State of Illinois
91st General Assembly
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Public Act 91-0533

SB746 Enrolled                                 LRB9101254EGfg

    AN ACT to revise the law by combining multiple enactments
and making technical corrections.

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

    Section 1.  Nature of this Act.
    (a)  This  Act  may  be  cited as the Second 1999 General
Revisory Act.
    (b)  This Act is not intended  to  make  any  substantive
change  in the law.  It reconciles conflicts that have arisen
from multiple amendments and enactments and  makes  technical
corrections and revisions in the law.
    This   Act  revises  and,  where  appropriate,  renumbers
certain Sections that have been added or amended by more than
one Public Act.  In certain cases in which a repealed Act  or
Section  has  been  replaced  with  a successor law, this Act
incorporates amendments to the repealed Act or  Section  into
the  successor  law.   This Act also corrects errors, revises
cross-references, and deletes obsolete text.
    (c)  In this Act,  the  reference  at  the  end  of  each
amended  Section indicates the sources in the Session Laws of
Illinois that were used in the preparation  of  the  text  of
that  Section.   The text of the Section included in this Act
is intended to include the different versions of the  Section
found in the Public Acts included in the list of sources, but
may  not include other versions of the Section to be found in
Public Acts not included in the list of sources.  The list of
sources is not a part of the text of the Section.
    (d)  Public Acts 90-810 through 90-815 were considered in
the preparation of the combining revisories included in  this
Act.   Combining  revisories  often  contain  no  striking or
underscoring because no additional changes are being made  in
the material that is being combined.
    (e)  The  version  of  Section 3 of the Voluntary Payroll
Deductions Act that is included in Section 4 of this revisory
Act is intended to control over and replace the version found
in House  Bill  745  of  the  91st  General  Assembly,  which
inadvertently  contains  material derived from the introduced
(rather than enrolled) form of the bill  that  became  Public
Act 90-487.

    Section  4.   The  Voluntary  Payroll  Deductions  Act is
amended by changing Section 3 as follows:

    (5 ILCS 340/3) (from Ch. 15, par. 503)
    Sec. 3. Definitions.  As used  in  this  Act  unless  the
context otherwise requires:
    (a)  "Employee" means any regular officer or employee who
receives  salary  or  wages for personal services rendered to
the State of Illinois.
    (b)  "Qualified  organization"  means   an   organization
representing   one   or   more   benefiting  agencies,  which
organization  is  designated  by  the  State  Comptroller  as
qualified to receive payroll deductions under this Act.    An
organization   desiring  to  be  designated  as  a  qualified
organization shall:
         (1)  Submit written designations on  forms  approved
    by  the  State Comptroller by 4,000 or more employees, in
    which such employees indicate that  the  organization  is
    one   for   which   the  employee  intends  to  authorize
    withholding. The forms shall  require  the  name,  social
    security  number,  and  employing  State  agency for each
    employee.  Upon notification by the Comptroller that such
    forms have been approved, the organization shall,  within
    30  days,  notify in writing the Governor or his designee
    of  its  intention  to  obtain  the  required  number  of
    designations.  Such organization  shall  have  12  months
    from that date, to obtain the necessary designations. The
    signed forms and signatures on the forms shall be subject
    to verification by the State Comptroller;
         (2)  Certify  that  all  benefiting agencies are tax
    exempt under Section 501(c)(3) of  the  Internal  Revenue
    Code;
         (3)  Certify  that  all  benefiting  agencies are in
    compliance with the Illinois Human Rights Act;
         (4)  Certify that all  benefiting  agencies  are  in
    compliance   with   the  Charitable  Trust  Act  and  the
    Solicitation for Charity Act;
         (5)  Certify that all benefiting  agencies  actively
    conduct  health  or welfare programs and provide services
    to individuals directed at one or more of  the  following
    common human needs within a community: service, research,
    and education in the health fields; family and child care
    services;  protective  services  for children and adults;
    services for children and adults in foster care; services
    related to the management and maintenance  of  the  home;
    day  care  services  for adults; transportation services;
    information, referral and counseling  services;  services
    to  eliminate illiteracy; the preparation and delivery of
    meals; adoption  services;  emergency  shelter  care  and
    relief   services;   disaster   relief  services;  safety
    services;   neighborhood   and   community   organization
    services;  recreation  services;  social  adjustment  and
    rehabilitation services; health support  services;  or  a
    combination of such services designed to meet the special
    needs of specific groups, such as children and youth, the
    ill  and infirm, and the physically handicapped; and that
    all such benefiting agencies provide the above  described
    services   to  individuals  and  their  families  in  the
    community and surrounding area in which the  organization
    conducts its fund drive, or that such benefiting agencies
    provide  relief to victims of natural disasters and other
    emergencies on a where and as needed basis;
         (6)  Certify that the organization has disclosed the
    percentage of the organization's total collected receipts
    from employees that are  distributed  to  the  benefiting
    agencies  and  the percentage of the organization's total
    collected receipts from employees that are  expended  for
    fund-raising and overhead costs.  These percentages shall
    be  the same percentage figures annually disclosed by the
    organization to the  Attorney  General.   The  disclosure
    shall  be made to all solicited employees and shall be in
    the form of a factual statement on all petitions  and  in
    the campaign's employee brochure;
         (7)  Certify  that all benefiting agencies receiving
    funds which the employee has requested or designated  for
    distribution  to  a  particular community and surrounding
    area  use  a  majority  of  such  funds  distributed  for
    services in the actual  provision  of  services  in  that
    community and surrounding area;
         (8)  Certify   that   neither   it  nor  its  member
    organizations   will   solicit   State   employees    for
    contributions at their workplace, except pursuant to this
    Act and the rules promulgated thereunder.  Each qualified
    organization,  and  each  participating  United  Fund, is
    encouraged to cooperate with  all  others  and  with  all
    State  agencies  and  educational  institutions  so as to
    simplify  procedures,  to  resolve  differences  and   to
    minimize costs;
         (9)  Certify  that  it  will  pay  its  share of the
    campaign costs and will comply with the Code of  Campaign
    Conduct  as  approved  by the Governor or other agency as
    designated by the Governor; and
         (10)  Certify that it maintains a year-round office,
    the telephone number,  and  person  responsible  for  the
    operations   of  the  organization  in  Illinois.    That
    information shall be provided to the State Comptroller at
    the time the organization is seeking participation  under
    this Act.
    Each  qualified  organization  shall  submit to the State
Comptroller between January 1 and March 1  of  each  year,  a
statement  that the organization is in compliance with all of
the requirements set forth in paragraphs  (2)  through  (10).
The  State  Comptroller  shall  exclude any organization that
fails to submit the  statement  from  the  next  solicitation
period.
    In  order  to  be designated as a qualified organization,
the organization shall have existed at least 2 years prior to
submitting  the  written  designation   forms   required   in
paragraph (1) and shall certify to the State Comptroller that
such  organization  has  been providing services described in
paragraph (5)  in  Illinois.   If  the  organization  seeking
designation  represents  more  than one benefiting agency, it
need not have existed for 2 years but shall  certify  to  the
State  Comptroller  that  each of its benefiting agencies has
existed for at least 2 years prior to submitting the  written
designation forms required in paragraph (1) and that each has
been   providing  services  described  in  paragraph  (5)  in
Illinois.
    Organizations which have met the requirements of this Act
shall  be  permitted  to  participate  in   the   State   and
Universities  Combined  Appeal  as of January 1st of the year
immediately following their approval by the Comptroller.
    Where the certifications  described  in  paragraphs  (2),
(3), (4), (5), (6), (7), (8), (9), and (10) 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7,
8,  9,  and 10 above are made by an organization representing
more than one benefiting agency they shall be based upon  the
knowledge  and  belief  of  such qualified organization.  Any
qualified organization shall  immediately  notify  the  State
Comptroller in writing if the qualified organization receives
information or otherwise believes that a benefiting agency is
no  longer  in  compliance  with  the  certification  of  the
qualified    organization.       A   qualified   organization
representing more than one benefiting agency shall thereafter
withhold and refrain from  distributing  to  such  benefiting
agency  those  funds  received pursuant to this Act until the
benefiting agency is again in compliance with  the  qualified
organization's  certification.   The  qualified  organization
shall   immediately  notify  the  State  Comptroller  of  the
benefiting   agency's    resumed    compliance    with    the
certification,   based   upon  the  qualified  organization's
knowledge and belief, and shall pay over  to  the  benefiting
agency those funds previously withheld.
    The  Comptroller  shall, by February 1st of each year, so
notify any qualified organization that failed to  receive  at
least  500  payroll deduction pledges during each immediately
preceding solicitation period as set forth in Section 6.  The
notification shall give  such  qualified  organization  until
March  1st to provide the Comptroller with documentation that
the 500 deduction requirement has been met.  On the basis  of
all  the  documentation, the Comptroller shall, by March 15th
of each year, submit to the Governor or his designee, or such
other agency as may be determined by the Governor, a list  of
all  organizations  which  have met the 500 payroll deduction
requirement.  Only those organizations which  have  met  such
requirements,  as  well  as  the  other  requirements of this
Section, shall be permitted to solicit  State  employees  for
voluntary contributions and the Comptroller shall discontinue
withholding  for  any  such  organization which fails to meet
these requirements.
    (c)  "United Fund" means the organization conducting  the
single,  annual,  consolidated  effort  to  secure  funds for
distribution to agencies engaged  in  charitable  and  public
health,  welfare  and  services  purposes,  which is commonly
known as the United Fund, or the organization which serves in
place of the United Fund organization in communities where an
organization known as the United Fund is not organized.
    (d)  "State and Universities Employees  Combined  Appeal"
(SECA),  otherwise  known as "SECA", means the State-directed
joint effort of all of the qualified organizations,  together
with  the  United  Funds,  for  the solicitation of voluntary
contributions from State and University employees.
    In order for a United Fund to participate  in  the  State
and  Universities  Employees Combined Appeal, it shall comply
with the provisions of Section 3, paragraph (9) of subsection
(b).
(Source: P.A. 90-487, eff. 8-17-97; revised 4-16-99.)

    Section 5.  The Election  Code  is  amended  by  changing
Section 6-35.03 as follows:

    (10 ILCS 5/6-35.03) (from Ch. 46, par. 6-35.03)
    Sec.  6-35.03.  The State Board of Elections shall design
a  registration  record  card  which,  except  as   otherwise
provided  in this Section, shall be used in triplicate by all
election   authorities   in   the   State,   beginning   with
registrations taken on or after January 1, 1986.   The  Board
shall  prescribe  the  form and specifications, including but
not limited to the weight of paper, color and print  of  such
cards.    Such  cards  shall  contain boxes or spaces for the
information required under Sections 6-31.1 and 6-35  of  this
Code;  provided,  that such cards shall also contain a box or
space for the applicant's driver's license number,  or  where
allowable the applicant's social security number, if any, and
a box for the applicant's telephone number, if available.
    The  original  and  duplicate  cards  shall  respectively
constitute  the  master file and precinct binder registration
records of the voter.  The triplicate card shall be given  to
the  applicant  upon completion of his or her registration or
completed transfer of registration.
    Whenever a voter moves to  another  precinct  within  the
same   election   jurisdiction   or   to   another   election
jurisdiction in the State, such voter may transfer his or her
registration  by presenting his or her triplicate card to the
election authority or a deputy registrar.  If such  voter  is
not  in possession of or has lost his or her triplicate card,
he or she may effect a transfer of registration by  executing
an Affidavit of Cancellation of Previous Registration.
    In  the  case  of  a  transfer  of  registration to a new
election jurisdiction, the election authority shall  transmit
the voter's triplicate card or such affidavit to the election
authority  of the voter's former election jurisdiction, which
shall immediately  cause  the  transmission  of  the  voter's
previous  registration  card  to  the  voter's  new  election
authority.  No  transfer  of  registration  to a new election
jurisdiction shall be complete until the voter's old election
authority receives notification.
    Deputy registrars shall return all  triplicate  cards  or
Affidavits  of  Cancellation  of Previous Registration to the
election authority within 7 working days  after  the  receipt
thereof. Such cards or Affidavits of Cancellation of Previous
Registration  received  by  the deputy registrars between the
35th and 28th day preceding an election shall be returned  by
the  deputy registrars within 48 hours after receipt thereof.
Such  cards  or  Affidavits  of  Cancellation   of   Previous
Registration  received  by  the deputy registrars on the 28th
day preceding an election shall be  returned  by  the  deputy
registrars  to  the  election authority within 24 hours after
receipt thereof.
    The date by which an election authority  is  required  to
take  registrations  in  compliance  with this Section may be
extended by the State Board of Elections to a date  no  later
than July 1, 1986, where, prior to January 1, 1986, the Board
has received a written request for such an extension from the
election  authority and such request has shown good cause for
the extension.
    In the case of  a  transfer  of  registration  to  a  new
election  jurisdiction, the election authority shall transmit
the voter's triplicate card or such affidavit to the election
authority of the voter's former election jurisdiction,  which
shall  immediately  cause  the  transmission  of  the voter's
previous  registration  card  to  the  voter's  new  election
authority. No transfer of  registration  to  a  new  election
jurisdiction shall be complete until the voter's old election
authority receives notification.
    Deputy  registrars  shall  return all triplicate cards or
Affidavits of Cancellation of Previous  Registration  to  the
election  authority  within  7 working days after the receipt
thereof, except that the deputy registrars shall  return  the
cards  or Affidavits of Cancellation of Previous Registration
received by them between the 35th and 28th day  preceding  an
election  to the election authority within 48 hours after the
receipt thereof.
    Such cards or  Affidavits  of  Cancellation  of  Previous
Registration  received  during  the  28th  day  preceding  an
election  shall  be  returned by the deputy registrars to the
election authority within 24 hours after receipt thereof.
(Source: P.A. 86-873; revised 1-28-99.)

    Section 10.  The Service Occupation Tax Act is amended by
changing Section 3-5 as follows:

    (35 ILCS 115/3-5) (from Ch. 120, par. 439.103-5)
    Sec. 3-5.  Exemptions.  The following  tangible  personal
property is exempt from the tax imposed by this Act:
    (1)  Personal  property  sold  by a corporation, society,
association, foundation, institution, or organization,  other
than  a  limited  liability  company,  that  is organized and
operated as  a  not-for-profit  service  enterprise  for  the
benefit  of  persons 65 years of age or older if the personal
property was not purchased by the enterprise for the  purpose
of resale by the enterprise.
    (2)  Personal  property  purchased  by  a  not-for-profit
Illinois  county  fair  association  for  use  in conducting,
operating, or promoting the county fair.
    (3)  Personal property purchased  by  any  not-for-profit
music  or  dramatic  arts  organization  that establishes, by
proof required  by  the  Department  by  rule,  that  it  has
received   an  exemption   under  Section  501(c)(3)  of  the
Internal Revenue Code and that is organized and operated  for
the  presentation  of  live public performances of musical or
theatrical works on a regular basis.
    (4)  Legal  tender,  currency,  medallions,  or  gold  or
silver  coinage  issued  by  the  State  of   Illinois,   the
government of the United States of America, or the government
of any foreign country, and bullion.
    (5)  Graphic  arts  machinery  and  equipment,  including
repair   and  replacement  parts,  both  new  and  used,  and
including that manufactured on special order or purchased for
lease, certified by the purchaser to be  used  primarily  for
graphic arts production.
    (6)  Personal   property   sold  by  a  teacher-sponsored
student  organization  affiliated  with  an   elementary   or
secondary school located in Illinois.
    (7)  Farm  machinery  and  equipment,  both new and used,
including that manufactured on special  order,  certified  by
the purchaser to be used primarily for production agriculture
or   State   or   federal  agricultural  programs,  including
individual replacement parts for the machinery and equipment,
including machinery and equipment purchased  for  lease,  and
including implements of husbandry defined in Section 1-130 of
the  Illinois  Vehicle  Code, farm machinery and agricultural
chemical and fertilizer spreaders, and nurse wagons  required
to  be registered under Section 3-809 of the Illinois Vehicle
Code, but excluding  other  motor  vehicles  required  to  be
registered  under  the  Illinois Vehicle Code.  Horticultural
polyhouses or hoop houses used for propagating,  growing,  or
overwintering  plants  shall be considered farm machinery and
equipment under this item (7).  Agricultural chemical  tender
tanks  and dry boxes shall include units sold separately from
a motor vehicle  required  to  be  licensed  and  units  sold
mounted  on  a  motor  vehicle required to be licensed if the
selling price of the tender is separately stated.
    Farm machinery  and  equipment  shall  include  precision
farming  equipment  that  is  installed  or  purchased  to be
installed on farm machinery and equipment including, but  not
limited   to,   tractors,   harvesters,  sprayers,  planters,
seeders, or spreaders. Precision farming equipment  includes,
but  is  not  limited  to,  soil  testing sensors, computers,
monitors, software, global positioning and  mapping  systems,
and other such equipment.
    Farm  machinery  and  equipment  also includes computers,
sensors, software, and related equipment  used  primarily  in
the  computer-assisted  operation  of  production agriculture
facilities,  equipment,  and  activities  such  as,  but  not
limited to, the collection, monitoring,  and  correlation  of
animal  and  crop  data for the purpose of formulating animal
diets and agricultural chemicals.  This item  (7)  is  exempt
from the provisions of Section 3-55 3-75.
    (8)  Fuel  and  petroleum  products sold to or used by an
air common carrier, certified by the carrier to be  used  for
consumption,  shipment,  or  storage  in  the  conduct of its
business as an air common carrier, for a flight destined  for
or  returning from a location or locations outside the United
States without regard  to  previous  or  subsequent  domestic
stopovers.
    (9)  Proceeds  of  mandatory  service  charges separately
stated on customers' bills for the purchase  and  consumption
of food and beverages, to the extent that the proceeds of the
service  charge  are  in  fact  turned  over  as tips or as a
substitute for tips to the employees who participate directly
in preparing, serving, hosting or cleaning  up  the  food  or
beverage function with respect to which the service charge is
imposed.
    (10)  Oil  field  exploration,  drilling,  and production
equipment, including (i) rigs and parts of rigs, rotary rigs,
cable tool rigs, and workover rigs,  (ii)  pipe  and  tubular
goods,  including  casing  and drill strings, (iii) pumps and
pump-jack units, (iv) storage tanks and flow lines,  (v)  any
individual   replacement  part  for  oil  field  exploration,
drilling, and production equipment, and  (vi)  machinery  and
equipment  purchased  for lease; but excluding motor vehicles
required to be registered under the Illinois Vehicle Code.
    (11)  Photoprocessing machinery and equipment,  including
repair  and  replacement  parts, both new and used, including
that  manufactured  on  special  order,  certified   by   the
purchaser  to  be  used  primarily  for  photoprocessing, and
including photoprocessing machinery and  equipment  purchased
for lease.
    (12)  Coal   exploration,   mining,  offhighway  hauling,
processing, maintenance, and reclamation equipment, including
replacement parts  and  equipment,  and  including  equipment
purchased for lease, but excluding motor vehicles required to
be registered under the Illinois Vehicle Code.
    (13)  Food  for  human consumption that is to be consumed
off the premises where  it  is  sold  (other  than  alcoholic
beverages,  soft  drinks  and food that has been prepared for
immediate consumption) and prescription and  non-prescription
medicines,  drugs,  medical  appliances,  and  insulin, urine
testing materials, syringes, and needles used  by  diabetics,
for  human  use, when purchased for use by a person receiving
medical assistance under Article 5 of the Illinois Public Aid
Code who resides in a licensed long-term  care  facility,  as
defined in the Nursing Home Care Act.
    (14)  Semen used for artificial insemination of livestock
for direct agricultural production.
    (15)  Horses, or interests in horses, registered with and
meeting  the  requirements  of  any of the Arabian Horse Club
Registry of America, Appaloosa Horse Club,  American  Quarter
Horse  Association,  United  States  Trotting Association, or
Jockey Club, as appropriate, used for purposes of breeding or
racing for prizes.
    (16)  Computers and communications equipment utilized for
any hospital purpose and equipment  used  in  the  diagnosis,
analysis,  or treatment of hospital patients sold to a lessor
who leases the equipment, under a lease of one year or longer
executed or in effect at the  time  of  the  purchase,  to  a
hospital  that  has  been  issued  an  active  tax  exemption
identification  number  by the Department under Section 1g of
the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act.
    (17)  Personal property sold to a lessor who  leases  the
property,  under a lease of one year or longer executed or in
effect at the time of the purchase, to  a  governmental  body
that  has  been issued an active tax exemption identification
number by the Department under Section 1g of  the  Retailers'
Occupation Tax Act.
    (18)  Beginning  with  taxable  years  ending on or after
December 31, 1995 and ending with taxable years ending on  or
before  December  31, 2004, personal property that is donated
for disaster relief to  be  used  in  a  State  or  federally
declared disaster area in Illinois or bordering Illinois by a
manufacturer  or retailer that is registered in this State to
a   corporation,   society,   association,   foundation,   or
institution that  has  been  issued  a  sales  tax  exemption
identification  number by the Department that assists victims
of the disaster who reside within the declared disaster area.
    (19)  Beginning with taxable years  ending  on  or  after
December  31, 1995 and ending with taxable years ending on or
before December 31, 2004, personal property that is  used  in
the  performance  of  infrastructure  repairs  in this State,
including but not limited to  municipal  roads  and  streets,
access  roads,  bridges,  sidewalks,  waste disposal systems,
water and  sewer  line  extensions,  water  distribution  and
purification  facilities,  storm water drainage and retention
facilities, and sewage treatment facilities, resulting from a
State or federally declared disaster in Illinois or bordering
Illinois  when  such  repairs  are  initiated  on  facilities
located in the declared disaster area within 6  months  after
the disaster.
(Source: P.A.  89-16,  eff.  5-30-95;  89-115,  eff.  1-1-96;
89-349,  eff.  8-17-95;  89-495,  eff.  6-24-96; 89-496, eff.
6-25-96; 89-626, eff. 8-9-96;  90-14,  eff.  7-1-97;  90-552,
eff. 12-12-97; 90-605, eff. 6-30-98; revised 2-10-99.)

    Section 15.  The Retailers' Occupation Tax Act is amended
by changing Section 2-5 as follows:

    (35 ILCS 120/2-5) (from Ch. 120, par. 441-5)
    Sec. 2-5.  Exemptions.  Gross receipts from proceeds from
the  sale  of  the  following  tangible personal property are
exempt from the tax imposed by this Act:
    (1)  Farm chemicals.
    (2)  Farm machinery and equipment,  both  new  and  used,
including  that  manufactured  on special order, certified by
the purchaser to be used primarily for production agriculture
or  State  or  federal   agricultural   programs,   including
individual replacement parts for the machinery and equipment,
including  machinery  and  equipment purchased for lease, and
including implements of husbandry defined in Section 1-130 of
the Illinois Vehicle Code, farm  machinery  and  agricultural
chemical  and fertilizer spreaders, and nurse wagons required
to be registered under Section 3-809 of the Illinois  Vehicle
Code,  but  excluding  other  motor  vehicles  required to be
registered under the  Illinois  Vehicle  Code.  Horticultural
polyhouses  or  hoop houses used for propagating, growing, or
overwintering plants shall be considered farm  machinery  and
equipment  under  this item (2). Agricultural chemical tender
tanks and dry boxes shall include units sold separately  from
a  motor  vehicle  required  to  be  licensed  and units sold
mounted on a motor vehicle required to be  licensed,  if  the
selling price of the tender is separately stated.
    Farm  machinery  and  equipment  shall  include precision
farming equipment  that  is  installed  or  purchased  to  be
installed  on farm machinery and equipment including, but not
limited  to,  tractors,   harvesters,   sprayers,   planters,
seeders,  or spreaders. Precision farming equipment includes,
but is not  limited  to,  soil  testing  sensors,  computers,
monitors,  software,  global positioning and mapping systems,
and other such equipment.
    Farm machinery and  equipment  also  includes  computers,
sensors,  software,  and  related equipment used primarily in
the computer-assisted  operation  of  production  agriculture
facilities,  equipment,  and  activities  such  as,  but  not
limited  to,  the  collection, monitoring, and correlation of
animal and crop data for the purpose  of  formulating  animal
diets  and  agricultural  chemicals.  This item (7) is exempt
from the provisions of Section 2-70 3-75.
    (3)  Distillation machinery and equipment, sold as a unit
or kit, assembled or installed by the retailer, certified  by
the  user to be used only for the production of ethyl alcohol
that will be used for consumption  as  motor  fuel  or  as  a
component of motor fuel for the personal use of the user, and
not subject to sale or resale.
    (4)  Graphic  arts  machinery  and  equipment,  including
repair   and  replacement  parts,  both  new  and  used,  and
including that manufactured on special order or purchased for
lease, certified by the purchaser to be  used  primarily  for
graphic arts production.
    (5)  A  motor  vehicle  of  the  first  division, a motor
vehicle of the second division that is a self-contained motor
vehicle designed or permanently converted to  provide  living
quarters  for  recreational,  camping,  or  travel  use, with
direct walk through access to the living  quarters  from  the
driver's seat, or a motor vehicle of the second division that
is  of  the van configuration designed for the transportation
of not less than 7 nor more than 16 passengers, as defined in
Section 1-146 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, that is used  for
automobile  renting,  as  defined  in  the Automobile Renting
Occupation and Use Tax Act.
    (6)  Personal  property  sold  by   a   teacher-sponsored
student   organization   affiliated  with  an  elementary  or
secondary school located in Illinois.
    (7)  Proceeds of that portion of the selling price  of  a
passenger car the sale of which is subject to the Replacement
Vehicle Tax.
    (8)  Personal  property  sold  to an Illinois county fair
association for use in conducting,  operating,  or  promoting
the county fair.
    (9)  Personal  property sold to a not-for-profit music or
dramatic  arts  organization  that  establishes,   by   proof
required  by  the Department by rule, that it has received an
exemption under Section 501(c) (3) of  the  Internal  Revenue
Code  and that is organized and operated for the presentation
of live public performances of musical or theatrical works on
a regular basis.
    (10)  Personal property sold by a  corporation,  society,
association,  foundation, institution, or organization, other
than a limited  liability  company,  that  is  organized  and
operated  as  a  not-for-profit  service  enterprise  for the
benefit of persons 65 years of age or older if  the  personal
property  was not purchased by the enterprise for the purpose
of resale by the enterprise.
    (11)  Personal property sold to a governmental body, to a
corporation, society, association, foundation, or institution
organized and operated exclusively for charitable, religious,
or educational purposes, or to a not-for-profit  corporation,
society,    association,    foundation,    institution,    or
organization  that  has  no compensated officers or employees
and  that  is  organized  and  operated  primarily  for   the
recreation  of  persons  55  years of age or older. A limited
liability company may qualify for the  exemption  under  this
paragraph  only if the limited liability company is organized
and operated exclusively for  educational  purposes.  On  and
after July 1, 1987, however, no entity otherwise eligible for
this exemption shall make tax-free purchases unless it has an
active identification number issued by the Department.
    (12)  Personal  property  sold to interstate carriers for
hire for use as rolling stock moving in  interstate  commerce
or  to lessors under leases of one year or longer executed or
in effect at the time of purchase by interstate carriers  for
hire  for  use as rolling stock moving in interstate commerce
and equipment  operated  by  a  telecommunications  provider,
licensed  as  a  common carrier by the Federal Communications
Commission, which is permanently installed in or  affixed  to
aircraft moving in interstate commerce.
    (13)  Proceeds from sales to owners, lessors, or shippers
of  tangible personal property that is utilized by interstate
carriers  for  hire  for  use  as  rolling  stock  moving  in
interstate   commerce   and   equipment   operated    by    a
telecommunications  provider, licensed as a common carrier by
the Federal Communications Commission, which  is  permanently
installed  in  or  affixed  to  aircraft moving in interstate
commerce.
    (14)  Machinery and equipment that will be  used  by  the
purchaser,  or  a  lessee  of the purchaser, primarily in the
process of  manufacturing  or  assembling  tangible  personal
property  for  wholesale or retail sale or lease, whether the
sale or lease is made directly by the manufacturer or by some
other person, whether the materials used in the  process  are
owned  by  the  manufacturer or some other person, or whether
the sale or lease is made apart from or as an incident to the
seller's engaging in  the  service  occupation  of  producing
machines,  tools,  dies,  jigs,  patterns,  gauges,  or other
similar items of no commercial value on special order  for  a
particular purchaser.
    (15)  Proceeds  of  mandatory  service charges separately
stated on customers' bills for purchase  and  consumption  of
food  and  beverages,  to the extent that the proceeds of the
service charge are in fact  turned  over  as  tips  or  as  a
substitute for tips to the employees who participate directly
in  preparing,  serving,  hosting  or cleaning up the food or
beverage function with respect to which the service charge is
imposed.
    (16)  Petroleum products  sold  to  a  purchaser  if  the
seller  is prohibited by federal law from charging tax to the
purchaser.
    (17)  Tangible personal property sold to a common carrier
by rail or motor that receives the physical possession of the
property in Illinois and that  transports  the  property,  or
shares  with  another common carrier in the transportation of
the property, out of Illinois on a standard uniform  bill  of
lading  showing  the seller of the property as the shipper or
consignor of the property to a destination outside  Illinois,
for use outside Illinois.
    (18)  Legal  tender,  currency,  medallions,  or  gold or
silver  coinage  issued  by  the  State  of   Illinois,   the
government of the United States of America, or the government
of any foreign country, and bullion.
    (19)  Oil  field  exploration,  drilling,  and production
equipment, including (i) rigs and parts of rigs, rotary rigs,
cable tool rigs, and workover rigs,  (ii)  pipe  and  tubular
goods,  including  casing  and drill strings, (iii) pumps and
pump-jack units, (iv) storage tanks and flow lines,  (v)  any
individual   replacement  part  for  oil  field  exploration,
drilling, and production equipment, and  (vi)  machinery  and
equipment  purchased  for lease; but excluding motor vehicles
required to be registered under the Illinois Vehicle Code.
    (20)  Photoprocessing machinery and equipment,  including
repair  and  replacement  parts, both new and used, including
that  manufactured  on  special  order,  certified   by   the
purchaser  to  be  used  primarily  for  photoprocessing, and
including photoprocessing machinery and  equipment  purchased
for lease.
    (21)  Coal   exploration,   mining,  offhighway  hauling,
processing, maintenance, and reclamation equipment, including
replacement parts  and  equipment,  and  including  equipment
purchased for lease, but excluding motor vehicles required to
be registered under the Illinois Vehicle Code.
    (22)  Fuel  and  petroleum products sold to or used by an
air  carrier,  certified  by  the  carrier  to  be  used  for
consumption, shipment, or  storage  in  the  conduct  of  its
business  as an air common carrier, for a flight destined for
or returning from a location or locations outside the  United
States  without  regard  to  previous  or subsequent domestic
stopovers.
    (23)  A  transaction  in  which  the  purchase  order  is
received by a florist who is located  outside  Illinois,  but
who has a florist located in Illinois deliver the property to
the purchaser or the purchaser's donee in Illinois.
    (24)  Fuel  consumed  or  used in the operation of ships,
barges, or vessels that are used  primarily  in  or  for  the
transportation  of  property or the conveyance of persons for
hire on rivers  bordering  on  this  State  if  the  fuel  is
delivered  by  the  seller to the purchaser's barge, ship, or
vessel while it is afloat upon that bordering river.
    (25)  A motor vehicle sold in this State to a nonresident
even though the motor vehicle is delivered to the nonresident
in this State, if the motor vehicle is not to  be  titled  in
this  State, and if a driveaway decal permit is issued to the
motor vehicle as provided in Section 3-603  of  the  Illinois
Vehicle  Code  or  if  the  nonresident purchaser has vehicle
registration plates to transfer to  the  motor  vehicle  upon
returning  to  his  or  her  home state.  The issuance of the
driveaway   decal   permit   or   having   the   out-of-state
registration plates to be transferred is prima facie evidence
that the motor vehicle will not be titled in this State.
    (26)  Semen used for artificial insemination of livestock
for direct agricultural production.
    (27)  Horses, or interests in horses, registered with and
meeting the requirements of any of  the  Arabian  Horse  Club
Registry  of  America, Appaloosa Horse Club, American Quarter
Horse Association, United  States  Trotting  Association,  or
Jockey Club, as appropriate, used for purposes of breeding or
racing for prizes.
    (28)  Computers and communications equipment utilized for
any  hospital  purpose  and  equipment used in the diagnosis,
analysis, or treatment of hospital patients sold to a  lessor
who leases the equipment, under a lease of one year or longer
executed  or  in  effect  at  the  time of the purchase, to a
hospital  that  has  been  issued  an  active  tax  exemption
identification number by the Department under Section  1g  of
this Act.
    (29)  Personal  property  sold to a lessor who leases the
property, under a lease of one year or longer executed or  in
effect  at  the  time of the purchase, to a governmental body
that has been issued an active tax  exemption  identification
number by the Department under Section 1g of this Act.
    (30)  Beginning  with  taxable  years  ending on or after
December 31, 1995 and ending with taxable years ending on  or
before  December  31, 2004, personal property that is donated
for disaster relief to  be  used  in  a  State  or  federally
declared disaster area in Illinois or bordering Illinois by a
manufacturer  or retailer that is registered in this State to
a   corporation,   society,   association,   foundation,   or
institution that  has  been  issued  a  sales  tax  exemption
identification  number by the Department that assists victims
of the disaster who reside within the declared disaster area.
    (31)  Beginning with taxable years  ending  on  or  after
December  31, 1995 and ending with taxable years ending on or
before December 31, 2004, personal property that is  used  in
the  performance  of  infrastructure  repairs  in this State,
including but not limited to  municipal  roads  and  streets,
access  roads,  bridges,  sidewalks,  waste disposal systems,
water and  sewer  line  extensions,  water  distribution  and
purification  facilities,  storm water drainage and retention
facilities, and sewage treatment facilities, resulting from a
State or federally declared disaster in Illinois or bordering
Illinois  when  such  repairs  are  initiated  on  facilities
located in the declared disaster area within 6  months  after
the disaster.
(Source: P.A.  89-16,  eff.  5-30-95;  89-115,  eff.  1-1-96;
89-349,  eff.  8-17-95;  89-495,  eff.  6-24-96; 89-496, eff.
6-25-96; 89-626, eff. 8-9-96;  90-14,  eff.  7-1-97;  90-519,
eff.  6-1-98;  90-552,  eff.  12-12-97; 90-605, eff. 6-30-98;
revised 2-10-99.)

    Section    20.     The    Telecommunications    Municipal
Infrastructure Maintenance Fee Act  is  amended  by  changing
Section 5 as follows:

    (35 ILCS 635/5)
    Sec.   5.   Legislative  intent.   The  General  Assembly
imposed a tax on invested capital of utilities  to  partially
replace  the  personal property tax that was abolished by the
Illinois Constitution of 1970.  Since that tax  was  imposed,
telecommunications retailers have evolved from utility status
into an increasingly competitive industry serving the public.
This  Act  is intended to abolish the invested capital tax on
telecommunications retailers (that is, persons engaged in the
business of transmitting messages and acting as a retailer of
telecommunications  as  defined   in   Section   2   of   the
Telecommunications     Excise     Tax     Act).      Cellular
telecommunications  Telecummunications retailers have already
been excluded from application of the invested capital tax by
earlier legislative action.
    This Act is also intended to abolish municipal  franchise
fees  with  respect to telecommunications retailers, create a
uniform system for the collection and  distribution  of  fees
associated  with  the privilege of use of the public right of
way   for   telecommunications    activity,    and    provide
municipalities  with  a  comprehensive method of compensation
for telecommunications activity  including  the  recovery  of
reasonable   costs  of  regulating  the  use  of  the  public
rights-of-way for telecommunications activity.
(Source: P.A. 90-154, eff. 1-1-98; revised 2-10-99.)

    Section 25.  The Counties Code  is  amended  by  changing
Section 5-1211 as follows:

    (55 ILCS 5/5-1121)
    Sec. 5-1121.  Demolition, repair, or enclosure.
    (a)  The  county  board  of each county may upon a formal
request by the city, village or incorporated  town  demolish,
repair,  or  enclose  or  cause  the  demolition,  repair, or
enclosure of dangerous and unsafe  buildings  or  uncompleted
and  abandoned  buildings within the territory of the county,
but outside the territory of any municipality, and may remove
or cause the removal of garbage, debris, and other hazardous,
noxious, or unhealthy  substances  or  materials  from  those
buildings.   In  any  county having adopted, by referendum or
otherwise, a county health department as provided by Division
5-25 of the Counties Code  or  its  predecessor,  the  county
board  of  any  such  county may upon a formal request by the
city, village, or incorporated town demolish, repair or cause
the demolition or repair of dangerous and unsafe buildings or
uncompleted and abandoned buildings within the  territory  of
any  city,  village, or incorporated town having a population
of less than 50,000.
    The county board shall apply to the circuit court of  the
county  in  which  the  building  is located (i) for an order
authorizing action to be taken with respect to a building  if
the  owner  or  owners  of  the  building, including the lien
holders of record, after at least 15 days' written notice  by
mail to do so, have failed to commence proceedings to put the
building in a safe condition or to demolish it or (ii) for an
order  requiring  the  owner or owners of record to demolish,
repair, or enclose the building or to remove garbage, debris,
and other hazardous,  noxious,  or  unhealthy  substances  or
materials  from  the  building.   It  is not a defense to the
cause of action that the building is boarded up or  otherwise
enclosed,  although the court may order the defendant to have
the building boarded up or otherwise  enclosed.  Where,  upon
diligent  search, the identity or whereabouts of the owner or
owners of the building, including the lien holders of record,
is not ascertainable, notice mailed to the person or  persons
in  whose  name  the  real  estate  was last assessed and the
posting of  such  notice  upon  the  premises  sought  to  be
demolished  or  repaired  is  sufficient  notice  under  this
Section.
    The  hearing  upon  the  application to the circuit court
shall be expedited by the court and shall be given precedence
over all other suits.
    The cost of the demolition, repair, enclosure, or removal
incurred by the county, by an intervenor, or by a lien holder
of record, including court costs, attorney's fees, and  other
costs   related  to  the  enforcement  of  this  Section,  is
recoverable from the owner or owners of the  real  estate  or
the  previous  owner  or both if the property was transferred
during the 15 day notice period and is a  lien  on  the  real
estate;  the lien is superior to all prior existing liens and
encumbrances, except taxes, if, within  180  days  after  the
repair,  demolition,  enclosure,  or removal, the county, the
lien holder of record, or the  intervenor  who  incurred  the
cost and expense shall file a notice of lien for the cost and
expense  incurred in the office of the recorder in the county
in which the real estate is located or in the office  of  the
registrar of titles of the county if the real estate affected
is registered under the Registered Titles (Torrens) Act.
    The  notice must consist of a sworn statement setting out
(1) a description of  the  real  estate  sufficient  for  its
identification, (2) the amount of money representing the cost
and expense incurred, and (3) the date or dates when the cost
and  expense  was  incurred by the county, the lien holder of
record, or the intervenor.  Upon  payment  of  the  cost  and
expense by the owner of or persons interested in the property
after  the  notice  of lien has been filed, the lien shall be
released by the county, the person in whose name the lien has
been filed, or the assignee of the lien, and the release  may
be  filed  of record as in the case of filing notice of lien.
Unless the lien is enforced under subsection  (b),  the  lien
may  be enforced by foreclosure proceedings as in the case of
mortgage foreclosures under Article XV of the Code  of  Civil
Procedure  or  mechanics'  lien  foreclosures.  An  action to
foreclose this lien may be commenced at any  time  after  the
date  of  filing  of  the  notice  of  lien.   The  costs  of
foreclosure  incurred  by  the county, including court costs,
reasonable  attorney's  fees,  advances   to   preserve   the
property,  and other costs related to the enforcement of this
subsection, plus statutory interest, are a lien on  the  real
estate  and  are  recoverable by the county from the owner or
owners of the real estate.
    All liens arising under  this  subsection  (a)  shall  be
assignable.  The  assignee  of  the  lien shall have the same
power to enforce the lien as the assigning party, except that
the lien may not be enforced under subsection (b).
    If the appropriate official of any county determines that
any  dangerous  and  unsafe  building  or   uncompleted   and
abandoned   building   within   its  territory  fulfills  the
requirements for an action by the county under the  Abandoned
Housing  Rehabilitation  Act,  the  county may petition under
that Act in a proceeding brought under this subsection.
    (b)  In any case where a county has obtained a lien under
subsection (a), the county may enforce the  lien  under  this
subsection  (b)  in  the same proceeding in which the lien is
authorized.
    A county desiring to enforce a lien under this subsection
(b) shall petition  the  court  to  retain  jurisdiction  for
foreclosure proceedings under this subsection.  Notice of the
petition shall be served, by certified or registered mail, on
all persons who were served notice under subsection (a).  The
court  shall  conduct a hearing on the petition not less than
15 days after the notice is served.  If the court  determines
that  the  requirements  of  this  subsection  (b)  have been
satisfied,  it  shall   grant   the   petition   and   retain
jurisdiction over the matter until the foreclosure proceeding
is  completed.   The  costs  of  foreclosure  incurred by the
county, including court costs,  reasonable  attorneys'  fees,
advances to preserve the property, and other costs related to
the  enforcement of this subsection, plus statutory interest,
are a lien on the real estate  and  are  recoverable  by  the
county  from  the owner or owners of the real estate.  If the
court denies the petition, the county may enforce the lien in
a separate action as provided in subsection (a).
    All persons designated in Section 15-1501 of the Code  of
Civil   Procedure   as   necessary   parties  in  a  mortgage
foreclosure action shall be joined as parties before issuance
of an order of foreclosure.  Persons  designated  in  Section
15-1501 of the Code of Civil Procedure as permissible parties
may also be joined as parties in the action.
    The  provisions  of  Article  XV  of  the  Code  of Civil
Procedure applicable to mortgage foreclosures shall apply  to
the  foreclosure  of a lien under this subsection (b), except
to the extent that those  provisions  are  inconsistent  with
this  subsection.    For  purposes  of  foreclosures of liens
under  this  subsection,  however,  the   redemption   period
described in subsection (b) of Section 15-1603 of the Code of
Civil  Procedure shall end 60 days after the date of entry of
the order of foreclosure.
    (c)  In addition to any other remedy provided by law, the
county board of any county may petition the circuit court  to
have  property  declared  abandoned under this subsection (c)
if:
         (1)  the property has been tax delinquent for  2  or
    more  years  or  bills for water service for the property
    have been outstanding for 2 or more years;
         (2)  the property is unoccupied by  persons  legally
    in possession; and
         (3)  the  property  contains  a  dangerous or unsafe
    building.
    All persons having an interest of record in the property,
including  tax  purchasers  and  beneficial  owners  of   any
Illinois  land  trust  having title to the property, shall be
named as defendants in the petition and shall be served  with
process.   In  addition,  service  shall be had under Section
2-206 of the Code  of  Civil  Procedure  as  in  other  cases
affecting property.
    The county, however, may proceed under this subsection in
a  proceeding  brought  under  subsection (a).  Notice of the
petition shall be served by certified or registered  mail  on
all persons who were served notice under subsection (a).
    If  the  county  proves  that the conditions described in
this subsection exist and the owner of record of the property
does not enter an appearance in the action, or, if  title  to
the  property  is  held by an Illinois land trust, if neither
the owner of record nor the owner of the beneficial  interest
of  the  trust  enters an appearance, the court shall declare
the property abandoned.
    If that determination is made, notice shall  be  sent  by
certified  or  registered  mail  to  all  persons  having  an
interest  of record in the property, including tax purchasers
and beneficial owners of any Illinois land trust having title
to the property, stating that title to the property  will  be
transferred  to  the  county  unless,  within  30 days of the
notice, the owner of  record  enters  an  appearance  in  the
action,  or unless any other person having an interest in the
property files with the  court  a  request  to  demolish  the
dangerous  or  unsafe building or to put the building in safe
condition.
    If the owner of record enters an appearance in the action
within the 30 day period, the court shall  vacate  its  order
declaring  the  property abandoned.  In that case, the county
may amend its complaint  in  order  to  initiate  proceedings
under subsection (a).
    If  a request to demolish or repair the building is filed
within the 30 day period, the court shall grant permission to
the requesting party to demolish the building within 30  days
or  to  restore the building to safe condition within 60 days
after the request is granted.  An extension  of  that  period
for up to 60 additional days may be given for good cause.  If
more than one person with an interest in the property files a
timely  request, preference shall be given to the person with
the lien or other interest of the highest priority.
    If the requesting party proves  to  the  court  that  the
building  has  been  demolished  or  put  in a safe condition
within the period of time granted by  the  court,  the  court
shall issue a quitclaim judicial deed for the property to the
requesting party, conveying only the interest of the owner of
record,  upon  proof  of  payment  to the county of all costs
incurred  by  the  county  in  connection  with  the  action,
including but not limited to court  costs,  attorney's  fees,
administrative  costs,  the  costs,  if  any, associated with
building enclosure or removal, and  receiver's  certificates.
The  interest in the property so conveyed shall be subject to
all liens and encumbrances on the property.  In addition,  if
the interest is conveyed to a person holding a certificate of
purchase  for  the  property under the Property Tax Code, the
conveyance shall be subject to the rights  of  redemption  of
all  persons entitled to redeem under that Act, including the
original owner of record.
    If no person with an interest in  the  property  files  a
timely  request  or if the requesting party fails to demolish
the building or put the building in safe condition within the
time specified by the court,  the  county  may  petition  the
court  to  issue  a  judicial  deed  for  the property to the
county.  A conveyance  by  judicial  deed  shall  operate  to
extinguish all existing ownership interests in, liens on, and
other interest in the property, including tax liens.
    (d)  Each   county   may   use  the  provisions  of  this
subsection to expedite the removal of certain buildings  that
are  a  continuing  hazard to the community in which they are
located.
    If a residential building is 2 stories or less in  height
as  defined  by  the county's building code, and the official
designated to be in charge of enforcing the county's building
code determines that the building is open and vacant  and  an
immediate and continuing hazard to the community in which the
building is located, then the official shall be authorized to
post  a  notice not less than 2 feet by 2 feet in size on the
front of the building.  The notice shall be dated as  of  the
date  of the posting and shall state that unless the building
is demolished, repaired, or enclosed, and unless any garbage,
debris, and other hazardous, noxious, or unhealthy substances
or materials are removed so that an immediate and  continuing
hazard  to  the community no longer exists, then the building
may be demolished, repaired, or  enclosed,  or  any  garbage,
debris, and other hazardous, noxious, or unhealthy substances
or materials may be removed, by the county.
    Not  later  than  30  days  following  the posting of the
notice, the county shall do both of the following:
         (1)  Cause to be sent,  by  certified  mail,  return
    receipt  requested,  a  notice to all owners of record of
    the property, the beneficial owners of any Illinois  land
    trust  having  title to the property, and all lienholders
    of record in the property,  stating  the  intent  of  the
    county  to  demolish,  repair, or enclose the building or
    remove any garbage, debris, or other hazardous,  noxious,
    or  unhealthy  substances  or materials if that action is
    not taken by the owner or owners.
         (2)  Cause to be published, in a newspaper published
    or  circulated  in  the  county  where  the  building  is
    located, a notice setting forth  (i)  the  permanent  tax
    index  number  and  the  address  of the building, (ii) a
    statement that  the  property  is  open  and  vacant  and
    constitutes  an  immediate  and  continuing hazard to the
    community, and (iii) a statement that the county  intends
    to  demolish,  repair,  or enclose the building or remove
    any garbage, debris,  or  other  hazardous,  noxious,  or
    unhealthy  substances or materials if the owner or owners
    or lienholders of record fail  to  do  so.   This  notice
    shall be published for 3 consecutive days.
    A  person objecting to the proposed actions of the county
board may file his or her objection in an appropriate form in
a court of competent jurisdiction.
    If the building is not demolished, repaired, or enclosed,
or the garbage,  debris,  or  other  hazardous,  noxious,  or
unhealthy  substances or materials are not removed, within 30
days of mailing the notice  to  the  owners  of  record,  the
beneficial  owners of any Illinois land trust having title to
the property, and all lienholders of record in the  property,
or  within  30  days  of  the  last day of publication of the
notice, whichever is later, the county board shall  have  the
power  to  demolish,  repair,  or  enclose the building or to
remove any garbage, debris, or other hazardous,  noxious,  or
unhealthy substances or materials.
    The  county may proceed to demolish, repair, or enclose a
building or remove any garbage, debris, or  other  hazardous,
noxious,  or  unhealthy  substances  or  materials under this
subsection within a 120-day period following the date of  the
mailing  of the notice if the appropriate official determines
that the demolition, repair, enclosure,  or  removal  of  any
garbage,  debris,  or  other hazardous, noxious, or unhealthy
substances or materials is necessary to remedy the  immediate
and  continuing  hazard.   If,  however,  before  the  county
proceeds   with   any  of  the  actions  authorized  by  this
subsection, any  person  has  sought  a  hearing  under  this
subsection  before  a  court  and  has  served  a copy of the
complaint on the chief executive officer of the county,  then
the  county  shall  not  proceed with the demolition, repair,
enclosure, or removal of garbage, debris, or other substances
until the court determines that that action is  necessary  to
remedy  the hazard and issues an order authorizing the county
to do so.
    Following the  demolition,  repair,  or  enclosure  of  a
building,  or  the  removal  of  garbage,  debris,  or  other
hazardous,  noxious,  or  unhealthy  substances  or materials
under this subsection, the county may file a notice  of  lien
against  the  real  estate  for  the  cost of the demolition,
repair, enclosure, or  removal  within  180  days  after  the
repair,  demolition,  enclosure, or removal occurred, for the
cost and expense incurred, in the office of the  recorder  in
the  county  in  which  the  real estate is located or in the
office of the registrar of titles of the county if  the  real
estate  affected  is  registered  under the Registered Titles
(Torrens) Act.  The notice of lien shall consist of  a  sworn
statement setting forth (i) a description of the real estate,
such  as  the  address  or other description of the property,
sufficient for its identification; (ii) the expenses incurred
by the county in undertaking the remedial actions  authorized
under  this  subsection; (iii) the date or dates the expenses
were incurred by the county; (iv) a statement by the official
responsible for enforcing the building code that the building
was  open  and  vacant  and  constituted  an  immediate   and
continuing  hazard  to  the community; (v) a statement by the
official that the required sign was posted on  the  building,
that  notice  was  sent  by  certified  mail to the owners of
record, and that notice was published in accordance with this
subsection; and (vi) a statement as to  when  and  where  the
notice was published.  The lien authorized by this subsection
may  thereafter  be  released  or  enforced  by the county as
provided in subsection (a).
(Source: P.A.  89-585,  eff.  1-1-97;  90-14,  eff.   7-1-97;
90-517, eff. 8-22-97; revised 3-4-99.)

    Section  30.   The  School  Code  is  amended by changing
Section 18-8.05 as follows:

    (105 ILCS 5/18-8.05)
    Sec. 18-8.05.  Basis for apportionment of  general  State
financial  aid  and  supplemental  general  State  aid to the
common schools for the 1998-1999 and subsequent school years.

(A)  General Provisions.
    (1)  The  provisions  of  this  Section  apply   to   the
1998-1999 and subsequent school years.  The system of general
State  financial aid provided for in this Section is designed
to assure that, through a combination of State financial  aid
and  required local resources, the financial support provided
each pupil in Average Daily Attendance equals  or  exceeds  a
prescribed per pupil Foundation Level.  This formula approach
imputes  a  level  of per pupil Available Local Resources and
provides for the basis to calculate  a  per  pupil  level  of
general  State  financial  aid  that, when added to Available
Local Resources, equals or exceeds the Foundation Level.  The
amount of per pupil general State financial  aid  for  school
districts,   in   general,  varies  in  inverse  relation  to
Available Local Resources.  Per pupil amounts are based  upon
each  school district's Average Daily Attendance as that term
is defined in this Section.
    (2)  In addition to general State financial  aid,  school
districts  with  specified levels or concentrations of pupils
from  low  income  households   are   eligible   to   receive
supplemental  general  State financial aid grants as provided
pursuant to subsection (H). The supplemental State aid grants
provided for school districts under subsection (H)  shall  be
appropriated  for distribution to school districts as part of
the same line item in which the general State  financial  aid
of school districts is appropriated under this Section.
    (3)  To  receive financial assistance under this Section,
school districts are required to file claims with  the  State
Board of Education, subject to the following requirements:
         (a)  Any  school  district which fails for any given
    school year to maintain school as required by law, or  to
    maintain  a recognized school is not eligible to file for
    such school year any claim upon the Common  School  Fund.
    In  case  of  nonrecognition  of  one  or more attendance
    centers  in  a  school   district   otherwise   operating
    recognized  schools,  the  claim of the district shall be
    reduced  in  the  proportion  which  the  Average   Daily
    Attendance  in  the  attendance center or centers bear to
    the Average Daily Attendance in the school  district.   A
    "recognized  school"  means any public school which meets
    the standards as established for recognition by the State
    Board of Education.   A  school  district  or  attendance
    center  not  having  recognition  status  at the end of a
    school term is entitled to receive State aid payments due
    upon  a  legal  claim  which  was  filed  while  it   was
    recognized.
         (b)  School district claims filed under this Section
    are subject to Sections 18-9, 18-10, and 18-12, except as
    otherwise provided in this Section.
         (c)  If  a  school  district  operates  a  full year
    school under Section 10-19.1, the general  State  aid  to
    the  school  district  shall  be  determined by the State
    Board of Education in accordance  with  this  Section  as
    near as may be applicable.
         (d) (Blank).
    (4)  Except  as  provided in subsections (H) and (L), the
board of any district receiving any of  the  grants  provided
for  in  this  Section  may  apply those funds to any fund so
received  for  which  that  board  is  authorized   to   make
expenditures by law.
    School  districts  are  not  required  to exert a minimum
Operating Tax Rate in order to qualify for  assistance  under
this Section.
    (5)  As  used  in  this Section the following terms, when
capitalized, shall have the meaning ascribed herein:
         (a)  "Average Daily Attendance":  A count  of  pupil
    attendance   in  school,  averaged  as  provided  for  in
    subsection  (C)  and  utilized  in  deriving  per   pupil
    financial support levels.
         (b)  "Available  Local Resources":  A computation of
    local financial  support,  calculated  on  the  basis  of
    Average Daily Attendance and derived as provided pursuant
    to subsection (D).
         (c)  "Corporate    Personal   Property   Replacement
    Taxes":  Funds paid to local school districts pursuant to
    "An Act in  relation  to  the  abolition  of  ad  valorem
    personal  property  tax  and  the replacement of revenues
    lost thereby, and amending and repealing certain Acts and
    parts of Acts in connection therewith", certified  August
    14, 1979, as amended (Public Act 81-1st S.S.-1).
         (d)  "Foundation  Level":  A prescribed level of per
    pupil financial support as  provided  for  in  subsection
    (B).
         (e)  "Operating  Tax  Rate":   All  school  district
    property taxes extended for all purposes, except Bond and
    Interest,  Summer  School, Rent, Capital Improvement, and
    Vocational Education Building purposes.

(B)  Foundation Level.
    (1)  The Foundation Level is a figure established by  the
State  representing  the minimum level of per pupil financial
support that should be available to  provide  for  the  basic
education  of each pupil in Average Daily Attendance.  As set
forth in this Section, each school  district  is  assumed  to
exert   a  sufficient  local  taxing  effort  such  that,  in
combination with the aggregate of general State financial aid
provided the  district,  an  aggregate  of  State  and  local
resources  are available to meet the basic education needs of
pupils in the district.
    (2)  For the 1998-1999 school year, the Foundation  Level
of  support  is  $4,225.   For the 1999-2000 school year, the
Foundation Level of support is  $4,325.   For  the  2000-2001
school year, the Foundation Level of support is $4,425.
    (3)  For  the  2001-2002 school year and each school year
thereafter, the Foundation Level of support is $4,425 or such
greater amount as may be established by law  by  the  General
Assembly.

(C)  Average Daily Attendance.
    (1)  For   purposes  of  calculating  general  State  aid
pursuant to  subsection  (E),  an  Average  Daily  Attendance
figure  shall  be  utilized.   The  Average  Daily Attendance
figure for formula calculation purposes shall be the  monthly
average  of the actual number of pupils in attendance of each
school district, as further averaged for the best 3 months of
pupil attendance for each school district.  In compiling  the
figures  for  the  number  of  pupils  in  attendance, school
districts  and  the  State  Board  of  Education  shall,  for
purposes of general State  aid  funding,  conform  attendance
figures to the requirements of subsection (F).
    (2)  The  Average  Daily  Attendance  figures utilized in
subsection (E) shall be the requisite attendance data for the
school year immediately preceding the school year  for  which
general State aid is being calculated.

(D)  Available Local Resources.
    (1)  For   purposes  of  calculating  general  State  aid
pursuant to subsection (E),  a  representation  of  Available
Local  Resources  per  pupil,  as  that  term  is defined and
determined in this subsection, shall be utilized.   Available
Local  Resources  per pupil shall include a calculated dollar
amount representing local school district revenues from local
property  taxes  and   from   Corporate   Personal   Property
Replacement  Taxes,  expressed  on  the  basis  of  pupils in
Average Daily Attendance.
    (2)  In determining  a  school  district's  revenue  from
local  property  taxes,  the  State  Board of Education shall
utilize the  equalized  assessed  valuation  of  all  taxable
property  of  each  school district as of September 30 of the
previous year.  The  equalized  assessed  valuation  utilized
shall  be  obtained  and determined as provided in subsection
(G).
    (3)  For school districts maintaining grades kindergarten
through 12, local property tax revenues per  pupil  shall  be
calculated   as  the  product  of  the  applicable  equalized
assessed valuation for the district multiplied by 3.00%,  and
divided  by  the  district's Average Daily Attendance figure.
For school districts maintaining grades kindergarten  through
8,  local property tax revenues per pupil shall be calculated
as the product of the applicable equalized assessed valuation
for the district multiplied by  2.30%,  and  divided  by  the
district's  Average  Daily  Attendance  figure.   For  school
districts maintaining grades 9 through 12, local property tax
revenues per pupil shall be the applicable equalized assessed
valuation of the district multiplied by 1.20%, and divided by
the district's Average Daily Attendance figure.
    (4)  The  Corporate  Personal  Property Replacement Taxes
paid to each school district during the calendar year 2 years
before the calendar year  in  which  a  school  year  begins,
divided  by  the  Average  Daily  Attendance  figure for that
district, shall be added to the local property  tax  revenues
per  pupil  as  derived by the application of the immediately
preceding paragraph (3).  The sum of these per pupil  figures
for  each  school  district  shall constitute Available Local
Resources as that term is utilized in subsection (E)  in  the
calculation of general State aid.

(E)  Computation of General State Aid.
    (1)  For  each  school  year, the amount of general State
aid allotted to a school district shall be  computed  by  the
State Board of Education as provided in this subsection.
    (2)  For  any  school  district for which Available Local
Resources per pupil is less than the product  of  0.93  times
the  Foundation  Level,  general  State aid for that district
shall be calculated as an  amount  equal  to  the  Foundation
Level  minus  Available  Local  Resources,  multiplied by the
Average Daily Attendance of the school district.
    (3)  For any school district for  which  Available  Local
Resources  per  pupil is equal to or greater than the product
of 0.93 times the Foundation Level and less than the  product
of 1.75 times the Foundation Level, the general State aid per
pupil  shall  be a decimal proportion of the Foundation Level
derived  using  a  linear  algorithm.   Under   this   linear
algorithm,  the  calculated general State aid per pupil shall
decline  in  direct  linear  fashion  from  0.07  times   the
Foundation  Level  for a school district with Available Local
Resources equal to the product of 0.93 times  the  Foundation
Level,  to  0.05  times  the  Foundation  Level  for a school
district with Available Local Resources equal to the  product
of  1.75  times  the  Foundation  Level.   The  allocation of
general State  aid  for  school  districts  subject  to  this
paragraph  3  shall  be  the calculated general State aid per
pupil figure multiplied by the Average  Daily  Attendance  of
the school district.
    (4)  For  any  school  district for which Available Local
Resources per pupil equals or exceeds  the  product  of  1.75
times  the  Foundation  Level,  the general State aid for the
school district shall be calculated as the  product  of  $218
multiplied  by  the  Average  Daily  Attendance of the school
district.

(F)  Compilation of Average Daily Attendance.
    (1)  Each school district shall, by July 1 of each  year,
submit  to  the State Board of Education, on forms prescribed
by the State Board of Education, attendance figures  for  the
school  year  that began in the preceding calendar year.  The
attendance information  so  transmitted  shall  identify  the
average daily attendance figures for each month of the school
year,  except  that any days of attendance in August shall be
added to the month of September and any days of attendance in
June shall be added to the month of May.
    Except as otherwise provided in  this  Section,  days  of
attendance  by  pupils  shall be counted only for sessions of
not less than 5 clock hours of  school  work  per  day  under
direct  supervision  of:  (i)  teachers, or (ii) non-teaching
personnel   or   volunteer   personnel   when   engaging   in
non-teaching  duties  and  supervising  in  those   instances
specified in subsection (a) of Section 10-22.34 and paragraph
10  of  Section 34-18, with pupils of legal school age and in
kindergarten and grades 1 through 12.
    Days of attendance by tuition pupils shall be  accredited
only  to  the  districts that pay the tuition to a recognized
school.
    (2)  Days of attendance by pupils of less  than  5  clock
hours  of school shall be subject to the following provisions
in the compilation of Average Daily Attendance.
         (a)  Pupils regularly enrolled in  a  public  school
    for  only  a part of the school day may be counted on the
    basis of 1/6 day for every class hour of  instruction  of
    40 minutes or more attended pursuant to such enrollment.
         (b)  Days  of  attendance  may  be less than 5 clock
    hours on the opening and closing of the school term,  and
    upon  the first day of pupil attendance, if preceded by a
    day  or  days  utilized  as  an  institute  or  teachers'
    workshop.
         (c)  A session of 4  or  more  clock  hours  may  be
    counted  as a day of attendance upon certification by the
    regional  superintendent,  and  approved  by  the   State
    Superintendent  of  Education  to  the  extent  that  the
    district has been forced to use daily multiple sessions.
         (d)  A  session  of  3  or  more  clock hours may be
    counted as a day of attendance (1) when the remainder  of
    the school day or at least 2 hours in the evening of that
    day  is  utilized  for an in-service training program for
    teachers, up to a maximum of 5 days per  school  year  of
    which  a maximum of 4 days of such 5 days may be used for
    parent-teacher conferences, provided a district  conducts
    an  in-service  training  program  for teachers which has
    been approved by the State Superintendent  of  Education;
    or,  in  lieu of 4 such days, 2 full days may be used, in
    which event each such day may be  counted  as  a  day  of
    attendance;  and  (2)  when  days  in  addition  to those
    provided in item (1) are scheduled by a  school  pursuant
    to  its  school improvement plan adopted under Article 34
    or its revised or amended school improvement plan adopted
    under Article 2, provided that (i) such sessions of 3  or
    more  clock  hours  are  scheduled  to  occur  at regular
    intervals, (ii) the remainder of the school days in which
    such sessions occur are utilized for in-service  training
    programs   or  other  staff  development  activities  for
    teachers, and (iii) a sufficient  number  of  minutes  of
    school  work under the direct supervision of teachers are
    added to the school days between such regularly scheduled
    sessions to  accumulate  not  less  than  the  number  of
    minutes  by  which such sessions of 3 or more clock hours
    fall short of 5 clock hours. Any full days used  for  the
    purposes  of  this  paragraph shall not be considered for
    computing average daily attendance.  Days  scheduled  for
    in-service    training    programs,   staff   development
    activities,  or   parent-teacher   conferences   may   be
    scheduled  separately  for  different  grade  levels  and
    different attendance centers of the district.
         (e)  A  session  of  not less than one clock hour of
    teaching hospitalized or homebound pupils on-site  or  by
    telephone  to  the classroom may be counted as 1/2 day of
    attendance, however these pupils must receive 4  or  more
    clock  hours  of instruction to be counted for a full day
    of attendance.
         (f)  A session of at least  4  clock  hours  may  be
    counted  as  a  day of attendance for first grade pupils,
    and pupils in full day kindergartens, and a session of  2
    or  more hours may be counted as 1/2 day of attendance by
    pupils in kindergartens which provide  only  1/2  day  of
    attendance.
         (g)  For  children  with  disabilities who are below
    the age of 6 years and who cannot attend 2 or more  clock
    hours  because  of  their  disability  or  immaturity,  a
    session of not less than one clock hour may be counted as
    1/2  day  of  attendance; however for such children whose
    educational needs so require a session of 4 or more clock
    hours may be counted as a full day of attendance.
         (h)  A recognized kindergarten  which  provides  for
    only  1/2  day of attendance by each pupil shall not have
    more than 1/2 day of attendance counted in any  one  day.
    However, kindergartens may count 2 1/2 days of attendance
    in  any  5 consecutive school days.  When a pupil attends
    such a kindergarten for 2 half days  on  any  one  school
    day,  the  pupil  shall  have  the following day as a day
    absent from school, unless the  school  district  obtains
    permission  in  writing  from the State Superintendent of
    Education.  Attendance at kindergartens which provide for
    a full day of attendance by each pupil shall  be  counted
    the  same  as attendance by first grade pupils.  Only the
    first year of attendance in  one  kindergarten  shall  be
    counted,  except  in  case  of  children  who entered the
    kindergarten  in  their  fifth  year  whose   educational
    development  requires  a  second  year of kindergarten as
    determined under the rules and regulations of  the  State
    Board of Education.

(G)  Equalized Assessed Valuation Data.
    (1)  For  purposes  of the calculation of Available Local
Resources required pursuant  to  subsection  (D),  the  State
Board  of  Education  shall  secure  from  the  Department of
Revenue the value as equalized or assessed by the  Department
of  Revenue  of all taxable property of every school district
together with the applicable tax rate used in extending taxes
for the funds of the district  as  of  September  30  of  the
previous year.
    This equalized assessed valuation, as adjusted further by
the requirements of this subsection, shall be utilized in the
calculation of Available Local Resources.
    (2)  The  equalized  assessed  valuation in paragraph (1)
shall be adjusted, as applicable, in the following manner:
         (a)  For the purposes of calculating State aid under
    this Section, with  respect  to  any  part  of  a  school
    district  within  a redevelopment project area in respect
    to  which  a  municipality  has  adopted  tax   increment
    allocation   financing  pursuant  to  the  Tax  Increment
    Allocation Redevelopment Act, Sections 11-74.4-1  through
    11-74.4-11   of   the  Illinois  Municipal  Code  or  the
    Industrial Jobs Recovery Law, Sections 11-74.6-1  through
    11-74.6-50 of the Illinois Municipal Code, no part of the
    current  equalized  assessed  valuation  of real property
    located in any such project area which is attributable to
    an increase above the total  initial  equalized  assessed
    valuation  of  such property shall be used as part of the
    equalized assessed valuation of the district, until  such
    time  as  all redevelopment project costs have been paid,
    as provided in Section 11-74.4-8  of  the  Tax  Increment
    Allocation  Redevelopment Act or in Section 11-74.6-35 of
    the Industrial Jobs Recovery Law.  For the purpose of the
    equalized assessed valuation of the district,  the  total
    initial  equalized  assessed  valuation  or  the  current
    equalized  assessed  valuation, whichever is lower, shall
    be used until such  time  as  all  redevelopment  project
    costs have been paid.
         (b)  The  real property equalized assessed valuation
    for a school district shall be  adjusted  by  subtracting
    from  the real property value as equalized or assessed by
    the Department of Revenue  for  the  district  an  amount
    computed by dividing the amount of any abatement of taxes
    under  Section  18-170  of the Property Tax Code by 3.00%
    for a district maintaining  grades  kindergarten  through
    12,   by   2.30%   for   a  district  maintaining  grades
    kindergarten through  8,  or  by  1.20%  for  a  district
    maintaining grades 9 through 12 and adjusted by an amount
    computed by dividing the amount of any abatement of taxes
    under  subsection  (a)  of Section 18-165 of the Property
    Tax Code by the same percentage rates for  district  type
    as specified in this subparagraph (b).

(H)  Supplemental General State Aid.
    (1)  In  addition  to  the  general  State  aid  a school
district is allotted pursuant to subsection  (E),  qualifying
school  districts  shall receive a grant, paid in conjunction
with  a  district's  payments  of  general  State  aid,   for
supplemental  general  State aid based upon the concentration
level of  children  from  low-income  households  within  the
school  district.  Supplemental State aid grants provided for
school districts under this subsection shall be  appropriated
for distribution to school districts as part of the same line
item  in  which  the  general  State  financial aid of school
districts is appropriated under this Section. For purposes of
this subsection, the term  "Low-Income  Concentration  Level"
shall  be  the  low-income eligible pupil count from the most
recently available federal  census  divided  by  the  Average
Daily  Attendance  of  the  school district. If, however, the
percentage decrease from the 2 most recent  federal  censuses
in  the  low-income  eligible  pupil  count  of a high school
district with fewer than 400 students exceeds by 75% or  more
the  percentage change in the total low-income eligible pupil
count  of  contiguous  elementary  school  districts,   whose
boundaries are coterminous with the high school district, the
high  school  district's low-income eligible pupil count from
the earlier federal census shall be the number  used  as  the
low-income eligible pupil count for the high school district,
for purposes of this subsection (H).
    (2)  Supplemental  general  State  aid  pursuant  to this
subsection shall be provided as follows:
         (a)  For any  school  district  with  a  Low  Income
    Concentration  Level  of  at least 20% and less than 35%,
    the grant for any school year shall be $800 multiplied by
    the low income eligible pupil count.
         (b)  For any  school  district  with  a  Low  Income
    Concentration  Level  of  at least 35% and less than 50%,
    the grant for the 1998-1999 school year shall  be  $1,100
    multiplied by the low income eligible pupil count.
         (c)  For  any  school  district  with  a  Low Income
    Concentration Level of at least 50% and  less  than  60%,
    the  grant  for  the  1998-99 school year shall be $1,500
    multiplied by the low income eligible pupil count.
         (d)  For any  school  district  with  a  Low  Income
    Concentration  Level  of  60%  or more, the grant for the
    1998-99 school year shall be $1,900 multiplied by the low
    income eligible pupil count.
         (e)  For the 1999-2000 school year,  the  per  pupil
    amount  specified  in  subparagraphs  (b),  (c), and (d),
    immediately above shall be increased by $100  to  $1,200,
    $1,600, and $2,000, respectively.
         (f)  For  the  2000-2001  school year, the per pupil
    amounts specified  in  subparagraphs  (b),  (c)  and  (d)
    immediately  above  shall be increased to $1,230, $1,640,
    and $2,050, respectively.
    (3)  School districts with an Average Daily Attendance of
more than  1,000  and  less  than  50,000  that  qualify  for
supplemental  general  State  aid pursuant to this subsection
shall submit a plan to the State Board of Education prior  to
October  30  of  each year for the use of the funds resulting
from this grant of supplemental general  State  aid  for  the
improvement  of  instruction  in  which  priority is given to
meeting the education needs of disadvantaged children.   Such
plan   shall  be  submitted  in  accordance  with  rules  and
regulations promulgated by the State Board of Education.
    (4)  School districts with an Average Daily Attendance of
50,000 or more that qualify for  supplemental  general  State
aid   pursuant  to  this  subsection  shall  be  required  to
distribute from funds available pursuant to this Section,  no
less  than  $261,000,000  in  accordance  with  the following
requirements:
         (a)  The required amounts shall  be  distributed  to
    the  attendance centers within the district in proportion
    to the number  of  pupils  enrolled  at  each  attendance
    center  who are eligible to receive free or reduced-price
    lunches or breakfasts under the federal  Child  Nutrition
    Act  of  1966  and  under  the  National School Lunch Act
    during the immediately preceding school year.
         (b)  The   distribution   of   these   portions   of
    supplemental  and  general  State  aid  among  attendance
    centers according to  these  requirements  shall  not  be
    compensated  for  or  contravened  by  adjustments of the
    total of  other  funds  appropriated  to  any  attendance
    centers, and the Board of Education shall utilize funding
    from  one  or several sources in order to fully implement
    this provision annually prior to the opening of school.
         (c)  Each attendance center shall be provided by the
    school district a distribution  of  noncategorical  funds
    and other categorical funds to which an attendance center
    is entitled under law in order that the general State aid
    and   supplemental   general   State   aid   provided  by
    application of this subsection  supplements  rather  than
    supplants  the noncategorical funds and other categorical
    funds provided by the school district to  the  attendance
    centers.
         (d)  Any  funds made available under this subsection
    that by reason of the provisions of this  subsection  are
    not  required  to be allocated and provided to attendance
    centers may be used and appropriated by the board of  the
    district for any lawful school purpose.
         (e)  Funds received by an attendance center pursuant
    to this subsection shall be used by the attendance center
    at  the  discretion  of  the  principal  and local school
    council for programs to improve educational opportunities
    at qualifying schools through the following programs  and
    services:  early  childhood education, reduced class size
    or improved adult to student classroom ratio,  enrichment
    programs,  remedial  assistance,  attendance improvement,
    and other  educationally  beneficial  expenditures  which
    supplement  the  regular and basic programs as determined
    by the State Board of Education.   Funds  provided  shall
    not be expended for any political or lobbying purposes as
    defined by board rule.
         (f)  Each district subject to the provisions of this
    subdivision  (H)(4)  shall  submit  an acceptable plan to
    meet the educational needs of disadvantaged children,  in
    compliance  with  the  requirements of this paragraph, to
    the State Board of Education prior to  July  15  of  each
    year. This plan shall be consistent with the decisions of
    local  school  councils concerning the school expenditure
    plans developed in accordance  with  part  4  of  Section
    34-2.3.  The State Board shall approve or reject the plan
    within  60  days  after  its  submission.  If the plan is
    rejected, the  district  shall  give  written  notice  of
    intent   to  modify  the  plan  within  15  days  of  the
    notification of rejection and then submit a modified plan
    within 30 days after the date of the  written  notice  of
    intent  to  modify.    Districts may amend approved plans
    pursuant to rules  promulgated  by  the  State  Board  of
    Education.
         Upon  notification  by  the State Board of Education
    that the district has not submitted a plan prior to  July
    15  or  a  modified plan within the time period specified
    herein, the State aid funds  affected  by  that  plan  or
    modified  plan  shall  be  withheld by the State Board of
    Education until a plan or modified plan is submitted.
         If the district fails to  distribute  State  aid  to
    attendance  centers  in accordance with an approved plan,
    the plan for the following year shall allocate funds,  in
    addition   to   the  funds  otherwise  required  by  this
    subsection,  to  those  attendance  centers  which   were
    underfunded  during the previous year in amounts equal to
    such underfunding.
         For purposes of  determining  compliance  with  this
    subsection  in relation to the requirements of attendance
    center funding, each district subject to  the  provisions
    of this subsection shall submit as a separate document by
    December  1 of each year a report of expenditure data for
    the prior year in addition to  any  modification  of  its
    current  plan.  If it is determined that there has been a
    failure to comply with the expenditure provisions of this
    subsection regarding contravention  or  supplanting,  the
    State  Superintendent  of Education shall, within 60 days
    of receipt of the report, notify  the  district  and  any
    affected local school council.  The district shall within
    45  days of receipt of that notification inform the State
    Superintendent of Education of the remedial or corrective
    action to be taken, whether  by amendment of the  current
    plan,  if  feasible, or by adjustment in the plan for the
    following  year.   Failure  to  provide  the  expenditure
    report or the  notification  of  remedial  or  corrective
    action  in  a timely manner shall result in a withholding
    of the affected funds.
         The State Board of Education shall promulgate  rules
    and  regulations  to  implement  the  provisions  of this
    subsection.   No  funds  shall  be  released  under  this
    subdivision (H)(4) to any district that has not submitted
    a plan that has been  approved  by  the  State  Board  of
    Education.

(I)  General State Aid for Newly Configured School Districts.
    (1)  For  a  new  school  district  formed  by  combining
property   included  totally  within  2  or  more  previously
existing school districts, for its first  year  of  existence
the  general  State  aid  and  supplemental general State aid
calculated under this Section shall be computed for  the  new
district  and for the previously existing districts for which
property is totally included within the new district.  If the
computation on the basis of the previously existing districts
is greater, a supplementary payment equal to  the  difference
shall  be  made for the first 4 years of existence of the new
district.
    (2)  For a school  district  which  annexes  all  of  the
territory  of  one or more entire other school districts, for
the  first  year  during  which  the  change  of   boundaries
attributable  to  such  annexation  becomes effective for all
purposes as determined under Section 7-9 or 7A-8, the general
State aid and supplemental general State aid calculated under
this Section shall be computed for the annexing  district  as
constituted  after  the  annexation  and for the annexing and
each annexed district as constituted prior to the annexation;
and if the computation on  the  basis  of  the  annexing  and
annexed  districts  as constituted prior to the annexation is
greater, a supplementary  payment  equal  to  the  difference
shall  be  made  for  the  first  4 years of existence of the
annexing school district as constituted upon such annexation.
    (3)  For 2 or more school districts which  annex  all  of
the  territory  of one or more entire other school districts,
and for 2 or more community unit districts which result  upon
the  division  (pursuant  to petition under Section 11A-2) of
one or more other unit school districts into 2 or more  parts
and  which  together include all of the parts into which such
other unit school district or districts are so  divided,  for
the   first  year  during  which  the  change  of  boundaries
attributable to such annexation or division becomes effective
for all purposes as determined under Section 7-9  or  11A-10,
as  the  case  may be, the general State aid and supplemental
general State aid calculated  under  this  Section  shall  be
computed   for   each   annexing  or  resulting  district  as
constituted after the annexation or  division  and  for  each
annexing  and  annexed  district,  or  for each resulting and
divided district, as constituted prior to the  annexation  or
division;  and  if the aggregate of the general State aid and
supplemental  general  State  aid  as  so  computed  for  the
annexing or resulting  districts  as  constituted  after  the
annexation  or  division  is  less  than the aggregate of the
general State aid and supplemental general State  aid  as  so
computed  for  the annexing and annexed districts, or for the
resulting and divided districts, as constituted prior to  the
annexation or division, then a supplementary payment equal to
the  difference  shall be made and allocated between or among
the annexing or resulting districts, as constituted upon such
annexation or division,  for  the  first  4  years  of  their
existence.   The  total difference payment shall be allocated
between or among the annexing or resulting districts  in  the
same  ratio  as the pupil enrollment from that portion of the
annexed or divided district or districts which is annexed  to
or included in each such annexing or resulting district bears
to  the  total  pupil  enrollment  from the entire annexed or
divided district or districts, as such  pupil  enrollment  is
determined  for the school year last ending prior to the date
when the change of boundaries attributable to the  annexation
or  division  becomes effective for all purposes.  The amount
of the total difference payment and the amount thereof to  be
allocated  to  the  annexing  or resulting districts shall be
computed by the State Board of  Education  on  the  basis  of
pupil  enrollment  and other data which shall be certified to
the State Board of Education, on forms which it shall provide
for that purpose, by the regional superintendent  of  schools
for each educational service region in which the annexing and
annexed  districts,  or  resulting  and divided districts are
located.
    (3.5)  Claims  for  financial   assistance   under   this
subsection  (I)  shall  not be recomputed except as expressly
provided under this Section.
    (4)  Any supplementary payment made under this subsection
(I) shall be treated as separate from all other payments made
pursuant to this Section.

(J)  Supplementary Grants in Aid.
    (1)  Notwithstanding  any  other   provisions   of   this
Section,  the  amount  of  the aggregate general State aid in
combination with supplemental general State  aid  under  this
Section  for  which each school district is eligible shall be
no less than the amount of the aggregate  general  State  aid
entitlement  that  was received by the district under Section
18-8 (exclusive of amounts received  under  subsections  5(p)
and  5(p-5)  of  that  Section)  for the 1997-98 school year,
pursuant to the provisions of that Section as it was then  in
effect.   If   a  school  district  qualifies  to  receive  a
supplementary payment made under  this  subsection  (J),  the
amount of the aggregate general State aid in combination with
supplemental general State aid under this Section  which that
district is eligible to receive for each school year shall be
no  less  than  the amount of the aggregate general State aid
entitlement that was received by the district  under  Section
18-8  (exclusive  of  amounts received under subsections 5(p)
and 5(p-5) of that Section) for the  1997-1998  school  year,
pursuant  to the provisions of that Section as it was then in
effect.
    (2)  If, as provided in paragraph (1) of this  subsection
(J),  a school district is to receive aggregate general State
aid in combination with supplemental general State aid  under
this  Section  for the 1998-99 school year and any subsequent
school year that in any such school year  is  less  than  the
amount  of  the  aggregate general State aid entitlement that
the district received for the 1997-98 school year, the school
district shall also receive, from  a  separate  appropriation
made  for  purposes  of  this subsection (J), a supplementary
payment that is equal to the amount of the difference in  the
aggregate State aid figures as described in paragraph (1).
    (3)  (Blank).

(K)  Grants to Laboratory and Alternative Schools.
    In  calculating  the  amount  to be paid to the governing
board of a  public  university  that  operates  a  laboratory
school  under  this Section or to any alternative school that
is operated by a  regional  superintendent  of  schools,  the
State Board of Education shall require by rule such reporting
requirements as it deems necessary.
    As  used  in  this  Section,  "laboratory school" means a
public school which is  created  and  operated  by  a  public
university and approved by the State Board of Education.  The
governing  board  of a public university which receives funds
from the State  Board  under  this  subsection  (K)  may  not
increase  the  number  of students enrolled in its laboratory
school from a single district, if that  district  is  already
sending  50 or more students, except under a mutual agreement
between the school board of a student's district of residence
and the university which operates the laboratory  school.   A
laboratory  school  may  not  have  more than 1,000 students,
excluding students with disabilities in a  special  education
program.
    As  used  in  this  Section, "alternative school" means a
public school which is created and  operated  by  a  Regional
Superintendent  of Schools and approved by the State Board of
Education.  Such alternative schools  may  offer  courses  of
instruction  for  which  credit  is  given  in regular school
programs, courses to prepare students  for  the  high  school
equivalency  testing  program  or vocational and occupational
training.   A regional superintendent of schools may contract
with a school district or a public community college district
to operate an  alternative  school.   An  alternative  school
serving  more  than  one  educational  service  region may be
established by the regional  superintendents  of  schools  of
those   the   affected   educational   service  regions.   An
alternative school serving more than one educational  service
region  may  be  operated  under  such  terms as the regional
superintendents  of  schools  of  those  educational  service
regions may agree.
    Each laboratory and alternative  school  shall  file,  on
forms  provided  by the State Superintendent of Education, an
annual  State  aid  claim  which  states  the  Average  Daily
Attendance of the school's students by  month.   The  best  3
months'  Average  Daily Attendance shall be computed for each
school. The general State aid entitlement shall  be  computed
by multiplying the applicable Average Daily Attendance by the
Foundation Level as determined under this Section.

(L)  Payments,   Additional   Grants   in   Aid   and   Other
Requirements.
    (1)  For  a school district operating under the financial
supervision of an Authority created under  Article  34A,  the
general  State  aid  otherwise payable to that district under
this Section, but not the  supplemental  general  State  aid,
shall  be  reduced  by  an amount equal to the budget for the
operations of the Authority as certified by the Authority  to
the  State  Board  of  Education, and an amount equal to such
reduction shall be paid to the  Authority  created  for  such
district for its operating expenses in the manner provided in
Section 18-11.  The remainder of general State school aid for
any  such  district  shall be paid in accordance with Article
34A when that Article provides for a disposition  other  than
that provided by this Article.
    (2)  Impaction.   Impaction  payments  shall  be  made as
provided for in Section 18-4.2.
    (3)  Summer school.  Summer school payments shall be made
as provided in Section 18-4.3.
(M)  Education Funding Advisory Board.
    The Education Funding Advisory Board, hereinafter in this
subsection (M) referred to as the "Board", is hereby created.
The Board shall consist of 5 members who are appointed by the
Governor, by and with the advice and consent of  the  Senate.
The   members  appointed  shall  include  representatives  of
education, business, and  the  general  public.  One  of  the
members  so  appointed shall be designated by the Governor at
the time the appointment is made as the  chairperson  of  the
Board.  The initial members of the Board may be appointed any
time after the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997.
The regular term of each member of the Board shall be  for  4
years  from  the third Monday of January of the year in which
the term of the member's appointment is to  commence,  except
that  of  the  5  initial  members  appointed to serve on the
Board, the member who is appointed as the  chairperson  shall
serve  for  a  term  that commences on the date of his or her
appointment and expires on the third Monday of January, 2002,
and the remaining 4 members,  by  lots  drawn  at  the  first
meeting  of  the  Board  that is held after all 5 members are
appointed, shall determine 2 of their  number  to  serve  for
terms   that   commence  on  the  date  of  their  respective
appointments and expire on the third Monday of January, 2001,
and 2 of their number to serve for terms that commence on the
date of their respective appointments and expire on the third
Monday of January, 2000.  All members appointed to  serve  on
the  Board  shall serve until their respective successors are
appointed and confirmed.  Vacancies shall be  filled  in  the
same  manner  as  original  appointments.   If  a  vacancy in
membership occurs at  a  time  when  the  Senate  is  not  in
session,  the  Governor  shall  make  a temporary appointment
until the next meeting of the Senate, when he  or  she  shall
appoint,  by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, a
person to fill that membership for the  unexpired  term.   If
the  Senate  is  not in session when the initial appointments
are made, those appointments shall be made as in the case  of
vacancies.
    The  Education  Funding  Advisory  Board  shall be deemed
established,  and  the  initial  members  appointed  by   the
Governor  to serve as members of the Board shall take office,
on the date that the Governor makes his or her appointment of
the fifth initial member of the Board, whether those  initial
members   are   then  serving  pursuant  to  appointment  and
confirmation or pursuant to temporary appointments  that  are
made by the Governor as in the case of vacancies.
    The  State  Board  of  Education shall provide such staff
assistance to the Education  Funding  Advisory  Board  as  is
reasonably  required  for the proper performance by the Board
of its responsibilities.
    For school years after the  2000-2001  school  year,  the
Education  Funding  Advisory  Board, in consultation with the
State Board  of  Education,  shall  make  recommendations  as
provided  in  this subsection (M) to the General Assembly for
the foundation level under subdivision (B)(3) of this Section
and for the supplemental general State aid grant level  under
subsection  (H)  of  this  Section  for  districts  with high
concentrations of children  from  poverty.   The  recommended
foundation  level  shall be determined based on a methodology
which  incorporates  the  basic  education  expenditures   of
low-spending  schools  exhibiting  high academic performance.
The  Education  Funding  Advisory  Board  shall   make   such
recommendations  to  the General Assembly on January 1 of odd
numbered years, beginning January 1, 2001.

(N)  General State Aid Adjustment Grant.
    (1)  Any  school  district  subject   to   property   tax
extension  limitations as imposed under the provisions of the
Property Tax Extension Limitation Law shall  be  entitled  to
receive,  subject  to  the qualifications and requirements of
this  subsection,  a  general  State  aid  adjustment  grant.
Eligibility for this grant shall be determined on  an  annual
basis  and claims for grant payments shall be paid subject to
appropriations  made  specific  to  this   subsection.    For
purposes  of  this  subsection the following terms shall have
the following meanings:
    "Budget Year":  The school year for which  general  State
aid is calculated and awarded under subsection (E).
    "Current  Year":   The  school year immediately preceding
the Budget Year.
    "Base Tax Year":  The property  tax  levy  year  used  to
calculate the Budget Year allocation of general State aid.
    "Preceding   Tax  Year":   The  property  tax  levy  year
immediately preceding the Base Tax Year.
    "Extension  Limitation   Ratio":   A   numerical   ratio,
certified  by  a school district's County Clerk, in which the
numerator  is  the  Base  Tax  Year's  tax  extension  amount
resulting from the Limiting Rate and the denominator  is  the
Preceding  Tax Year's tax extension amount resulting from the
Limiting Rate.
    "Limiting Rate":  The limiting rate  as  defined  in  the
Property Tax Extension Limitation Law.
    "Preliminary  Tax  Rate":  The  tax rate for all purposes
except bond and interest that would have been used to  extend
those  taxes  absent  the  provisions  of  the  Property  Tax
Extension Limitation Law.
    (2)  To qualify for a general State aid adjustment grant,
a  school district must meet all of the following eligibility
criteria for each Budget Year for which a grant is claimed:
         (a)  (Blank).
         (b)  The Preliminary Tax Rate of the school district
    for the Base Tax Year was reduced by  the  Clerk  of  the
    County  as  a  result of the requirements of the Property
    Tax Extension Limitation Law.
         (c)  The Available Local Resources per pupil of  the
    school  district as calculated pursuant to subsection (D)
    using the Base Tax Year are less than the product of 1.75
    times the Foundation Level for the Budget Year.
         (d)  The school district  has  filed  a  proper  and
    timely  claim for a general State aid adjustment grant as
    required under this subsection.
    (3)  A claim for grant assistance under  this  subsection
shall be filed with the State Board of Education on or before
April  1 of the Current Year for a grant for the Budget Year.
The claim shall be made on  forms  prescribed  by  the  State
Board  of  Education  and  must  be  accompanied by a written
statement from the Clerk of the County, certifying:
         (a)  That the school district  had  its  Preliminary
    Tax Rate for the Base Tax Year reduced as a result of the
    Property Tax Extension Limitation Law.
         (b)  (Blank).
         (c)  The  Extension Limitation Ratio as that term is
    defined in this subsection.
    (4)  On or before August 1 of the Budget Year  the  State
Board  of Education shall calculate, for all school districts
meeting the other requirements of this subsection, the amount
of the general State aid adjustment grant, if any,  that  the
school  districts are eligible to receive in the Budget Year.
The amount of the general State aid adjustment grant shall be
calculated as follows:
         (a)  Determine the school district's  general  State
    aid  grant  for the Budget Year as provided in accordance
    with the provisions of subsection (E).
         (b)  Determine the school district's adjusted  level
    of  general  State aid by utilizing in the calculation of
    Available  Local   Resources   the   equalized   assessed
    valuation  that  was  used to calculate the general State
    aid for the  preceding  fiscal  year  multiplied  by  the
    Extension Limitation Ratio.
         (c)  Subtract  the  sum  derived in subparagraph (a)
    from the sum derived in subparagraph (b).  If the  result
    is  a  positive  number, that amount shall be the general
    State aid adjustment grant that the district is  eligible
    to receive.
    (5)  The  State  Board  of Education shall in the Current
Year, based upon claims filed in the Current Year,  recommend
to  the  General  Assembly  an  appropriation  amount for the
general State aid adjustment grants to be made in the  Budget
Year.
    (6)  Claims for general State aid adjustment grants shall
be  paid  in  a lump sum on or before January 1 of the Budget
Year only from appropriations made by  the  General  Assembly
expressly  for  claims under this subsection.  No such claims
may be paid from amounts appropriated for any  other  purpose
provided  for  under  this  Section.   In  the event that the
appropriation   for   claims   under   this   subsection   is
insufficient to meet all Budget Year  claims  for  a  general
State aid adjustment grant, the appropriation available shall
be  proportionately  prorated by the State Board of Education
amongst all districts filing for and entitled to payments.
    (7)  The State Board of Education  shall  promulgate  the
required  claim  forms  and  rules necessary to implement the
provisions of this subsection.

(O)  References.
    (1)  References in other laws to the various subdivisions
of Section 18-8 as that Section existed before its repeal and
replacement by this Section 18-8.05 shall be deemed to  refer
to  the  corresponding provisions of this Section 18-8.05, to
the extent that those references remain applicable.
    (2)  References in other laws to State  Chapter  1  funds
shall  be  deemed  to refer to the supplemental general State
aid provided under subsection (H) of this Section.
(Source:  P.A.  90-548,  eff.  7-1-98;  incorporates  90-566;
90-653, eff. 7-29-98;  90-654,  eff.  7-29-98;  90-655,  eff.
7-30-98; 90-802, eff. 12-15-98; 90-815, eff. 2-11-99; revised
2-17-99.)

    Section  35.   The  Currency  Exchange  Act is amended by
renumbering Section .1 as follows:

    (205 ILCS 405/0.1)
    Sec. 0.1. .1.  Short Title.  This Act shall be known  and
may be cited as the Currency Exchange Act.
(Source: P.A. 86-432; revised 3-16-99.)

    Section  40.   The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by
changing Section 5-5.02 as follows:

    (305 ILCS 5/5-5.02) (from Ch. 23, par. 5-5.02)
    Sec. 5-5.02. Hospital reimbursements.
    (a)  Reimbursement to Hospitals;  July  1,  1992  through
September  30, 1992.  Notwithstanding any other provisions of
this Code or  the  Illinois  Department's  Rules  promulgated
under    the    Illinois    Administrative   Procedure   Act,
reimbursement to hospitals for services provided  during  the
period  July  1, 1992 through September 30, 1992, shall be as
follows:
         (1)  For inpatient hospital services rendered, or if
    applicable, for inpatient hospital discharges  occurring,
    on  or  after July 1, 1992 and on or before September 30,
    1992, the Illinois Department shall  reimburse  hospitals
    for    inpatient   services   under   the   reimbursement
    methodologies in effect for each  hospital,  and  at  the
    inpatient  payment  rate calculated for each hospital, as
    of June  30,  1992.   For  purposes  of  this  paragraph,
    "reimbursement  methodologies"  means  all  reimbursement
    methodologies  that pertain to the provision of inpatient
    hospital services, including, but  not  limited  to,  any
    adjustments  for disproportionate share, targeted access,
    critical care access and uncompensated care,  as  defined
    by the Illinois Department on June 30, 1992.
         (2)  For  the  purpose  of calculating the inpatient
    payment  rate  for  each  hospital  eligible  to  receive
    quarterly adjustment payments  for  targeted  access  and
    critical  care,  as defined by the Illinois Department on
    June 30, 1992, the adjustment payment for the period July
    1, 1992 through September 30, 1992, shall be 25%  of  the
    annual  adjustment  payments calculated for each eligible
    hospital, as of June 30, 1992.  The  Illinois  Department
    shall  determine  by  rule  the  adjustment  payments for
    targeted access and critical care  beginning  October  1,
    1992.
         (3)  For  the  purpose  of calculating the inpatient
    payment  rate  for  each  hospital  eligible  to  receive
    quarterly adjustment payments for uncompensated care,  as
    defined  by the Illinois Department on June 30, 1992, the
    adjustment payment for the period August 1, 1992  through
    September  30,  1992,  shall  be  one-sixth  of the total
    uncompensated care  adjustment  payments  calculated  for
    each  eligible  hospital  for the uncompensated care rate
    year, as defined by the Illinois  Department,  ending  on
    July  31,  1992.  The Illinois Department shall determine
    by rule the adjustment payments  for  uncompensated  care
    beginning October 1, 1992.
    (b)  Inpatient payments.  For inpatient services provided
on  or  after  October 1, 1993, in addition to rates paid for
hospital inpatient services pursuant to the  Illinois  Health
Finance  Reform  Act,  as  now  or  hereafter amended, or the
Illinois Department's prospective reimbursement  methodology,
or  any other methodology used by the Illinois Department for
inpatient  services,  the  Illinois  Department  shall   make
adjustment  payments, in an amount calculated pursuant to the
methodology described in paragraph (c) of  this  Section,  to
hospitals that the Illinois Department determines satisfy any
one of the following requirements:
         (1)  Hospitals that are described in Section 1923 of
    the  federal  Social  Security  Act,  as now or hereafter
    amended; or
         (2)  Illinois  hospitals  that   have   a   Medicaid
    inpatient  utilization  rate which is at least one-half a
    standard deviation  above  the  mean  Medicaid  inpatient
    utilization  rate for all hospitals in Illinois receiving
    Medicaid payments from the Illinois Department; or
         (3)  Illinois hospitals that on July 1, 1991  had  a
    Medicaid   inpatient  utilization  rate,  as  defined  in
    paragraph (h) (f) of this Section, that was at least  the
    mean   Medicaid   inpatient   utilization  rate  for  all
    hospitals in Illinois receiving  Medicaid  payments  from
    the  Illinois  Department  and  which  were  located in a
    planning area with one-third  or  fewer  excess  beds  as
    determined  by  the  Illinois  Health Facilities Planning
    Board, and that, as of June 30, 1992, were located  in  a
    federally designated Health Manpower Shortage Area; or
         (4)  Illinois hospitals that:
              (A)  have a Medicaid inpatient utilization rate
         that   is  at  least  equal  to  the  mean  Medicaid
         inpatient utilization  rate  for  all  hospitals  in
         Illinois   receiving   Medicaid  payments  from  the
         Department; and
              (B)  also have a Medicaid obstetrical inpatient
         utilization rate  that  is  at  least  one  standard
         deviation   above   the  mean  Medicaid  obstetrical
         inpatient utilization  rate  for  all  hospitals  in
         Illinois   receiving   Medicaid  payments  from  the
         Department for obstetrical services; or
         (5)  Any children's hospital, which means a hospital
    devoted exclusively to caring for children.   A  hospital
    which  includes  a facility devoted exclusively to caring
    for children that is separately licensed as a hospital by
    a municipality prior  to  September  30,  1998  shall  be
    considered  a  children's hospital to the degree that the
    hospital's Medicaid care is provided to children.
    (c)  Inpatient  adjustment  payments.    The   adjustment
payments  required by paragraph (b) shall be calculated based
upon the hospital's Medicaid inpatient  utilization  rate  as
follows:
         (1)  hospitals with a Medicaid inpatient utilization
    rate  below  the  mean shall receive a per day adjustment
    payment equal to $25;
         (2)   hospitals   with    a    Medicaid    inpatient
    utilization  rate  that  is  equal to or greater than the
    mean Medicaid inpatient utilization rate  but  less  than
    one  standard deviation above the mean Medicaid inpatient
    utilization rate  shall  receive  a  per  day  adjustment
    payment  equal  to  the  sum  of $25 plus $1 for each one
    percent   that   the   hospital's   Medicaid    inpatient
    utilization  rate  exceeds  the  mean  Medicaid inpatient
    utilization rate;
         (3)   hospitals   with    a    Medicaid    inpatient
    utilization  rate  that  is  equal to or greater than one
    standard deviation  above  the  mean  Medicaid  inpatient
    utilization  rate  but  less than 1.5 standard deviations
    above the mean Medicaid inpatient utilization rate  shall
    receive  a per day adjustment payment equal to the sum of
    $40 plus $7 for each  one  percent  that  the  hospital's
    Medicaid  inpatient utilization rate exceeds one standard
    deviation above the mean Medicaid  inpatient  utilization
    rate; and
         (4)   hospitals    with    a    Medicaid   inpatient
    utilization rate that is equal to  or  greater  than  1.5
    standard  deviations  above  the  mean Medicaid inpatient
    utilization rate  shall  receive  a  per  day  adjustment
    payment  equal  to  the  sum  of $90 plus $2 for each one
    percent   that   the   hospital's   Medicaid    inpatient
    utilization  rate  exceeds  1.5 standard deviations above
    the mean Medicaid inpatient utilization rate.
    (d)  Supplemental adjustment payments.   In  addition  to
the adjustment payments described in paragraph (c), hospitals
as  defined  in  clauses  (1)  through  (5) of paragraph (b),
excluding county hospitals (as defined in subsection  (c)  of
Section 15-1 of this Code) and a hospital organized under the
University   of   Illinois   Hospital   Act,  shall  be  paid
supplemental inpatient adjustment payments of  $60  per  day.
For purposes of Title XIX of the federal Social Security Act,
these   supplemental   adjustment   payments   shall  not  be
classified as adjustment payments to  disproportionate  share
hospitals.
    (e)  The   inpatient  adjustment  payments  described  in
paragraphs (c) and (d) shall be increased on October 1,  1993
and  annually  thereafter by a percentage equal to the lesser
of (i) the increase in the DRI hospital cost  index  for  the
most  recent 12 month period for which data are available, or
(ii)  the  percentage  increase  in  the  statewide   average
hospital  payment  rate  over  the  previous year's statewide
average hospital payment rate.   The  sum  of  the  inpatient
adjustment  payments  under  paragraphs  (c)  and  (d)  to  a
hospital,  other  than  a  county  hospital  (as  defined  in
subsection  (c)  of  Section 15-1 of this Code) or a hospital
organized under the  University  of  Illinois  Hospital  Act,
however,  shall  not exceed $275 per day; that limit shall be
increased on October 1, 1993 and  annually  thereafter  by  a
percentage equal to the lesser of (i) the increase in the DRI
hospital  cost  index for the most recent 12-month period for
which data are available or (ii) the percentage  increase  in
the statewide average hospital payment rate over the previous
year's statewide average hospital payment rate.
    (f)   Children's  hospital inpatient adjustment payments.
For  children's  hospitals,  as  defined  in  clause  (5)  of
paragraph (b), the adjustment payments required  pursuant  to
paragraphs (c) and (d) shall be multiplied by 2.0.
    (g)   County hospital inpatient adjustment payments.  For
county  hospitals,  as  defined  in subsection (c) of Section
15-1 of this Code, there shall be an  adjustment  payment  as
determined by rules issued by the Illinois Department.
    (h)   For  the  purposes  of  this  Section the following
terms shall be defined as follows:
         (1)  "Medicaid inpatient utilization rate"  means  a
    fraction,  the  numerator  of  which  is  the number of a
    hospital's inpatient days provided in  a  given  12-month
    period  to patients who, for such days, were eligible for
    Medicaid under Title XIX of the federal  Social  Security
    Act,  and the denominator of which is the total number of
    the hospital's inpatient days in that same period.
         (2)  "Mean  Medicaid  inpatient  utilization   rate"
    means   the  total  number  of  Medicaid  inpatient  days
    provided by all Illinois Medicaid-participating hospitals
    divided by the total number of inpatient days provided by
    those same hospitals.
         (3)  "Medicaid  obstetrical  inpatient   utilization
    rate"  means  the ratio of Medicaid obstetrical inpatient
    days to total Medicaid inpatient days  for  all  Illinois
    hospitals  receiving  Medicaid payments from the Illinois
    Department.
    (i)   Inpatient adjustment payment limit.   In  order  to
meet  the limits of Public Law 102-234 and Public Law 103-66,
the Illinois Department shall by rule adjust disproportionate
share adjustment payments.
    (j)  University of Illinois Hospital inpatient adjustment
payments.  For hospitals organized under  the  University  of
Illinois  Hospital  Act, there shall be an adjustment payment
as determined by rules adopted by the Illinois Department.
    (k)  The  Illinois  Department  may  by  rule   establish
criteria   for   and  develop  methodologies  for  adjustment
payments to hospitals participating under this Article.
(Source:  P.A.  89-21,  eff.  7-1-95;  90-588,  eff.  7-1-98;
revised 3-16-99.)

    Section 45.  The Elder Abuse and Neglect Act  is  amended
by changing Section 2 as follows:

    (320 ILCS 20/2) (from Ch. 23, par. 6602)
    Sec.  2.   Definitions.   As used in this Act, unless the
context requires otherwise:
    (a)  "Abuse" means causing any physical, mental or sexual
injury to an eligible adult, including exploitation  of  such
adult's financial resources.
    Nothing  in  this  Act shall be construed to mean that an
eligible adult is a victim of abuse or neglect for  the  sole
reason  that he or she is being furnished with or relies upon
treatment  by  spiritual  means  through  prayer  alone,   in
accordance  with  the  tenets  and  practices of a recognized
church or religious denomination.
    Nothing in this Act shall be construed to  mean  that  an
eligible  adult  is  a victim of abuse because of health care
services provided or not provided  by  licensed  health  care
professionals.
    (a-5)  "Abuser"  means  a person who abuses, neglects, or
financially exploits an eligible adult.
    (a-7)  "Caregiver" means a person who either as a  result
of  a  family  relationship,  voluntarily, or in exchange for
compensation has assumed responsibility for all or a  portion
of  the  care  of an eligible adult who needs assistance with
activities of daily living.
    (b)  "Department" means the Department on  Aging  of  the
State of Illinois.
    (c)  "Director" means the Director of the Department.
    (d)  "Domestic  living situation" means a residence where
the eligible adult lives alone or with his or her family or a
caregiver, or others, or a  board  and  care  home  or  other
community-based unlicensed facility, but is not:
         (1)  A licensed facility as defined in Section 1-113
    of the Nursing Home Care Act;
         (2)  A  "life  care facility" as defined in the Life
    Care Facilities Act;
         (3)  A home, institution, or other place operated by
    the federal government or agency thereof or by the  State
    of Illinois;
         (4)  A  hospital,  sanitarium, or other institution,
    the principal  activity  or  business  of  which  is  the
    diagnosis,  care,  and treatment of human illness through
    the maintenance and  operation  of  organized  facilities
    therefor,  which  is  required  to  be licensed under the
    Hospital Licensing Act;
         (5)  A "community living facility" as defined in the
    Community Living Facilities Licensing Act;
         (6)  A  "community   residential   alternative"   as
    defined   in   the   Community  Residential  Alternatives
    Licensing Act; and
         (7)  A "community-integrated living arrangement"  as
    defined  in  the Community-Integrated Living Arrangements
    Licensure and Certification Act.
    (e)  "Eligible adult" means a person 60 years of  age  or
older  who  resides in a domestic living situation and is, or
is alleged to be, abused, neglected, or financially exploited
by another individual.
    (f)  "Emergency" means a situation in which  an  eligible
adult  is  living in conditions presenting a risk of death or
physical, mental or sexual injury and the provider agency has
reason to believe the eligible adult is unable to consent  to
services which would alleviate that risk.
    (f-5)  "Mandated  reporter"  means  any  of the following
persons while engaged  in  carrying  out  their  professional
duties:
         (1)  a professional or professional's delegate while
    engaged  in:  (i)  social services, (ii) law enforcement,
    (iii) education, (iv) the care of an  eligible  adult  or
    eligible  adults,  or (v) any of the occupations required
    to be licensed under the Clinical Psychologist  Licensing
    Act,  the  Clinical  Social Work and Social Work Practice
    Act, the Illinois Dental Practice Act, the  Dietetic  and
    Nutrition  Services Practice Act, the Marriage and Family
    Therapy Licensing Act, the Medical Practice Act of  1987,
    the  Naprapathic  Practice  Act, the Illinois Nursing and
    Advanced Practice Nursing Act of 1987, the  Nursing  Home
    Administrators   Licensing   and  Disciplinary  Act,  the
    Illinois Occupational Therapy Practice Act, the  Illinois
    Optometric  Practice  Act  of 1987, the Pharmacy Practice
    Act of 1987,  the  Illinois  Physical  Therapy  Act,  the
    Physician  Assistant  Practice Act of 1987, the Podiatric
    Medical Practice Act of 1987, the Professional  Counselor
    and  Clinical  Professional  Counselor Licensing Act, the
    Illinois Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology Practice
    Act, the Veterinary Medicine and Surgery Practice Act  of
    1994, and the Illinois Public Accounting Act;
         (2)  an  employee  of  a  vocational  rehabilitation
    facility  prescribed  or  supervised by the Department of
    Human Services;
         (3)  an administrator, employee, or person providing
    services in or  through  an  unlicensed  community  based
    facility;
         (4)  a Christian Science Practitioner;
         (5)  field  personnel  of  the  Department of Public
    Aid, Department of Public Health, and Department of Human
    Services, and any county or municipal health department;
         (6)  personnel of the Department of Human  Services,
    the  Guardianship and Advocacy Commission, the State Fire
    Marshal, local fire departments, the Department on  Aging
    and  its  subsidiary  Area Agencies on Aging and provider
    agencies,  and  the  Office  of  State  Long  Term   Care
    Ombudsman;
         (7)  any  employee  of  the  State  of  Illinois not
    otherwise specified herein who is involved  in  providing
    services  to  eligible  adults,  including  professionals
    providing  medical  or  rehabilitation  services  and all
    other persons having direct contact with eligible adults;
    or
         (8) (9)  a person  who  performs  the  duties  of  a
    coroner or medical examiner.
    (g)  "Neglect"  means  another  individual's  failure  to
provide an eligible adult with or willful withholding from an
eligible  adult  the  necessities  of life including, but not
limited to, food, clothing, shelter  or  medical  care.  This
subsection  does  not  create  any  new  affirmative  duty to
provide support to eligible  adults.   Nothing  in  this  Act
shall be construed to mean that an eligible adult is a victim
of  neglect  because  of health care services provided or not
provided by licensed health care professionals.
    (h)  "Provider agency"  means  any  public  or  nonprofit
agency  in  a  planning  and  service  area  appointed by the
regional administrative agency with  prior  approval  by  the
Department  on Aging to receive and assess reports of alleged
or suspected abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation.
    (i)  "Regional administrative agency" means any public or
nonprofit agency in a planning and service area so designated
by the Department, provided that the designated  Area  Agency
on  Aging  shall  be  designated  the regional administrative
agency if it so requests.  The Department  shall  assume  the
functions  of  the  regional  administrative  agency  for any
planning and service area where  another  agency  is  not  so
designated.
    (j)  "Substantiated   case"  means  a  reported  case  of
alleged   or   suspected   abuse,   neglect,   or   financial
exploitation in which a provider  agency,  after  assessment,
determines that there is reason to believe abuse, neglect, or
financial exploitation has occurred.
(Source: P.A. 90-628, eff. 1-1-99; revised 3-1-99.)

    Section  50.   The  Senior  Citizens and Disabled Persons
Property Tax Relief  and  Pharmaceutical  Assistance  Act  is
amended by changing Section 5 as follows:

    (320 ILCS 25/5) (from Ch. 67 1/2, par. 405)
    Sec. 5.  Procedure.
    (a)  In  general.   Claims must be filed after January 1,
on forms prescribed by the Department.  No claim may be filed
more than one year after December 31 of the  year  for  which
the  claim  is filed except that claims for 1976 may be filed
until  December  31,  1978.   The  pharmaceutical  assistance
identification card provided for in  subsection  (f)  (g)  of
Section 4 shall be valid for a period not to exceed one year.
    (b)  Claim  is Personal.  The right to file a claim under
this Act shall be personal to  the  claimant  and  shall  not
survive  his death, but such right may be exercised on behalf
of a claimant by his legal guardian or attorney-in-fact.   If
a claimant dies after having filed a timely claim, the amount
thereof  shall be disbursed to his surviving spouse or, if no
spouse survives, to his surviving dependent minor children in
equal parts, provided the spouse or child, as  the  case  may
be, resided with the claimant at the time he filed his claim.
If  at  the time of disbursement neither the claimant nor his
spouse is surviving, and no dependent minor children  of  the
claimant  are surviving the amount of the claim shall escheat
to the State.
    (c)  One claim per  household.   Only  one  member  of  a
household  may  file  a  claim under this Act in any calendar
year;  where  both  members  of  a  household  are  otherwise
entitled to claim a grant under this Act, they must agree  as
to which of them will file a claim for that year.
    (d)  Content of application form.  The form prescribed by
the  Department for purposes of paragraph (a) shall include a
table, appropriately keyed to the parts of the form on  which
the  claimant  is required to furnish information, which will
enable the claimant  to  determine  readily  the  approximate
amount of grant to which he is entitled by relating levels of
household   income   to   property   taxes  accrued  or  rent
constituting property taxes accrued.
    (e)  Pharmaceutical    Assistance    Procedures.      The
Department   shall   establish   the   form  and  manner  for
application, and establish by January 1, 1986 a procedure  to
enable  persons  to apply for the additional grant or for the
pharmaceutical assistance identification  card  on  the  same
application form.
(Source: P.A. 83-1531; revised 3-16-99.)

    Section  55.   The Motor Vehicle Franchise Act is amended
by changing Section 13 as follows:

    (815 ILCS 710/13) (from Ch. 121 1/2, par. 763)
    Sec. 13. Damages; equitable relief.   Any  franchisee  or
motor  vehicle  dealer  who  suffers  any  loss  of  money or
property, real or  personal,  as  a  result  of  the  use  or
employment   by   a  manufacturer,  wholesaler,  distributor,
distributor branch or division, factory branch  or  division,
wholesale  branch  or  division,  or  any  agent,  servant or
employee thereof, of an unfair method of  competition  or  an
unfair or deceptive act or practice declared unlawful by this
Act  may  bring  an  action for damages and equitable relief,
including injunctive relief.  Where the misconduct is willful
or wanton, the court  may  award  treble  damages.   A  motor
vehicle  dealer,  if it has not suffered any loss of money or
property, may obtain permanent equitable relief if it can  be
shown  that the unfair act or practice may have the effect of
causing such loss of money or property.  Where the franchisee
or dealer substantially prevails  the  court  or  arbitration
panel  or  Motor  Vehicle Review Board shall award attorney's
fees and assess costs against the opposing party.   Moreover,
for  the  purposes  of the award of attorney's fees and costs
whenever the franchisee or dealer is  seeking  injunctive  or
other  relief,  the franchisee or dealer may be considered to
have prevailed when a judgment is entered in its favor,  when
a  final  administrative decision is entered in its favor and
affirmed, if subject to judicial review, when a consent order
is entered  into,  or  when  the  manufacturer,  distributor,
wholesaler,  distributor  branch  or division, factory factor
branch or division, wholesale  branch  or  division,  or  any
officer,  agent  or  other  representative thereof ceases the
conduct, act or practice which is alleged to be in  violation
of any Section of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 89-145, eff. 7-14-95; revised 3-16-99.)

    Section  990.   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 995.  No revival or extension.  This Act does not
revive or extend any Section or Act otherwise repealed.

    Section 999. Effective date.  This Act takes effect  upon
becoming law.

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