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Public Act 103-0752 Public Act 0752 103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY | Public Act 103-0752 | SB0857 Enrolled | LRB103 03316 RPS 48322 b |
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| AN ACT concerning State government. | Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, | represented in the General Assembly: | Section 5. The Department of Human Services Act is amended | by changing Section 1-17 as follows: | (20 ILCS 1305/1-17) | Sec. 1-17. Inspector General. | (a) Nature and purpose. It is the express intent of the | General Assembly to ensure the health, safety, and financial | condition of individuals receiving services in this State due | to mental illness, developmental disability, or both by | protecting those persons from acts of abuse, neglect, or both | by service providers. To that end, the Office of the Inspector | General for the Department of Human Services is created to | investigate and report upon allegations of the abuse, neglect, | or financial exploitation of individuals receiving services | within mental health facilities, developmental disabilities | facilities, and community agencies operated, licensed, funded, | or certified by the Department of Human Services, but not | licensed or certified by any other State agency. | (b) Definitions. The following definitions apply to this | Section: | "Agency" or "community agency" means (i) a community |
| agency licensed, funded, or certified by the Department, but | not licensed or certified by any other human services agency | of the State, to provide mental health service or | developmental disabilities service, or (ii) a program | licensed, funded, or certified by the Department, but not | licensed or certified by any other human services agency of | the State, to provide mental health service or developmental | disabilities service. | "Aggravating circumstance" means a factor that is | attendant to a finding and that tends to compound or increase | the culpability of the accused. | "Allegation" means an assertion, complaint, suspicion, or | incident involving any of the following conduct by an | employee, facility, or agency against an individual or | individuals: mental abuse, physical abuse, sexual abuse, | neglect, or financial exploitation , or material obstruction of | an investigation . | "Day" means working day, unless otherwise specified. | "Deflection" means a situation in which an individual is | presented for admission to a facility or agency, and the | facility staff or agency staff do not admit the individual. | "Deflection" includes triage, redirection, and denial of | admission. | "Department" means the Department of Human Services. | "Developmental disability" means "developmental | disability" as defined in the Mental Health and Developmental |
| Disabilities Code. | "Egregious neglect" means a finding of neglect as | determined by the Inspector General that (i) represents a | gross failure to adequately provide for, or a callused | indifference to, the health, safety, or medical needs of an | individual and (ii) results in an individual's death or other | serious deterioration of an individual's physical condition or | mental condition. | "Employee" means any person who provides services at the | facility or agency on-site or off-site. The service | relationship can be with the individual or with the facility | or agency. Also, "employee" includes any employee or | contractual agent of the Department of Human Services or the | community agency involved in providing or monitoring or | administering mental health or developmental disability | services. This includes but is not limited to: owners, | operators, payroll personnel, contractors, subcontractors, and | volunteers. | "Facility" or "State-operated facility" means a mental | health facility or developmental disabilities facility | operated by the Department. | "Financial exploitation" means taking unjust advantage of | an individual's assets, property, or financial resources | through deception, intimidation, or conversion for the | employee's, facility's, or agency's own advantage or benefit. | "Finding" means the Office of Inspector General's |
| determination regarding whether an allegation is | substantiated, unsubstantiated, or unfounded. | "Health Care Worker Registry" or "Registry" means the | Health Care Worker Registry under the Health Care Worker | Background Check Act. | "Individual" means any person receiving mental health | service, developmental disabilities service, or both from a | facility or agency, while either on-site or off-site. | "Material obstruction of an investigation" means the | purposeful interference with an investigation of physical | abuse, sexual abuse, mental abuse, neglect, or financial | exploitation and includes, but is not limited to, the | withholding or altering of documentation or recorded evidence; | influencing, threatening, or impeding witness testimony; | presenting untruthful information during an interview; failing | to cooperate with an investigation conducted by the Office of | the Inspector General. If an employee, following a criminal | investigation of physical abuse, sexual abuse, mental abuse, | neglect, or financial exploitation, is convicted of an offense | that is factually predicated on the employee presenting | untruthful information during the course of the investigation, | that offense constitutes obstruction of an investigation. | Obstruction of an investigation does not include: an | employee's lawful exercising of his or her constitutional | right against self-incrimination, an employee invoking his or | her lawful rights to union representation as provided by a |
| collective bargaining agreement or the Illinois Public Labor | Relations Act, or a union representative's lawful activities | providing representation under a collective bargaining | agreement or the Illinois Public Labor Relations Act. | Obstruction of an investigation is considered material when it | could significantly impair an investigator's ability to gather | all relevant facts. An employee shall not be placed on the | Health Care Worker Registry for presenting untruthful | information during an interview conducted by the Office of the | Inspector General, unless, prior to the interview, the | employee was provided with any previous signed statements he | or she made during the course of the investigation. | "Mental abuse" means the use of demeaning, intimidating, | or threatening words, signs, gestures, or other actions by an | employee about an individual and in the presence of an | individual or individuals that results in emotional distress | or maladaptive behavior, or could have resulted in emotional | distress or maladaptive behavior, for any individual present. | "Mental illness" means "mental illness" as defined in the | Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code. | "Mentally ill" means having a mental illness. | "Mitigating circumstance" means a condition that (i) is | attendant to a finding, (ii) does not excuse or justify the | conduct in question, but (iii) may be considered in evaluating | the severity of the conduct, the culpability of the accused, | or both the severity of the conduct and the culpability of the |
| accused. | "Neglect" means an employee's, agency's, or facility's | failure to provide adequate medical care, personal care, or | maintenance and that, as a consequence, (i) causes an | individual pain, injury, or emotional distress, (ii) results | in either an individual's maladaptive behavior or the | deterioration of an individual's physical condition or mental | condition, or (iii) places the individual's health or safety | at substantial risk. | "Person with a developmental disability" means a person | having a developmental disability. | "Physical abuse" means an employee's non-accidental and | inappropriate contact with an individual that causes bodily | harm. "Physical abuse" includes actions that cause bodily harm | as a result of an employee directing an individual or person to | physically abuse another individual. | "Presenting untruthful information" means making a false | statement, material to an investigation of physical abuse, | sexual abuse, mental abuse, neglect, or financial | exploitation, knowing the statement is false. | "Recommendation" means an admonition, separate from a | finding, that requires action by the facility, agency, or | Department to correct a systemic issue, problem, or deficiency | identified during an investigation. "Recommendation" can also | mean an admonition to correct a systemic issue, problem or | deficiency during a review. |
| "Required reporter" means any employee who suspects, | witnesses, or is informed of an allegation of any one or more | of the following: mental abuse, physical abuse, sexual abuse, | neglect, or financial exploitation. | "Secretary" means the Chief Administrative Officer of the | Department. | "Sexual abuse" means any sexual contact or intimate | physical contact between an employee and an individual, | including an employee's coercion or encouragement of an | individual to engage in sexual behavior that results in sexual | contact, intimate physical contact, sexual behavior, or | intimate physical behavior. Sexual abuse also includes (i) an | employee's actions that result in the sending or showing of | sexually explicit images to an individual via computer, | cellular phone, electronic mail, portable electronic device, | or other media with or without contact with the individual or | (ii) an employee's posting of sexually explicit images of an | individual online or elsewhere whether or not there is contact | with the individual. | "Sexually explicit images" includes, but is not limited | to, any material which depicts nudity, sexual conduct, or | sado-masochistic abuse, or which contains explicit and | detailed verbal descriptions or narrative accounts of sexual | excitement, sexual conduct, or sado-masochistic abuse. | "Substantiated" means there is a preponderance of the | evidence to support the allegation. |
| "Unfounded" means there is no credible evidence to support | the allegation. | "Unsubstantiated" means there is credible evidence, but | less than a preponderance of evidence to support the | allegation. | (c) Appointment. The Governor shall appoint, and the | Senate shall confirm, an Inspector General. The Inspector | General shall be appointed for a term of 4 years and shall | function within the Department of Human Services and report to | the Secretary and the Governor. | (d) Operation and appropriation. The Inspector General | shall function independently within the Department with | respect to the operations of the Office, including the | performance of investigations and issuance of findings and | recommendations and the performance of site visits and reviews | of facilities and community agencies . The appropriation for | the Office of Inspector General shall be separate from the | overall appropriation for the Department. | (e) Powers and duties. The Inspector General shall | investigate reports of suspected mental abuse, physical abuse, | sexual abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation of | individuals in any mental health or developmental disabilities | facility or agency and shall have authority to take immediate | action to prevent any one or more of the following from | happening to individuals under its jurisdiction: mental abuse, | physical abuse, sexual abuse, neglect, or financial |
| exploitation. The Inspector General shall also investigate | allegations of material obstruction of an investigation by an | employee. Upon written request of an agency of this State, the | Inspector General may assist another agency of the State in | investigating reports of the abuse, neglect, or abuse and | neglect of persons with mental illness, persons with | developmental disabilities, or persons with both. The | Inspector General shall conduct annual site visits of each | facility and may conduct reviews of facilities and community | agencies. To comply with the requirements of subsection (k) of | this Section, the Inspector General shall also review all | reportable deaths for which there is no allegation of abuse or | neglect. Nothing in this Section shall preempt any duties of | the Medical Review Board set forth in the Mental Health and | Developmental Disabilities Code. The Inspector General shall | have no authority to investigate alleged violations of the | State Officials and Employees Ethics Act. Allegations of | misconduct under the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act | shall be referred to the Office of the Governor's Executive | Inspector General for investigation. | (f) Limitations. The Inspector General shall not conduct | an investigation within an agency or facility if that | investigation would be redundant to or interfere with an | investigation conducted by another State agency. The Inspector | General shall have no supervision over, or involvement in, the | routine programmatic, licensing, funding, or certification |
| operations of the Department. Nothing in this subsection | limits investigations by the Department that may otherwise be | required by law or that may be necessary in the Department's | capacity as central administrative authority responsible for | the operation of the State's mental health and developmental | disabilities facilities. | (g) Rulemaking authority. The Inspector General shall | promulgate rules establishing minimum requirements for | reporting allegations as well as for initiating, conducting, | and completing investigations based upon the nature of the | allegation or allegations. The rules shall clearly establish | that if 2 or more State agencies could investigate an | allegation, the Inspector General shall not conduct an | investigation that would be redundant to, or interfere with, | an investigation conducted by another State agency. The rules | shall further clarify the method and circumstances under which | the Office of Inspector General may interact with the | licensing, funding, or certification units of the Department | in preventing further occurrences of mental abuse, physical | abuse, sexual abuse, neglect, egregious neglect, and financial | exploitation , and material obstruction of an investigation . | (g-5) Site visits and review authority. | (1) Site visits. The Inspector General shall conduct | unannounced site visits to each facility at least annually | for the purpose of reviewing and making recommendations on | systemic issues relative to preventing, reporting, |
| investigating, and responding to all of the following: | mental abuse, physical abuse, sexual abuse, neglect, | egregious neglect, financial exploitation, or material | obstruction of an investigation. | (2) Review authority. In response to complaints or | information gathered from investigations, the Inspector | General shall have and may exercise the authority to | initiate reviews of facilities and agencies related to | preventing, reporting, investigating, and responding to | all of the following: mental abuse, physical abuse, sexual | abuse, neglect, egregious neglect, financial exploitation, | or material obstruction of an investigation. Upon | concluding a review, the Inspector General shall issue a | written report setting forth its conclusions and | recommendations. The report shall be distributed to the | Secretary and to the director of the facility or agency | that was the subject of review. Within 45 calendar days, | the facility or agency shall submit a written response | addressing the Inspector General's conclusions and | recommendations and, in a concise and reasoned manner, the | actions taken, if applicable, to: (i) protect the | individual or individuals; (ii) prevent recurrences; and | (iii) eliminate the problems identified. The response | shall include the implementation and completion dates of | such actions. | (h) Training programs. The Inspector General shall (i) |
| establish a comprehensive program to ensure that every person | authorized to conduct investigations receives ongoing training | relative to investigation techniques, communication skills, | and the appropriate means of interacting with persons | receiving treatment for mental illness, developmental | disability, or both mental illness and developmental | disability, and (ii) establish and conduct periodic training | programs for facility and agency employees concerning the | prevention and reporting of any one or more of the following: | mental abuse, physical abuse, sexual abuse, neglect, egregious | neglect, or financial exploitation , or material obstruction of | an investigation . The Inspector General shall further ensure | (i) every person authorized to conduct investigations at | community agencies receives ongoing training in Title 59, | Parts 115, 116, and 119 of the Illinois Administrative Code, | and (ii) every person authorized to conduct investigations | shall receive ongoing training in Title 59, Part 50 of the | Illinois Administrative Code. Nothing in this Section shall be | deemed to prevent the Office of Inspector General from | conducting any other training as determined by the Inspector | General to be necessary or helpful. | (i) Duty to cooperate. | (1) The Inspector General shall at all times be | granted access to any facility or agency for the purpose | of investigating any allegation, conducting unannounced | site visits, monitoring compliance with a written |
| response, conducting reviews of facilities and agencies, | or completing any other statutorily assigned duty. The | Inspector General shall conduct unannounced site visits to | each facility at least annually for the purpose of | reviewing and making recommendations on systemic issues | relative to preventing, reporting, investigating, and | responding to all of the following: mental abuse, physical | abuse, sexual abuse, neglect, egregious neglect, or | financial exploitation. | (2) Any employee who fails to cooperate with an Office | of the Inspector General investigation is in violation of | this Act. Failure to cooperate with an investigation | includes, but is not limited to, any one or more of the | following: (i) creating and transmitting a false report to | the Office of the Inspector General hotline, (ii) | providing false information to an Office of the Inspector | General Investigator during an investigation, (iii) | colluding with other employees to cover up evidence, (iv) | colluding with other employees to provide false | information to an Office of the Inspector General | investigator, (v) destroying evidence, (vi) withholding | evidence, or (vii) otherwise obstructing an Office of the | Inspector General investigation. Additionally, any | employee who, during an unannounced site visit , or written | response compliance check, or review fails to cooperate | with requests from the Office of the Inspector General is |
| in violation of this Act. | (j) Subpoena powers. The Inspector General shall have the | power to subpoena witnesses and compel the production of all | documents and physical evidence relating to his or her | investigations and reviews and any hearings authorized by this | Act. This subpoena power shall not extend to persons or | documents of a labor organization or its representatives | insofar as the persons are acting in a representative capacity | to an employee whose conduct is the subject of an | investigation or the documents relate to that representation. | Any person who otherwise fails to respond to a subpoena or who | knowingly provides false information to the Office of the | Inspector General by subpoena during an investigation is | guilty of a Class A misdemeanor. | (k) Reporting allegations and deaths. | (1) Allegations. If an employee witnesses, is told of, | or has reason to believe an incident of mental abuse, | physical abuse, sexual abuse, neglect, or financial | exploitation , or material obstruction of an investigation | has occurred, the employee, agency, or facility shall | report the allegation by phone to the Office of the | Inspector General hotline according to the agency's or | facility's procedures, but in no event later than 4 hours | after the initial discovery of the incident, allegation, | or suspicion of any one or more of the following: mental | abuse, physical abuse, sexual abuse, neglect, or financial |
| exploitation , or material obstruction of an investigation . | A required reporter as defined in subsection (b) of this | Section who knowingly or intentionally fails to comply | with these reporting requirements is guilty of a Class A | misdemeanor. | (2) Deaths. Absent an allegation, a required reporter | shall, within 24 hours after initial discovery, report by | phone to the Office of the Inspector General hotline each | of the following: | (i) Any death of an individual occurring within 14 | calendar days after discharge or transfer of the | individual from a residential program or facility. | (ii) Any death of an individual occurring within | 24 hours after deflection from a residential program | or facility. | (iii) Any other death of an individual occurring | at an agency or facility or at any Department-funded | site. | (3) Retaliation. It is a violation of this Act for any | employee or administrator of an agency or facility to take | retaliatory action against an employee who acts in good | faith in conformance with his or her duties as a required | reporter. | (l) Reporting to law enforcement. Reporting criminal acts. | Within 24 hours after determining that there is credible | evidence indicating that a criminal act may have been |
| committed or that special expertise may be required in an | investigation, the Inspector General shall notify the Illinois | State Police or other appropriate law enforcement authority, | or ensure that such notification is made. The Illinois State | Police shall investigate any report from a State-operated | facility indicating a possible murder, sexual assault, or | other felony by an employee. All investigations conducted by | the Inspector General shall be conducted in a manner designed | to ensure the preservation of evidence for possible use in a | criminal prosecution. | (m) Investigative reports. Upon completion of an | investigation, the Office of Inspector General shall issue an | investigative report identifying whether the allegations are | substantiated, unsubstantiated, or unfounded. Within 10 | business days after the transmittal of a completed | investigative report substantiating an allegation, finding an | allegation is unsubstantiated, or if a recommendation is made, | the Inspector General shall provide the investigative report | on the case to the Secretary and to the director of the | facility or agency where any one or more of the following | occurred: mental abuse, physical abuse, sexual abuse, neglect, | egregious neglect, financial exploitation, or material | obstruction of an investigation. The director of the facility | or agency shall be responsible for maintaining the | confidentiality of the investigative report consistent with | State and federal law. In a substantiated case, the |
| investigative report shall include any mitigating or | aggravating circumstances that were identified during the | investigation. If the case involves substantiated neglect, the | investigative report shall also state whether egregious | neglect was found. An investigative report may also set forth | recommendations. All investigative reports prepared by the | Office of the Inspector General shall be considered | confidential and shall not be released except as provided by | the law of this State or as required under applicable federal | law. Unsubstantiated and unfounded reports shall not be | disclosed except as allowed under Section 6 of the Abused and | Neglected Long Term Care Facility Residents Reporting Act. Raw | data used to compile the investigative report shall not be | subject to release unless required by law or a court order. | "Raw data used to compile the investigative report" includes, | but is not limited to, any one or more of the following: the | initial complaint, witness statements, photographs, | investigator's notes, police reports, or incident reports. If | the allegations are substantiated, the victim, the victim's | guardian, and the accused shall be provided with a redacted | copy of the investigative report. Death reports where there | was no allegation of abuse or neglect shall only be released | pursuant to applicable State or federal law or a valid court | order. Unredacted investigative reports, as well as raw data, | may be shared with a local law enforcement entity, a State's | Attorney's office, or a county coroner's office upon written |
| request. | (n) Written responses, clarification requests, and | reconsideration requests. | (1) Written responses. Within 30 calendar days from | receipt of a substantiated investigative report or an | investigative report which contains recommendations, | absent a reconsideration request, the facility or agency | shall file a written response that addresses, in a concise | and reasoned manner, the actions taken to: (i) protect the | individual; (ii) prevent recurrences; and (iii) eliminate | the problems identified. The response shall include the | implementation and completion dates of such actions. If | the written response is not filed within the allotted 30 | calendar day period, the Secretary | , or the Secretary's | designee, shall determine the appropriate corrective | action to be taken. | (2) Requests for clarification. The facility, agency, | victim or guardian, or the subject employee may request | that the Office of Inspector General clarify the finding | or findings for which clarification is sought. | (3) Requests for reconsideration. The facility, | agency, victim or guardian, or the subject employee may | request that the Office of the Inspector General | reconsider the finding or findings or the recommendations. | A request for reconsideration shall be subject to a | multi-layer review and shall include at least one reviewer |
| who did not participate in the investigation or approval | of the original investigative report. After the | multi-layer review process has been completed, the | Inspector General shall make the final determination on | the reconsideration request. The investigation shall be | reopened if the reconsideration determination finds that | additional information is needed to complete the | investigative record. | (o) Disclosure of the finding by the Inspector General. | The Inspector General shall disclose the finding of an | investigation to the following persons: (i) the Governor, (ii) | the Secretary, (iii) the director of the facility or agency, | (iv) the alleged victims and their guardians, (v) the | complainant, and (vi) the accused. This information shall | include whether the allegations were deemed substantiated, | unsubstantiated, or unfounded. | (p) Secretary review. Upon review of the Inspector | General's investigative report and any agency's or facility's | written response, the Secretary , or the Secretary's designee, | shall accept or reject the written response and notify the | Inspector General of that determination. The Secretary , or the | Secretary's designee, may further direct that other | administrative action be taken, including, but not limited to, | any one or more of the following: (i) additional site visits, | (ii) training, (iii) provision of technical assistance | relative to administrative needs, licensure, or certification, |
| or (iv) the imposition of appropriate sanctions. | (q) Action by facility or agency. Within 30 days of the | date the Secretary , or the Secretary's designee, approves the | written response or directs that further administrative action | be taken, the facility or agency shall provide an | implementation report to the Inspector General that provides | the status of the action taken. The facility or agency shall be | allowed an additional 30 days to send notice of completion of | the action or to send an updated implementation report. If the | action has not been completed within the additional 30-day | period, the facility or agency shall send updated | implementation reports every 60 days until completion. The | Inspector General shall conduct a review of any implementation | plan that takes more than 120 days after approval to complete, | and shall monitor compliance through a random review of | approved written responses, which may include, but are not | limited to: (i) site visits, (ii) telephone contact, and (iii) | requests for additional documentation evidencing compliance. | (r) Sanctions. Sanctions, if imposed by the Secretary | under Subdivision (p)(iv) of this Section, shall be designed | to prevent further acts of mental abuse, physical abuse, | sexual abuse, neglect, egregious neglect, or financial | exploitation or some combination of one or more of those acts | at a facility or agency, and may include any one or more of the | following: | (1) Appointment of on-site monitors. |
| (2) Transfer or relocation of an individual or | individuals. | (3) Closure of units. | (4) Termination of any one or more of the following: | (i) Department licensing, (ii) funding, or (iii) | certification. | The Inspector General may seek the assistance of the | Illinois Attorney General or the office of any State's | Attorney in implementing sanctions. | (s) Health Care Worker Registry. | (1) Reporting to the Registry. The Inspector General | shall report to the Department of Public Health's Health | Care Worker Registry, a public registry, the identity and | finding of each employee of a facility or agency against | whom there is a final investigative report prepared by the | Office of the Inspector General containing a substantiated | allegation of physical or sexual abuse, financial | exploitation, egregious neglect of an individual, or | material obstruction of an investigation, unless the | Inspector General requests a stipulated disposition of the | investigative report that does not include the reporting | of the employee's name to the Health Care Worker Registry | and the Secretary of Human Services agrees with the | requested stipulated disposition. | (2) Notice to employee. Prior to reporting the name of | an employee, the employee shall be notified of the |
| Department's obligation to report and shall be granted an | opportunity to request an administrative hearing, the sole | purpose of which is to determine if the substantiated | finding warrants reporting to the Registry. Notice to the | employee shall contain a clear and concise statement of | the grounds on which the report to the Registry is based, | offer the employee an opportunity for a hearing, and | identify the process for requesting such a hearing. Notice | is sufficient if provided by certified mail to the | employee's last known address. If the employee fails to | request a hearing within 30 days from the date of the | notice, the Inspector General shall report the name of the | employee to the Registry. Nothing in this subdivision | (s)(2) shall diminish or impair the rights of a person who | is a member of a collective bargaining unit under the | Illinois Public Labor Relations Act or under any other | federal labor statute. | (3) Registry hearings. If the employee requests an | administrative hearing, the employee shall be granted an | opportunity to appear before an administrative law judge | to present reasons why the employee's name should not be | reported to the Registry. The Department shall bear the | burden of presenting evidence that establishes, by a | preponderance of the evidence, that the substantiated | finding warrants reporting to the Registry. After | considering all the evidence presented, the administrative |
| law judge shall make a recommendation to the Secretary as | to whether the substantiated finding warrants reporting | the name of the employee to the Registry. The Secretary | shall render the final decision. The Department and the | employee shall have the right to request that the | administrative law judge consider a stipulated disposition | of these proceedings. | (4) Testimony at Registry hearings. A person who makes | a report or who investigates a report under this Act shall | testify fully in any judicial proceeding resulting from | such a report, as to any evidence of physical abuse, | sexual abuse, egregious neglect, financial exploitation, | or material obstruction of an investigation abuse or | neglect , or the cause thereof. No evidence shall be | excluded by reason of any common law or statutory | privilege relating to communications between the alleged | perpetrator of abuse or neglect, or the individual alleged | as the victim in the report, and the person making or | investigating the report. Testimony at hearings is exempt | from the confidentiality requirements of subsection (f) of | Section 10 of the Mental Health and Developmental | Disabilities Confidentiality Act. | (5) Employee's rights to collateral action. No | reporting to the Registry shall occur and no hearing shall | be set or proceed if an employee notifies the Inspector | General in writing, including any supporting |
| documentation, that he or she is formally contesting an | adverse employment action resulting from a substantiated | finding by complaint filed with the Illinois Civil Service | Commission, or which otherwise seeks to enforce the | employee's rights pursuant to any applicable collective | bargaining agreement. If an action taken by an employer | against an employee as a result of a finding of physical | abuse, sexual abuse, or egregious neglect , financial | exploitation, or material obstruction of an investigation | is overturned through an action filed with the Illinois | Civil Service Commission or under any applicable | collective bargaining agreement and if that employee's | name has already been sent to the Registry, the employee's | name shall be removed from the Registry. | (6) Removal from Registry. At any time after the | report to the Registry, but no more than once in any | 12-month period, an employee may petition the Department | in writing to remove his or her name from the Registry. | Upon receiving notice of such request, the Inspector | General shall conduct an investigation into the petition. | Upon receipt of such request, an administrative hearing | will be set by the Department. At the hearing, the | employee shall bear the burden of presenting evidence that | establishes, by a preponderance of the evidence, that | removal of the name from the Registry is in the public | interest. The parties may jointly request that the |
| administrative law judge consider a stipulated disposition | of these proceedings. | (t) Review of Administrative Decisions. The Department | shall preserve a record of all proceedings at any formal | hearing conducted by the Department involving Health Care | Worker Registry hearings. Final administrative decisions of | the Department are subject to judicial review pursuant to | provisions of the Administrative Review Law. | (u) Quality Care Board. There is created, within the | Office of the Inspector General, a Quality Care Board to be | composed of 7 members appointed by the Governor with the | advice and consent of the Senate. One of the members shall be | designated as chairman by the Governor. Of the initial | appointments made by the Governor, 4 Board members shall each | be appointed for a term of 4 years and 3 members shall each be | appointed for a term of 2 years. Upon the expiration of each | member's term, a successor shall be appointed for a term of 4 | years. In the case of a vacancy in the office of any member, | the Governor shall appoint a successor for the remainder of | the unexpired term. | Members appointed by the Governor shall be qualified by | professional knowledge or experience in the area of law, | investigatory techniques, or in the area of care of the | mentally ill or care of persons with developmental | disabilities. Two members appointed by the Governor shall be | persons with a disability or parents of persons with a |
| disability. Members shall serve without compensation, but | shall be reimbursed for expenses incurred in connection with | the performance of their duties as members. | The Board shall meet quarterly, and may hold other | meetings on the call of the chairman. Four members shall | constitute a quorum allowing the Board to conduct its | business. The Board may adopt rules and regulations it deems | necessary to govern its own procedures. | The Board shall monitor and oversee the operations, | policies, and procedures of the Inspector General to ensure | the prompt and thorough investigation of allegations of | neglect and abuse. In fulfilling these responsibilities, the | Board may do the following: | (1) Provide independent, expert consultation to the | Inspector General on policies and protocols for | investigations of alleged abuse, neglect, or both abuse | and neglect. | (2) Review existing regulations relating to the | operation of facilities. | (3) Advise the Inspector General as to the content of | training activities authorized under this Section. | (4) Recommend policies concerning methods for | improving the intergovernmental relationships between the | Office of the Inspector General and other State or federal | offices. | (v) Annual report. The Inspector General shall provide to |
| the General Assembly and the Governor, no later than January 1 | of each year, a summary of reports and investigations made | under this Act for the prior fiscal year with respect to | individuals receiving mental health or developmental | disabilities services. The report shall detail the imposition | of sanctions, if any, and the final disposition of any | corrective or administrative action directed by the Secretary. | The summaries shall not contain any confidential or | identifying information of any individual, but shall include | objective data identifying any trends in the number of | reported allegations, the timeliness of the Office of the | Inspector General's investigations, and their disposition, for | each facility and Department-wide, for the most recent 3-year | time period. The report shall also identify, by facility, the | staff-to-patient ratios taking account of direct care staff | only. The report shall also include detailed recommended | administrative actions and matters for consideration by the | General Assembly. | (w) Program audit. The Auditor General shall conduct a | program audit of the Office of the Inspector General on an | as-needed basis, as determined by the Auditor General. The | audit shall specifically include the Inspector General's | compliance with the Act and effectiveness in investigating | reports of allegations occurring in any facility or agency. | The Auditor General shall conduct the program audit according | to the provisions of the Illinois State Auditing Act and shall |
| report its findings to the General Assembly no later than | January 1 following the audit period. | (x) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to mean | that an individual is a victim of abuse or neglect because of | health care services appropriately provided or not provided by | health care professionals. | (y) Nothing in this Section shall require a facility, | including its employees, agents, medical staff members, and | health care professionals, to provide a service to an | individual in contravention of that individual's stated or | implied objection to the provision of that service on the | ground that that service conflicts with the individual's | religious beliefs or practices, nor shall the failure to | provide a service to an individual be considered abuse under | this Section if the individual has objected to the provision | of that service based on his or her religious beliefs or | practices. | (Source: P.A. 102-538, eff. 8-20-21; 102-883, eff. 5-13-22; | 102-1071, eff. 6-10-22; 103-76, eff. 6-9-23; 103-154, eff. | 6-30-23.) |
Effective Date: 1/1/2025
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