State of Illinois
91st General Assembly
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Public Act 91-0610

HB1845 Enrolled                                LRB9103725SMdv

    AN ACT to amend the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution  of
Marriage Act by changing Section 607.

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

    Section 5.  The  Illinois  Marriage  and  Dissolution  of
Marriage Act is amended by changing Section 607 as follows:

    (750 ILCS 5/607) (from Ch. 40, par. 607)
    Sec. 607. Visitation.
    (a)  A  parent  not  granted  custody  of  the  child  is
entitled  to  reasonable  visitation  rights unless the court
finds,  after  a  hearing,  that  visitation  would  endanger
seriously the child's physical, mental,  moral  or  emotional
health.  If the custodian's street address is not identified,
pursuant  to Section 708, the court shall require the parties
to   identify   reasonable   alternative   arrangements   for
visitation by  a  non-custodial  parent,  including  but  not
limited  to visitation of the minor child at the residence of
another person or at a local public or private facility.
    (b) (1)  The  court  may  grant   reasonable   visitation
privileges to a grandparent, great-grandparent, or sibling of
any   minor   child   upon  petition  to  the  court  by  the
grandparents  or  great-grandparents  or  on  behalf  of  the
sibling, with notice to the parties required to  be  notified
under  Section  601 of this Act, if the court determines that
it is in the best interests and welfare of the child, and may
issue  any  necessary  orders  to  enforce  such   visitation
privileges.   Except  as  provided  in  paragraph (2) of this
subsection (b), a petition for visitation privileges  may  be
filed  under  this  paragraph  (1)  whether or not a petition
pursuant  to  this  Act  has  been  previously  filed  or  is
currently  pending  if  one  or   more   of   the   following
circumstances exist:
         (A)  the  parents  are not currently cohabiting on a
    permanent or an indefinite basis;
         (B)  one of the parents has  been  absent  from  the
    marital  abode for more than one month without the spouse
    knowing his or her whereabouts;
         (C)  one of the parents is deceased;
         (D)  one of the parents joins in the  petition  with
    the grandparents, great-grandparents, or sibling; or
         (E)  a sibling is in State custody.
    (1.5)  The   Court   may   grant   reasonable  visitation
privileges to a stepparent upon petition to the court by  the
stepparent,  with  notice  to  the  parties  required  to  be
notified  under  Section  601  of  this  Act,  if  the  court
determines  that  it  is in the best interests and welfare of
the child, and may issue  any  necessary  orders  to  enforce
those  visitation  privileges.    A  petition  for visitation
privileges may be filed under this paragraph (1.5) whether or
not a petition pursuant to this Act has been previously filed
or is currently pending if the  following  circumstances  are
met:
         (A)  the child is at least 12 years old;
         (B)  the  child resided continuously with the parent
    and stepparent for at least 5 years;
         (C)  the parent is deceased or is  disabled  and  is
    unable to care for the child;
         (D)  the  child wishes to have reasonable visitation
    with the stepparent; and
         (E)  the stepparent  was  providing  for  the  care,
    control, and welfare to the child prior to the initiation
    of the petition for visitation.
    (2)(A)  A petition for visitation privileges shall not be
filed  pursuant  to  this  subsection  (b)  by the parents or
grandparents of a putative father if  the  paternity  of  the
putative father has not been legally established.
    (B)  A  petition  for  visitation  privileges  may not be
filed under this subsection (b)  if  the  child  who  is  the
subject  of the grandparents' or great-grandparents' petition
has been voluntarily surrendered by the  parent  or  parents,
except for a surrender to the Illinois Department of Children
and  Family  Services  or a foster care facility, or has been
previously adopted by an individual or  individuals  who  are
not  related to the biological parents of the child or is the
subject of a pending adoption petition by  an  individual  or
individuals  who are not related to the biological parents of
the child.
    (3)  When one parent is deceased,  the  surviving  parent
shall  not  interfere  with  the  visitation  rights  of  the
grandparents.
    (c)  The  court  may  modify an order granting or denying
visitation rights of a  parent  whenever  modification  would
serve  the  best  interest  of the child; but the court shall
not restrict a parent's visitation  rights  unless  it  finds
that  the  visitation  would  endanger  seriously the child's
physical, mental, moral or emotional health.  The  court  may
modify  an  order  granting,  denying, or limiting visitation
rights of a grandparent, great-grandparent, or sibling of any
minor child whenever a change of circumstances  has  occurred
based  on  facts occurring subsequent to the judgment and the
court  finds  by  clear  and  convincing  evidence  that  the
modification is in the best interest of the minor child.
    (d)  If any court has  entered  an  order  prohibiting  a
non-custodial parent of a child from any contact with a child
or  restricting  the  non-custodial parent's contact with the
child, the following provisions shall apply:
         (1)  If  an  order   has   been   entered   granting
    visitation  privileges with the child to a grandparent or
    great-grandparent who is related to the child through the
    non-custodial parent, the visitation  privileges  of  the
    grandparent or great-grandparent may be revoked if:
              (i)  a  court  has entered an order prohibiting
         the non-custodial parent from any contact  with  the
         child,  and  the grandparent or great-grandparent is
         found to have used his or her visitation  privileges
         to  facilitate  contact  between  the  child and the
         non-custodial parent; or
              (ii)  a court has entered an order  restricting
         the  non-custodial  parent's contact with the child,
         and the grandparent or great-grandparent is found to
         have  used  his  or  her  visitation  privileges  to
         facilitate  contact  between  the  child   and   the
         non-custodial  parent  in a manner that violates the
         terms of the  order  restricting  the  non-custodial
         parent's contact with the child.
         Nothing in this subdivision (1) limits the authority
    of  the  court  to  enforce  its  orders  in  any  manner
    permitted by law.
         (2)  Any  order  granting visitation privileges with
    the child to a grandparent or  great-grandparent  who  is
    related  to  the  child  through the non-custodial parent
    shall contain the following provision:
         "If the (grandparent or great-grandparent, whichever
    is applicable) who has been granted visitation privileges
    under  this  order  uses  the  visitation  privileges  to
    facilitate contact between  the  child  and  the  child's
    non-custodial  parent,  the visitation privileges granted
    under this order shall be permanently revoked."
    (e)  No parent, not granted  custody  of  the  child,  or
grandparent,  or great-grandparent, or stepparent, or sibling
of any minor child, convicted of  any  offense  involving  an
illegal  sex act perpetrated upon a victim less than 18 years
of age including but not limited to offenses  for  violations
of  Article  12  of the Criminal Code of 1961, is entitled to
visitation rights while  incarcerated  or  while  on  parole,
probation,  conditional  discharge, periodic imprisonment, or
mandatory supervised  release  for  that  offense,  and  upon
discharge  from  incarceration  for  a misdemeanor offense or
upon discharge from parole, probation, conditional discharge,
periodic imprisonment, or mandatory supervised release for  a
felony  offense,  visitation shall be denied until the person
successfully completes a treatment program  approved  by  the
court.
    (f)  Unless  the  court determines, after considering all
relevant factors, including but  not  limited  to  those  set
forth  in  Section  602(a),  that  it  would  be  in the best
interests of the child to allow visitation, the  court  shall
not  enter  an order providing visitation rights and pursuant
to a motion to  modify  visitation  shall  revoke  visitation
rights  previously  granted to any person who would otherwise
be entitled to petition  for  visitation  rights  under  this
Section  who has been convicted of first degree murder of the
parent, grandparent, great-grandparent,  or  sibling  of  the
child  who  is  the  subject of the order.  Until an order is
entered pursuant to this subsection, no person  shall  visit,
with  the  child  present, a person who has been convicted of
first   degree   murder   of   the    parent,    grandparent,
great-grandparent,  or  sibling  of  the  child  without  the
consent  of the child's parent, other than a parent convicted
of  first  degree  murder  as  set  forth  herein,  or  legal
guardian.
    (g)  If an order has been entered limiting, for cause,  a
minor  child's  contact  or  visitation  with  a grandparent,
great-grandparent, or sibling on the grounds that it  was  in
the  best  interest  of the child to do so, that order may be
modified only upon a  showing  of  a  substantial  change  in
circumstances  occurring subsequent to the entry of the order
with proof by clear and convincing evidence that modification
is in the best interest of the minor child.
(Source: P.A. 89-488, eff.  6-21-96;  90-782,  eff.  8-14-98;
90-801, eff. 6-1-99; revised 12-22-98.)

    Section  99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.

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