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Public Act 103-0608 Public Act 0608 103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY | Public Act 103-0608 | HB5394 Enrolled | LRB103 39286 RJT 69440 b |
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| AN ACT concerning education. | Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, | represented in the General Assembly: | Section 5. The Critical Health Problems and Comprehensive | Health Education Act is amended by changing Section 3 as | follows: | (105 ILCS 110/3) | Sec. 3. Comprehensive Health Education Program. The | program established under this Act shall include, but not be | limited to, the following major educational areas as a basis | for curricula in all elementary and secondary schools in this | State: human ecology and health; human growth and development; | the emotional, psychological, physiological, hygienic, and | social responsibilities of family life, including sexual | abstinence until marriage; the prevention and control of | disease, including instruction in grades 6 through 12 on the | prevention, transmission, and spread of AIDS; age-appropriate | sexual abuse and assault awareness and prevention education in | grades pre-kindergarten through 12; public and environmental | health; consumer health; safety education and disaster | survival; mental health and illness; personal health habits; | alcohol and drug use and abuse, including the medical and | legal ramifications of alcohol, drug, and tobacco use; abuse |
| during pregnancy; evidence-based and medically accurate | information regarding sexual abstinence; tobacco and | e-cigarettes and other vapor devices; nutrition; and dental | health. The instruction on mental health and illness must | evaluate the multiple dimensions of health by reviewing the | relationship between physical and mental health so as to | enhance student understanding, attitudes, and behaviors that | promote health, well-being, and human dignity and must include | how and where to find mental health resources and specialized | treatment in the State. The program shall also provide course | material and instruction to advise pupils of the Abandoned | Newborn Infant Protection Act. The program shall include | information about cancer, including, without limitation, types | of cancer, signs and symptoms, risk factors, the importance of | early prevention and detection, and information on where to go | for help. Notwithstanding the above educational areas, the | following areas may also be included as a basis for curricula | in all elementary and secondary schools in this State: basic | first aid (including, but not limited to, cardiopulmonary | resuscitation and the Heimlich maneuver), heart disease, | diabetes, stroke, the prevention of child abuse, neglect, and | suicide, and teen dating violence in grades 7 through 12. | Beginning with the 2014-2015 school year, training on how to | properly administer cardiopulmonary resuscitation (which | training must be in accordance with standards of the American | Red Cross, the American Heart Association, or another |
| nationally recognized certifying organization) and how to use | an automated external defibrillator shall be included as a | basis for curricula in all secondary schools in this State. | Beginning with the 2024-2025 school year in grades 9 | through 12, the program shall include instruction, study, and | discussion on the dangers of allergies. Information for the | instruction, study, and discussion shall come from information | provided by the Department of Public Health and the federal | Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. This instruction, | study, and discussion shall include, at a minimum: | (1) recognizing the signs and symptoms of an allergic | reaction, including anaphylaxis; | (2) the steps to take to prevent exposure to | allergens; and | (3) safe emergency epinephrine administration. | No later than 30 days after the first day of each school | year, the The school board of each public elementary and | secondary school in the State shall provide encourage all | teachers , administrators, and other school personnel , as | determined by school officials, with information regarding | emergency procedures and to acquire, develop, and maintain the | knowledge and skills necessary to properly administer | life-saving techniques, including, without limitation, the | Heimlich maneuver , hands-only cardiopulmonary resuscitation, | and use of the school district's automated external | defibrillator and rescue breathing . The information training |
| shall be in accordance with standards of the American Red | Cross, the American Heart Association, or another nationally | recognized certifying organization. A school board may use the | services of non-governmental entities whose personnel have | expertise in life-saving techniques to instruct teachers , | administrators, and other school personnel in these | techniques. Each school board is encouraged to have in its | employ, or on its volunteer staff, at least one person who is | certified, by the American Red Cross or by another qualified | certifying agency, as qualified to administer first aid and | cardiopulmonary resuscitation. In addition, each school board | is authorized to allocate appropriate portions of its | institute or inservice days to conduct training programs for | teachers and other school personnel who have expressed an | interest in becoming certified qualified to administer | emergency first aid or cardiopulmonary resuscitation. School | boards are urged to encourage their teachers and other school | personnel who coach school athletic programs and other | extracurricular school activities to acquire, develop, and | maintain the knowledge and skills necessary to properly | administer first aid and cardiopulmonary resuscitation in | accordance with standards and requirements established by the | American Red Cross or another qualified certifying agency. | Subject to appropriation, the State Board of Education shall | establish and administer a matching grant program to pay for | half of the cost that a school district incurs in training |
| those teachers and other school personnel who express an | interest in becoming qualified to administer first aid or | cardiopulmonary resuscitation (which training must be in | accordance with standards of the American Red Cross, the | American Heart Association, or another nationally recognized | certifying organization) or in learning how to use an | automated external defibrillator . A school district that | applies for a grant must demonstrate that it has funds to pay | half of the cost of the training for which matching grant money | is sought. The State Board of Education shall award the grants | on a first-come, first-serve basis. | No pupil shall be required to take or participate in any | class or course on AIDS or family life instruction or to | receive training on how to properly administer cardiopulmonary | resuscitation or how to use an automated external | defibrillator if his or her parent or guardian submits written | objection thereto, and refusal to take or participate in the | course or program or the training shall not be reason for | suspension or expulsion of the pupil. | Curricula developed under programs established in | accordance with this Act in the major educational area of | alcohol and drug use and abuse shall include classroom | instruction in grades 5 through 12. The instruction, which | shall include matters relating to both the physical and legal | effects and ramifications of drug and substance abuse, shall | be integrated into existing curricula; and the State Board of |
| Education shall develop and make available to all elementary | and secondary schools in this State instructional materials | and guidelines which will assist the schools in incorporating | the instruction into their existing curricula. In addition, | school districts may offer, as part of existing curricula | during the school day or as part of an after-school after | school program, support services and instruction for pupils or | pupils whose parent, parents, or guardians are chemically | dependent. Curricula developed under programs established in | accordance with this Act in the major educational area of | alcohol and drug use and abuse shall include the instruction, | study, and discussion required under subsection (c) of Section | 27-13.2 of the School Code. | (Source: P.A. 102-464, eff. 8-20-21; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21; | 102-1034, eff. 1-1-23; 103-212, eff. 1-1-24; 103-365, eff. | 1-1-24; revised 12-12-23.) | Section 10. The School Safety Drill Act is amended by | changing Section 25 and by adding Section 60 as follows: | (105 ILCS 128/25) | Sec. 25. Annual review. | (a) Each public school district, through its school board | or the board's designee, shall conduct a minimum of one annual | meeting at which it will review each school building's | emergency and crisis response plans, protocols, and |
| procedures, including procedures regarding the school | district's threat assessment team, procedures regarding the | school district's cardiac emergency response plan, the | efficacy and effects of law enforcement drills, and each | building's compliance with the school safety drill programs. | The purpose of this annual review shall be to review and update | the emergency and crisis response plans, protocols, and | procedures and the school safety drill programs of the | district and each of its school buildings. This review must be | at no cost to the school district. In updating a school | building's emergency and crisis response plans, consideration | may be given to making the emergency and crisis response plans | available to first responders, administrators, and teachers | for implementation and utilization through the use of | electronic applications on electronic devices, including, but | not limited to, smartphones, tablets, and laptop computers. | (b) Each school board or the board's designee is required | to participate in the annual review and to invite each of the | following parties to the annual review and provide each party | with a minimum of 30 days' notice before the date of the annual | review: | (1) The principal of each school within the school | district or his or her official designee. | (2) Representatives from any other education-related | organization or association deemed appropriate by the | school district. |
| (3) Representatives from all local first responder | organizations to participate, advise, and consult in the | review process, including, but not limited to: | (A) the appropriate local fire department or | district; | (B) the appropriate local law enforcement agency; | (C) the appropriate local emergency medical | services agency if the agency is a separate, local | first responder unit; and | (D) any other member of the first responder or | emergency management community that has contacted the | district superintendent or his or her designee during | the past year to request involvement in a school's | emergency planning or drill process. | (4) The school board or its designee may also choose | to invite to the annual review any other persons whom it | believes will aid in the review process, including, but | not limited to, any members of any other education-related | organization or the first responder or emergency | management community. | (c) Upon the conclusion of the annual review, the school | board or the board's designee shall sign a one page report, | which may be in either a check-off format or a narrative | format, that does the following: | (1) summarizes the review's recommended changes to the | existing school safety plans and drill plans; |
| (2) lists the parties that participated in the annual | review, and includes the annual review's attendance | record; | (3) certifies that an effective review of the | emergency and crisis response plans, protocols, and | procedures and the school safety drill programs of the | district and each of its school buildings has occurred; | (4) states that the school district will implement | those plans, protocols, procedures, and programs, during | the academic year; and | (5) includes the authorization of the school board or | the board's designee. | (d) The school board or its designee shall send a copy of | the report to each party that participates in the annual | review process and to the appropriate regional superintendent | of schools. If any of the participating parties have comments | on the certification document, those parties shall submit | their comments in writing to the appropriate regional | superintendent. The regional superintendent shall maintain a | record of these comments. The certification document may be in | a check-off format or narrative format, at the discretion of | the district superintendent. | (e) The review must occur at least once during the fiscal | year, at a specific time chosen at the school district | superintendent's discretion. | (f) A private school shall conduct a minimum of one annual |
| meeting at which the school must review each school building's | emergency and crisis response plans, protocols, and | procedures , including procedures regarding the school's | cardiac emergency response plan, and each building's | compliance with the school safety drill programs of the | school. The purpose of this annual review shall be to review | and update the emergency and crisis response plans, protocols, | and procedures and the school safety drill programs of the | school. This review must be at no cost to the private school. | The private school shall invite representatives from all | local first responder organizations to participate, advise, | and consult in the review process, including, but not limited | to, the following: | (1) the appropriate local fire department or fire | protection district; | (2) the appropriate local law enforcement agency; | (3) the appropriate local emergency medical services | agency if the agency is a separate, local first responder | unit; and | (4) any other member of the first responder or | emergency management community that has contacted the | school's chief administrative officer or his or her | designee during the past year to request involvement in | the school's emergency planning or drill process. | (Source: P.A. 101-455, eff. 8-23-19; 102-395, eff. 8-16-21.) |
| (105 ILCS 128/60 new) | Sec. 60. Cardiac emergency response plan. | (a) A school district and a private school shall develop a | cardiac emergency response plan in place in accordance with | guidelines set forth by either the American Heart Association | or other nationally recognized, evidence-based standards that | addresses the appropriate response to incidents involving an | individual experiencing sudden cardiac arrest or a similar | life-threatening emergency while at a school or at a | school-sponsored activity or event. The plan must be | distributed to all teachers, administrators, school support | personnel, coaches, and other school staff identified by | school administrators at each school. | (b) A cardiac emergency response plan shall include, but | is not limited to, the following: | (1) Procedures to follow in the event of a cardiac | emergency at a school. | (2) A listing of every automated external | defibrillator that is present and clearly marked or easily | accessible at school athletic venues and events and at | school and the maintenance schedule for the automated | external defibrillator. The automated external | defibrillators shall be installed in accordance with the | Physical Fitness Facility Medical Emergency Preparedness | Act, guidelines from the American Heart Association, or | other nationally recognized guidelines focused on |
| emergency cardiovascular care. | (3) Information on hands-only cardiopulmonary | resuscitation and use of automated external defibrillators | to teachers, administrators, coaches, assistant coaches, | and other school staff identified by school | administrators, in accordance with Section 3 of the | Critical Health Problems and Comprehensive Health | Education Act. |
Effective Date: 1/1/2025
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