riverboat gambling operations, other
than licensed managers |
conducting riverboat gambling operations on behalf of
the |
State, based on the adjusted gross receipts received by a |
licensed owner
from gambling games authorized under this Act at |
the following rates:
|
15% of annual adjusted gross receipts up to and |
including $25,000,000;
|
22.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
|
$25,000,000 but not
exceeding $50,000,000;
|
27.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$50,000,000 but not
exceeding $75,000,000;
|
32.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$75,000,000 but not
exceeding $100,000,000;
|
37.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$100,000,000 but not
exceeding $150,000,000;
|
45% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$150,000,000 but not
exceeding $200,000,000;
|
50% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$200,000,000.
|
(a-8) Riverboat gambling operations conducted by a |
licensed manager on
behalf of the State are not subject to the |
tax imposed under this Section.
|
(a-10) The taxes imposed by this Section shall be paid by |
the licensed
owner to the Board not later than 3:00 o'clock |
p.m. of the day after the day
when the wagers were made.
|
(a-15) If the privilege tax imposed under subsection (a-3) |
is no longer imposed pursuant to item (i) of the last paragraph |
of subsection (a-3), then by June 15 of each year, each owners |
licensee, other than an owners licensee that admitted 1,000,000 |
persons or
fewer in calendar year 2004, must, in addition to |
the payment of all amounts otherwise due under this Section, |
pay to the Board a reconciliation payment in the amount, if |
any, by which the licensed owner's base amount for the licensed |
owner exceeds the amount of net privilege tax paid under this |
Section by the licensed owner to the Board in the then current |
State fiscal year. A licensed owner's net privilege tax |
obligation due for the balance of the State fiscal year shall |
be reduced up to the total of the amount paid by the licensed |
owner in its June 15 reconciliation payment. The obligation |
imposed by this subsection (a-15) is binding on any person, |
firm, corporation, or other entity that acquires an ownership |
interest in any such owners license. The obligation imposed |
under this subsection (a-15) terminates on the earliest of: (i) |
July 1, 2007, (ii) the first day after the effective date of |
|
this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly that riverboat |
gambling operations are conducted pursuant to a dormant |
license, (iii) the first day that riverboat gambling operations |
are conducted under the authority of an owners license that is |
in addition to the 10 owners licenses initially authorized |
under this Act, or (iv) the first day that a licensee under the |
Illinois Horse Racing Act of 1975 conducts gaming operations |
with slot machines or other electronic gaming devices. The |
Board must reduce the obligation imposed under this subsection |
(a-15) by an amount the Board deems reasonable for any of the |
following reasons: (A) an act or acts of God, (B) an act of |
bioterrorism or terrorism or a bioterrorism or terrorism threat |
that was investigated by a law enforcement agency, or (C) a |
condition beyond the control of the owners licensee that does |
not result from any act or omission by the owners licensee or |
any of its agents and that poses a hazardous threat to the |
health and safety of patrons. If an owners licensee pays an |
amount in excess of its liability under this Section, the Board |
shall apply the overpayment to future payments required under |
this Section. |
For purposes of this subsection (a-15): |
"Act of God" means an incident caused by the operation of |
an extraordinary force that cannot be foreseen, that cannot be |
avoided by the exercise of due care, and for which no person |
can be held liable.
|
"Base amount" means the following: |
For a riverboat in Alton, $31,000,000.
|
For a riverboat in East Peoria, $43,000,000.
|
For the Empress riverboat in Joliet, $86,000,000.
|
For a riverboat in Metropolis, $45,000,000.
|
For the Harrah's riverboat in Joliet, $114,000,000.
|
For a riverboat in Aurora, $86,000,000.
|
For a riverboat in East St. Louis, $48,500,000.
|
For a riverboat in Elgin, $198,000,000.
|
"Dormant license" has the meaning ascribed to it in |
subsection (a-3).
|
|
"Net privilege tax" means all privilege taxes paid by a |
licensed owner to the Board under this Section, less all |
payments made from the State Gaming Fund pursuant to subsection |
(b) of this Section. |
The changes made to this subsection (a-15) by this |
amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly are intended to |
restate and clarify the intent of Public Act 94-673 with |
respect to the amount of the payments required to be made under |
this subsection by an owners licensee to the Board.
|
(b) Until January 1, 1998, 25% of the tax revenue deposited |
in the State
Gaming Fund under this Section shall be paid, |
subject to appropriation by the
General Assembly, to the unit |
of local government which is designated as the
home dock of the |
riverboat. Beginning January 1, 1998, from the tax revenue
|
deposited in the State Gaming Fund under this Section, an |
amount equal to 5% of
adjusted gross receipts generated by a |
riverboat shall be paid monthly, subject
to appropriation by |
the General Assembly, to the unit of local government that
is |
designated as the home dock of the riverboat. From the tax |
revenue
deposited in the State Gaming Fund pursuant to |
riverboat gambling operations
conducted by a licensed manager |
on behalf of the State, an amount equal to 5%
of adjusted gross |
receipts generated pursuant to those riverboat gambling
|
operations shall be paid monthly,
subject to appropriation by |
the General Assembly, to the unit of local
government that is |
designated as the home dock of the riverboat upon which
those |
riverboat gambling operations are conducted.
|
(c) Appropriations, as approved by the General Assembly, |
may be made
from the State Gaming Fund to the Department of |
Revenue and the Department
of State Police for the |
administration and enforcement of this Act, or to the
|
Department of Human Services for the administration of programs |
to treat
problem gambling.
|
(c-5) After the payments required under subsections (b) and |
(c) have been
made, an amount equal to 15% of the adjusted |
gross receipts of (1) an owners
licensee that relocates |
|
pursuant to Section 11.2,
(2) an owners licensee
conducting |
riverboat gambling operations
pursuant to an
owners license |
that is initially issued after June
25, 1999,
or (3) the first
|
riverboat gambling operations conducted by a licensed manager |
on behalf of the
State under Section 7.3,
whichever comes |
first, shall be paid from the State
Gaming Fund into the Horse |
Racing Equity Fund.
|
(c-10) Each year the General Assembly shall appropriate |
from the General
Revenue Fund to the Education Assistance Fund |
an amount equal to the amount
paid into the Horse Racing Equity |
Fund pursuant to subsection (c-5) in the
prior calendar year.
|
(c-15) After the payments required under subsections (b), |
(c), and (c-5)
have been made, an amount equal to 2% of the |
adjusted gross receipts of (1)
an owners licensee that |
relocates pursuant to Section 11.2, (2) an owners
licensee |
conducting riverboat gambling operations pursuant to
an
owners |
license that is initially issued after June 25, 1999,
or (3) |
the first
riverboat gambling operations conducted by a licensed |
manager on behalf of the
State under Section 7.3,
whichever |
comes first, shall be paid, subject to appropriation
from the |
General Assembly, from the State Gaming Fund to each home rule
|
county with a population of over 3,000,000 inhabitants for the |
purpose of
enhancing the county's criminal justice system.
|
(c-20) Each year the General Assembly shall appropriate |
from the General
Revenue Fund to the Education Assistance Fund |
an amount equal to the amount
paid to each home rule county |
with a population of over 3,000,000 inhabitants
pursuant to |
subsection (c-15) in the prior calendar year.
|
(c-25) After the payments required under subsections (b), |
(c), (c-5) and
(c-15) have been made, an amount equal to 2% of |
the
adjusted gross receipts of (1) an owners licensee
that
|
relocates pursuant to Section 11.2, (2) an
owners
licensee |
conducting riverboat gambling operations pursuant to
an
owners |
license
that is initially issued after June 25, 1999,
or (3) |
the first
riverboat gambling operations conducted by a licensed |
manager on behalf of the
State under Section 7.3,
whichever
|
|
comes first,
shall be paid from the State
Gaming Fund to |
Chicago State University.
|
(d) From time to time, the
Board shall transfer the |
remainder of the funds
generated by this Act into the Education
|
Assistance Fund, created by Public Act 86-0018, of the State of |
Illinois.
|
(e) Nothing in this Act shall prohibit the unit of local |
government
designated as the home dock of the riverboat from |
entering into agreements
with other units of local government |
in this State or in other states to
share its portion of the |
tax revenue.
|
(f) To the extent practicable, the Board shall administer |
and collect the
wagering taxes imposed by this Section in a |
manner consistent with the
provisions of Sections 4, 5, 5a, 5b, |
5c, 5d, 5e, 5f, 5g, 5i, 5j, 6, 6a, 6b,
6c, 8, 9, and 10 of the |
Retailers' Occupation Tax Act and Section 3-7 of the
Uniform |
Penalty and Interest Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-27, eff. 6-20-03; 93-28, eff. 6-20-03; 94-673, |
eff. 8-23-05.)
|
Section 5-77. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
changing Section 5A-8 as follows: |
(305 ILCS 5/5A-8) (from Ch. 23, par. 5A-8)
|
Sec. 5A-8. Hospital Provider Fund.
|
(a) There is created in the State Treasury the Hospital |
Provider Fund.
Interest earned by the Fund shall be credited to |
the Fund. The
Fund shall not be used to replace any moneys |
appropriated to the
Medicaid program by the General Assembly.
|
(b) The Fund is created for the purpose of receiving moneys
|
in accordance with Section 5A-6 and disbursing moneys only for |
the following
purposes, notwithstanding any other provision of |
law:
|
(1) For making payments to hospitals as required under |
Articles V, VI,
and XIV of this Code and
under the |
Children's Health Insurance Program Act.
|
|
(2) For the reimbursement of moneys collected by the
|
Illinois Department from hospitals or hospital providers |
through error or
mistake in performing the
activities |
authorized under this Article and Article V of this Code.
|
(3) For payment of administrative expenses incurred by |
the
Illinois Department or its agent in performing the |
activities
authorized by this Article.
|
(4) For payments of any amounts which are reimbursable |
to
the federal government for payments from this Fund which |
are
required to be paid by State warrant.
|
(5) For making transfers, as those transfers are |
authorized
in the proceedings authorizing debt under the |
Short Term Borrowing Act,
but transfers made under this |
paragraph (5) shall not exceed the
principal amount of debt |
issued in anticipation of the receipt by
the State of |
moneys to be deposited into the Fund.
|
(6) For making transfers to any other fund in the State |
treasury, but
transfers made under this paragraph (6) shall |
not exceed the amount transferred
previously from that |
other fund into the Hospital Provider Fund.
|
(7) For State fiscal years 2004 and 2005 for making |
transfers to the Health and Human Services
Medicaid Trust |
Fund, including 20% of the moneys received from
hospital |
providers under Section 5A-4 and transferred into the |
Hospital
Provider
Fund under Section 5A-6. For State fiscal |
year
years 2006 , 2007 and 2008 for making transfers to the |
Health and Human Services Medicaid Trust Fund of up to |
$130,000,000 per year of the moneys received from hospital |
providers under Section 5A-4 and transferred into the |
Hospital Provider Fund under Section 5A-6. Transfers under |
this paragraph shall be made within 7
days after the |
payments have been received pursuant to the schedule of |
payments
provided in subsection (a) of Section 5A-4.
|
(7.5) For State fiscal years 2007 and 2008 for making
|
transfers of the moneys received from hospital providers |
under Section 5A-4 and transferred into the Hospital |
|
Provider Fund under Section 5A-6 to the designated funds |
not exceeding the following amounts in any State fiscal |
year: |
Health and Human Services |
Medicaid Trust Fund ......... $20,000,000 |
Long-Term Care Provider Fund ........ $30,000,000 |
General Revenue Fund ....... $80,000,000. |
Transfers under this paragraph shall be made within 7 |
days after the payments have been received pursuant to the |
schedule of payments provided in subsection (a) of Section |
5A-4.
|
(8) For making refunds to hospital providers pursuant |
to Section 5A-10.
|
Disbursements from the Fund, other than transfers |
authorized under
paragraphs (5) and (6) of this subsection, |
shall be by
warrants drawn by the State Comptroller upon |
receipt of vouchers
duly executed and certified by the Illinois |
Department.
|
(c) The Fund shall consist of the following:
|
(1) All moneys collected or received by the Illinois
|
Department from the hospital provider assessment imposed |
by this
Article.
|
(2) All federal matching funds received by the Illinois
|
Department as a result of expenditures made by the Illinois
|
Department that are attributable to moneys deposited in the |
Fund.
|
(3) Any interest or penalty levied in conjunction with |
the
administration of this Article.
|
(4) Moneys transferred from another fund in the State |
treasury.
|
(5) All other moneys received for the Fund from any |
other
source, including interest earned thereon.
|
(d) (Blank).
|
(Source: P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04; 94-242, eff. 7-18-05.)
|
Section 5-78. The Illinois Affordable Housing Act is |
|
amended by changing Section 8 as follows:
|
(310 ILCS 65/8) (from Ch. 67 1/2, par. 1258)
|
Sec. 8. Uses of Trust Fund.
|
(a) Subject to annual appropriation to
the Funding Agent |
and subject to the prior dedication, allocation, transfer
and |
use of Trust Fund Moneys as provided in Sections 8(b), 8(c) and |
9 of this
Act, the Trust Fund may be used to make grants,
|
mortgages, or
other loans to acquire, construct, rehabilitate, |
develop, operate, insure,
and retain affordable single-family |
and multi-family housing in this State
for low-income
and very |
low-income households. The majority of monies appropriated to |
the
Trust Fund in any given year are to be used for affordable |
housing for very
low-income households. For the fiscal year |
beginning July 1, 2006 only, the Department of Human Services |
is authorized to receive appropriations and spend moneys from |
the Illinois Affordable Housing Trust Fund for the purpose of |
developing and coordinating public and private resources |
targeted to meet the affordable housing needs of low-income, |
very low-income, and special needs households in the State of |
Illinois.
|
(b) For each fiscal year commencing with fiscal year 1994, |
the Program
Administrator shall certify from time to time to |
the Funding Agent, the
Comptroller and the State
Treasurer |
amounts, up to an aggregate in any fiscal year of $10,000,000, |
of
Trust Fund Moneys expected to be used or pledged by the |
Program Administrator
during the fiscal year for the purposes |
and uses specified in Sections 8(c) and
9 of this Act. Subject |
to annual appropriation, upon receipt of such
certification, |
the Funding Agent and the
Comptroller shall dedicate and the |
State Treasurer shall transfer not less
often than monthly to |
the Program Administrator or its designated payee,
without |
requisition or further
request therefor, all amounts |
accumulated in the Trust Fund within the State
Treasury and not |
already transferred to the Loan Commitment Account prior to
the |
Funding Agent's receipt of such certification, until the |
|
Program
Administrator has received the aggregate amount |
certified by the Program
Administrator, to be used solely for |
the purposes and uses authorized and
provided in Sections 8(c) |
and 9 of this Act. Neither the Comptroller nor the
Treasurer |
shall transfer, dedicate or allocate any of the Trust Fund |
Moneys
transferred or certified for transfer by the Program |
Administrator as provided
above to any other fund, nor shall |
the Governor authorize any such transfer,
dedication or |
allocation, nor shall any of the Trust Fund Moneys so |
dedicated,
allocated or transferred be used, temporarily or |
otherwise, for interfund
borrowing, or be otherwise used or |
appropriated, except as expressly authorized
and provided in |
Sections 8(c) and 9 of this Act for the purposes and subject to
|
the priorities, limitations and conditions provided for |
therein until such
obligations, uses and dedications as therein |
provided, have been satisfied.
|
(c) Notwithstanding Section 5(b) of this Act, any Trust |
Fund Moneys
transferred to the Program Administrator pursuant |
to Section 8(b) of this Act,
or otherwise obtained, paid to or |
held by or for the Program Administrator, or
pledged pursuant |
to resolution of the Program Administrator, for Affordable
|
Housing Program Trust Fund Bonds or Notes under the Illinois |
Housing
Development Act, and all proceeds, payments and |
receipts from investments or
use of such moneys, including any |
residual or additional funds or moneys
generated or obtained in |
connection with any of the foregoing, may be held,
pledged, |
applied or dedicated by the Program Administrator as follows:
|
(1) as required by the terms of any pledge of or |
resolution of the Program
Administrator authorized under |
Section 9 of this Act in connection with
Affordable Housing |
Program Trust Fund Bonds or Notes issued pursuant to the
|
Illinois Housing Development Act;
|
(2) to or for costs of issuance and administration
and |
the payments of any principal, interest, premium or other |
amounts or
expenses incurred or accrued in connection with |
Affordable Housing Program
Trust Fund Bonds or Notes, |
|
including rate protection contracts and credit
support |
arrangements pertaining thereto, and, provided such |
expenses, fees and
charges are obligations, whether |
recourse or nonrecourse, and whether financed
with or paid |
from the proceeds of Affordable Housing Program Trust Fund |
Bonds
or Notes, of the developers, mortgagors or other |
users, the Program
Administrator's expenses and servicing, |
administration and origination fees and
charges in |
connection with any loans, mortgages, or developments |
funded or
financed or expected to be funded or financed, in |
whole or in part, from the
issuance of Affordable Housing |
Program Trust Fund Bonds or Notes;
|
(3) to or for costs of issuance and administration and |
the payments of
principal, interest, premium, loan fees, |
and other amounts or other obligations
of the Program |
Administrator, including rate protection contracts and |
credit
support arrangements pertaining thereto, for loans, |
commercial paper or other
notes or bonds issued by the |
Program Administrator pursuant to the Illinois
Housing |
Development Act, provided that the proceeds of such loans, |
commercial
paper or other notes or bonds are paid or |
expended in connection with, or
refund or repay, loans, |
commercial paper or other notes or bonds issued or made
in |
connection with bridge loans or loans for the construction, |
renovation,
redevelopment, restructuring, reorganization |
of Affordable Housing and related
expenses, including |
development costs, technical assistance, or other amounts
|
to construct, preserve, improve, renovate, rehabilitate, |
refinance, or assist
Affordable Housing, including |
financially troubled Affordable Housing,
permanent or |
other financing for which has been funded or financed or is
|
expected to be funded or financed in whole or in part by |
the Program
Administrator through the issuance of or use of |
proceeds from Affordable
Housing Program Trust Fund Bonds |
or Notes;
|
(4) to or for direct expenditures or reimbursement for |
|
development costs,
technical assistance, or other amounts |
to construct, preserve, improve,
renovate, rehabilitate, |
refinance, or assist Affordable Housing, including
|
financially troubled Affordable Housing, permanent or |
other financing for which
has been funded or financed or is |
expected to be funded or financed in whole or
in part by |
the Program Administrator through the issuance of or use of |
proceeds
from Affordable Housing Program Trust Fund Bonds |
or Notes; and
|
(5) for deposit into any residual, sinking, reserve or |
revolving fund or
pool established by the Program |
Administrator, whether or not pledged to secure
Affordable |
Housing Program Trust Fund Bonds or Notes, to support or be
|
utilized for the
issuance, redemption, or payment of the |
principal, interest, premium or other
amounts payable on or |
with respect to any existing, additional or future
|
Affordable Housing Program Trust Fund Bonds or Notes, or to |
or for any other
expenditure authorized by this Section |
8(c).
|
(d) All or a portion of the Trust Fund Moneys on
deposit or |
to be
deposited in
the Trust Fund not already certified for |
transfer or transferred to the
Program Administrator pursuant |
to Section 8(b) of this Act may be used to
secure the repayment |
of Affordable Housing Program Trust Fund Bonds or
Notes, or |
otherwise to supplement or support Affordable Housing funded or
|
financed
or
intended to be funded or financed, in whole or in |
part, by Affordable Housing
Program Trust Fund Bonds or Notes.
|
(e) Assisted housing may include housing for special needs
|
populations
such as the homeless, single-parent families, the |
elderly, or the
physically and mentally disabled. The Trust |
Fund shall be used to
implement a demonstration congregate |
housing project for any such special
needs population.
|
(f) Grants from the Trust Fund may include, but are not |
limited
to,
rental assistance and security deposit subsidies |
for low and very low-income
households.
|
(g) The Trust Fund may be used to pay actual and reasonable
|
|
costs for
Commission members to attend Commission meetings, and |
any litigation costs
and expenses, including legal fees, |
incurred by the Program Administrator
in any litigation related |
to this Act or its action as Program
Administrator.
|
(h) The Trust Fund may be used to make grants for (1) the
|
provision of
technical assistance, (2) outreach, and (3) |
building an organization's
capacity to develop affordable |
housing projects.
|
(i) Amounts on deposit in the Trust Fund may be used to |
reimburse the
Program
Administrator and the Funding Agent for |
costs incurred in the performance of
their duties under this |
Act, excluding costs and fees of the Program
Administrator |
associated with the Program Escrow to the extent withheld
|
pursuant to paragraph (8) of subsection (b) of Section 5.
|
(Source: P.A. 88-93; 89-286, eff. 8-10-95.)
|
Section 5-80. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by |
changing Sections 18c-1603 and 18c-1604 as follows:
|
(625 ILCS 5/18c-1603) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 18c-1603)
|
Sec. 18c-1603. Expenditures from the Transportation |
Regulatory Fund. (1) Authorization of Expenditures from the |
Fund. Monies deposited in the
Transportation Regulatory Fund |
shall be expended only for the
administration and enforcement |
of this Chapter and Chapter 18a.
|
(2) Allocation of Expenses to the Fund. (a) Expenses |
Allocated Entirely
to the Transportation Regulatory Fund. All |
expenses of the Transportation
Division shall be allocated to |
the Transportation Regulatory Fund, provided
that they were:
|
(i) Incurred by and for staff employed within the |
Transportation
Division and accountable, directly or through a |
program director or staff
supervisor, to the Transportation |
Division manager;
|
(ii) Incurred exclusively in the administration and |
enforcement of
this Chapter and Chapter 18a; and
|
(iii) Authorized by the Transportation Division manager.
|
|
(b) Expenses Partially Allocated to the Transportation |
Regulatory Fund.
A portion of expenses for the following |
persons and activities may be
allocated to the Transportation |
Regulatory Fund:
|
(i) The Executive Director, his deputies and personal |
assistants, and
their clerical support;
|
(ii) The legislative liaison activities of the Office of |
Legislative
Affairs, its constituent elements and successors;
|
(iii) The activities of the Bureau of Planning and |
Operations on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
94th General Assembly
Administrative Services Division on the
|
effective date of this amendatory Act of 1987 , exclusive of the |
Chief Clerk's office;
|
(iv) The payroll expenses of Commissioners' assistants;
|
(v) The internal auditor; and
|
(vi) The in-state travel expenses of the Commissioners to |
and from
the offices of the Commission ; and .
|
(vii) The Public Affairs Group, its constituent elements, |
and its successors.
|
(c) Allocation Methodology for Expenses Other Than |
Administrative
Services Division and Commissioners' |
Assistants. The portion of total
expenses (other than
|
Administrative Services Division and commissioners' |
assistants' expenses)
allocated to the Transportation |
Regulatory Fund under paragraph (b) of this
subsection shall be |
the lessor of: (i) The portion of staff time spent exclusively |
on administration and
enforcement of this Chapter and Chapter |
18a, as shown
by a time study updated at least once each 6 |
months ; and (ii) The percentage of total authorized Commission |
staff for the fiscal
year which is employed in Transportation |
Division (based on the average for
the fiscal year) .
|
(d) (Blank).
Allocation Methodology for Expenses of |
Administration Services
Division. The portion of expenses for |
Administrative Services Division
allocated to the |
Transportation Regulatory Fund under paragraph (b) of this
|
subsection shall not exceed:
|
|
(i) The portion allocable under paragraph (c) of this |
subsection, for
staff payroll expenses; and
|
(ii) The portion used exclusively in the administration and |
enforcement
of this Chapter and Chapter 18a, for other than |
staff
payroll expenses.
|
(e) Allocation methodology for Commissioners' Assistants |
Expenses. Five
percent of the payroll expenses of |
commissioners'
assistants may be allocated to the |
Transportation Regulatory Fund.
|
(f) Expenses not allocable to the Transportation |
Regulatory Fund. No
expenses shall be allocated to or paid from |
the Transportation Regulatory
Fund except as expressly |
authorized in paragraphs (a) through (e) of this
subsection. In |
particular, no expenses shall be allocated to the Fund
which |
were incurred by or in relation to the following persons and |
activities:
|
(i) Commissioners' travel, except as otherwise provided in |
paragraphs (b)
and (c) of this subsection;
|
(ii) Commissioners' assistants except as otherwise |
provided in
paragraphs (b) and (e) of this subsection;
|
(iii) The Policy Analysis and Research Division, its |
constituent
elements and successors;
|
(iv) The Chief Clerk's office, its constituent elements and |
successors;
|
(v) The Hearing Examiners Division, its constituent |
elements and
successors, and any hearing examiners or hearings
|
conducted, in whole or in part, outside the Transportation |
Division;
|
(vi) (Blank);
The Public Affairs Group, its constituent |
elements and successors;
|
(vii) The Office of General Counsel, its constituent |
elements and
successors, including but not limited to the |
Office of Public Utility
Counsel and any legal staff in the |
office of the executive director, but
not including the |
personal assistant serving as staff counsel to the executive
|
director as provided in Section 18c-1204(2) and the Office
of |
|
Transportation Counsel; and
|
(viii) Any other expenses or portion thereof not expressly |
authorized in
this subsection to
be allocated to the Fund.
|
The constituent elements of the foregoing shall, for |
purposes of this
Section be their constituent elements on the |
effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1987.
|
(3) (Blank).
Allocation of Expenses Within the Fund. (a) |
Monies deposited in the
Transportation Regulatory Fund shall be |
expended only in the regulation of
that class of persons as |
defined in subsection (2) of Section 18c-1601 of
this Chapter |
from or in relation to which the monies were received.
|
(b) Expenses incurred exclusively in relation to one class |
shall be
allocated to that class and no other.
|
(c) A portion of each expense incurred in relation to more |
than one
class may be allocated to each of the involved classes |
based on time study
or actual use, provided that the portion |
allocated to any class shall not
exceed the maximum specified |
in paragraph (d) of this subsection.
|
(d) Total expenses allocated to any one class under |
paragraph (c) of
this subsection shall not exceed the amount |
which bears the same percentage
relationship to expenses |
allocated to that class under paragraph (b) of
this subsection |
((c) divided by (b)) as total expenses allocated to all
classes |
under paragraph (b) bear to total expenses allocated to all
|
classes under paragraph (c) ((c) divided by (b)).
|
(4) (Blank).
Effective Date of Section. The Commission |
shall have 180 calendar
days from the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1987 to comply fully
with this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-1005.)
|
(625 ILCS 5/18c-1604) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 18c-1604)
|
Sec. 18c-1604. Annual Report of Expenditures. The |
Commission shall,
within 60 calendar days after the end of the |
lapse period for each fiscal year, submit to the
Governor and |
the General Assembly a report of the following for such fiscal
|
year:
|
|
(1) All monies deposited in the Transportation Regulatory |
Fund, showing
the total and subtotals by class as defined in |
subsection (2) of
Section 18c-1601 of this Chapter;
|
(2) All expenditures from the Transportation Regulatory |
Fund, showing
the total and the sub-totals by class as defined |
in subsection (2) of
Section 18c-1601 of this Chapter;
|
(3) A listing and description by function of all staff |
positions
actually funded, in whole or in part, at any time |
during the fiscal year,
from the Transportation Regulatory |
Fund; and
|
(4) The methods used to allocate expenses between the |
Transportation
Regulatory Fund and other funds, and between |
classes within the
Transportation Regulatory Fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 85-553.)
|
Section 5-85. The Pretrial Services Act is amended by |
changing Section 33 as follows:
|
(725 ILCS 185/33) (from Ch. 38, par. 333)
|
Sec. 33. The Supreme Court shall pay from funds |
appropriated to it for this purpose
100% of all approved costs |
for pretrial services, including pretrial
services officers, |
necessary support personnel, travel costs reasonably
related |
to the delivery of pretrial services, space costs, equipment,
|
telecommunications, postage, commodities, printing and |
contractual
services. Costs shall be reimbursed monthly, based |
on a plan and budget
approved by the Supreme Court. No
|
department may be reimbursed for costs which exceed or are not |
provided for
in the approved plan and budget.
For State fiscal |
years 2004, 2005, and 2006 , and 2007 only, the Mandatory |
Arbitration Fund may be used
to
reimburse approved costs for |
pretrial services.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03; 93-839, eff. 7-30-04; 94-91, |
eff. 7-1-05.)
|
Section 5-90. The Unified Code of Corrections is amended by |
|
changing Sections 3-14-6 and 5-9-1.8 as follows:
|
(730 ILCS 5/3-14-6)
|
Sec. 3-14-6. Transitional jobs; pilot program. Subject to |
appropriations
or other funding, the Department may
establish
a
|
pilot program at various
in 2 locations in the State to place |
persons discharged from a
Department
facility on parole or |
mandatory supervised release in jobs or otherwise
establish a
|
connection between such persons and the workforce. One such |
location must be at Waukegan, in Lake County. By rule, the |
Department
shall
determine the locations in which the pilot |
program is to be implemented
and the services to be provided.
|
In determining locations for the pilot program, however, the |
Department shall
give priority to areas of the State in which |
the concentration of released
offenders is the highest.
The
|
Department may consult with the Department of Human Services in |
establishing
the pilot
program.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-208, eff. 7-18-03.)
|
(730 ILCS 5/5-9-1.8)
|
Sec. 5-9-1.8. Child pornography fines. Beginning July 1, |
2006, 100%
One hundred percent of the fines in
excess of |
$10,000 collected for violations of Section 11-20.1 of the |
Criminal
Code of 1961 shall be deposited into the Child Abuse |
Prevention Fund
Child Sexual Abuse Fund that is
created in the |
State Treasury. Moneys in the Fund resulting from the fines
|
shall be for the use of the
Department of Children and Family |
Services for grants to private entities
giving treatment and |
counseling to victims of child sexual abuse. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, in addition to |
any other transfers that may be provided by law, on July 1, |
2006, or as soon thereafter as practical, the State Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer the |
remaining balance from the Child Sexual Abuse Fund into the |
Child Abuse Prevention Fund. Upon completion of the transfer, |
the Child Sexual Abuse Fund is dissolved, and any future |
|
deposits due to that Fund and any outstanding obligations or |
liabilities of the Fund pass to the Child Abuse Prevention |
Fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-1070; 88-45.)
|
Section 5-95. The Probation and Probation Officers Act is |
amended by changing Sections 15 and 15.1 as follows:
|
(730 ILCS 110/15) (from Ch. 38, par. 204-7)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 94-696 )
|
Sec. 15. (1) The Supreme Court of Illinois may establish a |
Division of
Probation Services whose purpose shall be the |
development, establishment,
promulgation, and enforcement of |
uniform standards for probation services in
this State, and to |
otherwise carry out the intent of this Act. The Division
may:
|
(a) establish qualifications for chief probation |
officers and other
probation and court services personnel |
as to hiring, promotion, and training.
|
(b) make available, on a timely basis, lists of those |
applicants whose
qualifications meet the regulations |
referred to herein, including on said
lists all candidates |
found qualified.
|
(c) establish a means of verifying the conditions for |
reimbursement
under this Act and develop criteria for |
approved costs for reimbursement.
|
(d) develop standards and approve employee |
compensation schedules for
probation and court services |
departments.
|
(e) employ sufficient personnel in the Division to |
carry out the
functions of the Division.
|
(f) establish a system of training and establish |
standards for personnel
orientation and training.
|
(g) develop standards for a system of record keeping |
for cases and
programs, gather statistics, establish a |
system of uniform forms, and
develop research for planning |
of Probation
Services.
|
|
(h) develop standards to assure adequate support |
personnel, office
space, equipment and supplies, travel |
expenses, and other essential items
necessary for |
Probation and Court Services
Departments to carry out their
|
duties.
|
(i) review and approve annual plans submitted by
|
Probation and Court
Services Departments.
|
(j) monitor and evaluate all programs operated by
|
Probation and Court
Services Departments, and may include |
in the program evaluation criteria
such factors as the |
percentage of Probation sentences for felons convicted
of |
Probationable offenses.
|
(k) seek the cooperation of local and State government |
and private
agencies to improve the quality of probation |
and
court services.
|
(l) where appropriate, establish programs and |
corresponding standards
designed to generally improve the |
quality of
probation and court services
and reduce the rate |
of adult or juvenile offenders committed to the
Department |
of Corrections.
|
(m) establish such other standards and regulations and |
do all acts
necessary to carry out the intent and purposes |
of this Act.
|
The Division shall establish a model list of structured |
intermediate
sanctions that may be imposed by a probation |
agency for violations of terms and
conditions of a sentence of |
probation, conditional discharge, or supervision.
|
The State of Illinois shall provide for the costs of |
personnel, travel,
equipment, telecommunications, postage, |
commodities, printing, space,
contractual services and other |
related costs necessary to carry out the
intent of this Act.
|
(2) (a) The chief judge of each circuit shall provide
|
full-time probation services for all counties
within the |
circuit, in a
manner consistent with the annual probation plan,
|
the standards, policies,
and regulations established by the |
Supreme Court. A
probation district of
two or more counties |
|
within a circuit may be created for the purposes of
providing |
full-time probation services. Every
county or group of
counties |
within a circuit shall maintain a
probation department which |
shall
be under the authority of the Chief Judge of the circuit |
or some other
judge designated by the Chief Judge. The Chief |
Judge, through the
Probation and Court Services Department |
shall
submit annual plans to the
Division for probation and |
related services.
|
(b) The Chief Judge of each circuit shall appoint the Chief
|
Probation
Officer and all other probation officers for his
or |
her circuit from lists
of qualified applicants supplied by the |
Supreme Court. Candidates for chief
managing officer and other |
probation officer
positions must apply with both
the Chief |
Judge of the circuit and the Supreme Court.
|
(3) A Probation and Court Service Department
shall apply to |
the
Supreme Court for funds for basic services, and may apply |
for funds for new
and expanded programs or Individualized |
Services and Programs. Costs shall
be reimbursed monthly based |
on a plan and budget approved by the Supreme
Court. No |
Department may be reimbursed for costs which exceed or are not
|
provided for in the approved annual plan and budget. After the |
effective
date of this amendatory Act of 1985, each county must |
provide basic
services in accordance with the annual plan and |
standards created by the
division. No department may receive |
funds for new or expanded programs or
individualized services |
and programs unless they are in compliance with
standards as |
enumerated in paragraph (h) of subsection (1) of this Section,
|
the annual plan, and standards for basic services.
|
(4) The Division shall reimburse the county or counties for
|
probation
services as follows:
|
(a) 100% of the salary of all chief managing officers |
designated as such
by the Chief Judge and the division.
|
(b) 100% of the salary for all probation
officer and |
supervisor
positions approved for reimbursement by the |
division after April 1, 1984,
to meet workload standards |
and to implement intensive sanction and
probation
|
|
supervision
programs and other basic services as defined in |
this Act.
|
(c) 100% of the salary for all secure detention |
personnel and non-secure
group home personnel approved for |
reimbursement after December 1, 1990.
For all such |
positions approved for reimbursement
before
December 1, |
1990, the counties shall be reimbursed $1,250 per month |
beginning
July 1, 1995, and an additional $250 per month |
beginning each July 1st
thereafter until the positions |
receive 100% salary reimbursement.
Allocation of such |
positions will be based on comparative need considering
|
capacity, staff/resident ratio, physical plant and |
program.
|
(d) $1,000 per month for salaries for the remaining
|
probation officer
positions engaged in basic services and |
new or expanded services. All such
positions shall be |
approved by the division in accordance with this Act and
|
division standards.
|
(e) 100% of the travel expenses in accordance with |
Division standards
for all Probation positions approved |
under
paragraph (b) of subsection 4
of this Section.
|
(f) If the amount of funds reimbursed to the county |
under paragraphs
(a) through (e) of subsection 4 of this |
Section on an annual basis is less
than the amount the |
county had received during the 12 month period
immediately |
prior to the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1985,
|
then the Division shall reimburse the amount of the |
difference to the
county. The effect of paragraph (b) of |
subsection 7 of this Section shall
be considered in |
implementing this supplemental reimbursement provision.
|
(5) The Division shall provide funds beginning on April 1, |
1987 for the
counties to provide Individualized Services and |
Programs as provided in
Section 16 of this Act.
|
(6) A Probation and Court Services Department
in order to |
be eligible
for the reimbursement must submit to the Supreme |
Court an application
containing such information and in such a |
|
form and by such dates as the
Supreme Court may require. |
Departments to be eligible for funding must
satisfy the |
following conditions:
|
(a) The Department shall have on file with the Supreme
|
Court an annual Probation plan for continuing,
improved, |
and
new Probation and Court Services Programs
approved by |
the Supreme Court or its
designee. This plan shall indicate |
the manner in which
Probation and Court
Services will be |
delivered and improved, consistent with the minimum
|
standards and regulations for Probation and Court
|
Services, as established
by the Supreme Court. In counties |
with more than one
Probation and Court
Services Department |
eligible to receive funds, all Departments within that
|
county must submit plans which are approved by the Supreme |
Court.
|
(b) The annual probation plan shall seek to
generally |
improve the
quality of probation services and to reduce the
|
commitment of adult and
juvenile offenders to the |
Department of Corrections and shall require, when
|
appropriate, coordination with the Department of |
Corrections and the
Department of Children and Family |
Services in the development and use of
community resources, |
information systems, case review and permanency
planning |
systems to avoid the duplication of services.
|
(c) The Department shall be in compliance with |
standards developed by the
Supreme Court for basic, new and |
expanded services, training, personnel
hiring and |
promotion.
|
(d) The Department shall in its annual plan indicate |
the manner in which
it will support the rights of crime |
victims and in which manner it will
implement Article I, |
Section 8.1 of the Illinois Constitution and in what
manner |
it will coordinate crime victims' support services with |
other criminal
justice agencies within its jurisdiction, |
including but not limited to, the
State's Attorney, the |
Sheriff and any municipal police department.
|
|
(7) No statement shall be verified by the Supreme Court or |
its
designee or vouchered by the Comptroller unless each of the |
following
conditions have been met:
|
(a) The probation officer is a full-time
employee |
appointed by the Chief
Judge to provide probation services.
|
(b) The probation officer, in order to be
eligible for |
State
reimbursement, is receiving a salary of at least |
$17,000 per year.
|
(c) The probation officer is appointed or
was |
reappointed in accordance
with minimum qualifications or |
criteria established by the Supreme
Court; however, all |
probation officers appointed
prior to January 1, 1978,
|
shall be exempted from the minimum requirements |
established by the Supreme
Court. Payments shall be made to |
counties employing these exempted
probation officers as |
long as they are employed
in the position held on the
|
effective date of this amendatory Act of 1985. Promotions |
shall be
governed by minimum qualifications established by |
the Supreme Court.
|
(d) The Department has an established compensation |
schedule approved by
the Supreme Court. The compensation |
schedule shall include salary ranges
with necessary |
increments to compensate each employee. The increments
|
shall, within the salary ranges, be based on such factors |
as bona fide
occupational qualifications, performance, and |
length of service. Each
position in the Department shall be |
placed on the compensation schedule
according to job duties |
and responsibilities of such position. The policy
and |
procedures of the compensation schedule shall be made |
available to each
employee.
|
(8) In order to obtain full reimbursement of all approved |
costs, each
Department must continue to employ at least the |
same number of
probation
officers and probation managers as |
were
authorized for employment for the
fiscal year which |
includes January 1, 1985. This number shall be designated
as |
the base amount of the Department. No positions approved by the |
|
Division
under paragraph (b) of subsection 4 will be included |
in the base amount.
In the event that the Department employs |
fewer
Probation officers and
Probation managers than the base |
amount for a
period of 90 days, funding
received by the |
Department under subsection 4 of this
Section may be reduced on |
a monthly basis by the amount of the current
salaries of any |
positions below the base amount.
|
(9) Before the 15th day of each month, the treasurer of any |
county which
has a Probation and Court Services Department, or
|
the treasurer of the most
populous county, in the case of a |
Probation or
Court Services Department
funded by more than one |
county, shall submit an itemized statement of all
approved |
costs incurred in the delivery of Basic
Probation and Court
|
Services under this Act to the Supreme Court.
The treasurer may |
also submit an itemized statement of all approved costs
|
incurred in the delivery of new and expanded
Probation and |
Court Services
as well as Individualized Services and Programs. |
The Supreme Court or
its designee shall verify compliance with |
this Section and shall examine
and audit the monthly statement |
and, upon finding them to be correct, shall
forward them to the |
Comptroller for payment to the county treasurer. In the
case of |
payment to a treasurer of a county which is the most populous |
of
counties sharing the salary and expenses of a
Probation and |
Court Services
Department, the treasurer shall divide the money |
between the counties in a
manner that reflects each county's |
share of the cost incurred by the
Department.
|
(10) The county treasurer must certify that funds received |
under this
Section shall be used solely to maintain and improve
|
Probation and Court
Services. The county or circuit shall |
remain in compliance with all
standards, policies and |
regulations established by the Supreme Court.
If at any time |
the Supreme Court determines that a county or circuit is not
in |
compliance, the Supreme Court shall immediately notify the |
Chief Judge,
county board chairman and the Director of Court |
Services Chief
Probation Officer. If after 90 days of written
|
notice the noncompliance
still exists, the Supreme Court shall |
|
be required to reduce the amount of
monthly reimbursement by |
10%. An additional 10% reduction of monthly
reimbursement shall |
occur for each consecutive month of noncompliance.
Except as |
provided in subsection 5 of Section 15, funding to counties |
shall
commence on April 1, 1986. Funds received under this Act |
shall be used to
provide for Probation Department expenses
|
including those required under
Section 13 of this Act. For |
State fiscal years 2004, 2005, and 2006 , and 2007 only, the |
Mandatory
Arbitration Fund may be used to provide for Probation |
Department expenses,
including those required under Section 13 |
of this Act.
|
(11) The respective counties shall be responsible for |
capital and space
costs, fringe benefits, clerical costs, |
equipment, telecommunications,
postage, commodities and |
printing.
|
(12) For purposes of this Act only, probation officers |
shall be
considered
peace officers. In the
exercise of their |
official duties, probation
officers, sheriffs, and police
|
officers may, anywhere within the State, arrest any probationer |
who is in
violation of any of the conditions of his or her |
probation, conditional
discharge, or supervision, and it shall |
be the
duty of the officer making the arrest to take the |
probationer
before the
Court having jurisdiction over the |
probationer for further order.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03; 93-576, eff. 1-1-04; 93-839, |
eff. 7-30-04; 94-91, eff. 7-1-05.)
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 94-696 )
|
Sec. 15. (1) The Supreme Court of Illinois may establish a |
Division of
Probation Services whose purpose shall be the |
development, establishment,
promulgation, and enforcement of |
uniform standards for probation services in
this State, and to |
otherwise carry out the intent of this Act. The Division
may:
|
(a) establish qualifications for chief probation |
officers and other
probation and court services personnel |
as to hiring, promotion, and training.
|
|
(b) make available, on a timely basis, lists of those |
applicants whose
qualifications meet the regulations |
referred to herein, including on said
lists all candidates |
found qualified.
|
(c) establish a means of verifying the conditions for |
reimbursement
under this Act and develop criteria for |
approved costs for reimbursement.
|
(d) develop standards and approve employee |
compensation schedules for
probation and court services |
departments.
|
(e) employ sufficient personnel in the Division to |
carry out the
functions of the Division.
|
(f) establish a system of training and establish |
standards for personnel
orientation and training.
|
(g) develop standards for a system of record keeping |
for cases and
programs, gather statistics, establish a |
system of uniform forms, and
develop research for planning |
of Probation
Services.
|
(h) develop standards to assure adequate support |
personnel, office
space, equipment and supplies, travel |
expenses, and other essential items
necessary for |
Probation and Court Services
Departments to carry out their
|
duties.
|
(i) review and approve annual plans submitted by
|
Probation and Court
Services Departments.
|
(j) monitor and evaluate all programs operated by
|
Probation and Court
Services Departments, and may include |
in the program evaluation criteria
such factors as the |
percentage of Probation sentences for felons convicted
of |
Probationable offenses.
|
(k) seek the cooperation of local and State government |
and private
agencies to improve the quality of probation |
and
court services.
|
(l) where appropriate, establish programs and |
corresponding standards
designed to generally improve the |
quality of
probation and court services
and reduce the rate |
|
of adult or juvenile offenders committed to the
Department |
of Corrections.
|
(m) establish such other standards and regulations and |
do all acts
necessary to carry out the intent and purposes |
of this Act.
|
The Division shall establish a model list of structured |
intermediate
sanctions that may be imposed by a probation |
agency for violations of terms and
conditions of a sentence of |
probation, conditional discharge, or supervision.
|
The State of Illinois shall provide for the costs of |
personnel, travel,
equipment, telecommunications, postage, |
commodities, printing, space,
contractual services and other |
related costs necessary to carry out the
intent of this Act.
|
(2) (a) The chief judge of each circuit shall provide
|
full-time probation services for all counties
within the |
circuit, in a
manner consistent with the annual probation plan,
|
the standards, policies,
and regulations established by the |
Supreme Court. A
probation district of
two or more counties |
within a circuit may be created for the purposes of
providing |
full-time probation services. Every
county or group of
counties |
within a circuit shall maintain a
probation department which |
shall
be under the authority of the Chief Judge of the circuit |
or some other
judge designated by the Chief Judge. The Chief |
Judge, through the
Probation and Court Services Department |
shall
submit annual plans to the
Division for probation and |
related services.
|
(b) The Chief Judge of each circuit shall appoint the Chief
|
Probation
Officer and all other probation officers for his
or |
her circuit from lists
of qualified applicants supplied by the |
Supreme Court. Candidates for chief
managing officer and other |
probation officer
positions must apply with both
the Chief |
Judge of the circuit and the Supreme Court.
|
(3) A Probation and Court Service Department
shall apply to |
the
Supreme Court for funds for basic services, and may apply |
for funds for new
and expanded programs or Individualized |
Services and Programs. Costs shall
be reimbursed monthly based |
|
on a plan and budget approved by the Supreme
Court. No |
Department may be reimbursed for costs which exceed or are not
|
provided for in the approved annual plan and budget. After the |
effective
date of this amendatory Act of 1985, each county must |
provide basic
services in accordance with the annual plan and |
standards created by the
division. No department may receive |
funds for new or expanded programs or
individualized services |
and programs unless they are in compliance with
standards as |
enumerated in paragraph (h) of subsection (1) of this Section,
|
the annual plan, and standards for basic services.
|
(4) The Division shall reimburse the county or counties for
|
probation
services as follows:
|
(a) 100% of the salary of all chief managing officers |
designated as such
by the Chief Judge and the division.
|
(b) 100% of the salary for all probation
officer and |
supervisor
positions approved for reimbursement by the |
division after April 1, 1984,
to meet workload standards |
and to implement intensive sanction and
probation
|
supervision
programs and other basic services as defined in |
this Act.
|
(c) 100% of the salary for all secure detention |
personnel and non-secure
group home personnel approved for |
reimbursement after December 1, 1990.
For all such |
positions approved for reimbursement
before
December 1, |
1990, the counties shall be reimbursed $1,250 per month |
beginning
July 1, 1995, and an additional $250 per month |
beginning each July 1st
thereafter until the positions |
receive 100% salary reimbursement.
Allocation of such |
positions will be based on comparative need considering
|
capacity, staff/resident ratio, physical plant and |
program.
|
(d) $1,000 per month for salaries for the remaining
|
probation officer
positions engaged in basic services and |
new or expanded services. All such
positions shall be |
approved by the division in accordance with this Act and
|
division standards.
|
|
(e) 100% of the travel expenses in accordance with |
Division standards
for all Probation positions approved |
under
paragraph (b) of subsection 4
of this Section.
|
(f) If the amount of funds reimbursed to the county |
under paragraphs
(a) through (e) of subsection 4 of this |
Section on an annual basis is less
than the amount the |
county had received during the 12 month period
immediately |
prior to the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1985,
|
then the Division shall reimburse the amount of the |
difference to the
county. The effect of paragraph (b) of |
subsection 7 of this Section shall
be considered in |
implementing this supplemental reimbursement provision.
|
(5) The Division shall provide funds beginning on April 1, |
1987 for the
counties to provide Individualized Services and |
Programs as provided in
Section 16 of this Act.
|
(6) A Probation and Court Services Department
in order to |
be eligible
for the reimbursement must submit to the Supreme |
Court an application
containing such information and in such a |
form and by such dates as the
Supreme Court may require. |
Departments to be eligible for funding must
satisfy the |
following conditions:
|
(a) The Department shall have on file with the Supreme
|
Court an annual Probation plan for continuing,
improved, |
and
new Probation and Court Services Programs
approved by |
the Supreme Court or its
designee. This plan shall indicate |
the manner in which
Probation and Court
Services will be |
delivered and improved, consistent with the minimum
|
standards and regulations for Probation and Court
|
Services, as established
by the Supreme Court. In counties |
with more than one
Probation and Court
Services Department |
eligible to receive funds, all Departments within that
|
county must submit plans which are approved by the Supreme |
Court.
|
(b) The annual probation plan shall seek to
generally |
improve the
quality of probation services and to reduce the
|
commitment of adult offenders to the Department of |
|
Corrections and to reduce the
commitment of juvenile |
offenders to the Department of Juvenile Justice and shall |
require, when
appropriate, coordination with the |
Department of Corrections, the Department of Juvenile |
Justice, and the
Department of Children and Family Services |
in the development and use of
community resources, |
information systems, case review and permanency
planning |
systems to avoid the duplication of services.
|
(c) The Department shall be in compliance with |
standards developed by the
Supreme Court for basic, new and |
expanded services, training, personnel
hiring and |
promotion.
|
(d) The Department shall in its annual plan indicate |
the manner in which
it will support the rights of crime |
victims and in which manner it will
implement Article I, |
Section 8.1 of the Illinois Constitution and in what
manner |
it will coordinate crime victims' support services with |
other criminal
justice agencies within its jurisdiction, |
including but not limited to, the
State's Attorney, the |
Sheriff and any municipal police department.
|
(7) No statement shall be verified by the Supreme Court or |
its
designee or vouchered by the Comptroller unless each of the |
following
conditions have been met:
|
(a) The probation officer is a full-time
employee |
appointed by the Chief
Judge to provide probation services.
|
(b) The probation officer, in order to be
eligible for |
State
reimbursement, is receiving a salary of at least |
$17,000 per year.
|
(c) The probation officer is appointed or
was |
reappointed in accordance
with minimum qualifications or |
criteria established by the Supreme
Court; however, all |
probation officers appointed
prior to January 1, 1978,
|
shall be exempted from the minimum requirements |
established by the Supreme
Court. Payments shall be made to |
counties employing these exempted
probation officers as |
long as they are employed
in the position held on the
|
|
effective date of this amendatory Act of 1985. Promotions |
shall be
governed by minimum qualifications established by |
the Supreme Court.
|
(d) The Department has an established compensation |
schedule approved by
the Supreme Court. The compensation |
schedule shall include salary ranges
with necessary |
increments to compensate each employee. The increments
|
shall, within the salary ranges, be based on such factors |
as bona fide
occupational qualifications, performance, and |
length of service. Each
position in the Department shall be |
placed on the compensation schedule
according to job duties |
and responsibilities of such position. The policy
and |
procedures of the compensation schedule shall be made |
available to each
employee.
|
(8) In order to obtain full reimbursement of all approved |
costs, each
Department must continue to employ at least the |
same number of
probation
officers and probation managers as |
were
authorized for employment for the
fiscal year which |
includes January 1, 1985. This number shall be designated
as |
the base amount of the Department. No positions approved by the |
Division
under paragraph (b) of subsection 4 will be included |
in the base amount.
In the event that the Department employs |
fewer
Probation officers and
Probation managers than the base |
amount for a
period of 90 days, funding
received by the |
Department under subsection 4 of this
Section may be reduced on |
a monthly basis by the amount of the current
salaries of any |
positions below the base amount.
|
(9) Before the 15th day of each month, the treasurer of any |
county which
has a Probation and Court Services Department, or
|
the treasurer of the most
populous county, in the case of a |
Probation or
Court Services Department
funded by more than one |
county, shall submit an itemized statement of all
approved |
costs incurred in the delivery of Basic
Probation and Court
|
Services under this Act to the Supreme Court.
The treasurer may |
also submit an itemized statement of all approved costs
|
incurred in the delivery of new and expanded
Probation and |
|
Court Services
as well as Individualized Services and Programs. |
The Supreme Court or
its designee shall verify compliance with |
this Section and shall examine
and audit the monthly statement |
and, upon finding them to be correct, shall
forward them to the |
Comptroller for payment to the county treasurer. In the
case of |
payment to a treasurer of a county which is the most populous |
of
counties sharing the salary and expenses of a
Probation and |
Court Services
Department, the treasurer shall divide the money |
between the counties in a
manner that reflects each county's |
share of the cost incurred by the
Department.
|
(10) The county treasurer must certify that funds received |
under this
Section shall be used solely to maintain and improve
|
Probation and Court
Services. The county or circuit shall |
remain in compliance with all
standards, policies and |
regulations established by the Supreme Court.
If at any time |
the Supreme Court determines that a county or circuit is not
in |
compliance, the Supreme Court shall immediately notify the |
Chief Judge,
county board chairman and the Director of Court |
Services Chief
Probation Officer. If after 90 days of written
|
notice the noncompliance
still exists, the Supreme Court shall |
be required to reduce the amount of
monthly reimbursement by |
10%. An additional 10% reduction of monthly
reimbursement shall |
occur for each consecutive month of noncompliance.
Except as |
provided in subsection 5 of Section 15, funding to counties |
shall
commence on April 1, 1986. Funds received under this Act |
shall be used to
provide for Probation Department expenses
|
including those required under
Section 13 of this Act. For |
State fiscal years 2004, 2005, and 2006 , and 2007 only, the |
Mandatory
Arbitration Fund may be used to provide for Probation |
Department expenses,
including those required under Section 13 |
of this Act.
|
(11) The respective counties shall be responsible for |
capital and space
costs, fringe benefits, clerical costs, |
equipment, telecommunications,
postage, commodities and |
printing.
|
(12) For purposes of this Act only, probation officers |
|
shall be
considered
peace officers. In the
exercise of their |
official duties, probation
officers, sheriffs, and police
|
officers may, anywhere within the State, arrest any probationer |
who is in
violation of any of the conditions of his or her |
probation, conditional
discharge, or supervision, and it shall |
be the
duty of the officer making the arrest to take the |
probationer
before the
Court having jurisdiction over the |
probationer for further order.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03; 93-576, eff. 1-1-04; 93-839, |
eff. 7-30-04; 94-91, eff. 7-1-05; 94-696, eff. 6-1-06.)
|
(730 ILCS 110/15.1) (from Ch. 38, par. 204-7.1) |
Sec. 15.1. Probation and Court Services Fund.
|
(a) The county treasurer in each county shall establish a
|
probation and court services fund consisting of fees collected |
pursuant to
subsection (i) of Section 5-6-3 and subsection (i) |
of Section 5-6-3.1
of the Unified Code of Corrections, |
subsection (10) of Section 5-615
and
subsection (5) of Section |
5-715 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, and
paragraph 14.3 of |
subsection (b) of Section 110-10 of the Code of Criminal
|
Procedure of 1963.
The
county treasurer shall disburse monies |
from the fund only at the direction
of the chief judge of the |
circuit court in such circuit where the county is
located. The |
county treasurer of each county shall, on or before January
10 |
of each year, submit an annual report to the Supreme Court.
|
(b) Monies in the probation and court services fund shall |
be
appropriated by the county board to be used within the |
county or
jurisdiction where
collected in accordance
with |
policies and guidelines approved by the Supreme Court for the |
costs
of operating the probation and court services department |
or departments;
however, except as provided in subparagraph |
(g), monies
in the probation and court services fund shall not |
be used for the payment
of salaries of probation and court |
services personnel.
|
(c) Monies expended from the probation and court services |
fund shall
be used to supplement, not supplant, county |
|
appropriations for probation
and court services.
|
(d) Interest earned on monies deposited in a probation and |
court
services fund may be used by the county for its ordinary |
and contingent
expenditures.
|
(e) The county board may appropriate moneys from the |
probation and court
services fund, upon the direction of the |
chief judge, to support programs that
are part of the continuum |
of juvenile delinquency intervention programs which
are or may |
be developed within the county. The grants from the probation |
and
court services fund shall be for no more than one year and |
may be used for any
expenses attributable to the program |
including administration and oversight of
the program by the |
probation department.
|
(f) The county board may appropriate moneys from the |
probation and court
services fund, upon the direction of the |
chief judge, to support practices
endorsed or required under |
the Sex Offender Management Board Act, including but
not |
limited to sex offender evaluation, treatment, and monitoring |
programs that
are or may be developed within the county.
|
(g) For the State Fiscal Years 2005 ,
and 2006 , and 2007
|
only, the Administrative Office of the Illinois Courts may |
permit a county or circuit to use its probation and court |
services fund for the payment of salaries of probation officers |
and other court services personnel whose salaries are |
reimbursed under this Act if the State's FY2005 ,
or FY2006 , or |
FY2007 appropriation to the Supreme Court for reimbursement to |
counties for probation salaries and services is less than the |
amount appropriated to the Supreme Court for these
purposes for |
State Fiscal Year 2004. The Administrative Office of the |
Illinois Courts shall take into account each county's or |
circuit's probation fee collections and expenditures when |
apportioning the total reimbursement for each county or |
circuit.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-616, eff. 1-1-04; 93-839, eff. 7-30-04; 94-91, |
eff. 7-1-05.)
|
|
Section 5-100. The Code of Civil Procedure is amended by |
changing Section 2-1009A as follows:
|
(735 ILCS 5/2-1009A) (from Ch. 110, par. 2-1009A)
|
Sec. 2-1009A. Filing Fees. In each county authorized by the |
Supreme
Court to utilize mandatory arbitration, the clerk of |
the
circuit court shall charge and collect, in addition to any |
other fees, an
arbitration fee of $8, except in counties with |
3,000,000 or more inhabitants
the fee shall be $10, at the time |
of filing the first pleading, paper
or
other appearance filed |
by each party in all civil cases, but no additional
fee shall |
be required if more than one party is represented in a single
|
pleading, paper or other appearance. Arbitration fees received |
by the
clerk of the circuit court pursuant to this Section |
shall be remitted within
one month after receipt to the State |
Treasurer for deposit into the
Mandatory Arbitration Fund, a |
special fund in the State treasury for the
purpose of funding |
mandatory arbitration programs and such other alternative
|
dispute resolution programs as may be authorized by circuit |
court rule for
operation in counties that have implemented |
mandatory arbitration, with a
separate account
being |
maintained for each county.
Notwithstanding any other |
provision of this Section to the contrary, and for
State fiscal
|
years 2004, 2005, and 2006 , and 2007 only, the Mandatory |
Arbitration Fund may be used
for any
other purpose authorized |
by the Supreme Court.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03; 93-839, eff. 7-30-04; 94-91, |
eff. 7-1-05.)
|
Section 5-110. The Workers' Compensation Act is amended by |
changing Section 4 as follows:
|
(820 ILCS 305/4) (from Ch. 48, par. 138.4)
|
Sec. 4. (a) Any employer, including but not limited to |
general contractors
and their subcontractors, who shall come |
within the provisions of
Section 3 of this Act, and any other |
|
employer who shall elect to provide
and pay the compensation |
provided for in this Act shall:
|
(1) File with the Commission annually an application |
for approval as a
self-insurer which shall include a |
current financial statement, and
annually, thereafter, an |
application for renewal of self-insurance, which
shall |
include a current financial statement. Said
application |
and financial statement shall be signed and sworn to by the
|
president or vice president and secretary or assistant |
secretary of the
employer if it be a corporation, or by all |
of the partners, if it be a
copartnership, or by the owner |
if it be neither a copartnership nor a
corporation. All |
initial applications and all applications for renewal of
|
self-insurance must be submitted at least 60 days prior to |
the requested
effective date of self-insurance. An |
employer may elect to provide and pay
compensation as |
provided
for in this Act as a member of a group workers' |
compensation pool under Article
V 3/4 of the Illinois |
Insurance Code. If an employer becomes a member of a
group |
workers' compensation pool, the employer shall not be |
relieved of any
obligations imposed by this Act.
|
If the sworn application and financial statement of any |
such employer
does not satisfy the Commission of the |
financial ability of the employer
who has filed it, the |
Commission shall require such employer to,
|
(2) Furnish security, indemnity or a bond guaranteeing |
the payment
by the employer of the compensation provided |
for in this Act, provided
that any such employer whose |
application and financial statement shall
not have |
satisfied the commission of his or her financial ability |
and
who shall have secured his liability in part by excess |
liability insurance
shall be required to furnish to the |
Commission security, indemnity or bond
guaranteeing his or |
her payment up to the effective limits of the excess
|
coverage, or
|
(3) Insure his entire liability to pay such |
|
compensation in some
insurance carrier authorized, |
licensed, or permitted to do such
insurance business in |
this State. Every policy of an insurance carrier,
insuring |
the payment of compensation under this Act shall cover all |
the
employees and the entire compensation liability of the |
insured:
Provided, however, that any employer may insure |
his or her compensation
liability with 2 or more insurance |
carriers or may insure a part and
qualify under subsection |
1, 2, or 4 for the remainder of his or her
liability to pay |
such compensation, subject to the following two |
provisions:
|
Firstly, the entire compensation liability of the |
employer to
employees working at or from one location |
shall be insured in one such
insurance carrier or shall |
be self-insured, and
|
Secondly, the employer shall submit evidence |
satisfactorily to the
Commission that his or her entire |
liability for the compensation provided
for in this Act |
will be secured. Any provisions in any policy, or in |
any
endorsement attached thereto, attempting to limit |
or modify in any way,
the liability of the insurance |
carriers issuing the same except as
otherwise provided |
herein shall be wholly void.
|
Nothing herein contained shall apply to policies of |
excess liability
carriage secured by employers who have |
been approved by the Commission
as self-insurers, or
|
(4) Make some other provision, satisfactory to the |
Commission, for
the securing of the payment of compensation |
provided for in this Act,
and
|
(5) Upon becoming subject to this Act and thereafter as |
often as the
Commission may in writing demand, file with |
the Commission in form prescribed
by it evidence of his or |
her compliance with the provision of this Section.
|
(a-1) Regardless of its state of domicile or its principal |
place of
business, an employer shall make payments to its |
insurance carrier or group
self-insurance fund, where |
|
applicable, based upon the premium rates of the
situs where the |
work or project is located in Illinois if:
|
(A) the employer is engaged primarily in the building |
and
construction industry; and
|
(B) subdivision (a)(3) of this Section applies to the |
employer or
the employer is a member of a group |
self-insurance plan as defined in
subsection (1) of Section |
4a.
|
The Illinois Workers' Compensation Commission shall impose |
a penalty upon an employer
for violation of this subsection |
(a-1) if:
|
(i) the employer is given an opportunity at a hearing |
to present
evidence of its compliance with this subsection |
(a-1); and
|
(ii) after the hearing, the Commission finds that the |
employer
failed to make payments upon the premium rates of |
the situs where the work or
project is located in Illinois.
|
The penalty shall not exceed $1,000 for each day of work |
for which
the employer failed to make payments upon the premium |
rates of the situs where
the
work or project is located in |
Illinois, but the total penalty shall not exceed
$50,000 for |
each project or each contract under which the work was
|
performed.
|
Any penalty under this subsection (a-1) must be imposed not |
later
than one year after the expiration of the applicable |
limitation period
specified in subsection (d) of Section 6 of |
this Act. Penalties imposed under
this subsection (a-1) shall |
be deposited into the Illinois Workers' Compensation |
Commission
Operations Fund, a special fund that is created in |
the State treasury. Subject
to appropriation, moneys in the |
Fund shall be used solely for the operations
of the Illinois |
Workers' Compensation Commission and by the Department of |
Financial and Professional Regulation for the purposes |
authorized in subsection (c) of Section 25.5 of this Act .
|
(b) The sworn application and financial statement, or |
security,
indemnity or bond, or amount of insurance, or other |
|
provisions, filed,
furnished, carried, or made by the employer, |
as the case may be, shall
be subject to the approval of the |
Commission.
|
Deposits under escrow agreements shall be cash, negotiable |
United
States government bonds or negotiable general |
obligation bonds of the
State of Illinois. Such cash or bonds |
shall be deposited in
escrow with any State or National Bank or |
Trust Company having trust
authority in the State of Illinois.
|
Upon the approval of the sworn application and financial |
statement,
security, indemnity or bond or amount of insurance, |
filed, furnished or
carried, as the case may be, the Commission |
shall send to the employer
written notice of its approval |
thereof. The certificate of compliance
by the employer with the |
provisions of subparagraphs (2) and (3) of
paragraph (a) of |
this Section shall be delivered by the insurance
carrier to the |
Illinois Workers' Compensation Commission within five days |
after the
effective date of the policy so certified. The |
insurance so certified
shall cover all compensation liability |
occurring during the time that
the insurance is in effect and |
no further certificate need be filed in case
such insurance is |
renewed, extended or otherwise continued by such
carrier. The |
insurance so certified shall not be cancelled or in the
event |
that such insurance is not renewed, extended or otherwise
|
continued, such insurance shall not be terminated until at |
least 10
days after receipt by the Illinois Workers' |
Compensation Commission of notice of the
cancellation or |
termination of said insurance; provided, however, that
if the |
employer has secured insurance from another insurance carrier, |
or
has otherwise secured the payment of compensation in |
accordance with
this Section, and such insurance or other |
security becomes effective
prior to the expiration of the 10 |
days, cancellation or termination may, at
the option of the |
insurance carrier indicated in such notice, be effective
as of |
the effective date of such other insurance or security.
|
(c) Whenever the Commission shall find that any |
corporation,
company, association, aggregation of individuals, |
|
reciprocal or
interinsurers exchange, or other insurer |
effecting workers' compensation
insurance in this State shall |
be insolvent, financially unsound, or
unable to fully meet all |
payments and liabilities assumed or to be
assumed for |
compensation insurance in this State, or shall practice a
|
policy of delay or unfairness toward employees in the |
adjustment,
settlement, or payment of benefits due such |
employees, the Commission
may after reasonable notice and |
hearing order and direct that such
corporation, company, |
association, aggregation of individuals,
reciprocal or |
interinsurers exchange, or insurer, shall from and after a
date |
fixed in such order discontinue the writing of any such |
workers'
compensation insurance in this State. Subject to such |
modification of
the order as the Commission may later make on |
review of the order,
as herein provided, it shall thereupon be |
unlawful for any such
corporation, company, association, |
aggregation of individuals,
reciprocal or interinsurers |
exchange, or insurer to effect any workers'
compensation |
insurance in this State. A copy of the order shall be served
|
upon the Director of Insurance by registered mail. Whenever the |
Commission
finds that any service or adjustment company used or |
employed
by a self-insured employer or by an insurance carrier |
to process,
adjust, investigate, compromise or otherwise |
handle claims under this
Act, has practiced or is practicing a |
policy of delay or unfairness
toward employees in the |
adjustment, settlement or payment of benefits
due such |
employees, the Commission may after reasonable notice and
|
hearing order and direct that such service or adjustment |
company shall
from and after a date fixed in such order be |
prohibited from processing,
adjusting, investigating, |
compromising or otherwise handling claims
under this Act.
|
Whenever the Commission finds that any self-insured |
employer has
practiced or is practicing delay or unfairness |
toward employees in the
adjustment, settlement or payment of |
benefits due such employees, the
Commission may, after |
reasonable notice and hearing, order and direct
that after a |
|
date fixed in the order such self-insured employer shall be
|
disqualified to operate as a self-insurer and shall be required |
to
insure his entire liability to pay compensation in some |
insurance
carrier authorized, licensed and permitted to do such |
insurance business
in this State, as provided in subparagraph 3 |
of paragraph (a) of this
Section.
|
All orders made by the Commission under this Section shall |
be subject
to review by the courts, said review to be taken in |
the same manner and
within the same time as provided by Section |
19 of this Act for review of
awards and decisions of the |
Commission, upon the party seeking the
review filing with the |
clerk of the court to which said review is taken
a bond in an |
amount to be fixed and approved by the court to which the
|
review is taken, conditioned upon the payment of all |
compensation awarded
against the person taking said review |
pending a decision thereof and
further conditioned upon such |
other obligations as the court may impose.
Upon the review the |
Circuit Court shall have power to review all questions
of fact |
as well as of law. The penalty hereinafter provided for in this
|
paragraph shall not attach and shall not begin to run until the |
final
determination of the order of the Commission.
|
(d) Whenever a panel of 3 Commissioners comprised of one |
member of the employing class, one member of the employee |
class, and one member not identified with either the employing |
or employee class, with due process and after a hearing, |
determines an employer has knowingly failed to provide coverage |
as required by paragraph (a) of this Section, the failure shall |
be deemed an immediate serious danger to public health, safety, |
and welfare sufficient to justify service by the Commission of |
a work-stop order on such employer, requiring the cessation of |
all business operations of such employer at the place of |
employment or job site. Any law enforcement agency in the State |
shall, at the request of the Commission, render any assistance |
necessary to carry out the provisions of this Section, |
including, but not limited to, preventing any employee of such |
employer from remaining at a place of employment or job site |
|
after a work-stop order has taken effect. Any work-stop order |
shall be lifted upon proof of insurance as required by this |
Act. Any orders under this Section are appealable under Section |
19(f) to the Circuit Court.
|
Any individual employer, corporate officer or director of a |
corporate employer, partner of an employer partnership, or |
member of an employer limited liability company who knowingly |
fails to provide coverage as required by paragraph (a) of this |
Section is guilty of a Class 4 felony. This provision shall not |
apply to any corporate officer or director of any |
publicly-owned corporation. Each day's violation constitutes a |
separate offense. The State's Attorney of the county in which |
the violation occurred, or the Attorney General, shall bring |
such actions in the name of the People of the State of |
Illinois, or may, in addition to other remedies provided in |
this Section, bring an action for an injunction to restrain the |
violation or to enjoin the operation of any such employer.
|
Any individual employer, corporate officer or director of a |
corporate employer, partner of an employer partnership, or |
member of an employer limited liability company who negligently |
fails to provide coverage as required by paragraph (a) of this |
Section is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor. This provision |
shall not apply to any corporate officer or director of any |
publicly-owned corporation. Each day's violation constitutes a |
separate offense. The State's Attorney of the county in which |
the violation occurred, or the Attorney General, shall bring |
such actions in the name of the People of the State of |
Illinois.
|
The criminal penalties in this subsection (d) shall not |
apply where
there exists a good faith dispute as to the |
existence of an
employment relationship. Evidence of good faith |
shall
include, but not be limited to, compliance with the |
definition
of employee as used by the Internal Revenue Service.
|
Employers who are subject to and who knowingly fail to |
comply with this Section shall not be entitled to the benefits |
of this Act during the period of noncompliance, but shall be |
|
liable in an action under any other applicable law of this |
State. In the action, such employer shall not avail himself or |
herself of the defenses of assumption of risk or negligence or |
that the injury was due to a co-employee. In the action, proof |
of the injury shall constitute prima facie evidence of |
negligence on the part of such employer and the burden shall be |
on such employer to show freedom of negligence resulting in the |
injury. The employer shall not join any other defendant in any |
such civil action. Nothing in this amendatory Act of the 94th |
General Assembly shall affect the employee's rights under |
subdivision (a)3 of Section 1 of this Act. Any employer or |
carrier who makes payments under subdivision (a)3 of Section 1 |
of this Act shall have a right of reimbursement from the |
proceeds of any recovery under this Section.
|
An employee of an uninsured employer, or the employee's |
dependents in case death ensued, may, instead of proceeding |
against the employer in a civil action in court, file an |
application for adjustment of claim with the Commission in |
accordance with the provisions of this Act and the Commission |
shall hear and determine the application for adjustment of |
claim in the manner in which other claims are heard and |
determined before the Commission.
|
All proceedings under this subsection (d) shall be reported |
on an annual basis to the Workers' Compensation Advisory Board.
|
Upon a finding by the Commission, after reasonable notice |
and
hearing, of the knowing and wilful failure or refusal of an |
employer to
comply with
any of the provisions of paragraph (a) |
of this Section or the failure or
refusal of an employer, |
service or adjustment company, or an insurance
carrier to |
comply with any order of the Illinois Workers' Compensation |
Commission pursuant to
paragraph (c) of this Section |
disqualifying him or her to operate as a self
insurer and |
requiring him or her to insure his or her liability, the
|
Commission may assess a civil penalty of up to $500 per day for |
each day of
such failure or refusal after the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of
1989. The minimum penalty under this |
|
Section shall be the sum of $10,000.
Each day of such failure |
or refusal shall constitute a separate offense.
The Commission |
may assess the civil penalty personally and individually
|
against the corporate officers and directors of a corporate |
employer, the
partners of an employer partnership, and the |
members of an employer limited
liability company, after a |
finding of a knowing and willful refusal or failure
of each |
such named corporate officer, director, partner, or member to |
comply
with this Section. The liability for the assessed |
penalty shall be
against the named employer first, and
if the |
named employer fails or refuses to pay the penalty to the
|
Commission within 30 days after the final order of the |
Commission, then the
named
corporate officers, directors, |
partners, or members who have been found to have
knowingly and |
willfully refused or failed to comply with this Section shall |
be
liable for the unpaid penalty or any unpaid portion of the |
penalty. Upon investigation by the insurance non-compliance |
unit of the Commission, the Attorney General shall have the |
authority to prosecute all proceedings to enforce the civil and |
administrative provisions of this Section before the |
Commission. The Commission shall promulgate procedural rules |
for enforcing this Section.
|
Upon the failure or refusal of any employer, service or |
adjustment
company or insurance carrier to comply with the |
provisions of this Section
and with the orders of the |
Commission under this Section, or the order of
the court on |
review after final adjudication, the Commission may bring a
|
civil action to recover the amount of the penalty in Cook |
County or in
Sangamon County in which litigation the Commission |
shall be represented by
the Attorney General. The Commission |
shall send notice of its finding of
non-compliance and |
assessment of the civil penalty to the Attorney General.
It |
shall be the duty of the Attorney General within 30 days after |
receipt
of the notice, to institute prosecutions and promptly |
prosecute all
reported violations of this Section.
|
Any individual employer, corporate officer or director of a |
|
corporate employer, partner of an employer partnership, or |
member of an employer limited liability company who, with the |
intent to avoid payment of compensation under this Act to an |
injured employee or the employee's dependents, knowingly |
transfers, sells, encumbers, assigns, or in any manner disposes |
of, conceals, secretes, or destroys any property belonging to |
the employer, officer, director, partner, or member is guilty |
of a Class 4 felony.
|
Penalties and fines collected pursuant to this paragraph |
(d) shall be deposited upon receipt into a special fund which |
shall be designated the Injured Workers' Benefit Fund, of which |
the State Treasurer is ex-officio custodian, such special fund |
to be held and disbursed in accordance with this paragraph (d) |
for the purposes hereinafter stated in this paragraph (d), upon |
the final order of the Commission. The Injured Workers' Benefit |
Fund shall be deposited the same as are State funds and any |
interest accruing thereon shall be added thereto every 6 |
months. The Injured Workers' Benefit Fund is subject to audit |
the same as State funds and accounts and is protected by the |
general bond given by the State Treasurer. The Injured Workers' |
Benefit Fund is considered always appropriated for the purposes |
of disbursements as provided in this paragraph, and shall be |
paid out and disbursed as herein provided and shall not at any |
time be appropriated or diverted to any other use or purpose. |
Moneys in the Injured Workers' Benefit Fund shall be used only |
for payment of workers' compensation benefits for injured |
employees when the employer has failed to provide coverage as |
determined under this paragraph (d) and has failed to pay the |
benefits due to the injured employee. The Commission shall have |
the right to obtain reimbursement from the employer for |
compensation obligations paid by the Injured Workers' Benefit |
Fund. Any such amounts obtained shall be deposited by the |
Commission into the Injured Workers' Benefit Fund. If an |
injured employee or his or her personal representative receives |
payment from the Injured Workers' Benefit Fund, the State of |
Illinois has the same rights under paragraph (b) of Section 5 |
|
that the employer who failed to pay the benefits due to the |
injured employee would have had if the employer had paid those |
benefits, and any moneys recovered by the State as a result of |
the State's exercise of its rights under paragraph (b) of |
Section 5 shall be deposited into the Injured Workers' Benefit |
Fund. The custodian of the Injured Workers' Benefit Fund shall |
be joined with the employer as a party respondent in the |
application for adjustment of claim. After July 1, 2006, the |
Commission shall make disbursements from the Fund once each |
year to each eligible claimant. An eligible claimant is an |
injured worker who has within the previous fiscal year obtained |
a final award for benefits from the Commission against the |
employer and the Injured Workers' Benefit Fund and has notified |
the Commission within 90 days of receipt of such award. Within |
a reasonable time after the end of each fiscal year, the |
Commission shall make a disbursement to each eligible claimant. |
At the time of disbursement, if there are insufficient moneys |
in the Fund to pay all claims, each eligible claimant shall |
receive a pro-rata share, as determined by the Commission, of |
the available moneys in the Fund for that year. Payment from |
the Injured Workers' Benefit Fund to an eligible claimant |
pursuant to this provision shall discharge the obligations of |
the Injured Workers' Benefit Fund regarding the award entered |
by the Commission.
|
(e) This Act shall not affect or disturb the continuance of |
any
existing insurance, mutual aid, benefit, or relief |
association or
department, whether maintained in whole or in |
part by the employer or
whether maintained by the employees, |
the payment of benefits of such
association or department being |
guaranteed by the employer or by some
person, firm or |
corporation for him or her: Provided, the employer contributes
|
to such association or department an amount not less than the |
full
compensation herein provided, exclusive of the cost of the |
maintenance
of such association or department and without any |
expense to the
employee. This Act shall not prevent the |
organization and maintaining
under the insurance laws of this |
|
State of any benefit or insurance
company for the purpose of |
insuring against the compensation provided
for in this Act, the |
expense of which is maintained by the employer.
This Act shall |
not prevent the organization or maintaining under the
insurance |
laws of this State of any voluntary mutual aid, benefit or
|
relief association among employees for the payment of |
additional
accident or sick benefits.
|
(f) No existing insurance, mutual aid, benefit or relief |
association
or department shall, by reason of anything herein |
contained, be
authorized to discontinue its operation without |
first discharging its
obligations to any and all persons |
carrying insurance in the same or
entitled to relief or |
benefits therein.
|
(g) Any contract, oral, written or implied, of employment |
providing
for relief benefit, or insurance or any other device |
whereby the
employee is required to pay any premium or premiums |
for insurance
against the compensation provided for in this Act |
shall be null and
void. Any employer withholding from the wages |
of any employee any
amount for the purpose of paying any such |
premium shall be guilty of a
Class B misdemeanor.
|
In the event the employer does not pay the compensation for |
which he or
she is liable, then an insurance company, |
association or insurer which may
have insured such employer |
against such liability shall become primarily
liable to pay to |
the employee, his or her personal representative or
beneficiary |
the compensation required by the provisions of this Act to
be |
paid by such employer. The insurance carrier may be made a |
party to
the proceedings in which the employer is a party and |
an award may be
entered jointly against the employer and the |
insurance carrier.
|
(h) It shall be unlawful for any employer, insurance |
company or
service or adjustment company to interfere with, |
restrain or coerce an
employee in any manner whatsoever in the |
exercise of the rights or
remedies granted to him or her by |
this Act or to discriminate, attempt to
discriminate, or |
threaten to discriminate against an employee in any way
because |
|
of his or her exercise of the rights or remedies granted to
him |
or her by this Act.
|
It shall be unlawful for any employer, individually or |
through any
insurance company or service or adjustment company, |
to discharge or to
threaten to discharge, or to refuse to |
rehire or recall to active
service in a suitable capacity an |
employee because of the exercise of
his or her rights or |
remedies granted to him or her by this Act.
|
(i) If an employer elects to obtain a life insurance policy |
on his
employees, he may also elect to apply such benefits in |
satisfaction of all
or a portion of the death benefits payable |
under this Act, in which case,
the employer's compensation |
premium shall be reduced accordingly.
|
(j) Within 45 days of receipt of an initial application or |
application
to renew self-insurance privileges the |
Self-Insurers Advisory Board shall
review and submit for |
approval by the Chairman of the Commission
recommendations of |
disposition of all initial applications to self-insure
and all |
applications to renew self-insurance privileges filed by |
private
self-insurers pursuant to the provisions of this |
Section and Section 4a-9
of this Act. Each private self-insurer |
shall submit with its initial and
renewal applications the |
application fee required by Section 4a-4 of this Act.
|
The Chairman of the Commission shall promptly act upon all |
initial
applications and applications for renewal in full |
accordance with the
recommendations of the Board or, should the |
Chairman disagree with any
recommendation of disposition of the |
Self-Insurer's Advisory Board, he
shall within 30 days of |
receipt of such recommendation provide to the Board
in writing |
the reasons supporting his decision. The Chairman shall also
|
promptly notify the employer of his decision within 15 days of |
receipt of
the recommendation of the Board.
|
If an employer is denied a renewal of self-insurance |
privileges pursuant
to application it shall retain said |
privilege for 120 days after receipt of
a notice of |
cancellation of the privilege from the Chairman of the |
|
Commission.
|
All orders made by the Chairman under this Section shall be |
subject to
review by the courts, such review to be taken in the |
same manner and within
the same time as provided by subsection |
(f) of Section 19 of this Act for
review of awards and |
decisions of the Commission, upon the party seeking
the review |
filing with the clerk of the court to which such review is |
taken
a bond in an amount to be fixed and approved by the court |
to which the
review is taken, conditioned upon the payment of |
all compensation awarded
against the person taking such review |
pending a decision thereof and
further conditioned upon such |
other obligations as the court may impose.
Upon the review the |
Circuit Court shall have power to review all questions
of fact |
as well as of law.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-721, eff. 1-1-05; 94-277, eff. 7-20-05.)
|
ARTICLE 10. STATE POLICE VEHICLES |
Section 10-5. If and only if Senate Bill 1089 of the 94th |
General Assembly becomes law in the form in which it appears in |
the engrossed bill, the State Finance Act is amended by adding |
Section 5.664 as follows: |
(30 ILCS 105/5.664 new)
|
Sec. 5.664. The State Police Vehicle Maintenance Fund.
|
Section 10-10. If and only if Senate Bill 1089 of the 94th |
General Assembly becomes law in the form in which it appears in |
the engrossed bill, the State Property Control Act is amended |
by changing Section 7b and by adding Section 7c as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 605/7b)
|
Sec. 7b. Maintenance and operation of State Police |
vehicles. All proceeds received by the Department
of Central |
Management Services under this Act from the sale of vehicles
|
operated
by the Department of State Police, except for a $500 |
|
handling fee
to be
retained by the Department of Central |
Management Services for each vehicle
sold, shall be deposited
|
into the State Police Vehicle Maintenance Fund.
However, in |
lieu of the $500 handling fee as provided by this paragraph, |
the
Department of Central
Management Services shall retain all |
proceeds from the sale of any vehicle for
which $500 or a |
lesser amount is collected.
|
The State Police Vehicle Maintenance Fund is created as a |
special fund in the
State treasury. All moneys in the State |
Police Vehicle Maintenance Fund, subject to
appropriation, |
shall be used by the Department of State Police for the |
maintenance and operation
acquisition of vehicles for
that |
Department.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-54, eff. 6-30-95.)
|
(30 ILCS 605/7c new) |
Sec. 7c. Acquisition of State Police vehicles. The State |
Police Vehicle Fund is created as a special fund in the State |
treasury. The Fund shall consist of fees received pursuant to |
Section 16-104c of the Illinois Vehicle Code. All moneys in the |
Fund, subject to appropriation, shall be used by the Department |
of State Police: |
(1) for the acquisition of vehicles for that |
Department; or |
(2) for debt service on bonds issued to finance the |
acquisition of vehicles for that Department. |
ARTICLE 15. TRANSIT AUTHORITY PENSION FUNDING |
Section 15-5. The Illinois Pension Code is amended by |
changing Section 22-101 and adding Section 22-103 as follows:
|
(40 ILCS 5/22-101) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 22-101)
|
Sec. 22-101. Metropolitan Transit Authority (CTA) Pension |
Fund. |
(a) There shall be established and maintained by the |
|
Authority created by
the "Metropolitan Transit Authority Act", |
approved April 12, 1945, as
amended, a financially sound |
pension and retirement system adequate to
provide for all |
payments when due under such established system or as
modified |
from time to time by ordinance of the Chicago Transit Board. |
For
this purpose, both the Board must make contributions to the |
established system as required under this Section and may make |
any additional contributions provided for by Board ordinance or |
collective bargaining agreement. The
and the participating |
employees shall make
such periodic payments to the established |
system as may be determined by
Board
such ordinance or |
collective bargaining agreement . The Board, in lieu of social |
security payments required to
be paid by private corporations |
engaged in similar activity, shall make
payments into such |
established system at least equal in amount to the
amount so |
required to be paid by such private corporations. |
Provisions
shall be made by the Board for all Board |
members, officers and employees of
the Authority appointed |
pursuant to the "Metropolitan Transit Authority
Act" to become, |
subject to reasonable rules and regulations, members or
|
beneficiaries of the pension or retirement system with uniform |
rights,
privileges, obligations and status as to the class in |
which such officers
and employees belong. The terms, conditions |
and provisions of any pension
or retirement system or of any |
amendment or modification thereof affecting
employees who are |
members of any labor organization may be established,
amended |
or modified by agreement with such labor organization , but must |
be consistent with the requirements of this Section .
|
(b) Beginning January 1, 2009, the Authority shall make |
contributions to the retirement system in an amount which, |
together with the contributions of participants, interest |
earned on investments, and other income, will meet the cost of |
maintaining and administering the retirement plan in |
accordance with applicable actuarial recommendations and |
assumptions and the requirements of this Section. These |
contributions may be paid on a payroll or other periodic basis, |
|
but shall in any case be paid at least monthly. |
For retirement system fiscal years 2009 through 2058, the |
minimum contribution to the retirement system to be made by the |
Authority for each fiscal year shall be an amount determined |
jointly by the Authority and the trustee of the retirement |
system to be sufficient to bring the total assets of the |
retirement system up to 90% of its total actuarial liabilities |
by the end of fiscal year 2058. In making these determinations, |
the required Authority contribution shall be calculated each |
year as a level percentage of payroll over the years remaining |
to and including fiscal year 2058 and shall be determined under |
the projected unit credit actuarial cost method. Beginning in |
retirement system fiscal year 2059, the minimum Authority |
contribution for each fiscal year shall be the amount needed to |
maintain the total assets of the retirement system at 90% of |
the total actuarial liabilities of the system. |
For purposes of determining employer contributions and |
actuarial liabilities under this subsection, contributions and |
liabilities relating to health care benefits shall not be |
included. As used in this Section, "retirement system fiscal |
year" means the calendar year, or such other plan year as may |
be defined from time to time in the agreement known as the |
Retirement Plan for Chicago Transit Authority Employees, or its |
successor agreement.
|
(c) The Authority and the trustee shall jointly certify to |
the Governor, the General Assembly, and the Board of the |
Regional Transportation Authority on or before November 15 of |
2008 and of each year thereafter the amount of the required |
Authority contributions to the retirement system for the next |
retirement system fiscal year under subsection (b). The |
certification shall include a copy of the actuarial |
recommendations upon which it is based. In addition, copies of |
the certification shall be sent to the Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability, the Mayor of Chicago, the |
Chicago City Council, and the Cook County Board. |
(d) The Authority shall take all actions lawfully available |
|
to it to separate the funding of health care benefits for |
retirees and their dependents and survivors from the funding |
for its retirement system. The Authority shall endeavor to |
achieve this separation as soon as possible, and in any event |
no later than January 1, 2009.
|
(e) This amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly does |
not affect or impair the right of either the Authority or its |
employees to collectively bargain the amount or level of |
employee contributions to the retirement system.
|
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 161.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/22-103 new)
|
Sec. 22-103. Regional Transportation Authority and related |
pension plans. |
(a) As used in this Section: |
"Affected pension plan" means a defined-benefit pension |
plan supported in whole or in part by employer contributions |
and maintained by the Regional Transportation Authority, the |
Suburban Bus Division, or the Commuter Rail Division, or any |
combination thereof, under the general authority of the |
Regional Transportation Authority Act, including but not |
limited to any such plan that has been established under or is |
subject to a collective bargaining agreement or is limited to |
employees covered by a collective bargaining agreement. |
"Affected pension plan" does not include any pension fund or |
retirement system subject to Section 22-101 of this Section. |
"Authority" means the Regional Transportation Authority |
created under
the Regional Transportation Authority Act.
|
"Contributing employer" means an employer that is required |
to make contributions to an affected pension plan under the |
terms of that plan. |
"Funding ratio" means the ratio of an affected pension |
plan's assets to the present value of its actuarial |
liabilities, as determined at its latest actuarial valuation in |
accordance with applicable actuarial assumptions and |
recommendations.
|
|
"Under-funded pension plan" or "under-funded" means an |
affected pension plan that, at the time of its last actuarial |
valuation, has a funding ratio of less than 90%.
|
(b) The contributing employers of each affected pension |
plan have a general duty to make the required employer |
contributions to the affected pension plan in a timely manner |
in accordance with the terms of the plan. A contributing |
employer must make contributions to the affected pension plan |
as required under this subsection and, if applicable, |
subsection (c); a contributing employer may make any additional |
contributions provided for by the board of the employer or |
collective bargaining agreement. |
(c) In the case of an affected pension plan that is |
under-funded on January 1, 2009 or becomes under-funded at any |
time after that date, the contributing employers shall |
contribute to the affected pension plan, in addition to all |
amounts otherwise required, amounts sufficient to bring the |
funding ratio of the affected pension plan up to 90% in |
accordance with an amortization schedule adopted jointly by the |
contributing employers and the trustee of the affected pension |
plan. The amortization schedule may extend for any period up to |
a maximum of 50 years and shall provide for additional employer |
contributions in substantially equal annual amounts over the |
selected period. If the contributing employers and the trustee |
of the affected pension plan do not agree on an appropriate |
period for the amortization schedule within 6 months of the |
date of determination that the plan is under-funded, then the |
amortization schedule shall be based on a period of 50 years. |
In the case of an affected pension plan that has more than |
one contributing employer, each contributing employer's share |
of the total additional employer contributions required under |
this subsection shall be determined: (i) in proportion to the |
amounts, if any, by which the respective contributing employers |
have failed to meet their contribution obligations under the |
terms of the affected pension plan; or (ii) if all of the |
contributing employers have met their contribution obligations |
|
under the terms of the affected pension plan, then in the same |
proportion as they are required to contribute under the terms |
of that plan. In the case of an affected pension plan that has |
only one contributing employer, that contributing employer is |
responsible for all of the additional employer contributions |
required under this subsection. |
If an under-funded pension plan is determined to have |
achieved a funding ratio of at least 90% during the period when |
an amortization schedule is in force under this Section, the |
contributing employers and the trustee of the affected pension |
plan, acting jointly, may cancel the amortization schedule and |
the contributing employers may cease making additional |
contributions under this subsection for as long as the affected |
pension plan retains a funding ratio of at least 90%.
|
(d) Beginning January 1, 2009, if the Authority fails to |
pay to an affected pension fund within 30 days after it is due |
(i) any employer contribution that it is required to make as a |
contributing employer, (ii) any additional employer |
contribution that it is required to pay under subsection (c), |
or (iii) any payment that it is required to make under Section |
4.02a or 4.02b of the Regional Transportation Authority Act, |
the trustee of the affected pension fund shall promptly so |
notify the Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability, the Mayor of Chicago, the Governor, and the |
General Assembly. |
(e) For purposes of determining employer contributions, |
assets, and actuarial liabilities under this subsection, |
contributions, assets, and liabilities relating to health care |
benefits shall not be included.
|
(f) This amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly does |
not affect or impair the right of any contributing employer or |
its employees to collectively bargain the amount or level of |
employee contributions to an affected pension plan, to the |
extent that the plan includes employees subject to collective |
bargaining.
|
|
Section 15-10. The Regional Transportation Authority Act |
is amended by changing Section 4.02 and by adding Sections |
4.02a and 4.02b as follows:
|
(70 ILCS 3615/4.02) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 704.02)
|
Sec. 4.02. Federal, State and Other Funds. |
(a) The Authority shall have the power to apply for, |
receive and expend
grants, loans or other funds from the State |
of Illinois or any department
or agency thereof, from any unit |
of local government, from the federal
government or any |
department or agency thereof,
for use in connection with any of |
the powers or purposes of the Authority
as set forth in this |
Act. The Authority shall have power to make such
studies as may |
be necessary and to enter into contracts or agreements with
the |
State of Illinois or any department or agency thereof, with any |
unit of
local government, or with the federal government or any |
department or
agency thereof, concerning such grants, loans or
|
other funds, or any conditions relating thereto, including |
obligations to
repay such funds. The Authority may make such |
covenants concerning such
grants, loans and funds as it deems |
proper and necessary in carrying out
its responsibilities, |
purposes and powers as provided in this Act.
|
(b) The Authority shall be the primary public body in the |
metropolitan
region with authority to apply for and receive any |
grants, loans or other
funds relating to public transportation |
programs from the State of Illinois
or any department or agency |
thereof, or from the federal government or any
department or |
agency thereof. Any unit of local government, Service Board
or |
transportation agency may apply for and receive any such |
federal
or state capital grants, loans or other funds, |
provided, however that a
Service Board may not apply
for or |
receive any grant or loan which is not identified in the |
Five-Year Program.
Any Service Board, unit of local government |
or transportation agency
shall notify the Authority prior to |
making any such application and shall
file a copy thereof with |
the Authority. Nothing in this Section shall be
construed to |
|
impose any limitation on the ability of the State of Illinois
|
or any department or agency thereof, any unit of local |
government or Service
Board or
transportation agency to make |
any grants or to enter into any agreement or
contract with the |
National Rail Passenger Corporation. Nor shall anything
in this |
Section impose any limitation on the ability of any school |
district
to apply for or receive any grant, loan or other funds |
for transportation
of school children.
|
(c) The Authority shall provide to the Service Board any |
monies received
relating to public transportation services |
under the jurisdiction of the
Service Boards as follows:
|
(1) As soon as may be practicable after the Authority |
receives payment,
under Section 4.03(m) or Section |
4.03.1(d), of the proceeds of those taxes
levied by the |
Authority,
the Authority shall transfer to each Service |
Board the amount to which it
is entitled under Section |
4.01(d);
|
(2) The Authority by ordinance adopted by 9 of its then |
Directors
shall establish a formula apportioning any |
federal funds for operating assistance
purposes the |
Authority receives to each Service Board. In establishing |
the
formula, the Board shall consider, among other factors: |
ridership levels,
the efficiency with which the service is |
provided, the degree of transit
dependence of the area |
served and the cost of service. That portion of
any federal |
funds for operating assistance received by the Authority |
shall
be paid to each Service Board as soon as may be |
practicable upon their receipt
provided the Authority has |
adopted a balanced budget as required by Section
4.01 and |
further provided that the Service Boards are in compliance |
with
the requirements in Section 4.11.
|
(3) The Authority by ordinance adopted by 9 of its then |
Directors shall
apportion to the Service Boards funds |
provided by the State of Illinois
under Section 4.09 and |
shall make payment of said funds to each Service
Board as |
soon as may be practicable upon their receipt provided the |
|
Authority
has adopted a balanced budget as required by |
Section 4.01 and further provided
the Service Board is in |
compliance with the requirements in Section 4.11.
|
(4) Beginning January 1, 2009, before making any |
payments, transfers, or expenditures under this subsection |
to a Service Board, the Authority must first comply with |
Section 4.02a or 4.02b of this Act, whichever may be |
applicable.
|
(Source: P.A. 83-885; 83-886.)
|
(70 ILCS 3615/4.02a new) |
Sec. 4.02a. Chicago Transit Authority contributions to |
pension funds.
|
(a) The Authority shall continually review the Chicago |
Transit Authority's payment of the required contributions to |
its retirement system under Section 22-101 of the Illinois |
Pension Code.
|
(b) Beginning January 1, 2009, if at any time the Authority |
determines that the Chicago Transit Authority's payment of any |
portion of the required contributions to its retirement system |
under Section 22-101 of the Illinois Pension Code is more than |
one month overdue, it shall as soon as possible pay the amount |
of those overdue contributions to the trustee of the retirement |
system on behalf of the Chicago Transit Authority out of moneys |
otherwise payable to the Chicago Transit Authority under |
subsection (c) of Section 4.02 of this Act. The Authority shall |
thereafter have no liability to the Chicago Transit Authority |
for amounts paid to the trustee of the retirement system under |
this Section.
|
(c) Whenever the Authority acts or determines that it is |
required to act under subsection (b), it shall so notify the |
Chicago Transit Authority, the Mayor of Chicago, the Governor, |
and the General Assembly.
|
(70 ILCS 3615/4.02b new)
|
Sec. 4.02b. Other contributions to pension funds. |
|
(a) The Authority shall continually review the payment of |
the required employer contributions to affected pension plans |
under Section 22-103 of the Illinois Pension Code.
|
(b) Beginning January 1, 2009, if at any time the Authority |
determines that the Commuter Rail Board's or Suburban Bus |
Board's payment of any portion of the required contributions to |
an affected pension plan under Section 22-103 of the Illinois |
Pension Code is more than one month overdue, it shall as soon |
as possible pay the amount of those overdue contributions to |
the trustee of the affected pension plan on behalf of that |
Service Board out of moneys otherwise payable to that Service |
Board under subsection (c) of Section 4.02 of this Act. The |
Authority shall thereafter have no liability to the Service |
Board for amounts paid to the trustee of the affected pension |
plan under this Section.
|
(c) Whenever the Authority acts or determines that it is |
required to act under subsection (b), it shall so notify the |
affected Service Board, the Mayor of Chicago, the Governor, and |
the General Assembly.
|
(d) Beginning January 1, 2009, if the Authority fails to |
pay to an affected pension fund within 30 days after it is due |
any employer contribution that it is required to make as a |
contributing employer under Section 22-103 of the Illinois |
Pension Code, it shall promptly so notify the Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability, the Mayor of |
Chicago, the Governor, and the General Assembly, and it shall |
promptly pay the overdue amount out of the first money |
available to the Authority for its administrative expenses, as |
that term is defined in Section 4.01(c). |
ARTICLE 99. NO ACCELERATION; EFFECTIVE DATE |
Section 99-95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act |
makes changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by |
text that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a |
Section represented by multiple versions), the use of that text |