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Public Act 100-0406 Public Act 0406 100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 100-0406 | SB0646 Enrolled | LRB100 07832 KTG 17900 b |
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| AN ACT concerning children.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, | represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Child Care Act of 1969 is amended by | changing Section 12 as follows:
| (225 ILCS 10/12) (from Ch. 23, par. 2222)
| Sec. 12. Advertisements.
| (a) In this Section, "advertise" means communication by any | public medium originating or distributed in this State, | including, but not limited to, newspapers, periodicals, | telephone book listings, outdoor advertising signs, radio, or | television. | (b) A child care facility or child welfare agency licensed | or operating under a permit issued by the Department may | publish advertisements for the services that the facility is | specifically licensed or issued a permit under this Act to | provide. A person, group of persons, agency, association, | organization, corporation, institution, center, or group who | advertises or causes to be published any advertisement | offering, soliciting, or promising to perform adoption | services as defined in Section 2.24 of this Act is guilty of a | Class A misdemeanor and shall be subject to a fine not to | exceed $10,000 or 9 months imprisonment for each advertisement, |
| unless that person, group of persons, agency, association, | organization, corporation, institution, center, or group is | (i) licensed or operating under a permit issued by the | Department as a child care facility or child welfare agency, | (ii) a biological parent or a prospective adoptive parent | acting on his or her own behalf, or (iii) a licensed attorney | advertising his or her availability to provide legal services | relating to adoption, as permitted by law. | (c) Every advertisement published after the effective date | of this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly shall | include the Department-issued license number of the facility or | agency. | (d) Any licensed child welfare agency providing adoption | services that, after the effective date of this amendatory Act | of the 94th General Assembly, causes to be published an | advertisement containing reckless or intentional | misrepresentations concerning adoption services or | circumstances material to the placement of a child for adoption | is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor and is subject to a fine not | to exceed $10,000 or 9 months imprisonment for each | advertisement.
| (e) An out-of-state agency that is not licensed in Illinois | and that has a written interagency agreement with one or more | Illinois licensed child welfare agencies may advertise under | this Section, provided that (i) the out-of-state agency must be | officially recognized by the United States Internal Revenue |
| Service as a tax-exempt organization under 501(c)(3) of the | Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (or any successor provision of | federal tax law), (ii) the out-of-state agency provides only | international adoption services and is covered by the | Intercountry Adoption Act of 2000, (iii) the out-of-state | agency displays, in the
advertisement, the license number of at | least one of the Illinois licensed child welfare agencies with | which it has a written agreement, and (iv) the advertisements | pertain only to international adoption services. Subsection | (d) of this Section shall apply to any out-of-state agencies | described in this subsection (e).
| (f) An advertiser, publisher, or broadcaster, including, | but not limited to, newspapers, periodicals, telephone book | publishers, outdoor advertising signs, radio stations, or | television stations, who knowingly or recklessly advertises or | publishes any advertisement offering, soliciting, or promising | to perform adoption services, as defined in Section 2.24 of | this Act, on behalf of a person, group of persons, agency, | association, organization, corporation, institution, center, | or group, not authorized to advertise under subsection (b) or | subsection (e) of this Section, is guilty of a Class A | misdemeanor and is subject to a fine not to exceed $10,000 or 9 | months imprisonment for each advertisement. | (g) The Department shall maintain a website listing child | welfare agencies licensed by the Department that provide | adoption services and other general information for biological |
| parents and adoptive parents. The website shall include, but | not be limited to, agency addresses, phone numbers, e-mail | addresses, website addresses, annual reports as referenced in | Section 7.6 of this Act, agency license numbers, the Birth | Parent Bill of Rights, the Adoptive Parents Bill of Rights, and | the Department's complaint registry established under Section | 9.1a of this Act. The Department shall adopt any rules | necessary to implement this Section.
| (h) Nothing in this Act shall prohibit a day care agency, | day care center, day care home, or group day care home that | does not provide or perform adoption services, as defined in | Section 2.24 of this Act, from advertising or marketing the day | care agency, day care center, day care home, or group day care | home. | (Source: P.A. 94-586, eff. 8-15-05.)
| Section 10. The Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act is | amended by adding Section 7.4a as follows: | (325 ILCS 5/7.4a new) | Sec. 7.4a. Domestic violence co-location program. | (a) As used in this Section: | "Domestic violence co-location program" means a program, | administered in partnership with a co-location program | management entity, where domestic violence advocates who are | trained in domestic violence services and employed through a |
| domestic violence provider are assigned to work in a field | office of the Department of Children and Family Services | alongside and in collaboration with child welfare | investigators and caseworkers working with families where | there are indicators of domestic violence. | "Domestic violence" has the meaning ascribed to it in the | Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986. | "Co-location program management entity" means the | organization that partners with the Department to administer | the domestic violence co-location program. | (b) Subject to appropriations or the availability of other | funds for this purpose, the Department may implement a 5-year | pilot program of a domestic violence co-location program. The | domestic violence co-location program shall be designed to | improve child welfare interventions provided to families | experiencing domestic violence in part by enhancing the safety | and stability of children, reducing the number of children | removed from their parents, and improving outcomes for children | within their families through a strength-based and | trauma-informed collaborative support program. The pilot | program shall occur in no fewer than 3 Department offices. | Additional sites may be added during the pilot program, and the | pilot program may be expanded and converted into a permanent | statewide program. | (c) The Department shall adopt rules and procedures and | shall develop and facilitate training for the effective |
| implementation of the domestic violence co-location program. | The Department shall adopt rules on the qualification | requirements for domestic violence advocates participating in | the pilot program. | (d) The Department shall track, collect, report on, and | share data about domestic violence-affected families, | including, but not limited to, data related to hotline calls, | investigations, protective custody, cases referred to the | juvenile court, and outcomes of the domestic violence | co-location program. | (e) The Department may arrange for an independent, | evidence-based evaluation of the domestic violence co-location | program authorized and implemented under this Section to | determine whether it is meeting its goals. The independent | evidence-based evaluation may include, but is not limited to, | data regarding: (i) the number of children removed from their | parents; (ii) the number of children who remain with the | non-offending parent; (iii) the number of indicated and | unfounded investigative findings and corresponding allegations | of maltreatment for the non-offending parent and domestic | violence perpetrator; (iv) the number of referrals to the | co-located domestic violence advocates; (v) the number of | referrals for services; and (vi) the number of months that | children remained in foster care whose cases involved the | co-located domestic violence advocate. | (f) Following the expiration of the 5-year pilot program or |
| prior to the expiration of the pilot program, if there is | evidence that the pilot program is effective, the domestic | violence co-location program may expand into each county, | investigative office of the Department of Children and Family | Services, or purchase of service or other contracted private | agency delivering intact family or foster care services in | Illinois. | (g) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to breach | the confidentiality protections provided under State law to | domestic violence professionals, including co-located domestic | violence advocates, in the provision of services to domestic | violence victims as employees of domestic violence agencies or | to any individual who receives services from domestic violence | agencies.
| Section 15. If and only if House Bill 1785 of the 100th | General Assembly becomes law, then the Vital Records Act is | amended by changing Section 17 as follows:
| (410 ILCS 535/17) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 73-17)
| Sec. 17. (1) For a person born in this State, the State | Registrar of Vital
Records shall establish a new certificate of | birth when he receives any of
the following:
| (a) A certificate of adoption as provided in Section 16 | or a certified
copy of the order of adoption together with | the information necessary to
identify the original |
| certificate of birth and to establish the new
certificate | of birth; except that a new certificate of birth shall not | be
established if so requested by the court ordering the | adoption, the
adoptive parents, or the adopted person.
| (b) A certificate of adoption or a certified copy of | the order of
adoption entered in a court of competent | jurisdiction of any other state or
country declaring | adopted a child born in the State of Illinois, together
| with the information necessary to identify the original | certificate of
birth and to establish the new certificate | of birth; except that a new
certificate of birth shall not | be established if so requested by the court
ordering the | adoption, the adoptive parents, or the adopted person.
| (c) A request that a new certificate be established and | such evidence as
required by regulation proving that such | person has been legitimatized, or
that the circuit court, | the Department of Healthcare and Family Services (formerly
| Illinois Department of Public Aid), or
a court or | administrative agency of any other state
has established
| the paternity of such a person
by judicial or | administrative processes or by voluntary acknowledgment,
| which is accompanied by the social security
numbers of all | persons determined and presumed to be the parents.
| (d) A declaration by a licensed health care | professional or licensed mental health professional who | has treated or evaluated a person stating that the
person |
| has undergone treatment that is clinically appropriate for | that individual for the purpose of gender transition, based | on contemporary medical standards, or that the individual | has an intersex condition, and that the sex designation on | such
person's birth record should therefore be changed. The | information in the declaration shall be proved by the | licensed health care professional or licensed mental | health professional signing and dating it in substantially | the following form: "I declare (or certify, verify, or | state) under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true | and correct. Executed on (date).". The new certificate of | birth shall reflect any legal name change, so long as the | appropriate documentation of the name change is submitted.
| Each request for a new certificate of birth shall be | accompanied by a fee
of $15 and entitles the applicant to one | certification or certified copy
of the new certificate. If the | request is for additional copies, it shall
be accompanied by a | fee of $2 for each additional certification or certified
copy.
| (2) When a new certificate of birth is established, the | actual place and
date of birth shall be shown; provided, in the | case of adoption of a person
born in this State by parents who | were residents of this State at the time
of the birth of the | adopted person, the place of birth may be shown as the
place of | residence of the adoptive parents at the time of such person's
| birth, if specifically requested by them, and any new | certificate of birth
established prior to the effective date of |
| this amendatory Act may be
corrected accordingly if so | requested by the adoptive parents or the
adopted person when of | legal age. The social security numbers of the
parents shall not | be recorded on the certificate of birth. The social
security | numbers may only be used for purposes allowed under federal | law.
The new certificate shall be substituted for the original | certificate of birth:
| (a) Thereafter, the original certificate and the | evidence of adoption,
paternity, legitimation, or change | of sex designation shall not be subject to inspection
or | certification except upon order of the circuit court, | request of the person named on the certificate of birth , or
| as provided by regulation. If the new certificate was | issued subsequent to an adoption, then the evidence of | adoption is not subject to inspection or certification | except upon order of the circuit court or as provided by | rule, and the original certificate shall not be subject to | inspection until the adopted person has reached the age of | 21; thereafter, the original certificate shall be made | available as provided by Section 18.1b of the Adoption Act , | and nothing in this subsection shall impede or prohibit | access to the original birth certificate under Section | 18.1b of the Adoption Act .
| (b) Upon receipt of notice of annulment of adoption, | the original
certificate of birth shall be restored to its | place in the files, and the
new certificate and evidence |
| shall not be subject to inspection or
certification except | upon order of the circuit court.
| (3) If no certificate of birth is on file for the person | for whom a new
certificate is to be established under this | Section, a delayed record of
birth shall be filed with the | State Registrar of Vital Records as provided
in Section 14 or | Section 15 of this Act before a new certificate of birth
is | established, except that when the date and place of birth and | parentage
have been established in the adoption proceedings, a | delayed record shall
not be required.
| (4) When a new certificate of birth is established by the | State
Registrar of Vital Records, all copies of the original | certificate of birth
in the custody of any custodian of | permanent local records in this State
shall be transmitted to | the State Registrar of Vital Records as directed,
and shall be | sealed from inspection except as provided by Section 18.1b of | the Adoption Act.
| (5) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to prohibit | the amendment
of a birth certificate in accordance with | subsection (6) of Section 22.
| (Source: P.A. 97-110, eff. 7-14-11; 100HB1785eng.)
| Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect January | 1, 2018, except that Section 15 takes effect upon becoming law | or on the date House Bill 1785 of the 100th General Assembly | takes effect, whichever is later. |
Effective Date: 1/1/2018
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