Public Act 90-0061 of the 90th General Assembly

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Public Act 90-0061

SB857 Enrolled                                 LRB9003267DPcc

    AN ACT to extend the boards of the  Marriage  and  Family
Therapy  Licensing  Act  and  the Nursing Home Administrators
Licensing and Disciplinary Act  and  the  committees  of  the
Illinois  Nursing  Act  of  1987  and the Physician Assistant
Practice Act of 1987, concerning regulated  professions,  and
amending named Acts.

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

    Section 5.  The Regulatory Agency Sunset Act  is  amended
by changing Section 4.9 and adding Section 4.18 as follows:

    (5 ILCS 80/4.9) (from Ch. 127, par. 1904.9)
    (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 89-702)
    Sec.  4.9.  The  following Acts are repealed December 31,
1997:
    The Medical Practice Act of 1987.
    The Illinois Optometric Practice Act of 1987.
    The Podiatric Medical Practice Act of 1987.
    The   Nursing   Home   Administrators    Licensing    and
Disciplinary Act.
    The Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987.
    The Illinois Nursing Act of 1987.
    The Clinical Social Work and Social Work Practice Act.
    The Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act.
    The  Illinois  Speech-Language  Pathology  and  Audiology
Practice Act.
    The Marriage and Family Therapy Licensing Act.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 89-702)
    Sec.  4.9.  The  following Acts are repealed December 31,
1997:
    The Podiatric Medical Practice Act of 1987.
    The   Nursing   Home   Administrators    Licensing    and
Disciplinary Act.
    The Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987.
    The Illinois Nursing Act of 1987.
    The Clinical Social Work and Social Work Practice Act.
    The  Illinois  Speech-Language  Pathology  and  Audiology
Practice Act.
    The Marriage and Family Therapy Licensing Act.
(Source: P.A.  89-702,  eff.  7-1-97;  89-706,  eff. 1-31-97;
revised 2-7-97.)

    (5 ILCS 80/4.18 new)
    Sec. 4.18. Act repealed on January 1, 2008. The following
Act is repealed on January 1, 2008:
    The   Nursing   Home   Administrators    Licensing    and
Disciplinary Act.
    The Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987.
    The Illinois Nursing Act of 1987.
    The Marriage and Family Therapy Licensing Act.

    Section  10.  The  Acupuncture Practice Act is amended by
changing Sections 10, 15, 20, 25, 35, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90,
100, 110, 130, 140, 145, 150, 155, 160, 165, 170,  175,  180,
185,  and  195  and by adding Sections 55, 75, 105, 135, 152,
and 154 as follows:

    (225 ILCS 2/10)
    Sec. 10.   Definitions.  As used in this Act:
    "Acupuncture"  means  the  evaluation  or  treatment   of
persons affected through a method of stimulation of a certain
point  or  points  on or immediately below the surface of the
body  by  the  insertion   of   pre-sterilized,   single-use,
disposable needles, unless medically contraindicated, with or
without  the  application of heat, electronic stimulation, or
manual pressure to prevent or modify the perception of  pain,
to normalize physiological functions, or for the treatment of
certain  diseases  or  dysfunctions  of the body. Acupuncture
does  not  include  radiology,  electrosurgery,  chiropractic
technique, physical therapy, naprapathic  technique,  use  or
prescribing  of  any drugs, medications, herbal preparations,
nutritional   supplements,   serums,    or    vaccines,    or
determination  of  a differential diagnosis. An acupuncturist
registered under this Act who  is  not  also  licensed  as  a
physical  therapist  under  the Illinois Physical Therapy Act
shall not hold himself or herself out as being  qualified  to
provide  physical  therapy  or  physiotherapy  services.   An
acupuncturist shall refer to a licensed physician or dentist,
any patient whose condition should, at the time of evaluation
or treatment,  be  determined  to  be  beyond  the  scope  of
practice of the acupuncturist.
    "Acupuncturist"  means a person who practices acupuncture
and  who  is  licensed  by  the  Department   has   met   all
requirements as provided in this Act.
    "Board" means the Board of Acupuncture.
    "Dentist"  means  a  person  licensed  under the Illinois
Dental Practice Act.
    "Department"  means  the   Department   of   Professional
Regulation.
    "Director" means the Director of Professional Regulation.
    "Physician"  means  a  person  licensed under the Medical
Practice Act of 1987.
    "Referral by written order"  for  purposes  of  this  Act
means  a diagnosis, substantiated by signature of a physician
or dentist, that a patient's condition is such that it may be
treated by acupuncture as defined in this Act.  The diagnosis
shall remain in effect until  changed  by  the  physician  or
dentist who shall maintain management of the patient.
    "State" includes:
         (1)  the states of the United States of America;
         (2)  the District of Columbia; and
         (3)  the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/15)
    Sec.   15.  Who  may  practice  acupuncture.   No  person
licensed registered under this Act may treat  human  ailments
otherwise  than  by the practice of acupuncture as defined in
this Act; and no person licensed registered  under  this  Act
may  practice acupuncture on another person without having on
file a written referral order from  a  physician  or  dentist
licensed  in  Illinois.   A  physician or dentist licensed in
Illinois may practice acupuncture.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/20)
    Sec. 20. Registration; Exempt activities.  This Act  does
not  prohibit  any person licensed in this State as a dentist
or physician from engaging in the practice for  which  he  or
she is licensed.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/25)
    Sec.  25.   Powers  and duties of Department.  Subject to
the provisions of this Act,  The  Department  shall  exercise
powers and duties under this Act as follows:
         (1)  Review    applications    to    ascertain   the
    qualifications of applicants for licensure registration.
         (2)  Adopt rules consistent with the  provisions  of
    this  Act  for its administration and enforcement and may
    prescribe forms that shall be  used  in  connection  with
    this  Act.   The  rules may define standards and criteria
    for professional conduct and discipline.  The  Department
    shall  consult  with the Board in adopting rules.  Notice
    of proposed rulemaking shall be transmitted to the Board,
    and the Department shall review the Board's response  and
    any recommendations made in the response.
         (3)  The  Department may at any time seek the advice
    and the expert knowledge  of  the  Board  on  any  matter
    relating to the administration of this Act.
         (3)  Submit all registered complaints related to the
    profession  received by the Department to the Acupuncture
    Examining Committee for  review.   The  Department  shall
    also submit all complaints to the Medical Licensing Board
    for review.
         (4)  Maintain  a  list  of registered acupuncturists
    authorized to practice in the  State.   This  list  shall
    show  the name of every registrant, his or her last known
    place of residence, and the date and number of his or her
    registration. Any interested  person  in  the  State  may
    obtain a copy of that list on application to the Director
    and payment of the required fee.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/35)
    Sec.  35.  Board  of  Acupuncture.   The  Director  shall
appoint  a  Board  of Acupuncture to consist of 7 persons who
shall be appointed by and shall serve in an advisory capacity
to the Director. Four members must hold an active license  to
engage  in  the  practice  of  acupuncture in this State, one
member shall be a chiropractic physician licensed  under  the
Medical  Practice  Act of 1987 who is actively engaged in the
practice of acupuncture, one  member  shall  be  a  physician
licensed  to  practice  medicine  in  all  of its branches in
Illinois, and one member must be a member of the  public  who
is  not  licensed  under this Act or a similar Act of another
jurisdiction and who has no connection with  the  profession.
The  initial appointees who would otherwise be required to be
licensed acupuncturists shall instead be individuals who have
been practicing acupuncture for at least 5 years and who  are
eligible under this Act for licensure as acupuncturists.
    Members   shall   serve  4-year  terms  and  until  their
successors are appointed and qualified, except  that  of  the
initial  appointments, one member shall be appointed to serve
for 1 year, 2 members shall  be  appointed  to  serve  for  2
years, 2 members shall be appointed to serve for 3 years, and
2  members  shall be appointed to serve for 4 years and until
their successors are  appointed  and  qualified.   No  member
shall be reappointed to the Board for a term that would cause
his  or her continuous service on the Board to be longer than
8 consecutive years.  Appointments to fill vacancies shall be
made in the same manner  as  original  appointments  for  the
unexpired  portion  of the vacated term.  Initial terms shall
begin upon the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997.
    The Board  shall  annually  elect  a  chairperson  and  a
vice-chairperson  who  shall  preside  in  the absence of the
chairperson.  The membership of the Board  should  reasonably
reflect  representation  from  the  geographic  areas in this
State.  The Director may terminate  the  appointment  of  any
member  for cause. The Director may give due consideration to
all recommendations of the Board.  A majority  of  the  Board
members  currently  appointed  shall  constitute a quorum.  A
vacancy in the membership of the Board shall not  impair  the
right  of  a quorum to exercise the right and perform all the
duties of the Board.  Members of  the  Board  shall  have  no
liability   in   any   action  based  upon  any  disciplinary
proceeding or other activity performed in  good  faith  as  a
member  of  the  Board.  Requirements  for  registration.  No
person shall be registered to practice acupuncture unless  he
or   she   has    paid  the  required  registration  fee  and
demonstrated  competence   in   performing   acupuncture   by
submitting  proof  of passing the National Commission for the
Certification of Acupuncturists examination.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/40)
    Sec.   40.  Application   for   licensure   registration.
Applications  for  original  licensure  registration  as   an
acupuncturist  shall  be made to the Department in writing on
forms prescribed by the Department and shall  be  accompanied
by the required fee, which shall not be refundable.
    Applicants  shall  submit  with  the application proof of
passing the National  Commission  for  the  Certification  of
Acupuncturists  examination  or  a  substantially  equivalent
examination  approved  by the Department or meeting any other
qualifications established by the Department.
    An applicant has 3 years from the  date  of  his  or  her
application  to  complete  the  application  process.  If the
process has not been completed in 3  years,  the  application
shall  be  denied,  the  fee  shall  be  forfeited,  and  the
applicant must reapply and meet the requirements in effect at
the  time  of  reapplication.  Each application shall contain
proof  of  the  particular  qualifications  required  of  the
applicant and shall be verified by the applicant  under  oath
or affirmation.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/50)
    Sec.  50.  Practice  prohibited  Title and designation of
registered acupuncturists.  Unless he or she has been issued,
by the Department, a valid, existing license registration  as
an  acupuncturist under this Act, no person may use the title
and  designation  of  "Acupuncturist",  "Licensed  Registered
Acupuncturist", "Certified  Acupuncturist",  "C.A.",  "Act.",
"Lic.  Reg.  Act.",  or  "Lic.  Reg.  Ac." either directly or
indirectly, in connection  with  his  or  her  profession  or
business.   No  person licensed registered under this Act may
use the designation "medical",  directly  or  indirectly,  in
connection  with  his or her profession or business.  Nothing
shall  prevent  a  physician  from  using   the   designation
"Acupuncturist".
    No  person  may  practice,  offer to practice, attempt to
practice, or hold himself or herself out  to  practice  as  a
licensed acupuncturist without being licensed under this Act.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/55 new)
    Sec.  55.   Endorsement.   The  Department  may,  at  its
discretion,  license as an acupuncturist without examination,
on payment of the fee, an applicant for licensure who  is  an
acupuncturist   under  the  laws  of  another  state  if  the
requirements pertaining to acupuncture in that state were  at
the  date  of his or her licensure substantially equal to the
requirements in force in Illinois  on  that  date  or  if  an
applicant   possesses   individual  qualifications  that  are
substantially equal to the requirements under this Act.
    An applicant has 3 years from the  date  of  his  or  her
application  to  complete  the  application  process.  If the
process has not been completed in 3  years,  the  application
shall  be  denied,  the  fee  shall  be  forfeited,  and  the
applicant must reapply and meet the requirements in effect at
the time of reapplication.

    (225 ILCS 2/60)
    Sec.  60.  Display  of  license registration certificate;
change of  address.   A  holder  of  a  license  registration
certificate   under   this  Act  shall  display  the  license
certificate in a conspicuous place in the office  or  offices
where   the   holder   practices   acupuncture.   A  licensee
registrant shall, whenever  requested,  exhibit  his  or  her
license  certificate of registration to any representative of
the Department and shall notify the Department of the address
or addresses, and of  every  change  of  address,  where  the
licensee registrant practices acupuncture.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/70)
    Sec.   70.  Renewal,  reinstatement,  or  restoration  of
license registration; continuing education; military service.
The expiration date  and  renewal  period  for  each  license
registration issued under this Act shall be set by rule.  The
holder  of  a license registration certificate may renew that
license  registration  during   the   month   preceding   its
expiration date by paying the required fee.
    In  order  to  renew  or  restore  a license, All renewal
applicants shall provide proof of having met the requirements
of continuing education registration set forth in  the  rules
of the Department.
    A  person  who has permitted his or her license to expire
or who has had his or her license on inactive status may have
the license restored by  submitting  an  application  to  the
Department, by meeting continuing education requirements, and
by  filing  proof  acceptable to the Department of fitness to
have the license restored, which may include  sworn  evidence
certifying   to   active  practice  in  another  jurisdiction
satisfactory to the Department and  by  paying  the  required
restoration  fee.  If the person has not maintained an active
practice  in  another  jurisdiction   satisfactory   to   the
Department,  the Department shall determine, by an evaluation
program established by rule, his or  her  fitness  to  resume
active status and may require the person to complete a period
of  evaluated  clinical experience and may require successful
completion of a practical examination.
    Any  acupuncturist  whose  license  registration  expired
while he or she was (1) in federal  service  on  active  duty
with  the  Armed  Forces  of  the  United States or the State
Militia called into service or training or (2) in training or
education  under  the  supervision  of  the   United   States
preliminary  to induction into the military service, however,
may have his or her registration restored without paying  any
lapsed  renewal  fees  if  within  2  years  after  honorable
termination  of  service,  training,  or education, he or she
furnishes the Department with satisfactory evidence  that  he
or  she  has  been  so  engaged  and that his or her service,
training, or education has been terminated.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/75 new)
    Sec. 75.  Inactive licenses.  A licensee who notifies the
Department in writing on forms prescribed by  the  Department
may  elect to place his or her license on inactive status and
shall, subject to rules of the Department,  be  excused  from
payment  of  renewal  fees  until  he  or  she  notifies  the
Department  in  writing of his or her desire to resume active
status.  A  licensee  requesting  restoration  from  inactive
status  shall  be  required  to  pay the current renewal fee,
shall meet the continuing education requirements,  and  shall
be  required  to  restore  his  or her license as provided in
Section 70 of this Act.

    (225 ILCS 2/80)
    Sec. 80.  Fees.  The Department shall provide by rule for
a schedule of fees for the administration and enforcement  of
this  Act,  including  but not limited to original licensure,
renewal, and restoration.  The fees shall  be  nonrefundable.
The  fees  for application for registration, the renewal of a
registration, and all other purposes are not  refundable  and
shall be adopted by rule.
    All fees collected under this Act shall be deposited into
the   General   Professions   Dedicated  Fund  and  shall  be
appropriated  to  the  Department  for   the   ordinary   and
contingent  expenses  of the Department in the administration
of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/90)
    Sec. 90.  Roster.  The Department shall maintain a roster
of the names and addresses of all licensees  registrants  and
of  all persons person whose licenses registrations have been
disciplined.  This roster shall  be  available  upon  written
request and payment of the required fee.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/100)
    Sec.  100.  Advertisement. Any person licensed registered
under this Act may advertise the availability of professional
services in the public media or on the  premises  where  such
professional  services  are rendered.  Such advertising shall
be limited to the following information:
         (1)  publication of the person's name, title, office
    hours, address and telephone number;
         (2)  information pertaining to the person's areas of
    specialization or limitation of professional practice;
         (3)  information on usual  and  customary  fees  for
    routine  professional services offered, which information
    shall include, notification that fees may be adjusted due
    to complications or unforeseen circumstances;
         (4)  announcement of  the  opening  of,  change  of,
    absence from, or return to business;
         (5)  announcement  of additions to or deletions from
    professional registered staff; and
         (6)  the issuance of business or appointment cards.
    It is unlawful for any person registered under  this  Act
to  use testimonials or claims of superior quality of care to
entice the public.  It shall be  unlawful  to  advertise  fee
comparisons of available services with those of other persons
providing acupuncture services.
    This   Act   does   not   authorize  the  advertising  of
professional services that the offeror of  such  services  is
not  licensed registered to render.  Nor shall the advertiser
use statements that contain false, fraudulent, deceptive,  or
misleading material or guarantees of success, statements that
play  upon  the  vanity or fears of the public, or statements
that promote or produce unfair competition.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/105 new)
    Sec. 105.  Unlicensed practice; civil penalty.  A  person
who  practices,  offers to practice, attempts to practice, or
holds himself or  herself  out  to  practice  as  a  licensed
acupuncturist without being licensed under this Act shall, in
addition  to  any  other penalty provided by law, pay a civil
penalty to the Department in an amount not to  exceed  $5,000
for  each offense as determined by the Department.  The civil
penalty shall be assessed by the Department after  a  hearing
is  held  in accordance with the provisions set forth in this
Act regarding the provision of a hearing for  the  discipline
of a licensee.

    (225 ILCS 2/110)
    Sec. 110.  Grounds for disciplinary action.
    (a)  The  Department  may  refuse  to  issue or to renew,
place  on  probation,   suspend,   revoke   or   take   other
disciplinary  action  as  deemed  appropriate  including  the
imposition  of  or  may revoke a registration or impose fines
not to exceed $5,000 for each violation,  as  the  Department
may  deem  proper,  with regard to a license registration for
any one or combination of the following causes:
         (1)  Violations of the Act or its rules.
         (2)  Conviction of any crime under the laws  of  any
    U.S.   jurisdiction   that   is  (i)  a  felony,  (ii)  a
    misdemeanor, an essential element of which is dishonesty,
    or  (iii)  directly  related  to  the  practice  of   the
    profession.
         (3)  Making any misrepresentation for the purpose of
    obtaining a license registration.
         (4)  Aiding or assisting another person in violating
    any provision of this Act or its rules.
         (5)  Failing  to  provide information within 60 days
    in response to a written request made by  the  Department
    which  has  been  sent by certified or registered mail to
    the licensee's registrant's last known address.
         (6)  Discipline  by  another  U.S.  jurisdiction  or
    foreign nation, if at least one of the  grounds  for  the
    discipline is the same or substantially equivalent to one
    set forth in this Section.
         (7)  Solicitation  of professional services by means
    other than permitted under this Act advertising.
         (8) Failure to provide a patient with a copy of  his
    or her record upon the written request of the patient.
         (9)  Gross negligence in the practice of acupuncture
    Conviction by any court of competent jurisdiction, either
    within or outside of this State, or any violation of  any
    law  governing the practice of acupuncture; conviction in
    this or another state of any  crime  which  is  a  felony
    under the laws of this State or conviction of a felony in
    a  federal  court,  if  the  Department  determines after
    investigation that the person has not  been  sufficiently
    rehabilitated to warrant the public trust.
         (10)  Habitual  or  excessive  use  or  addiction to
    alcohol, narcotics, stimulants,  or  any  other  chemical
    agent   or   drug  that  results  in  an  acupuncturist's
    inability to practice with reasonable judgment, skill, or
    safety.
         (11) (10)  A finding that licensure registration has
    been applied for or obtained by fraudulent means.
         (12)  A pattern of practice or other  behavior  that
    demonstrates incapacity or incompetence to practice under
    this Act.
         (13)  (11)  Being  named  as  a  perpetrator  in  an
    indicated report by the Department of Children and Family
    Services  under  the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting
    Act and upon proof by clear and convincing evidence  that
    the  licensee  registrant  has  caused  a  child to be an
    abused child or a  neglected  child  as  defined  in  the
    Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
         (14) (12)  Wilfully failing to report an instance of
    suspected  child  abuse  or  neglect  as  required by the
    Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
         (15) (13)  The  use  of  any  words,  abbreviations,
    figures  or  letters  (such  as  Acupuncturist,  Licensed
    Registered  Acupuncturist, Certified Acupuncturist, C.A.,
    Act.,  Lic.  Reg.  Act.,  or  Lic.  Reg.  Ac.)  with  the
    intention of indicating practice as a licensed registered
    acupuncturist without a valid license registration as  an
    acupuncturist issued under this Act.
         (16)  Using   testimonials  or  claims  of  superior
    quality of care to entice the public or  advertising  fee
    comparisons  of  available  services  with those of other
    persons providing acupuncture services.
         (17)  Advertising of professional services that  the
    offeror  of  the  services  is  not  licensed  to render.
    Advertising of professional services that contains false,
    fraudulent,  deceptive,   or   misleading   material   or
    guarantees  of  success,  statements  that  play upon the
    vanity or fears of the public, or statements that promote
    or produce unfair competition.
         (14)  The  performance  of  acupuncture  service  in
    conjunction with a scheme or plan  with  another  person,
    firm,  or  corporation  known  by  the  registrant  to be
    advertising in a manner contrary to this Act or otherwise
    violating the laws of the State  of  Illinois  concerning
    the practice of acupuncture.
         (18)  (15)  Having  treated ailments of human beings
    other than by the practice of acupuncture as  defined  in
    this Act, or having treated ailments of human beings as a
    licensed   registered   acupuncturist  independent  of  a
    written referral order from a physician  or  dentist,  or
    having  failed  to  notify  the  physician or dentist who
    established the diagnosis that the patient  is  receiving
    acupuncture treatment pursuant to that diagnosis.
         (19)  Unethical,   unauthorized,  or  unprofessional
    conduct as defined by rule.
         (20)  Physical illness including but not limited  to
    deterioration  through the aging process, mental illness,
    or disability that results in the inability  to  practice
    the  profession  with  reasonable  judgment,  skill,  and
    safety.
         (21)  Violation    of   the   Health   Care   Worker
    Self-Referral Act.
    The entry of an order by  a  circuit  court  establishing
that  any  person holding a license under this Act is subject
to involuntary admission or judicial  admission  as  provided
for  in the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code
operates as an automatic suspension of  that  license.   That
person  may  have  his  or her license restored only upon the
determination by a circuit  court  that  the  patient  is  no
longer subject to involuntary admission or judicial admission
and  the  issuance of an order so finding and discharging the
patient and upon the Board's recommendation to the Department
that the license be restored.   Where  the  circumstances  so
indicate,  the  Board may recommend to the Department that it
require  an  examination  prior  to  restoring  a   suspended
license.
    The  Department  may refuse to issue or renew the license
registration of any person who fails to (i) file a return  or
to  pay  the tax, penalty or interest shown in a filed return
or (ii) pay any final assessment  of  the  tax,  penalty,  or
interest  as  required  by  any  tax  Act administered by the
Illinois Department of  Revenue,  until  the  time  that  the
requirements of that tax Act are satisfied.
    In enforcing this Section, the Department or Board upon a
showing  of  a  possible  violation  may compel an individual
licensed to practice under this Act, or who has  applied  for
licensure  under  this Act, to submit to a mental or physical
examination, or both, as required by and at  the  expense  of
the  Department.  The  Department  or  Board  may  order  the
examining  physician  to  present  testimony  concerning  the
mental  or physical examination of the licensee or applicant.
No information shall be excluded by reason of any common  law
or statutory privilege relating to communications between the
licensee  or  applicant  and  the  examining  physician.  The
examining  physicians shall be specifically designated by the
Board or Department. The individual to be examined may  have,
at  his  or  her own expense, another physician of his or her
choice  present  during  all  aspects  of  this  examination.
Failure of an individual to submit to a  mental  or  physical
examination,  when  directed, shall be grounds for suspension
of his or her license until the  individual  submits  to  the
examination   if  the  Department  finds,  after  notice  and
hearing, that the refusal to submit to  the  examination  was
without reasonable cause.
    If  the Department or Board finds an individual unable to
practice because of the reasons set forth  in  this  Section,
the Department or Board may require that individual to submit
to  care,  counseling, or treatment by physicians approved or
designated by the Department or Board, as a condition,  term,
or   restriction   for   continued,  reinstated,  or  renewed
licensure to practice; or, in lieu of  care,  counseling,  or
treatment,   the  Department  may  file,  or  the  Board  may
recommend  to  the  Department  to  file,  a   complaint   to
immediately  suspend,  revoke,  or  otherwise  discipline the
license of the individual. An individual  whose  license  was
granted,   continued,  reinstated,  renewed,  disciplined  or
supervised   subject   to   such   terms,   conditions,    or
restrictions,  and  who  fails  to  comply  with  such terms,
conditions,  or  restrictions,  shall  be  referred  to   the
Director  for  a  determination  as to whether the individual
shall have his or her license suspended immediately,  pending
a hearing by the Department.
    In instances in which the Director immediately suspends a
person's  license  under  this  Section,  a  hearing  on that
person's license must be convened by the Department within 15
days after the suspension and completed  without  appreciable
delay.  The  Department and Board shall have the authority to
review the  subject  individual's  record  of  treatment  and
counseling  regarding  the impairment to the extent permitted
by applicable federal statutes and  regulations  safeguarding
the confidentiality of medical records.
    An  individual licensed under this Act and affected under
this Section shall be afforded an opportunity to  demonstrate
to the Department or Board that he or she can resume practice
in  compliance with acceptable and prevailing standards under
the provisions of his or her license.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)
    (225 ILCS 2/130)
    Sec.  130.  Injunctions;  criminal  offenses;  cease  and
desist order.
    (a)  If any person violates the provisions of  this  Act,
the  Director  may, in the name of the People of the State of
Illinois, through  the  Attorney  General  of  the  State  of
Illinois  or the State's Attorney for any county in which the
action is  brought,  petition  for  an  order  enjoining  the
violation or for an order enforcing compliance with this Act.
Upon  the  filing  of a verified petition in court, the court
may issue a temporary restraining order,  without  notice  or
condition  bond, and may preliminarily and permanently enjoin
the violation.  If it is  established  that  the  person  has
violated or is violating the injunction, the Court may punish
the  offender  for contempt of court.  Proceedings under this
Section shall be in addition to, and  not  in  lieu  of,  all
other remedies and penalties provided by this Act.
    (b)  Whenever  in  the opinion of the Department a person
violates a provision of this Act, the Department may issue  a
rule  to  show  cause why an order to cease and desist should
not be entered against that person.  The rule  shall  clearly
set forth the grounds relied upon by the Department and shall
allow  at  least  7 days from the date of the rule to file an
answer to the satisfaction of  the  Department.   Failure  to
answer  to  the satisfaction of the Department shall cause an
order to cease and desist to be issued immediately.
    (c) (b)  Other than as provided in  Section  20  of  this
Act,  if  any  person  practices as an acupuncturist or holds
himself or herself out as a licensed registered acupuncturist
under this Act without being issued a valid existing  license
registration by the Department,  then any licensed registered
acupuncturist,  any  interested  party, or any person injured
thereby may, in addition to the Director, petition for relief
as provided in subsection (a) of this Section.
    Whoever  knowingly  practices  or  offers   to   practice
acupuncture  in  this State without being registered for that
purpose shall be guilty of a Class A misdemeanor and for each
subsequent conviction, shall be guilty of a Class  4  felony.
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, all criminal
fines, monies, or other property collected or received by the
Department  under  this Section or any other State or federal
statute, including, but not limited to, property forfeited to
the Department under Section 505 of the  Illinois  Controlled
Substances  Act,  shall  be  deposited  into the Professional
Regulation Evidence Fund.
    (c)  Whenever in the opinion of the Department any person
violates any provision of this Act, the Department may  issue
a  rule to show cause why an order to cease and desist should
not be entered against that person.  The rule  shall  clearly
set  forth  the  grounds relied upon the Department and shall
provide a period of 7 days from the date of the rule to  file
an  answer to the satisfaction of the Department.  Failure to
answer to the satisfaction of the Department shall  cause  an
order to cease and desist to be issued immediately.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/135 new)
    Sec.   135.    Criminal  violations.   Whoever  knowingly
practices or offers to practice  acupuncture  in  this  State
without  being licensed for that purpose shall be guilty of a
Class A misdemeanor and for each subsequent conviction  shall
be  guilty  of  a  Class 4 felony.  Notwithstanding any other
provision of this Act, all criminal fines, moneys,  or  other
property  collected  or received by the Department under this
Section or any other State or federal statute, including  but
not  limited  to  property  forfeited to the Department under
Section 505 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act,  shall
be deposited into the Professional Regulation Evidence Fund.
    (225 ILCS 2/140)
    Sec.  140.  Investigation; notice; hearing.  Licenses may
be refused, revoked, suspended, or otherwise  disciplined  in
the  manner  provided  by  this  Act  and not otherwise.  The
Department may  upon  its  own  motion  and  shall  upon  the
verified  complaint  in  writing  of any person setting forth
facts that if proven would constitute grounds for refusal  to
issue  or  for  suspension  or  revocation  under  this  Act,
investigate the actions of a person applying for, holding, or
claiming  to  hold  a  license.  The Department shall, before
refusing to issue or renew, suspending, or revoking a license
or taking other discipline pursuant to Section  110  of  this
Act,  and  at  least  30  days  prior to the date set for the
hearing, notify in writing the applicant or licensee  of  any
charges  made,  shall  afford  the  applicant  or licensee an
opportunity to be heard in person or by counsel in  reference
to  the charges, and direct the applicant or licensee to file
a written answer to the Department under oath within 20  days
after  the  service of the notice and inform the applicant or
licensee that failure  to  file  an  answer  will  result  in
default  being  taken  against  the applicant or licensee and
that  the  license  may  be  suspended,  revoked,  placed  on
probationary status, or  other  disciplinary  action  may  be
taken,  including  limiting  the  scope, nature, or extent of
practice, as the Director may deem  proper.   Written  notice
may  be  served  by  personal  delivery  to  the applicant or
licensee or by mailing the notice by certified mail to his or
her last known place of residence or to the place of business
last specified by the applicant or licensee  in  his  or  her
last  notification to the Department.  If the person fails to
file an answer after receiving notice,  his  or  her  license
may,  in  the  discretion  of  the  Department, be suspended,
revoked, or placed on probationary status or  the  Department
may   take   whatever   disciplinary  action  deemed  proper,
including limiting  the  scope,  nature,  or  extent  of  the
person's  practice  or  the  imposition  of a fine, without a
hearing, if the act or  acts  charged  constitute  sufficient
grounds  for  such  action  under  this Act.  At the time and
place fixed in the notice, the Department  shall  proceed  to
hearing of the charges and both the applicant or licensee and
the  complainant  shall  be  afforded  ample  opportunity  to
present,  in person or by counsel, any statements, testimony,
evidence, and arguments that may be pertinent to the  charges
or  to  their defense.  The Department may continue a hearing
from time to time. If the Board is not sitting  at  the  time
and  place  fixed  in  the notice or at the time and place to
which the hearing shall have been continued,  the  Department
may  continue the hearing for a period not to exceed 30 days.
Investigation;   notice;   hearing.    The   Department   may
investigate the actions of any applicant or of any person  or
persons  holding  or claiming to hold a registration.  Before
taking  any  disciplinary   action   with   regard   to   any
registration,  at least 30 days prior to the date set for the
hearing, the Department  shall  (i)  notify  the  accused  in
writing  of  any  charges  made  and the time and place for a
hearing of the charges before the Department, (ii) direct him
or her to file a written answer  with  the  Department  under
oath  within  20  days  after  the service of the notice, and
(iii) inform him or her that failure answer shall  result  in
default  being  taken  against  him  or  her  and  his or her
registration being disciplined, as the  Department  may  deem
proper.   The  written  notice  may  be  served  by  personal
delivery  or  certified  delivery  or certified or registered
mail to the registrant.  At the time and place fixed  in  the
notice,  the Department shall proceed to hear the charges and
the parties,  or  their  counsel,  shall  be  accorded  ample
opportunity  to  present  any statements, testimony, evidence
and argument that may be pertinent to the charges or to their
defense.  The Department may continue the hearing  from  time
to  time.   At  the  discretion  of the Director, the accused
person's registration may be disciplined as the Director  may
deem  proper, including limiting the scope, nature, or extent
of the person's practice, without a hearing, if  the  act  or
acts  charged  constitute  sufficient grounds for that action
under this Act.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/145)
    Sec. 145.  Formal hearing; preservation of  record.   The
Department,  at  its  expense, shall preserve a record of all
proceedings at the formal hearing of any case  involving  the
refusal   to   issue  or  renew  a  license  registration  or
discipline of a licensee registrant.  The notice of  hearing,
complaint, and all other documents in the nature of pleadings
and  written motions filed in the proceedings, the transcript
of testimony, the report of the hearing officer, and order of
the Department shall be the record of the proceeding.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/150)
    Sec. 150.  Witnesses; production of documents;  contempt.
Any  circuit court may, upon application of the Department or
its designee or  of  the  applicant  or  licensee  registrant
against  whom  proceedings  under Section 140 of this Act are
pending, enter an order requiring the attendance of witnesses
and their testimony and the production of documents,  papers,
files,  books,  and records in connection with any hearing or
investigation.  The court may compel obedience to  its  order
by proceedings for contempt.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/152 new)
    Sec. 152.  Certification of record.  The Department shall
not  be  required  to certify a record to the court, file any
answer in court, or  otherwise  appear  in  any  court  in  a
judicial  review  proceeding,  unless  there  is filed in the
court with  the  complaint  a  receipt  from  the  Department
acknowledging   payment   of  the  costs  of  furnishing  and
certifying the record.  Failure on the part of the  plaintiff
to  file a receipt in court shall be grounds for dismissal of
the action.

    (225 ILCS 2/154 new)
    Sec. 154. Compelling testimony.  Any circuit  court  may,
upon  application of the Department or its designee or of the
applicant or licensee against whom  proceedings  pursuant  to
Section 140 of this Act are pending, enter an order requiring
the  attendance  of  witnesses  and  their testimony, and the
production of documents, papers, files, books, and records in
connection with any hearing or investigation.  The court  may
compel   obedience  to  its  order  through  proceedings  for
contempt.

    (225 ILCS 2/155)
    Sec. 155.  Subpoena; oaths.  The  Department  shall  have
power  to  subpoena  and  bring  before it any person in this
State and to take testimony either orally or by deposition or
both with the same fees and mileage and in the same manner as
prescribed by law in judicial proceedings in civil  cases  in
circuit  courts of this State. The Department shall also have
the power to subpoena the production  of  documents,  papers,
files,  books,  and  records  in connection with a hearing or
investigation.
    The Director and the hearing officer  designated  by  the
Director  shall  each  have  power  to  administer  oaths  to
witnesses at any hearing that the Department is authorized to
conduct  under  this  Act  and  any  other  oaths required or
authorized to be administered by the  Department  under  this
Act.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/160)
    Sec.  160.  Findings  of  facts,  conclusions of law, and
recommendations.  At  the  conclusion  of  the  hearing,  the
hearing  officer  shall  present  to  the  Director a written
report of its findings  of  fact,  conclusions  of  law,  and
recommendations.   The report shall contain a finding whether
or not the accused person violated  this  Act  or  failed  to
comply with the conditions required in this Act.  The hearing
officer  shall specify the nature of the violation or failure
to comply and shall make his or her  recommendations  to  the
Director.
    The  report  of findings of fact, conclusions of law, and
recommendations of the hearing officer may shall be the basis
of the order of the Department.  If the Director disagrees in
any regard with  the  report  of  the  hearing  officer,  the
Director  shall  may  issue  an order in contravention of the
report.  Within 60 days after taking that action the Director
shall provide a written report to the hearing officer on  any
deviation  and  shall  specify with particularity the reasons
for the action in  the  final  order.   The  finding  is  not
admissible  in  evidence  against  the  person  in a criminal
prosecution brought for the violation of this  Act,  but  the
hearing  and findings are not a bar to a criminal prosecution
brought for the violation of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/165)
    Sec. 165.  Hearing officer. The Director shall  have  the
authority  to  appoint any attorney duly licensed to practice
law in the State of Illinois to serve as the hearing  officer
in  any  action for discipline of a license registration. The
hearing officer shall have  full  authority  to  conduct  the
hearing. The hearing officer shall report his or her findings
of fact, conclusions of law, and recommendations to the Board
and the Director.  The Board shall have 60 days after receipt
of the report to review the report of the hearing officer and
to  present  its  findings  of  fact, conclusions of law, and
recommendations to the Director.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/170)
    Sec. 170.  Service of report; rehearing; order.   In  any
case  involving  the  discipline of a license registration, a
copy of the hearing officer's report shall be served upon the
respondent  by  the  Department,  either  personally  or   as
provided  in  this  Act  for  the  service  of  the notice of
hearing.  Within 20 days after the  service,  the  respondent
may  present  to  the  Department  a  motion in writing for a
rehearing that  shall  specify  the  particular  grounds  for
rehearing.    If  no motion for rehearing is filed, then upon
the expiration of the time specified for filing a motion,  or
if a motion for rehearing is denied, then upon the denial the
Director  may enter an order in accordance with this Act.  If
the respondent orders from the reporting office and pays  for
a  transcript  of  the  record  within  the time for filing a
motion for rehearing, the 20  day  period  within  which  the
motion  may  be filed shall commence upon the delivery of the
transcript to the respondent.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/175)
    Sec. 175.  Substantial justice  to  be  done;  rehearing.
Whenever  the  Director is satisfied that substantial justice

has  not  been  done  in  the   discipline   of   a   license
registration,  the Director may order a rehearing by the same
or another hearing officer.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/180)
    Sec. 180.  Order or certified copy as prima facie  proof.
An  order  or  a certified copy thereof, over the seal of the
Department and purporting to be signed by the Director, shall
be prima facie proof:
         (1)  that the signature is the genuine signature  of
    the Director; and
         (2)  that   such  Director  is  duly  appointed  and
    qualified; and.
         (3)  that the Board and its members are qualified to
    act.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/185)
    Sec. 185.  Restoration of license registration.   At  any
time  after  the  suspension  or  revocation  of  any license
registration the Department may restore  it  to  the  accused
person,  unless  after  an  investigation  and  a hearing the
Department determines that restoration is not in  the  public
interest.  Where circumstances of suspension or revocation so
indicate, the Department may require an  examination  of  the
accused person prior to restoring his or her license.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/195)
    Sec.   195.  Imminent   danger   to   public;   temporary
suspension.  The Director may temporarily suspend the license
registration   of   an   acupuncturist   without  a  hearing,
simultaneously with the  institution  of  proceedings  for  a
hearing  provided  for  in  Section  140  of this Act, if the
Director finds that  evidence  in  his  or  her    possession
indicates  that  continuation in practice would constitute an
imminent danger  to  the  public.   In  the  event  that  the
Director  temporarily suspends a license registration without
a hearing, a hearing by the Department must be held within 30
days after the  suspension  has  occurred  and  be  concluded
without appreciable delay.
(Source: P.A. 89-706, eff. 1-31-97.)

    (225 ILCS 2/45 rep.)
    (225 ILCS 2/205 rep.)
    Section  15.  The  Acupuncture Practice Act is amended by
repealing Sections 45 and 205.

    Section 17.  The Illinois Dental Practice Act is  amended
by changing Section 21 as follows:

    (225 ILCS 25/21) (from Ch. 111, par. 2321)
    Sec.  21.   Fees.  The  fees  for  the administration and
enforcement  of  this  Act,  including  but  not  limited  to
original licensure, renewal, and restoration fees,  shall  be
set   by  the  Department  by  rule.  However,  the  fee  for
application  for  renewal  of  a  license  as  a  dentist  or
specialist is $75 per year and the fee  for  application  for
renewal  of  a  license  as  a dental hygienist is $37.50 per
year. The fees shall be  nonrefundable.   The  Department  is
authorized to impose the following nonrefundable fees:
    (a)  License as dentist or specialist.
         (1)  Application    for    temporary   training   or
    restricted faculty license: $25.
         (2)  Application for  initial  license  pursuant  to
    examination: $25.
         (3)  Applicants   for   any   examination  shall  be
    required to pay, either  to  the  Department  or  to  the
    designated  testing  service,  a fee covering the cost of
    initial screening to determine eligibility and  providing
    the examination.
         (4)  Application   for   licensure   from  a  person
    licensed as a dentist under the laws of another state  or
    territory of the United States: $50.
         (5)  Application  for  renewal of a license: $50 per
    year.
         (6)  Application for restoration of a  license:  $10
    plus payment of all lapsed renewal fees.
         (7)  Application for inactive status: $10.
         (8)  Application   for   restoration  from  inactive
    status: the current renewal fee.
         (9)  Application for restoration  after  failure  to
    notify Department of change of address: $15, plus payment
    of all lapsed renewal fees.
         (10)  Application   for   an   initial   permit   to
    administer  general  anesthesia  or  parenteral conscious
    sedation: $25.
         (11)  Application  for  renewal  of  a   permit   to
    administer  general  anesthesia  or  parenteral conscious
    sedation: $25 per year.

    (b)  License as dental hygienist.
         (1)  Application for  initial  license  pursuant  to
    examination: $25.
         (2)  Applicants   for   any   examination  shall  be
    required to pay, either  to  the  Department  or  to  the
    designated  testing  service,  a fee covering the cost of
    initial screening to determine eligibility and  providing
    the examination.
         (3)  Application  for license from a person licensed
    as a dental hygienist under the laws of another state  or
    territory of the United States: $50.
         (4)  Application  for  renewal of a license: $15 per
    year.
         (5)  Application for restoration of a  license:  $10
    plus  payment  of  all  lapsed  renewal  fees, but not to
    exceed $85.
         (6)  Application for inactive status: $10.
         (7)  Application  for  restoration   from   inactive
    status: the current renewal fee.

    (c)  General fees.
         (1)  Application for a duplicate license: $20.
         (2)  Application    for   a   certification   of   a
    registrant's record for any purpose: $20.
         (3)  Application  to  have   the   scoring   of   an
    examination  administered  by the Department reviewed and
    verified: $20, plus any fees charged  by  the  applicable
    testing service.
         (4)  The  fee  for  a  wall  certificate  showing  a
    license  shall  be  the  actual  cost  of  producing such
    certificate.
         (5)  The fee for a roster  of  persons  licensed  as
    dentists  or  dental  specialists or dental hygienists in
    this State shall be the actual cost of producing  such  a
    roster.
         (6)  The  fee  for dental licensing, disciplinary or
    investigative records pursuant to a subpoena  is  $1  per
    page.
(Source: P.A. 89-80, eff. 6-30-95; 89-116, eff. 7-7-95.)

    Section 20. The Marriage and Family Therapy Licensing Act
is  amended  by changing Sections 20, 25, 30, 40, 45, 55, 60,
65, 85, 90, 95, and 165 as follows:

    (225 ILCS 55/20) (from Ch. 111, par. 8351-20)
    Sec. 20.  Powers and duties of the  Department.   Subject
to  the provisions of this Act, the Department shall exercise
the following functions, powers, and duties:
         (a)  Conduct or authorize examinations to  ascertain
    the   fitness   and   qualifications  of  applicants  for
    licensure and issue licenses to those who are found to be
    fit and qualified.
         (b)  Prescribe rules and regulations for a method of
    examination of candidates.
         (b-5)  Prescribe  rules  for  determining   approved
    graduate  programs  and  prepare  and  maintain a list of
    colleges and universities offering approved programs.
         (c)  Conduct  hearings  on  proceedings  to  revoke,
    suspend, or refuse to issue licenses.
         (d)  Promulgate rules and regulations  required  for
    the administration of this Act.
    The Board may make recommendations on matters relating to
continuing education, including the number of hours necessary
for  license  renewal,  waivers  for those unable to meet the
requirements, and acceptable course content.
(Source: P.A. 87-783; 87-1237.)

    (225 ILCS 55/25) (from Ch. 111, par. 8351-25)
    Sec.  25.  Marriage  and  Family  Therapy  Licensing  and
Disciplinary Board.
    (a)  There  is  established  within  the  Department  the
Marriage and Family Therapy Licensing and Disciplinary  Board
to be appointed by the Director.  The Board shall be composed
of  7  persons who shall serve in an advisory capacity to the
Director. The Board shall elect  a  chairperson  and  a  vice
chairperson chairman.
    (b)  In  appointing  members  of  the Board, the Director
shall give due consideration to recommendations by members of
the profession of marriage and  family  therapy  and  by  the
statewide  organizations solely representing the interests of
marriage and family therapists.
    (c)  Five members of the  Board  shall  be  marriage  and
family  therapists  who  have  been in active practice for at
least 5 years immediately  preceding  their  appointment,  or
engaged  in  the education and training of masters, doctoral,
or post-doctoral students of marriage and family therapy,  or
engaged  in  marriage  and  family  therapy  research.   Each
marriage  or  family therapy teacher or researcher shall have
spent the majority of  the  time  devoted  to  the  study  or
research  of  marriage  and family therapy during the 2 years
immediately preceding his or her appointment  to  the  Board.
The  initial  appointees  shall  be  licensed  under this Act
within one year after appointment to the Board.
    (d)  Two members shall be representatives of the  general
public who have no direct affiliation or work experience with
the  practice  of marriage and family therapy and who clearly
represent consumer interests.
    (e)  Board members Of the first Board members  appointed,
3 members shall be appointed to serve for 2 years, 2 shall be
appointed  to serve for 3 years, and the remaining 2 shall be
appointed to serve for 4 years.  Their  successors  shall  be
appointed  for  terms of 4 years each, except that any person
chosen to fill a vacancy shall  be  appointed  only  for  the
unexpired  term  of  the  Board  member  whom he or she shall
succeed. Upon the expiration of this term of office, a  Board
member shall continue to serve until a successor is appointed
and  qualified.  No  member shall be reappointed to the Board
for a term that would cause continuous service on  the  Board
to be longer than 8 years.
    (f)  The membership of the Board shall reasonably reflect
representation  from  the  various  geographic  areas  of the
State.
    (g)  Members of the Board shall be immune  from  suit  in
any  action  based upon any disciplinary proceedings or other
activities performed in good faith as members of the Board.
    (h)  The Director may remove any member of the Board  for
any  cause  that,  in the opinion of the Director, reasonably
justifies termination.
    (i)  The Director may consider the recommendations of the
Board on questions  of  standards  of  professional  conduct,
discipline,  and  qualification  of  candidates  or licensees
under this Act.
    (j)  The members of the Board shall be reimbursed for all
legitimate, necessary, and authorized expenses.
    (k)  A majority of the Board members currently  appointed
shall constitute a quorum. A vacancy in the membership of the
Board  shall not impair the right of a quorum to exercise all
the  rights  and  perform  all  the  duties  of  the   Board.
(Source: P.A. 87-783; 87-1237.)

    (225 ILCS 55/30) (from Ch. 111, par. 8351-30)
    Sec. 30.  Application.
    (a)  Applications for original licensure shall be made to
the   Department  in  writing  on  forms  prescribed  by  the
Department  and  shall  be  accompanied  by  the  appropriate
documentation  and   the   required   fee,   which   fee   is
nonrefundable.     Any   application   shall   require   such
information as, in  the  judgment  of  the  Department,  will
enable  the  Department  to pass on the qualifications of the
applicant for licensing.
    (b)  Applicants have 3 years from the date of application
to complete the application process. If the  application  has
not  been  completed within 3 years, the application shall be
denied, the fee shall be forfeited, and  the  applicant  must
reapply  and  meet  the requirements in effect at the time of
reapplication.
    (c)  A license  shall  not  be  denied  to  an  applicant
because  of  the  applicant's race, religion, creed, national
origin, political beliefs or  activities,  age,  sex,  sexual
orientation, or physical impairment If an applicant neglects,
fails  or refuses to take an examination, or fails to pass an
examination for a license under this Act within 3 years after
filing an application, the application is  denied.   However,
the   applicant   may   thereafter  make  a  new  application
accompanied  by  the  required  fee  and   shall   meet   the
requirements   in  force  at  the  time  of  making  the  new
application.
(Source: P.A. 87-783; 87-1237.)

    (225 ILCS 55/40) (from Ch. 111, par. 8351-40)
    Sec. 40.  Qualifications for licensure.
    (a)  A person is qualified for licensure  as  a  marriage
and family therapist if that person:
         (1)  is at least 21 years of age;
         (2)  has  applied  in  writing on forms prepared and
    furnished by the Department;
         (3)  (blank);
         (4)  has not  engaged  or  is  not  engaged  in  any
    practice   or   conduct   that   would   be  grounds  for
    disciplining a licensee under Section 85 of this Act;
         (5)  satisfies   the   education   and    experience
    requirements of subsection (b) of this Section; and
         (6)  passes  a written examination authorized by the
    Department.
    (b)  Any person who applies to the  Department  shall  be
issued  a  license  by the Department if the person meets the
qualifications set forth in subsection (a)  of  this  Section
and provides evidence to the Department that the person:
         (1)  holds a master's or doctoral degree in marriage
    and  family  therapy  approved  by  the Department from a
    regionally accredited educational  institution;  holds  a
    master's  or doctoral degree from a regionally accredited
    educational institution in marriage and family therapy or
    in a related field with an equivalent course of study  in
    marriage  and  family  therapy that is recommended by the
    Board and approved by the Department; or holds a master's
    or doctoral degree  from  a  program  accredited  by  the
    commission  on  accreditations  for  marriage  and family
    therapy  education  of  the  American   Association   for
    Marriage and Family Therapists;
         (2)  following  the  receipt of the first qualifying
    degree, has at least 2 years of experience, as defined by
    rule, in the practice of  marriage  and  family  therapy,
    including  at  least  1,000 hours of face-to-face contact
    with couples and families for the purpose  of  evaluation
    and treatment;
         (3)  has completed at least 200 hours of supervision
    of marriage and family therapy, as defined by rule.
(Source: P.A. 89-387, eff. 8-20-95.)

    (225 ILCS 55/45) (from Ch. 111, par. 8351-45)
    Sec.  45.  Licenses;  renewals;  restoration;  person  in
military service.
    (a)  The  expiration  date  and  renewal  period for each
license issued under this Act shall be  set  by  rule.  As  a
condition  for  renewal  of  a license, the licensee shall be
required to complete continuing education under  requirements
set forth in rules of the Department.
    (b)  Any  person  who has permitted his or her license to
expire may  have  his  or  her  license  restored  by  making
application  to the Department and filing proof acceptable to
the  Department  of  fitness  to  have  his  or  her  license
restored, which may  include  sworn  evidence  certifying  to
active  practice  in another jurisdiction satisfactory to the
Department,   complying   with   any   continuing   education
requirements, and paying the required restoration fee.
    (c)  If the person has not maintained an active  practice
in  another  jurisdiction satisfactory to the Department, the
Board shall determine, by an evaluation  program  established
by rule, the person's fitness to resume active status and may
require the person to complete a period of evaluated clinical
experience   and   successful   completion   of  a  practical
examination.
    However, any person whose license expired  while  (i)  in
federal  service  on active duty with the Armed Forces of the
United States or called into service  or  training  with  the
State  Militia,  or  (ii)  in training or education under the
supervision of the United  States  preliminary  to  induction
into the military service may have his or her license renewed
or restored without paying any lapsed renewal fees if, within
2  years after honorable termination of the service, training
or education, except under condition other than honorable, he
or she furnishes the Department with satisfactory evidence to
the effect that he or she has been so engaged  and  that  the
service, training, or education has been so terminated.
    (d)  Any  person  who notifies the Department, in writing
on forms prescribed by the Department, may place his  or  her
license  on  inactive  status  and  shall be excused from the
payment  of  renewal  fees  until  the  person  notifies  the
Department in writing  of  the  intention  to  resume  active
practice.
    (e)  Any  person requesting his or her license be changed
from inactive to active status shall be required to  pay  the
current  renewal  fee  and  shall also demonstrate compliance
with the continuing education requirements.
    (f)  Any marriage and family therapist whose  license  is
nonrenewed  or  on  inactive  status  shall not engage in the
practice of marriage and  family  therapy  in  the  State  of
Illinois  and  use  the  title  or  advertise  that he or she
performs the services of  a  "licensed  marriage  and  family
therapist".
    (g)  Any  person violating subsection (f) of this Section
shall be considered to be practicing without  a  license  and
will be subject to the disciplinary provisions of this Act.
    (h)  (Blank)  A  license  to practice shall not be denied
any applicant because  of  the  applicant's  race,  religion,
creed, national origin, political beliefs or activities, age,
sex, sexual orientation, or physical impairment.
(Source: P.A. 87-783; 87-1237.)

    (225 ILCS 55/55) (from Ch. 111, par. 8351-55)
    Sec.  55.  Fees.  The  fees imposed under this Act are as
follows and are not refundable:
    (a)  Except as provided in subsection (c), the  fees  for
the administration and enforcement of this Act, including but
not  limited to original licensure, renewal, and restoration,
shall be set by rule of the Department.  The  fees  shall  be
nonrefundable  The fee for original application for a license
as a licensed marriage and family therapist is $100.
    (b)  (Blank) The fee for a temporary license is $100.
    (c)  In addition to the application fee,  applicants  for
the examination are required to pay, either to the Department
or the designated testing service, a fee covering the cost of
determining  an  applicant's  eligibility  and  providing the
examination.  Failure to appear for the  examination  on  the
scheduled  date,  at  the time and place specified, after the
applicant's application and fee  for  examination  have  been
received and acknowledged by the Department or the designated
testing service, shall result in the forfeiture of the fee.
    (d)  The  fee  for  the  renewal  of a license is $60 per
year.
    (e)  The fee for the restoration of a  license  that  has
been  expired  for 5 years or less is $20 plus payment of all
unpaid fees for every year the license has been lapsed.
    (f)  The fee for the restoration of a  license  that  has
been expired for more than 5 years is $200.
    (g)  The  fee  for the issuance of a duplicate license, a
replacement license for a  license  that  has  been  lost  or
destroyed,  or  a  license  with a change of name or address,
other than during the renewal  period  is  $20.   No  fee  is
required  for  name and address changes on Department records
when no duplicate license is issued.
    (h)  The fee for the certification of a license  for  any
purpose is $20.
    (i)  The  fee  to  have  the  scoring  of  an examination
administered by the Department reviewed and verified is  $20,
plus any fee charged by the testing service.
    (j)  The  fee  for  a  wall license is the actual cost of
producing the license.
    (k)  The fee for a roster of persons licensed as marriage
and family therapists is the actual cost of production of the
roster.
    (l)  The fee for application for a license by a  marriage
and  family  therapist  licensed  under  the  laws of another
jurisdiction is $200.
    (m)  The fee for application as  a  continuing  education
sponsor  is  $500.  State  agencies, State colleges and State
universities in Illinois are exempt from paying this fee.
    (n)  The  fee  for  renewal  as  a  continuing  education
sponsor is $125 per year.
(Source: P.A. 87-783; 87-1237.)

    (225 ILCS 55/60) (from Ch. 111, par. 8351-60)
    Sec. 60.  Payments; penalty for insufficient  funds.  Any
person   who  delivers  a  check  or  other  payment  to  the
Department that is returned to the Department unpaid  by  the
financial institution upon which it is drawn shall pay to the
Department,  in  addition  to  the amount already owed to the
Department, a fine of $50.  If  a  person  practices  without
paying  the  renewal fee or issuance fee and the fine due, an
additional fine of $100 shall be imposed. The  fines  imposed
by  this  Section  are  in  addition  to any other discipline
provided under this Act prohibiting  unlicensed  practice  or
practice on a nonrenewed license. The Department shall notify
the  person  that  payment of fees and fines shall be paid to
the Department by certified check or money  order  within  30
calendar days after notification. If, after the expiration of
30  days  from  the  date of the notification, the person has
failed to submit the  necessary  remittance,  the  Department
shall  automatically  terminate the license or certificate or
deny the application, without hearing. If, after  termination
or  denial,  the person seeks a license or certificate, he or
she shall apply to the Department for restoration or issuance
of the license or certificate and pay all fees and fines  due
to the Department. The Department may establish a fee for the
processing  of an application for restoration of a license or
certificate  to  pay  all   expenses   of   processing   this
application.  The Director may waive the fines due under this
Section in individual cases where the Director finds that the
fines would be unreasonable or unnecessarily burdensome.
(Source: P.A. 87-783; 87-1031; 87-1237; 88-45.)

    (225 ILCS 55/65) (from Ch. 111, par. 8351-65)
    Sec. 65.  Endorsement. The Department may issue a license
as a licensed marriage  and  family  therapist,  without  the
required examination, to an applicant licensed under the laws
of  another  state  if the requirements for licensure in that
state are, on the date of licensure, substantially  equal  to
the  requirements of this Act or to a person who, at the time
of his or her application for licensure, possessed individual
qualifications that  were  substantially  equivalent  to  the
requirements  then in force in this State. An applicant under
this Section shall pay all of the required fees.
    Applicants have 3 years from the date of  application  to
complete the application process. If the process has not been
completed  within  the  3  years,  the  application  shall be
denied, the fee shall be forfeited, and  the  applicant  must
reapply  and  meet  the requirements in effect at the time of
reapplication.
(Source: P.A. 87-783; 87-1237.)

    (225 ILCS 55/85) (from Ch. 111, par. 8351-85)
    Sec. 85.  Refusal, revocation or suspension.
    (a)  The Department may refuse to issue or renew, or  may
revoke  a  license, or may suspend, place on probation, fine,
or take any disciplinary action as the  Department  may  deem
proper,   including  fines  not  to  exceed  $1000  for  each
violation, with regard to any licensee or certificate for any
one or combination of the following causes:
         (1)  Material misstatement in furnishing information
    to the Department.
         (2)  Violations of this Act or its rules.
         (3)  Conviction of any crime under the laws  of  the
    United  States  or any state or territory thereof that is
    (i) a felony, (ii) a misdemeanor, an essential element of
    which is dishonesty, or  (iii)  a  crime  that  which  is
    related to the practice of the profession.
         (4)  Making any misrepresentation for the purpose of
    obtaining  a  license  or violating any provision of this
    Act or its rules.
         (5)  Professional incompetence or gross negligence.
         (6)  Malpractice.
         (7)  Aiding or assisting another person in violating
    any provision of this Act or its rules.
         (8)  Failing, within 60 days, to provide information
    in response to a written request made by the Department.
         (9)  Engaging   in   dishonorable,   unethical,   or
    unprofessional conduct of a character likely to  deceive,
    defraud or harm the public as defined by the rules of the
    Department,   or  violating  the  rules  of  professional
    conduct  adopted  by  the  Board  and  published  by  the
    Department.
         (10)  Habitual or  excessive  use  or  addiction  to
    alcohol,  narcotics,  stimulants,  or  any other chemical
    agent or drug that results in the inability  to  practice
    with reasonable judgment, skill, or safety.
         (11)  Discipline  by  another  state,  territory, or
    country if at least one of the grounds for the discipline
    is the same or  substantially  equivalent  to  those  set
    forth in this Act.
         (12)  Directly  or indirectly giving to or receiving
    from  any  person,  firm,  corporation,  partnership   or
    association any fee, commission, rebate, or other form of
    compensation  for  any professional services not actually
    or personally rendered.
         (13)  A finding by the Department that the licensee,
    after having his or her license  placed  on  probationary
    status, has violated the terms of probation.
         (14)  Abandonment of a patient without cause.
         (15)  Willfully  making  or  filing false records or
    reports relating to a licensee's practice, including  but
    not  limited  to, false records filed with State agencies
    or departments.
         (16)  Wilfully failing  to  report  an  instance  of
    suspected  child  abuse  or  neglect  as  required by the
    Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
         (17)  Being named as a perpetrator in  an  indicated
    report  by the Department of Children and Family Services
    under the Abused and Neglected Child  Reporting  Act  and
    upon  proof  by  clear  and  convincing evidence that the
    licensee has caused a child to  be  an  abused  child  or
    neglected  child  as  defined in the Abused and Neglected
    Child Reporting Act.
         (18)  Physical  or  mental   disability,   including
    deterioration  through  the  aging  process,  or  loss of
    abilities and skills that which results in the  inability
    to  practice  the  profession  with  reasonable judgment,
    skill, or safety.
         (19)  Solicitation of professional services by using
    false or misleading advertising.
         (20)  A finding that licensure has been applied  for
    or obtained by fraudulent means.
         (21)  Practicing  or  attempting to practice under a
    name other than the full name as shown on the license  or
    any other legally authorized name.
         (22)  Gross  overcharging  for professional services
    including filing statements for  collection  of  fees  or
    moneys monies for which services are not rendered.
    (b)  The  Department  shall  deny  any  application for a
license, without hearing, or renewal under this  Act  to  any
person who has defaulted on an educational loan guaranteed by
the  Illinois  Student  Assistance  Commission;  however, the
Department may issue a license or renewal if  the  person  in
default  has  established  a satisfactory repayment record as
determined by the Illinois Student Assistance Commission.
    (c)  The determination by a circuit court that a licensee
is subject to involuntary admission or judicial admission, as
provided in the Mental Health and Developmental  Disabilities
Code,  operates  as  an automatic suspension.  The suspension
will terminate only upon  a  finding  by  a  court  that  the
patient  is  no  longer  subject  to involuntary admission or
judicial admission and the issuance of an  order  so  finding
and  discharging  the patient, and upon the recommendation of
the Board to the Director that the  licensee  be  allowed  to
resume  his or her practice as a licensed marriage and family
therapist.
    (d)  The Department may refuse to issue  or  may  suspend
the license of any person who fails to file a return, pay the
tax,  penalty, or interest shown in a filed return or pay any
final assessment of tax, penalty, or interest, as required by
any tax  Act  administered  by  the  Illinois  Department  of
Revenue,  until  the time the requirements of the tax Act are
satisfied.
    (e)  In enforcing this Section, the Department  or  Board
upon  a  showing  of  a  possible  violation  may  compel  an
individual  licensed  to  practice under this Act, or who has
applied for licensure under this Act, to submit to  a  mental
or  physical  examination, or both, as required by and at the
expense of the Department. The Department or Board may  order
the  examining  physician to present testimony concerning the
mental or physical examination of the licensee or  applicant.
No  information shall be excluded by reason of any common law
or statutory privilege relating to communications between the
licensee  or  applicant  and  the  examining  physician.  The
examining physicians shall be specifically designated by  the
Board  or Department. The individual to be examined may have,
at his or her own expense, another physician of  his  or  her
choice  present  during  all  aspects  of  this  examination.
Failure  of  an  individual to submit to a mental or physical
examination, when directed, shall be grounds  for  suspension
of  his  or  her  license until the individual submits to the
examination  if  the  Department  finds,  after  notice   and
hearing,  that  the  refusal to submit to the examination was
without reasonable cause.
    If the Department or Board finds an individual unable  to
practice  because  of  the reasons set forth in this Section,
the Department or Board may require that individual to submit
to care, counseling, or treatment by physicians  approved  or
designated  by the Department or Board, as a condition, term,
or  restriction  for  continued,   reinstated,   or   renewed
licensure  to  practice;  or, in lieu of care, counseling, or
treatment,  the  Department  may  file,  or  the  Board   may
recommend   to   the  Department  to  file,  a  complaint  to
immediately suspend,  revoke,  or  otherwise  discipline  the
license  of  the  individual. An individual whose license was
granted,  continued,  reinstated,  renewed,  disciplined   or
supervised    subject   to   such   terms,   conditions,   or
restrictions, and  who  fails  to  comply  with  such  terms,
conditions,   or  restrictions,  shall  be  referred  to  the
Director for a determination as  to  whether  the  individual
shall  have his or her license suspended immediately, pending
a hearing by the Department.
    In instances in which the Director immediately suspends a
person's license  under  this  Section,  a  hearing  on  that
person's license must be convened by the Department within 15
days  after  the suspension and completed without appreciable
delay. The Department and Board shall have the  authority  to
review  the  subject  individual's  record  of  treatment and
counseling regarding the impairment to the  extent  permitted
by  applicable  federal statutes and regulations safeguarding
the confidentiality of medical records.
    An individual licensed under this Act and affected  under
this  Section shall be afforded an opportunity to demonstrate
to the Department or Board that he or she can resume practice
in compliance with acceptable and prevailing standards  under
the provisions of his or her license.
(Source: P.A. 87-783; 87-1237.)

    (225 ILCS 55/90) (from Ch. 111, par. 8351-90)
    Sec.  90.   Violations;  injunctions;  cease  and  desist
order.
    (a)  If  any person violates a provision of this Act, the
Director may, in the name of  the  People  of  the  State  of
Illinois,  through  the  Attorney  General  of  the  State of
Illinois, petition for an order enjoining  the  violation  or
for  an  order  enforcing compliance with this Act.  Upon the
filing of a verified petition in court, the court may issue a
temporary restraining order, without notice or bond, and  may
preliminarily and permanently enjoin the violation.  If it is
established  that the person has violated or is violating the
injunction, the Court may punish the offender for contempt of
court.  Proceedings under this Section are  in  addition  to,
and not in lieu of, all other remedies and penalties provided
by this Act.
    (b)  If  any  person  practices  as a marriage and family
therapist or holds himself or herself  out  as  such  without
having  a  valid license certificate under this Act, then any
licensee, any interested party or any person injured  thereby
may,  in  addition  to  the  Director, petition for relief as
provided in subsection (a) of this Section.
    (c)  Whenever in the opinion of the Department any person
violates any provision of this Act, the Department may  issue
a  rule to show cause why an order to cease and desist should
not be entered against him or her.  The  rule  shall  clearly
set forth the grounds relied upon by the Department and shall
provide  a period of 7 days from the date of the rule to file
an answer to the satisfaction of the Department.  Failure  to
answer  to  the satisfaction of the Department shall cause an
order to cease and desist to be issued immediately.
(Source: P.A. 87-783.)

    (225 ILCS 55/95) (from Ch. 111, par. 8351-95)
    Sec.  95.  Investigation;  notice   and   hearing.    The
Department  may  investigate the actions or qualifications of
any person or persons holding or claiming to hold  a  license
certificate  of  registration.  Before  suspending, revoking,
placing  on  probationary  status,  or   taking   any   other
disciplinary  action  as  the Department may deem proper with
regard to any license  or  certificate  of  registration,  at
least  30  days  before  the  date  set  for the hearing, the
Department shall (i) notify the accused  in  writing  of  any
charges  made  and  the  time  and place for a hearing on the
charges before the Board, (ii) direct him or her  to  file  a
written  answer  to  the  charges  with  the Board under oath
within 20 days after the  service  on  him  or  her  of  such
notice,  and  (iii) inform him or her that if he or she fails
to file an answer, default will be taken against him  or  her
and  his or her license or certificate of registration may be
suspended, revoked, placed on probationary status,  or  other
disciplinary  action  taken  with  regard  to  the license or
certificate, including limiting the scope, nature, or  extent
of his or her practice, as the Department may deem proper. In
case  the  person,  after  receiving notice, fails to file an
answer, his  or  her  license  or  certificate  may,  in  the
discretion  of  the Department, be suspended, revoked, placed
on probationary status, or the Department may  take  whatever
disciplinary  action  deemed  proper,  including limiting the
scope, nature, or extent of  the  person's  practice  or  the
imposition  of  a fine, without a hearing, if the act or acts
charged constitute sufficient for such action under this Act.
This  written  notice  and  any  notice  in  the   subsequent
proceedings may be served by personal delivery to the accused
person,  or  by  registered  or certified mail to the address
last specified by the accused in his last notification to the
Department. In case the person fails to file an answer  after
receiving  notice,  his or her license or certificate may, in
the discretion of the Department, be suspended,  revoked,  or
placed  on  probationary  status,  or the Department may take
whatever  disciplinary  action   deemed   proper,   including
limiting  the  scope,  nature,  or  extent  of  the  person's
practice  or  the imposition of a fine, without a hearing, if
the act or acts charged  constitute  sufficient  grounds  for
such  action  under  this  Act.  The  written answer shall be
served by personal delivery, certified delivery, or certified
or registered mail to the Department.  At the time and  place
fixed in the notice, the Department shall proceed to hear the
charges  and  the  parties or their counsel shall be accorded
ample opportunity  to  present  such  statements,  testimony,
evidence,  and argument as may be pertinent to the charges or
to the defense thereto.  The  Department  may  continue  such
hearing from time to time.  At the discretion of the Director
after  having first received the recommendation of the Board,
the accused person's license certificate of registration  may
be   suspended   or  revoked,  if  the  evidence  constitutes
sufficient grounds for such action under this Act.
(Source: P.A. 87-783; 87-1031; 87-1237; 88-45.)

    (225 ILCS 55/165) (from Ch. 111, par. 8351-165)
    Sec. 165.  Illinois Administrative  Procedure  Act.   The
Illinois  Administrative  Procedure  Act is expressly adopted
and incorporated in this Act as if all of the  provisions  of
that Act were included in this Act, except that the provision
of   paragraph   (d)   of   Section  10-65  of  the  Illinois
Administrative Procedure Act, which provides that at hearings
the  license  certificate  holder  has  the  right  to   show
compliance   with  all  lawful  requirements  for  retention,
continuation or renewal of the certificate,  is  specifically
excluded.   For  the  purpose of this Act the notice required
under Section 10-25 of the Illinois Administrative  Procedure
Act  is  deemed  sufficient  when  mailed  to  the last known
address of a party.
(Source: P.A. 87-783; 88-670, eff. 12-2-94.)

    (225 ILCS 55/50 rep.)
    Section 25. The Marriage and Family Therapy Licensing Act
is amended by repealing Section 50.

    Section 30. The Illinois Nursing Act of 1987  is  amended
by changing Sections 3, 4, 7, 10, 11, 12, 14, 16, 17, 21, 23,
24,  25,  26, 27, 30, 32, 33, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 42, 43,
and 47 as follows:

    (225 ILCS 65/3) (from Ch. 111, par. 3503)
    Sec. 3. Definitions. Each of the  following  terms,  when
used  in  this Act, shall have  the meaning ascribed to it in
this Section, except  where  the  context  clearly  indicates
otherwise:
    (a)  "Department"  means  the  Department of Professional
Regulation;
    (b)  "Director" means the Director of the  Department  of
Professional Regulation;
    (c)  "Board  Committee"  means  the Board of Committee on
Nursing appointed by the Director;
    (d)  "Academic year" means the customary annual  schedule
of  courses  at  a  college,  university, or approved school,
customarily regarded as the school year as distinguished from
the calendar year;
    (e)  "Approved program of professional nursing education"
and "approved program of  practical  nursing  education"  are
programs  of professional or practical nursing, respectively,
approved by the Department under the provisions of this Act;
    (f)  "Nursing  Act  Coordinator"   means   a   registered
professional nurse appointed by the Director to carry out the
administrative policies of the Department;
    (g)  "Assistant   Nursing   Act   Coordinator"   means  a
registered professional nurse appointed by  the  Director  to
assist  in  carrying  out  the administrative policies of the
Department;
    (h)  "Registered" is the equivalent of "licensed";
    (i)  "Practical  nurse"  or  "licensed  practical  nurse"
means a person who is licensed as  a  practical  nurse  under
this  Act  and  practices  practical  nursing  as  defined in
paragraph (j)  of  this  Section.   Only  a  practical  nurse
licensed  under  this  Act  is  entitled  to  use  the  title
"licensed practical nurse" and the abbreviation "L.P.N.";
    (j)  "Practical   nursing"  means  the  performance,  for
compensation, of acts in the care of  the  ill,  injured,  or
infirmed,  selected by and performed under the direction of a
registered professional nurse, licensed physician,   dentist,
or  podiatrist,  requiring the basic nursing skill, judgment,
and knowledge acquired by means  of  a  completed  course  of
study in an approved practical nursing education program;
    (k)  "Registered   nurse"   or  "registered  professional
nurse" means a person who is licensed as a professional nurse
under this Act and practices nursing as defined in  paragraph
(l)  of this Section.  Only a registered nurse licensed under
this Act is entitled to use the titles "registered nurse" and
"registered professional nurse" and the abbreviation, "R.N.";
    (l)  "Professional nursing" includes all its specialties,
and means the performance for  compensation  of  any  nursing
act,  (1)  in  the nursing evaluation, observation, care, and
counsel  of  the  ill,  injured,  or  infirmed;  (2)  in  the
maintenance of health or prevention of illness of others; (3)
in  the  administration  of  medications  and  treatments  as
prescribed by a licensed physician, dentist,  or  podiatrist;
or  (4)  any  act  in the supervision or teaching of nursing,
which requires substantial, specialized  judgment  and  skill
the  proper  performance  of  which is based on knowledge and
application of the principles of  biological,  physical,  and
social  science acquired by means of a completed course in an
approved school of professional nursing.  The foregoing shall
not be deemed to include those acts of medical  diagnosis  or
prescription of therapeutic or corrective measures that which
are  properly  performed  only  by physicians licensed in the
State of Illinois; and
    (m)  "Current nursing practice  update  course"  means  a
planned   nursing   education   curriculum  approved  by  the
Department  consisting  of   activities   that   which   have
educational  objectives,  instructional  methods,  content or
subject matter, clinical practice,  and  evaluation  methods,
related to basic review and updating content and specifically
planned  for  those  nurses previously licensed in the United
States or its territories  and  preparing  for  reentry  into
nursing practice.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/4) (from Ch. 111, par. 3504)
    Sec. 4. Policy; application of Act. For the protection of
life  and  the  promotion  of  health,  and the prevention of
illness and communicable diseases, any person  practicing  or
offering  to  practice  professional and practical nursing in
Illinois shall submit evidence that he or she is qualified to
practice, and shall be licensed as hereinafter provided under
this Act.  No person shall  practice  or  offer  to  practice
professional  or  practical  nursing  in  Illinois or use any
title, sign, card or device to indicate that such a person is
practicing professional  or  practical  nursing  unless  such
person has been licensed under the provisions of this Act.
    This Act does not prohibit the following:
    (a)  The practice of nursing in Federal employment in the
discharge  of  the  employee's  duties  by  a  person  who is
employed by the  United  States  government  or  any  bureau,
division  or  agency  thereof  and is a legally qualified and
licensed nurse of another  state  or  territory  and  not  in
conflict with Sections 6, 12, 13, and 25 of this Act;
    (b)  Nursing  that  which is included in their program of
study by students enrolled  in  programs  of  nursing  or  in
current   nurse  practice  update  courses  approved  by  the
Department;
    (c)  The  furnishing  of   nursing   assistance   in   an
emergency;
    (d)  The  practice  of  nursing  by  a nurse who holds an
active license in another state when  providing  services  to
patients  in  Illinois  during  a  bonafide  emergency  or in
immediate preparation for or during interstate transit;
    (e)  The incidental care of the sick by  members  of  the
family,  domestic  servants  or  housekeepers, or care of the
sick where treatment is by prayer or spiritual means;
    (f)  Persons  from  being  employed  as  nursing   aides,
attendants,  orderlies and other auxiliary workers in private
homes, long term care  facilities,  nurseries,  hospitals  or
other institutions;
    (g)  The  practice  of  practical  nursing by one who has
applied in writing to the Department in  form  and  substance
satisfactory  to  the Department, for a license as a licensed
practical nurse and has  complied  with  all  the  provisions
under  Section 12 13, except the passing of an examination to
be eligible to receive such license, until:  the decision  of
the Department that the applicant has failed to pass the next
available   examination  authorized  by  the  Department,  or
failed,  without  an  approved  excuse,  to  take  the   next
available  examination  authorized  by the Department, or the
withdrawal of the application, not to exceed  3  months.   No
applicant  for  licensure  practicing under the provisions of
this paragraph shall practice practical nursing except  under
the  direct  supervision  of  a registered professional nurse
licensed under this Act or a licensed physician,  dentist  or
podiatrist.  In no instance shall any such applicant practice
or be employed in any supervisory capacity;
    (h)  The  practice  of  practical nursing by one who is a
licensed practical nurse  under  the  laws  of  another  U.S.
jurisdiction and has applied in writing to the Department, in
form  and  substance  satisfactory  to  the Department, for a
license as a licensed practical nurse and who is qualified to
receive such license under Section  12  13,  until:  (1)  the
expiration  of  6  months  after  the  filing of such written
application, or (2) the withdrawal of  such  application,  or
(3) the denial of such application by the Department;
    (i)  The  practice of professional nursing by one who has
applied in writing to the Department in  form  and  substance
satisfactory  to the Department for a license as a registered
professional nurse and has complied with all  the  provisions
under  Section  12 except the passing of an examination to be
eligible to receive such license until:  the decision of  the
Department  that  the  applicant  has failed to pass the next
available  examination  authorized  by  the  Department,   or
failed,   without  an  approved  excuse,  to  take  the  next
available examination authorized by  the  Department  or  the
withdrawal  of  the  application,  not to exceed 3 months. No
applicant for licensure practicing under  the  provisions  of
this  paragraph  shall  practice  professional nursing except
under the direct supervision  of  a  registered  professional
nurse licensed under this Act.  In no instance shall any such
applicant   practice   or  be  employed  in  any  supervisory
capacity;
    (j)  The practice of professional nursing by one who is a
registered professional  nurse  under  the  laws  of  another
state,  territory  of  the  United  States or country and has
applied in writing to the Department, in form  and  substance
satisfactory to the Department, for a license as a registered
professional  nurse  and  who  is  qualified  to receive such
license under Section 12, until:  (1)  the expiration of 6 12
months after the filing of such written application,  or  (2)
the withdrawal of such application, or (3) the denial of such
application by the Department;
    (k)  The  practice  of professional nursing that which is
included in a program of study by one  who  is  a  registered
professional  nurse  under  the  laws  of  another  state  or
territory  of the United States or foreign country, territory
or province  and  who  is  enrolled  in  a  graduate  nursing
education  program  or  a  program  for  the  completion of a
baccalaureate nursing degree  in  this  State  which  program
includes clinical supervision by faculty as determined by the
educational  institution  offering the program and the health
care organization where the practice of nursing occurs.   The
educational  institution  will  file with the Department each
academic term a list of the names and origin  of  license  of
all  professional  nurses practicing nursing as part of their
programs under this provision; or
    (l)  Any person licensed in this State  under  any  other
Act  from  engaging  in  the  practice for which she or he is
licensed.
    An applicant for license practicing under the  exceptions
set  forth  in  subparagraphs  (g), (h), (i), and (j) of this
Section shall use the title R.N. Lic. Pend.  or  L.P.N.  Lic.
Pend. respectively and no other.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/7) (from Ch. 111, par. 3507)
    Sec. 7. Board.
    (a)  The Director shall appoint the Board Committee which
shall  be  composed  of  9  registered professional nurses, 2
licensed practical nurses and one  public  member  who  shall
also  be a voting non-voting member and who is not a licensed
health care provider. Two Three registered nurses shall  hold
at  least  a  master's  degree in nursing and be educators in
professional nursing programs, one representing baccalaureate
nursing education, one representing associate degree  nursing
education,   and  one  representing  diploma  education;  one
registered nurse shall hold at least a bachelor's degree with
a major in nursing and be an educator in a licensed practical
nursing program; one registered nurse shall hold  a  master's
degree  in  nursing   and  shall  represent  nursing  service
administration;  2 registered nurses shall represent clinical
nursing practice, one of whom shall have at least a  master's
degree  in  nursing;  and 2 registered nurses shall represent
advanced specialty practice. Each of the 11 nurses shall have
had a minimum of 5 years experience in nursing,  3  three  of
which  shall  be  in  the  area  they  represent on the Board
committee and be actively engaged in the area of nursing they
represent at the time of appointment and during their  tenure
on  the  Board  Committee.   Members shall be appointed for a
term of 3 years.  No member shall be eligible for appointment
to more than 2 consecutive terms and any appointment to  fill
a vacancy shall be for the unexpired portion of the term.  In
making  Board Committee appointments, the Director shall give
consideration  to  recommendations   submitted   by   nursing
organizations.     Consideration  shall  be  given  to  equal
geographic representation.  The Board Committee shall receive
actual and necessary expenses incurred in the performance  of
their duties.
    In  making  the  initial appointments, the Director shall
appoint all new members for terms of 2, 3  and  4  years  and
such  terms  shall  be  staggered  as  follows:   3  shall be
appointed for terms of 2 years;  3  shall  be  appointed  for
terms  of  3  years;, and 3 shall be appointed for terms of 4
years.  However, such appointment shall be made in  a  manner
so that each member appointed prior to January 1, 1987, whose
current  appointed  term  has not expired, will be allowed to
serve out the remainder of his or her term.
    The Director may remove any member of the Board committee
for misconduct, incapacity, or neglect of duty.  The Director
shall reduce to writing any causes for removal.
    The Board  Committee  shall  meet  annually  to  elect  a
chairperson  and  vice  chairperson.  The Board Committee may
hold such other meetings during the year as may be  necessary
to  conduct  its  business.   Six voting members of the Board
Committee shall constitute a  quorum  at  any  meeting.   Any
action   taken   by  the  Board  Committee  must  be  on  the
affirmative vote of 6 members.  Voting by proxy shall not  be
permitted.
    The  Board Committee shall submit an annual report to the
Director.
    The members of the Board Committee shall be  immune  from
suit in any action based upon any disciplinary proceedings or
other  acts  performed  in good faith as members of the Board
Committee.
    (b)  The Board Committee is authorized to:
         (1)  recommend the adoption and, from time to  time,
    the revision of such rules that and regulations which may
    be necessary to carry out the provisions of this Act;
         (2)  conduct  hearings  and disciplinary conferences
    upon charges calling for  discipline  of  a  licensee  as
    provided in Section 25;
         (3)  report  to the Department, upon completion of a
    hearing, the disciplinary actions recommended to be taken
    against persons violating this Act;
         (4)  recommend the  approval,  denial  of  approval,
    withdrawal   of   approval,   or  discipline  of  nursing
    education programs;
         (5)  participate in a national organization of state
    boards of nursing; and
         (6)  recommend a list of the  registered  nurses  to
    serve  as  Nursing  Act Coordinator and Assistant Nursing
    Act Coordinator, respectively.
(Source: P.A. 87-268.)

    (225 ILCS 65/10) (from Ch. 111, par. 3510)
    Sec. 10. Department powers and duties.
    (a)  The Department shall exercise the powers and  duties
prescribed  by  the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois for
administration of licensing  acts  and  shall  exercise  such
other  powers  and  duties  necessary  for  effectuating  the
purpose of this Act.  None of the functions, powers or duties
of  the Department with respect to licensure and examination,
shall be exercised by the Department except  upon  review  by
the  Board  Committee.  The Department shall promulgate rules
to implement, interpret, or make specific the provisions  and
purposes  of  this  Act;  however no such rulemaking shall be
promulgated by the Department except upon review by the Board
the affirmative vote of 5 members of the Committee.
    (b)  The Department shall:
         (1)  (blank); Issue quarterly  to  the  Committee  a
    report  of  the  status of all formal complaints filed by
    the Department and significant issues  as  determined  by
    the Committee.
         (2)  prepare   and   maintain  a  list  of  approved
    programs of professional nursing education  and  programs
    of  practical  nursing  education  in  this  State, whose
    graduates,   if   they   have   the    other    necessary
    qualifications provided in this Act, shall be eligible to
    apply for a license to practice nursing in this State;
         (3)  promulgate  rules  defining what constitutes an
    approved program of professional  nursing  education  and
    what constitutes an approved program of practical nursing
    education; and
         (4)  promulgate  rules for examination of candidates
    for licenses; and for issuance  of  licenses  authorizing
    candidates  upon passing an examination to practice under
    this Act.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)
    (225 ILCS 65/11) (from Ch. 111, par. 3511)
    Sec. 11. Nursing Act Coordinator.  The  Department  shall
obtain, pursuant to the Personnel Code, as amended, a Nursing
Act  Coordinator and assistants.  The Nursing Act Coordinator
and assistants shall be professional nurses licensed in  this
State  and  graduated  from  approved schools of nursing, and
each shall have been actively engaged  in  nursing  education
not less than one year prior to appointment.  The Nursing Act
Coordinator  shall hold at least a master's degree in nursing
from an approved college or university; and have at  least  5
years'   experience   since   graduation   in   progressively
responsible  positions  in nursing education.  Each assistant
shall hold at least a master's  degree  in  nursing  from  an
approved  college  or  university; and have at least 3 years'
experience  since  graduation  in  progressively  responsible
positions in nursing education.  The Nursing Act  Coordinator
and assistants shall perform such administrative functions as
may be delegated to them by the Director.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/12) (from Ch. 111, par. 3512)
    Sec. 12. Qualifications for licensure.
    (a)  Each    applicant   who   successfully   meets   the
requirements of this Section shall be entitled  to  licensure
as  a Registered Nurse or Licensed Practical Nurse, whichever
is applicable.
    (b)  An  applicant  for  licensure  by   examination   to
practice  as  a  registered nurse or licensed practical nurse
shall:
         (1)  submit  a  completed  written  application,  on
    forms provided by the Department and fees as  established
    by the Department;
         (2)  for  registered nurse licensure, have completed
    an approved professional nursing education program of not
    less than 2 academic years and have  graduated  from  the
    program;  for  licensed  practical  nurse licensure, have
    completed an approved practical nursing education program
    of not less than one academic  year  and  have  graduated
    from the program;
         (3)  have  not violated the provisions of Section 25
    of this Act.  The Department may take into  consideration
    any  felony  conviction  of  the  applicant,  but  such a
    conviction shall  not  operate  as  an  absolute  bar  to
    licensure;
         (4)  meet  all  other requirements as established by
    rule;
         (5)  pay, either to the Department or its designated
    testing service, a fee covering the cost of providing the
    examination. Failure to appear for the examination on the
    scheduled date at the time and place specified after  the
    applicant's application for examination has been received
    and  acknowledged  by  the  Department  or the designated
    testing service shall result in  the  forfeiture  of  the
    examination fee.
    If  an  applicant  neglects, fails, or refuses to take an
examination or fails to pass an  examination  for  a  license
under  this  Act within 3 years after filing the application,
the application shall be denied.  However, the applicant  may
make  a  new  application accompanied by the required fee and
provide evidence of meeting the requirements in force at  the
time of the new application.
    An  applicant  shall  have  one  year  from  the  date of
notification of successful completion of the  examination  to
apply to the Department for a license.  If an applicant fails
to  apply within one year, the applicant shall be required to
again take  and  pass  the  examination  unless  licensed  in
another  jurisdiction  of the United States within 2 years of
passing the examination.
    (c)  An applicant  for  licensure  who  is  a  registered
professional  nurse or a licensed practical nurse licensed by
examination under the laws of another state or  territory  of
the United States shall:
         (1)  submit  a  completed  written  application,  on
    forms supplied by the Department, and fees as established
    by the Department;
         (2)  for  registered nurse licensure, have completed
    an approved professional nursing education program of not
    less than 2 academic years and have  graduated  from  the
    program;  for  licensed  practical  nurse licensure, have
    completed an approved practical nursing education program
    of not less than one academic  year  and  have  graduated
    from the program;
         (3)  submit   verification   of   licensure   status
    directly   from   the   United   States  jurisdiction  of
    licensure;
         (4)  have passed the examination authorized  by  the
    Department;
         (5)  meet  all  other requirements as established by
    rule.
    (d)  All  applicants  for  licensure  pursuant  to   this
Section  who are graduates of nursing educational programs in
a country other than the United  States  or  its  territories
must  submit  to  the  Department certification of successful
completion of the Commission of Graduates of Foreign  Nursing
Schools  (CGFNS)  examination. An applicant, who is unable to
provide appropriate documentation to satisfy CGFNS of her  or
his  educational  qualifications  for  the CGFNS examination,
shall be required to pass an examination to  test  competency
in  the  English  language  which  shall be prescribed by the
Department, if the applicant is determined by the Board to be
educationally prepared in  nursing.   The  Board  shall  make
appropriate   inquiry   into  the  reasons  for  any  adverse
determination by CGFNS before making its own decision.
    An applicant licensed in another state or  territory  who
is  applying  for  licensure  and  has  received  her  or his
education in a country other than the United  States  or  its
territories  shall  be  exempt  from  the  completion  of the
Commission of Graduates of Foreign  Nursing  Schools  (CGFNS)
examination  if  the  applicant  meets  all  of the following
requirements:
         (1)  successful passage of the licensure examination
    authorized by the Department;
         (2)  holds  an  active,  unencumbered   license   in
    another state; and
         (3)  has been actively practicing for a minimum of 2
    years in another state.
    (e)  No   applicant  shall  be  issued  a  license  as  a
registered nurse or practical nurse under this Section unless
he or she  has  passed  the  examination  authorized  by  the
Department  within  3 years of completion and graduation from
an approved nursing education program, unless such  applicant
submits    proof    of    successful    completion    of    a
Department-authorized  remedial  nursing education program or
recompletion of an approved  registered  nursing  program  or
licensed practical nursing program, as appropriate.
    (f)  Pending  the  issuance of a license under subsection
(b) of this Section, the Department may grant an applicant  a
temporary  license  to practice nursing as a registered nurse
or as  a  licensed  practical  nurse  if  the  Department  is
satisfied  that  the  applicant holds an active, unencumbered
license in good standing in  another  jurisdiction.   If  the
applicant  holds more than one current active license, or one
or more active temporary licenses from  other  jurisdictions,
the  Department  shall not issue a temporary license until it
is satisfied that each current active  license  held  by  the
applicant  is  unencumbered.   The  temporary  license, which
shall be issued no  later  than  14  working  days  following
receipt by the Department of an application for the temporary
license,   shall  be  granted  upon  the  submission  of  the
following to the Department:
         (1)  a  signed   and   completed   application   for
    licensure  under  subsection  (a)  of  this  Section as a
    registered nurse or a licensed practical nurse;
         (2)  proof of a current, active license in at  least
    one other jurisdiction and proof that each current active
    license  or  temporary  license  held by the applicant is
    unencumbered;
         (3)  a  signed  and  completed  application  for   a
    temporary license; and
         (4)  the required permit fee.
    (g)  The  Department  may  refuse to issue an applicant a
temporary license authorized pursuant  to  this  Section  if,
within   14   working   days  following  its  receipt  of  an
application  for  a   temporary   license,   the   Department
determines that:
         (1)  the  applicant  has  been  convicted of a crime
    under the laws of a jurisdiction of  the  United  States:
    (i)  which  is  a  felony; or (ii) which is a misdemeanor
    directly related  to  the  practice  of  the  profession,
    within the last 5 years;
         (2)  within the last 5 years the applicant has had a
    license  or  permit  related  to  the practice of nursing
    revoked, suspended, or placed  on  probation  by  another
    jurisdiction,   if  at  least  one  of  the  grounds  for
    revoking, suspending, or placing on probation is the same
    or substantially equivalent to grounds in Illinois; or
         (3)  it intends to deny licensure by endorsement.
    For purposes of this Section, an  "unencumbered  license"
means a license against which no disciplinary action has been
taken  or  is  pending and for which all fees and charges are
paid and current.
    (h)  The Department may revoke a temporary license issued
pursuant to this Section if:
         (1)  it  determines  that  the  applicant  has  been
    convicted of a crime under the law of any jurisdiction of
    the United  States  that  is  (i)  a  felony  or  (ii)  a
    misdemeanor  directly  related  to  the  practice  of the
    profession, within the last 5 years;
         (2)  it determines that within the last 5 years  the
    applicant  has  had  a  license  or permit related to the
    practice of nursing  revoked,  suspended,  or  placed  on
    probation by another jurisdiction, if at least one of the
    grounds for revoking, suspending, or placing on probation
    is  the  same  or  substantially equivalent to grounds in
    Illinois; or
         (3)  it determines that it intends to deny licensure
    by endorsement.
    A temporary license or renewed  temporary  license  shall
expire  (i) upon issuance of an Illinois license or (ii) upon
notification that the Department intends to deny licensure by
endorsement.  A temporary license shall expire 6 months  from
the  date of issuance.  Further renewal may be granted by the
Department in hardship cases, as defined by rule.  However, a
temporary license shall automatically expire upon issuance of
the Illinois license or upon notification that the Department
intends  to  deny  licensure,  whichever  occurs  first.   No
extensions shall be granted beyond the 6-month period  unless
approved  by  the  Director.   Notification by the Department
under this Section shall be by certified or registered  mail.
The  Department  shall  issue a license to a person qualified
for licensure as a  registered  professional  nurse  if  that
person:
         (a)  has  applied  in  writing in form and substance
    acceptable to the Department and  has  not  violated  the
    provisions  of Section 25 of this Act. The Department may
    take into consideration  any  felony  conviction  of  the
    applicant,  but such a conviction shall not operate as an
    absolute bar to licensure;
         (b)  has completed an approved professional  nursing
    education  program  of not less than 2 academic years and
    has graduated from the program;
         (c)  has  satisfactorily  completed  an  examination
    authorized by the Department; and
         (d)  has paid the required fees.
    An applicant who received her or his nursing education in
a country other than the United  States  or  its  territories
shall  be  required to submit to the Department certification
of successful completion of the Commission  of  Graduates  of
Foreign  Nursing  Schools  (CGFNS) Examination.  An applicant
who is unable to provide appropriate documentation to satisfy
CGFNS of her or his educational qualifications for the  CGFNS
examination  shall be required to pass an examination to test
competency in the English language which shall be  prescribed
by  the  Department,  if  determined  by  the Committee to be
educationally prepared in nursing.
    An applicant licensed in another State or  territory  who
is  applying  for  licensure  and  has  received  his  or her
education in a country other than the United  States  or  its
territories shall be exempt from completion of the Commission
of  Graduates  of Foreign Nursing Schools (CGFNS) Examination
if the applicant meets all of the following requirements:
         (1)  successful   passage   of    the    examination
    authorized by the Department;
         (2)  holds   an   active,  unencumbered  license  in
    another state; and
         (3)  has been actively practicing for a minimum of 2
    years in the other state.
    The Committee shall make  appropriate  inquiry  into  the
reasons  for any adverse determination by CGFNS before making
its own decision.
(Source: P.A. 88-218.)

    (225 ILCS 65/14) (from Ch. 111, par. 3514)
    Sec. 14.  Except for those applicants who  have  received
advanced graduate degrees in nursing from an approved program
with concurrent theory and clinical practice, the educational
requirements   of   Section   12   relating   to   registered
professional  nursing  and of Section 13 relating to licensed
practical nursing shall not be deemed to have been  satisfied
by the completion of any correspondence course or any program
of  nursing  that  which  does  not  require  coordinated  or
concurrent theory and clinical practice.
(Source: P.A. 88-595, eff. 8-26-94.)

    (225 ILCS 65/16) (from Ch. 111, par. 3516)
    Sec.  16.  Expiration of license; renewal. The expiration
date and renewal period for each license  issued  under  this
Act  shall be set by rule.  The holder of a license may renew
the license such certificate during the month  preceding  the
expiration date of the license thereof by paying the required
fee.  It  is the responsibility of the licensee to notify the
Department in writing of a change of address.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/17) (from Ch. 111, par. 3517)
    Sec. 17.  Restoration of license; temporary permit.
    (a)  Any license issued under this  Act  that  which  has
expired  or  that which is on inactive status may be restored
by making application to the Department and filing  proof  of
fitness acceptable to the Department as specified by rule, to
have  the  license  restored,  and  by  paying  the  required
restoration  fee.  Such proof of fitness may include evidence
certifying to active lawful practice in another jurisdiction.
    However, any license issued under  this  Act  that  which
expired  while  the  licensee  was  (1) in federal service on
active duty with the Armed Forces of the  United  States,  or
the  State Militia called into service or training, or (2) in
training or education under the  supervision  of  the  United
States  preliminary  to  induction into the military service,
may have the  license  restored  without  paying  any  lapsed
renewal fees if within 2 years after honorable termination of
such service, training, or education, the applicant furnishes
the  Department with satisfactory evidence to the effect that
the applicant has been so engaged and that  the  individual's
service, training, or education has been so terminated.
    Any  licensee who shall engage in the practice of nursing
with a lapsed license or while on inactive  status  shall  be
considered  to be practicing without a license which shall be
grounds for discipline under Section 25 of this Act.
    (b)  Pending restoration of a  license  under  subsection
(a)  of this Section, the Department may grant an applicant a
temporary license permit to practice nursing as a  registered
nurse  or  as a licensed practical nurse if the Department is
satisfied that the applicant holds  an  active,  unencumbered
license  in  good  standing  in  another jurisdiction. If the
applicant holds more than one current active license, or  one
or   more   active  temporary  licenses  permits  from  other
jurisdictions, the Department shall  not  issue  a  temporary
license permit until it is satisfied that each current active
license and permit held by the applicant is unencumbered. The
temporary license permit, which shall be issued no later than
14  working  days  following  receipt by the Department of an
application for the license therefore, shall be granted  upon
the submission of the following to the Department:
         (1)  a   signed   and   completed   application  for
    restoration  of  licensure  under  this  Section   as   a
    registered nurse or a licensed practical nurse;
         (2)  proof  of  (i)  a current, active license in at
    least one other jurisdiction and proof that each current,
    active license or temporary permit held by the  applicant
    is  unencumbered  or  (ii) fitness to practice nursing in
    Illinois as specified by rule;
         (3)  a  signed  and  completed  application  for   a
    temporary permit; and
         (4)  the required permit fee of $25.
    (c)  The Department may refuse to issue to an applicant a
temporary  permit authorized under this Section if, within 14
working days following its receipt of an  application  for  a
temporary permit, the Department determines that:
         (1)  the  applicant  has  been  convicted within the
    last  5  years  of  any  crime  under  the  laws  of  any
    jurisdiction of the United States that is  (i)  a  felony
    or (ii) a misdemeanor directly related to the practice of
    the profession;
         (2)  within  the  last  5  years the applicant had a
    license or permit related  to  the  practice  of  nursing
    revoked,  suspended,  or  placed  on probation by another
    jurisdiction if at least one of the grounds for revoking,
    suspending, or  placing  on  probation  is  the  same  or
    substantially equivalent to grounds in Illinois; or
         (3)  it  is  determined  by  the  Department that it
    intends to deny restoration of the license.
    For purposes of this Section, an  "unencumbered  license"
means  any  license  against which no disciplinary action has
been taken or is pending and for which all fees  and  charges
are paid and current.
    (d)  The  Department may revoke a temporary permit issued
under this Section if:
         (1)  it  determines  that  the  applicant  has  been
    convicted within the last 5 years of any crime under  the
    law  of any jurisdiction of the United States that is (i)
    a felony or (ii) a misdemeanor directly  related  to  the
    practice of the profession;
         (2)  within  the  last  5  years the applicant had a
    license or permit related  to  the  practice  of  nursing
    revoked,  suspended,  or  placed  on probation by another
    jurisdiction,  if  at  least  one  of  the  grounds   for
    revoking, suspending, or placing on probation is the same
    or substantially equivalent to grounds in Illinois; or
         (3)  it  is  determined  by  the  Department that it
    intends to deny restoration of the license.
    A temporary permit  or  renewed  temporary  permit  shall
expire  (i) upon issuance of an Illinois license or (ii) upon
notification that the Department intends to deny  restoration
of  licensure.  A temporary permit shall expire 6 months from
the date of issuance. Further renewal may be granted  by  the
Department,  in  hardship  cases,  that  shall  automatically
expire   upon  issuance  of  the  Illinois  license  or  upon
notification that the Department intends to  deny  licensure,
whichever occurs first. No extensions shall be granted beyond
the   6  months  period  unless  approved  by  the  Director.
Notification by the Department under this Section shall be by
certified or registered mail.
(Source: P.A. 86-615; 87-1156.)

    (225 ILCS 65/21) (from Ch. 111, par. 3521)
    Sec. 21.  Returned checks; fines. Any person who delivers
a check or other payment to the Department that  is  returned
to  the  Department  unpaid by the financial institution upon
which it is drawn shall pay to the Department, in addition to
the amount already owed to the Department, a fine of $50.  If
the  check or other payment was for a renewal or issuance fee
and that person practices without paying the renewal  fee  or
issuance  fee  and  the  fine due, an additional fine of $100
shall be imposed. The fines imposed by this  Section  are  in
addition  to any other discipline provided under this Act for
unlicensed practice or practice on a nonrenewed license.  The
Department  shall  notify the person that payment of fees and
fines shall be paid to the Department by certified  check  or
money  order within 30 calendar days of the notification. If,
after the  expiration  of  30  days  from  the  date  of  the
notification,  the  person has failed to submit the necessary
remittance, the Department shall automatically terminate  the
license  or  certificate  or  deny  the  application, without
hearing. If, after termination or denial, the person seeks  a
license  or  certificate,  he  or  she  shall  apply  to  the
Department  for  restoration  or  issuance  of the license or
certificate and pay all fees and fines due to the Department.
The Department may establish a fee for the processing  of  an
application  for  restoration  of a license or certificate to
pay all expenses of processing this application. The Director
may waive the fines due  under  this  Section  in  individual
cases  where  the  Director  finds  that  the  fines would be
unreasonable or unnecessarily burdensome.
(Source: P.A. 86-596; 87-1031.)

    (225 ILCS 65/23) (from Ch. 111, par. 3523)
    Sec. 23. Fees. The following fees are not refundable:
    (a)  The Department shall provide by rule for a  schedule
of fees to be paid for licenses by all applicants.
    (a-5)  Except as provided in subsection (b), the fees for
the administration and enforcement of this Act, including but
not  limited to original licensure, renewal, and restoration,
shall be set by rule. The fees shall not be  refundable.  The
fee  for  application  for a Certificate of Registration as a
registered professional nurse and a licensed practical  nurse
is $50.
    (b)  In  addition,  applicants  for  any examination as a
Registered Professional Nurse or a Licensed  Practical  Nurse
shall  be required to pay, either to the Department or to the
designated testing  service,  a  fee  covering  the  cost  of
providing   the  examination.   Failure  to  appear  for  the
examination on the scheduled date,  at  the  time  and  place
specified,  after the applicant's application for examination
has been received and acknowledged by the Department  or  the
designated testing service, shall result in the forfeiture of
the examination fee.
    (c)  The   fee  for  the  renewal  of  a  Certificate  of
Registration shall be calculated at the rate of $20 per year.
    (d)  The fee for the  restoration  of  a  certificate  of
registration  other  than  from  inactive  status is $15 plus
payment of all lapsed renewal fees, but not to exceed $60.
    (e)  The fee for a license issued under the provisions of
Section 20, to a nurse licensed by examination under the laws
of another United States jurisdiction is $50.
    (f)  The fee for the issuance of a duplicate license, for
the issuance of a replacement license for a license which has
been lost or destroyed or for the issuance of a license  with
a  change  of  name  or address other than during the renewal
period is $15.  No fee  is  required  for  name  and  address
changes  on  Department records when no duplicate certificate
is issued.
    (g)  The fee for a certification of a registrant's record
for any purpose is $15.
    (h)  The fee  to  have  the  scoring  of  an  examination
authorized  by  the  Department  reviewed and verified is $15
plus any fees charged by the applicable testing service.
    (i)  The fee for a wall certificate showing  registration
shall be the actual cost of producing such certificate.
    (j)  The  fee  for  a  roster  of  persons  registered as
Registered Professional Nurse in  this  State  shall  be  the
actual cost of producing such a roster.
    (k)  All of the fees collected by the Department pursuant
to  this Section shall be paid into the Nursing Dedicated and
Professional Fund.
    (l)  The  fee  for  nurse  licensing,   disciplinary   or
investigative  records  obtained pursuant to a subpoena is $1
per page.
(Source: P.A. 86-596; 86-1475.)

    (225 ILCS 65/24) (from Ch. 111, par. 3524)
    Sec. 24. Fund. There is hereby created within  the  State
Treasury  the  Nursing  Dedicated and Professional Fund.  The
monies in the Fund may shall be used by and at the  direction
of  the  Department for the administration and enforcement of
this Act, including but not limited to:
         (a)  Distribution and publication of  "the  Illinois
    Nursing Act" of 1987 and the rules and regulations at the
    time of renewal to all Registered Professional Nurses and
    Licensed Practical Nurses licensed by the Department.;
         (b)  Employment     of     secretarial,     nursing,
    administrative,  enforcement,  and  other  staff research
    assistance for the administration of  this  Act.    After
    January 1, 1991, the Director shall employ, in conformity
    with  the  Personnel Code, one full-time investigator for
    every 10,000 nurses licensed to practice in the State;
         (c)  Conducting a survey, as prescribed by  rule  of
    the  Department,  once  every  4 years during the license
    renewal period. Surveying, every license renewal  period,
    the   nurse   population  of  Illinois,  its  employment,
    earnings, distribution, education and other  professional
    and  demographic characteristics, and for the publication
    and distribution of the survey; and
         (d)  Conducting of training seminars  for  licensees
    under    this    Act   relating   to   the   obligations,
    responsibilities, enforcement and other provisions of the
    Act and its rules the regulations thereunder.
         (e)  Disposition of Fees:
              (i)  (Blank) Until January 1, 1991, 50% of  the
         fees   collected  pursuant  to  this  Act  shall  be
         deposited in the Nursing Dedicated and  Professional
         Fund  and  50%  shall  be  deposited  in the General
         Revenue Fund.
              (ii)  On or after January 1, 1991, All  of  the
         fees  and fines collected pursuant to this Act shall
         be  deposited   in   the   Nursing   Dedicated   and
         Professional Fund.
              (iii)  For  the  fiscal  year beginning July 1,
         1988, the moneys monies  deposited  in  the  Nursing
         Dedicated    and    Professional   Fund   shall   be
         appropriated to the Department for expenses  of  the
         Department   and   the   Board   Committee   in  the
         administration of this Act.  All  earnings  received
         from  investment  of  moneys  monies  in the Nursing
         Dedicated and Professional Fund shall  be  deposited
         in  the  Nursing Dedicated and Professional Fund and
         shall  be  used  for  the  same  purposes  as   fees
         deposited in the Fund.
              (iv)  For  the  fiscal  year  beginning July 1,
         1991 and for each fiscal year thereafter, either 10%
         of  the  moneys  monies  deposited  in  the  Nursing
         Dedicated  and  Professional  Fund  each  year,  not
         including  interest  accumulated  on   such   moneys
         monies,  or  any moneys monies deposited in the Fund
         in each year which  are  in  excess  of  the  amount
         appropriated  in  that  year  to  meet  ordinary and
         contingent  expenses   of   the   Board   Committee,
         whichever   is   less,   shall   be  set  aside  and
         appropriated to the Illinois  Department  of  Public
         Health  for nursing scholarships awarded pursuant to
         the Nursing Education Scholarship Law.
              (v)  Moneys in the Fund may be  transferred  to
         the  Professions  Indirect  Cost  Fund as authorized
         under Section 61e of the Civil  Administrative  Code
         of Illinois.
    In  addition  to any other permitted use of moneys in the
Fund, and notwithstanding any restriction on the use  of  the
Fund,  moneys  in the Nursing Dedicated and Professional Fund
may be transferred to the General Revenue Fund as  authorized
by  this  amendatory Act of 1992.  The General Assembly finds
that an excess of moneys exists in the Fund. On  February  1,
1992,   the  Comptroller  shall  order  transferred  and  the
Treasurer shall transfer $200,000 (or such lesser  amount  as
may  be on deposit in the Fund and unexpended and unobligated
on that date) from the Fund to the General Revenue Fund.
(Source: P.A.  89-204,  eff.  1-1-96;  89-237,  eff.  8-4-95;
89-626, eff. 8-9-96.)

    (225 ILCS 65/25) (from Ch. 111, par. 3525)
    Sec. 25. Grounds for disciplinary action.
    (a)  The Department may, upon recommendation of the Board
Committee  on  Nursing,  refuse  to issue or to renew, or may
revoke, suspend, place on probation, reprimand, or take other
disciplinary action as the Department may  deem  appropriate,
with  regard to a license for any one or a combination of the
causes set forth in subsection (b) below in 25(b).  Fines  up
to  $2,500  may be imposed in conjunction with other forms of
disciplinary action for those violations that which result in
monetary gain for  the  licensee.  Fines  shall  not  be  the
exclusive  disposition of any disciplinary action arising out
of conduct resulting in death or injury to a patient.   Fines
shall  not  be  assessed  in  disciplinary  actions involving
mental  or  physical  illness  or  impairment.    All   fines
collected  under  this  Section  shall  be  deposited  in the
Nursing Dedicated and Professional Fund.
    (b)  The causes for disciplinary action are:
         (1) 1.  Material deception in furnishing information
    to the Department.;
         (2) 2.  Material violations of any provision of this
    Act or of the Illinois Nursing Act, prior to  the  repeal
    of  this  Act,  or  violation  of  the  rules of or final
    administrative   action   of    the    Director,    after
    consideration   of   the  recommendation  of  the  Board.
    Committee;
         (3) 3.  Conviction of any crime under  the  laws  of
    any  jurisdiction  of  the  United States: (i) which is a
    felony; or (ii) which  is  a  misdemeanor,  an  essential
    element  of  which  is  dishonesty, or (iii) of any crime
    which  is  directly  related  to  the  practice  of   the
    profession.;
         (4)  4.  A  pattern  of  practice  or other behavior
    which demonstrates incapacity or incompetency to practice
    under this Act.;
         (5) 5.  Knowingly aiding or assisting another person
    in violating any provision of this Act or rules.;
         (6)  6.  Failing,  within  90  days,  to  provide  a
    response to a request for information in  response  to  a
    written  request  made  by  the  Department  by certified
    mail.;
         (7)  7.  Engaging  in  dishonorable,  unethical   or
    unprofessional  conduct of a character likely to deceive,
    defraud or harm the public, as defined by rule.;
         (8) 8.  Unlawful sale or distribution of  any  drug,
    narcotic,  or prescription device, or unlawful conversion
    of any drug, narcotic or prescription device.;
         (9) 9.  Habitual or excessive use  or  addiction  to
    alcohol,  narcotics,  stimulants,  or  any other chemical
    agent or drug which results  in  a  nurses  inability  to
    practice with reasonable judgment, skill or safety.;
         (10) 10.  Discipline by another U.S. jurisdiction or
    foreign  nation,  if  at least one of the grounds for the
    discipline is the same  or  substantially  equivalent  to
    those set forth in this Section. herein;
         (11)  11.  A finding that the licensee, after having
    her or his license placed  on  probationary  status,  has
    violated the terms of probation.;
         (12)   12.  Being  named  as  a  perpetrator  in  an
    indicated report by the Department of Children and Family
    Services  and  under  the  Abused  and  Neglected   Child
    Reporting  Act,  and  upon  proof by clear and convincing
    evidence that the licensee has caused a child  to  be  an
    abused  child or neglected child as defined in the Abused
    and Neglected Child Reporting Act.;
         (13) 13.  Willful omission to  file  or  record,  or
    willfully  impeding  the  filing or recording or inducing
    another person to omit to file or record medical  reports
    as  required  by  law  or  willfully failing to report an
    instance of suspected child abuse or neglect as  required
    by the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.;
         (14)   14.  Gross  negligence  in  the  practice  of
    nursing.;
         (15)  15.  Holding  oneself  out  to  be  practicing
    nursing under any name other than one's own.;
         (16)  16.  Fraud,  deceit  or  misrepresentation  in
    applying for or procuring a license under this Act or  in
    connection  with  applying for renewal of a license under
    this Act.;
         (17) 17.  Allowing another person or organization to
    use the licensees' license to deceive the public.;
         (18) 18.  Willfully making or filing  false  records
    or  reports  in  the  licensee's  practice  as  a  nurse,
    including,  but  not limited to, false records to support
    claims against the  medical  assistance  program  of  the
    Department  of  Public  Aid under the Illinois Public Aid
    Code.;
         (19) 19.  Attempting to subvert or cheat on a  nurse
    licensing examination administered under this Act.;
         (20)  20.  Willfully  or  negligently  violating the
    confidentiality  between  nurse  and  patient  except  as
    required by law.;
         (21) 21.  The  use  of  any  false,  fraudulent,  or
    deceptive  statement  in  any document connected with the
    practice of nursing under this Act.;
         (22) 22.  Failure of a licensee  to  report  to  the
    Department  any  adverse  final action taken against such
    licensee by another  licensing  jurisdiction  (any  other
    jurisdiction of the United States or any foreign state or
    country),  by  any  peer  review body, by any health care
    institution, by any professional or  nursing  society  or
    association,  by  any  governmental  agency,  by  any law
    enforcement  agency,  or  by  any  court  or  a   nursing
    liability  claim  related  to  acts or conduct similar to
    acts or conduct that which would constitute  grounds  for
    action as defined in this Section.;
         (23)  23.  Failure  of  a  licensee to report to the
    Department surrender by the  licensee  of  a  license  or
    authorization  to  practice  nursing  in another state or
    jurisdiction, or current surrender  by  the  licensee  of
    membership  on  any  nursing  staff  or in any nursing or
    professional   association   or   society   while   under
    disciplinary investigation by any of those authorities or
    bodies for acts or conduct similar  to  acts  or  conduct
    that which would constitute grounds for action as defined
    by this Section.;
         (24)  24.  The determination by a circuit court that
    a  licensee  is  subject  to  involuntary  admission   or
    judicial  admission  as provided in the Mental Health and
    Developmental Disabilities Code, as amended, operates  as
    an  automatic  suspension.  The  Such suspension will end
    only upon a finding by a court that  the  patient  is  no
    longer  subject  to  involuntary  admission  or  judicial
    admission  and issues an order so finding and discharging
    the patient; and upon the  recommendation  of  the  Board
    Committee to the Director that the licensee be allowed to
    resume his or her practice.;
         (25)  25.  The Department may refuse to issue or may
    suspend the license of any person who  fails  to  file  a
    return, or to pay the tax, penalty or interest shown in a
    filed  return, or to pay any final assessment of the tax,
    penalty,  or  interest  as  required  by  any   tax   Act
    administered by the Illinois Department of Revenue, until
    such  time  as  the  requirements of any such tax Act are
    satisfied.; and
         (26)  26.  Violation  of  the  Health  Care   Worker
    Self-Referral Act.
         (27)  Physical illness, including but not limited to
    deterioration  through the aging process or loss of motor
    skill, mental illness, or disability that results in  the
    inability  to  practice  the  profession  with reasonable
    judgment, skill, or safety;
    (c)  In enforcing this Section, the Department  or  Board
upon  a  showing  of  a  possible  violation  may  compel  an
individual  licensed  to  practice under this Act, or who has
applied for licensure under this Act, to submit to  a  mental
or  physical  examination, or both, as required by and at the
expense of the Department. The Department or Board may  order
the  examining  physician to present testimony concerning the
mental or physical examination of the licensee or  applicant.
No  information shall be excluded by reason of any common law
or statutory privilege relating to communications between the
licensee  or  applicant  and  the  examining  physician.  The
examining physicians shall be specifically designated by  the
Board  or Department. The individual to be examined may have,
at his or her own expense, another physician of  his  or  her
choice  present  during  all  aspects  of  this  examination.
Failure  of  an  individual to submit to a mental or physical
examination, when directed, shall be grounds  for  suspension
of  his  or  her  license until the individual submits to the
examination  if  the  Department  finds,  after  notice   and
hearing,  that  the  refusal to submit to the examination was
without reasonable cause.
    If the Department or Board finds an individual unable  to
practice  because  of  the reasons set forth in this Section,
the Department or Board may require that individual to submit
to care, counseling, or treatment by physicians  approved  or
designated  by the Department or Board, as a condition, term,
or  restriction  for  continued,   reinstated,   or   renewed
licensure  to  practice;  or, in lieu of care, counseling, or
treatment,  the  Department  may  file,  or  the  Board   may
recommend   to   the  Department  to  file,  a  complaint  to
immediately suspend,  revoke,  or  otherwise  discipline  the
license  of  the  individual. An individual whose license was
granted,  continued,  reinstated,  renewed,  disciplined   or
supervised    subject   to   such   terms,   conditions,   or
restrictions, and  who  fails  to  comply  with  such  terms,
conditions,   or  restrictions,  shall  be  referred  to  the
Director for a determination as  to  whether  the  individual
shall  have his or her license suspended immediately, pending
a hearing by the Department.
    In instances in which the Director immediately suspends a
person's license  under  this  Section,  a  hearing  on  that
person's license must be convened by the Department within 15
days  after  the suspension and completed without appreciable
delay. The Department and Board shall have the  authority  to
review  the  subject  individual's  record  of  treatment and
counseling regarding the impairment to the  extent  permitted
by  applicable  federal statutes and regulations safeguarding
the confidentiality of medical records.
    An individual licensed under this Act and affected  under
this  Section shall be afforded an opportunity to demonstrate
to the Department or Board that he or she can resume practice
in compliance with acceptable and prevailing standards  under
the provisions of his or her license.
(Source: P.A. 86-596; 87-1207.)

    (225 ILCS 65/26) (from Ch. 111, par. 3526)
    Sec.   26.  Limitation  on  action.  All  proceedings  to
suspend, revoke, or take any other disciplinary action as the
Department may deem proper, with regard to a license  on  any
of  the  foregoing  grounds may not be commenced later than 3
years next after the commission of any act which is a  ground
for  discipline  or  a  final conviction order for any of the
acts described herein.  In the event of the settlement of any
claim or cause of action in favor  of  the  claimant  or  the
reduction  to the final judgment of any civil action in favor
of the plaintiff, such claim, cause of action or civil action
being rounded on the allegation that a person licensed  under
this  Act  was  negligent  in  providing care, the Department
shall have an additional period of one year from the date  of
such settlement or final judgment in which to investigate and
commence  formal disciplinary proceedings under Section 25 of
this Act, except as otherwise  provided  by  law.   The  time
during  which the holder of the license was outside the State
of Illinois shall not be included within any period  of  time
limiting the commencement of disciplinary action by the Board
Committee.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)
    (225 ILCS 65/27) (from Ch. 111, par. 3527)
    (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 89-507)
    Sec.  27. Suspension for imminent danger. The Director of
the Department may, upon receipt of a  written  communication
from  the  Director  of  the  Department of Mental Health and
Developmental Disabilities or Department  of  Public  Aid  or
Department  of Public Health that continuation of practice of
a person licensed under this  Act  constitutes  an  immediate
danger to the public, immediately suspend the license of such
person without a hearing.  In instances in which the Director
immediately  suspends a license under this Section, a hearing
upon such person's license must be convened by the Department
within 30 15 days after such suspension and completed without
appreciable delay, such hearing held to determine whether  to
recommend  to  the  Director  that  the  person's  license be
revoked,  suspended,  placed  on   probationary   status   or
reinstated,  or  such person be subject to other disciplinary
action.  In such hearing, the written communication  and  any
other  evidence  submitted  therewith  may  be  introduced as
evidence against such person; provided, however, the  person,
or  his  or  her  counsel,  shall  have  the  opportunity  to
discredit  or  impeach  and  submit  evidence  rebutting such
evidence.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 89-507)
    Sec. 27. Suspension for imminent danger. The Director  of
the  Department  may, upon receipt of a written communication
from the Secretary of Human Services, the Director of  Public
Aid,  or  the  Director of Public Health that continuation of
practice of a person licensed under this Act  constitutes  an
immediate  danger  to  the  public,  immediately  suspend the
license of such person without a hearing.   In  instances  in
which  the Director immediately suspends a license under this
Section,  a  hearing  upon  such  person's  license  must  be
convened by the Department  within  30  15  days  after  such
suspension  and  completed  without  appreciable  delay, such
hearing  held  to  determine  whether  to  recommend  to  the
Director that the person's  license  be  revoked,  suspended,
placed  on  probationary status or reinstated, or such person
be subject to other disciplinary action.   In  such  hearing,
the  written  communication  and any other evidence submitted
therewith may be introduced as evidence against such  person;
provided,  however,  the person, or his or her counsel, shall
have the opportunity  to  discredit  or  impeach  and  submit
evidence rebutting such evidence.
(Source: P.A. 89-507, eff. 7-1-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/30) (from Ch. 111, par. 3530)
    Sec.  30.  Right  to  legal  counsel.   No  action  of  a
disciplinary discliplinary nature that which is predicated on
charges  alleging  unethical  or  unprofessional conduct of a
person who is a registered professional nurse or  a  licensed
practical  nurse and that which can be reasonably expected to
affect adversely that person's  maintenance  of  her  or  his
present, or her or his securing of future, employment as such
a  nurse  may be taken by the Department, by any association,
or by any person unless the person against whom such  charges
are  made  is  afforded  the right to be represented by legal
counsel of her or his choosing and to  present  any  witness,
whether  an  attorney  or  otherwise  to  testify  on matters
relevant to such charges.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/32) (from Ch. 111, par. 3532)
    Sec.  32.  Investigation;  notice;  hearing.   Prior   to
bringing an action before the Board Committee, the Department
may investigate the actions of any applicant or of any person
or  persons  holding  or  claiming  to  hold  a license.  The
Department shall, before  suspending,  revoking,  placing  on
probationary  status, or taking any other disciplinary action
as the Department may deem proper with regard to any  license
or  certificate,  at  least 30 days prior to the date set for
the hearing, notify the accused in  writing  of  any  charges
made  and  the  time  and  place for a hearing of the charges
before the Board Committee, direct  her  or  him  to  file  a
written  answer  thereto  to  the  Board Committee under oath
within 20 days after the service of such  notice  and  inform
the  licensee  that  if  she  or he fails to file such answer
default will be taken against the licensee and  such  license
or   certificate   may   be  suspended,  revoked,  placed  on
probationary  status,  or  have  other  disciplinary  action,
including limiting the scope, nature or extent of her or  his
practice, as the Department may deem proper taken with regard
thereto.  Such  written  notice  may  be  served  by personal
delivery or certified or registered mail to the respondent at
the  address  of  her  or  his  last  notification   to   the
Department.   At  the time and place fixed in the notice, the
Department shall proceed to hear the charges and the  parties
or  their  counsel  shall  be  accorded  ample opportunity to
present such statements, testimony, evidence and argument  as
may  be  pertinent  to  the  charges or to the defense to the
charges thereto. The Department may continue a  such  hearing
from  time  to  time.   In  case  the  accused  person, after
receiving notice, fails to file an answer, her or his license
or certificate may in the discretion of the Director,  having
received  first the recommendation of the Board Committee, be
suspended, revoked, placed on  probationary  status,  or  the
Director  may  take whatever disciplinary action as he or she
may deem proper, including limiting  the  scope,  nature,  or
extent  of  said person's practice, without a hearing, if the
act or acts charged constitute sufficient  grounds  for  such
action under this Act.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/33) (from Ch. 111, par. 3533)
    Sec.  33.  Stenographer;  transcript.  The Department, at
its expense, shall provide a stenographer to  take  down  the
testimony  and  preserve  a  record of all proceedings at the
hearing of any case wherein any disciplinary action is  taken
regarding  a  license.   The notice of hearing, complaint and
all other documents in the nature of  pleadings  and  written
motions   filed   in   the  proceedings,  the  transcript  of
testimony, the report of the Board Committee and  the  orders
of  the  Department  shall  be the record of the proceedings.
The Department shall furnish a transcript of  the  record  to
any  person interested in the hearing upon payment of the fee
required under Section 60f of the Civil  Administrative  Code
of Illinois.
(Source: P.A. 87-1031.)

    (225 ILCS 65/35) (from Ch. 111, par. 3535)
    Sec. 35. Subpoena power; oaths. The Department shall have
power  to  subpoena  and  bring  before it any person in this
State and to take testimony, either orally or  by  deposition
or  both,  with  the  same  fees  and mileage and in the same
manner as prescribed by law in judicial proceedings in  civil
cases in circuit courts of this State.
    The  Director,  and  any  member  of  the Board Committee
designated  by  the  Director,  shall  each  have  power   to
administer  oaths  to  witnesses  at  any  hearing  which the
Department is authorized to conduct under this Act,  and  any
other  oaths required or authorized to be administered by the
Department under this Act hereunder.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/36) (from Ch. 111, par. 3536)
    Sec. 36. Board report. At the conclusion of  the  hearing
the  Board  committee shall present to the Director a written
report of its findings  of  fact,  conclusions  of  law,  and
recommendations.   The report shall contain a finding whether
or not the accused person violated  this  Act  or  failed  to
comply  with the conditions required in this Act.  The report
shall specify the nature  of  the  violation  or  failure  to
comply,    and   the   Board   Committee   shall   make   its
recommendations to the Director.
    The report of findings of fact, conclusions of  law,  and
recommendation  of the Board committee shall be the basis for
the Department's order of refusal or for the  granting  of  a
license  or  permit  unless the Director shall determine that
the  report  is  contrary  to  the  manifest  weight  of  the
evidence, in which case the Director may issue  an  order  in
contravention of the report.  The findings are not admissible
in  evidence  against  the  person  in a criminal prosecution
brought for the violation of this Act, but  the  hearing  and
findings  are not a bar to a criminal prosecution brought for
the violation of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/37) (from Ch. 111, par. 3537)
    Sec. 37. Hearing officer. The  Director  shall  have  the
authority  to  appoint  an attorney duly licensed to practice
law in the State of Illinois to serve as the hearing  officer
in any action  before the Board Committee to revoke, suspend,
place on  probation,  reprimand,  fine,  or  take  any  other
disciplinary  action  with  regard to a license.  The hearing
officer shall have full authority  to  conduct  the  hearing.
The Board Committee shall have the right to have at least one
member  present  at  any  hearing  conducted  by such hearing
officer.  There may be present at least one RN member of  the
Board   Committee   at   any  such  hearing  or  disciplinary
conference.  An LPN member or LPN educator may be present for
hearings and disciplinary conferences of an LPN.  The hearing
officer shall report her or his findings and  recommendations
to  the  Board Committee within 30 days of the receipt of the
record.  The Board Committee shall have 90 days from  receipt
of the report to review the report of the hearing officer and
present  their  findings  of  fact,  conclusions  of  law and
recommendations to the  Director.   If  the  Board  Committee
fails  to  present  its  report within the 90-day period, the
Director may issue an  order  based  on  the  report  of  the
hearing  officer.    However,  if  the  Board  Committee does
present its  report  within  the  specified  90    days,  the
Director's  order shall be based upon the report of the Board
Committee.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/38) (from Ch. 111, par. 3538)
    Sec. 38. Motion for  rehearing.  In  any  case  involving
refusal  to  issue,  renew, or the discipline of a license, a
copy of the Board's Committee's report shall be  served  upon
the  respondent  by  the  Department, either personally or as
provided in this Act,  for  the  service  of  the  notice  of
hearing.   Within  20 days after such service, the respondent
may present to the Department  a  motion  in  writing  for  a
rehearing,  which motion shall specify the particular grounds
for a rehearing therefor.  If  no  motion  for  rehearing  is
filed,  then  upon  the expiration of the time then upon such
denial the Director may enter an  order  in  accordance  with
recommendations  of the Board Committee except as provided in
Section 36 and 37 of this Act.  If the respondent shall order
from the reporting service, and pay for a transcript  of  the
record within the time for filing a motion for rehearing, the
20  day  period within which such a motion may be filed shall
commence  upon  the  delivery  of  the  transcript   to   the
respondent.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/39) (from Ch. 111, par. 3539)
    Sec.  39.  Order  for rehearing. Whenever the Director is
satisfied that substantial justice has not been done  in  the
revocation,  suspension,  or  refusal  to  issue  or  renew a
license, the Director may order a  hearing  by  the  same  or
another hearing officer or the Board Committee.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/40) (from Ch. 111, par. 3540)
    Sec.  40.  Order  of  Director.  An  order  regarding any
disciplinary action, or a certified  copy  thereof  over  the
seal  of  the  Department  and purporting to be signed by the
Director shall be prima facie evidence that:
    (a)  such signature  is  the  genuine  signature  of  the
Director;
    (b)  that  such Director is duly appointed and qualified;
and
    (c)  that the  Board  Committee  and  the  Board  members
thereof are qualified to act.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/42) (from Ch. 111, par. 3542)
    Sec.   42.  Surrender  of  license.  Upon  revocation  or
suspension of any license or certificate, the licensee  shall
forthwith  surrender the license to the Department and if the
licensee fails to do so, the Department shall have the  right
to seize the license.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/43) (from Ch. 111, par. 3543)
    Sec.   43.   Temporary   suspension.   The  Director  may
temporarily suspend the license of a nurse without a hearing,
simultaneously with the  institution  of  proceedings  for  a
hearing  provided  for  in  Section  32  of  this Act, if the
Director  finds  that  evidence  in  his  or  her  possession
indicates that continuation in practice would  constitute  an
imminent  danger  to  the  public.   In  the  event  that the
Director  suspends,  temporarily,  this  license  without   a
hearing,  a  hearing by the Department must be held within 30
days after the such suspension has occurred, and be concluded
without appreciable delay.
    Proceedings for judicial review shall be commenced in the
circuit court of the county in which the party  applying  for
review  resides;  but  if the party is not a resident of this
State, the venue shall be in Sangamon County.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/47) (from Ch. 111, par. 3547)
    Sec. 47. Pending  actions.  All  licenses  in  effect  on
December 31, 1987 and issued pursuant to the Illinois Nursing
Act,  approved  June 14, 1951, as amended, are reinstated for
the balance of the term for which last issued.  All rules and
regulations in effect on December 31,  1987  and  promulgated
pursuant to the Illinois Nursing Act, approved June 14, 1951,
as  amended,  shall  remain  in  full force and effect on the
effective date of this Act without being promulgated again by
the Department,  except  to  the  extent  any  such  rule  or
regulation  is  inconsistent  with any provision of this Act.
All disciplinary actions taken or  pending  pursuant  to  the
Illinois  Nursing  Act,  approved  June 14, 1951, as amended,
shall, for the actions taken, remain in effect, and  for  the
actions pending, shall be continued, on the effective date of
this  Act  without  having  separate  actions  filed  by  the
Department.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)
    (225 ILCS 65/8 rep.)
    (225 ILCS 65/9 rep.)
    (225 ILCS 65/13 rep.)
    (225 ILCS 65/15 rep.)
    (225 ILCS 65/19 rep.)
    Section  35.  The Illinois Nursing Act of 1987 is amended
by repealing Sections 8, 9, 13, 15, and 19.

    Section 40. The Nursing Home Administrators Licensing and
Disciplinary Act is amended by changing Sections 4, 5, 6,  7,
8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24,
and 28 and by adding Sections 5.1, 20.1, and 24.1 as follows:

    (225 ILCS 70/4) (from Ch. 111, par. 3654)
    Sec.  4.   Definitions.:   For  purposes of this Act, the
following definitions  shall  have  the  following  meanings,
except where the context requires otherwise:
         (1)  1.  "Act" means the Nursing Home Administrators
    Licensing and Disciplinary Act.;
         (2)  2.  "Department"  means   the   Department   of
    Professional Regulation.;
         (3)    3.  "Director"    means   the   Director   of
    Professional Regulation.;
         (4)   4.  "Board"    means    the    Nursing    Home
    Administrators Licensing and Disciplinary Board appointed
    by the Governor.;
         (5)   5.  "Nursing  home  administrator"  means  the
    individual  licensed  under   this   Act   and   directly
    responsible   for  planning,  organizing,  directing  and
    supervising the operation of a nursing home,  or  who  in
    fact   performs  such  functions,  whether  or  not  such
    functions are delegated to one or more other persons.;
         (6)  6.  "Nursing  home"  or  "facility"  means  any
    entity that which is  required  to  be  licensed  by  the
    Illinois  Department  of  Public Health under the Nursing
    Home Care Act, as amended, other than a  "sheltered  care
    home"  as  defined thereunder, and includes private homes
    home,  institutions,  buildings,  residences,  or   other
    places,  whether operated for profit or not, irrespective
    of the names attributed to them,  county  homes  for  the
    infirm  and  chronically  ill  operated  pursuant  to the
    County Nursing Home Act,  as  amended,  and  any  similar
    institutions  operated  by a political subdivision of the
    State  of  Illinois  that  which  provide,  though  their
    ownership or management, maintenance, personal care,  and
    nursing  for  3 or more persons, not related to the owner
    by blood or marriage, or any similar facilities in  which
    maintenance  is  provided  to  3  or  more persons who by
    reason of illness of physical infirmity require  personal
    care and nursing.;
         (7)   7.  "Maintenance"   means  food,  shelter  and
    laundry.;
         (8) 8.  "Personal care" means assistance with meals,
    dressing, movement,  bathing,  or  other  personal  needs
    need,  or  general supervision of the physical and mental
    well-being of an individual who because of age, physical,
    or mental disability, emotion or  behavior  disorder,  or
    mental  retardation  is  incapable of managing his or her
    person, whether or not a guardian has been appointed  for
    such  individual.  For  the  purposes  of  this Act, this
    definition does not include the professional services  of
    a nurse.;
         (9)  9.  "Nursing"  means  professional  nursing  or
    practical  nursing  as  those  terms  are  defined in the
    Illinois Nursing Act of 1987, as  amended,  for  sick  or
    infirm  persons who are under the care and supervision of
    licensed physicians or dentists.;
         (10) 10.  "Disciplinary  action"  means  revocation,
    suspension,  probation,  supervision, reprimand, required
    education,  fines  or  any  other  action  taken  by  the
    Department against a person holding a license.;
         (11) 11.  "Impaired" means the inability to practice
    with reasonable skill  and  safety  due  to  physical  or
    mental   disabilities   as   evidenced   by   a   written
    determination   or  written  consent  based  on  clinical
    evidence  including  deterioration  through   the   aging
    process  or  loss  of  motor  skill, or abuse of drugs or
    alcohol, of sufficient  degree  to  diminish  a  person's
    ability to administer a nursing home.
(Source: P.A. 86-820.)

    (225 ILCS 70/5) (from Ch. 111, par. 3655)
    (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 89-507)
    Sec. 5. Board.
    (a)  There   is   hereby   created   the   Nursing   Home
Administrators  Administrator's  Licensing  and  Disciplinary
Board.  The Board shall consist of 9 members appointed by the
Governor.   All  shall be residents of the State of Illinois.
Three members shall be representatives of the general public.
Six members shall be nursing home administrators who  for  at
least 5 years prior to their appointments were licensed under
this  Act.   The  public members shall have no responsibility
for management or formation of policy of, nor  any  financial
interest  in,  nursing  homes as defined in this Act, nor any
other connection with the profession.  In appointing licensed
nursing home administrators, the  Governor  shall  take  into
consideration   the   recommendations  of  the  nursing  home
professional associations.
    (b)  Members Initial terms shall begin January  1,  1988.
Of  the  members  of  the  Board  first appointed, 3 shall be
appointed for terms of 2 years;  3  shall  be  appointed  for
terms  of  3  years,  and 3 shall be appointed for terms of 4
years.  Upon the expiration of the term of any member,  their
successor  shall  be  appointed  for a term of 4 years by the
Governor.  The  Governor  shall  fill  any  vacancy  for  the
remainder  of the unexpired term. Any member of the Board may
be removed by the Governor  for  cause.   Each  member  shall
serve  on  the  Board  until  his  or  her their successor is
appointed and qualified.  No member of the Board shall  serve
more than 2 consecutive 4 year terms.
    In  making  appointments  the  Governor  shall attempt to
insure that the various geographic regions of  the  State  of
Illinois are properly represented.
    The  Board in existence on the effective date of this Act
shall continue to exercise the powers  and  duties  specified
under  this  Act until a successor Board is designated by the
Governor.  The Governor shall designate the  successor  Board
within 90 days of the effective date of this Act.
    (c)  The Board shall annually elect one of its members as
chairperson  and  chairman,  one as vice chairperson chairman
and one as secretary. No officer shall be elected  more  than
twice  in  succession to the same office.  Each officer shall
serve until his or her their successor has been  elected  and
qualified.
    (d)  A  majority of the Board members currently appointed
shall constitute a quorum Five members  of  the  Board  shall
constitute a quorum. A vacancy in the membership of the Board
shall  not  impair  the right of a quorum to exercise all the
rights and perform all the duties of the  Board.  Any  action
taken  by  the  Board  under  this  Act  may be authorized by
resolution at any regular or special meeting  and  each  such
resolution  shall  take  effect immediately.  The Board shall
meet at least quarterly.  The Board is empowered to adopt all
rules and regulations necessary and incident  to  the  powers
granted to it under this Act.
    (e)  Each  member, and member-officer, of the Board shall
receive a per diem stipend as the Director of the Department,
hereinafter referred to as  the  Director,  shall  determine.
Each  member  shall  be  paid  their necessary expenses while
engaged in the performance of his or her their duties.
    (f)  (Blank) The Director shall  select  a  Nursing  Home
Administrator  Coordinator  who  shall not be a member of the
Board. The Nursing Home Administrator  coordinator  shall  be
the designated administrator of this Act.
    The   Director  shall  employ,  in  conformity  with  the
Personnel Code, not less than one investigator for every 5000
Nursing Home Administrators  licensed  in  the  State.   Each
investigator  shall  be  a  college  graduate with at least 2
years' investigative experience or be a licensed Nursing Home
Administrator for 2 years.  Upon the written request  of  the
Board,  the  Director  shall  employ,  in conformity with the
Personnel   Code,   such   other   professional,   technical,
investigative,  and  clerical  help,  either  on  a  full  or
part-time basis as the Board deems necessary for  the  proper
performance of its duties.
    (g)  (Blank) Upon the written request of the Board or the
Nursing  Home  Administrator  Coordinator,  the Department of
Alcoholism and Substance Abuse or  the  Department  of  State
Police   may   cooperate  and  assist  in  any  investigation
undertaken by the Board.
    (h)  Members of the Board shall be immune  from  suit  in
any  action  based upon any disciplinary proceedings or other
acts performed in good faith as members of the Board.
    (i)  (Blank)  The  Board  may  compile  and  establish  a
statewide roster of Nursing  Home  Administrators  and  other
associated field professionals, including the several medical
specialties,  who  have  agreed to serve from time to time as
advisors to the Nursing Home Administrator Coordinator.  Such
advisors  shall  assist  the   Nursing   Home   Administrator
Coordinator in investigations and participation in complaints
against  Nursing  Home  Administrators.   Such advisors shall
serve under contract and shall be reimbursed at a rate set by
the Director for each and every day they  shall  be  actually
advising  the  Nursing  Home  Administrator Coordinator, plus
reasonable  expenses  incurred.   While   serving   in   this
capacity,  the  advisor, for any act undertaken in good faith
and in the conduct of their duties under this Section,  shall
be immune from civil suit.
    The  Department  shall  exercise  the  powers  and duties
prescribed by the Civil Administrative Code of  Illinois  for
administration  of  licensing  acts  and  shall exercise such
other  powers  and  duties  necessary  for  effectuating  the
purpose of this Act.  The Department shall  promulgate  rules
to implement, interpret, or make specific  the provisions and
purposes  of  this  Act;  however no such rulemaking shall be
promulgated by the Department except upon the Board's written
approval.
    (j)  The Director shall give  due  consideration  to  all
recommendations  of the Board. If the Director disagrees with
or takes action contrary to a recommendation of the Board, he
or she shall provide the Board with a  written  and  specific
explanation of his or her action.
(Source: P.A. 85-932.)

    (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 89-507)
    Sec. 5. Board.
    (a)  There   is   hereby   created   the   Nursing   Home
Administrators  Administrator's  Licensing  and  Disciplinary
Board.  The Board shall consist of 9 members appointed by the
Governor.   All  shall be residents of the State of Illinois.
Three members shall be representatives of the general public.
Six members shall be nursing home administrators who  for  at
least 5 years prior to their appointments were licensed under
this  Act.   The  public members shall have no responsibility
for management or formation of policy of, nor  any  financial
interest  in,  nursing  homes as defined in this Act, nor any
other connection with the profession.  In appointing licensed
nursing home administrators, the  Governor  shall  take  into
consideration   the   recommendations  of  the  nursing  home
professional associations.
    (b)  Members Initial terms shall begin January  1,  1988.
Of  the  members  of  the  Board  first appointed, 3 shall be
appointed for terms of 2 years;  3  shall  be  appointed  for
terms  of  3  years,  and 3 shall be appointed for terms of 4
years.  Upon the expiration of the term of any member,  their
successor  shall  be  appointed  for a term of 4 years by the
Governor.  The  Governor  shall  fill  any  vacancy  for  the
remainder  of the unexpired term. Any member of the Board may
be removed by the Governor  for  cause.   Each  member  shall
serve  on  the  Board  until  his  or  her their successor is
appointed and qualified.  No member of the Board shall  serve
more than 2 consecutive 4 year terms.
    In  making  appointments  the  Governor  shall attempt to
insure that the various geographic regions of  the  State  of
Illinois are properly represented.
    The  Board in existence on the effective date of this Act
shall continue to exercise the powers  and  duties  specified
under  this  Act until a successor Board is designated by the
Governor.  The Governor shall designate the  successor  Board
within 90 days of the effective date of this Act.
    (c)  The Board shall annually elect one of its members as
chairperson  and  chairman,  one as vice chairperson chairman
and one as secretary.  No officer shall be elected more  than
twice   in succession to the same office.  Each officer shall
serve until his or her their successor has been  elected  and
qualified.
    (d)  A  majority of the Board members currently appointed
shall constitute a quorum Five members  of  the  Board  shall
constitute a quorum. A vacancy in the membership of the Board
shall  not  impair  the right of a quorum to exercise all the
rights and perform all the duties of the  Board.  Any  action
taken  by  the  Board  under  this  Act  may be authorized by
resolution at any regular or special meeting  and  each  such
resolution  shall  take  effect immediately.  The Board shall
meet at least quarterly.  The Board is empowered to adopt all
rules and regulations necessary and incident  to  the  powers
granted to it under this Act.
    (e)  Each  member, and member-officer, of the Board shall
receive a per diem stipend as the Director of the Department,
hereinafter referred to as  the  Director,  shall  determine.
Each  member  shall  be  paid  their necessary expenses while
engaged in the performance of his or her their duties.
    (f)  (Blank) The Director shall  select  a  Nursing  Home
Administrator  Coordinator  who  shall not be a member of the
Board. The Nursing Home Administrator  coordinator  shall  be
the designated administrator of this Act.
    The   Director  shall  employ,  in  conformity  with  the
Personnel Code, not less than one investigator for every 5000
Nursing Home Administrators  licensed  in  the  State.   Each
investigator  shall  be  a  college  graduate with at least 2
years' investigative experience or be a licensed Nursing Home
Administrator for 2 years.  Upon the written request  of  the
Board,  the  Director  shall  employ,  in conformity with the
Personnel   Code,   such   other   professional,   technical,
investigative,  and  clerical  help,  either  on  a  full  or
part-time basis as the Board deems necessary for  the  proper
performance of its duties.
    (g)  (Blank) Upon the written request of the Board or the
Nursing  Home  Administrator  Coordinator,  the Department of
Human  Services  or  the  Department  of  State  Police   may
cooperate  and  assist in any investigation undertaken by the
Board.
    (h)  Members of the Board shall be immune  from  suit  in
any  action  based upon any disciplinary proceedings or other
acts performed in good faith as members of the Board.
    (i)  (Blank)  The  Board  may  compile  and  establish  a
statewide roster of Nursing  Home  Administrators  and  other
associated field professionals, including the several medical
specialties,  who  have  agreed to serve from time to time as
advisors to the Nursing Home Administrator Coordinator.  Such
advisors  shall  assist  the   Nursing   Home   Administrator
Coordinator in investigations and participation in complaints
against  Nursing  Home  Administrators.   Such advisors shall
serve under contract and shall be reimbursed at a rate set by
the Director for each and every day they  shall  be  actually
advising  the  Nursing  Home  Administrator Coordinator, plus
reasonable  expenses  incurred.   While   serving   in   this
capacity,  the  advisor, for any act undertaken in good faith
and in the conduct of their duties under this Section,  shall
be immune from civil suit.
    The  Department  shall  exercise  the  powers  and duties
prescribed by the Civil Administrative Code of  Illinois  for
administration  of  licensing  acts  and  shall exercise such
other  powers  and  duties  necessary  for  effectuating  the
purpose of this Act.  The Department shall  promulgate  rules
to implement, interpret, or make specific  the provisions and
purposes  of  this  Act;  however no such rulemaking shall be
promulgated by the Department except upon the Board's written
approval.
    (j)  The Director shall give  due  consideration  to  all
recommendations  of the Board. If the Director disagrees with
or takes action contrary to the recommendation of the  Board,
he or she shall provide the Board with a written and specific
explanation of his or her action.
(Source: P.A. 89-507, eff. 7-1-97.)

    (225 ILCS 70/5.1 new)
    Sec.  5.1. Powers and duties; rules. The Department shall
exercise the  powers  and  duties  prescribed  by  the  Civil
Administrative   Code   of  Illinois  for  administration  of
licensing acts and  shall  exercise  such  other  powers  and
duties  necessary  for effectuating the purposes of this Act.
The Department shall adopt rules to implement, interpret,  or
make specific the provisions and purposes of this Act and may
prescribe  forms  that  shall  be  issued  in connection with
rulemaking.  The  Department  shall  transmit  the   proposed
rulemaking to the Board.
    The Department may solicit the advice of the Board on any
matter relating to the administration and enforcement of this
Act.
    The   Director  shall  employ,  in  conformity  with  the
Personnel Code, professional, technical,  investigative,  and
clerical help on a full-time or part-time  basis as necessary
for the proper performance of its duties.
    Upon   the   written   request  of  the  Department,  the
Department of Human  Services  or  the  Department  of  State
Police   may   cooperate  and  assist  in  any  investigation
undertaken by the Board.

    (225 ILCS 70/6) (from Ch. 111, par. 3656)
    Sec. 6. Application procedure. Applications for  original
licenses  shall be made to the Department in writing on forms
prescribed by the Department and shall be accompanied by  the
required  fee,  which  shall  not be refundable. The Any such
application shall require such information as in the judgment
of the Department will enable the Department Board to pass on
the qualifications of the applicant for a license.
(Source: P.A. 85-932.)

    (225 ILCS 70/7) (from Ch. 111, par. 3657)
    Sec.  7.  Examination.  The  Department  shall  authorize
examinations of applicants as nursing home administrators  at
such times and places as it may determine. Examinations shall
be  held  not  less  frequently  than 2 times every year. The
examination of applicants shall be of a character to  give  a
fair  test of the qualifications of the applicant to practice
nursing home administration.
    Applicants for examination as nursing home administrators
shall be required to pay, either to  the  Department  or  the
designated  testing  service,  a  fee  covering  the  cost of
providing  the  examination.  Failure  to  appear   for   the
examination  on  the  scheduled  date,  at the time and place
specified, after the applicant's application for  examination
has  been  received and acknowledged by the Department or the
designated testing service, shall result in the forfeiture of
the examination fee.
    If an applicant neglects, fails or  refuses  to  take  an
examination  or  fails  to  pass an examination for a license
under this Act  within  3  years  after  filing  his  or  her
licensure  application,  the  application shall be denied and
the examination shall be void. However,  such  applicant  may
thereafter make a new application for examination accompanied
by  the  required  fee,  and  must  furnish  proof of meeting
qualifications for examination in effect at the time  of  new
application.
    An  applicant  shall  have  one  year  from  the  date of
notification of successful completion of the  examination  to
apply  to the Department for a license. If an applicant fails
to apply within one year, the applicant shall be required  to
again take and pass the examination.
    The  Department may employ consultants for the purpose of
preparing and conducting examinations.
(Source: P.A. 85-932.)

    (225 ILCS 70/8) (from Ch. 111, par. 3658)
    Sec.  8.  Qualifications  for  license.   A   person   is
qualified   to   receive   a   license   as  a  nursing  home
administrator:
         (a)  who is at least 21 years of age,
         (b)  who has not  engaged  in  conduct  or  behavior
    determined to be grounds for discipline under this Act,
         (c)   who is in sound physical and mental health,
         (d)  (blank),
         (e)  who  is  a  graduate of a college or university
    deemed reputable and in good standing by the  Department,
    or   who   has   satisfactorily  completed  a  course  of
    instruction  approved  by   the   Department   containing
    subjects  embracing  the  laws governing the operation of
    nursing homes, the protection of the health and safety of
    patients in nursing  homes  and  the  elements  of  sound
    nursing  home administration, or who presents evidence to
    the Department  of  education,  training  and  experience
    deemed by the Department to be equivalent to of either of
    the above,
         (f)  who  passes  a written examination conducted by
    the Department to determine his or her fitness to receive
    a license as a nursing home administrator, and
         (g)  who pays the required fee.
(Source: P.A. 89-387, eff. 8-20-95.)

    (225 ILCS 70/9) (from Ch. 111, par. 3659)
    Sec.  9.  Temporary  license  without  examination.   The
Department  may in its discretion issue without examination a
temporary license as a  nursing  home  administrator  to  any
applicant  who  furnishes  the  Department  with satisfactory
proof under oath, on forms prescribed by the Department, that
he or she:
         (a)  is at least 21 years of age,
         (b)  who has not  engaged  in  conduct  or  behavior
    determined to be grounds for discipline under this Act,
         (c)  is in sound physical and mental health,
         (d)  (blank) is a citizen of the United States or is
    a lawfully admitted alien,
         (e)  is a graduate of a college or university deemed
    reputable  and in good standing by the Department, or who
    has satisfactorily  completed  a  course  of  instruction
    approved  by the Department containing subjects embracing
    the laws governing the operation of  nursing  homes,  the
    protection  of  the  health  and  safety  of  patients in
    nursing homes and the  elements  of  sound  nursing  home
    administration,   or   who   presents   evidence  to  the
    Department of education, training, and experience  deemed
    by  the  Department  to  be  equivalent  to either of the
    above,
         (f) (g)  has been accepted or appointed as a nursing
    home administrator in  a  facility  licensed  to  provide
    nursing care by the Illinois Department of Public Health,
    and
         (g) (h)  pays the required fee.
    The  applicant  shall  indicate the beginning date of the
period for which he or she has been  accepted  or  appointed,
and  shall specify the particular facility in which he or she
will serve as administrator.
    After receiving a temporary license under  this  Section,
the  holder of a temporary license shall take the examination
for a license under this Act that is scheduled  to  be  given
before  his  or  her temporary license expires. The temporary
license of an individual who passes the examination shall  be
valid  until  he  or  she  applies for and receives a license
under Section 7 of this Act.
    Temporary licenses issued pursuant to this Section  shall
be valid only for a period of one year from date of issuance.
A temporary license issued under this Section may be extended
only for one additional one-year period if the applicant took
the  examination  during  the  period of his or her temporary
license.  The applicant shall retake the examination prior to
the expiration of the extended temporary license.  The holder
of a temporary license  shall  be  entitled  to  serve  as  a
nursing   home   administrator  in  the  particular  facility
indicated on his or her application, but he or she shall  not
be  entitled  to  engage  in  the  practice  of  nursing home
administration in any other facility without  first  applying
to   the  Department  and  having  been  granted  an  amended
temporary license designating a different facility.
    Upon the termination of his or her service or  the  lapse
or revocation of his or her license, whichever is sooner, the
holder  of  a  temporary  license  shall  surrender it to the
Department.
    A temporary license may be revoked by the Department upon
proof that the holder has engaged in the practice of  nursing
home  administration in this State in a facility not named on
his or her application.
    An applicant for a temporary license as  a  nursing  home
administrator  may  act as a nursing home administrator for a
period of up to 60 days prior to the issuance of a license if
the  applicant  has  submitted  the  required  fee   and   an
application  for  licensure  to  the Department.  This 60-day
period may be extended until the next Board meeting if action
by the Board is required.  The applicant shall keep a copy of
the submitted application on the premises where the applicant
is engaged in the practice as a nursing home administrator.
    The authority to  practice  shall  terminate  immediately
upon  the  denial  of  licensure  by  the  Department  or the
withdrawal of the application.
(Source: P.A. 89-197, eff. 7-21-95.)

    (225 ILCS 70/10) (from Ch. 111, par. 3660)
    Sec. 10. License requirement. It shall  be  unlawful  for
any  person  to operate or manage a nursing home in the State
of Illinois unless he or she is licensed as  a  nursing  home
administrator in accordance with this Act.
    The  practice  of nursing home administration, or the use
of the  title  "Licensed  Nursing  Home  Administrator",  the
initials   "N.H.A."   or   any  other  word  or  abbreviation
indicating that he or she is a nursing home administrator, by
any person who has not been issued a license or whose license
has been suspended  or  revoked  is  hereby  declared  to  be
inimical  to  public  health  and welfare and to constitute a
public nuisance.
    Nothing in this Act or in  the  rules  adopted  hereunder
shall require an administrator of any facility or institution
operated  solely by and for persons who rely exclusively upon
treatment  by  spiritual  means  through  prayer  alone,   in
accordance  with  the  creed or tenets of any well-recognized
church or religious denomination, to be licensed as a nursing
home administrator.
(Source: P.A. 86-130.)

    (225 ILCS 70/11) (from Ch. 111, par. 3661)
    Sec. 11. Expiration; renewal; continuing  education.  The
expiration  date  and  renewal period for each license issued
under this Act shall be set by rule.
    Each licensee shall provide proof of having  obtained  36
hours  of continuing education in the 2 year period preceding
the renewal date of the license as  a  condition  of  license
renewal.   The continuing education requirement may be waived
in part or in whole for such good cause as may be  determined
by rule.
    Any   continuing   education   course  for  nursing  home
administrators approved by the National Continuing  Education
Review  Service  of  the  National  Association  of Boards of
Examiners of Nursing Home  Administrators  will  be  accepted
toward toward satisfaction of these requirements.
    Any   continuing   education   course  for  nursing  home
administrators sponsored by  the  Life  Services  Network  of
Illinois   Illinois  Association  of  Homes  for  the  Aging,
Illinois Council on  Long  Term  Care,  County  Nursing  Home
Association  of  Illinois,  Illinois Health Care Association,
Illinois  Chapter  of  American  College   of   Health   Care
Administrators,  and the Illinois Nursing Home Administrators
Association will be accepted  toward  satisfaction  of  these
requirements.
    Any school, college or university, State agency, or other
entity  may  apply  to the Department Board for approval as a
continuing education sponsor. Criteria for qualification as a
continuing education sponsor shall be established by rule.
    It  shall  be  the  responsibility  of  each   continuing
education sponsor to maintain records, as prescribed by rule,
to verify attendance.
    The  Department  shall  establish by rule a means for the
verification  of  completion  of  the  continuing   education
required   by   this   Section.   This  verification  may  be
accomplished  through  audits  of   records   maintained   by
registrants;  by requiring the filing of continuing education
certificates  with  the  Department;  or   by   other   means
established by the Department.
    Any  nursing  home administrator who has permitted his or
her license to expire or who has had his or  her  license  on
inactive  status  may  have  his  or  her license restored by
making  application  to  the  Department  and  filing   proof
acceptable  to  the  Department of his or her fitness to have
his or her license restored and by paying the  required  fee.
Proof  of  fitness  may include evidence certifying to active
lawful practice in another jurisdiction satisfactory  to  the
Department and by paying the required restoration fee.
    However,  any  nursing  home  administrator whose license
expired while he or she was (1) in federal service on  active
duty with the Armed Forces of the United States, or the State
Militia  called  into service or training, or (2) in training
or education under  the  supervision  of  the  United  States
preliminary to induction into the military services, may have
his  or  her  license  renewed or restored without paying any
lapsed  renewal  fees  if  within  2  years  after  honorable
termination of such service, training or education, he or she
furnishes the Department with satisfactory  evidence  to  the
effect that he or she has been so engaged and that his or her
service, training or education has been so terminated.
(Source: P.A. 86-1472; 87-546.)

    (225 ILCS 70/12) (from Ch. 111, par. 3662)
    Sec.  12. Inactive status. Any nursing home administrator
who notifies the Department in writing on forms prescribed by
the Department, may elect to place his or her license  on  an
inactive   status   and   shall,  subject  to  rules  of  the
Department, be excused from payment of renewal fees  and  the
completion  of  continuing education requirements until he or
she notifies the Department in writing of his or  her  intent
to restore his or her license.
    Any  nursing  home  administrator  requesting restoration
from inactive status shall be required  to  pay  the  current
renewal  fee  and  shall  be  required  to restore his or her
license, as provided by rule of the Department.
    Any nursing home administrator whose  license  is  in  an
inactive   status  shall  not  practice  as  a  nursing  home
administrator in the State of Illinois.
    Any  licensee  who  shall  practice  as  a  nursing  home
administrator while his  or  her  license  is  lapsed  or  on
inactive  status shall be considered to be practicing without
a license which shall be grounds for discipline under Section
17 of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 85-932.)

    (225 ILCS 70/13) (from Ch. 111, par. 3663)
    Sec.  13.  Endorsement.  The  Department  may,   in   its
discretion,  license as a nursing home administrator, without
examination, on payment of the required fee, an applicant who
is so licensed under the laws of another  U.S.  jurisdiction,
if  the  requirements for licensure in the other jurisdiction
in which the applicant was licensed, were, at the date of his
or   her   licensure,   substantially   equivalent   to   the
requirements  then  in  force  in  this  State;  or  if   the
applicant's  qualifications  were,  at the date of his or her
licensure in the other jurisdiction, substantially equivalent
to the requirements then in force in this State.
    Notwithstanding  the  provisions  of  this  Section,  all
applicants seeking licensure  under  this  Section  shall  be
required   to  take  and  pass  an  examination  testing  the
applicant's  knowledge  of  Illinois  law  relating  to   the
practice of nursing home administration.
    Applicants  have  3 years from the date of application to
complete the application process.  If  the  process  has  not
been  completed  in 3 years, the application shall be denied,
the fee shall be forfeited, and the  applicant  must  reapply
and   meet   the  requirements  in  effect  at  the  time  of
reapplication.
(Source: P.A. 86-596.)

    (225 ILCS 70/14) (from Ch. 111, par. 3664)
    Sec. 14. Fees.
    (a)  Except as provided in subsection (b), the  fees  for
the administration and enforcement of this Act, including but
not  limited  to original licensure, renewal, and restoration
fees, shall be set by rule of the Department.  The  following
fees shall are not be refundable.
    1.  The fee for application for a license is $100.
    (b)  Applicants   2.  In  addition,  applicants  for  any
examination  shall  be  required  to  pay,  either   to   the
Department  or  to  the  designated  testing  service,  a fee
covering the cost of determining the applicant's  eligibility
and  providing  the  examination.  Failure  to appear for the
examination on  the  scheduled  date,  the  time,  and  place
specified,  after the applicant's application for examination
has been received and acknowledged by the Department  or  the
designated testing service, shall result in the forfeiture of
the examination fee.
    3.    The   fee   for   a  license  for  a  nursing  home
administrator  registered  or  licensed  under  the  laws  of
another U.S. jurisdiction is $150.
    4.  The fee  for  the  renewal  of  a  license  shall  be
calculated at the rate of $50 per year.
    5.  The  fee  for the restoration of a license other than
from inactive status  is  $10  plus  payment  of  all  lapsed
renewal fees.
    6.  The  fee  to  be paid by an applicant for a temporary
license as provided under Section 9 of this Act is $75.
    7.  The fee for the issuance of a duplicate license,  for
the issuance of a replacement license for a license which has
been  lost or destroyed or for the issuance of a license with
a change of name or address other  than  during  the  renewal
period is $20.
    8.  The   fee  to  be  paid  for  a  certification  of  a
licensee's record for any purpose is $20.
    9.  The fee  to  be  paid  to  have  the  scoring  of  an
examination  administered  by  the  Department  reviewed  and
verified  is  $20  in  addition  to  the  fee required by the
testing service.
    10.  The fee by a licensee for a wall certificate showing
his licensure shall be the  actual  cost  of  producing  such
certificate.
    11.  The  fee for a roster of persons licensed as nursing
home administrators in this State shall be the actual cost of
producing such a roster.
    12.  The annual fee for continuing education sponsors  is
$500, however State agencies, colleges and universities shall
be exempt from the payment of this fee.
(Source: P.A. 85-932.)

    (225 ILCS 70/15) (from Ch. 111, par. 3665)
    Sec. 15.  Returned checks; fines. Any person who delivers
a  check  or other payment to the Department that is returned
to the Department unpaid by the  financial  institution  upon
which it is drawn shall pay to the Department, in addition to
the  amount already owed to the Department, a fine of $50. If
the check or other payment was for a renewal or issuance  fee
and  that  person practices without paying the renewal fee or
issuance fee and the fine due, an  additional  fine  of  $100
shall  be  imposed.  The fines imposed by this Section are in
addition to any other discipline provided under this Act  for
unlicensed  practice or practice on a nonrenewed license. The
Department shall notify the person that payment of  fees  and
fines  shall  be paid to the Department by certified check or
money order within 30 calendar days of the notification.  If,
after  the  expiration  of  30  days  from  the  date  of the
notification, the person has failed to submit  the  necessary
remittance,  the Department shall automatically terminate the
license or  certificate  or  deny  the  application,  without
hearing.  If, after termination or denial, the person seeks a
license  or  certificate,  he  or  she  shall  apply  to  the
Department for restoration or  issuance  of  the  license  or
certificate and pay all fees and fines due to the Department.
The  Department  may establish a fee for the processing of an
application for restoration of a license  or  certificate  to
pay all expenses of processing this application. The Director
may  waive  the  fines  due  under this Section in individual
cases where the  Director  finds  that  the  fines  would  be
unreasonable or unnecessarily burdensome.
(Source: P.A. 86-596; 87-1031.)

    (225 ILCS 70/17) (from Ch. 111, par. 3667)
    Sec. 17. Grounds for disciplinary action.
    (a)  The  Department  may  impose  fines  not  to  exceed
$1,000,  or  may  refuse to issue or to renew, or may revoke,
suspend, place on probation, censure, reprimand or take other
disciplinary action with regard to the license of any person,
for any one or combination of the following causes:
         (1)   1.  Intentional   material   misstatement   in
    furnishing information to the Department.
         (2) 2.  Conviction of any crime under  the  laws  of
    the  United States or any state or territory thereof that
    which is a felony or which is  a misdemeanor of which, an
    essential element of which is dishonesty, or of any crime
    that which is directly related to  the  practice  of  the
    profession of nursing home administration.
         (3) 3.  Making any misrepresentation for the purpose
    of   obtaining  a  license  licenses,  or  violating  any
    provision of this Act.
         (4) 4.  Immoral conduct in  the  commission  of  any
    act,  such  as sexual abuse or sexual misconduct, related
    to the licensee's practice.
         (5) 5.  Failing to respond  within  60  days,  to  a
    written  request  made  by the Department for information
    after consultation with the  Nursing  Home  Administrator
    Coordinator.
         (6)   6.  Engaging  in  dishonorable,  unethical  or
    unprofessional conduct of a character likely to  deceive,
    defraud or harm the public.
         (7)   7.  Habitual  use  or  addiction  to  alcohol,
    narcotics, stimulants, or any  other  chemical  agent  or
    drug  which  results  in  the  inability to practice with
    reasonable judgment, skill or safety.
         (8) 8.  Discipline by another U.S.  jurisdiction  if
    at  least  one  of  the grounds for the discipline is the
    same or  substantially  equivalent  to  those  set  forth
    herein.
         (9)   9.  A  finding  by  the  Department  that  the
    licensee, after having  his  or  her  license  placed  on
    probationary status has violated the terms of probation.
         (10)  10.  Willfully  making or filing false records
    or reports in his or  her  practice,  including  but  not
    limited  to  false  records  filed with State agencies or
    departments.
         (11)  11.  Physical  illness,  including   but   not
    limited  to,  deterioration through the aging process, or
    loss of motor skill that which results in  the  inability
    to  practice  the  profession  with  reasonable judgment,
    skill or safety.
         (12) 12.  Disregard or violation of this Act  or  of
    any  rule  or  regulation  issued  pursuant  to  this Act
    thereto.
         (13)  13.  Aiding  or  abetting   another   in   the
    violation  of  this  Act or any rule or regulation issued
    pursuant to this Act thereto.
         (14) 14.  Allowing one's license to be  used  by  an
    unlicensed person.
         (15)  15.  Conviction  of  any  crime  an  essential
    element of which is misstatement, fraud or dishonesty, or
    conviction  in  this  State or another state of any crime
    that which is a felony under the laws of  this  State  or
    conviction of a felony in a federal court.
         (16)  16.  Professional incompetence in the practice
    of nursing home administration.
         (17) 17.  Conviction of a violation of Section 12-19
    of the Criminal Code of 1961  for  the  abuse  and  gross
    neglect of a long term care facility resident.
         (18)  18.  Violation of the Nursing Home Care Act or
    of any rule issued under the Nursing Home Care Act.
    All proceedings to suspend, revoke, place on probationary
status,  or  take  any  other  disciplinary  action  as   the
Department  may  deem proper, with regard to a license on any
of the foregoing grounds, must be commenced  within  3  years
next  after  receipt  by  the  Department  of (i) a complaint
alleging the commission of or notice of the conviction  order
for  any  of the acts described herein or (ii) a referral for
investigation under Section 3-108 of the  Nursing  Home  Care
Act.
    The  entry  of  an order or judgment by any circuit court
establishing that any person holding a license under this Act
is a person  in  need  of  mental  treatment  operates  as  a
suspension  of  that  license.   That person may resume their
practice only upon the entry of a Department order based upon
a finding by the Board that they have been determined  to  be
recovered  from  mental  illness  by  the  court and upon the
Board's recommendation that they be permitted to resume their
practice.
    The Department, upon the  recommendation  of  the  Board,
shall  adopt  rules  which  set forth standards to be used in
determining what constitutes:
         (a)  when  a  person  will  be  deemed  sufficiently
    rehabilitated to warrant the public trust;
         (b)  dishonorable,   unethical   or   unprofessional
    conduct of a character likely  to  deceive,  defraud,  or
    harm the public;
         (c)  immoral  conduct  in  the commission of any act
    related to the licensee's practice; and
         (d)  professional incompetence in  the  practice  of
    nursing home administration.
    However,  no  such rule shall be admissible into evidence
in any civil action except for review of a licensing or other
disciplinary action under this Act.
    In enforcing this Section, the Department or Board,  upon
a  showing  of  a possible violation of paragraph 7 or 11, of
subsection (a), of Section  17,  may  compel  any  individual
licensed  to  practice under this Act, or who has applied for
licensure pursuant to this Act, to  submit  to  a  mental  or
physical  examination,  or  both,  as  required by and at the
expense  of  the  Department.   The  examining  physician  or
physicians shall be  those  specifically  designated  by  the
Department  or  Board.  The Department or Board may order the
examining physician  to  present  testimony  concerning  this
mental  or physical examination of the licensee or applicant.
No information shall be excluded by reason of any common  law
or statutory privilege relating to communications between the
licensee  or  applicant  and  the  examining  physician.  The
individual  to  be  examined  may  have,  at  his  or her own
expense, another physician  of  his  or  her  choice  present
during  all  aspects  of  the  examination.   Failure  of any
individual to submit to mental or physical examination,  when
directed,  shall  be  grounds  for  suspension  of his or her
license until such time as  the  individual  submits  to  the
examination  if  the Department Board finds, after notice and
hearing, that the refusal to submit to  the  examination  was
without reasonable cause.
    If  the Department or Board finds an individual a Nursing
Home Administrator unable to practice because of the  reasons
set  forth  in  this  Section,  the Department or Board shall
require such individual to submit  to  care,  counseling,  or
treatment   by  physicians  approved  or  designated  by  the
Department or Board, as a condition, term, or restriction for
continued, reinstated, or renewed licensure to  practice;  or
in lieu of care, counseling, or treatment, the Department may
file, or the Board may recommend to the Department to file, a
complaint   to  immediately  suspend,  revoke,  or  otherwise
discipline the license  of  the  individual.  Any  individual
Administrator,  whose  license  was  granted pursuant to this
Act,  or,  continued,  reinstated,  renewed,  disciplined  or
supervised, subject to such terms, conditions or restrictions
who shall fail to  comply  with  such  terms,  conditions  or
restrictions,  or  to  complete  a  required program of care,
counseling, or treatment, as determined by the  Nursing  Home
Administrator  Coordinator, shall be referred to the Director
for a determination as to whether the licensee shall have his
or her their license suspended immediately, pending a hearing
by the Department Board. In instances in which  the  Director
immediately  suspends a license under this Section, a hearing
upon such person's license must  be  convened  by  the  Board
within  15  days  after such suspension and completed without
appreciable delay.  The Department and Board shall  have  the
authority  to  review  the  subject administrator's record of
treatment and counseling regarding  the  impairment,  to  the
extent   permitted   by   applicable   federal  statutes  and
regulations  safeguarding  the  confidentiality  of   medical
records.
    An  individual  licensed  under  this Act, affected under
this Section, shall be afforded an opportunity to demonstrate
to the Department or Board that he or  she  they  can  resume
practice   in   compliance  with  acceptable  and  prevailing
standards under the provisions of his or her their license.
    (b)  Immunity  from  prosecution.   Any   individual   or
organization  acting  in  good faith, and not in a wilful and
wanton manner, in complying with this Act  by  providing  any
report  or  other  information  to  the  Department Board, or
assisting  in  the  investigation  or  preparation  of   such
information,  or  by  participating  in  proceedings  of  the
Department  Board,  or  by  serving as a member of the Board,
shall not, as  a  result  of  such  actions,  be  subject  to
criminal prosecution or civil damages.
    (c)  Indemnification.  Members  of the Board, and persons
retained under contract to assist and advise the Nursing Home
Administrator  Coordinator  in  an  investigation,  shall  be
indemnified by the State for any actions occurring within the
scope of services on or for the Board, done in good faith and
not wilful and wanton in nature.  The Attorney General  shall
defend  all  such  actions unless he or she determines either
that  there  would  be  a  conflict  of  interest   in   such
representation  or that the actions complained of were not in
good faith or were wilful and wanton.
    Should the Attorney  General  decline  representation,  a
person  entitled  to indemnification under this Section shall
have the right to employ counsel of his or her choice,  whose
fees  shall  be  provided by the State, after approval by the
Attorney General, unless there is a determination by a  court
that  the  member's  actions  were  not in good faith or were
wilful and wanton.
    A person entitled to indemnification under  this  Section
must  notify the Attorney General within 7 days of receipt of
notice of the initiation of any action involving services  of
the  Board.   Failure to so notify the Attorney General shall
constitute an absolute waiver of the right to a  defense  and
indemnification.
    The  Attorney General shall determine within 7 days after
receiving such notice, whether he or she  will  undertake  to
represent  a  person  entitled  to indemnification under this
Section.
    (d)  The determination by a circuit court that a licensee
is subject to involuntary admission or judicial admission  as
provided in the "Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities
Code", as amended, operates as an automatic suspension.  Such
suspension  will  end only upon a finding by a court that the
patient is no longer  subject  to  involuntary  admission  or
judicial  admission  and  issues  an  order  so  finding  and
discharging  the  patient; and upon the recommendation of the
Board to the Director that the licensee be allowed to  resume
his or her practice.
    (e)  The  Department  may  refuse to issue or may suspend
the license certificate of any person who  fails  to  file  a
return,  or  to  pay  the tax, penalty or interest shown in a
filed return, or to pay any final assessment of tax,  penalty
or  interest,  as required by any tax Act administered by the
Illinois Department  of  Revenue,  until  such  time  as  the
requirements of any such tax Act are satisfied.
    (f)  The  Illinois  Department  of  Public  Health  shall
transmit  to  the Department a list of those facilities which
receive an "A" violation as defined in Section 1-129  of  the
Nursing Home Care Act.
(Source: P.A. 89-197, eff. 7-21-95.)

    (225 ILCS 70/18) (from Ch. 111, par. 3668)
    Sec. 18. Cease and desist order.
    (a)  If  any  person  who  is not a licensed nursing home
administrator violates a  the  provision  of  this  Act,  the
Director  may,  in  the  name  of  the People of the State of
Illinois, through  the  Attorney  General  of  the  State  of
Illinois  or  the State's Attorney of any county in which the
action is brought, petition,  for  an  order  enjoining  such
violation or for an order enforcing compliance with this Act.
Upon  the  filing  of a verified petition in court, the court
may issue a temporary restraining order,  without  notice  or
bond,  and  may  preliminarily  and  permanently  enjoin such
violation., and If it is established  that  such  person  has
violated or is violating the injunction, the Court may punish
the  offender  for contempt of court.  Proceedings under this
Section shall be in addition to, and  not  in  lieu  of,  all
other remedies and penalties provided by this Act.
    (b)  If  any  person  shall  practice  as  a nursing home
administrator or hold himself or herself  out  as  a  nursing
home   administrator   without   being   licensed  under  the
provisions of  this  Act,  then  any  licensed  nursing  home
administrator,  any  interested  party, or any person injured
thereby may, in addition to the Director, petition for relief
as provided in subsection (a) of this Section.
    Whoever knowingly practices or offers to practice nursing
home administration in this State without being licensed  for
that purpose shall be guilty of a Class A misdemeanor and for
each  subsequent  conviction,  shall  be  guilty of a Class 4
felony.
    (c)  Whenever in the opinion of the Department any person
not licensed in good standing violates any provision of  this
Act,  the  Department  may  issue a rule to show cause why an
order to cease and desist should not be entered  against  him
or  her.  The rule shall clearly set forth the grounds relied
upon by the Department  and  shall  provide  a  period  of  7
working  days  from the date of the rule to file an answer to
the satisfaction of the Department.  Failure to answer to the
satisfaction of the Department shall cause an order to  cease
and desist to be issued immediately forthwith.
(Source: P.A. 85-932.)

    (225 ILCS 70/19) (from Ch. 111, par. 3669)
    Sec.  19.  Investigation;  hearing notification. Upon the
motion of either the Department or  the  Board  or  upon  the
verified  complaint  in  writing  of any person setting forth
facts that which, if proven,  would  constitute  grounds  for
suspension  or  revocation  under Section 17 of this Act, the
Department shall investigate the actions of  any  person,  so
accused,  who  holds  or represents that he or she holds they
hold a license. Such  a  person  is  hereinafter  called  the
accused.
    The   Department   shall,  before  suspending,  revoking,
placing  on  probationary  status,  or   taking   any   other
disciplinary  action  as  the Department may deem proper with
regard to any license at least 30 days prior to the date  set
for the hearing, notify the accused in writing of any charges
made  and  the  time  and  place for a hearing of the charges
before the Board, direct them to file their written answer to
such notice thereto to the Board under oath  within  30  days
after the service on them of such notice and inform them that
if  they  fail  to  file  such  answer  default will be taken
against them and their license  may  be  suspended,  revoked,
placed  on  probationary  status,  or have other disciplinary
action, including limiting the scope,  nature  or  extent  of
their  practice, as the Department may deem proper taken with
regard thereto.
    Such written notice and any notice  in  such  proceedings
thereafter may be served by delivery of the same, personally,
to  the  accused person, or by mailing the same by registered
or certified mail to the address last  theretofore  specified
by the accused in their last notification to the Department.
(Source: P.A. 85-932.)

    (225 ILCS 70/20) (from Ch. 111, par. 3670)
    Sec.  20.  Board hearing; recommendation. At the time and
place fixed in the notice, the Board provided for in this Act
shall proceed to hear the charges and both the accused person
and the complainant shall be accorded  ample  opportunity  to
present in person, or by counsel, such statements, testimony,
evidence  and  argument as may be pertinent to the charges or
to any defense thereto.  The Board may continue such  hearing
from  time  to time.  If the Board is not sitting at the time
and place fixed in the notice or at the  time  and  place  to
which  the  hearing  has been continued, the Department shall
continue such hearing for a period not to exceed 30 days.
    In case the accused person, after receiving notice, fails
to file an answer, the Board may recommend that  his  or  her
license  be  suspended,  revoked  or  placed  on probationary
status, or the  Board  may  recommend  whatever  disciplinary
action  as  it may deem proper, without a hearing, if the act
or acts charged constitute sufficient grounds for such action
under this Act.
    The Board has the authority to recommend to the  Director
that  probation be granted or that other disciplinary action,
be taken as it deems proper.  If disciplinary  action,  other
than  suspension  or  revocation,  is  taken  the  Board  may
recommend that the Director impose reasonable limitations and
requirements upon the accused registrant to insure compliance
with the terms of the probation or other disciplinary action,
including,  but  not  limited  to,  regular  reporting by the
accused  to  the  Department  of   their   actions,   placing
themselves  under  the  care  of  a  qualified  physician for
treatment, or limiting their practice in such manner  as  the
Director may require.
    The  Director,  after  consultation with the Nursing Home
Administrator  Coordinator,  may  temporarily   suspend   the
license  of  a  nursing home administrator without a hearing,
simultaneously with the  institution  of  proceedings  for  a
hearing  provided  under  this  Section if the Director finds
that evidence in his or  her  possession  indicates  that  an
administrator's  continuation in practice would constitute an
immediate danger to the public.  If  the  Director  suspends,
temporarily,  the  license  of  an  administrator  without  a
hearing,  a hearing by the Board shall be held within 15 days
after such suspension has occurred  and  shall  be  concluded
without appreciable delay.
(Source: P.A. 85-932.)

    (225 ILCS 70/20.1 new)
    Sec. 20.1. Summary suspension. The Director may summarily
suspend the license of a nursing home administrator without a
hearing,  simultaneously  with the institution of proceedings
for a hearing provided under this  Section  if  the  Director
finds  that  evidence in his or her possession indicates that
an administrator's continuation in practice would  constitute
an  immediate danger to the public. If the Director summarily
suspends the license of an administrator without a hearing, a
hearing shall be held within 30 days after the suspension has
occurred.

    (225 ILCS 70/21) (from Ch. 111, par. 3671)
    Sec. 21. Appointment of  hearing  officer.  The  Director
shall have the authority to appoint an attorney duly licensed
to  practice  law  in  the  State of Illinois to serve as the
hearing officer in any action for refusal to issue, renew, or
discipline a license before the  Board  to  suspend,  revoke,
place  on probationary status, or take any other disciplinary
action with regard to a license. The  hearing  officer  shall
have  full  authority to conduct the hearing.  There shall be
present at least one member of the Board at any such hearing.
The hearing officer shall report his or her findings of fact,
conclusions of law, and recommendations to the  Board  within
30 days of the receipt of the record. The Board shall have 60
90 days after from receipt of the report to review the report
of  the  hearing  officer  and  present its their findings of
fact,  conclusions  of  law,  and  recommendations   to   the
Director. If the Board fails to present its report within the
60  90  day  period, the Director may issue an order based on
the report of the hearing officer.   However,  if  the  Board
does  present its report within the specified 60 90 days, the
Director's order shall be based upon the report of the Board.
If the Director disagrees  with  the  recommendation  of  the
Board or the hearing officer, the Director may issue an order
in  contravention  of  the Board's report. The Director shall
promptly provide a written explanation to the  Board  on  any
such disagreement.
(Source: P.A. 85-932.)

    (225 ILCS 70/22) (from Ch. 111, par. 3672)
    Sec.  22.  Subpoena  power.  The  Board or Department has
power to subpoena and bring before  it  any  person  in  this
State  and  to take testimony either orally or by deposition,
or both, with the same fees  and  mileage  and  in  the  same
manner  as  is  prescribed by law for judicial proceedings in
civil cases.
    The Department Board, upon a determination that  probable
cause  exists  that a violation of one or more of the grounds
for discipline listed  in  Section  17  has  occurred  or  is
occurring, may subpoena the records of an individual licensed
under  this  Act,  provided,  that prior to the submission of
such records to the Board,  all  information  indicating  the
identity  of  any resident shall be removed and deleted.  The
use of such records shall be restricted  to  members  of  the
Board,   the  Nursing  Home  Administrator  Coordinator,  and
appropriate staff  of  the  Department  for  the  purpose  of
determining   the  existence  of  one  or  more  grounds  for
discipline of the nursing home administrator as provided  for
by  Section  17  of  this Act.  Any such review of individual
residents' records shall be conducted by the Board in  strict
confidentiality, provided that such resident records shall be
admissible  in  a disciplinary hearing, before the Department
Board,  when  necessary  to  substantiate  the  grounds   for
discipline  alleged  against the administrator licensed under
this Act, and provided further, that nothing herein shall  be
deemed to supersede the provisions of Part 21 of Article VIII
of  the  "Code  of  Civil  Procedure",  as  now  or hereafter
amended, to the extent applicable.
    The Director, the designated  hearing  officer,  and  any
member  of  the Board each have the power to administer oaths
at  any  hearing  that  which  the  Board  or  Department  is
authorized by law to conduct and any other  oaths  authorized
in an Act administered by the Department.
(Source: P.A. 85-932.)

    (225 ILCS 70/23) (from Ch. 111, par. 3673)
    Sec. 23. Record of proceedings. Stenographer; transcript.
The  Department, at its expense, shall provide a stenographer
to take down the testimony  and  preserve  a  record  of  all
proceedings  at  any formal the hearing of any case wherein a
license may be revoked,  suspended,  placed  on  probationary
status,  or  other  disciplinary  action  taken  with  regard
thereto.  The  notice  of  hearing,  complaint, and all other
documents in the nature  of  pleadings  and  written  motions
filed  in  the  proceedings, the transcript of testimony, the
report of the Board, and the orders of the  Department  shall
be  constitute  the record of the proceedings. The Department
shall furnish a  transcript  of  the  record  to  any  person
interested  in  such hearing upon payment of the fee required
under  Section  60f  of  the  Civil  Administrative  Code  of
Illinois.
(Source: P.A. 87-1031.)

    (225 ILCS 70/24) (from Ch. 111, par. 3674)
    Sec. 24. Motion for rehearing.  The Board  shall  present
to  the  Director  a  written  report  of  its  findings  and
recommendations.   A copy of such report shall be served upon
the accused person, either personally  or  by  registered  or
certified  mail.   Within  20 30 days after such service, the
accused person may present to the Department a their  motion,
in  writing,  for  a  rehearing,  which  written motion shall
specify the particular grounds for rehearing ground therefor.
If the accused person orders and pays for a transcript of the
record  as  provided  in  Section  23,  the   time   elapsing
thereafter  and  before such transcript is ready for delivery
to them shall not be counted as part of such 30 days.
    At the expiration of the time allowed for filing a motion
for rehearing, the Director may take the  action  recommended
by  the  Board. Upon the suspension, revocation, placement on
probationary status, or the taking of any other  disciplinary
action,  deemed  proper  by  the  Board,  with  regard to the
license, the accused shall surrender  their  license  to  the
Department,  if ordered to do so  by the Department, and upon
their failure or refusal so to do, the Department  may  seize
the same.
    Each   order   of   revocation,   suspension,   or  other
disciplinary action shall contain a brief, concise  statement
of  the  ground or grounds upon which the Department's action
is based, as well as the specific  terms  and  conditions  of
such  action.  This document shall be retained as a permanent
record by the Board and the Director.
    The Department shall at least annually publish a list  of
the  names  of  all persons disciplined under this Act in the
preceding 12 months.  Such  lists  shall  be  mailed  by  the
Department to any person in the State upon request.
    In   those   instances  where  an  order  of  revocation,
suspension, or other disciplinary action has been rendered by
virtue of a Nursing Home  Administrator's  physical  illness,
including,  but  not  limited  to,  deterioration through the
aging process, or loss of motor skill  which  results  in  an
inability  to  practice  with  reasonable judgment, skill, or
safety, the Department shall only permit this  document,  and
the  record  of the hearing incident thereto, to be observed,
inspected, viewed, or copied pursuant to court order.
(Source: P.A. 85-932.)

    (225 ILCS 70/24.1 new)
    Sec.  24.1.  Surrender  of  license;  record;   list   of
disciplinees.  Upon  the suspension, revocation, placement on
probationary status, or the taking of any other  disciplinary
action  deemed  proper by the Board with regard to a license,
the accused  shall  surrender  his  or  her  license  to  the
Department,  if  ordered to do so by the Department, and upon
his or her failure or refusal to do so,  the  Department  may
seize the license.
    Each   order   of   revocation,   suspension,   or  other
disciplinary action shall contain a brief, concise  statement
of  the  ground or grounds upon which the Department's action
is based, as well as the specific  terms  and  conditions  of
such  action.  This document shall be retained as a permanent
record by the Board and the Director.
    The Department shall at least annually publish a list  of
the  names  of  all persons disciplined under this Act in the
preceding 12 months.  Such  lists  shall  be  mailed  by  the
Department to any person in the State upon request.
    In   those   instances  where  an  order  of  revocation,
suspension, or other disciplinary action has been rendered by
virtue of a nursing home  administrator's  physical  illness,
including  but not limited to deterioration through the aging
process, or loss of motor skill that results in an  inability
to  practice  with reasonable judgment, skill, or safety, the
Department shall only permit this document, and the record of
the hearing incident  thereto,  to  be  observed,  inspected,
viewed, or copied pursuant to court order.

    (225 ILCS 70/28) (from Ch. 111, par. 3678)
    Sec.  28.  Rehearing  on  order of Director. Whenever the
Director believes justice has not been done in the refusal to
issue or  renew  a  license  or  revocation,  suspension,  or
discipline  of  a  license,  he or she may order a rehearing.
None  of  the  disciplinary  functions,  powers  and   duties
enumerated  in  this Act shall be exercised by the Department
except upon the action and report in writing of the Board.
    In all instances, under this Act, in which the Board  has
rendered  a  recommendation to the Director with respect to a
particular administrator, the Director shall,  in  the  event
that he or she disagrees with or takes action contrary to the
recommendation  of  the  Board,  file  with the Board and the
Secretary of State his or her  specific  written  reasons  of
disagreement  with  the  Board.   Such reasons shall be filed
within 30 days of the occurrence of the  Director's  contrary
position having been taken.
    The  action  and  report  in writing of a majority of the
Board designated  is  sufficient  authority  upon  which  the
Director may act.
    Whenever  the  Director  is  satisfied  that  substantial
justice  has  not been done either in an examination, or in a
formal disciplinary action, or refusal to restore a  license,
he  or  she  may  order a re-examination or re-hearing by the
same or other examiners.
(Source: P.A. 85-932.)

    (225 ILCS 70/37 rep.)
    Section 45. The Nursing Home Administrators Licensing and
Disciplinary Act is amended by repealing Section 37.

    Section 50. The Physician Assistant Practice Act of  1987
is amended by changing Sections 6, 9, 10, 11, 14, 16, 17, 21,
22.1,  22.2,  22.5,  22.7, 22.11, 22.12, and 24 and by adding
Section 14.1 as follows:
    (225 ILCS 95/6) (from Ch. 111, par. 4606)
    Sec. 6. Title; billing. No physician assistant shall  use
the  title of doctor or associate with his or her name or any
other term that which would indicate to other persons that he
or she is qualified to engage  in  the  general  practice  of
medicine.  A physician assistant shall not be allowed to bill
patients  or  in  any way to charge for services.  Nothing in
this Act, however, shall be so construed as  to  prevent  the
employer  of a physician assistant from charging for services
rendered  by  the  physician  assistant.    The   supervising
physician   shall   file   with   the  Department  notice  of
employment, discharge, or supervisory control of a  physician
assistant at the time of employment, discharge, or assumption
of supervisory control of a physician assistant.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 95/9) (from Ch. 111, par. 4609)
    Sec.  9.  Application  for  licensure.  Applications  for
original  licenses shall be made to the Department in writing
on  forms  prescribed  by  the  Department   and   shall   be
accompanied   by   the  required  fee,  which  shall  not  be
refundable.  An  Any  such  application  shall  require  such
information that as in the judgment of  the  Department  will
enable  the  Department  to pass on the qualifications of the
applicant for a license. An Such  application  shall  include
evidence  of  passage  of  the  examination  of  the National
Commission on the Certification of Physician  Assistants,  or
its  successor  agency,  and proof that the applicant holds a
valid certificate issued by that Commission.
    Applicants have 3 years from the date of  application  to
complete the application process. If the process has not been
completed  in  3  years, the application shall be denied, the
fee shall be forfeited, and the applicant  must  reapply  and
meet the requirements in effect at the time of reapplication.
    If  an  applicant fails to obtain registration under this
Act  within  3  years  after  filing  his  application,   the
application shall be denied. However, such applicant may make
a new application, accompanied by the required fee.
(Source: P.A. 86-596.)

    (225 ILCS 95/10) (from Ch. 111, par. 4610)
    Sec. 10. Identification. No person shall use the title or
perform  the duties of "Physician assistant" unless he or she
is a qualified holder of a license issued by  the  Department
certificate  as  provided in this Act.  A physician assistant
shall wear on his or  her  person  a  visible  identification
indicating  that  he  or  she  is  certified  as  a physician
assistant while acting in the course of his or her duties.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 95/11) (from Ch. 111, par. 4611)
    Sec. 11. Committee.  There  is  established  a  physician
assistant  advisory committee to the Medical Licensing Board.
The physician assistant advisory committee shall  review  and
make  recommendations  to  the  Board  regarding  all matters
relating to physician  assistants.  The  physician  assistant
advisory  committee  shall be composed of 7 members. Three of
the 7 members shall be physicians, 2 of whom shall be members
of the Board and appointed to the advisory committee  by  the
chairman.  One physician, not a member of the Board, shall be
a supervisor of a certified physician assistant and shall  be
approved  by  the Governor from a list of Illinois physicians
supervising certified  physician  assistants.  Three  members
shall  be  physician  assistants, certified under the law and
appointed by the Governor from a list of 10 names recommended
by  the  Board  of  Directors  of  the  Illinois  Academy  of
Physician Assistants. One member, not employed or having  any
material   interest  in  any  health  care  field,  shall  be
appointed by the  Governor  and  represent  the  public.  The
chairman  of the physician assistant advisory committee shall
be a member elected by  a  majority  vote  of  the  physician
assistant  advisory  committee unless already a member of the
Board. The physician assistant advisory committee is required
to meet and report to the Board quarterly  and  as  physician
assistant  issues arise. Initial appointment to the physician
assistant advisory committee shall be  made  within  90  days
after the effective date of this Section. The terms of office
of  each  of  the  original  7  members shall be at staggered
intervals. One physician and one  physician  assistant  shall
serve  for  a  2  year  term. One physician and one physician
assistant shall serve a  3  year  term.  One  physician,  one
physician  assistant  and  the  public member shall serve a 4
year term. Upon the expiration of the term of any member, his
successor shall be appointed for a term of  4  years  in  the
same manner as the initial appointment. No member shall serve
more than 2 consecutive terms.
    The members of the physician assistant advisory committee
shall   be  reimbursed  for  all  authorized  legitimate  and
necessary expenses incurred in attending the meetings of  the
committee.
    A  majority of the physician assistant advisory committee
members currently appointed  shall  constitute  a  quorum.  A
vacancy  in  the membership of the committee shall not impair
the right of a quorum to perform all of  the  duties  of  the
committee.
    Members  of  the  physician  assistant advisory committee
shall  have  no  liability  for  any  action  based  upon   a
disciplinary  proceeding  or other activity performed in good
faith as a member of the committee.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 95/14) (from Ch. 111, par. 4614)
    Sec. 14. Issuance of license.
    (a)  Upon the satisfactory completion of application  and
examination  procedures  and  compliance  with the applicable
rules  of  the  Department,  the  Department  shall  issue  a
physician assistant license  certificate  to  the  qualifying
applicant  who  holds  a  certificate  issued by the National
Commission on the Certification of  Physician  Assistants  or
equivalent successor agency.
    (b)  Those Individuals who have successfully completed an
approved  physician  assistant program as determined by rules
of the Department, and  who  have  made  application  to  the
Department  and  submitted  evidence  to  the  Department  of
admission  to  the certifying examination administered by the
National  Commission  on  the  Certification   of   Physician
Assistants,  or  its  successor  agency,   shall  be issued a
temporary license that  certificate  which  shall  allow  the
applicant to practice until:
         (1)  he  or  she  receives  certification  from  the
    National  Commission  on  the  Certification of Physician
    Assistants or its successor agency; or
         (2)  fifteen months have  elapsed,  whichever  comes
    first.
    Under  no  circumstances shall such applicant continue to
practice  on  the   temporary   license   certificate   after
notification that he or she has failed the examination.  Such
authorization shall not be renewable.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 95/14.1 new)
    Sec. 14.1. Fees.
    (a)  The  Department shall provide by rule for a schedule
of fees to be paid for licenses by all applicants.  All  fees
are not refundable.
    (b)  Except as provided in subsection (c) below, the fees
for the administration and enforcement of this Act, including
but   not   limited   to  original  licensure,  renewal,  and
restoration, shall be set by rule.
    (c)  All  moneys  collected  under  this   Act   by   the
Department  shall  be deposited in the Illinois State Medical
Disciplinary Fund in the State Treasury and used (1)  in  the
exercise  of  its  powers and performance of its duties under
this Act, as such use is made  by  the  Department;  (2)  for
costs directly related to license renewal of persons licensed
under  this  Act; (3) for the costs incurred by the physician
assistant advisory committee in the exercise  of  its  powers
and  performance of its duties under this Act, as such use is
made by the Department; and  (4)  for  direct  and  allocable
indirect   costs  related  to  the  public  purposes  of  the
Department of Professional Regulation.
    All earnings received from investment of  moneys  in  the
Illinois  State  Medical Disciplinary Fund shall be deposited
into the Illinois State Medical Disciplinary Fund  and  shall
be used for the same purposes as fees deposited in the Fund.

    (225 ILCS 95/16) (from Ch. 111, par. 4616)
    Sec.  16.  Expiration;  renewal.  The expiration date and
renewal period for each license issued under this  Act  shall
be  set  by rule.  Renewal shall be conditioned on paying the
required fee and by meeting such other requirements as may be
established by rule.
    Any physician assistant who  has  permitted  his  or  her
license  to  expire  or  who  has  had  his or her license on
inactive status may have the his license restored  by  making
application  to the Department and filing proof acceptable to
the Department of his or her fitness to have the his  license
restored,  and  by  paying  the  required fees. Such Proof of
fitness may  include  sworn  evidence  certifying  to  active
lawful practice in another jurisdiction.
    If  the  physician assistant has not maintained an active
practice  in  another  jurisdiction   satisfactory   to   the
Department,  the Department shall determine, by an evaluation
program  established  by  rule,  his  or  her   fitness   for
restoration of the his license and shall establish procedures
and requirements for such restoration.
    However,  any  physician  assistant whose license expired
while he or she was (1) in federal  service  on  active  duty
with  the  Armed  Forces  of  the United States, or the State
Militia called into service or training, or (2)  in  training
or  education  under  the  supervision  of  the United States
preliminary to induction into the military service, may  have
the  his  license  restored without paying any lapsed renewal
fees if within 2 years after honorable  termination  of  such
service,  training,  or  education  he  or  she furnishes the
Department with satisfactory evidence to the effect  that  he
or  she  has  been  so  engaged  and that his or her service,
training, or education has been so terminated.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 95/17) (from Ch. 111, par. 4617)
    Sec. 17. Inactive status.  Any  physician  assistant  who
notified the Department in writing on forms prescribed by the
Department,  may  elect  to  place  his  or her license on an
inactive  status  and  shall,  subject  to   rules   of   the
Department,  be excused from payment of renewal fees until he
or she notifies the Department  in  writing  of  his  or  her
intention to restore the his license.
    Any   physician  assistant  requesting  restoration  from
inactive status shall be required to pay the current  renewal
fee  and  shall be required to restore his or her license, as
provided in Section 16 of this Act.
    Any physician assistant whose license is in  an  inactive
status shall not practice in the State of Illinois.
    Any  licensee  who  shall engage in practice while his or
her  license  is  lapsed  or  on  inactive  status  shall  be
considered to be practicing without a license, which shall be
grounds for discipline under Section 21 of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 95/21) (from Ch. 111, par. 4621)
    Sec. 21. Grounds for disciplinary action.
    (a)  The Department may refuse to issue or to  renew,  or
may   revoke,   suspend,   place  on  probation,  censure  or
reprimand, or take other disciplinary action with  regard  to
any  license issued under this Act as the Department may deem
proper, including the issuance of fines not to  exceed  $5000
for  each  violation,  for  any  one  or  combination  of the
following causes:
         (1)   1.  Material   misstatement   in    furnishing
    information to the Department.;
         (2) 2.  Violations of this Act, or the rules adopted
    under this Act promulgated hereunder.;
         (3)  3.  Conviction  of  any crime under the laws of
    any U.S. jurisdiction that thereof which is a  felony  or
    that  which  is  a  misdemeanor,  an essential element of
    which is dishonesty, or of any crime  which  is  directly
    related to the practice of the profession.;
         (4) 4.  Making any misrepresentation for the purpose
    of obtaining licenses.;
         (5) 5.  Professional incompetence.;
         (6)   6.  Aiding  or  assisting  another  person  in
    violating any provision of this Act or its rules.;
         (7)  7.  Failing,  within  60   days,   to   provide
    information  in response to a written request made by the
    Department.;
         (8)  8.  Engaging  in  dishonorable,  unethical,  or
    unprofessional  conduct,  as  defined  by  rule,   of   a
    character   likely  to  deceive,  defraud,  or  harm  the
    public.;
         (9) 9.  Habitual or excessive use  or  addiction  to
    alcohol,  narcotics,  stimulants,  or  any other chemical
    agent  or  drug  that  which  results  in   a   physician
    assistant's   assistants'   inability  to  practice  with
    reasonable judgment, skill, or safety.;
         (10) 10.  Discipline by another U.S. jurisdiction or
    foreign nation, if at least one  of  the  grounds  for  a
    discipline  is  the  same  or substantially equivalent to
    those set forth in this Section herein.;
         (11)  11.  Directly  or  indirectly  giving  to   or
    receiving    from    any   person,   firm,   corporation,
    partnership, or association any fee,  commission,  rebate
    or  other  form  of  compensation  for  any  professional
    services not actually or personally rendered.;
         (12)  12.  A  finding by the Disciplinary Board that
    the licensee, after having his or her license  placed  on
    probationary status has violated the terms of probation.;
         (13) 13.  Abandonment of a patient.;
         (14)  14.  Willfully  making or filing false records
    or reports in his or  her  practice,  including  but  not
    limited  to  false  records  filed with state agencies or
    departments.;
         (15) 15.  Willfully failing to report an instance of
    suspected child abuse  or  neglect  as  required  by  the
    Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.;
         (16)   16.  Physical   illness,  including  but  not
    limited to, deterioration through the aging  process,  or
    loss  of  motor skill, mental illness, or disability that
    which results in the inability to practice the profession
    with reasonable judgment, skill or safety.;
         (17)  17.  Being  named  as  a  perpetrator  in   an
    indicated report by the Department of Children and Family
    Services  under  the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting
    Act, and upon proof by clear and convincing evidence that
    the licensee has caused a child to be an abused child  or
    neglected  child  as  defined in the Abused and Neglected
    Child Reporting Act.;
         (18) 18.  Conviction in this State or another  state
    of  any  crime  that  which is a felony under the laws of
    this State, or  conviction  of  a  felony  in  a  federal
    court.;
         (19)  19.  Gross  malpractice resulting in permanent
    injury or death of a patient.;
         (20) 20.  Employment of  fraud,  deception,  or  any
    unlawful means in applying for or securing a license as a
    physician assistant.;
         (21)  21.  Exceeding  the authority delegated to him
    or her  by his or her supervising physician in guidelines
    established by the physician/physician assistant team.;
         (22) 22.  Immoral conduct in the commission  of  any
    act,  such  as  sexual abuse, sexual misconduct or sexual
    exploitation, related to the licensee's practice.;
         (23)  23.  Violation  of  the  Health  Care   Worker
    Self-Referral Act.
    (b)  The  Department  may  refuse to issue or may suspend
the license of any person who fails to file a return,  or  to
pay  the tax, penalty or interest shown in a filed return, or
to pay any final assessment of the tax, penalty, or  interest
as  required  by  any  tax  Act  administered by the Illinois
Department of Revenue, until such time as the requirements of
any such tax Act are satisfied.
    (c)  The determination by a circuit court that a licensee
is subject to involuntary admission or judicial admission  as
provided  in the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities
Code operates as an automatic suspension. The Such suspension
will end only upon a finding by a court that the  patient  is
no  longer  subject  to  involuntary  admission  or  judicial
admission  and issues an order so finding and discharging the
patient,; and upon the  recommendation  of  the  Disciplinary
Board  to the Director that the licensee be allowed to resume
his or her practice.
    (d)  In enforcing this Section,  the  Department  upon  a
showing  of  a  possible  violation  may compel an individual
licensed to practice under this Act, or who has  applied  for
licensure  under  this Act, to submit to a mental or physical
examination, or both, as required by and at  the  expense  of
the  Department.  The  Department  may  order  the  examining
physician  to  present  testimony  concerning  the  mental or
physical  examination  of  the  licensee  or  applicant.   No
information  shall be excluded by reason of any common law or
statutory privilege relating to  communications  between  the
licensee  or  applicant  and  the  examining  physician.  The
examining  physicians shall be specifically designated by the
Department. The individual to be examined may have, at his or
her own expense, another  physician  of  his  or  her  choice
present  during  all aspects of this examination.  Failure of
an individual to submit to a mental or physical  examination,
when  directed, shall be grounds for suspension of his or her
license until the individual submits to  the  examination  if
the  Department  finds,  after  notice  and hearing, that the
refusal to submit to the examination was  without  reasonable
cause.
    If  the Department finds an individual unable to practice
because of  the  reasons  set  forth  in  this  Section,  the
Department  may  require  that  individual to submit to care,
counseling, or treatment by physicians approved or designated
by the Department, as a condition, term, or  restriction  for
continued,  reinstated, or renewed licensure to practice; or,
in lieu of care, counseling, or treatment, the Department may
file a complaint to immediately suspend, revoke, or otherwise
discipline the license of the individual. An individual whose
license  was   granted,   continued,   reinstated,   renewed,
disciplined, or supervised subject to such terms, conditions,
or  restrictions,  and  who  fails to comply with such terms,
conditions,  or  restrictions,  shall  be  referred  to   the
Director  for  a  determination  as to whether the individual
shall have his or her license suspended immediately,  pending
a hearing by the Department.
    In instances in which the Director immediately suspends a
person's  license  under  this  Section,  a  hearing  on that
person's license must be convened by the Department within 15
days after the suspension and completed  without  appreciable
delay.  The Department shall have the authority to review the
subject  individual's  record  of  treatment  and  counseling
regarding  the  impairment  to  the   extent   permitted   by
applicable  federal statutes and regulations safeguarding the
confidentiality of medical records.
    An individual licensed under this Act and affected  under
this  Section shall be afforded an opportunity to demonstrate
to the Department that he  or  she  can  resume  practice  in
compliance with acceptable and prevailing standards under the
provisions of his or her license.
(Source: P.A. 87-1207.)

    (225 ILCS 95/22.1) (from Ch. 111, par. 4622.1)
    Sec. 22.1. Injunction.
    (a)  If  any  person  violates the provision of this Act,
the Director may, in the name of the People of the  State  of
Illinois,  through  the  Attorney  General  of  the  State of
Illinois, or the State's Attorney of any county in which  the
action  is brought, petition, for an order enjoining the such
violation or for an order enforcing compliance with this Act.
Upon the filing of a verified petition in  court,  the  court
may  issue  a  temporary restraining order, without notice or
bond, and  may  preliminarily  and  permanently  enjoin  such
violation,  and  if  it  is  established that such person has
violated or is violating the injunction, the Court may punish
the offender for contempt of court.  Proceedings  under  this
Section  shall  be  in  addition  to, and not in lieu of, all
other remedies and penalties provided by this Act.
    (b)  If  any  person  shall  practice  as   a   physician
assistant  or  hold  himself  or  herself  out as a physician
assistant without being licensed under the provisions of this
Act, then any licensed physician  assistant,  any  interested
party  or  any person injured thereby may, in addition to the
Director, petition for relief as provided in  subsection  (a)
of this Section.
    (c)  Whenever in the opinion of the Department any person
violates  any provision of this Act, the Department may issue
a rule to show cause why an order to cease and desist  should
not be entered against him.  The rule shall clearly set forth
the grounds relied upon by the Department and shall provide a
period  of 7 days from the date of the rule to file an answer
to the satisfaction of the Department.  Failure to answer  to
the  satisfaction  of  the Department shall cause an order to
cease and desist to be issued forthwith.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 95/22.2) (from Ch. 111, par. 4622.2)
    Sec. 22.2. Investigation; notice; hearing. The Department
may investigate the actions of any applicant or of any person
or persons holding  or  claiming  to  hold  a  license.   The
Department  shall,  before  suspending,  revoking, placing on
probationary status, or taking any other disciplinary  action
as  the Department may deem proper with regard to any license
or certificate, at least 30 days prior to the  date  set  for
the  hearing,  notify  the  applicant  or licensee accused in
writing of any charges made and the  time  and  place  for  a
hearing  of the charges before the Disciplinary Board, direct
him or her to file his or her written answer thereto  to  the
Disciplinary  Board  under  oath  within  20  days  after the
service on him or her of such notice and inform  him  or  her
that  if  he or she fails to file such answer default will be
taken  against  him  or  her  and  his  or  her  license   or
certificate may be suspended, revoked, placed on probationary
status, or have other disciplinary action, including limiting
the  scope,  nature  or extent of his or her practice, as the
Department may deem proper taken with  regard  thereto.  Such
written   notice  may  be  served  by  personal  delivery  or
certified or registered mail at the last address  of  his  or
her  last  notification  to  the Department.  At the time and
place fixed in the notice, the Department  shall  proceed  to
hear  the  charges  and the parties or their counsel shall be
accorded  ample  opportunity  to  present  such   statements,
testimony,  evidence, and argument as may be pertinent to the
charges or  to  the  defense  thereto.   The  Department  may
continue  such  hearing  from  time  to  time.  In  case  the
applicant or licensee accused person, after receiving notice,
fails  to  file  an answer, his or her license or certificate
may in the discretion of the Director, having received  first
the  recommendation  of the Disciplinary Board, be suspended,
revoked, placed on probationary status, or the  Director  may
take  whatever  disciplinary  action  as  he  or she may deem
proper, including limiting the scope, nature,  or  extent  of
such person's practice, without a hearing, if the act or acts
charged  constitute  sufficient grounds for such action under
this Act.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 95/22.5) (from Ch. 111, par. 4622.5)
    Sec. 22.5. Subpoena power; oaths.  The  Department  shall
have power to subpoena and bring before it any person in this
State and to take testimony either orally or by deposition or
both,  with  the same fees and mileage and in the same manner
as prescribed by law in judicial proceedings in  civil  cases
in circuit courts of this State.
    The  Director,  the  designated  hearing officer, and any
member of the Disciplinary Board designated by  the  Director
shall each have power to administer oaths to witnesses at any
hearing  which  the Department is authorized to conduct under
this Act, and any other oaths required or  authorized  to  be
administered by the Department under this Act hereunder.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 95/22.7) (from Ch. 111, par. 4622.7)
    Sec.   22.7.    Hearing   officer.   Notwithstanding  the
provisions of Section 22.2 of this Act,  the  Director  shall
have  the  authority to appoint any attorney duly licensed to
practice law in the State of Illinois to serve as the hearing
officer in any action for refusal to issue or, renew, or  for
discipline  of,  a license or certificate. The Director shall
notify the Disciplinary Board of any such  appointment.   The
hearing  officer  shall  have  full  authority to conduct the
hearing.   The  hearing  officer  shall  report  his  or  her
findings of fact, conclusions of law, and recommendations  to
the  Disciplinary  Board  and the Director.  The Disciplinary
Board shall have 60 days from receipt of the report to review
the report of the hearing officer and present their  findings
of  fact,  conclusions  of  law,  and  recommendations to the
Director.  If the Disciplinary Board  fails  to  present  its
report  within the 60 day period, the Director shall issue an
order based on the report of the  hearing  officer.   If  the
Director  disagrees  in  any  regard  with  the report of the
Disciplinary Board or hearing officer, he or she may issue an
order in contravention thereof.  The Director shall provide a
written explanation to the Disciplinary  Board  on  any  such
deviation,  and  shall specify with particularity the reasons
for such action in the final order.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 95/22.11) (from Ch. 111, par. 4622.11)
    Sec. 22.11. Restoration of license. At any time after the
suspension or revocation of any license  the  Department  may
restore  it  to  the licensee accused person, unless after an
investigation and a hearing, the Department  determines  that
restoration   is   not   in   the   public   interest.  Where
circumstances of suspension or revocation  so  indicate,  the
Department  may  require an examination of the licensee prior
to restoring his or her license.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 95/22.12) (from Ch. 111, par. 4622.12)
    Sec. 22.12. Surrender of license. Upon the revocation  or
suspension  of  any  license,  the licensee shall immediately
forthwith surrender the license to the Department. and If the
licensee fails to do so, the Department shall have the  right
to seize the license.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 95/24) (from Ch. 111, par. 4624)
    Sec.  24.  Pending  actions.  All  licenses  in effect on
December 31, 1987 and issued  pursuant  to  the  "Physician's
Assistants  Practice  Act",  approved  September 11, 1975, as
amended, are reinstated for the balance of the term for which
last issued.  All rules and regulations in effect on December
31,  1987  and  promulgated  pursuant  to  the   "Physician's
Assistants  Practice  Act",  approved  September 11, 1975, as
amended, shall  remain  in  full  force  and  effect  on  the
effective date of this Act without being promulgated again by
the  Department,  except  to  the  extent  any  such  rule or
regulation is inconsistent with any provision  of  this  Act.
All  disciplinary  actions  taken  or pending pursuant to the
"Physician's Assistants Practice Act", approved September 11,
1975, as amended, shall, for the  actions  taken,  remain  in
effect,  and  for the actions pending, shall be continued, on
the effective  date  of  this  Act  without  having  separate
actions filed by the Department.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 95/18 rep.)
    Section  55. The Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987
is amended by repealing Section 18.

    Section 70.  The Professional Geologist Licensing Act  is
amended by changing Sections 25, 52, and 65 as follows:

    (225 ILCS 745/25)
    Sec. 25.  Restrictions and limitations.  No person shall,
without  a  valid license issued by the Department (i) in any
manner hold himself  or  herself  out  to  the  public  as  a
licensed   professional  geologist;  (ii)  attach  the  title
"Licensed Professional Geologist" to  his  or  her  name;  or
(iii) render or offer to render to individuals, corporations,
or  public  agencies  services  constituting  the practice of
professional geology.
    Individuals practicing geology  in  Illinois  as  of  the
effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997 may continue to
practice  as  provided  in  this Act until the Department has
adopted rules implementing this Act.  To continue  practicing
geology  after the adoption of rules, individuals shall apply
for licensure within 180 days after the effective date of the
rules.  If an application  is  received  during  the  180-day
period,  the  individual  may  continue to practice until the
Department  acts  to  grant  or  deny   licensure.    If   an
application  is  not  filed  within  the  180-day period, the
individual  must  cease  the  practice  of  geology  at   the
conclusion  of  the  180-day  period and until the Department
acts to grant a license to the individual.
(Source: P.A. 89-366, eff. 7-1-96.)

    (225 ILCS 745/52)
    Sec. 52.   Alternate  qualification  for  licensure.  The
Department  may  issue  a  license  to  practice professional
geology in Illinois to any applicant who, on or  before  July
1,  1998 within one calendar year after the effective date of
this Act, meets the following qualifications:
         (1)  The applicant has completed an application form
    and remitted the application fee.
         (2)  The applicant meets all of the requirements for
    a license under subsection (a) of  Section  50  excluding
    the requirements for passing the required examination.
(Source: P.A. 89-366, eff. 7-1-96.)

    (225 ILCS 745/65)
    Sec.   65.   Expiration  and  renewal  of  license.   The
expiration date and renewal period for each license shall  be
set  by  rule.   A  professional  geologist whose license has
expired may reinstate his or her license at any time within 5
years after the  expiration  thereof,  by  making  a  renewal
application  and  by  paying  the required fee.  However, any
professional geologist whose license expired while he or  she
was  (i)  on  active duty with the Armed Forces of the United
States or called  into  service  or  training  by  the  State
militia   or   (ii)   in  training  or  education  under  the
supervision of the United  States  preliminary  to  induction
into   the   military  service,  may  have  his  professional
geologist license renewed, reinstated,  or  restored  without
paying  any  lapsed  renewal  fees  if  within  2 years after
termination  of  the  service,  training,  or  education  the
professional  geologist   furnishes   the   Department   with
satisfactory  evidence of service, training, or education and
it has been terminated under honorable conditions.
    Any professional geologist whose license has expired  for
more  than 5 years may have it restored by making application
to the  Department,  paying  the  required  fee,  and  filing
acceptable proof of fitness to have the license restored. The
proof  may  include sworn evidence certifying active practice
in another jurisdiction. If the geologist has  not  practiced
for  5  years  or  more,  the  Board  shall  determine  by an
evaluation  program  established  by   rule,   whether   that
individual is fit to resume active status and may require the
professional  geologist  to  complete  a  period of evaluated
professional clinical experience and may  require  successful
completion of an examination.
    The  Department  may  refuse  to issue or may suspend the
license of any person who fails to file a return, or  to  pay
the  tax,  penalty or interest shown in a filed return, or to
pay any final assessment of tax,  penalty,  or  interest,  as
required   by  any  tax  Act  administered  by  the  Illinois
Department of Revenue, until such time as the requirements of
any such tax Act are satisfied.
(Source: P.A. 89-366, eff. 7-1-96.)

    Section 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  does  not  accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i)
the changes made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived  from
any other Public Act.

    Section   99.  Effective  date.  This  Act  takes  effect
December 30, 1997, except that Sections 10, 15, and  99  take
effect upon becoming law.
                            INDEX
           Statutes amended in order of appearance
5 ILCS 80/4.9             from Ch. 127, par. 1904.9
5 ILCS 80/4.18 new
225 ILCS 2/10
225 ILCS 2/15
225 ILCS 2/20
225 ILCS 2/25
225 ILCS 2/35
225 ILCS 2/40
225 ILCS 2/50
225 ILCS 2/55 new
225 ILCS 2/60
225 ILCS 2/70
225 ILCS 2/75 new
225 ILCS 2/80
225 ILCS 2/90
225 ILCS 2/100
225 ILCS 2/105 new
225 ILCS 2/110
225 ILCS 2/130
225 ILCS 2/135 new
225 ILCS 2/140
225 ILCS 2/145
225 ILCS 2/150
225 ILCS 2/152 new
225 ILCS 2/154 new
225 ILCS 2/155
225 ILCS 2/160
225 ILCS 2/165
225 ILCS 2/170
225 ILCS 2/175
225 ILCS 2/180
225 ILCS 2/185
225 ILCS 2/195
225 ILCS 2/45 rep.
225 ILCS 2/205 rep.
225 ILCS 55/20            from Ch. 111, par. 8351-20
225 ILCS 55/25            from Ch. 111, par. 8351-25
225 ILCS 55/30            from Ch. 111, par. 8351-30
225 ILCS 55/40            from Ch. 111, par. 8351-40
225 ILCS 55/45            from Ch. 111, par. 8351-45
225 ILCS 55/55            from Ch. 111, par. 8351-55
225 ILCS 55/60            from Ch. 111, par. 8351-60
225 ILCS 55/65            from Ch. 111, par. 8351-65
225 ILCS 55/85            from Ch. 111, par. 8351-85
225 ILCS 55/90            from Ch. 111, par. 8351-90
225 ILCS 55/95            from Ch. 111, par. 8351-95
225 ILCS 55/165           from Ch. 111, par. 8351-165
225 ILCS 55/50 rep.
225 ILCS 65/3             from Ch. 111, par. 3503
225 ILCS 65/4             from Ch. 111, par. 3504
225 ILCS 65/7             from Ch. 111, par. 3507
225 ILCS 65/10            from Ch. 111, par. 3510
225 ILCS 65/11            from Ch. 111, par. 3511
225 ILCS 65/12            from Ch. 111, par. 3512
225 ILCS 65/14            from Ch. 111, par. 3514
225 ILCS 65/16            from Ch. 111, par. 3516
225 ILCS 65/17            from Ch. 111, par. 3517
225 ILCS 65/21            from Ch. 111, par. 3521
225 ILCS 65/23            from Ch. 111, par. 3523
225 ILCS 65/24            from Ch. 111, par. 3524
225 ILCS 65/25            from Ch. 111, par. 3525
225 ILCS 65/26            from Ch. 111, par. 3526
225 ILCS 65/27            from Ch. 111, par. 3527
225 ILCS 65/30            from Ch. 111, par. 3530
225 ILCS 65/32            from Ch. 111, par. 3532
225 ILCS 65/33            from Ch. 111, par. 3533
225 ILCS 65/35            from Ch. 111, par. 3535
225 ILCS 65/36            from Ch. 111, par. 3536
225 ILCS 65/37            from Ch. 111, par. 3537
225 ILCS 65/38            from Ch. 111, par. 3538
225 ILCS 65/39            from Ch. 111, par. 3539
225 ILCS 65/40            from Ch. 111, par. 3540
225 ILCS 65/42            from Ch. 111, par. 3542
225 ILCS 65/43            from Ch. 111, par. 3543
225 ILCS 65/47            from Ch. 111, par. 3547
225 ILCS 65/8 rep.
225 ILCS 65/9 rep.
225 ILCS 65/13 rep.
225 ILCS 65/15 rep.
225 ILCS 65/19 rep.
225 ILCS 70/4             from Ch. 111, par. 3654
225 ILCS 70/5             from Ch. 111, par. 3655
225 ILCS 70/5.1 new
225 ILCS 70/6             from Ch. 111, par. 3656
225 ILCS 70/7             from Ch. 111, par. 3657
225 ILCS 70/8             from Ch. 111, par. 3658
225 ILCS 70/9             from Ch. 111, par. 3659
225 ILCS 70/10            from Ch. 111, par. 3660
225 ILCS 70/11            from Ch. 111, par. 3661
225 ILCS 70/12            from Ch. 111, par. 3662
225 ILCS 70/13            from Ch. 111, par. 3663
225 ILCS 70/14            from Ch. 111, par. 3664
225 ILCS 70/15            from Ch. 111, par. 3665
225 ILCS 70/17            from Ch. 111, par. 3667
225 ILCS 70/18            from Ch. 111, par. 3668
225 ILCS 70/19            from Ch. 111, par. 3669
225 ILCS 70/20            from Ch. 111, par. 3670
225 ILCS 70/20.1 new
225 ILCS 70/21            from Ch. 111, par. 3671
225 ILCS 70/22            from Ch. 111, par. 3672
225 ILCS 70/23            from Ch. 111, par. 3673
225 ILCS 70/24            from Ch. 111, par. 3674
225 ILCS 70/24.1 new
225 ILCS 70/28            from Ch. 111, par. 3678
225 ILCS 70/37 rep.
225 ILCS 95/6             from Ch. 111, par. 4606
225 ILCS 95/9             from Ch. 111, par. 4609
225 ILCS 95/10            from Ch. 111, par. 4610
225 ILCS 95/11            from Ch. 111, par. 4611
225 ILCS 95/14            from Ch. 111, par. 4614
225 ILCS 95/14.1 new
225 ILCS 95/16            from Ch. 111, par. 4616
225 ILCS 95/17            from Ch. 111, par. 4617
225 ILCS 95/21            from Ch. 111, par. 4621
225 ILCS 95/22.1          from Ch. 111, par. 4622.1
225 ILCS 95/22.2          from Ch. 111, par. 4622.2
225 ILCS 95/22.5          from Ch. 111, par. 4622.5
225 ILCS 95/22.7          from Ch. 111, par. 4622.7
225 ILCS 95/22.11         from Ch. 111, par. 4622.11
225 ILCS 95/22.12         from Ch. 111, par. 4622.12
225 ILCS 95/24            from Ch. 111, par. 4624
225 ILCS 95/18 rep.
225 ILCS 110/3            from Ch. 111, par. 7903
225 ILCS 110/3.5 new
225 ILCS 110/5            from Ch. 111, par. 7905
225 ILCS 110/7            from Ch. 111, par. 7907
225 ILCS 110/8            from Ch. 111, par. 7908
225 ILCS 110/9.5 new
225 ILCS 110/11           from Ch. 111, par. 7911
225 ILCS 110/13           from Ch. 111, par. 7913
225 ILCS 110/14           from Ch. 111, par. 7914
225 ILCS 110/16           from Ch. 111, par. 7916
225 ILCS 110/16.5 new
225 ILCS 110/17           from Ch. 111, par. 7917
225 ILCS 110/18           from Ch. 111, par. 7918
225 ILCS 110/21           from Ch. 111, par. 7921
225 ILCS 110/22           from Ch. 111, par. 7922
225 ILCS 110/28           from Ch. 111, par. 7928
225 ILCS 110/28.5 new
225 ILCS 110/29.5 new
225 ILCS 110/30           from Ch. 111, par. 7930
225 ILCS 110/33           from Ch. 111, par. 7933
225 ILCS 110/6 rep.
225 ILCS 110/7.5 rep.
225 ILCS 110/9 rep.
225 ILCS 110/12 rep.
225 ILCS 110/31 rep.
225 ILCS 110/32 rep.

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